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‘Goyim TV’ removed from internet, but new antisemitic site takes its place – The Jewish News of Northern California

Posted By on August 29, 2020

Goyim TV, an antisemitic video-sharing website that was promoted with a banner drop from a Los Angeles freeway overpass on Saturday, has been taken down by its domain host under a flood of complaints.

Jon Minadeo Jr., a 37-year-old Petaluma man, was behind both the website and the banner drop, J. reported earlier this week, as were a handful of Minadeo cronies known as the Goyim Defense League.

However, just days after Goyim TV was taken offline, Minadeo directed his followers to a similar site disseminating the same hateful ideology on BitChute, a U.K.-based company described by a London-based Jewish security firm as a cesspool of racist and antisemitic content. It reportedly solicits financial support via cryptocurrency.

The rapid resurfacing of Minadeos videos, on a different but similar channel, reflects the challenge of controlling hate-spewing websites on the internet, and the whack-a-mole-like effort it can take by anti-hate groups and concerned members of the public to confront them.

It is similar to what happened with the Daily Stormer website and other bad actors, said Seth Brysk, the S.F.-based director of the Anti-Defamation Leagues Central Pacific region.

The neo-Nazi Daily Stormer was rejected by a number of domain registrars after the highly antisemitic 2017 Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, but ultimately found a new host in the Canadian-based company BitMitigate, whose founder at the time cited a commitment to liberty.

The norms, rules and laws for online behavior are still evolving, Brysk added. So the public can and should continue to play a role in pushing back against harassment, lies and extremism.

It appears that is exactly what happened with Goyim TV, which had been hosted since December by Epik, a domain registrar with more than 560,000 websites according to DomainState.

The three hastily painted banners promoting Goyim TV which read Honk if you know the Jews want a race war and were hung above the busy I-405 freeway shocked the Los Angeles Jewish community and captured the attention of organizations such as the American Jewish Committee and the ADL.

The incident was reported in news outlets across the country and in Israel, and a spokesperson for Epik told J. that the company received a number of anonymous Gmail reports taking issue with their hosting of the site.

The nonprofit StopAntisemitism.org, which monitors the internet for antisemitic content, reported that hundreds of complaints were made to the web host.

The Epik spokesperson told J. that the company had been receiving complaints from both sides those demanding the website be taken down, and those demanding the opposite. Many of the latter came with violent threats, some of which the spokesperson shared with J.

Unfortunately we do not win ever in these cases, the person, who asked to remain anonymous for their own safety, wrote.

A site goes up we get 300 complaints calling us neo-Nazis and harbingers of death, they said. We take it down instantly we get 300 complaints telling [us] we are fascists, threatening to put bullet holes in our head.

The person said Epik removed the website within hours of receiving complaints, and after attempts to get the platform owner to remove the objectionable content failed.

Publicly, on Twitter, Epik responded to some of its critics.

Free speech is not coming into our house, declaring war on a mass group of people based on their religion or belief, publishing videos inviting them to be killed by horrific genocide, then celebrating the work that has been done, the tweet read.

But by Thursday, the BitChute-hosted channel called Handsome Truth GDL (for Goyim Defense League) was publishing the same content from the old Goyim TV site.

That content largely includes wild antisemitic conspiracy theories, cell-phone footage of Minadeo and others driving around California and shouting antisemitic phrases (often through a megaphone), and other far-right fringe conspiracy theories (about coronavirus, Dr. Anthony Fauci and the Black Lives Matter movement, for example).

BitChute, according to the company, earns $23,485 per month via what it calls community funding sources.

The switch was written about on Twitter, where Minadeos account, Handsome Truth, remains active. It was implied that the takedown was, naturally, a Jewish conspiracy.

The you know whos temporary shut down GTV, Handsome Truth posted. But i got a bitchute channelso please GO & SUB.. and support IRL [in real life] activist like myself and others.

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'Goyim TV' removed from internet, but new antisemitic site takes its place - The Jewish News of Northern California

The more things change… – IJN – Intermountain Jewish News

Posted By on August 29, 2020

Good will toward men was on the lips of the world Christmas morning, but Juden Raus (Jews Get Out!) was on the walls of a new synagogue in Cologne, Germany.

In the three weeks since the words and the accompanying swastikas appeared, the world has witnesed an unprecedented outbreak of desecration and vandalism.

Reports of anti-Semitic incidents have been piling up faster than they can be tabulated.

At the New York headquarters of the Anti-Defamation League, staff members, at one point, were compiling hourly totals of occurences in the United States alone.

Sound familiar? The report above was in the Denver Post, 17, 1960 60 years ago! I deleted only one word, West, before Germany, so as not to give it away.

We think were living in a new period of anti-Semitism. Seems it was the same or even worse 60 years ago.

Excerpts from the same article: Accounts have been most prevalent from areas with sizable Jewish populations, but even nations with few Jews, like Australia and Finland, have been the scenes of anti-Semitic acts.

Although modern anti-Semitism reached its height under the Nazis, the history of anti-Semitism is almost as old as the history of the Jews.

Like all bias, it was born in the unwillingness of ignorant and immature people to accept responsibility for their own circumstances and their consequent need to blame others for their misfortunes.

This psychological process results in the selection of a scapegoat, a reference to the biblical rite of symbolically placing the sins of a people on the head of a goat.

The prequisites for a scapegoat are that it be a minority, that it be easily identifiable by language, appearance or customs and that its practices be sufficiently known that they can be distorted, exaggerated or fabricated.

Throughout history it has been the fate of the Jews to meet all these qualifications.

This is but a small part of the article again, from 1960. The more things change . . .

Thefact is that the only way to pass these barriers is to show a white skin.

Experience has clearly shown that the existing process of law cannot overcome systematic and ingenious discrimination.

Their cause must be our cause too. It is not just African Americans, but all of us, who must overcome the crippling legacy of bigotry and injustice.

This time of justice has now come. No force can hold it back. It is right in the eyes of man and G-d that it should come. And when it does, that day will brighten the lives of every American.

