Page 95«..1020..94959697..100110..»

Rep. Andy Biggs: The Left Fears Trump More Than A Nuclear Holocaust – FOX News Radio

Posted By on March 5, 2024

Arizona Republican Congressman Andy Biggs joins Fox Across America with Jimmy Failla to share his thoughts on the Supreme Court siding unanimously with former President Trump in his challenge to the state of Colorados effort to remove him from the 2024 primary ballot.

Its a total meltdown. And what Im getting a kick out of is, you know, they thought Ketanji there was going to save their bacon, but, I mean, even Ketanji was with it and said, look, the Constitution does not allow that. I mean, heres a guy hes never been charged, hes never been convicted of anything but by golly, they hate him so much, they fear him worse than a nuclear holocaust. They really think that Donald Trump is a Satan spawn. And so it governs everything. Its total Trump derangement syndrome. I actually Im getting a kick out of watching it, but but we dont have enough psychiatrists in the country that can help them. You know why? Because all the psychiatrists are lefties too.

Rep. Biggs and Jimmy also discuss the impact of woke policy in the military. To hear what else they had to say, listen to the podcast!

PLUS, dont forget to order your copy of Jimmys new book!

Order Cancel Culture Dictionary

Go here to read the rest:

Rep. Andy Biggs: The Left Fears Trump More Than A Nuclear Holocaust - FOX News Radio

Daughter of Holocaust survivor finds swastika daubed on her garden gate in sickening anti-Semitic act on the s – Daily Mail

Posted By on March 5, 2024

A jewish mother-of-four whose father fled Nazi Germany on the Kindertransport was 'devastated' to find a swastika on her garden gate on the sixth anniversary of his death.

Aviva Kaufmann, 52, from north-west London, was horrified when her husband made the discovery as he went to retrieve his bike yesterday.

Mrs Kaufmann, a maths teacher whose German-born grandparents, David and Ketty Goldschmidt, were murdered in Auschwitz, told the Mail: 'I am just so sad about it.

'When my father Alfred Goldschmidt fled Germany he had such a love for this country. We [our entire family] have grown up with such a love for this country.

'In England, I was able to get a good education and all those things Nazi Germany deprived my father of. But now I wonder will England be like that for my children?'

She added: 'When my father and his siblings fled on the Kindertransport, my grandmother said to my uncle 'you won't see any more of those dirty flags' [in England].

'He never thought he would see a swastika again. But to have that daubed on my property on the sixth anniversary of his death is just horrible.'

Mrs Kaufmann texted her neighbours to see if their houses had also been vandalised. 'My neighbours all sent me the loveliest messages... Two non-Jewish neighbours even came round to clean it off.'

She said that until now she had always felt safe in England. 'I've never had my eye on the door and I have always felt safe in this country.

'I proudly wear a Star of David necklace and a 'bring them home' dog tag for the hostages.

'But I have said to my kids that I am not sure it's always going to be like that.'

Mrs Kaufmann reported the swastika to the police and to CST, a Jewish charity that combats anti-Semitism. A CST spokesman said: 'Anti-Jewish hatred has become far too common and this is yet another example.'

A spokesperson for the Met police confirmed officers are investigating a report that a swastika had been drawn onto the gate of a property in north west London on Monday morning.

It is being investigated as a racially motivated criminal damage.

A spokesperson added: 'Hate crime will not be tolerated in London.'

Here is the original post:

Daughter of Holocaust survivor finds swastika daubed on her garden gate in sickening anti-Semitic act on the s - Daily Mail

New Haven Museum Honors Laurel Vlock: Trailblazer in Holocaust Testimony Preservation – BNN Breaking

Posted By on March 5, 2024

In a touching tribute during Women's History Month, the New Haven Museum celebrated the life and legacy of Laurel Vlock, an influential journalist and the pioneering founder of the Fortunoff Video Archive for Holocaust Testimonies at Yale University. The event, co-hosted with the Jewish Historical Society of Greater New Haven, drew speakers from Vlock's family and collaborators who shared personal and professional insights into her impactful work.

Laurel Vlock, whose life was tragically cut short in a car crash in 2000, left an indelible mark on Holocaust education and remembrance through her visionary work. The event featured heartfelt anecdotes from her son, Daniel Vlock, and sister, Marian Fox Wexler, alongside virtual contributions from Stephen Naron, director of the Fortunoff Archive, and Paul Falcone, reflecting on Vlock's enthusiasm for life and dedication to her mission. An exhibit showcased personal photographs and the Emmy Award she won in 1981, recognizing her as a trailblazing figure in the documentation of Holocaust testimonies.

Vlock's career achievements include the creation of "Your Community Speaks" for Yale's WYBC radio station and the acclaimed "Dialogue with Laurel Vlock" on WTNH Channel 8, where she interviewed a range of figures from local activists to global personalities like Hillary Clinton and Elie Wiesel. Her collaboration with the University of New Haven led to the production of over 230 programs, cementing her legacy in the field of educational broadcasting. The event also highlighted her instrumental role, alongside psychiatrist Dori Laub, in founding the Holocaust Survivors' Film Project, which evolved into the Fortunoff Video Archive for Holocaust Testimonies, now housing over 4,400 interviews.

Stephen Naron's remarks underscored the critical importance of Vlock's work in founding the Fortunoff Archive and the establishment of a fellowship in her name, supporting filmmakers in residence to continue the mission of Holocaust education. The archive's extensive collection serves as a testament to Vlock's foresight and dedication to preserving survivors' stories. The event concluded with a reflection on Vlock's belief in the power of visual testimony and the urgency of documenting Holocaust survivors' experiences, a legacy that continues to inspire new generations of educators, historians, and filmmakers.

As the New Haven Museum displays items from Vlock's life and career throughout March, her story serves as a powerful reminder of the impact one individual can have on preserving history and educating future generations. Her work, celebrated and remembered, continues to resonate, ensuring that the voices of Holocaust survivors are heard and their stories never forgotten.

