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‘Its not going to stop us’ | Churches in Webster Groves vandalized by hate speech – KSDK.com

Posted By on September 8, 2020

"Were clear that folks were trying to intimidate us," Pastor Denoon says.

WEBSTER GROVES, Mo. Waving in the wind, a Black Lives Matter and pride flag are planted in front of Peace United Church of Christ in Webster Groves.

To show even more support?

For the past 15 weeks, Pastor Wendy Bruner leads a Black Lives Matter vigil at the progressive denomination every Friday.

Three blocks away is First Congregational Church and Webster Groves Presbyterian.

Pastor David Denoon says all three churches have activist congregations.

And while they welcome all and seek equality, not everyone is on the same page.

Pastor Denoon says, "I think this caught somebodys attention. Were clear that folks were trying to intimidate us."

Stenciled in red spray paint are the numbers 13 and 50 divided by a slash.

This is what's seen coated on the ground in front of all these churches.

According to the Anti-Defamation League, 13 represents the U.S. population who are African-Americans.

As for 50, ADL explains it represents a false percentage of all murders committed in the U.S. by African-Americans.

Pastor Bruner says, "I think its just a way of making a group of people look criminal. Im sad, frustrated, and angry."

ADL adds, it's racist propaganda by white supremacists to depict Black people as savage and criminal in nature.

According to the U.S. census, Black and African-Americans do make up about 13.4 percent of the population.

If we look at the DOJ Chart, we also have to consider the Violent Crimes section for numbers, which includes offenses of murder, as well as other categories. Also, these numbers are arrests and not convictions. The high Black arrest rates could be the result of discrimination.

"We know what this is. This is white people who are supremacists telling white people who are seeking equity for all, that we need to shut up sit down and move to the back of the line. We need to pray for the people whove done this," Pastor Denoon says passionately.

The numbers are now scrubbed away and police reports were made.

"We definitely heard you... do you hear us? Do you understand what we are called to do," Pastor Denoon pleads.

Pastor Bruner says the graffiti may be gone, but the issue is not.

She says they are motivated now more than ever and they're staying firm in their beliefs.

"Its not going to stop us. We will be out there every Friday until Black lives matter," Pastor Bruner says.

Every Friday, Peace United Church of Christ hosted a Black Lives Matter vigil from 6 to 6:30.

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'Its not going to stop us' | Churches in Webster Groves vandalized by hate speech - KSDK.com

Palestinian hijacker Leila Khaled to speak at SF State – The Jewish News of Northern California

Posted By on September 8, 2020

A San Francisco State University invitation to Palestinian hijacker Leila Khaled to speak at a virtual event this month is roiling Bay Area Jewish organizations.

Khaled, 76, was a key player in two hijackings as a member of the Palestinian Front for the Liberation of Palestine, in 1969 on a Tel Aviv-bound flight and in 1970 on an El Al flight to New York. The PFLP has been designated a terrorist organization by the State Department.

Hosted by the universitys Arab and Muslim Ethnicities and Diasporas Studies program (AMED), the Sept. 23 roundtable discussion, Whose Narratives? Gender, Justice and Resistance, is facing strong rebukes this week from an array of organizations, including the Anti-Defamation League, San Francisco Hillel and the S.F.-based Jewish Community Relations Council.

It is bitterly ironic that a notorious hijacker and convicted terrorist will be welcomed at an institution of higher learning where the free exchange of ideas ought to be paramount, said Seth Brysk, director of the ADLs Central Pacific region. An individual with a demonstrated commitment to violent extremism will undoubtedly discourage students from free expression and exploration.

While the ADL respects and defends academic freedom, Brysk added, it is urging the university to reject violence and reassure the safety of its students.

The event will be moderated by the AMED programs senior scholar, associate professor Rabab Abdulhadi, an outspoken critic of Israel and a supporter of the boycott, divestment and sanctions movement. Womens studies professor Tomomi Kinukawa also will moderate. The events Facebook page so far shows 276 people planning to attend and 1,200 people interested.

Abdulhadi and Kinukawa did not respond to requests for comment.

At a time of unrest and deep divisions in our country, holding a program that advocates and even glorifies violent solutions to the worlds problems, in [a] public forum that will be broadcast into students private homes, is unconscionable, said JCRCs Middle East project director Karen Stiller. Leila Khaleds appearance may be considered an exercise of free speech, but SFSU must protect students and exercise its own free speech rights by clearly stating that this program does not represent its mission and core values.

In a statement provided by an SFSU spokesperson, the university cited free speech in backing the right to include Khaled as a speaker.

An invitation to a public figure to speak to a class should not be construed as an endorsement of point of view, the statement read. Higher education and the college experience are an opportunity to hear divergent ideas, viewpoints and accounts of life experiences.

The statement also read, We recognize that the exercise of free speech and academic freedom can result in discomfort or pain for others.

S.F. Hillels executive director Rachel Nilson Ralston said she is alarmed by Khaleds participation in a university event.

We call on the university to use their leadership voices to make clear that Khaleds actions do not represent the values of our university, Ralston wrote in a statement. We look to them to ensure the safety and inclusion of all students, including Jews and Zionists.

The event will include other speakers, including Laura Whitehorn, a member of Jewish Voice for Peace who was in prison for 14 years for her involvement in a 1983 bombing at the U.S.Capitol; Sekou Odinga, a former member of the Black Liberation Army; Ronnie Kasrils, a South African politician and Israel critic; and Rula Abu Dahou of Birzeit University in the West Bank.

Khaled is a folk hero of sorts in the Palestinian resistance movement; a photo of her wearing a kaffiyeh and holding an AK-47 has been reproduced on murals in Bethlehem, Belfast and elsewhere. She has never renounced her past, and in frequent interviews continues to hold that Israel and Zionism are terrorism and that violence against Israel is a legitimate weapon.

It is also not the first time that Khaled has been controversial in the Bay Area.

