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White supremacy gang may have had a role in escape attempt thwarted at Lee County Jail – News-Press

Posted By on October 8, 2020

A man accused in the 2019 deaths of two Cape Coral women and a man accused in a domestic violence case were thwarted in a bidto escape the Lee County Jail Thursday. This window in their cell showed signs of tampering.(Photo: Special to The News-Press)

A possible connection between a white supremacy gang and an accused Cape Coral double murder suspectmay have been a factor in a recently thwarted escape attempt at the Lee County Jail.

Newly released court documents outlined Wade Steven Wilson's apparent attempt to arrange for a getaway vehicle via fellow inmates at the Lee County Sheriff's Office CORE jail facility on Ortiz Avenue.

Wade Steven Wilson(Photo: Lee County Sheriff's Office)

Deputies at the CORE received a tip that there was an escape attempt planned either Sept. 30or Oct. 1 by a person who said they were on death row for two murders. The tip said the inmate was looking to set up a ride at 1 or 2 a.m.

An actual note on yellow, legal-size paper was found signed with Wilson's name, court documents said.

The note had been passed between Wilson and another inmate, both of whomare allegedly connected via a white supremacy gang known as "The Unforgiven," the court documents said.

The Anti Defamation League describes The Unforgiven as a large white supremacist prison gang based in the Florida prison system.

When deputies checked the cell in CORE Pod 1 housing Wilson, a suspect in the 2019 deaths of two Cape Coral women, andJosephKatz, a man accused in a domestic violence case,the only window in the unit showed signs of tampering. The metal frame holding the window was removed and the thick, security glass window showed several cracks.

Joseph Katz(Photo: Special to the News-Press)

Witnesses at the jail also reported hearing pounding noises from an upper floor cell area for several days.

Wilson, 26, had charges of attempted escape and criminal mischief added to his case andKatz, 30, now also faces charges of aiding anattempted escape, and criminal mischief.

Connect with breaking news reporter Michael Braun:MichaelBraunNP (Facebook),@MichaelBraunNP (Twitter) or mbraun@news-press.com.

Journalism matters. Your support matters. Subscribe to The News-Press.

Previously: Inmates, one awaiting trial for homicides, thwarted in escape attempt

More: Man linked to deaths of two women pleads not guilty to battery charge

And: State seeks death penalty for man linked to homicides of Cape Coral women

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White supremacy gang may have had a role in escape attempt thwarted at Lee County Jail - News-Press

What Jewish groups are watching for in this unusual Supreme Court session – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on October 8, 2020

WASHINGTON The uncertainty surrounding the makeup of the Supreme Court led to a quieter-than-normal kickoff for the courts 2021 decision-making season. But even with the little known about what the countrys highest court will consider, its clear that multiple issues of interest to Jewish advocates will be on the docket.A challenge to a 1990 ruling that has galvanized religious freedom advocates for years is before the court, as is a voting rights case. And if Amy Coney Barrett, President Donald Trumps nominee to replace Ruth Bader Ginsberg, is confirmed, the list could quickly grow. The same could happen if Trump is elected to a second term next month.

For one thing, cases that draw a 4-4 tie automatically revert to the lower courts ruling, making them a waste of the courts time. The court is currently configured five conservatives to three liberals, but Chief Justice John Roberts, a conservative, occasionally swings to join the liberals.

At this point, anything they havent taken could mean the court is not sure that theyre going to be able to get a majority until the ninth justice is confirmed, said Marc Stern, the American Jewish Committees legal counsel and a veteran court watcher.

Because four justices must agree to hear a case, Barretts confirmation would also make it easier for some kinds of cases to be taken up.

Heres a glance at what Jewish groups are watching out for this coming session.

Adoption agencies and prospective foster parents face off in Philly

The rights of agencies that foster children versus the rights of their would-be parents also pits the American Jewish communitys Orthodox bodies against its civil rights groups.

In Fulton v. the City of Philadelphia, an adoption agency is challenging the city for cutting off funding because the agency would not place foster children with same-sex parents. The court will hear oral arguments on Nov. 4, the day after the election.

The Anti-Defamation League filed a friend of the court brief arguing that requiring Philadelphia to exempt religious agencies would roll back hard-fought discrimination protections.

Requiring such an exception for Petitioners in this case would cause a flood of demands for similar exemptions, undermining the efficacy of those laws in safeguarding vulnerable members of the population, including religious minorities and members of other marginalized communities, said the amicus brief, which cited cases in which Jewish parents have been denied the opportunity to foster children.

Joining the ADL on the amicus brief are an array of groups favoring church-state separations, including a whos who of the liberal Jewish establishment: Bend the Arc, Jewish Women International, Keshet, the National Council of Jewish Women and Truah.

Steve Freeman, the ADLs vice president of civil rights, said the adoption agency in the case was using religious freedom as a sword and not a shield to blunt the freedoms of others.

Because we have our religious views, we can use taxpayer dollars to refuse to allow gay couples to adopt a foster child to me should be a non-starter, he said.

Jewish groups lined up on the other side include the Orthodox Union and Agudath Israel of America. Both groups have signed onto amicus briefs on the side of the adoption agency, but not necessarily because they oppose placing foster children with same-sex couples.

Its not about what is the right or wrong approach for foster care and adoption in particular, its more about defending the longstanding principle that in American society and under the First Amendment, we should find ways to accommodate different religious groups and religious minorities and religious practices, said Nathan Diament, the Orthodox Unions Washington director.

Instead, an array of conservative religious groups see the Philadelphia case as a way into overturning a decision they have despised since it was made in 1990, Employment Division v. Smith, that upheld a drug rehabilitation clinics right to fire two Native American employees who smoked peyote as part of a religious ritual.

As everybody said back in the early 90s, this was the Dred Scott case of religious freedom and it continues to be, Rabbi Abba Cohen, Agudath Israels Washington director, referring to the notorious 19th-century decision that upheld slavery.