Sound familiar? These words were uttered in March, 1965, by President Lyndon B. Johnson a week after the civil rights march in Selma, Alabama 55 years ago! I changed only one word, Negroes, to African Americans, so as not to give it away.

Johnsons moving speech contained many inspiring words. Among them:

My first job after college was as a teacher in a small Mexican-American school. My students were poor, and often hungry, and they knew even in their youth the pain of prejudice. They did not understand why people disliked them. But they knew it was so. You could see it in their eyes.

I often walked home after classes wishing there was more I could do. But all I knew was to teach them the little I knew hoping it might help them against the hardships that lay ahead.

Somehow you never forget what poverty and hatred can do when you see its scars on the hopeful face of a child.

I never thought then that I might be standing here. It never occurred to me that I might have the chance to help the sons of those students and people like them all over this country.

But now that I have this chance, I mean to take it.

And I hope that you will take it with me.

Arelevant as Johnson might sound, there is also major difference between then and now. Sadly and dangerously, from Portland to Minneapolis to Denver and beyond, violence is saluted and practiced in the struggle to overcome the crippling legancy of bigotry and injustice.

A Denver City Councilwoman, Candi CdeBaca, is quoted in the Denver Post as having said about the rioters last week in downtown Denver: Let them [the police] hit you. Every single one of these cops bears a higher liability now. Sue these [expletive] cops.

If quoted correctly, this elected official advocates violence (I see no difference between advocating violence by or against police). Is this grounds for impeachment? At a minimum, it is morally corrupt and socially dangerous.

Lyndon Johnson not to mention Martin Luther King, Jr. denounced violence. Johnson, in the same post-Selma speech of 1965, said:

At the heart of battle for equality is a belief in the democratic process. Equality depends not on the force of arms but the force of moral right not on recourse to violence but on respect for the law.

Rabbi Hillel Goldberg may be reached at hillel@ijn.com.

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The more things change... - IJN - Intermountain Jewish News

Kenosha Shooting: 17-Year-Old Kyle Rittenhouse Arrested In Connection With Shooting That Left 2 Dead, 1 Wounded – CBS Chicago

Posted By on August 29, 2020

VERNON HILLS, Ill. (CBS) A 17-year-old boy is in police custody in north suburban Lake County, charged as a fugitive in connection with a shooting in Kenosha, Wisconsin, that left two people dead and another wounded.

Kenosha County authorities issued an arrest warrant for 17-year-old Kyle Rittenhouse, of Antioch, Illinois, on Wednesday morning, charging him with first-degree intentional homicide.

Rittenhouse was arrested later Wednesday morning in Antioch, and he was taken to the Lake County Juvenile Detention Center near Vernon Hills.An extradition hearing has been scheduled for Friday.

CBS 2 stopped by the teens Antioch home Wednesday afternoon, but property managers asked us to leave and we were escorted off the complex by police.

In a photo posted on Kyle Rittenhouses now-deleted Facebook, hes sporting a long gun. Based on his social media posts, he appears to have been a former police explorer a program for kids considering a career in law enforcement.

The Anti-Defamation League said there is no indication from his social media footprint that he was connected to any extremist movements.

The shooting took place around 11:45 p.m. Tuesday near 63rd Street and Sheridan Road in Kenosha, amid a third night of unrest following the police shooting of 29-year-old Jacob Blake.

Kenosha Police Chief Daniel Miskinis said the two people who were killed were a 26-year-old resident of Silver Lake, and a 36-year-old resident of Kenosha. A 26-year-old resident of West Allis was wounded, but expected to survive.

The partner of the 26-year-old victim who was killed identified him to CBS 58 Milwaukee as Anthony Huber.

Hubers partner says he was the smartest, kindest man she ever knew.

Miskinis said its still unclear exactly what led to the shooting, and if both people killed were shot by the same person. He said it appeared there was some kind of confrontation involving people who were out on the streets after curfew, and the 17-year-old started shooting.

This is not a police action. This is not the action, I believe, of those who set out to do protests. It is the persons who are involved after the legal time, involved in illegal activity, that brought violence to this community, he said.

Several groups were out on the streets of Kenosha after curfew Tuesday night, including protesters as well as an armed group calling themselves armed citizens to protect our lives and property. The armed group said they were protecting the city from looting and burning.

Kenosha County Sheriff David Beth said its possible the shooter was part of one of an armed group that had asked his office to deputize them earlier Tuesday night to help protect property in Kenosha.

However, Beth said he would never deputize civilians who own guns.

Oh, hell no, he said. What a scary, scary thought that would be in my world.

The sheriff said, if he were to deputize armed civilians, it would create an unacceptable liability, because hed be responsible for their actions.

It would have been one deputy sheriff who killed two people, he said. The liability that goes with that would have been immense.

Kenosha Mayor John Antaramian said he does not welcome armed civilians taking to the streets during the protests and looting.

I dont need more guns on the street in the community when we are trying to make sure that we are keeping people safe. Law enforcement is trained. Theyre the ones who are responsible. Theyre the ones we have faith that will do their jobs to make sure it gets done, and it would be beneficial and helpful to everyone to realize that, he said.

Social media videos captured a young man armed with a rifle as he apparently shot and killed at least two people overnight in Kenosha, and wounded a third.

The incident was captured on a series of videos on social media, which appear to show Rittenhouse opening fire in the parking lot of a car dealership and again on a crowded street, and then walking past police responding to the scene without being taken into custody. As he walked past police at the scene, Rittenhouse apparently told officers he works at a nearby business, but court records indicate that he is a lifeguard at a YMCA in Lindenhurst.

Beth declined to speculate on exactly why police might have let the shooter go when he approached them with his hands up, but said officers might have been focused on other matters, because of everything going on in the area at the time.

Police so far have not commented on where Rittenhouse got a gun. Illinois law prohibits anyone under 18 from preventing a handgun.

Some people living in Kenosha are leaving the city after escalating violence, riots, and looting; and police are still searching for the killer who opened fire Tuesday night on the streets of Kenosha.