Earlier this year, a display at UC Berkeley by Bears of Palestine, a campus group that promotes Palestinian history and culture, included the iconic photo of Khaled along a row of female Palestinian militants, including Rasmea Odeh. Odeh was convicted for her participation in a 1969 bombing of a Jerusalem market that killed two college students. A student government resolution to condemn the photos failed to pass in February.

S.F. State, too, has been a longtime battleground between Israeli and Palestinian activists.

In April 2016, a talk by Jerusalem Mayor Nir Barkat was shouted down by pro-Palestinian students, an incident that drew the condemnation of then-S.F. State president Les Wong. A year later, Barkat abruptly canceled another invitation to speak at the university after both Jewish and Palestinian students wrote letters to oppose his appearance on campus.

In February 2017, an investigation by S.F. State found that the universitys Hillel was improperly excluded from a campus civil rights information fair. In June of that year, a lawsuit was filed in federal court against 13 professors and administrators, alleging discrimination against Jewish students.

In February 2018, two Jewish students filed a lawsuit in San Francisco Superior Court against the board of trustees of California State University, alleging that SFSU discriminates against Jewish students in violation of their civil rights.

Abdulhadi, listed as a defendant in that case, also was cited in the suit. She defended Hillels exclusion from the 2017 information fair in an essay in the pro-Palestinian publication Mondoweiss.

The case was settled in March 2019. As part of the settlement, SFSU promised to protect the rights of Jewish students and to pay $36,000 toward the plaintiffs fees.

The settlement also mandated the establishment of a Jewish life coordinator on campus. The job was filled by former S.F. Hillel staffer Sasha Joseph, who left the post in February 2020 after less than a year. The university has yet to find a replacement for the position.

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Palestinian hijacker Leila Khaled to speak at SF State - The Jewish News of Northern California

Letter to the Editor: It’s all About Experience for the Job – by Community Contributor – The Ark Valley Voice

Posted By on September 8, 2020

Dear Editor,

Alison Brown recently responded to my letter about Hannah Hannahs lack of qualifications for the job of County Commissioner.

I pointed out that Ms. Hannah circulated a photo of herself wearing doc Martens type boots with red boot laces laced in a certain ladder fashion rather than the traditional X pattern most people use. This is quite specifically a White Power insignia; I linked my comments to articles by both the Southern Poverty Law Center and the Anti-Defamation League which unambiguously confirm that boots and red laces done this way are a White Power insignia.

Allison Brown attempted to write this off as a fashion choice and paint me as an anti-feminist for calling out womens fashion choices aligning Hannah with suffragettes in the 19th century and aligning me with the men who fought against them. This of course is total hogwash. Im all for women in government and have both campaigned and voted for many of them. Further calling a White Supremacist insignia a fashion choice is no different than saying a KKK white hood is a fashion choice.

In my opinion, the fact that Ms. Hannah has removed the offensive photo from her website also says volumes.

I also pointed out that Hannah has no experience in public policy and should be spending her time gaining experience in less important and less critical public board and public policy positions before asking us to pay her $75,000 a year to learn on the job in the most senior position in the county. Ms. Brown defends Hannah by saying she is a busy working mother and does not have free time to dedicate to working on lower-level boards for no money.

To be clear, I am making no judgments whatsoever of Ms. Hannahs past work with her familys cattle ranch or her adult choices to be a professional mountain bike racer, fashion designer or jewelry designer.

I admire her decision to put her family first and spend time with her kids rather than work on low or no pay public policy boards.

Whether she has never served on a public board because it did not interest her, or because she is a busy mom, is moot. The fact remains that she has not worked in the types of positions that give one the skills to tackle the larger countywide issues. She lacks the experience the job requires and saying its because she is a busy single mom does not change that fact.

Rob Dubin

Salida

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Letter to the Editor: It's all About Experience for the Job - by Community Contributor - The Ark Valley Voice

This week in Jewish political news: Bay State update, Jews and the Black Lives Matter movement, and more – JTA News – Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Posted By on September 8, 2020

(JTA) Heres a rundown of what weve covered while we miss our man in Washington. Hell be back next week!

Bay State update

There were lots of Jewish candidates in the running in primaries this week in Massachusetts, including Alex Morse, the progressive Democrat who was trying to unseat a longtime senator and become the first Jewish member of The Squad. He lost, as did an epidemiologist running for Congress. But two Jewish candidates are neck and neck in the race to fill the congressional seat vacated by Joe Kennedy III.

On the trail

Lara Trump, the presidents daughter-in-law, campaigned with Laura Loomer, the Jewish 27-year-old and self-proclaimed proud Islamophobe who is the Republican congressional candidate in the Florida district that includes Mar-a-Lago, President Trumps home. Meanwhile, Karlie Kloss, whos married to Jared Kushners brother Josh (and loves Shabbat), is joining a campaign event for Joe Biden.

Florida report

Theres more going on in the Sunshine State than Rons visit. As both parties vie for Florida, Kamala Harriss husband Douglas Emhoff made a pitch for Jewish voters there. He made a similar pitch today on a call to Pennsylvania Democrats right down to his stump speech recounting his camp accolades.

Jews and Black lives

Four years ago, the Movement for Black Lives frustrated many potential Jewish supporters by condemning Israel. Its new platform doesnt mention Israel at all. Before the new platform came out, more than 600 Jewish groups and institutions issued a show of support for the Black Lives Matter movement. One later backed out, leaving no mainstream Orthodox supporters.

Cant get enough news? Join our live weekly news quiz at 7:30 p.m. ET tonight, right here on Zoom.

Reportedly to communicate that the U.S. Embassy in Israel wont ever leave Jerusalem, casino magnate Sheldon Adelson may be buying the former ambassadors mansion in Herzliya.

Republicans played Leonard Cohens Hallelujah twice during their convention, against his estates wishes. The estate suggested as an alternative You Want It Darker.

Biden condemned the apparent arson of a Chabad building at the University of Delaware.

An Anti-Defamation League analyst offers insights about what to make of the killings during protests in Kenosha, Wisconsin, and Portland, Oregon, and why armed vigilantes are a growing concern for extremism monitors.