Smith, as it is commonly known, gave states wide some would say total latitude to reject religious exemptions to laws. The decision spurred the passage in 1993 of the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, but the Supreme Court subsequently ruled the law held only for the federal government and was unconstitutional when other entities were accused of not granting exemptions for religious beliefs.

Rabhan of NCJW said the particulars of the Philadelphia case were germane to why Jewish groups should uphold the citys right to defund the adoption agency.

Placing children in foster homes and using religion as a way in which to accept or reject otherwise qualified placements, based on religious beliefs, is core to who we are as an organization, she said.

Cases about days off work for religious reasons could make the cut

Orthodox Jewish and other religiously conservative groups would like to see discarded a 1977 decision that upheld the right of the now defunct Trans World Airlines to fire a man whose Christian sect forbade work on Saturday.

There are an array of cases in the lower courts that they hope the court will seize upon to overturn TWA v. Hardison, a decision written so broadly that Cohen says he advises people not to file lawsuits challenging employers who will not allow time off for the Jewish Sabbath or holy days.

I tell people, your rights have been violated and you have a case but, you know, the law is so weak that to invest all that time and resources aggravation on a case that you dont have much of a chance to win, I just cant advise you with a clear conscience, he said.

Considered most likely to rise to the Supremes docket is Dalberiste V. GLE Associates, the case of a Seventh Day Adventist who sought sabbaths off from his power plant employer.

Growing attention to voting rights

Jewish civil liberties groups are pouring energy into voting access this year. They are also closely watching an Arizona voting rights case the court will consider this session in which the state has restricted what Trump and Republicans call ballot harvesting, collecting early ballots from voters.

Another voting rights case the court may take up is a law passed by Floridas Republican-led legislature and enacted by its Republican governor that guts a 2018 ballot measure that allowed most former felons to vote. The law requires the former felons to pay outstanding fines and court fees, and critics have argued it amounts to an unconstitutional poll tax.

Religious liberty issues could get a hearing

The court this week heard oral arguments in Tanzin v. Tanvir, the case of three Muslim men who would not act as federal informants in their own community. The federal government, they allege, retaliated by placing them on no-fly lists. They are suing for damages under the Religious Freedom Restoration Act. Orthodox Jewish groups are paying attention to the case to see whether the beleaguered law they once hoped would ensure their freedoms will take another beating.

The potential for precedent-overturning cases is high

Perhaps the most prominent case that could be overturned if Barrett is confirmed is Roe. V. Wade, the 1973 decision that enshrined the right to abortion. Rabhan said there were at least 17 challenges to Roe v. Wade in lower courts that the Supreme Court could consider, and both she and the AJCs Stern said they were certain that abortion would come up this session, and in a way that could once and for all overturn Roe v. Wade.

Already, the court has indicated an interest in revisiting the issue of marriage equality, enshrined only in 2015 by Obergefell v. Hodges and another case that upheld the right to same-sex marriage.

The justices this week allowed to proceed a lawsuit two gay couples brought against Kim Davis, a Kentucky clerk who refused to grant them marriage licenses. Davis wanted the lawsuit quashed. However, two of the courts most conservative justices, Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito, suggested that the court could soon consider a more appropriate case that would overturn Obergefell v. Hodges.

This petition provides a stark reminder of the consequences of Oberfegell, Thomas wrote. By choosing to privilege a novel constitutional right over the religious liberty interests explicitly protected in the First Amendment, and by doing so undemocratically, the Court has created a problem that only it can fix.

Rabhan said she heard a warning in Thomass statement.

It was almost as if it was a dog whistle, to the Senate and certainly to Judge Barrett, that they too dont prioritize precedent, and its frightening to think about rights that we have being taken away and its as easy as filling one seat to make that happen, Rabhan said.

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What Jewish groups are watching for in this unusual Supreme Court session - The Jerusalem Post

Trump White House brokers the (etrog) deal of the century – Forward

Posted By on October 8, 2020

WASHINGTON (JTA) There was a hard deadline to meet and the job involved delicate international negotiations, but the Trump administrations top Middle East envoy got on the job.

Thanks to Avi Berkowitz, Sukkot was was saved for tens of thousands of New York area Jews.

Fox News reported Wednesday that Berkowitz led a successful effort to circumvent pandemic restrictions and bring to the United States 100,000 etrogs, or citrons, one of the four species traditionally waved together during the Sukkot holiday, which began last Friday evening.

We are extremely grateful to the Trump administration for immediately responding to our request for assistance after we learned that Esrog importers would not be able to enter Italy due to reciprocal COVID Travel restrictions, Fox quoted Rabbi David Niederman, the president of United Jewish Organizations of Williamsburg and North Brooklyn, as saying, using an alternative spelling for etrogs.

A senior administration official told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency that in August, Berkowitz got calls from New York rabbis asking for help. Mutual restrictions on travel were keeping kosher supervisors from entering Italy to supervise the export.

Berkowitz, then mired in helping to shape what would become the Abraham Accords, normalizing relations between Israel and the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain, took the time to contact the Italian embassy. The official told JTA that the talks culminated in allowing the supervisors to enter Italy, where they inspected the etrogs.

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Trump White House brokers the (etrog) deal of the century - Forward

Principal fired after Holocaust comments could be rehired this week – Palm Beach Post

Posted By on October 8, 2020

Andrew Marra|Palm Beach Post

Nearly a year after firing him, Palm Beach County School Board members are being asked to rehire a former principal who sparked a national controversy by refusing to saythe Holocaust was a historical fact.

Following an administrative judges rulingthat hewas improperly terminated,Schools Superintendent Donald Fennoy has recommended former Spanish River High School Principal William Latson be reinstated and given$152,000 in back pay.

Board members are scheduled to consider the recommendation Wednesday. If Latson's hiring is approved, Fennoy plans to place him in the district's assessment department as a "principal on assignment," according to a list of proposed district hires.

More: Judge: Reinstate Boca principal in Holocaust emails incident

Latson was fired on grounds of "ethical misconduct" and "failure to carry out job responsibilities" last October, nearly four monthsafter the revelation of emails in which he told a parent he can't say the Holocaust is a factual, historical event.