In the wake of the shooting, there is growing concern about what could happen again later today.

There are several videos of the incident on social media, some of them very graphic. The shooting happened on 63rd and Sheridan in Kenosha. One video shows a man carrying a rifle running through the lot of a car dealership just before several shots ring out.

The man with the rifle then can be hard saying I just killed somebody as he runs away from the scene, while others in the video tend to a person on the ground who appears to have been shot in the head.

Another widely shared video on social media appears to show the same man running through a crowd on the street as someone asks what he do? Another person says he just shot someone just before the man with the rifle falls to the ground and someone shouts get his a**.

From a seated position, the man appears to fire as many as four shots, shooting one person in the torso and another in the arm.

As the crowd around him scatters, the gunman stood up and continued walking down the street, repeatedly putting his hands up as police vehicles arrived on the scene. Someone in the crowd shouted to police that the gunman had just shot someone, but several police cars drove past him toward the people who had been shot. In the video, it does not appear any officers try to stop the man with the rifle.

A separate video appears to show the gunman interacting with Kenosha County Sheriffs officers earlier in the night outside a gas station. In thevideo, officers can be heard telling an armed group outside the gas station we appreciate you guys, and passing out water.

Officers also can be heard telling others outside the gas station, You are a civilian. This area is closed to them. You are trespassing. Leave. Leave now.

Meantime, people in Kenosha came out Wednesday morning to help clean up after another night of unrest. They said theyll do anything to help out their town, but fear the chaos isnt over just yet.

I have no doubt that its going to happen tonight. I just hope its not as bad as last night, with everything that did happen, with like shootings with civilians on civilians. It kind of sucks, and I hope that will end soon, Jacob Schubert said.

In anticipation of additional protests, the Kenosha County Board sent a letter to Gov. Tony Evers, requesting additional National Guard members with police powers to be brought in.

Antioch Community High School District 117 said there will be an increased police presence in and around their schools, after hearing concerns from students and members of the community that two people involved in the Kenosha shooting live in Antioch.

Antioch High Schools website said Rittenhouse is not currently associated with Antioch or Lakes Community High School.

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Kenosha Shooting: 17-Year-Old Kyle Rittenhouse Arrested In Connection With Shooting That Left 2 Dead, 1 Wounded - CBS Chicago

Maltz Museum of Jewish Heritage reopens to the public today – WJW FOX 8 News Cleveland

Posted By on August 26, 2020

BEACHWOOD, Ohio (WJW) The Maltz Museum of Jewish Heritage is reopening its doors to the public today, after shutting down due to the coronavirus pandemic back in March.

Like all the other museums in the Cleveland area that have already reopened (as seen in the video above), this one is doing so with new health guidelines in place, including mandatory face coverings and temperature checks.

We are living through a remarkable time in our history, David Schafer, Managing Director of the Maltz Museum, said in a statement. We are proud to open our doors once again and welcome back visitors into our physical space. Our safety protocols are in place and we are confident that visitors will feel comfortable with the limitations weve put on attendance to honor the six feet distancing guidelines.

For those concerned still about going out in public, the museum is offering multiple online options as well.

There are choices about how to connect to us with online programs and the launch of new digital tours, coming soon, Schafer said. We hope Northeast Ohio and beyond will take advantage of these options.

While the museum already opened to members earlier this month, Sunday is the official day it opens to all.

Ticket reservations must be made before attending the museum. Find out all other information below:

Get the latest headlines on FOX8.com below:

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Maltz Museum of Jewish Heritage reopens to the public today - WJW FOX 8 News Cleveland

Words, like sticks and stones, can hurt us – The Jewish Star

Posted By on August 26, 2020

By Rabbi Dr. Tzvi Hersh Weinreb

For many of us, the first pieces of wisdom we learned were from nursery rhymes and schoolyard jingles. Sometimes these childish lessons had value, but more often they were off the mark and had the effect of distorting a truer perspective on life.

Take, for example, this ditty: Sticks and stones may break my bones, but words can never harm me. The implicit message, which had some utility on the playground, is that we can safely ignore insults to our emotions and feelings, and need to only be concerned about physical injury. The truth, however, is quite different.

Obviously, we want to protect ourselves from physical harm. The trauma of bodily injury is something which none of us wishes to bear. But we cannot minimize the harmful effects of psychological trauma, whether it comes in the form of insults, embarrassment, or shame.

During the years I spent as a psychotherapist, I dealt with quite a few victims of domestic violence. I saw the effects that abuse could have upon people, but I noticed that those who suffered emotional abuse were less amenable to successful treatment than those who were physically battered.

Lets face it. Words hurt.

The power that words have to do damage is something which is recognized by our Torah. That emotions can be grievously wounded, reputations ruined, and relationships damaged beyond repair through mere words, is illustrated in biblical narratives, Talmudic tales, and Hassidic stories.

In this weeks parsha, Ki Tetzei, we are instructed to remember what the L-rd your G-d did unto Miriam, on the road out of Egypt. The Torah is referring to the fact that Miriam was punished by a leprous infection.

The full episode of Miriams sin and its consequences appears in an earlier portion of the Torah, at the very end of Parshat Behaalotecha (Bamidbar12:1-16). There we learn that Miriam and Aaron spoke against Moses because of his Cushite wife. They went on to belittle Moses importance, and spoke condescendingly about him.

It seems from the context of the story that Miriam, as the instigator of this critique, did so privately. Nevertheless, the Almighty was angry with her and she was healed, ironically, only because of Moses prayerful intervention.

Thus, our sages understand this command to remember Miriam as an injunction against speaking lashon hara, malicious gossip.

Much closer to our time, at the beginning of the last century, Rabbi Israel Meir Kagan of Radin (the Chofetz Chaim) became convinced that the central evil of modern times was the abuse of words. So confident was he of the certainty of his diagnosis of the social ills of our time that he devoted a major work to the subject of lashon hara. The name of that work is Desirous of Life, after the verse in Psalms, which reads, Who is the person who desires life? Let him guard his tongue against speaking evil.