Read more from the original source:

New Haven Museum Honors Laurel Vlock: Trailblazer in Holocaust Testimony Preservation - BNN Breaking

West Covina house, inspired by the dreams of a Holocaust survivor, seeks $1.6M – The San Gabriel Valley Tribune

Posted By on March 5, 2024

The same family has owned the Good Family Residence in West Covina since its completion in 1961. (Photo by Gavin Cater)

The kitchen. (Photo by Gavin Cater)

The carport. (Photo by Gavin Cater)

There is a dropped and centered 360-degree fireplace in the living room. (Photo by Gavin Cater)

The front facade of the house. (Photo by Gavin Cater)

Pearl lounges by the pool in her West Covina backyard in the early 1960s. (Courtesy of Michael Good)

The pool. (Photo by Gavin Cater)

The Good children in the early 1960s. (Courtesy of Michael Good)

The dining room has west-facing bowed, paned windows to capture the sunset. (Photo by Gavin Cater)

Pearl Good in the dining area in the early 1960s . (Courtesy of Michael Good)

A curved brick wall partially separates the living room from the dining space. (Photo by Gavin Cater)

A wood-slat divider splits one of the bedrooms in two. (Photo by Gavin Cater)

A fireplace warms the den. (Photo by Gavin Cater)

On a hill off Citrus Street is the dream of a young girl.

Lush trees and lawn. Sunshine. Mountain views. West Covina is a far cry from the horrors of the ghetto in Vilna, Poland, where Pearl Good, then 12-year-old Perella Esterowicz, was imprisoned in September 1941.

There wasnt a blade of grass, not a leaf on a tree, and things were so crowded that she couldnt even see the sky, Michael Good remembered his mother telling him. And so, my mom built this house.

That house is now on the market for $1.595 million.

Known as the Good Family Residence, the 3,140-square-foot custom build has four bedrooms, three bathrooms and a living room with a dropped and centered 360-degree fireplace.

A curved brick wall partially separates the living room from the dining space, with west-facing windows bowed to capture the sunset.

Glass walls, wood paneling and built-ins add character.

Pearl and her husband William Z. Good, a Holocaust survivor who ran a medical practice in La Puente, built the light-filled home in 1961 on a 1-acre-plus lot surrounded by rugged hills where cattle grazed. They hired the architectural firm Grillias, Savage, Alves & Associates to draw up the plans for a modern glass home, but the design?

Michael Good, 66, credits his mother for the vision.

Pearl Good borrowed inspiration from The Glass House, a National Trust Historic Site in New Canaan, Conn., built by its architect-owner Philip Johnson in the late 1940s, and consumed architectural books and magazines for ideas.

She had seen these new cutting-edge houses with all the glass that was happening all throughout Southern California, and thats what she wanted to build, said Michael Good. The retired doctor from Connecticut is overseeing the sale of his childhood home on behalf of his twin sister, Anne, and their elder brother, Leonard.

Perched at the end of a long driveway, nature surrounds the property and offers privacy from neighboring homes. The house fronts a large backyard pool, in which the siblings used to play on kid-sized yellow boats.

Family photos show the whole family enjoying the pool area, including one of Pearl Good lounging on the patio with the hills in the background.

Inside, the kitchen separates the great room and the den.

The primary suite is secluded from the other bedrooms and boasts an oversized walk-in closet and an office.

All the secondary bedrooms are found to the right of the foyer, including the largest. It has a wood-slat divider that splits the 20 by 14 space in two, each half with a built-in closet, desk and set of drawers.

According to Michael Good, the scars of the war are apparent in some of those built-ins.

If you pull up one of the desktops, it lifts so you can put pillows and blankets in it, he said. We always knew that if the Nazis came, that was where we were going to hide because kids could fit in those little places.

While the home has undergone necessary upgrades, its still the place his mother dreamed up.

Michael Good hopes the next owner preserves it. This is where his parents raised a family and lived for all but the last years of their lives.

Pearl Good, 93, and William Z. Good, 96, died of complications from Covid-19 two years apart from each other in October 2022 and December 2020, respectively.

It was light, and trees, and greenery and fresh air, he said. Freedom, it was freedom.

Benjamin J. Kahle of Compass is the listing agent.

Read more:

West Covina house, inspired by the dreams of a Holocaust survivor, seeks $1.6M - The San Gabriel Valley Tribune

USC Shoah Foundation partners with National Library of Israel – JNS.org

Posted By on March 5, 2024

(March 4, 2024 / JNS)

The USC Shoah Foundation announced on March 4 that it has partnered with the National Library of Israel to provide Israelis with the first countrywide access to the institutes entire Visual History Archive, including testimonies from more than 52,000 Holocaust survivors and hundreds of survivors of the Oct. 7 terrorist attacks.

Robert J. Williams, USC Shoah Foundation Finci-Viterbi executive director chair, and Sallai Meridor, National Library of Israel chairman, announced the exclusive partnership during a March 4 signing event at the new National Library of Israel building in Jerusalem.As part of the agreement, the USC Shoah Foundation has created a customized page on the NLI website allowing anyone with an Israeli IP address to search,stream and download testimonies from survivors of the Holocaust and other antisemitic attacks (click here).

While the entire Visual History Archive is accessible at nearly 200 academic and cultural institutions around the world, the partnership with NLI makes Israel the only country where full access is available nationwide.

The work of the USC Shoah Foundation with the National Library of Israel is a strong sign of what is possible when major institutions work in partnership in ways that elevate each others missions. Together, we are creating a resource that not only helps inform the global struggle against antisemitism, but one that also builds awareness and understanding of the Jewish people, said Williams, who serves as UNESCO chair on Antisemitism, as well as Holocaust research andadvisor to the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance. It is vitally important that all our testimonies are available in Israel, where nearly half of the worlds remaining Holocaust survivors and the vast majority of Oct. 7 survivors live.The USC Shoah Foundations archive contains uniquely powerful sources that inform education, research and awareness-raising initiatives that bring people and societies face-to-facewith the human beings who survived the worlds oldest hatred. By giving scholars, educators and the wider public additional access to these testimonies through the National Library of Israel, we are helping connect the past with the present in ways that can secure a better future for Israel and the wider international community.

