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Humans Are All More Closely Related Than We Commonly Think – Scientific American

Posted By on October 7, 2020

The late esteemed English actor Christopher Lee traced his ancestry directly to Charlemagne. In 2010 Lee released a symphonic metal album paying homage to the first Holy Roman emperorbut his enthusiasm may have been a tad excessive. After all, says geneticist Adam Rutherford, literally everyone with European ancestry is directly descended from Charlemagne.

The family tree of humanity is much more interconnected than we tend to think. Were culturally bound and psychologically conditioned to not think about ancestry in very broad terms, Rutherford says. Genealogists can only focus on one branch of a family tree at a time, making it easy to forget how many forebears each of us has.

Imagine counting all your ancestors as you trace your family tree back in time. In the nth generation before the present, your family tree has 2n slots: two for parents, four for grandparents, eight for great-grandparents, and so on. The number of slots grows exponentially. By the 33rd generationabout 800 to 1,000 years agoyou have more than eight billion of them. That is more than the number of people alive today, and it is certainly a much larger figure than the world population a millennium ago.

This seeming paradox has a simple resolution: Branches of your family tree dont consistently diverge, Rutherford says. Instead they begin to loop back into each other. As a result, many of your ancestors occupy multiple slots in your family tree. For example, your great-great-great-great-great-grandmother might have also been your great-great-great-great-aunt, he explains.

The consequence of humanity being incredibly inbred is that we are all related much more closely than our intuition suggests, Rutherford says. Take, for instance, the last person from whom everyone on the planet today is descended. In 2004 mathematical modeling and computer simulations by a group of statisticians led by Douglas Rohde, then at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, indicated that our most recent common ancestor probably lived no earlier than 1400 B.C. and possibly as recently as A.D. 55. In the time of Egypts Queen Nefertiti, someone from whom we are all descended was likely alive somewhere in the world.

Go back a bit further, and you reach a date when our family trees share not just one ancestor in common but every ancestor in common. At this date, called the genetic isopoint, the family trees of any two people on the earth now, no matter how distantly related they seem, trace back to the same set of individuals. If you were alive at the genetic isopoint, then you are the ancestor of either everyone alive today or no one alive today, Rutherford says. Humans left Africa and began dispersing throughout the world at least 120,000 years ago, but the genetic isopoint occurred much more recentlysomewhere between 5300 and 2200 B.C., according to Rohdes calculations.

At first glance, these dates may seem much too recent to account for long-isolated Indigenous communities in South America and elsewhere. But genetic information spreads rapidly through generational time, Rutherford explains. Beginning in 1492, you begin to see the European genes flowing in every direction until our estimates are that there are no people in South America today who dont have European ancestry.

In fact, even more recent than the global genetic isopoint is the one for people with recent European ancestry. Researchers using genomic data place the latter date around A.D. 1000. So Christopher Lees royal lineage is unexceptional: because Charlemagne lived before the isopoint and has living descendants, everyone with European ancestry is directly descended from him. In a similar vein, nearly everyone with Jewish ancestry, whether Ashkenazic or Sephardic, has ancestors who were expelled from Spain beginning in 1492. Its a very nice example of a small world but looking to the past, says Susanna Manrubia, a theoretical evolutionary biologist at the Spanish National Center for Biotechnology.

Not everyone of European ancestry carries genes passed down by Charlemagne, however. Nor does every Jew carry genes from their Sephardic ancestors expelled from Spain. People are more closely related genealogically than genetically for a simple mathematical reason: a given gene is passed down to a child by only one parent, not both. In a simple statistical model, Manrubia and her colleagues showed that the average number of generations separating two random present-day individuals from a common genealogical ancestor depends on the logarithm of the relevant populations size. For large populations, this number is much smaller than the population size itself because the number of possible genealogical connections between individuals doubles with each preceding generation. By contrast, the average number of generations separating two random present-day individuals from a common genetic ancestor is linearly proportional to the population size because each gene can be traced through only one line of a persons family tree. Although Manrubias model unrealistically assumed the population size did not change with time, the results still apply in the real world, she says.

Because of the random reshuffling of genes in each successive generation, some of your ancestors contribute disproportionately to your genome, while others contribute nothing at all. According to calculations by geneticist Graham Coop of the University of California, Davis, you carry genes from fewer than half of your forebears from 11 generations back. Still, all the genes present in todays human population can be traced to the people alive at the genetic isopoint. If you are interested in what your ancestors have contributed to the present time, you have to look at the population of all the people that coexist with you, Manrubia says. All of them carry the genes of your ancestors because we share the [same] ancestors.

And because the genetic isopoint occurred so recently, Rutherford says, in relation to race, it absolutely, categorically demolishes the idea of lineage purity. No person has forebears from just one ethnic background or region of the world. And your genealogical connections to the entire globe mean that not too long ago your ancestors were involved in every event in world history.

So the next time you hear someone claim to be descended from royalty, take heart: you are, too. You are very special, and you are very generic, in a sense, Manrubia says.

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Humans Are All More Closely Related Than We Commonly Think - Scientific American

Why the High Holidays Were Great – jewishboston.com

Posted By on October 7, 2020

It wasnt surprising to hearso much despair leading up to the High Holidaysgiven the state of the world. And getting the devastating news of the great RBG just as we were eating Rosh Hashanah dinner by the fireonly made it hurt that much more.

Never miss the best stories and events! Get JewishBoston This Week.

So,I almost feel guilty admitting that I had the most meaningful and fulfilling High Holiday season of my adult life. Why?

Virtual and distanced holiday celebrations pushed us to shift and rethink everything about how we celebrate, including our mindsets and intention. Here are the top eight differences that made the High Holidays great for me:

1. It forced the focus from food to family. We had my beloved kreplach and brisket, but on paper plates outside, and it was great. It was more of a barbecue vibe than a fine china vibe, but so much more relaxed than a typical year, and we could just talk rather than incessantly cleaning up dishes.