Recalling Miriams misdeeds, and taking seriously the comprehensive teachings of the author of Chafetz Chaim, is especially valuable today. Because words have become even more powerful and potentially destructive than a rabbi living a hundred years ago could possibly imagine.

Nowadays, through the power of electronic instant communication, words can be sent to millions of people in microseconds. If these words are negative, they can harm individuals instantly, without even the possibility of recourse or recall. The power of words has exponentially increased in scope and effect in our day and age.

Our tradition teaches that using words to offend another human being is akin to a snake and its venom. The snakes venom kills, yet the snake has no benefit from its fiendish action. So too, human beings usually benefit from every other sin imaginable, but gain nothing by harming others verbally. Because of this, lashon hara is the least justifiable of sins.

Not a day goes by when we do not receive e-mails or read Internet reports which damage reputations of individuals, without due process and without the remotest possibility of defending themselves. This goes against both our Jewish heritage and our democratic ideals in a very fundamental way.

It is already the first week of Elul, the last month of the Jewish year. At this time, it behooves us to introspectively examine our faults. It is the season of teshuvah, repentance, which precedes and heralds the imminent High Holidays. We must give thought to how we have offended others with words and with deeds.

Although the unimaginable spread of verbal abuse that postmodern technology has instigated is beyond the capacity for any one of us to correct, we have no option but to try individually to control the way we use words and the words which we use. None of us is innocent of lashon hara, and none of us is exempt from sincerely addressing this weakness.

In conclusion, I call to your attention the rabbinic dictum that the power of Good exceeds the force of Evil manifold. Thus, if words have the ability to harm, they have the infinitely greater ability to soothe and to heal. The way to undo our sins of the negative use of language is to resolve to use language positively.

Imagine if e-mails were limited to complimentary statements and words of praise. Imagine if the blogs and websites were replete with stories of human accomplishment, altruism, and heroism. It would be a happier world for sure.

And it would be a world closer to that which the Almighty intended. Now, less than a month before Rosh Hashanah, is the ideal time for each of us to commit, in a deeply personal way, to bring about that better world.

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Words, like sticks and stones, can hurt us - The Jewish Star

Here’s a list of fall festivals that are canceled or will be virtual due to COVID-19 – Corpus Christi Caller-Times

Posted By on August 26, 2020

South Texans will celebratefalla little differently this year.

As COVID-19 continues to vexthe region, many festivals and events have opted to cancel or transform the celebration into a virtual event to keep the community safe.

Here's a list of fall festivals and events that will be canceled, ongoing or virtual in 2020.

Do you know a fall festival or event that will be ongoing or canceled due to COVID-19? Send a news tip to meagan.falcon@caller.com and we will update this list as more information comes along.

People enjoy tacos at the Que Bueno Taco Fest in Corpus Christi on Saturday, Sept. 15, 2018.(Photo: Casey Jackson/Caller-Times, )

The annual taco festival in downtown Corpus Christi has been canceled due to COVID-19. The third taco festival will rescheduled forfall 2021.

For more information, visit https://www.quebuenotacofest.com/.

Families enjoy the cow train at Rockin' K Farms in Robstown on Saturday, Sept. 28, 2019.(Photo: Meagan Falcon/Caller-Times)

Rockin K' Farms will host its annual corn maze, fall days and other activities as planned with COVID-19 guidelines.

The fall events in Robstown will take place 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays from Sept. 26 to Nov. 7. The farm will also have hours on Halloween from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., the website states.

Those who attend must follow social distancing and sanitary guidelines. For more information on the farm's COVID-19 guidelines, visithttps://www.rockinkmaze.com/covid-19.

Tickets will go on sale Monday, Aug. 31 at http://www.rockinkmaze.com.

The Port Aransas Jail Break Escape is a 5-kilometer run that features 20 challenging obstacles such as a tall wall, tire guard, cargo net, pole carry, and rope wall on Saturday, Sept. 28, 2019, at Horace Caldwell Pier. The race took place on the beach.(Photo: Annie Rice/Caller-Times)

Port Aransas' month-long season of festivals, racesand cooking showdowns has beencanceled this year as COVID-19 cases continue to rise.

The city announced in a news release on Aug. 10 thatBeachtoberfest will be rescheduled for 2021.

Since 2018, the city has hosted the six-week festival every fall, incorporating16 events that center onthe city's unique cultureevery weekend from September to October.

For more information, visit http://www.portaransas.org.

More: Visit Port Aransas cancels its month-long Beachtoberfest due to COVID-19

Clyde Price (top) helps little brother Brennan Price, 4, put on his life jacket Saturday, Oct. 6, 2012 as they get ready to head out on their vessel, "The Boat," during the cardboard boat race at Rockport Seafair.(Photo: Michael Zamora, Michael Zamora)

The 46th annual Rockport Seafair has beencanceled in 2020 due to the pandemic.

The event's committee announced in a news release on Aug. 26 itplanned to suspend its fall festival forthe safety of its volunteers and the community.

The three-day event was scheduled for Oct. 9-11, the release states. The festival will be rescheduled for Oct. 8-10, 2021.

For more information, visit http://www.rockport-fulton.org.

A cosplayer dressed as Deadpool rides the escalator at the Omni Corpus Christi to Realms Con on Saturday, Sept. 29, 2018.(Photo: Courtney Sacco/Caller-Times, )

The 16th annual Realms Con, which welcomed anime fans and gamers across South Texas, has beencanceled.

The convention announced on its Facebook page on July 6 it would be canceling the 2020 event due to the rise of coronavirus cases in the region.

The anime con will be rescheduled for Oct. 8-10, 2021 at the Omni Bayfront Hotel in Corpus Christi. For more information, visit Realms Con's Facebook page.