The National Library of Israel is the keeper of national memory for the Jewish people and the State of Israel,said Meridor. This outstanding agreement will deepen the understanding of Israelis of all backgrounds and faiths as to humanitys nadirs and zeniths, from the lowest levels of cruelty, brutality and malice to the highest points of resilience, faith and courage. We invite all users of the National Library website to watch and witness these testimonies, and hope fervently that our resolute pledge of Never Again will continue to guide generations to come.

The March 4 National Library of Israel event kicked off the USC Shoah Foundations four-day Israel Solidarity Mission designed to foster collaboration in the fight against antisemitism. The mission also includes meetings with Israel President Isaac Herzog, a visit to the Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial, and conversations with Oct. 7 survivors and hostage families, as well as visits to sites of Oct. 7 mass atrocities in southern Israel.

In the past five months, the USC Shoah Foundation has gathered more than 400 testimonies of Oct. 7 survivors and eyewitnesses. The National Library of Israel, which opened its new building in the shadow of the war on Oct. 29, will serve as a central repository cataloging Oct. 7 testimonies collected by the USC Shoah Foundation and other organizations.

Our collective work will represent the most comprehensive archival effort to chronicle antisemitic violence, said Williams. Researchers and storytellersnow and in the futurecan turn to these archives as an irrefutable, publicly available resource to rely on in the ongoing fight against antisemitism.

For more information, visit: http://www.nli.org.il/en/research-and-teach/holocaust-research.

You have read 3 articles this month.

Register to receive full access to JNS.

Read this article:

USC Shoah Foundation partners with National Library of Israel - JNS.org

The Week Ahead: Holocaust child survivor shares story on Sunday – Fairfield Daily Republic

Posted By on March 5, 2024

State Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut Delaware Florida Georgia Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia Washington Washington D.C. West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming Puerto Rico US Virgin Islands Armed Forces Americas Armed Forces Pacific Armed Forces Europe Northern Mariana Islands Marshall Islands American Samoa Federated States of Micronesia Guam Palau Alberta, Canada British Columbia, Canada Manitoba, Canada New Brunswick, Canada Newfoundland, Canada Nova Scotia, Canada Northwest Territories, Canada Nunavut, Canada Ontario, Canada Prince Edward Island, Canada Quebec, Canada Saskatchewan, Canada Yukon Territory, Canada

Zip Code

Country United States of America US Virgin Islands United States Minor Outlying Islands Canada Mexico, United Mexican States Bahamas, Commonwealth of the Cuba, Republic of Dominican Republic Haiti, Republic of Jamaica Afghanistan Albania, People's Socialist Republic of Algeria, People's Democratic Republic of American Samoa Andorra, Principality of Angola, Republic of Anguilla Antarctica (the territory South of 60 deg S) Antigua and Barbuda Argentina, Argentine Republic Armenia Aruba Australia, Commonwealth of Austria, Republic of Azerbaijan, Republic of Bahrain, Kingdom of Bangladesh, People's Republic of Barbados Belarus Belgium, Kingdom of Belize Benin, People's Republic of Bermuda Bhutan, Kingdom of Bolivia, Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina Botswana, Republic of Bouvet Island (Bouvetoya) Brazil, Federative Republic of British Indian Ocean Territory (Chagos Archipelago) British Virgin Islands Brunei Darussalam Bulgaria, People's Republic of Burkina Faso Burundi, Republic of Cambodia, Kingdom of Cameroon, United Republic of Cape Verde, Republic of Cayman Islands Central African Republic Chad, Republic of Chile, Republic of China, People's Republic of Christmas Island Cocos (Keeling) Islands Colombia, Republic of Comoros, Union of the Congo, Democratic Republic of Congo, People's Republic of Cook Islands Costa Rica, Republic of Cote D'Ivoire, Ivory Coast, Republic of the Cyprus, Republic of Czech Republic Denmark, Kingdom of Djibouti, Republic of Dominica, Commonwealth of Ecuador, Republic of Egypt, Arab Republic of El Salvador, Republic of Equatorial Guinea, Republic of Eritrea Estonia Ethiopia Faeroe Islands Falkland Islands (Malvinas) Fiji, Republic of the Fiji Islands Finland, Republic of France, French Republic French Guiana French Polynesia French Southern Territories Gabon, Gabonese Republic Gambia, Republic of the Georgia Germany Ghana, Republic of Gibraltar Greece, Hellenic Republic Greenland Grenada Guadaloupe Guam Guatemala, Republic of Guinea, Revolutionary People's Rep'c of Guinea-Bissau, Republic of Guyana, Republic of Heard and McDonald Islands Holy See (Vatican City State) Honduras, Republic of Hong Kong, Special Administrative Region of China Hrvatska (Croatia) Hungary, Hungarian People's Republic Iceland, Republic of India, Republic of Indonesia, Republic of Iran, Islamic Republic of Iraq, Republic of Ireland Israel, State of Italy, Italian Republic Japan Jordan, Hashemite Kingdom of Kazakhstan, Republic of Kenya, Republic of Kiribati, Republic of Korea, Democratic People's Republic of Korea, Republic of Kuwait, State of Kyrgyz Republic Lao People's Democratic Republic Latvia Lebanon, Lebanese Republic Lesotho, Kingdom of Liberia, Republic of Libyan Arab Jamahiriya Liechtenstein, Principality of Lithuania Luxembourg, Grand Duchy of Macao, Special Administrative Region of China Macedonia, the former Yugoslav Republic of Madagascar, Republic of Malawi, Republic of Malaysia Maldives, Republic of Mali, Republic of Malta, Republic of Marshall Islands Martinique Mauritania, Islamic Republic of Mauritius Mayotte Micronesia, Federated States of Moldova, Republic of Monaco, Principality of Mongolia, Mongolian People's Republic Montserrat Morocco, Kingdom of Mozambique, People's Republic of Myanmar Namibia Nauru, Republic of Nepal, Kingdom of Netherlands Antilles Netherlands, Kingdom of the New Caledonia New Zealand Nicaragua, Republic of Niger, Republic of the Nigeria, Federal Republic of Niue, Republic of Norfolk Island Northern Mariana Islands Norway, Kingdom of Oman, Sultanate of Pakistan, Islamic Republic of Palau Palestinian Territory, Occupied Panama, Republic of Papua New Guinea Paraguay, Republic of Peru, Republic of Philippines, Republic of the Pitcairn Island Poland, Polish People's Republic Portugal, Portuguese Republic Puerto Rico Qatar, State of Reunion Romania, Socialist Republic of Russian Federation Rwanda, Rwandese Republic Samoa, Independent State of San Marino, Republic of Sao Tome and Principe, Democratic Republic of Saudi Arabia, Kingdom of Senegal, Republic of Serbia and Montenegro Seychelles, Republic of Sierra Leone, Republic of Singapore, Republic of Slovakia (Slovak Republic) Slovenia Solomon Islands Somalia, Somali Republic South Africa, Republic of South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands Spain, Spanish State Sri Lanka, Democratic Socialist Republic of St. Helena St. Kitts and Nevis St. Lucia St. Pierre and Miquelon St. Vincent and the Grenadines Sudan, Democratic Republic of the Suriname, Republic of Svalbard & Jan Mayen Islands Swaziland, Kingdom of Sweden, Kingdom of Switzerland, Swiss Confederation Syrian Arab Republic Taiwan, Province of China Tajikistan Tanzania, United Republic of Thailand, Kingdom of Timor-Leste, Democratic Republic of Togo, Togolese Republic Tokelau (Tokelau Islands) Tonga, Kingdom of Trinidad and Tobago, Republic of Tunisia, Republic of Turkey, Republic of Turkmenistan Turks and Caicos Islands Tuvalu Uganda, Republic of Ukraine United Arab Emirates United Kingdom of Great Britain & N. Ireland Uruguay, Eastern Republic of Uzbekistan Vanuatu Venezuela, Bolivarian Republic of Viet Nam, Socialist Republic of Wallis and Futuna Islands Western Sahara Yemen Zambia, Republic of Zimbabwe