2. I usually cant sit still and have never had real patience for traditional services. But the ability to log in to almost any kind of service anywhere at any time meant I could watch Rosh Hashanah services while out for a walk with the sun shining over my head, Yom Kippur services outside my car while my daughter took a nap in her car seat and the first Yizkor service for my father-in-law surrounded by my nieces and nephews on their patio. Each of these unexpectedly moving experiences reminded me of a basic truth of Judaism: You dont need to be in a sacred space to have a holy experience.

3. I didnt just observe, I was entertained! I watched musical performances and author AJ Jacobs through the Hillel Higher Holidays services along with thousands of students and alumni around the country. I experienced a Torah reading in a field in Jerusalem, and endless holiday musical mashups by synagogues around the country.

4. I got to spend the holiday with people I would never otherwise have been able to. For years I have wanted to go to my friend/composer Matti Kovlers alternative operatic Kol Nidre in Brooklyn, and this year I got to join him.

5. Tashlikh. A tradition that could have been created for COVID-19, Tashlikh really had its moment this year, and for good reason. We did a JArts staff Tashlikh downtown by The Shape of Play installation, I took my kids to the pond outside our adorable Airbnb barn and I also tossed away a few sins while walking around Jamaica Pond. And I had some real moments of reflection.

6. Baked goods. But really, the tradition and connection that comes with that sugar! My mother-in-law makes the be-all-end-all of High Holiday cookieschaskies and honey cookies (our special and unique family tradition). Because we couldnt get to Pittsburgh like we would normally, she sent three dozen and even made me a video for us on how to make them!

7. The Rosh Hashanah seder! Its not a new thing, but its new to most of us Ashkenazi folkwho havebeen missing out on this for years, and it was nice to bring a fun new tradition into the mix. If you didnt catch this one, its a Sephardic tradition in which we share, eat and discuss the significance behind an array of symbols (pomegranates, dates, black-eyed peas, apples and honey).These symbols all remind us of the relevance of the holiday inourlives andgive some good perspective.

8. This time forced me to think about what is meaningful. I had more moments of genuine awe at the worldbecause I was out in itmore moments of joy with my kids because we were at the playground, andmore meaningful connection with family because we werent all standing over the stove.

So,while Ilook forward to when we can also get together to celebrate, Idont ever want to go back from what I learned this year.

Shanahtovah! Happy 5781!

This post has been contributed by a third party. The opinions, facts and any media content are presented solely by the author, and JewishBoston assumes no responsibility for them. Want to add your voice to the conversation? Publish your own post here.MORE

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Introducing Fahrenheit 411, your guide to the disinformation plaguing the 2020 campaign – Forward

Posted By on October 7, 2020

Welcome to FAHRENHEIT 411, a special newsletter on disinformation and conspiracy theories ahead of the 2020 presidential election. It is produced in partnership with the Institute for Strategic Dialogue, a London-based think tank that studies extremism, and written by Molly Boigon, an investigative reporter at The Forward.

A Wikipedia articleabout genetic studies on Jews was among the most shared links in antisemitic online spaces at the end of September, used to spread disinformation about Jews role in the slave trade, Islamophobic tropes and other conspiracy theories, according to ISD.

ISD researchers found that at the end of last month, users in hateful corners of Twitter, Facebook, Reddit and YouTube posted more than 660 times about Jews, and that some users shared the Wikipedia article and pointed to a section that suggests Jewish men and Arab men have shared paternal ancestors.

In one instance, a user reposted the article twice on Twitter on September 24 after first using it to argue that the role of Europeans in perpetuating the slave trade was overstated, since some Jews enslaved Black Americans and, according to the social media users, are not European due to their shared ancestry with Arabs.

A YouTube user posted a video on October 1 that quoted the article in discussing a theory adopted by the Black Hebrew Israelites that Jews are not really descended from the biblical Israelites.

Another post on September 23 did not include a link to the Wikipedia article but discussed its findings claimed that bestiality could explain the genealogical similarities between Arabs and Jews.

The posts, according to ISD extremism researcher Ciaran OConnor, reflect a blend of different types of hatred, including both Islamophobia and antisemitism. Posts attempting to minimize white peoples role in the slave trade are also typically white supremacist.

Researchers also highlighted that its the online users who drive the narrative around the article, since in 2018, a viral Facebook post linked to the article as evidence for why there should be peace between Jewish Israelis and Muslim Palestinians.

The articles most referenced section discusses studies from the early 1990s and early 2000s that found there was common paternal heritage between Sephardic and Ashkenazi Jews and between Israeli Jews and Palestinian Muslim Arabs.

ISD also noted a rise in anti-Muslim disinformation online last week.

Image by Molly Boigon

Congresswoman Jan Schakowsky

Rep. Jan Schakowsky, a Democrat from Illinois,circulated draft legislation last week aimed at shoring up rules enforcement at social media companies to prevent hate speech and privacy violations.

Molly Boigon:Why do you think its so hard to set ground rules for social-media companies?

Jan Schakowsky: Early on, we wanted to encourage entrepreneurship and we wanted to encourage the development of the whole sector, and so social media companies were set free from liability in many ways. But now we are finding that consumers are feeling anxious about the Internetwhether or not they are in control of their own information, is this going to be a place where violence can be stoked, where extremism has a home.

We want in the legislation that weve just sent out as a discussion draft by staff to make sure that the social media platforms and the online marketplaces establish, maintain and make public written terms of service. Its really a pretty modest idea that any failure to do that would result in what we would call in an unfair and deceptive practice.

Boigon:Is the issue in your mind that the written terms of service are not sufficiently strict, or that theyre not enforced?

Schakowsky: Certainly that theyre not enforced. Most social media companies, I think, have terms of service that, if they were enforced, would certainly improve the environment on the internet. I think thats an interesting question on whether or not a final bill ought to have some minimum requirements,but right now, in the draft that we have sent out, we have really talked about establishing, maintaining and making public as opposed to evaluating those terms of service.

Boigon: Can you talk a little bit more about why hate speech is an issue of consumer protection?

Schakowsky: We want to empower these regulatory agencieswhile in this case its the Federal Trade Commission, Im also interested in the Consumer Product Safety Commission for exampleto clarify their authority to act on these issues of extremism and product safety.