13th annual Dia de los Muertos Street Festival VIRTUAL

Ana Olvera poses for a portrait at the Dia de los Muertos Street Festival, Saturday, Nov. 2, 2019. Olvera is from Corpus Christi and comes to the festival every year to "keep our heritage going."(Photo: Annie Rice/Caller-Times)

The 2020 Dia De Los Muertos Street Festival will be a virtual event this year due to COVID-19 concerns.

The virtual festival will includephysical and virtual art exhibitions,an altar exhibition, onlineart workshops, and other virtual events, a release from K Space Contemporary said.

For information on how to participate in the Annual Art Exhibition, Youth Art Exhibition and Altar Display, visit http://www.diadelosmuertoscc.com.

More: Dia de los Muertos Festival going virtual this year due to COVID-19 concerns

People and their pets gather for the the 7th annual Bark in the Park on Saturday, Oct. 20, 2018 at Cole Park. (Photo: Casey Jackson/Caller-Times)

Thomas J. Henry's law office announced it will not host an in-person Bark in the Park event in October.

The event's website states there will be changes to this year's event due to COVID-19. It is not clear if the event will be virtual or postponed; however, the website encourages the community to visit its site for more updates on the pet costume show.

For more information, visit http://www.thomasjhenrylaw.com.

Visitors had a chance to enjoy more than 15 tamale and food vendors, arts and craft vendors, live music and more at the 4th annual Corpus Christi Hot Tamale Festival Saturday, Nov. 17, 2018.(Photo: Meagan Falcon/Corpus Christi Caller-Times)

The fourth annual Corpus Christi Hot Tamale Festival has been canceled.

The festival announced on its Facebook page on July 28 that the event's committee made the decision to cancel the 2020 festival to keep the community safe.

The event's committee plans to announce a future festival in the coming months.

For more information, visit the festival's Facebook page or http://www.cchottamalefest.com.

Demetri Sanchez, 11 (from left), Sophia Sanchez, 10, and Arial Garza perform a Greek dance Saturday, Nov. 3, 2012 at the 48th annual Greek Festival at St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church in Corpus Christi. (Photo: Michael Zamora/Caller-Times file, Michael Zamora)

The annual Greek festival in downtown Corpus Christi has yet to publicly announce if the event will continue in 2020 or will be postponed due to COVID-19.

For more information about the event, visit the Greek Festival of Corpus Christi on Facebook.

Jim Gold and Amy Krams wrap items for the 2015 Jewish Food Festival. The two-day event returns this year to celebrate 30 years of preserving flavor and tradition.(Photo: Caller-Times file photo)

The annual food festival in Corpus Christi has yet to publicly announce if the event will continue in 2020 or will be postponed due to COVID-19.

For more information about the event, visit the Corpus Christi Jewish Food Festival on Facebook.

Contributed photo The Corpus Christi Wine Festival will make its debut from noon to 11 p.m. at Heritage Park.(Photo: George Gongora)

The fifth-annual Corpus Christi Wine Festival has beencanceled in 2020 due to COVID-19.

The festival announced in a Facebook post on July 14 it would be canceling its event, which was scheduled for Nov. 23 at Heritage Park.

The event will be rescheduled for Nov. 19-20, 2021 at Heritage Park. For more information, visit the Corpus Christi Wine Festival Facebook page or http://www.corpuschristiwinefestival.com.

The Rockport Film Festival will kick off its 2016 three-day weekend with a launch party on Thursday. The special event, which will include drinks, food and the season's inaugural screening, will cost $50. Guests can choose to attend and block of films for $10 on Friday and Saturday. For more information, visit http://www.rockportfilmfest.com.(Photo: Contributed photo)

The Rockport Film Festival announced in a news release on Aug. 17 it plans to host its 2020 event fromThursday, Nov. 12 to Sunday, Nov. 15. The event will accommodate social distancing and other COVID-19 guidelines.

For more information, visit http://www.rockportfilmfestival.com.

Norman Delaney, pictured in 2011, was dressed as the Unionist John Dix during the Voices of South Texas at the Old Bayview Cemetery Come Alive.(Photo: Rachel Denny Clow/Caller-Times f)

The Voices of South Texas at Old Bayview Cemetery will continue its 2020 celebration in November, officials said.

The eventis scheduled to take place on Saturday, Nov. 7 to celebrate Old Bayview Cemetery's 175th birthday.

For more updates on Voices of South Texas, visit its Facebook page.

Austin D'Elia, 3 (from right) takes a bite of his eggs at the Ranch Hand Breakfast with his parents, Joe and Jennifer D'Elia, in 2014 at King Ranch.(Photo: Caller-Times file photo)

South Texans will have to wait another year to celebrate the 30th annual King Ranch Hand Breakfast.

King Ranch announced in a news release Aug. 25its annual breakfast, which has become a longstanding tradition in South Texas, will be canceled for 2020 due to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic.

The release states the breakfast, which is celebrated theSaturday before Thanksgiving, will be rescheduled for Nov. 20, 2021.

For more information, visit http://www.king-ranch.com.

Southland Conference cancels fall sports, looks to play in spring

These Corpus Christi events have canceled or are postponed amid coronavirus concerns

King Ranch postpones 30th annual Ranch Hand Breakfast in Kingsville due to COVID-19

Meagan Falcon covers entertainment, things to do and trending news.Supportmore coverage like this by checking out our subscription options and special offers at Caller.com/subscribe

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Here's a list of fall festivals that are canceled or will be virtual due to COVID-19 - Corpus Christi Caller-Times

Love and Courage, or On Being a Literary Editor in Today’s Istanbul: A Conversation with Mustafa evikdoan and Mehmet Erte – lareviewofbooks

Posted By on August 26, 2020

AUGUST 26, 2020

ISTANBUL HAS BEEN a hub for literary publishing since the late-19th-century Tanzimat era. But what does it mean to be a literary editor in Istanbul today? I sat down with Mustafa evikdoan and Mehmet Erte to address this question, among others.