The publication of those comments sparked national outrage and led to calls for his termination from residents and several prominent political leaders.

The district made a tactical decision not to fire Latson for the comments but instead for his conduct after the comments become public, focusingon his failure to respond to supervisors' messages and a false statement he made about a school parents role in the controversy.

Latson, a veteran principal, appealed the termination in state administrative court. A judge sided with him in August, ruling that while Latsons actions merited punishment, they were not serious enough to establish just cause for termination.

These acts of poor judgment on Dr. Latsons part should result in a verbal or written reprimand, the lowest rungs on the ladder of progressive discipline, Administrative Law Judge Robert Cohen wrote.

More: Ex-principal in Holocaust furor defends his right not to say the genocide is a fact

The judge's ruling was only a recommended order,butschool board attorneys concluded that the board had little legal leeway to disregard or alter it.

School Board Chairman Frank Barbieri declined to comment. A spokeswoman for ADL Florida, an anti-hate group that called for Latson's firing last year, did not respond to a request for comment. Latson's attorney also did not respond to a message seeking comment.

A 26-year-veteran of the school district, Latson had served as Spanish River High's principal since 2011 with little public controversy.

But he found himself at the center of a political storm in July 2019, when his comments about the Holocaustwere revealed in a Palm Beach Post article.

In an email exchange with a school parent, Latson had written in April 2018 that students could opt out of Holocaust lessons because "not everyone believes the Holocaust happened" and that as an educator he had "the role to be politically neutral."

When the parent responded to insist the Holocaust was a historical fact, he responded that "I can't say the Holocaust is a factual, historical event because I am not in a position to do so as a school district employee."

More: I cant get on: How a chaotic reopening left thousands of students in the lurch

The comments prompted international controversy when they became public, coming at a time of increased concern about anti-Semitism in the U.S. and Europe.

Latson apologized and was quickly removed from his position at the school. But some political leaders, including U.S. Sen. Rick Scott, called for Schools Superintendent Donald Fennoy to end his employment.

When Latson,in a farewell message to his faculty, blamed the controversy on "false statements" by the parent, the calls to fire him were joined by the Anti-Defamation League, an anti-hate group; state Sen. Kevin Rader, D-Delray Beach; and state Rep. Tina Polsky, D-Boca Raton.

Under increasing pressure, Fennoy recommended Latson be terminated, and the school board approved his firing in a 5-2 vote.

More: PBC teachers don't have a legal right to work from home, judge rules

In his appeal, Latson argued that his offenses did not amount to "just cause" to terminate his contract, and that his firing was a ploy by the district to defuse the intense criticism that his comments generated.

In his ruling, Cohen agreed. The district's "progressive discipline" policies required Latson to be reprimanded first before termination could even be considered, he said.

"While that is understandable at some level, the punishment imposed on Dr. Latson was too severe in light of 26 years of service, including eight laudable years as principal at [Spanish River High]," he wrote.

amarra@pbpost.com

@AMarranara

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Principal fired after Holocaust comments could be rehired this week - Palm Beach Post

Conversations with Jewish Texts Offered by B’nai Shalom’s Culture and Learning Center this October – TAPinto.net

Posted By on October 7, 2020

If you are someone who wants to take part in intriguing conversations about how Jewish texts are relevant in our daily lives, then you should check out Torah talk classes being offered by the Culture and Learning Center at Bnai Shalom in West Orange, NJ. All classes are free (except as noted below) and are open to the community. People are welcome to come to any session that they can attend.

Our Torah talk programs offer a comfortable learning environment that is easy to join and welcoming to learners of all backgrounds, said Rabbi Robert Tobin, spiritual leader of Bnai Shalom.

Rabbi Tobin offers conducts Talmud Mondays classes weekly via Zoom. Participants read portions from the Talmud and are guided by the Rabbi to seek out their relevance to modern times. Classes start on Monday, October 19, from noon to 1 p.m.

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He also offers meaningful and mind-stretching Shabbat Mincha Study that delves into the prophets Prophets every Shabbat during the quiet time between the end of afternoon services (Minchah) and the beginning of evening services (Maariv) and Havdalah.

Torah Study with Janice Colmar-Michaelis begins on October 25 at 11 a.m. via Zoom. Her always interesting insights into Judaisms most sacred texts continues at the same time on November 8th and December 20th.

Rabbi Andrew Warmflash, Rabbi Emeritus of Hewlett East Rockaway Jewish Center and now a member of Bnai Shalom, will lead a class on the Book of Exodus that will explore the Jewish peoples journey from slavery to freedom. Class begins Tuesday, October 12 at 11 a.m. via Zoom.

The provocative and timely Jewish Theological Seminary (JTS) Community Learning Experience online course, The Ethical Life: Jewish Values in an Age of Choice will begin on October 22. Each of the 5five- sessions will be presented via Zoom. Facilitated by Rabbi Richard Fagan, this course will feature world-class scholars from the JTS faculty. The scholars for the opening class on The Sources of Jewish Ethics willEthics will be Rabbi Gordon Tucker, Rabbi Elliot Dorff, Dr. Eitan Fishbane and Dr. Michal Raucher.

For information about these classes and to get the Zoom link, call Leslie Gleaner at 973-731-0160 ext. 207 or email her at programs@bnaishalom.net. Registration is needed for the Ethical Life course. To learn more and register go to https://clc.bnaishalom.net/register.php. (there is a $25 fee for non-members). When you register, you will receive the Zoom link in response.

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Conversations with Jewish Texts Offered by B'nai Shalom's Culture and Learning Center this October - TAPinto.net

Welcome to the Future, Third Time Around | Lander College of Arts & Sciences – Touro College News

Posted By on October 7, 2020

Despite a raging pandemic, colleges and universities took advantage of mature technologies to transition online, preserving the safety of students and faculty while maintaining true to our educational goals.

Understandably, many participants in this bold enterprise lamented what was lost, even temporarily, myself included. The digital divide, Zoom fatigue, and the annoying experience of teaching and learning while masked were common complaints. But let there be no doubt: we are at the cusp of a bold new era in education, particularly tertiary education.