Originally posted here:

The Week Ahead: Holocaust child survivor shares story on Sunday - Fairfield Daily Republic

Don’t Wait to Stop Another Genocide – Progressive.org

Posted By on March 5, 2024

Ive been losing sleep, feeling helpless in the face of present-day atrocities that are much like the ones committed against my ancestors.

I was born and raised in Israel to a father who survived the Holocaust and a mother who survived the Nazi blitz of London, both of them as children. Like many others of my generation, Im named after a relative who was murdered by the Nazisin my case, my fathers youngest sister, Esty, who was killed at the age of five in Auschwitz. I grew up among people with numbers tattooed on their forearms.

My father was a Holocaust historian. As I grew up, there was one question that permeated everything: How could this happen? How is it possible that the whole world was watching the genocide of the Jewsand other groupsand did nothing until it was too late? By the time the Nazis were defeated, six million Jews had been murdered, including my fathers mother and four younger siblings.

I find myself mulling this question again, now that I see my own people engaged in a genocide themselves: that of the Palestinians. How can it be? Were watching the horrors; we see thousands and thousands of women and children being slaughtered, and it keeps going on. The genocide, carried out by bombs and tanks, starvation, dehydration, the destruction of hospitals and other infrastructure and the withholding of funds from UNRWAthe organization responsible for keeping Gaza aliveis efficient and unceasing. And it is made possible by the monetary and military support of the United States.

How can Democrats like President Joe Biden support Ukrainians in their struggle against the Russian invasion while at the same time enthusiastically supporting Israels invasion of Gaza? Why does the United States earmark $14 billion for Israel while so many Americans are hungry and homeless? As a dual Israeli-American citizen, I find myself both enraged and called to action.

Now, as Israel plots a ground operation in Rafah that would likely kill huge numbers of civilians, the United States is urging the country to come up with a strong safety plan. But what does that even mean? Expelling even more Gazans further south to a new open air prison in the Sinai desert?

The United States and much of the rest of the world have seen mass mobilizations of citizens, including many Jews, who are horrified by this organized decimation of a people and demand that it stop. Weve been organizing and demanding that our elected officials listen and start representing us. So far, to no avail. Biden and his cabinet are deaf to us as are most of our congressional supposed representatives. But there has been some success: So far, at least seventy cities across the country have passed ceasefire resolutions, and 100,000 Democrats voted Uncommitted in the Michigan primary elections.

As the daughter of a victim of a horrendous crime against humanity, I refuse to look away from another such crime. I demand that both my governments, Israel and the United States, immediately stop this mass murder and start rebuilding Gaza, using the $14 billion for that purpose. It will take a lot to atone for the horrors of the past five months. The sooner it starts the better.

This column was produced for Progressive Perspectives, a project of The Progressive magazine, and distributed by Tribune News Service.

Esty Dinur is a radio, print and online journalist. Listen to her weekly radio show every Friday at noon Central Time on http://www.wortfm.org. She is a member of Jewish Voice for Peace-Madison and a founder of Veterans for Peace-Madison.

February 29, 2024

4:41 PM

Excerpt from:

Don't Wait to Stop Another Genocide - Progressive.org

MODEL BOARD OF TRUSTEES RESOLUTION – Condemning Jew-Hatred and Fighting Holocaust Denial – America First Policy Institute

Posted By on March 5, 2024

The America First Policy Institutes model resolution, Condemning Jew-Hatred and Fighting Holocaust Denial, is designed to be adapted by governing boards for their respective university systems. The resolutions purpose is to express the boards commitment to protecting Jewish students and combating Jew-hatred on college campuses. The resolution acknowledges that university leaders have an obligation under Title VI of the Civil Rights Act (1964) to ensure that no student is denied equal access to school programs or opportunities due to discrimination or harassment based on race, sex, or national origin. It, therefore, expresses the boards dedication to ensuring all students, including Jewish students, will be able to learn in a welcoming environment. The resolution affirms the importance of deliberation and recognizes that criticism of Israeli policies is protected by the First Amendment and norms of academic freedom and debate. It closes by expressing the boards intention to promote the establishment of scholarly and balanced educational programs to improve all students understanding of the Holocaust and Israels history.