Erte is the editor-in-chief of the oldest and finest Turkish literary journal, Varlk. Trained as a physicist, Erte is an award-winning poet, a painter, and the author of a novel, Sahte, and two short story collections, Arzuda Bir Sapma and Bakn Kirlettii Ayna. Under his editorship, Varlkcontinues its cultural mission to publish significant works of fiction and poetry while also expanding its remit to cover modern art and interdisciplinary studies. Ertes latest special issue, dedicated to the coronavirus, was entitled Is it possible to have a New Beginning?

For the last seven years, evikdoan has worked as a literary editor for one of Turkeys most prestigious publishing houses, Can Publishing, for whom he has edited numerous best-selling books. (Full disclosure: Can is scheduled to publish my co-translation of Halide Edib Adivars early-20th-century novel Seviyye Talip this summer.) His short story collection Temiz Kagidi came out in 2017, and his stories continue to appear in various literary magazines. Since 2018, he has worked as the series editor of Cans Legacy project dedicated to early Turkish fiction.

ICLAL VANWESENBEECK: Do you think a literary editor in todays Istanbul needs to be both creative and courageous?

MUSTAFA EVKDOAN: Anyone who chooses a career in literary publishing, knowing s/he will hardly make ends meet doing what s/he does, is courageous. In todays world, publishing a text solely because it is beautifully written is, in and of itself, an act of courage, too.

MEHMET ERTE: Varlk, as the oldest literary journal in Turkey, also carries a cultural mission. As an editor, I gather experts to create special issues that tackle cultural issues bravely. Weve had special issues on Post-Kemalism, Post-Humanism, etc. In 2017, President Erdoan said that even though AKP has accomplished a radical change in the country, they still didnt have full cultural hegemony. That September, Nilgn Tutal, a professor at Galatasaray University, published an essay in Varlk on AKP and Cultural Hegemony. In 2019, she followed up with a piece called Potato: The Old Friend of Resistance, which looked at inflation and poverty from the perspective of a potato, with a focus on art. Her piece was inspired by Brechts poem Traum von einer grossen Miesmacherin, in which a potato publicly defies Hitler. Varlk has been and continues to be a home for courageous thinkers, writers, and poets.

What defines the limits of a literary editors freedom in Turkey?

MEHMET ERTE: I see capitalism and a profit-hungry boss as more of a threat to literary publishing than a conservative government.

MUSTAFA EVKDOAN: In Turkey, most editors are writers themselves and stand with the writers. Though there are exceptions, in most cases it is still the editor who decides if a book gets published in Turkey. In terms of our freedom to resist market trends and financial pressure, I think we may still be above the world average.

Is Istanbul the center for literary publishing? How many manuscripts or submissions do you receive every month?

MUSTAFA EVKDOAN: The Turkish literary circle is a small one, and its center is Istanbul (except for the government, Istanbul is the center of everything in Turkey). We have popular writers whose books sell 200,000 copies, but most books sell 2,000 to 3,000 copies. Id say that independent publishers still constitute the majority, but Turkish banks and big corporations also have publishing houses. In 2019, about 70,000 new titles were published and over 400 million copies were printed. Literature, art, nonfiction books make up about 35 percent of this total, and the largest subgroup is educational books, books that students read in schools. Can Publishing received about 2,500 manuscripts in 2019, about half of which were novels, 40 percent were short stories. We publish about 150 books a year. Can Publishing has historically been home to big names in Turkish literature, such as Kemal Tahir, Orhan Pamuk, and Halide Edib Adivar, as well as major world authors, but we have always been equally committed to publishing new writers. I should mention that there is also a deep appreciation for poetry in Turkey but not enough publishing houses and even fewer distributors for poetry books.

MEHMET ERTE: At Varlk, we are receiving about 10 stories and 20 poems per day during the coronavirus crisis. Normally, the numbers would be half as many. Literary journals had a precipitous decline in the last 20 years; most of them closed down. Varlk, as a premier literary journal, prints about 6,000 copies a month. We have about 400 subscribers; some are academic and research institutions, of course. But our biggest challenge is distribution. In the past, there were government incentives and support to distribute Varlk and other literary journals to the furthest corners of the country. Right now, there is a national monopoly in distribution and its getting tougher to have your literary journals in bookstores, unless they sell 30,000 copies a month.

There is a growing right-wing monopoly over journalism in Turkey. How about in literary publishing?

MUSTAFA EVKDOAN: For the last 20 years, there has been a powerful right-wing government in Turkey. Previous governments were also mostly right-wing, but the dominant voice in the arts has traditionally been from the left. I am skeptical, however, about what this voice has transformed into over the last two decades in the world of art or literature. I am afraid that the dissenters may have become as conservative as those they oppose.

MEHMET ERTE: TV channels and newspapers are becoming monotypes while literary journals maintain their diversity. But due to the increased cost of paper and print materials, most of the journals, both Islamic and liberal, have had to quit, and now we have had to endure another blow with the pandemic. Still, when it comes to literature, we can say that there is still some kind of dialogue between factions.

Is the Turkish literary world divided between Islamic, secular, and nationalist?

MEHMET ERTE: We do see political divisions in the world of literature. In the early 2000s, there was much more dialogue between these sections, but after the Gezi Park protests in 2013, sharper lines have been drawn. In recent years, the political right is all about cultural hegemony, but what we see is that cultural hegemony doesnt change hands as quickly as political hegemony. According to the government, cultural hegemony in Turkey is still in the hands of a pro-Western elite (leftists or White Kemalists) and it needs to be toppled. Their shared values are anti-Westernization and regionalism. What we call modernization in this country is basically Westernization. Literary history in Turkey is written in line with social modernization i.e., Westernization. We cannot ignore the fact that, in the past, some poets, writers, and artists were neglected because they were Islamists, and we cannot pretend that literary journals and books published by Islamist writers dont exist, but there must be an explanation for being in power and still saying you want cultural hegemony.

MUSTAFA EVKDOAN: The Turkish intellectual landscape has been fragmented for a very long time now. Each side has its preferred publishing houses, with their preferred writers. Even though it might look like the cultural hegemony is with the left in Turkey, big corporate right-wing publishers have recently gained increasing visibility and recognition.