We know, and the FBI says, that QAnon actually is engaged in terrorism as a continuing terrorist threat, so this is real. This is not an abstract idea. It can cause real harm. Plus, we have found a situation where the platforms do not take account of products that are brought into this country or made in this country that are dangerous. We want to set some parameters here so that they cant hide behind a liability shield.

Boigon: What would you say to people who think this type of legislation would be an infringement upon free speech?

Schakowsky: Theres been a lot of complaints from both sides. A major ranking Republican member on my subcommittee said that the real problem is that theres suppression of speech from the right, and people on the left have said that too. But I think there are some very clear lines that are not going to be hard to draw. There are some very clear cases.

Boigon: What does accountability look like?

Schakowsky:There can be fines. Facebook woke up a little bit from the $5 billion fine that they got [for violating consumer privacy]. Whatever the enforcement mechanisms are, they have to be meaningful to these companies that are so big and making so much money and focusing far less on consumer protection than on profit protection.

DISINFORMATION ROUNDUP

News outlets this week covered increasing disinformation about the legitimacy of mail-in voting. Trumps Covid-19 diagnosis also generated false stories from both the left and the right. And Donald Trump Jr. may have known in advance about a video accusing Minnesota Rep. Ilhan Omar of voter fraud. ISD noted the spread of that video in its analysis of anti-Muslim content this week.

Tracing the disinformation campaign on mail-in voter fraud

We recognized the narrative that Donald Trump starting spreading earlier this year was going to play a significant role in the turnout and legitimacy of the 2020 election. Read more.

Trump and COVID-19: Facebook, Twitter and YouTube race to contain disinformation about presidents diagnosis

Fact-checkers have already knocked down the hoax that an airborne command center was readying for an invasion before the announcement. They also debunked another that claim that an episode of The Simpsons showed Trump in a coffin. [Read more(http://click1.e.forward.com/omfsstrzznwdnnvsdklgvdmgptdklltlwgkntrqktwjkw_wgddgwjsz.html).

Project Veritas Video Was a Coordinated Disinformation Campaign, Researchers Say

A deceptive video released on Sundaywhich claimed through unidentified sources and with no verifiable evidence that Rep. Ilhan Omars campaign had collected ballots illegally, was probably part of a coordinated disinformation effort,according to researchers at Stanford Universityand the University of Washington. Read more.

The Forwards coverage of disinformation and conspiracy theories

We wrote about the Proud Boys taking President Trumps stand by comment at the debate as a call to action, a Proud Boys chapter in Israel and a report from the Anti-Defamation League that found that Jewish incumbents were bombarded with antisemitic tweets over the summer.

HATE TRACKERS,WEEK OF SEPT. 23 - 30

ISD has developed a tracker that scrapes the web for hateful posts across social media platforms. Researchers categorize hateful usersbased on their ideological motivations and use keywords to examine their conversations. All of the entities are manually reviewed by ISD analysts. To read more about ISDs methodology, click here, and to see their entire analysis for the week, click here.

Explore how hateful messages and pages changed from last week to this week.

QAnon:

Related messages decreased to18,133 this weekfrom 18,247 last week.

Top 5 Ascendant Communities:

+69% Far-right

+42% QAnon

+5% Anti-Hispanic

+4% Misogynist

+2% International influencers

Molly Boigon is an investigative reporter at the Forward. Contact her at boigon@forward.com or follow her on Twitter @MollyBoigon.

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Introducing Fahrenheit 411, your guide to the disinformation plaguing the 2020 campaign - Forward

What Black History Month should be teaching our children – The Conservative Woman

Posted By on October 7, 2020

THIS is Black History Month. The initiative started in the United States at Kent State University, Ohio, in 1970. It reached the UK in 1987 when it was first observed in London. Today, it has a prominent position in our national cultural diversity calendar. The official website carries impassioned messages of support from political party leaders.

Schools, in particular, have committed themselves to the celebration. Not that every proponent of Black History is entirely happy with the only-one-month-in-twelve allocation. Norwegian-bornGuardiancolumnist Afua Hirsch argues with persuasive logic: Why should the focus on black figures of historical significance be confined to one month of the year? If they are important, they should be entered into the mainstream of the rest of the curriculum and, outside school, into cultural events. If they arent significant, then there is no greater justification for focusing on them in October than there is at any other time of the year.

For Hirsch, Black History Month constitutes aform of historical segregation. She has a point but not, necessarily, the one she wishes to make.

Other minority groups may contend that a single months allocation to African-Caribbean history is better than no allocation at all. Other heritage/history months do, however, exist (mostly in the US) including: Gay and Lesbian Pride Month, Irish American Heritage Month, Arab American Heritage Month, Native American Heritage Month, Puerto Rican Heritage Month, Jewish History Month, National Hispanic Heritage Month, Womens History Month and so on. Hardly enough months to go round.

History is dishonest and distorted if it is filtered through these lenses of political correctness or, indeed, through any other lens. Abundant filters have been applied to the past, of course Tudor, Whig, Tory, Marxist, Liberal and so on. PC history provides a new distorting mirror.

Black History should, nevertheless, be taught in our schools and universities. Arguably, we need more of it, but it does not merit special or privileged status.

The presence of Africans in Romes army of occupation and enslavement of Britain certainly needs to be known about, as does the story of genocide-promoting African Emperor, Septimius Severus, who died in York. Contrary to any pursuit of historical truth, it is rarely if ever taught in these terms.

Schools should respect the truth that for over a thousand years following imperial rule from Rome the Middle Ages Africans had little if any role to play in British history. They should not dilute the history of the Anglo-Saxons, the Vikings and the Normans to try to win approval from the Black History lobby. Nor should we ever contemplate ditching the Reformation, the Civil War or the Glorious Revolution to accommodate the presence of some Africans in Britain during the early modern period.

The African-Caribbean dimension becomes increasingly significant for British history in modern times and so, of course, needs to be taught. This should, though, include some unpalatable truths surrounding the racist, imperialistic and jingoistic views of Jamaican nurse and greatest black Briton Mary Seacole, who put her life on the line in support of the British Empire during the Crimean War.