[University System] Board of Trustees Resolution No. X

Condemning Jew-Hatred and Fighting Holocaust Denial in [University System]

Primary Sponsor

First Last (Board Member)

Cosponsors

First Last (Board Member), First Last (Board Member), First Last (Board Member), First Last (Board Member)

WHEREAS, Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 provides that No person in the United States shall, on the ground of race, color, or national origin, be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any program or activity receiving Federal financial assistance; and

WHEREAS, the Biden-Harris Administrations U.S. National Strategy to Counter Antisemitism embraces Executive Order 13899, Combating Antisemitism (2019), and specifies that national origin within Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 includes groups with shared ancestry, specifically Jewish ancestry;[1] and

WHEREAS, the U.S. Department of Education has issued a Dear Colleague letter explaining that universities must take immediate and effective action to respond to harassment that creates a hostile environment for students based on shared ancestry;[2] and

WHEREAS, the [University System] Statement on [Student Rights and Responsibilities or similar] makes clear that [Quote from university system explicitly stating that unlawful discrimination on the grounds of religion and/or ethnicity is prohibited in system];[3] and

WHEREAS, the Antidefamation League has reported a 360 percent increase in antisemitic incidents recorded from the October 7 massacre to January 10, 2024, compared to the same period a year prior3,283 incidents in all, including 60 incidents of physical assault, 553 incidents of vandalism, and 1,353 incidents of verbal or written harassment;[4] and

WHEREAS, in the aftermath of the October 7 massacre against Israeli civilians and the ensuing war in Gaza, antisemitic attacks and harassment across the United States have skyrocketed, including:

WHEREAS, since the October 7 massacre, the number of assaults and instances of harassment and vandalism have skyrocketed on college campuses around the country, including:[9]

WHEREAS, too many public leaders have equivocated in the face of Jew-hatred and failed to condemn grotesque expressions of hatred targeting Jewish students; and

WHEREAS, Jews make up only 2.4 percent of the U.S. population but are the targets of 54.9 percent of all religion-based hate crimes in the United States;[13] and

WHEREAS, we recognize that roughly two-thirds of antisemitic incidents since the October 7 massacre are directly related to the Israel-Hamas war;[14] and

WHEREAS, shifting attitudes among young people raise serious concerns that America may grow less welcoming to Jews in the future, an alarming trend documented by:

WHEREAS, we recognize that criticisms of Israel can veer into antisemitism when such criticism demonizes Israel, applies double standards to Israel, or delegitimizes the state of Israel for example, when protestors liken Israeli Defense Forces operations in Gaza to Nazi behavior at Auschwitz or call for Israels destruction and the ethnic cleansing of Israeli Jews; and

WHEREAS, we recognize that one can vehemently criticize Israeli policies without veering into antisemitism, and we affirm that it is of utmost importance that university administrators encourage civil and wide-ranging deliberation on controversial topics;

THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED, that the [University System] Board of Trustees condemns violent antisemitic attacks at our university[ies] and at school-sponsored events, including instances of bullying and harassment, and commits to establishing an environment free from discrimination and harassment in which all students, including Jewish students, have unfettered access to educational programs, activities, and benefits; and

BE IT RESOLVED, that the [University System] Board of Trustees is committed to protecting Jewish students from discrimination and harassment and will investigate student and staff complaints fully, in exactly the same way we respond to allegations of race- or sex-based discrimination and harassment; and

BE IT RESOLVED, that the [University System] Board of Trustees stands with our Jewish community and Jews everywhere and condemns antisemitic chants calling for the murder of Jews and the destruction of the Israeli state, including Globalize the Intifada, Gas the Jews, and From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free; and

BE IT RESOLVED, that the [University System] Board of Trustees affirms the centrality of free expression on a university campus, including criticism of Israeli policies, speech that is protected by norms of academic freedom [and the First Amendment (public campuses only)]; and

BE IT RESOLVED, that the [University System] Board of Trustees is committed to striving for balance and academic integrity in programs of study designed to educate the student body about the Holocaust and the modern state of Israel, including the history of Arab Palestinians in Israel.

To learn more about this resolution or to request a copy of the resolution as a Microsoft Word document, please contact Matthew Lobel at [emailprotected].

To learn more about the education policy priorities of the America First Policy Institute, please visit the Center for Education Opportunity, Center for 1776, and Higher Education Reform Initiative.

[1] The White House. (2023, May 25). FACT SHEET: Biden-Harris Administration Releases First-Ever U.S. National Strategy to Counter Antisemitism. https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/statements-releases/2023/05/25/fact-sheet-biden-harris-administration-releases-first-ever-u-s-national-strategy-to-counter-antisemitism/

[2] Department of Education, Office for Civil Rights (2023, Nov. 7). Dear Colleague Letter. https://www2.ed.gov/about/offices/list/ocr/letters/colleague-202311-discrimination-harassment-shared-ancestry.pdf

[3] This footnote is a reference to a university system-specific policy. [University System Name. (Year, Month, Day). Name of Document Regarding Students Rights and Responsibilities or similar. URL]

[4] Antidefamation League. (2024, January 17). U.S. Antisemitic Incidents Skyrocketed 360% in Aftermath of Attack in Israel, according to Latest ADL Data. https://www.adl.org/resources/press-release/us-antisemitic-incidents-skyrocketed-360-aftermath-attack-israel-according

[5] Donlevy, K., Vago, S., & Land, O. (2023, November 17). Hundreds of pro-Palestinian protesters including A-list actress shout Long live the Intifada!, pass out maps of pro-Israel locations to target in NYC. The New York Post.

https://nypost.com/2023/11/17/metro/pro-palestinian-protesters-shout-long-live-the-intifada-in-union-square/

[6] Secure Community Network. (n.d.). Secure Community Network News Releases. https://www.securecommunitynetwork.org/about/news