Some political views

The editor-at large of Mishpacha, an influential and widely read magazine by and for Orthodox Jews, explains why hes voting for Donald Trump: Orthodox Jews see Trump as their man on the street.

An experienced political communications strategist unpacks what synagogues planning to stream their High Holiday services can learn from this years political conventions.

TV guide

In case youre watching HBOs Lovecraft Country or thinking about it, be warned that theres a plot point that sounds a lot like a blood libel. This story examines why and what viewers should take away. But beware: There are spoilers.

Share your thoughts on The Tell, or suggest a topic for us atthetell@jta.org.

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This week in Jewish political news: Bay State update, Jews and the Black Lives Matter movement, and more - JTA News - Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Donald Trump is the most serious threat to American Jewish security in the past half century – Forward

Posted By on September 8, 2020

Forty-five years in the Jewish civil rights field did not prepare me for the Jewish communitys response to Donald Trump. From Gerald Ford (the president when I began my 27-year career with the Anti-Defamation League in 1975) to Barack Obama, there was a unifying reality that bound liberal and conservative Jews together when assessing the political scene. All of the following were summarily rejected: bigotry, apologists for bigotry, purveyors of conspiracy notions and anyone who posed a threat (real or rhetorical) to Jews and other minority groups.

Jewsboth Republican and Democrats arose as one in 1976 when the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. George Brown, talked about They (Jews) own, you know, the banks in this country, the newspapers. Just look at where the Jewish money is Jews running the banks. He was uniformly condemned.

In 1990 when former Klan leader David Duke ran as a Republican for the Senate in Louisiana, the Republican Party leadershipen masserefused to support the Klan leader even though the seat would remain in the hands of the Democratic Party as a result. The entire Jewish community applauded President Bush and his colleagues.

When political leaders or their followers evidenced bigotry or racism, invariably Jewish leaders and their constituents would demand that the bigots be ostracized and condemned. Republicans would criticize their own, as would Democrats-the overarching principle was to isolate and quarantine hate; silence in the face of bigotry was viewed as acquiescence.

In September 1985 I wrote an op/ed in the Los Angeles Times condemning a long-time ally, LA mayor Tom Bradley, for not condemning an appearance in LA by the Nation of Islams anti-Semitic leader Louis Farrakhan. Political affiliation and alliances were irrelevant, silence in the face of bigotry was not.

That was how things operated until Donald Trump emerged from his gilded escalator and announced his candidacy. There were Jewish community figures who stood by him then and later while ignoring his musings about Mexicans and Muslim immigrants and good people in Charlottesville. They were also silent when he heavy-handedly stereotyped his accountants with yarmulkes and Jews being excessively interested in money.

But nearly four years into Trumps term, his avoidance of facts, of data and reason and his embrace of bigotry-laced conspiracy notions are evidence that even lower tax rates ought not outweigh.

An attendee at President Trumps rally in Tampa, Florida holds a sign mentioning the conspiracy theory QAnon.

In recent weeks Trump has either become unhinged or he has just more clearly revealed the mental processes that were semi-dormant in recent years. He has embraced, encouraged, and enunciated conspiracy notions that are insidious and a threat to any group that has historically been the victim of persecution. The purveyors of hate of sought, and hitherto, failed to gain mainstream legitimation for decades.

That Trumps enablers in the GOP tolerate his bizarre behavior is depressing enough, but that Jews who ought to have at least a glancing familiarity with the historical record of the past century and the evil that can result from unfounded conspiracy theories directed by a leader at a segment of his population, is downright perverse.

With the recent rise of QAnon, Trump has shown his cards-bigotry and tawdry hate are simply not disqualifying characteristics in his view of the world. When he was asked point-blank about QAnons bizarre conspiracy notions, he did not take his usual tack of just feigning ignorance of the subject. He baldly said, Is that supposed to be a bad thing or a good thing? So I dont know really anything about it other than they do supposedly like me.

For that cohort in the Jewish community (or any minority community in America) that still supports Trump, this should be a wake-up call. This is not a dispute about funding Social Security benefits or whether to cut taxes or save the Arctic tundra; this is a debate about fundamental values of truth and facts that speak to how minority groups and dissenting views are treated in our country.

The president of the United States has no issues with a group that the ADL has described as conspiracy theorists [who] spread disinformation and foster a climate of extremism and paranoia, which in some cases has led to violence.

There is no conceivable way that a sentient minority group member should not find Trumps actions disqualifying on their face.

There are those in the community who choose to support Trump because he will lower their taxes and otherwise benefit their bottom line-they have a different set of values than most of us-selfishness. Policy arguments that transcend their bank accounts and the stock markets have no currency with them.

Then there are those in the Jewish community who claim that Trumps support for Israel is sufficient reason for sticking with him (e.g. the embassy move to Jerusalem, etc.) Theirs is a hollow argument with an opponent like Joe Biden whose 50-year plus track record of advocacy and support for Israel is unparalleled. Neither AOC nor Ilhan Omar are running for president nor did their platform planks regarding the Middle East get adopted by the Democratic Party.

Furthermore, Trumps track record of loyalty to those who have allied with him is deplorable-hell take a better offer of support in a nanosecond if it suits his purposes. Just ask the Kurds.

One might have made a case for Trump in November, 2016 the slate was partially blank. But now, after over three years of his term, there simply is no questionhe is a dangerous empty vessel who promotes the very worst extremists in our midst and legitimizes their lunacy, either out of ignorance or malevolence.

Having been involved in civil rights work that involved monitoring extremist groups (from the Klan to neo-Nazis to Lyndon La Rouche to the PLO) and defending the Jewish community since 1975, there is no doubt in my mind that Donald Trump is the most serious threat to Jewish (and other minority groups) security in this country in the past half century; its not even close.

David Lehrer is president of Community Advocates and a co-founder of Jews United for Democracy and Justice.

The views and opinions expressed in this article are the authors own and do not necessarily reflect those of the Forward.