The history of other racial groups and other parts of the world have an equal claim on curriculum time. An important lesson from the past that children need to learn is that people have similar characteristics, regardless of their racial background.

Slavery, for example, was widespread in Africa and in central America, including the Caribbean area, before the Europeans turned up.Nor was human sacrifice unusual in those parts of the world. The Aztecs, for example, practised it on a large scale.

In the historical kingdom of Benin, too, part of modern-day Nigeria, human sacrifice was a component of the state religion until stamped out by the British in the late 19thcentury, just as the Sati or suttee widow burning was suppressed by the British in India.

Older children, at least, need to understand that across history wickedness has not been confined to the deeds of the white Caucasian race. Nor is imperial conquest a peculiarly Caucasian practice. Pre-colonial Africa, Asia and America had their fair share of empires and empire building.

If children are allowed to scratch the surface of Black History, they will find that what racial groups have in common outweighs their differences.

In October 2018 the Royal Historical Society published a report entitled: Race, Ethnicity & Equality in UK History. It wassupportive of calls for greater diversity in the curriculum. It noted, however, that what amounts to a non-stop force-feeding of slavery and deprivation was putting black children off history. The seemingly relentless focus on the exploitation and abolition of slavery can be intellectually limiting and, at times, alienating for black pupils, it concluded.

Black History month needs to concern itself with more than the transatlantic slave trade and its abolition. Here are three other Black History topics that, in my opinion, all children should learn about:

1 The defeat of Hitlers German/Aryan master-race theory by Jesse Owens at the 1936 Olympic Games in Berlin.

2 Nelson Mandelas donning of the South African Springbok rugby shirt the symbol of white supremacy and apartheid at the 1995 Rugby World Cup Final in Johannesburg.

3 The image of Patrick Hutchinson, a black man, carrying a white man to safety during the first Black Lives Matter protest in London in June 2020.

They are there to be argued over. That, after all, is what history should be about.

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What Black History Month should be teaching our children - The Conservative Woman

The BroadsheetDAILY ~ 10/6/20 ~ Tribeca’s Pier 26 Opens with Amenities Galore – ebroadsheet.com

Posted By on October 7, 2020

Lower Manhattans Local News

Quay to Success

Pier 26 Opens with Amenities Galore

The centerpiece of the new Pier 26 is the Tide Deckacultivated rocky salt marsh beneath an elevated, cantilevered walkway

The tally of great public spaces in Lower Manhattan has increased by one. Last Wednesday, the Hudson River Park Trust officially opened Pier 26 in Tribeca (near Hubert Street), the product of a decade-plus of planning and construction, and a $37-million budget.

The result is 2.5 acres of woodland forest, coastal grassland, maritime scrub, and a rocky tidal zoneall culminating in a breathtaking view of the Hudson River. Additionally included in the design are a multi-use recreation field and a spacious sunning lawn, as well as boardwalks and seating areas.

Pier 26 is a celebration of the Hudson River coastline, reflects Madelyn Wils, president of the Hudson River Park Trust (HRPT), the public service organization responsible for designing, building, operating and maintaining the park that stretches four miles along the waterfront of Manhattans west side. It will really show people the kinds of life that are in the Hudson River and the life that is actually now becoming more enhanced as the River becomes cleaner.

Above: The new dock also features an athletic field,spacious lawns, boardwalks and seating areas. Below: Two sheds (complete with swings) are designed to frame the vista, while also providing a sheltered space for quiet contemplation.

Holly Leicht, chair of the Lower Manhattan Development Corporation (LMDC), which funded part of the project, says that Pier 26, was always in the master plan as an ecological pier. But what that could mean was anyones guess. So much creativity has been put in to making each part of this park with magic at every step. This really is the heart of the west side right now.

Lucinda Sanders, the chief executive officer of landscape architecture firm Olin (which created the design for Pier 26), says, we wanted to create a very curated journey through this landscape. There is about a 12-foot grade change, so that you are not just walking in a woodland, but youre moving up into the canopy of the trees. She adds, there are two sheds designed to frame vistas, but theyre also these places where you can just go in and sit and mediate on a swing and be kind of quiet.

Ms. Been observes, its amazing that the HRPT was able to move forward with these projects during the pandemic, but its the affirmation that New York is moving forward, they were doubling down on making New York City even better. She predicts that Pier 26, is going to get people out to where they really feel like theyre connecting with the River in a way that I dont think any other place in the Park does, or really any other place in the City does.

Pier 26 has been closed to the public for more than a decade. In the early 1900s, the Old Dominion Steamship Company took passengers and freight from what is now called Tribeca to Norfolk and Newport News, Virginia. (The fare was $8.00, and the trip took 24 hours.) By the early 2000s, however, the dock had been abandoned for decades, and its rotting structure was beginning to fall into the Hudson.

The curated habitat walk that spans the docks 700-foot length takes visitors through five distinct ecological zones, culminating with a stunning view of the Hudson River.

Beginning in 2008, the wharf was demolished and rebuilt, creating a blank slate for which it was possible to begin making plans. We went to the community to find out what they wanted this park to have, Ms. Wils recalls.

Priorities voiced at a succession of meetings with Community Board 1 (CB1) included the opportunity to get close to the water, as well as strong educational and ecological components. This led to the creation of the Tide Deca cultivated rocky salt marsh beneath an elevated, cantilevered walkway, where tours escorted by HRPT staff will be able to descend to the waters edgeas well as hundreds of native plantings.

These are all plants that you would have seen 400 years ago if you were standing on the Hudson River coastline, Ms. Wils says. And the Tide Deck is our outdoor classroom. It really is the exclamation point on our mission to teach people about the River and about the estuary.

The dialog with the community also led to some details in the original vision for Pier 26 being vetoed. For example, a plan to install wind turbines on the dock to meet all (or most) of the facilitys need for electrical power was met with resistance by CB1 members, who raisedconcerns about noise and danger to birds from this element of the design, which was dropped.