[7] Lybrand, H. (2023, December 17). A man was arrested in Washington DC after allegedly spraying a substance at 2 people and yelling an antisemitic phrase. CNN. https://www.cnn.com/2023/12/17/us/washington-dc-man-arrest-anti-semitic-phrase/index.html

[8] Cowan, J., & Hubler, S. (2023, November 6). Jewish Mans Death After California Protest Clash Is Under Investigation. The New York Times. https://www.nytimes.com/2023/11/06/us/california-jewish-man-paul-kessler-israel-protests.html

[9] Antidefamation League. (2024, January 17). U.S. Antisemitic Incidents Skyrocketed 360% in Aftermath of Attack in Israel, according to Latest ADL Data. https://www.adl.org/resources/press-release/us-antisemitic-incidents-skyrocketed-360-aftermath-attack-israel-according

[10] World Jewish Congress. (n.d.). Jewish Life on Campus During the Israel Hamas War. https://www.worldjewishcongress.org/en/campus-life-israel-hamas-war

[11] World Jewish Congress. (n.d.). Jewish Life on Campus During the Israel Hamas War. https://www.worldjewishcongress.org/en/campus-life-israel-hamas-war

[12] Lynch, J., & Sung, C. (2023, December 8). Two students claim the University of Pennsylvania has violated the Civil Rights Act by not protecting Jewish students from antisemitism on campus. CNN Business. https://www.cnn.com/2023/12/08/business/students-claim-university-of-pennsylvania-civil-rights-antisemitism-on-campus/index.html

[13] Antidefamation League. (2023, October 16). ADL: FBI Data Reflects Deeply Alarming Record-High Number of Reported Hate Crime Incidents in the U.S. in 2022. https://www.adl.org/resources/press-release/adl-fbi-data-reflects-deeply-alarming-record-high-number-reported-hate

[14] Antidefamation League. (2024, January 17). U.S. Antisemitic Incidents Skyrocketed 360% in Aftermath of Attack in Israel, according to Latest ADL Data. https://www.adl.org/resources/press-release/us-antisemitic-incidents-skyrocketed-360-aftermath-attack-israel-according

[15] The Harvard University and Harris Poll. (2023, December 14). Harvard CAPS (Center for American Political Studies) Harris Poll. https://harvardharrispoll.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/HHP_Dec23_KeyResults.pdf

[16] One in five young Americans thinks the Holocaust is a myth. (2023, December 7). The Economist. https://www.economist.com/united-states/2023/12/07/one-in-five-young-americans-thinks-the-holocaust-is-a-myth

Read the rest here:

MODEL BOARD OF TRUSTEES RESOLUTION - Condemning Jew-Hatred and Fighting Holocaust Denial - America First Policy Institute

Jewish Food 101 | My Jewish Learning

Posted By on March 3, 2024

Jewish food is difficult to define. Over time, Jews have eaten many different types of foods, often no different from those of their gentile neighbors. Nonetheless, the foods Jews have eaten bear the stamp of the unique socio-economic and migratory patterns of the Jewish community, while also reflecting the Jewish dietary laws (kashrut) and other religious requirements; for instance, the prohibition against creating fire on Shabbat inspired slow-cooked Sabbath stews in both Sephardic and Ashkenazic cuisine.

Get Jewish recipes and food news in your inbox. Sign up for our free newsletters.

Seven types of produce are mentioned in Deuteronomy 8:8 wheat, barley, grapes, figs, pomegranate, olives and dates. Legumes, wild plants, and meat mostly mutton were also eaten in biblical times. The dietary laws found in the Torah, and analyzed in detail in the Talmud, governed all eating in ancient years. The Torah and Talmud also enumerate other food-related laws, such as those related to the shmita or sabbatical year, during which all land must lay fallow.

Sephardic cuisine refers to the foods eaten by the Jews of the Mediterranean, North Africa, the Middle East, the Red Sea regionand India. Most of these lands were once part of the Islamic world, and they reflect the varied yet related food customs of this culture. In the early Middle Ages, the Jews in Islamic lands flourished culturally and economically. Their foods reflect this socio-economic position in quality, quantity, and presentation. After the Jews were expelled from Spain in 1492, most Sephardic Jews made their way to North Africa and the Ottoman lands, where they continued to influence and be influenced by local cuisine.

In contrast to Sephardic Jewry, most Ashkenazi Jews those from Europe and Russia were very poor, and their food reflects this. Ashkenazic food also reflects the migration of a community first based in Germany that ultimately spread eastward to Russia and Poland. What Americans usually refer to as Jewish foodbagels, knishes, borscht are the foods of Ashkenazic Jewry, and indeed, in many cases were foods eaten by the non-Jews of Eastern Europe as well.

The Jewish style food of America is an enriched version of Ashkenazic cuisine. However, Jews existed in the U.S. long before the major wave of Eastern European immigration in the beginning of the 20th century. Though early Jewish life was located primarily in the major cities on the East Coast, Jews traveled and lived throughout the United States, and their foods were influenced by local custom and availability. Matzah balls with hot pepper in Louisiana and gefilte fish made from salmon in the Far West are examples of Americas influence on Jewish cuisine. The recent interest in health food has also affected Jewish eating. Derma (stomach casings) and schmaltz (chicken fat), once staples of Jewish cooking, are rarely used today.

Most of Israels culinary experts believe that Israel has yet to develop its own national cuisine. The foods most commonly referred to as Israeli foods like hummus, falafeland Israeli salad are actually common to much of the Mediterranean and Arabic world. Nonetheless, because of its international citizenry, certain government-sponsored kashrut laws, and the recent surge in American fast food which produced a kosher McDonalds eating in Israel is a unique experience.