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Donald Trump is the most serious threat to American Jewish security in the past half century - Forward

‘White Lives Matter’ painted on front campus’ rock; students and university react – Kent Wired

Posted By on September 8, 2020

When the words White Lives Matter were painted on Kent States front-campus rock Aug. 28, Marteashia Thompson, president of Voices of Color, described them as a direct threat to the Black students here on this campus.

Spray painted in large, white block letters, the words covered slogans painted Aug. 24 supporting the Black Lives Matter [BLM] movement and commemorating those lost to police brutality. A variety of student groups joined together to quickly cover the controversial words, which the Anti-Defamation League defines as a white supremacist phrase that originated in early 2015 as a racist response to the Black Lives Matter movement. The individuals who painted the slogans over the BLM messages are unknown at this time.

Historically, the rock on front campus is an open canvas for anyone to paint messages, from remembrances of deceased students to slogans of civil rights movements such as [BLM].

Thompson, whose student-led political activist group advocates for voter registration and educates students about government, came out Tuesday to repaint the rock. She said the words White Lives Matter do not represent unity in the Kent Community.

Director of Political Affairs and Grievances for B.U.S. Gabrielle Blake paints the rock Monday, Aug. 31.

This isnt an inclusive slogan at all, Thompson said. This isnt something to uplift Caucasian Americans. This is only a term and rebuttal to the Black Lives Matter movement.

She said that was why her group came out to paint the rock. We wanted to put a very beautiful and positive image upholding our people, one that spoke to the unity of our organization as well as our community.

In an email sent Wednesday to Kent State faculty, staff and students, President Todd Diacon stated the painting of the messages on the rock, along with recent incidents involving the shootings of Black Americans by police, serve as glaring evidence that this university and our country need to do better when addressing racism and violence against Black Americans.

Diacon also announced in the email a new Anti-Racism Task Force that will explore all facets of racism at Kent State. He stated the group will focus on anti-Black racism to start and then expand to examine all areas of racism on our campuses. It will be led by Amoaba Gooden, interim vice president for diversity, equity and inclusion, Lamar Hylton, vice president for student affairs and Melody Tankersley, interim senior vice president and provost.

A newly painted rock to cover the "White Lives Matter" statement on Wednesday, Sept. 2.

Subcommittees associated with the task force will recommend how Kent State can eliminate the challenges and barriers that Black students, faculty, staff and others have faced at the university, with the goal of becoming a more diverse, equitable and inclusive institution, according to the email.

The university also released an official statement Aug. 28 that stated messages that are intended to be upsetting and hurtful are unconstructive and do not reflect our core values as a university. The painting of the rock coincided with the first full week of classes on campus, although many courses will be taught remotely, so fewer people are present in person.

Controversy surrounding the rock and what is painted on it is not a new occurrence. During the 46th anniversary of the May 4 shootings in 2016, the rock was painted with the slogans Cop Lives Matter, Shame on you Kent State, and no Rice, in reference to Samaria Rices [Tamir Rices mother] invitation to speak during the commemoration ceremony.

Black United Students [BUS] president Tayjua Hines said she anticipated an incident like the rock painting would occur on campus given the BLM protests over the summer and the racial unrest that began after the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis. Hines said painting the rock with discriminatory words was only a surface-level act in comparison to the daily adversities students of color face on campus. She said she would not respond to those who painted the rock.

I will not try to waste my energy trying to speak to someone who clearly doesnt care about my life, and clearly doesnt care about what I have to say, Hines said. They said what they had to say. My only question[s] would be why did you do it in the dark? Why werent you bold enough to do it when everyone could see you?

The rock was the meeting place for a BLM protest on June 6 against police violence. Hines was one of the leaders that day and she said while Kent students are hearing and understanding the movements messages, she said there will always be a small pocket of individuals who will remain ignorant. Every Black student at Kent State is a member of BUS, she said, and the organization is there to serve and protect Black students who feel threatened by these discriminatory acts.

The rock on Monday, Aug. 31. A silhouette of a Black woman is depicted on a gold background with the word U.N.I.T.Y. spelled below. A number of clenched fists a symbol of the Black Lives Matter movement are also depicted around the rock and lettering.

A town hall will be organized in the near future to address the incident at the rock, Hines said.

Undergraduate Student Government [USG] President Tiera Moore said via Twitter Aug. 28 she is disappointed by the defacing of the rock. Some comments made in response to her post defended the use of White Lives Matter. Moore said she hopes those who do not understand the current movement can educate themselves.

I hope those people can educate themselves on what [BLM] means, Moore said. Getting backlash on that tweet is something I expected and I hope those people can understand the significance of what this means, and as a community its not what we want to see. In the tweet, I said we are all Golden Flashes, and attacking each other is not what we should be doing right now. I think we should be focusing on being united as a community.

The anti-racism task force was originally discussed in early June and more details were provided Aug. 4 by Vice President for Student Affairs Lamar Hylton during a town hall. The task force will consist of faculty, students, staff and administrators and will examine 15 areas of university life, according to the email.

Those include: academic curriculum; accessibility; admissions and prospective students; business practices; community engagement; faculty recruitment and retention; graduate and doctoral student life; health and well-being; learning and education; mental health support and services; policies and procedures; safety and security; staff recruitment/retention/ promotion; undergraduate student life and educating faculty and staff.

Troy Pierson is a general assignment reporter. Contact him at rpierso4@kent.edu.

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'White Lives Matter' painted on front campus' rock; students and university react - Kent Wired

Violence on American streets: What is the ‘militia movement’ and why are deadly incidents on the rise – Haaretz

Posted By on September 8, 2020

Last week, a researcher who focuses on extremism said he was concerned that the fatal shooting in Kenosha, Wisconsin, could start a trend of similar deadly incidents at protests.

Then, three days later, something like it happened in Portland, Oregon: One man was killed following a night of clashes between supporters of President Donald Trump and counterprotesters.

The alleged Kenosha shooter, Kyle Rittenhouse, 17, did not appear to be linked to any far-right organizations when he traveled there with an AR-15 rifle and killed two people on Aug. 25 amid ongoing protests sparked by the police shooting of an unarmed Black man, Jacob Blake.