Is there anything unique or different about the world of literary publishing in Turkey?

MUSTAFA EVKDOAN: Our biggest and oldest literary prizes are for short stories, and thats a beloved and popular genre, and we continue to see great collections published every year. Id also say translation is important. Our market is saturated with translations, amounting to almost half of the books released. From Chinese to Norwegian to African languages, a wide range of world literature is translated into Turkish. That means we have more translation series editors and Turkish literature editors than academic editors, for example.

How about Arabic, Persian, and Hebrew translations? Perhaps they are linguistically distant, but Turkey is geographically close to these cultures.

MUSTAFA EVKDOAN: There are translations from Israel. Eshkol Nevo and Amos Oz are popular, but the most beloved Israeli writer in Turkey is probably Etgar Keret. Perhaps because of the general love for the short story genre in Turkey, his books have enjoyed many reprintings. On the other hand, its hard to find literary translators who can translate from Arabic to Turkish, and I think our editing world still keeps its distance from the Middle East. Some Arabic writers get translated from French or English.

MEHMET ERTE: We receive short stories and poems from Baku or Iran, but in Turkish. I know there are also some Iranian translators who work out of Istanbul.

MUSTAFA EVKDOAN: It might be worth noting, since thats partly what I do in the Cans Legacy series, that translation in Turkey also happens when we translate our own classical literature from Ottoman script to Latin script (Modern Turkish), or revise esoteric texts for the modern Turkish reader by adapting them. In fact, when I started working as the series editor, I realized how many past editions of seminal Ottoman novels like September, Blue and Black, Forbidden Love, were printed with missing parts and mistakes.

Despite common assumptions, the late Ottoman publishing world was an exciting and cosmopolitan one, with Armenian, Jewish, Levantine, and Turkish entrepreneurs publishing anything from Fortun du Boisgobey novels and opera librettos to bilingual newspapers, feminist journals, and illustrations. As editors, do you see that kind of an entrepreneurial spirit and cosmopolitanism in todays Turkey?

MEHMET ERTE: We dont have the cosmopolitan spirit or multilingual publishing tradition of the Ottoman world. For example, in the Ottoman Empire, there were close to 50 newspapers and journals published in Armenian alone. Today, there are only nine, and just two newspapers: Jamanak and Nor Marmara. There is also Agos, but thats printed in Turkish script. You can check out the whole list on the website of the Patriarchate of Turkish Armenians. On the other hand, the publishing world in Turkey exhibits a growing appetite for world literature. I guess, as we lose our interest in our own diverse heritage, we have begun to reach to the far corners of the globe.

MUSTAFA EVKDOAN: Yes, you are right, there was such a cultural richness in 19th-century Istanbul but not for the common people and not for those who lived outside the city. Paris was closer to the Ottoman intellectuals than Ankara ever was. Istanbul high society knew that reading novels and newspapers was one of the conditions of being European, but alas there were no novels to read. Thats why they were hastily translating whatever popular novels they could find in France. The Ottoman publishing world didnt really care to reach the common people, and even if it did, it didnt succeed much. For the Ottoman Empire, the only place that mattered was Istanbul. The rest were places to be taxed or to recruit soldiers from. A genuine course of enlightenment occurred in Anatolia only after the declaration of the Republic. Today, this endeavor either gets too much praise or is heavily criticized, but the Republican reformers tried to bring books and literacy to cities swept by sickness and hunger; places that had no roads, no hotels, etc. Still, I wouldnt want to be unfair. Womens emancipation, freedom of expression, art criticism all date back to the late Ottoman era. Besides, it is the Istanbulites of the Ottoman Empire who gave us the most beautiful works of Turkish literature. Whether we like it or not, we cannot think of our publishing world or tradition as being separate from the Ottoman tradition. The saddest part is that we no longer have the cosmopolitanism of those times. Even though there was an increase in publishing in Kurdish after 2000, I can say that, in recent years, thats unfortunately gotten harder. Once, even mainstream publishers published in Kurdish, but now there is not even mention of it. Aras Publishing publishes in Armenian and Turkish, Istos publishes in Turkish and Greek today. They remind us of the once-cosmopolitan Istanbul of the past.

Turkey has a very large refugee population. Do either of you receive manuscripts or submissions from refugees?

MUSTAFA EVKDOAN: Strangely, we havent so far. As far as I know, other publishers I have talked to havent either.

MEHMET ERTE: Varlk received a proposal back in the day to have a special issue on Arab poets exiled to Turkey, but it never materialized.

Its impossible not to fall in love with the landscape of secondhand bookstores, modern bookstores, museums, and archives in Istanbul. Looking at the bookshelves, book titles, and translations, the literary world seems to be full of artistic and intellectual energy.

MUSTAFA EVKDOAN: You are more optimistic than we are. Most of those bookstores are struggling to survive, even though you are right that literary productivity and energy is there.

MEHMET ERTE: Yes, Istanbul is home to a lot of bookstores. As a nation, we havent yet warmed up to the idea of ebooks; even ordering books online is new most have had to learn it in the coronavirus days and I believe that a book is still a magical object for the happy minority in Turkey. But there is pressure on the literary publishing world in Turkey, just not as much as you might think. Perhaps we are still outside the control range of the government. I also dont see the ruling party supporting their own writers and poets. They might care about what they say on social media, but they dont seem to care for or support their literary productions.

In Turkey during the 80s, some books were bowdlerized. I remember seeing lines smeared with black paint. Censorship was explicit. There is censorship in todays Turkey, too, but perhaps less visible. What do you think? Do people use pen names nowadays? Is more auto-censorship in play? Are you being asked to change stories, or remove words, etc.? How many people have to say yes before a book gets published in Turkey?

MUSTAFA EVKDOAN: Perhaps the question implies that editors in general might function as censors. I dont think I agree, but even if it were so, there arent very many texts to censor. By the time the manuscript reaches us, the thorny details of recent history have been eliminated. Some controversial content exists, but within limits. The writer doesnt necessarily say, Let me get rid of this part, itll give me a headache, but its probably ingrained in his/her mind, and there is some auto-censorship that even they are not aware of.