Empower your Jewish discovery, daily

See the article here:

Jewish Food 101 | My Jewish Learning

Ashkenazi Jewish cuisine – Wikipedia

Posted By on March 3, 2024

The cuisine of the Ashkenazi Jews is reflective of their journey from Central to Eastern Europe and then to the Americas and Israel.[3] Ashkenazi Jews are a Jewish diaspora population which coalesced in the Holy Roman Empire around the end of the first millennium CE. This population progressively migrated eastward, and established population centres in the PolishLithuanian Commonwealth (a nation which then consisted of territories currently located in parts of present-day Belarus, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Moldova, Poland, Russia, Slovakia, and Ukraine).[4] Ashkenazi communities have also historically been present in the Banat, a region in central and eastern Europe that consists of parts of present-day Serbia, Romania, and Hungary. As a result, the cuisine of Ashkenazi Jews was highly regional in the past, and has also been influenced by a diverse range of European cooking traditions, including German, Italian, Slavic, and Ottoman cuisines.

A common refrain is that the food of Ashkenazi Jews is the food of poverty. Indeed, Jews in Europe generally lived at the sufferance of the gentile rulers of the lands in which they sojourned, and they were frequently subjected to antisemitic laws that, at certain times and in certain places, limited their participation in the regular economy,[5] or in land ownership and farming.[6] This situation forced many Jews into intergenerational poverty, with the result being that for many Jews, only basic staples were available. Luxury items like meat and imported foods such as spices were not commonplace for anyone but the wealthy. However, the wealthy had access to imported goods like spices, olive oil, and exotic fruits, and they were able to eat meat more frequently.

While the majority of Jews who have been living in the Western Levant and Turkey since the time of the first diaspora have been Sefardic, Mizrahi, and other non-Ashkenazi Jews, Ashkenazi communities also existed among the Jewish communities of the southern Syrian provinces in the Ottoman period (the Old Yishuv), and Turkey.[7] Evidence of cross-cultural culinary exchange between Ottoman and Ashkenazi cuisines can be seen most readily in the food of Jews in the Banat, Romania, and Moldova, particularly pastrami and karnatzel.[8]

A stereotype of Ashkenazi food is that it contains few vegetables relative to other Jewish cuisines.[9] While there is some truth to this allegation, it was most true in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, a period during which many eastern European Ashkenazi Jews experienced particularly extreme deprivation (including in terms of the availability of food), that coincided with the advent of industrial food processing. "Modern kitchen science" and industrial food processing continued and accelerated into the mid-20th century in the United States, leading to a narrowing of the culinary repertoire and a heavier reliance of processed shelf-stable foods.[10]

Root vegetables such as turnips, beets, parsnips, carrots, black radish and potatoes historically made up a large portion of the Ashkenazi diet in Europe. The potato indigenous to the Americas had an enormous impact on Ashkenazi cuisine, though it reached most Ashkenazi Jews only in the second half of the 19th century.[11] Other vegetables commonly eaten were cabbage, cucumbers, sorrel, horseradish, and in the Banat, tomatoes and peppers. Cabbage, cucumbers, and other vegetables were frequently preserved through pickling or fermentation. Fruits include stone fruits such as plums and apricots, apples and pears, and berries, which were eaten fresh or preserved. Raisins are also historically an integral part of Ashkenazi cuisine since the 14th century.[12] Staple grains included barley, rye, buckwheat and wheat; barley and buckwheat were generally cooked whole by boiling the grains/groats in water, while rye and wheat were ground into flour and used to make breads and other baked goods. Dairy products were common, including sour cream, and cheeses such as farmer's cheese and brindze and kashkaval in southeastern regions. Nuts such as almonds and walnuts were eaten as well. Mushrooms were foraged or purchased.[13]

In North America in the 20th century, Ashkenazi food became blander and less regionally-distinct than it had been in Europe, due primarily to the unavailability of certain ingredients and staple foods, the advent of industrial food processing and modern kitchen science,[14] and poverty and pressures to assimilate.[15] In the early 21st century, however, increased interest in heritage and food history, including that of Ashkenazi Jews, has resulted in efforts to revitalize this cuisine.[16]

The hamentash, a triangular cookie or turnover filled with fruit preserves (lekvar) or honey and black poppy seed paste, is eaten on the Feast of Purim. It is said to be shaped like the hat of Haman the tyrant. The mohn kichel is a circular or rectangular wafer sprinkled with poppy seed. Pirushkes, or turnovers, are little cakes fried in honey or dipped in molasses after they are baked. Strudel is served for dessert.

Kugels are a type of casserole. They come in two types: noodle or potato. Lokshn kugl, or noodle kugel, is usually made from wide egg noodles, eggs, sour cream, raisins, and farmer's cheese, and contains some sugar. Potato kugels (bulbenikes) are made from chopped or shredded potatoes, onions, salt, and eggs, with oil or schmaltz. A regional specialty, kugel yerushalmi (Jerusalem kugel) is made from long, thin eggs noodles, more sugar than a typical noodle kugel, and large quantities of black pepper. It is usually pareve, whereas noodle kugel is dairy and potato kugel may be either pareve or meat-based (if made with schmaltz).

The dough of challah (called barkhes in Western Yiddish) is often shaped into forms having symbolical meanings; thus on Rosh Hashanah rings and coins are imitated, indicating "May the new year be as round and complete as these"; for Hosha'na Rabbah, bread is baked in the form of a key, meaning "May the door of heaven open to admit our prayers."[citation needed]

In Eastern Europe, the Jews baked black (proster, or "ordinary") bread, white bread and challah. The most common form is the twist (koilitch or kidke from the Romanian word ncolci which means "to twist"). The koilitch is oval in form and about one and a half feet in length. On special occasions, such as weddings, the koilitch is increased to a length of about two and a half feet.

The bagel, which originated in Jewish communities of Poland, is a popular Ashkenazi food and became widespread in the United States.[17][18]

The rendered fat of chickens, known as schmaltz, is sometimes kept in readiness for cooking use when needed. Gribenes or "scraps", also called griven, the cracklings left from the rendering process were one of the favorite foods of the former Jewish community in Eastern Europe. Schmaltz is eaten spread on bread.

With kosher meat not always available, fish became an important staple of the Jewish diet. In Eastern Europe it was sometimes especially reserved for Shabbat. As fish is not considered meat in the same way that beef or poultry are, it can also be eaten with dairy products (although some Sephardim do not mix fish and dairy).