But weve been here before. Twice, at least.

The first time educators encountered this phenomenon was in the ancient world, when the technology of recording the spoken word became widespread. Clay tablets incised with wedge-shaped script, friable inked papyrus, and of course scrolls from animal skins preserved instruction for generations, the first global experiment in distance learning.

Socrates subjected the educational value of writing to withering criticism, saying that writingis very like painting. The creatures in a painting stand like living beings, but if one asks them a question, they preserve a solemn silence. And so it is with written words; you might think they spoke as if they had intelligence, but if you question them, wishing to know about their sayings, they always say only one and the same thing. Writing lacks synchronous interactivity with an instructor, and is therefore critically impoverished. That said, Socrates argument is undermined by the fact that we receive his words only because his student Plato (ahem) wrote them down.

And with synchronous Zoom classes, Socrates argument is rendered moot.

Related concerns were raised by the Sages regarding the commitment of the Oral Torah in textual form, and the Talmud was only rendered in its current form after strenuous debate.

So despite the objection of the early Greek philosophers, western civilization marched ahead with writing anyway, considering this technology an invaluable add-on to in-person instruction, not its replacement.

The next major challenge came some 2100 years later, with the advent of cheap printing technologies. Long accustomed to beautiful Arabic calligraphy, the Islamic world largely rejected the poor quality mass-produced equivalent, inadvertently missing an opportunity to participate actively in the scientific revolution that would give Christian Europe a distinct advantage entering the modern era. But not all Europeans were pleasedHieronimus Squarciafico, himself an employee of an early Venetian print shop, panned the new technology in 1477, writing already abundance of books makes men less studious; it destroys memory and enfeebles the mind by relieving it of too much work. Better, argued Squarciafico, to learn more deeply with expensive handwritten texts than read lots of cheap printed books.

But the printers won that debate. Five centuries later, it is increasingly rare for instructors to assign bound physical books, let alone manuscripts on vellum or parchment. No one will doubt the diminished aesthetic value of a mass-produced book when compared to a hand-written work, painstakingly completed by a human scribe. The value of increased access, however, widely overwhelmed the sacrifice of artistic beauty of individually produced written works. And just as Socrates objection to writing was recorded in text, so too was Squarciaficos lament preserved in a printed book.

And with synchronous Zoom classes, the increasing range of personal customizationsvirtual backgrounds, gallery vs. speaker views, filters and so onsuggest that even the aesthetic features of remote learning may be overcome to meet individual tastes.

Historians are notoriously unreliable when speaking about the futurewe tend to do our jobs best when we are looking backwards, not forwards. But that rear-view perspective suggests that if 2020 is anything like 400 BCE, or like 1500 CE, the Zoom revolution in higher education will certainly not eliminate live, in-person education: we will take these new digital tools to expand, not diminish, our pedagogic power.

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Welcome to the Future, Third Time Around | Lander College of Arts & Sciences - Touro College News

NYC schools in COVID-19 hot spots will close starting Tuesday: Gov. Cuomo – New York Post

Posted By on October 7, 2020

Schools in Brooklyn and Queens neighborhoods experiencing COVID-19 outbreaks will again be closed for in-person classes starting Tuesday though businesses will remain open for now, Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced Monday.

The governor additionally announced that the state was rolling into the city to take the reins on enforcement using city personnel for coronavirus infractions in those areas, and put religious institutions on notice about large gatherings in houses of worship.

Cuomo dropped the bomb during a Midtown Manhattan press briefing one day after Mayor Bill de Blasio sought his blessing to shut down nine ZIP codes in the boroughs wholesale, closing not just schools but non-essential businesses and dining at restaurants.

The governor, however, said only schools would be closing for now.

These clusters have to be attacked, he said. New York City has clusters.

I would not send my child to a school in a hot-spot cluster, Cuomo continued with respect to the school closures. I am not going to recommend or allow any New York City family to send their child to a school that I wouldnt send my child.

Both public and private schools within nine ZIP codes experiencing outbreaks will be closed to in-person classes starting Tuesday. The governor did not give a reopening date.

Cuomo said that he made the decision following a good, collaborative conference call with de Blasio, city Comptroller Scott Stringer, City Council President Corey Johnson and Michael Mulgrew, president of the powerful United Federation of Teachers union.

Cuomo partially approved de Blasios plan less than a week after rapping the city for not doing enough to tamp down on the burgeoning outbreaks, a point he again stressed Monday without specifically naming the target of his remarks.

Enforcement is kind. You know why? Because enforcement saves lives, Cuomo said. Any rule is only as good as the enforcement.

Too many local governments are not doing enforcement, he continued. Warnings are not enforcement.

He announced that a joint task force between the state Department of Health and State Police would soon roll into the hot spots to take the lead on enforcement, staffed by local authorities.

Local governments will need to assign people to that task force who are supervised by that task force, deputized by that task force to give out state summonses, Cuomo said.

To illustrate how targeted enforcement could work, Cuomo offered the example of a church required to restrict its capacity to 50 percent.

When 50 percent enter the church, [theres] a person there who says to the pastor, You agreed to follow the rules, thats 50 percent. Thats it or we close it down, he said. It does not work without enforcement.

In the five boroughs, the sheriffs department had been taking the lead, augmented by the NYPD, city Department of Health and other municipal agencies.

But Cuomo derided City Hall for recently touting just 26 violations and 883 warnings issued among 2,000 inspections in the hot spots as a success story

Cuomo also noted that de Blasios plan left untouched religious institutions, even though many of the areas experiencing flare-ups are home to sizable Orthodox Jewish populations, with which the citys outreach efforts have struggled to connect.

Cuomo said he would meet Tuesday with leaders of the community both from the city and in Rockland and Orange counties, which also seeing outbreaks.

He said that he would again attempt to get them to see the light on abiding by pandemic precautions, but was prepared to shutter synagogues if ignored.

Were not going to make the same mistake twice, he said.

But some local leaders did not see Mondays announcement as an olive branch.