Multiple videos capture an incident in which Rittenhouse, of Illinois, appears to trip while running down a street and then shoots two people who are converging on him. Rittenhouse has been arrested and charged with first-degree murder in the deaths of Anthony Huber and Joseph Rosenbaum.

The notion of a teenager crossing state lines with a semiautomatic rifle in hand to uphold public order shocked many Americans. But to Alex Friedfeld, an investigative researcher at the Anti-Defamation Leagues Center on Extremism, it was the latest sign of a disturbing trend armed men showing up to scenes of unrest and, without training or a mandate, acting as self-appointed guardians of law and order.

That, Friedfeld says, isnt that different from the Portland shooting. Policehave not identified a suspected shooteror the victim there, though the latter has been identified as wearing a hat with the insignia of Patriot Prayer, which the ADLcallsa far-right group.

The Anti-Defamation League is perhaps best known for its efforts to document and combat antisemitism, but its analysts actually monitor many interrelated forms of extremism. Thats why Friedfeld and his colleagues at the ADL and other anti-extremism groups have been closely monitoring for months as Black Lives Matter protests have swept the country. And with tensions sure to rise as the November presidential election nears, Friedfeld worries that others may follow Rittenhouses example.

The Jewish Telegraphic Agency spoke with Friedfeld about the Kenosha shooting, what it suggests about extremism in America and how the rising militia movement intersects with threats to Jews. Following the Portland shooting, JTA spoke with Friedfeld again about how the two shootings are related. That question-and-answer is appended at the end of this interview, which has been edited for length and clarity.

JTA: What are your reactions to the Kenosha killings and the circumstances surrounding them?

Friedfeld:What happened on Tuesday night was something that we have been kind of concerned about over the last few months, particularly since the outbreak of the Black Lives Matter movement. Since that point, you know, we have seen whats essentially armed vigilantes.

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Sometimes they form up as more formalized groups, but often its just armed individuals or a few guys going out and linking up with other people, without a mandate or any certification or qualifications for this moment. They are tasking themselves with the responsibility of what they believe is keeping the people and their local communities safe.

But again, theyre taking it upon themselves. They are not police officers. There is no sense that they have the training to handle this right.

And so youve got these armed individuals who are inserting themselves into these very tense situations. And it creates the possibility that if things go south, if there is an escalation, that theyll find themselves outmatched or unprepared for the moment. And thats when bad things happen, especially when theyre carrying firearms.

No one should have let a 17-year-old kid patrol the streets while there are protests going on. He was in a position where he could actually kill people. And that should never have happened.

Whats the connection between Rittenhouse and the far-right militias and other extremist groups you research?

We have been tracking vigilante groups and militias that have been showing up at these protests across the country to provide security for local residents and their businesses.

And the Kenosha Guard [an independent militia that patrolled the protests on the night of the shooting] is one of these types of groups. Theyre not linked with the other ones, but its that same type of local security watch that were seeing rise to prominence in the wake of the Black Lives Matter movement.

They put up this call basically saying we need to protect our city from thugs, from looters, from rioters. What these calls do is they normalize this idea that it is OK and proper for armed vigilantes to patrol the streets of Americas towns and cities in order to protect people and property.

On their pages, you can find these anti-Black Lives Matter sentiments. And thats pretty common among these vigilante groups. They will go out in public and say that they are there to protect all residents and to protect all businesses, and they just want to protect peoples right to protest. But when you actually look at the words that they say on their pages, you often find very staunchly anti-Black Lives Matter rhetoric.

In general, when you look at groups like the Kenosha Guard, do they tend to affiliate with the same anti-government extremist ideologies that other right-wing militias ascribe to?

The closest thing that we tend to find is that these groups will often align with the militia movement, and the more conspiratorial elements of the militia movement. But the fact is, a lot of these groups are really new. And because they were formed in response to Black Lives Matter, they tend to focus on Black Lives Matter, and we havent seen as much evidence that they talk about the conspiracies that animate the militia movement.

These groups are more vulnerable to those more classic militia movement conspiracies because they fit into that network. The mindset basically is that there is someone out there that wants to destroy America, and that they are the ones that have to resist it.

Does that lead to an antisemitic conspiracy theory, that the ones who want to destroy America are the Jews?

I dont usually see overt antisemitism in terms of someone saying the Jews are behind it, but you do see [references to Jewish financier and progressive philanthropist] George Soros. I dont even know if you call it a dog whistle at that point. But its that coded language, George Soros being the most popular one. I mean, how many times over the last few months have we seen these conspiracies that George Soros is paying for Black Lives Matter?

The implicit message there is that he is paying to cause unrest to destroy American cities and towns. So you dont usually see overt antisemitism in the way that you would among white supremacists. But there is absolutely that coded language, particularly when it comes to conspiracies about George Soros and folks like that, that tries to pin the blame on them.

Theres something that is extreme that people feel that its OK to take guns into the streets with the implicit message of violence that that sends, that youre carrying a firearm that is loaded, that can hurt a lot of people in the street. That is something that is extreme, and they are in the streets inherently portraying a political message.

This idea that people feel comfortable to bring a gun into public [space], with all the messaging and inherent threats that come along with that, thats an act of extremism.

What are your thoughts on the way the Kenosha police reacted to the shooting?

I cant speak to the Kenosha police. Theyre still investigating.

What I can say though is the fact that the police did not immediately try and get rid of these guys, push these guys off the street or just say You can stay here, but put your guns away, that is concerning.

They werent breaking any laws by carrying the guns. But if you have a chaotic environment, I would think you would want to reduce the amount of guns.

Are you worried about shootings like this one becoming a trend?

The environment and conditions that made this shooting possible still exist. Nothing has changed to prevent this from happening anywhere else. So thats not to say that another shooting like this will occur. But those underlying conditions are still there. It is certainly possible, as summer turns to fall, that we see another incident like this.

There was nothing particularly special about Kenosha that resulted in the shooting happening there. As the election nears and people get even more heated and the stakes get even higher, these events [could] attract more hotheads, attract more of this extremist element.