Even though fish is parve, when they are served at the same meal, Orthodox Jews will eat them during separate courses and wash (or replace) the dishes in between. Gefilte fish and lox are popular in Ashkenazi cuisine.

Gefilte fish (from German gefllte "stuffed" fish) was traditionally made by skinning the fish steaks, usually German carp, de-boning the flesh, mincing it and sometimes mixing with finely chopped browned onions (3:1), eggs, salt or pepper and vegetable oil. The fish skin and head were then stuffed with the mixture and poached.[19]

The religious reason for a boneless fish dish for Shabbat is the prohibition of separating bones from food while eating (borer).

A more common commercially packaged product found today is the "Polish" gefilte-fish patties or balls, similar to quenelles, where sugar is added to the broth, resulting in a slightly sweet taste.[20] Strictly speaking they are the fish filling, rather than the complete filled fish.[21] This method of serving evolved from the tradition of removing the stuffing from the skin,[22] rather than portioning the entire fish into slices before serving.

While traditionally made with carp or whitefish and sometimes pike, gefilte fish may also be made from any large fish: cod, haddock, or hake in the United Kingdom.

The combination of smoked salmon, or whitefish with bagels and cream cheese is a traditional breakfast or brunch in American Jewish cuisine, made famous at New York City delicatessens.

Vorschmack or gehakte hering (chopped herring), a popular appetizer on Shabbat, is made by chopping skinned, boned herrings with hard-boiled eggs, sometimes onions, apples, sugar or pepper and a dash of vinegar.

Holishkes, stuffed cabbage, also known as the cabbage roll, is also a European Jewish dish that emerged from more impoverished times for Jews. Because having a live cow was more valuable than to eat meat in the Middle Ages, Jews used fillers such as breadcrumbs and vegetables to mix with ground beef. This gave the effect of more meat being stuffed into the cabbage leaves.

A spread of chopped liver, prepared with caramelized onions and often including gribenes, is a popular appetizer, side dish, or snack, especially among Jews on the east coast of North America. It is usually served with rye bread or crackers.

Gebratenes (roasted meat), chopped meat and essig-fleisch (vinegar meat) are favorite meat recipes. The essig or, as it is sometimes called, honig or Sauerbraten, is made by adding to meat which has been partially roasted some sugar, bay leaves, pepper, raisins, salt and a little vinegar. Knish is a snack food consisting of a meat or potato filling covered with dough that is either baked or grilled.

Tzimmes generally consists of cooked vegetables or fruits, sometimes with meat added. The most popular vegetable is the carrot (mehren tzimes), which is sliced. Turnips are also used for tzimmes, particularly in Lithuania. In southern Russia, Galicia and Romania tzimmes are made with pears, apples, figs, prunes or plums (floymn tzimes).

Kreplach are ravioli-like dumplings made from flour and eggs mixed into a dough, rolled into sheets, cut into squares and then filled with finely chopped, seasoned meat or cheese. They are most often served in soup, but may be fried. Kreplach are eaten on various holidays, including Purim and Hosha'na Rabbah.

A number of soups are characteristically Ashkenazi, one of the most common of which is chicken soup traditionally served on Shabbat, holidays and special occasions. The soup may be served with noodles (lokshen in Yiddish). It is often served with shkedei marak (lit. "soup almonds", croutons popular in Israel), called mandlen or mandlach in Yiddish. Other popular ingredients are kreplach (dumplings) and matza balls(kneidlach)a mixture of matza meal, eggs, water pepper or salt. Some reserve kneidlach for Passover and kreplach for other special occasions.

In the preparation of a number of soups, neither meat nor fat is used. Such soups formed the food of the poor classes. An expression among Jews of Eastern Europe, soup mit nisht (soup with nothing), owes its origin to soups of this kind.

Soups such as borscht were considered a staple in Ukraine. Shtshav, a soup made with sorrel, was often referred to as "green borscht" or "sour grass".[23] Soups like krupnik were made of barley, potatoes and fat. This was the staple food of the poor students of the yeshivot; in richer families, meat was added to this soup.

At weddings, "golden" chicken soup was often served. The reason for its name is probably the yellow circles of molten chicken fat floating on its surface. Today, chicken soup is widely referred to (not just among Jews) in jest as "Jewish penicillin", and hailed as a cure for the common cold.[24]

There are a number of sour soups in the borscht category. One is kraut or cabbage borscht, made by cooking together cabbage, meat, bones, onions, raisins, sour salt (citric acid), sugar and sometimes tomatoes.

Beet borscht is served hot or cold. In the cold version, a beaten egg yolk may be added before serving and each bowl topped with a dollop of sour cream. This last process is called farweissen (to make white).

Krupnik, or barley soup, originates in Polish lands; its name comes from the Slavic term for hulled grains, krupa. While non-Jewish recipes for krupnik often involve meat (beef, chicken, pork or a mixture) and dairy (sour cream) in the same recipe, Jewish recipes for meat-based krupnik generally use chicken or (more rarely) beef broth; if made without meat, sour cream may be added.[25]

Teiglach, traditionally served on Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year, consists of little balls of dough (about the size of a marble) drenched in a honey syrup. Ingberlach are ginger candies shaped into small sticks or rectangles. Rugelach, babka, and kokosh are popular pastries as well.

In Europe, jellies and preserves made from fruit juice were used as pastry filling or served with tea. Among the poor, jelly was reserved for invalids, hence the practice of reciting the Yiddish saying Alevay zol men dos nit darfn (May we not have occasion to use it) before storing it away.

Flodni, a layered sweet pastry consisting of apples, walnuts, currants and poppy seeds, were a staple of Hungarian Jewish bakeries prior to World War II.

Because it was easy to prepare, made from inexpensive ingredients and contained no dairy products, compote became a staple dessert in Jewish households throughout Europe and was considered part of Jewish cuisine.[26]

Continue reading here:

Ashkenazi Jewish cuisine - Wikipedia


Page 95«..1020..94959697..100110..»

matomo tracker