Closing down our schools is the most devastating thing you can do to our community, said Rabbi Bernard Freilich, a longtime community leader in Borough Park.

We tried this in March and April and it did not work. With Jewish studies in particular, it has to be done as a group, in person. Children cannot learn the Talmud alone.

Parents also said they were blindsided by the school closures.

It makes me sick to my stomach, because its a hardship on the parents, said Robyn Thompson, a mom to two kids, 11 and 8, at St. Edmunds Elementary School in Homecrest, Brooklyn. Theres no way a third-grader, a second-grader, a first-grader can do online school by his or herself. You have to sit there all day long, and Im not a teacher. It means I also cant work.

De Blasio had also requested that non-essential businesses within the affected ZIP codes be shuttered by state order, a step Cuomo stopped short of taking.

The governor explained Monday that he didnt feel ZIP codes were sufficient guidelines for outlining outbreaks, as they might punish stretches abiding by the rules while missing trouble spots just outside the ZIP code limits.

He said that closures of non-essential businesses are still in play, once a more surgical method of identifying problem areas is found.

The nine ZIP codes targeted for their 3-percent coronavirus positivity rate over the past seven days are:

Additional reporting by Sam Raskin and Reuven Fenton

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NYC schools in COVID-19 hot spots will close starting Tuesday: Gov. Cuomo - New York Post

Jewish Community Mourns the Passing of Rabbi RBO Bat-Or – Jewish Journal

Posted By on October 7, 2020

Local Los Angeles Rabbi RBO Bat-Or, passed away on Oct. 1 after a five-year battle with cancer.

The Journal spoke with RBO just over a year ago and you can read about per life and work in that interview here.

JQ International issued the following statement shortly after RBOs passing:

Condolences: May Per Memory Be A Blessing

Rabbi RBO Bat-Or, a beloved parent, grandparent, friend, colleague, educator, LGBTQ+ activist, therapist and founder and director emeritus of the JQ Helpline & Inclusion Services, passed away on Thursday, Oct. 1 after a brave five-year battle with cancer.

Rabbi RBO leaves a legacy any of us would be lucky to achieve one marked by a deep drive to make the world a more just and equitable place. RBO will be remembered for fierce advocacy on behalf of LGBTQ+ people and unparalleled gentleness and kindness. A devoted educator and a rabbi ordained by the Ziegler School of Rabbinics, RBO spearheaded the launch of the JQ Helpline in 2014, which continues to be a literal life saver for thousands of community members in need.

Over the course of per life, Rabbi RBO helped transform countless communities through LGBTQ+ inclusion education. (As a non-binary gender fluid human, Rabbi RBO used the gender pronouns per and pers.) Last year, the Jewish Journal did a feature story entitled RBO The Rabbi who Eschews Conventional Gender Pronouns.

The Talmud teaches that if you save a single life, it is as if you have saved the entire world. By that measure, Rabbi RBO saved our world over and over and over again. We grieve for a true luminary of our time, a role model and friend.

Rabbi RBO is survived by son Michael, daughter-in-law Jennifer and grandchildren Sam, Owen, and Ava. Memorial arrangements are pending and we will post plans on our website once they are finalized. Messages to Rabbi RBOs family can be sent to [emailprotected].

May per memory be a blessing.

RBO will be buried in Connecticut on Oct. 8. Zoom memorial and shivah arrangements will be held after the Simchat Torah holiday, which ends on the evening of Oct. 11

JQ is here for you at this moment of grief and always. If you need support, please reach out to our Helpline at 855-JQI-HLPS or [emailprotected].

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Jewish Community Mourns the Passing of Rabbi RBO Bat-Or - Jewish Journal

How a Palestinian refugee is enjoying new freedoms as a Spaniard after unearthing Jewish heritage – The National

Posted By on October 7, 2020

She is a student in Britain born in Dubai to a Palestinian father and a Lebanese mother. But it is her secret Jewish heritage that has made her eligible for a Spanish passport and opened up a world of possibilities.

Dubai resident Heba Nabil Iskandarani, 26, was classed as stateless and had a Lebanese travel document that defined her as a Palestinian refugee, but after searching familys ancestral tree a new branch has emerged.

Her family are Muslims but further back in her lineage she found Jewish heritage that opened doors to a new Spanish passport.

She told The National how that new passport has changed her life for example, she can now visit Jaffa, near Tel Aviv, where her grandfather was born.

Words cannot describe what it means to have a Spanish passport, she said. Honestly, I am beyond blessed today for finally being a citizen and now have basic human rights to be accepted in society as an equal individual, rather than always being oppressed or looked down upon for being less.

I was always without an identity and now I have one. I can proudly call myself Spanish.

In 2015, Spain introduced a law that gave descendants of Sephardic Jews, expelled from Spain in 1492, the chance to apply for citizenship.

She had found that many Iskandaranis are part of a sizeable Jewish population, and she found an identity document for her grandfathers mother in the name of Djerbi a common name among Sephardic Jews from the Tunisian island of Djerba.

Ms Iskandarani, who studied at Birmingham City University, in England, also underwent a DNA test which showed she had both North African and Iberian ancestry.

The Spanish government created a law in 2015 to fix their wrongdoing of 1492. During the the monarchy of Queen Isabel of Castile she signed a bill to exile and prosecute all Jewish people from the lands of Spain if they did not convert to Catholicism, Ms Iskandarani said.

The familys forgotten history began unfolding with online searches of Sephardic names and the help of a Spanish lawyer.

I began asking my family in Beirut and building up a family tree and found documents that support my claim, and then I hired a lawyer who hired a researcher who specialises in Sephardic ancestry, and his strong knowledge of the surnames being of Spanish Jewish origins, so he helped me search, she said.

He drafted a 167-page document proving my ancestry back to people who lived in Spain in 1492. In order to receive Spanish citizenship, we applied for a certificate to validate my Jewish origin from a Jewish federation in Spain that analyses your documents and approves them.

With her familys complicated past now becoming clearer, Ms Iskandarani has many more choices.