Resiliency was another focus of community concerns, which led to a uniquely sustainable design. As Paul Goldstein, chair of CB1s Waterfront Committee noted in 2019, it is built to flood. HRPT is using materials that they believe, if the pier is overwhelmed by water, can be easily restored.

After years of discussion and consultation, a final design was unveiled in December, 2016. Around this time, HRPT also announced that it had secured $30 million in funding, thanks to three appropriations (of $10 million each), from the Lower Manhattan Development Corporation, the de Blasio Administration, and Citigroup, which occupies an office tower directly adjacent to Pier 26. The remaining budget came from grants from Albany and Washington.

While Pier 26 is open, it is not quite finished. Still under construction is a childrens playground designed to spark an interest in science among young minds. And funds are still being raised to build a new home for Estuarium a combination laboratory, public exhibit and learning space designed to offer hands-on programs in the urban ecology of New York Harbor and the larger Hudson River ecosystem that was created by the River Project, in Tribeca, in the 1990s. For years, the River Project was housed on Pier 26, but the organization relocated to temporary quarters at Pier 40 when the HRPT began to redevelop the structure in 2008.

Matthew Fenton

Eyes to the Sky

October 6 18, 2020

Planet Mars Will Surprise You

Mars reaches opposition, as in this artists illustration, when it is opposite from the sun in Earths sky.(Image credit: NASA)

A rusty-gold star-like celestial body shines suspended above the eastern skyline at nightfall. It is heavens celebrity of the month. Even though I knew that planet Mars is predicted to be at that location after sunset, a rush of surprise overcame me when, approaching a clear view to the east, the planets brilliant light pierced the darkness. Mars is brightest for the year in Earths skies. Today, the 6th, it will orbit closest to our planet since 2018 and arrive at opposition on the 13th.

According to Simulation Curriculums Starry Night Skyguide software, the red planets magnitude ranges from -2.56 tonight to a maximum of -2.62 on the 12th. By the 18th, Mars magnitude drops to -2.52 and continues to decrease, but is still quite bright until the end of October. Note that the red planets maximum magnitude possible seen from Earth is -2.92.

During the Mars opposition in 2003, the Red Planet was only 34.6 million miles from Earth. This was the closest the two planets had come to each other in almost 60,000 years, and this record wont be broken until Aug. 28, 2287, according to NASA. This year, Mars will be closest to Earth, at 38,568,243 miles distant, at 10:19 a.m. on the 6th. The planets furthest distance is 250 million miles.

Follow Mars from sunset to sunrise. Take a first look before moonrise. The waning gibbous moon rises in the east-northeast at 8:38pm on the 5th and half-hour to an hour later all this week The rusty-gold orb reaches rather high in the sky at midnight and then drops to set in the west as the sun rises in the east.

Sunset is at 6:30 Eastern Daylight Time today and about two minute earlier everyday through the 18th. Mars rises at about 7 oclock today and several minutes earlier every evening.

Resources

Judy Isacoff

Inn and Out

Latest in Wave of Hotel Closures Steps Away from Hostelry Commandeered as Homeless Shelter

Freedom of Movement

Alliance Revamps Bus Fleet to Make Hitching a Ride More Hygienic

As of Thursday, the Downtown Connection shuttle bus has a new look, a new fleet, and new onboard systems to safeguard against the spread of communicable airborne diseases.

Matthew Fenton

Gimme Shelter

Citys Plan to House Homeless in FiDi Hotel

Lower Manhattan residents and community leaders are scrambling to formulate a response to the announcement, circulated last Friday evening, that the administration of Mayor Bill de Blasio plans to use a hotel in the Financial District as a homeless shelter.

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Words Come to Life Amid New Installation in Battery Park City

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Playing Hooky for Health

More Than Half of All Students at Downtown Schools Opt for Remote Learning

As children are slated to return to public elementary schools today (along with public middle and high schools on Thursday), slightly more than half of all students in nine Lower Manhattan public schools plan to stay home and focus on remote learning, according to statistics from a State Department of Health (DOH) website.

The DOHs School COVID-19 Report Card site contains preliminary data about how many students are expected to return to each school throughout the State, relative to the overall size of every schools student body.

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The BroadsheetDAILY ~ 10/6/20 ~ Tribeca's Pier 26 Opens with Amenities Galore - ebroadsheet.com

Clare Bronfman, heiress who bankrolled NXIVM sex cult, sentenced to almost seven years – Forward

Posted By on October 7, 2020

Image by Getty Image

Bronfman, center, arrived at her sentencing on September 30.

Clare Bronfman, an heiress to the Seagrams liquor fortune, was sentenced to six years and nine months in prison for her involvement in NXIVM, a self-described self-improvement group widely considered a cult.

Bronfman pled guilty in 2019 to two counts: fraudulent use of identification and conspiring to conceal and harbor an undocumented immigrant for financial gain. The sentence was even longer than prosecutors had requested. In his ruling, Judge Nicholas Garaufis, of the Federal District Court in Brooklyn, cited the key role she played in enabling the organization.

I dont know how many other multimillionaires are out there, ready to devote the limitless resources at their disposal to supporting pyramid schemes run by dangerous criminals, he said.

Under the leadership of its founder, Keith Raniere, NXIVM offered pricey self-empowerment classes. Attendees included media and corporate executives and celebrities including Alison Mack, known for her role in Smallville.

However, a 2017 New York Times investigation revealed that Raniere had recruited female NXIVM members into a subgroup with the purpose of grooming them to be his sexual partners. Members of the subgroup were coerced into providing incriminating information, like nude photos. In a secret ritual, many were branded with Ranieres initials while saying, Master, please brand me, it would be an honor.

Bronfman became involved in 2003 with NXIVM, which she said helped her overcome debilitating social anxiety. She said she was unaware of the secret subgroup, but as a member of NXIVMs executive board she was involved in other illegal activities. Prosecutors said Bronfman falsified documents to bring NXIVMs recruits to the United States illegally.

She also used her fortune to pursue critics of the organization, hiring private investigators to gather information on perceived enemies, including Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer.

Prosecutors said that Bronfman spent $116 million of her fortune on NXIVM.