Its not like in the wake of this we have seen guards say, Oh, wow, we need to stand down or something like that. Or we need to change the way we do these things to make sure that the people who are standing with us, we know who they are, we know that they are trained, or whatever. Or that police have come out and said, you know, we are not going to let armed men stand in the streets anymore. No one has responded like that.

The potential for this to happen still exists until we as a society take those steps, to say no more armed men in the streets that are not law enforcement.

How have militias responded to this?

The Kenosha Guard tried to distance themselves. I think, in general, a bunch [of militias] have come to his defense and said that he was in the right, that he was being attacked and he acted in self-defense.

Are these groups numbers on the rise since the start of recent Black Lives Matter protests?

Thats where we started to see a lot of these groups starting to form. They were formed in response to BLM. Their reason for being is usually protecting the city from Black Lives Matter protesters and antifa.

What this incident revealed is just how deadly the stakes can be by participating in these events. I think this incident revealed the danger that exists when you have a bunch of armed men standing around with little training in a situation that they are not prepared for. And firearms make that toxic mix even deadlier.

How does the Portland shooting relate to the Kenosha shooting? You said last week you were worried that something like the Kenosha shooting would happen again, and then something like it happened again.

I think this is another example of what weve been witnessing over the course of the summer, which is the rise in street violence. Militias are this environmental problem of there is this increasing amount of street violence that can affect anybody.

Were witnessing an increasing politicization of this violence. Rather than standing together as protesters and saying we will not condone the use of violence, people are blaming the other side for what happened. Rather than condemning the cycle, theyre perpetuating it.

When you view everything though the lens of almost-life-or-death struggles, committing an act of violence no longer seems as unreasonable.

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Violence on American streets: What is the 'militia movement' and why are deadly incidents on the rise - Haaretz

‘White Lives Matter’ painted on Kent State U. rock: a ‘direct threat’ to black students – The College Fix

Posted By on September 8, 2020

During the last week of August, someone had the audacity to paint the slogan White Lives Matter on Kent State Universitys front-campus rock leading to some in the campus community to label it a direct threat to black students.

According to Kentwired.com, the slogan covered over Black Lives Matter slogans which had been scrawled there days before.

The rock historically has been available for anyone to write messages.

But according to the Anti-Defamation League, White Lives Matter is a white supremacist phrase that originated in early 2015 as a racist response to the Black Lives Matter movement.

Marteashia Thompson, president of the student group Voices of Color, said White Lives Matter does not represent unity and isnt an inclusive slogan at all. She added This isnt something to uplift Caucasian Americans. This is only a term and rebuttal to the Black Lives Matter movement.

Kent State President Todd Diacon said the incident, along with the recent shootings of several black individuals by law enforcement, serve as glaring evidence that this university and our country need to do better when addressing racism and violence against Black Americans.

In the same message, Diacon said the university would establish an Anti-Racism Task Force which will explore all facets of racism at Kent State.

From the story:

Black United Students [BUS] president Tayjua Hines said she anticipated an incident like the rock painting would occur on campus given the BLM protests over the summer and the racial unrest that began after the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis. Hines said painting the rock with discriminatory words was only a surface-level act in comparison to the daily adversities students of color face on campus. She said she would not respond to those who painted the rock.

I will not try to waste my energy trying to speak to someone who clearly doesnt care about my life, and clearly doesnt care about what I have to say, Hines said. They said what they had to say. My only question[s] would be why did you do it in the dark? Why werent you bold enough to do it when everyone could see you?

Last week, roughly a dozen Kent State students showed up to protest the White Lives Matter graffiti.Kentwired.com reports the demonstrators received accolades from passing drivers for their signs which read Use your privilege to listen to the oppressed, Honk if you agree Black Lives Matter and Not today Karen.

Freshman Sarah Mowder said the best way to learn about Black Lives Matter is to visit the movements website: The most patriotic thing you can do is see a fault in your country, and try to fix it.

Read theKentwired.com articles.

MORE: Non-white HS student admits to White Lives Matter graffiti

MORE: Law prof: Texas A&M has no legal grounds to block White Lives Matter

IMAGE: Twitter screencap /Kentwired.com

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'White Lives Matter' painted on Kent State U. rock: a 'direct threat' to black students - The College Fix

How ‘Holocough’ Went from Anti-Semitic Threat to COVID Truther Rallying Cry – The Daily Beast

Posted By on September 8, 2020

In May, conspiracy theory and hate speech monitoring groups started flagging the spread of a disturbing anti-Semitic meme: a stylized picture of the novel coronavirus on a tie-dye-like background framed with text reading, COVID-19. If you have the bug, give a hug. Spread the flu to every Jew. Holocough.

A report by the Community Security Trust, a British group that works to stop the spread of anti-Semitism, cast the meme as the apex of far-right chatter about getting infected, either deliberately or accidentally, and then going to synagogues and other Jewish buildings to try to infect as many Jewish people as possible.

The meme soon largely fell out of the public eye. But the term holocough spread, and not just among twisted circles advocating the anti-Semitic weaponization of the virus.

According to several digital hate speech monitoring groups canvassed by The Daily Beast, the term has been used as a tagline for a slew of conspiracy theories in recent months. Among them are deluded ideas that deny the existence or extent of the horrific COVID-19 pandemic, accept the pandemic but believe its a Jewish invention created for profit or population control, or suggest pandemic control measures are a prelude to Holocaust-like mass internments by the deep state.

The meme has also cropped up in shitposts with no clear ideology or goal beyond provocation.

The story of how and why this trope caught fire and spread across many seemingly distinct and even opposed strains of conspiracy and hate is representative of how ideas flow through and across far-right factions in modern America, experts said. Understanding those dynamics is especially vital right now, as open hate and conspiracy theories are enjoying remarkable visibility in mainstream politics. Among recent examples, the Republican National Convention had to boot a speaker after The Daily Beast revealed shed recently retweeted a particularly virulent anti-Semitic QAnon thread. Days earlier, President Trump himself effectively embraced QAnon at the White House.