I can do anything I want, she said. I can work wherever I want. I had so many obstacles with my refugee document, though Ive lived a good life in Dubai and am forever grateful to the UAE, the only country that treated me like an equal for giving me a home since, the day I was born here, but there was something missing in me, which was an identity.

I have been refused job positions. Its the first time I feel like I am free, and no longer restricted because of something that was forced upon me. I was the collateral damage. And no one cared, but now I have the right to choose, to travel and not face issues while entering other countries, she said.

The extended family history came as a surprise to some relatives but others also remembered having great-uncles with traditionally Jewish names such as Jacob and Ruben.

Updated: October 5, 2020 10:43 PM

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How a Palestinian refugee is enjoying new freedoms as a Spaniard after unearthing Jewish heritage - The National

China’s War on Uighur Culture – The Atlantic

Posted By on October 7, 2020

How do you protect a culture that is being wiped out?

For Uighurs, this is more than just a hypothetical. Repressive measures against the ethnic minority have progressively worsened: The Chinese government has corralled more than 1 million of them into internment camps, where they have been subjected to political indoctrination, forced sterilization, and torture.

The targeting of the Uighurs isnt limited to the camps. Since 2016, dozens of graveyards and religious sites have been destroyed. The Uighur language has been banned in Xinjiang schools in favor of Mandarin Chinese. Practicing Islam, the predominant Uighur faith, has been discouraged as a sign of extremism.

Beijing frames these moves as its way of rooting out terrorism, separatism, and religious extremism. But the aim of Chinas actions in Xinjiang is clear: to homogenize Uighurs into the countrys Han Chinese majority, even if that means erasing their cultural and religious identity for good. What is taking place is a cultural genocide.

The repercussions bear heavily even on Uighurs living outside the country. Their burden is more than just raising awareness about what is taking place in their homelanda task many have taken up at great cost to themselves and their families. Its also about preserving and promoting their identity in countries where few people might know who the Uighurs are, let alone what the world stands to lose should their language, food, art, and traditions be eradicated.

Read: The panopticon is already here

In an effort to understand what this kind of cultural preservation looks like in practice, I spoke with seven Uighurs residing in Britain, France, Turkey, and the United States. As chefs, poets, singers, filmmakers, language teachers, and musicians, each of them is contributing to this work in different ways. All of them are passionate about ensuring that their heritage will be passed on to future generations. None of them is under any illusions about whats at stake if they fail.

Every Uighur now is under very big psychological pressure, Omer Kanat, the director of the Uyghur Human Rights Project, a Washington, D.C.based nonprofit, told me. We cannot sleep at night.

By April 2017, few people outside of Central Asia might have known much about the Uighurs. Though the ethnic group totals more than 11 million people in Xinjiang, about 1 million live outside China, mostly in Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, and Turkey, with much smaller numbers in the United States and Europe. Reports of their persecution by the Chinese state wouldnt reach wider international audiences until later that year.

It was against this backdrop that Mukaddes Yadikar, a Uighur woman from Ili in the northwest of Xinjiang, near Chinas border with Kazakhstan, decided to open Etles, one of Londons first Uighur restaurants. Nestled on a busy North London high street brimming with corner stores, betting shops, and cafs, Etless bright-blue exterior stands in marked contrast to much of its surroundingsa differentiation befitting its distinctive offerings. Owing to the Uighur homelands place along the ancient Silk Road trade route, Uighur cuisine takes its influences from across Central Asia, incorporating dishes as seemingly disparate as hand-pulled noodles and crispy naan. Even diners accustomed to the culinary diversity of the British capital might not expect to find dumplings, samosas, and shish kebabs on a single menu. At Etles, however, these dishes are only a representative sample of what makes Uighur cooking unique.

Our food is very rich, very different, Yadikar told me one Sunday afternoon over tea. Its absence from Britains food scene is what she said first inspired her to open the restaurant with her husband, Ablikim Rahman. At the time of its opening, Etles catered to a predominantly Chinese clientelea trend Yadikar chalked up to Britons lack of familiarity with Uighur cuisine. In the years since, that has changed. Now most of our customers are English, Yadikar said, adding that their menu has appealed to many within the British Muslim community, for whom halal Chinese food can often be difficult to find. Today, the couple runs two North London restaurants (the second opened in December, just months before the pandemic forced both locations to close).

Etles feels like a living homage to Uighur culture. Etles silks, the traditional Uighur cloth from which the restaurant gets its name, are laid across every table. A tapestry of the artist Ghazi Ehmets Uyghur Muqam, one of the most recognizable paintings in Xinjiang, is prominently featured at the center of the dining room. Every wall is adorned with models of traditional instruments, embroidered caps, and decorative plates.

When I asked Yadikar and Rahman about the role they see themselves playing in protecting Uighur culture, they paused for several seconds. Its not a question many people are asked to consider. The silence was filled by their three young children who, sitting one table over, were clamoring over schoolwork. In a way, they answered the question for their parents.

Were just [trying to] pass our culture, identity, and religion to the next generation, Rahman said, nodding to the kids. Though the children speak Uighur fluently at home, only two of them have been to Xinjiang, and are too young to remember it.

So Yadikar and Rahman keep the spirit of their homeland alive at Etles. From the restaurant, we can introduce our people, our culture, and our traditions, Yadikar said. We cant go [to Ili]; we cant see our people. They cant leave. So we have to introduce our people then; we have to protect.

Few understand the exhausting task of piecing a culture back together like Devin Naar. For nearly two decades, the historian and Sephardic-studies professor at the University of Washington has sought to understand and recuperate the lost world of Sephardic Jewry, an effort that began when he was in college. His interest in the topic stems from his own family history, a puzzle he says spans from the Greek port city of Salonica (now known as Thessaloniki), where one of the worlds largest Sephardic Jewish communities once lived, to the substantial Sephardic population in Seattle, where he currently resides.