At the sentencing hearing, several victims spoke of the destructive toll of Bronfmans lawsuits. Ranieres former girlfriend, Barbara Bouchey, said that Bronfan had pursued litigation against her even in the last few weeks.

Bronfman has refused to denounce Raniere, who was convicted in 2019 of racketeering and sex trafficking. Prior to her sentencing Bronfman wrote to Judge Garaufis that NXIVM and Keith greatly changed my life for the better.

At the hearing, Bronfman spoke briefly to the court. Im immensely grateful and privileged because all over the world, people are praying for me because they know my goodness, she said. It doesnt mean I havent made mistakes.

Irene Katz Connelly is an editorial fellow at the Forward. You can contact her at connelly@forward.com. Follow her on Twitter at @katz_conn.

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Clare Bronfman, heiress who bankrolled NXIVM sex cult, sentenced to almost seven years - Forward

Reflections of a survivor on second anniversary of Pittsburgh synagogue shooting – thejewishchronicle.net

Posted By on October 7, 2020

(JNS) Judah Samet has been on the front lines of history more than once. A survivor of Bergen-Belsen and a former Israeli paratrooper, the 82-year-old also lived through the mass shooting at the Tree of Life*Or LSimcha synagogue in the Squirrel Hill neighborhood of Pittsburgh on Oct. 27, 2018the deadliest anti-Semitic attack in U.S. history.

Two years later, he sat down with JNS to share his recollections of that fateful day.

Samet was born into an Orthodox Jewish family in 1938 in Debrecen, Hungary. After surviving the concentration camp, he and his surviving family members, including several siblings, their mother and his maternal grandfather, immigrated to Israel with help from the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee (JDC). Samet eventually served as a paratrooper and radio operator in the Israel Defense Forces. His brother, Jacob, an IDF machine gunner, was killed in combat in 1956.

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Not long afterwards, Samet met his future wife, Barbara, at a wedding in New York. The couple married and settled in her hometown of Pittsburgh, where they raised their only child, Elizabeth. She and her husband, David Aaron Winitsky, have two children: Ezekiel, 19, and Alexander, 16.

A high-spirited grandfather, Samet credited his military training with helping him make accurate mental notes about the shooter, with whom he locked eyes briefly as he pulled up at synagogue that Saturday morning to attend services.

When he arrived, he said a man named Hank Feinberg came over to tell him, very quietly, There is a shooting going on, you better go back, recalled Samet. (Feinberg, a member of New Light synagogue, also survived that day).

At that moment, the shooter was engaged in a firefight with police. Robert Gregory Bowers, 46, was arrested at the scene after having just killed 11 Jewish worshippers and injured six others. In addition to the 63 federal crimes, he has been charged with another 36 separate crimes in the state of Pennsylvania.

Im not sure why he didnt shoot me, mused Samet. Maybe he figured he needed to shoot at the detective, not at me, because the detective could kill him and I couldnt.

Before driving away, however, Samet made a point to look at the shooter so as to be able to identify him.

The soldier in me came out, he said. The first thing I learned in the military is to see who is shooting. I made a note to be able to describe him.

The FBI, with whom Samet says he spoke with four times, credited him for his accuracy and consistency, down to specific details about Bowers physical appearance and clothing.

Samet plans to testify at the trial.

I will have to identify him, said the octogenarian. He may have changed some, but I have a very good memory.

Samet, who is retired from the jewelry business, said he would remember which salesperson sold which piece of jewelry to whom 25 years later.

The trial date has not yet been set, but authorities are in touch about it.

They said they will let me know in plenty of advance, said Samet. I will take the stand.

He credited his fearless mother, Rachel (nee Mermelstein) Samet, with helping him survive a concentration camp, and having the courage to confront obstacles and threats in life.

Samet said he favors life imprisonment over the death penalty for the shooter.

I dont want him dead because if he is dead, he suffers no more, he said. I want him to live Put him in a little room with a little window at the top, with no one to talk to.

What happened here will never be forgotten

In the two years since the shooting, Samet has been enjoying time with family, traveling to Montana for several speaking engagements with college and high school students, addressing the Pittsburgh police academy about his experiences, reading the works of George Orwell, and as a result of the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, these days attending synagogue services via Zoom.

During the nationally televised State of the Union address in 2019, U.S. President Donald Trump highlighted Samets dramatic survival story, and in a rare moment of national unity, legislators from both Houses of Congress sang Happy Birthday to Samet. Also last year, he met the president in person at the White House annual Hanukkah party.

Samet, who is against political extremism, doesnt dismiss the threat of white supremacy (I have a friend who is retired FBI, who says there are 17 supremacist organizations in Allegheny County in his state), though believes that Bowers was a lone wolf.

I dont think anyone else who was a white supremacist here in Pittsburgh knew about it, he said. I dont think there was any demonstration on his behalf.

Plans are in the works to turn the Tree of Life synagogue building into a multi-use facility for the community, to include a cafe and the existing Holocaust Center of Pittsburgh, which was established in 1980, and is dedicated to remembrance, education and combating anti-Semitism.

Samet is supportive of the idea.

Thats OK, perfect, for the Holocaust Center to move in there, he said. It belongs in Squirrel Hillthats the Jewish neighborhood here, and that way what happened here will never be forgotten.