Grasping the way deranged totems like this one morph and spread is also important because America is still deep in the throes of the historic COVID-19 pandemic. As public health scholar Lawrence Gostin told The Daily Beast, conspiracies that sow doubt about the nature of and responses to the coronavirus are probably the single greatest threats to public health today.

Because the social mediascape is vast, fractured, and at times opaque, Aryeh Tuchman of the Anti-Defamation League cautioned its difficult to track the precise origin of terms like holocough. But Rick Eaton, a digital hate researcher at the Simon Wiesenthal Center, told The Daily Beast that the earliest usage hes been able to document during the pandemic came from a Telegram post on March 11. (Telegram did not respond to a request for comment for this story.)

It read, simply, the holocough.

By that time, anti-Semitic pandemic conspiracy theories and hate had already been burbling up online for months. Conspiracy theories typically form and spread in times of confusion and upheaval, as people search for clear and easy answers, and for individuals to blame. They often pile on to established scapegoatslike Jewish populations, who have been wrongly blamed for pandemics since at least the 14th century Black Death, and falsely accused of manipulating literally every major global event to benefit themselves and hurt others.

Someone apparently saw holocough, liked it, and forwarded it to other Telegram groups, until it seemingly caught the eye of notorious shitposter Milo Yiannopoulos, and he included it in a March 16 poll on his Telegram channel on what he and others should call the virus, pitting it against Chinese flu, kung flu, Wuhan wheezer, boomer doomer, and ching chong chinky-wong ping lo wang pao sweet & sour sickness. (Yiannopoulos did not respond to a request for comment.) That likely put it on the radar of people advocating many different strands of conspiracy theory who all cross over onto each others forums and lap up content from major (or once-major) figures like Yiannopoulos.

But hate researchers believe the first person to really pick the term up and run with it was a 30-year-old amateur musician from central Massachusetts who has created several prominent memes used by the esoteric neo-Nazi group Feuerkrieg Division to honor racist killers and advocate for a race war. He allegedly created and posted the give a hug meme on March 31. This individual has since scrubbed most of his social media accounts; The Daily Beast attempted to contact him but was unable to reach him as of publication. We are not listing the creators pseudonym, nor the real name some researchers believe to be behind it, to avoid giving him and his wider portfolio of far-right propaganda undue attention.

Once it was in the ether, the meme proceeded to take off in neo-Nazi groups already urging followers to cough on synagogues, and to lick items in Kosher aisles.

As Eaton notes, neo-Nazis and other conspiracy and hate groups do not put a premium on consistency. They might deny the Holocaust ever happened, yet allow people in their groups who say it did, and that it just didnt kill enough Jews, with no debateand may even adopt that language when its convenient. Conspiracy theorists also tend to consume each others ideas, mixing and matching them, tossing out bits of them to fit their views. This tendency is especially common among QAnon types. So even though the Massachusetts meme-maker appears to have helped establish holocough as a call to weaponize a real pandemic against Jews, his memes sheer visibility invited inconsistent, and chaotic, appropriation.

As suspicions of masking grew in the U.S. this spring, Eaton says virus denial theories, including many rooted in fears of plots to use pandemic control measures to erode freedoms and abet New World Order tyranny, gained traction onlineand appropriated the popular holocough tag. As these ideas spread on larger platforms, people saw the phrase, likely found it simply amusing or provocative, and appropriated it for non-ideological posts meant to express amorphous frustration and sow indiscriminate outrage.

The wishy-washy nature of the appropriation of tropes among conspiracy theorists makes experts doubt that that the spread of the holocough tagline represents a marked increase in anti-Semitic beliefs or actions. But just because people use terms like this sporadically and indiscriminately doesnt mean they dont pose real threats.

Rabbi Abraham Cooper of the Simon Wiesenthal Center points out that every time the term is shared, regardless of context, its a huge victory from a marketing point of view for all the nastiest hate and conspiracy groups that use it. It also normalizes the cheapening and erosion of the memory of the Holocaust. And, Gostin stressed, itlike all pandemic-related conspiracy theoriesspreads mistrust and confusion that ultimately hinder pandemic control efforts.

The groups The Daily Beast consulted for this article largely agree that the best way to prevent this kind of harm is for governments and social media companies to crack down on tags like holocough. But social media platforms have long struggled with hate speech and dangerous conspiracy theories, although Telegram has reportedly taken steps to remove neo-Nazi communities from its platform recently. And with an avid conspiracy theorist in the White House, and fear of potential erosions of the First Amendment palpable on both sides of the aisle, its unlikely theyll get traction on a political solution in America anytime soon.

That means holocough has space to continue spreading and mutating into bizarre new forms. Most of that evolution will likely play out in tiny conspiratorial and hateful communities on niche platforms, experts stressed. But iterations of the term always have the potential to spill out into the mainstream againand even into the real world.

Indeed, Holly Huffnagle of the American Jewish Committee told The Daily Beast her team has recently found holocough T-shirts, greeting cards, and other paraphernalia for sale online.

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How 'Holocough' Went from Anti-Semitic Threat to COVID Truther Rallying Cry - The Daily Beast

Harbor From The Holocaust – KPBS

Posted By on September 8, 2020

Stream now or tune in Tuesday, Sept. 8, 2020 at 10 p.m. on KPBSTV

Holocaust Story of Hope Shines Light on Story of European Jews Finding Refuge in Shanghai During World War II

Harbor From The Holocaust shares the story of 20,000 Jewish refugees who fled Nazi-occupied Europe during World War II to the city of Shanghai. The one-hour film explores the extraordinary relationship the refugees, known as Shanghailanders, had with their adopted city, through the bitter years of Japanese occupation 1937-1945 and the Chinese civil war that followed.

Through personal recollections, interviews with historians, archival footage and music, the documentary tells the story of a group of people who, in tragic contrast with those who could not escape, were given a second chance.