Toward the end of the 15th century, the Iberian Peninsula was home to one of the largest Jewish communities in the world. That is, until 1492, when Spain issued its Jewish population an ultimatum: to convert, leave, or be killed. As many as hundreds of thousands of expelled Sephardic Jews (deriving from the Hebrew word for Spain, Sepharad) sought exile in places such as Portugal (which not long after delivered a similarly stark demand), Italy, and the Netherlands. Others, like Naars ancestors, made their way to the Ottoman empire.

Read: Spains attempt to atone for a 500-year-old sin

They didnt speak either Greek or Turkish at home, but they spoke a language that they called Spanish, Naar told me of his ancestors in Salonica. In fact, like other Sephardim, they spoke a centuries-old variant of Spanish known as Ladino, which uses Hebrew script. Growing up in the U.S., Naar said he found very little information about Sephardic history and culture, and some books offered barely more than footnotes about the Jews of the late Ottoman empirean erasure he attributed in part to assimilation and the Holocaust, during which tens of thousands of Sephardic Jews from Salonica perished. We were just invisible, Naar said. We literally did not exist in the narrative.

Naar wasnt completely without resources, though. One of his great uncles had a stack of letters dating as far back as 1935, all written in Ladino, a language Naar would ultimately learn in order to decode them. The correspondence revealed painful parts of his family history, including details about the family members who sought, and failed, to secure visas to the U.S. at the height of World War II, and those who were put on trains to Auschwitz. When I began to open up that story I was like, I have to do something, he said. I have to enter more deeply into this world.

His quest took him as far afield as Salonica, Jerusalem, Moscow, and New York City, culminating in a book about the history of Salonicas Sephardic Jews. But the effort to revive Sephardic culture is far from complete. Today, there are thought to be anywhere from 60,000 to 400,000 Ladino speakers worldwide. Few have spoken the language from birth, and its safely assumed that none of them speak it exclusively. Their dwindling numbers mean that few, if any, new works are being published in Ladino. Even the worlds last Ladino-language newspaper, El Amaneser, or The Dawn, is written using Latin script. Though there have been some recent efforts to preserve the language, including Spains 2018 decision to recognize Ladino as a Spanish language and to establish a new Ladino academy in Israel, it is still widely considered to be at risk of extinction.

For Sephardic Jews, the loss of their language means more than just the disappearance of their ancestors native tongue. It means being unable to access a wealth of Ladino literature, hundreds of thousands of pages of which Naar has worked with the University of Washington to digitize as part of the worlds first virtual Ladino library. It also means missing out on troves of stories, perspectives, and ways of thinking. Without the language as an organizing feature, Naar said, there is really a lot that is lost.

The situation facing Sephardic Jews is undoubtedly different from that facing the Uighurs today. Whereas the Sephardim confronted expulsion more than 500 years ago, the suppression of the Uighurs is happening in real time. Although the former had to maintain their traditions within their families, in many cases secretly, the latter have been able to utilize modern tools such as the internet to keep their culture alive. Still, some lessons can be gleaned from their shared challenges.

The first has to do with the issue of homeland, and how a community can go about preserving a culture outside of one. For Sephardim, this issue is ever-present. Since their expulsion from the Iberian Peninsula, they have carried with them a distinctive diasporic identity. And despite Spains and Portugals offers to extend citizenship to Sephardic Jews who were forced out of both countries hundreds of years earlier, this hasnt really changed. There is no country in the world that speaks on behalf of Sephardic Jews as Sephardic Jews, Naar said. Spain speaks on behalf of them as part of the Spanish empire Israel speaks on behalf of Jews because of their Jewishness. But there is no Sephardistan. That does not exist.

Uighurs, by contrast, do have a homeland, albeit a rarely autonomous one. (Though there was a short-lived Republic of East Turkestan, as some Uighurs prefer to call Xinjiang, the region has been under Chinese control since 1949.) But their suppression by the Chinese state has put the future of Uighur culture in their native land in doubt, prompting many Uighurs with means to leave. Such was the case for Rahima Mahmut, a London-based Uighur singer and activist from the northern town of Ghulja. Born to a family of musicians, Mahmut began singing from a very young age. According to my mother, I could sing when I started speaking, she told me over the phone, laughing. Her four brothers provided the music, playing the drums, the violin, and traditional Uighur instruments such as the dutar and the tmbur. Naturally, it became a part of me.

Mahmuts decision to leave Ghulja came decades before Beijings internment of Uighurs. During a visit home to see her family in 1997, Mahmut witnessed a violent crackdown on peaceful protesters calling for an end to religious and ethnic discrimination. Dozens were killed and thousands were arrested. Among those detained, Mahmut said, was her brother-in-law, who received a 12-year prison sentence. I could see that the situation was getting really, really bad, she said.

Three years later, she traveled to Britain for a masters degree and eventually moved to London, where she met other Uighurs and musicians with whom she would form the London Uyghur Ensemble, which has toured Britain, Europe, the U.S., and Canada.

When I asked Mahmut whether she felt she could more freely enjoy her culture outside the Uighur homeland, she said she could never be truly free while speaking out against abuses by the Chinese government: Of her immediate family, she is the only one who managed to leave Xinjiang, along with her then-husband and son. The last time she spoke with her remaining family was in 2017. She has avoided contacting them for fears of compromising their safety.

Read: Uighurs cant escape Chinese repression, even in Europe

Hundreds of prominent Uighur cultural figures including singers, musicians, novelists, scholars, and academics have been detained, imprisoned, or have disappeared since 2017, according to the Uyghur Human Rights Project. Tahir Hamut Izgil, a Uighur poet and film director based in Washington, D.C., told me via an interpreter that this suppression of the Uighur cultural sphere dates back to at least 2012, when the Chinese government began a reexamination of Uighur-language publications, films, and music, many of which were blacklisted. Uighur music and dance troupes were obligated to perform entirely in Chinese on topics like opposing separatism, loving the motherland, loving the party, unity of the peoples, Izgil said.

His work often touches on themes such as homeland, religion, and exiletopics that would be almost impossible to write about in Xinjiang today. Not until 2017, just before Izgil planned to leave for the U.S., did he decide to formally publish a collection of his poems. I knew that if I left for America, I might never return to my homeland, he said. I wanted to ensure that at least one volume of my work was distributed among my people so that they would have it. In the end, he said, he was able to distribute 1,000 copies; 2,000 more were confiscated.