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Reflections of a survivor on second anniversary of Pittsburgh synagogue shooting - thejewishchronicle.net

Gantz and Ashkenazi the former IDF chiefs who are politically AWOL – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on October 4, 2020

Missing in action is the best way to describe Benny Gantz and Gabi Ashkenazi these days. The two former IDF chiefs of staff are barely seen or make their voices heard.They havent fallen into enemy hands, but besides the occasional photo op, video update or statement, at the moment, they barely contribute to local political discourse.Forget about Ashkenazi. Until Saturday, he was completely underground. Not a word, not a sound. He tweeted something on September 20, on September 25, and then again on the 30. It seems as if he only comes up for air in five-day intervals.Behind the scenes, Blue and White is falling apart. Members of the party no longer understand, or remember, why they became partners in a coalition that has failed at the only mission it set itself, and what was the reason Gantz and Ashkenazi gave when they went back on their word and joined a government headed by Benjamin Netanyahu, the man they had vowed to topple.The decision of Tourism Minister Asaf Zamir on Friday to quit is now just the beginning, Blue and White party members say. More ministers look certain to walk away from Netanyahus table.Instead of posing as an alternative to Likud, Blue and White simply serves Netanyahu. Gantz and Ashkenazi have enabled him to remain in power and to stay prime minister and pass anti-democratic legislation such as the law preventing demonstrations, even when there is no evidence that people contract coronavirus at rallies.That decision to join Netanyahu not only dismantled Blue and White, it also went against what Gantz had been telling people before and after the election in March that he did not believe a word the prime minister said, not even half a word. cnxps.cmd.push(function () { cnxps({ playerId: '36af7c51-0caf-4741-9824-2c941fc6c17b' }).render('4c4d856e0e6f4e3d808bbc1715e132f6'); });But then he flipped, turning from someone who didnt believe Netanyahu to someone who signed a deal that the prime minister has consistently violated and has refused to implement.Despite everything, Gantzs strategy remains constant. He prefers to turn the other cheek for as long as possible in the hope that Netanyahu will allow him to become prime minister in November 2021.The reasoning is that if he manages to get Netanyahu across the budget deadline in December, he will be locked into the job next year. Right now, this appears to be all Gantz cares about and until next year, the country can fall by the wayside, as far as hes concerned. Although thats pretty much the case already.While Gantz is seen occasionally at IDF events he attended the delivery of the Iron Dome system to the US Army this week Foreign Minister Ashkenazi is completely hidden from view.He hardly gives interviews, he doesnt speak publicly very much and he barely tweets. It seems as if he hasnt fathomed that an elected official is not like being the countrys top soldier, a position that is revered by the vast majority of the population. Nevertheless, as a senior member of Israels leadership, he has an obligation to be transparent and to speak to the public.Ashkenazis fellow party members interpret his silence through one of two possibilities. The first is that he doesnt want to take the blame for the failure to control coronavirus. If hes not involved and if he doesnt talk, perhaps hell get lucky and avoid the mud slinging match which is certain to ensue.The second, is that he is planning if elections are called to oust Gantz and grab the helm of Blue and White. By keeping a low profile, he can always say later that he was opposed to the government and didnt play a significant role in its decisions.The problem for Blue and White is that the party that was meant to offer a credible alternative to Netanyahu has been swallowed up by him. Party members are pushing Gantz and Ashkenazi to fight back and revert to presenting voters with an alternative, even if such a move could lead the government to disintegrate.The announcement on Friday that Gantz told Justice Minister Avi Nissenkorn to begin the process of appointing a new state attorney is intended to elicit a fight with Netanyahu and it remains to be seen whether Gantz will be willing to shepherd such a crisis all the way to another election at a time when his party is tanking in the polls.Time will tell, but for Blue and White this could very well be a last lifeline.

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Gantz and Ashkenazi the former IDF chiefs who are politically AWOL - The Jerusalem Post

Pandemic Temporarily Silences Violins That Survived the Holocaust – Smithsonian Magazine

Posted By on October 4, 2020

In one more twist of fate for prized possessions that survived the Holocaust, dozens of violins and other stringed instruments recently returned to their Tel Aviv home after spending six months hidden beneath a stage in California.

The instruments represent a large part of the Violins of Hope collection owned by Israeli violin maker Amnon Weinstein and his son Avshalom. All of the 88 violins in the trove date to before World War II, when Jewish musicians and music lovers treasured them as prized possessions.

Per the Los Angeles Times Catherine Womack, the Younes and Soraya Nazarian Center for the Performing Arts at Cal State Northridge initially brought around 60 of the instruments to Southern California for a series of spring concerts featuring the Los Angeles Jewish Symphony, Rotterdam Philharmonic and Jerusalem Quartet. The violins were then set to go on exhibition at the Holocaust Museum Los Angeles. But as events were postponed or canceled, the Soraya decided to place the instruments in storage under its main stage.

The fact that 60 Holocaust violins, handcrafted in early 20th-century Europe, [spent months in] hiding on our campus in Los Angeles this year, I think about it all the time, Soraya Executive Director Thor Steingraber tells the Times. Its just so unlikely, and so heartbreaking.

With the pandemic showing no signs of letting up, organizers sent the instruments back to Tel Aviv in September. Before that, though, violinists Niv Ashkenazi, Janice Markham and Lindsay Deutsch had the chance to play them in front of the empty, 1,700-seat auditorium. The Soraya will eventually share a filmed version of the concert with the public.

Its nice to actually get to have them come out again before sending them off, Ashkenazi tells Tara Lynn Wagner of Spectrum News One. Its an emotional experience especially once it sinks in, the stories connecting them to a physical object.

Ashkenazi is the only musician in the world to have an instrument from the Violins of Hope collection out on a long-term loan. In April, he released an album of performances played on the instrument; titled Niv Ashkenazi: Violins of Hope, it includes music by artists directly affected by the Holocaust, including Robert Dauber, who composed his Serenade while interned at Theresienstadt and died in Dachau three years later, at just 26 years old.

Atlas Obscuras Matthew Taub chronicles some of the instruments dramatic and tragic stories. One violins owner was forced to play for Nazis while he was imprisoned at the Auschwitz concentration and death camp. Later, as a refugee, he sold the instrument to an aid worker whose son eventually donated it to the collection. Another former owner threw his instrument from a train bringing French Jews to Auschwitz in the hopes that someone would find it. Someone didand kept the violin for the rest of his life. After that mans death, the instrument found its way to the Weinsteins.

Many of the violins were donated by or bought from survivors, according to Violins of Hopes website. [S]ome arrived through family members and many simply carry Stars of David as a decoration and an identity tag declaring: [W]e were played by proud klezmers, or musicians specializing in an Eastern European genre popular in the Jewish tradition.

The Weinsteins have dedicated themselves to giving the instruments new life. As they explain, many are rather cheap and unsophisticated. But the father-son duo hopes to rebuild the violins to be worthy of concert hall performances.