"Harbor from the Holocaust" is the story of nearly 20,000 Jewish refugees fleeing Nazi-occupied Europe during World War II, to the Chinese port city of Shanghai. Explore the extraordinary relationship of these Jews and their adopted city of Shanghai, even through the bitter years of Japanese occupation 1937-1945 and the Chinese civil war that followed. Airing: 09/08/20

This is a Holocaust story of life not easy, not without loss and hardship but perhaps one that is largely unknown but for the people who can still share their view of survival, says Executive Producer Darryl Ford Williams. There is a contemporary context that is undeniable in reflecting on this narrative of people who found a way to live when country after country around the world closed their borders and turned their backs on those in need.

Documentary Advisors Tina Johnson and Michele Heryford share brief historical highlights of Shanghai and its relationship with Jewish emigres through many centuries, making it a unique safe harbor and one of the only places in the world for Jews escaping Nazi persecution during WWII. The preserved Jewish ghetto is also discussed in the context of modern China. Airing: 09/08/20

Taking a captivating look at this moment, Harbor From The Holocaust reveals why Shanghai was uniquely positioned, through geo-political, cultural and historical influences, to allow this remarkable influx to happen, due to those past relations with Jews predominantly from the Middle East, the Iberian Peninsula and Russia, and because of its centuries of control by and openness to foreigners as a vigorous center of trade and commerce.

Professor Emeritus Irene Eber of the Hebrew University in Jerusalem was an early advisor to the documentary. Author of "Wartime Shanghai and the Jewish Refugees from Central Europe: Survival, Co-Existence, and Identity in a Multi-Ethnic City," Ebers own story is that of a Jewish refugee from Nazi Germany who escaped and hid for two years in a chicken coop belonging to a Polish family. Airing: 09/08/20

Through extraordinary recollections, the film highlights the stories of exceptional artists, statesmen and authors, as well as ordinary people who survived to carry on their Jewish religion and traditions.

Bert Reiners middle-class family was forced to abandon a comfortable life in Germany for the unknown world of Shanghai, China. Bert saw poverty and deprivation, but also made friends, learned Chinese, and played games. Coming to America after WWIIs end, when Shanghai emptied of its Jewish refugees, Bert became the pivotal design engineer behind the mass production of the Cabbage Patch Doll. Airing: 09/08/20

The story, much like the city itself, is nuanced and complex, incorporating many kinds of foreigners, many classes of Chinese, many kinds of Jews, and many layers.

Shanghai was not a place of tolerance and openness, so much as it was a place of fractionalized, disparate forces, which were sometimes competitive and sometimes complementary, but always existed within tenuous and often difficult transactional alliances.

Even the people whose stories are shared have varying tales of how they lived in Shanghai, what their families experienced, and how they were able to function on a day-to-day basis.

Mike Medavoys family was already settled in Shanghai among the Jewish emigres who had escaped pogroms in Russia during the mid-1900s. This group offered assistance to the waves of refugees fleeing the Nazis during WWII. His boyhood in Shanghai inspired Medavoy who eventually became a successful and well-known Hollywood movie producer, responsible for some of the most iconic films of our times. Airing: 09/08/20

Music plays an important role in the film evoking the time, the fear, the pain and the joy of the Shanghailanders. Orchestrated by musician and composer Chad Cannon, one of the special musical moments is a duet with violinist Niv Ashkenazi and guzheng player Beibei Monter. Ashkenazi performs on a violin of hope, a violin that survived the Holocaust and was restored.

Reflections on creating the textured musical score for Harbor from the Holocaust by Composer Chad Cannon, Violinist Niv Ashkenazi and Cantor Avram Mlotek. The music includes many personal and cultural influences, and features traditional Chinese guzheng played by Bei Bei Monter, and world renowned Cellist Yo Yo Ma playing passages throughout the score. Airing: 09/08/20

Of note, Yo Yo Ma also performs a piece for the film that was composed by his father entitled Pome pour Violoncelle et Orchestre.Mas father, Hiao-Tsuin Ma, studied with a great Chinese violinist in Shanghai. He taught at Nanjing University but continued his studies in Shanghai.

Composed by Hiao Tsiun Ma and played by his son, Yo Yo Ma. This piece was written by the elder Ma, who was one of Chinas greatest cellists. He wrote it about Shanghai, a city across the bay from the small town he grew up in (Ningbo) and which hed visited many times. Hiao Tsiun actually composed the work for his son, Yo Yo, who was studying cello and asked his father to write something for him. Airing: 09/08/20

Ultimately, he followed his teachers musical path to Paris, but the seeds of this composition were rooted in his experience in Shanghai as were the life stories of the Shanghailanders.

"Migu migu w i n" is a song in Mandarin composed by Chen Gexin, and first recorded by Yao Lee, that became very popular in the1940s in Shanghai among the Jewish refugees there. It was also known as Shanghai Rose and China Rose. In 1951, an English-language version called Rose, Rose, I Love You was recorded by Frankie Lane, and later as May Kway by British pop vocalist Petula Clark. Airing: 09/08/20

Heather Klein was moved to create and sing a one-woman operatic program to honor her grandmother Rosa Ginsberg who escaped Nazi persecution, lived a challenging life in Shanghai, and was detained at Angel Island upon coming to America. Rosa was finally able to settle in New York. Backed by accompanist Joshua Horowitz, Heather shared her songs at a Shanghailander event at Congregation BNai Emunah. Airing: 09/08/20

Watch On Your Schedule:

This film is available to stream on demand through Oct. 6, 2020.

With the PBS Video App, you can stream your favorite and local station shows. Download it for free on your favorite device. The app allows you to catch up on recent episodes and discover award-winning shows.

Credits:

A production of WQED. The executive producer is Darryl Ford Williams. The producer and director is Violet Du Feng. The editor is Michelle Chang. Orchestration by Chad Cannon. Funding is provided by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting; the National Endowment for the Humanities; The Philip Chosky Charitable and Educational Foundation; The Posner Foundation of Pittsburgh; PBS and public television viewers.

KPBS' daily news podcast covering local politics, education, health, environment, the border and more. New episodes are ready weekday mornings so you can listen on your morning commute.

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Harbor From The Holocaust - KPBS


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