Izgil nevertheless continues to publish his poems in Uighur online. As a father of three, he said he sees it as his responsibility to ensure that his children are able to speak Uighur. Others have taken a more formal approach to preserving it. The Turkic language, like other minority languages, is banned from being taught in schools in China, though this hasnt stopped Uighurs in the diaspora from setting up their own language schools abroad, including in France, the U.S., and Turkey. Language is the key to preserve the nation, Muyesser Abdulehed Hendan, a Uighur-language teacher based in Istanbul, told me in an email. She runs an informal language school for children ages 5 to 12, and though the pandemic forced her to pivot to online-only instruction, she said it also enabled her to reach more pupils. To date, Hendan said that she, alongside Uighur teachers as far afield as Norway, Sweden, Australia, and France, is teaching nearly 150 students worldwide. If a language and culture are inherited by an enough number of children, Hendan said, it wont be in danger.

Language alone may not guarantee the cultures continued survival, though. If [future generations] are unable to visit their homeland, if they are unable to see their native soil, if they are unable to experience the culture in that place, it will be much more difficult for them, Izgil said. If in the next several generations Uighur culture is destroyed in its homeland, it will be very difficult for Uighurs in the diaspora to preserve it. Even in the diaspora, it may cease to exist.

Safeguarding a culture requires more than simply maintaining a historical record of its existence. Cultures, after all, cant be placed behind glass like museum artifacts; much like the people who inhabit them, cultures are meant to grow, adapt, and evolve. The Ladino language offers a prime example of this: The medieval variant of Spanish is not identical to the modern Ladino used today. As the language traveled, it absorbed like a sponge the linguistic and cultural elements of its surrounding environment in the Ottoman empire, Naar said, noting that the language has since incorporated elements of Arabic, Greek, Italian, French, and English.

For Mukaddas Mijit, a filmmaker, ethnomusicologist, and expert on Uighur dance and music from rmqi, the capital of Xinjiang, the tension between preserving elements of culture as they are and allowing them to grow and evolve is at the heart of the challenge facing Uighurs in the diaspora. When she first left Xinjiang in 2003 to study at Paris Nanterre University, no one really knew where I was from or who I was, who were the Uighurs, she told me. Culture, she thought, could play a role in raising awareness, so she began organizing Uighur cultural events known as meshrep. This social, and traditionally male, gathering brings people together to enjoy a meal, poetry, music, and dance. A traditional meshrep has a structured hierarchy, including a master of ceremony, and serves as a forum for the community to mediate conflicts and impart important customs and traditions. (Though meshrep is included on UNESCOs list of intangible cultural heritage, Chinese authorities have banned illicit or unhealthy versions of the practice.)

Yet not everyone in the Uighur diaspora has been supportive of Mijits efforts, she told me. Some criticized the events for not being entirely authentic, while others questioned why the community should be focused on culture at all, as though to say, How can we focus on frivolous matters while our people are being repressed? This concern has been raised beyond France. Many [Uighurs] have been very reluctant to hold public events or celebratory eventsthe kind of spaces in which this culture continues to live and breathebecause it feels so wrong to them when their relatives and friends are suffering back home, Elise Anderson, an expert on the Uighur language and Uighur music and a senior program officer at the Uyghur Human Rights Project, told me. A lot of people feel this sort of strange, sometimes contradictory set of feelings about wanting to celebrate, but wondering, Is it appropriate?

An argument could be made that these things shouldnt be mutually exclusive. Although raising awareness about what is happening to Uighurs in China is important, their persecution doesnt alone tell the full story of who the Uighurs are, nor why people should care. By representing their culture beyond the prism of its repression, Uighurs in the diaspora are giving the world a better understanding of not only who they are, but what it stands to lose should the culture be allowed to disappear.

For them to be successful, though, Mijit argues that the diaspora must be willing to move beyond simply aiming to be authentic. The whole point of having a different culture is to communicate it with others and share it, she said. People are so stressed about preserving that they forget that this thing that they want to preserve is something alive. If we really want to keep it in a box, that means we will kill it ourselves.

This admission points to a broader truth about cultural preservation: Even when cultures arent facing active persecution, as is the case for the Uighurs, they are still prone to transform as a result of more natural causes, such as migration, assimilation, or integration. Joshua Freeman, a historian of China and Inner Asia at Princeton and a translator of Uighur poetry into English who spent seven years living in rmqi, told me that he observed this kind of cultural hybridity occur in real time. There were many Uighurs, especially in the younger generation, who spoke perfect Chinese and were in many ways able to navigate those societies in both languages, he said, noting that if the Chinese states project was to integrate Uighurs as a community into China, there were many Uighurs in the younger generation who could have played a part in that and were beginning to.

By giving up on that possibility and opting instead for assimilation by force, China has threatened Uighur culture and identity. But it has also, paradoxically, spurred its greatest growth outside the Uighur homeland. Today, Uighurs in the diaspora are slowly rebuilding some of what has been lost in Xinjiang: Uighur restaurants, bookstores, and language schools are being opened. Uighur poems, books, and magazines are being published. Traditional Uighur music and dance are being introduced to the wider world.

This relatively small number of writers and poets and artists and filmmakers and musicians in the diaspora are creating an incredible amount of new and important work, said Freeman. Thanks to them, Uighur culture isnt just surviving abroadits flourishing.

None of this is to say that Uighur culture is no longer under threat. If Uighurs are unable to study their native language, practice their faith, or freely celebrate their identity in their homeland, their culture will continue to be hollowed outperhaps beyond repair. Still, many of the people I spoke with expressed optimism that, so long as the diaspora continues to promote and develop its culture, not all will be lost.

The Chinese states project of erasing Uighur identity and culture will not be successful, Freeman said. Even in the diaspora, Uighur culture is vibrant. It has a lot to give to the world.

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China's War on Uighur Culture - The Atlantic


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