The Nazis used music and especially violins to humiliate and degrade Jews in ghettos and camps, they write on their website. Our concerts are the ultimate answer to their plan to annihilate a people and culture, to destroy human lives and freedom.

Before Covid-19 outbreaks closed schools and performance spaces, the Soraya was able to take one of the violins to dozens of schools, allowing students to hear them playedand learn about the Holocaust.

At one visit last November, the Times reports, eighth-grader Joan-Kristen Gray examined an abalone shell Star of David inlaid into the back of a violin.

Its not like reading about it in a history book, she said. The violin told a real story that really happened.

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Pandemic Temporarily Silences Violins That Survived the Holocaust - Smithsonian Magazine

We dont know if rotation will happen says FM amid political tension – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on October 4, 2020

Amid mounting political instability and the resignation of a government minister over the prime ministers handling of the COVID-19 crisis, Foreign Minister Gabi Ashkenazi said threats by the premier about elections were a threat to the public, not the Blue and White party.Ashkenazi was speaking following the resignation of Tourism Minister Asaf Zamir on Friday, who said again Saturday night that the coronavirus epidemic in Israel could not be resolved until Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu leaves office because of his focus on political concerns.Speaking on the Channel 12 Meet the Press program Saturday night, Ashkenazi said he did not know if, due to the severe political tension between Netanyahus Likud party and Blue and White if party leader and Alternate Prime Minister Benny Gantz would actually get to take over as prime minister next year, as stipulated in the rotation clause of the coalition agreement.If we feel that we can no longer influence [matters] that is a red line, said Ashkenazi.If Netanyahu wants elections that is not a threat against us, it is a threat against the public, he continued in reference to the severe health crisis the country is experiencing, and accusing Netanyahu of acting against political unity.We dont know what will happen in another month or two, I don't know if the rotation will happen, and dont know what to answer.The foreign minister also defended his partys decision to advance the appointment process for a new state attorney and to seek to advance the appointment of a new chief of police despite Netanyahus opposition to this process without a joint committee. cnxps.cmd.push(function () { cnxps({ playerId: '36af7c51-0caf-4741-9824-2c941fc6c17b' }).render('4c4d856e0e6f4e3d808bbc1715e132f6'); });Gantz issued a statement on Friday saying he had told Justice Minister Avi Nissenkorn to start the appointment process for the state attorney and said his party would advance the process for a new police chief, who is appointed by the minister for internal security, currently Netanyahu ally Amir Ohana.Gantz said he was doing so because of the lack of stability and the lack of control in the management of the coronavirus requires the restoration of government order.The Blue and White leader said he had accepted Zamirs resignation with understanding and pain, and appeared to agree with the outgoing ministers sentiment towards the prime minister when saying that the publics crisis of confidence in the government was due to a real concern stemming from the fact that dealing with political concerns is trumping concern for public health and livelihoods of millions of homes who are trembling over their fate and work.Speaking on Channel 13 on Saturday night, Zamir said Netanyahu was responsible for 90 percent of the problems and failures in dealing with the COVID-19 crisis, and was responsible for the failure in which we dont have a budget, [and] responsible for the state of the health system after a decade of budgetary neglect.Zamir said of Netanyahu that despite the fact the whole country is on fire, and internal [medicine] wards are collapsing, and businesses cannot make ends meet, the majority of the time he is dealing with the protests against him.Netanyahu ally and coalition chairman, Likud MK Miki Zohar, called on the prime minister to dismantle the government and call new elections in an interview with the ultra-Orthodox news site Kikar Shabbat, saying that the partnership with Blue and White was not working.Zamir became the first Blue and White minister to quit Netanyahus government on Friday, a step which raised speculation that elections could be on the horizon.Following Zamirs resignation, Gantz announced that he will appoint Orit Farkash Hacohen as the new tourism minister instead of her current role as minister of strategic affairsZamir voted against the last two packages of coronavirus regulations in the government and had come under tremendous pressure from protest movements to resign.Zamir met with Gantz on Friday and told him he had to resign because he had no faith in Netanyahu.The coronavirus crisis is at best a secondary priority for the prime minister, he said. The personal and legal considerations are what interests Netanyahu, and this has been clear from every step he has taken.He wrote on Facebook that he did not believe that Israel could end its coronavirus crisis as long as Netanyahu remains prime minister.The outgoing minister said he would remain loyal to the party and to Gantz, who he called a leader who puts the people of Israel above all considerations.Zamir is a former deputy mayor of Tel Aviv, who ran unsuccessfully for mayor before joining Blue and White.The Black Flag protest movement issued a statement praising Zamir for his resignation, calling it a courageous step. The movement called on the rest of Blue and White MKs to stand for democracy like he did.Last week, Science and Technology Minister Yizhar Shay also contemplated resigning but was persuaded not to by Gantz.Asaf Zamir didnt only resign, he laid out a serious indictment before all those who remain in the government a minute longer and continue to keep Netanyahu in power. Gantz and Ashkenazi you are not serving the State of Israel, you are serving Netanyahu. Its time to resign, Leader of the Opposition, Yair Lapid said in regard to Zamirs resignation.Yesh Atid MK Ofer Shelah said Zamirs departure is the first brick in Netanyahus wall falling. He promised that more Blue and White ministers would follow.Likud responded by accusing Zamir of resigning for his own political reasons. He is expected to run again for Tel Aviv mayor in the next election.Zamir is running away from the battle just in order to gain some votes in Tel Aviv, the Likud said. It is Zamir who is engaging in petty politics while the prime minister is fighting around the clock to save the lives and the livelihood of the citizens of Israel.In a second statement, Likud said that Blue and White needs to decide whether it is fighting the virus or the government.The three ministers who voted against the new directives limiting protests against Netanyahu were Zamir, Shay and Farkash-Hacohen. Asked why she voted against, a spokesman for Farkash-Hacohen said it did not have to do with the protests but with economic issues.She doesnt agree with the economic part of the plan, and thinks the damage to the economy is much greater than what the plan achieves, her spokesperson said.

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We dont know if rotation will happen says FM amid political tension - The Jerusalem Post


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