Back in the day, the censors of the Abdulhamid II era [18761909], for instance, were foreign to the world of narrative fiction and so they could be ticked off by any word. For instance, the word son-in-law was censored in Halid Ziyas 1901 novel Kirik Hayatlar because of a dispute between the sultans sons-in-laws (Ziya abandoned the novel halfway through because of the censorship). Another word censored in his novel was transformation. Of course, today, we are not in that situation, but we are not progressing either. On the other hand, art wants to move forward and raise the scale higher, and subvert. I personally have not observed such subversive literary endeavors yet. Our generation is still in a slumber on the steps that the previous generations of writers have climbed.

By the way, one of the most striking examples of bowdlerization in Turkey took place in 1988 at Can Publishing. Henry Millers Tropic of Capricorn, translated and published by Can in 1985, was banned by court order on the grounds of obscenity. The translator, Aylin Sagtur, and the publisher, Erdal Oz, were prosecuted. After that, 39 publishing houses in Turkey came together and prepared the second edition of Tropic of Capricorn using Can Publishings cover. Censored sections remained censored, but the court ruling was included in that edition, because it actually contained the censored parts. Because a court ruling could not be prosecuted for obscenity, the book was eventually sold and read as a whole. Today, the novel is published freely.

MEHMET ERTE: In the past, everything that contradicted formal historical narratives, especially the ones about minorities, would be redacted, even in translation. Today, because it is easier for everyone to access the original documents, Im guessing, optimistically, that publishers would not want to embarrass themselves. Besides, we live in an age where, despite the regime, the official history is up for debate. But we know that publishers owned by the religious congregations in Turkey censor sex scenes and Islamicize certain parts of world classics, but you can find the same world classics in excellent and complete translations from other publishers. I never had to or was asked to censor anything in Varlk, but I know that state-employed teachers and military personnel who send their work to us use pen names and have reservations about writing on certain issues. Its obvious that they are right in their reservations. But despite all this, there are some great things happening in our literary world. In 2011, the Board for the Protection of Minors from Obscene Publications wrote a report on the Turkish translation of William S. Burroughss Soft Machine and sued the publisher and the translator. The case was overturned by the Constitutional Court of Turkey. Sel Publishing published the councils report on the back cover of the novel.

MUSTAFA EVKDOAN: The criteria used by this board and the Ministry of Education are becoming more and more strict. For instance, booksellers for high schools look for and prefer books with no sexuality in them.

I checked out some of the books that the Board has declared obscene and a vast majority seem to be about sexuality or LGBTQ themes. There seems to be a persistent moral policing of literature under the pretext of protecting children. Are stories with explicit sexuality and especially LGBTQ literature a no-no for publishers? Whats your attitude when you receive such stories?

MEHMET ERTE: There is the Kaos GL journal, and Sel Publishing has two series, The LGBTQ Library and The Queer Dream. A few books come to mind: Id like to mention Kvan Tanryars seminal book Sexual Orientation and Sexual Identity in Turkish Literature (2018), the edited volume The Paradox of Sexuality: Queer Culture and Opposition in Turkey (2012), and the short story collection Woman to Woman (2014), edited by Murathan Mungan who, together with Ahmet Gntan and the late poet Kk skender, are the big literary names who write about homoerotic desire. I published Bura Giritliolus love story Bir Yaz Hsran (A Summer Disillusionment) in our October 2017 issue. We receive very few literary submissions at Varlk on homoeroticism, but both in academia and in literary circles, there is a very strong new generation coming along.

MUSTAFA EVKDOAN: To be honest, thats not how we think when we decide to publish a book. Our priority is the overall quality of the work, but I understand your question, and the answer is that lots of LGBTQ-related books are published in Turkish and in translation. Queer theory books are translated; there are actually publishing houses that have created book series for these titles. Not all publishers are like that, of course. Some entirely bypass this topic for religious or political reasons. There is no government mandate not to publish LGBTQ literature, but publishers may feel uneasy nevertheless. A complaint letter from a reader might easily lead to a court case that could drag on for years. That said, there is a very strong feminist movement in Turkey, and people read feminist literature of the past and present.

What do you think is excessive or lacking in the world of literary publishing in Turkey today?

MUSTAFA EVKDOAN: Calmness. Turkish novelist Ahmed Hamdi Tanpinar [190162] once said that Turkey doesnt give its children a chance to occupy themselves with anything other than itself. I think everyone who lives in Turkey would agree with that. Perhaps, if we were to calm down, stop regurgitating outdated, formulaic discourses, and approach our socio-cultural issues with genuine emotion, we might get a better grip on whats happening around us.

MEHMET ERTE: I can say that, today, the Turkish literary world is governed by politics or political correctness. Books are being marketed according to the problems they discuss. Writers discuss social issues rather than aesthetics. And yet, literature is as much about the problems of the subject as it is about how the subject problematizes the world, because that after all is what determines the aesthetics.

Iclal Vanwesenbeeck is an associate professor at the State University of New York in Fredonia, where she teaches courses in world literature, global citizenship, and a study-abroad course in Iceland.

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Love and Courage, or On Being a Literary Editor in Today's Istanbul: A Conversation with Mustafa evikdoan and Mehmet Erte - lareviewofbooks

15 women from York County’s past who influenced, inspired and created change – York Daily Record

Posted By on August 26, 2020

The York Daily Record will host discussions through Facebook live regarding York's racial history, pursuit for change, and opportunities for youth. York Daily Record

Three women with strong York County ties have won national honors in August, an anniversary month for womens suffrage.

A century ago on Aug. 18, Tennessee ratified the 19th Amendment, becoming the 36th state to do so and thus meeting the legal threshold to give women the right to vote in the presidential election of 1920.

Special Olympian Loretta Claiborne today focuses especially on the treatment of people with disabilities.(Photo: Photo REED SAXON, AP, ILLUSTRATION: USA TODAY NETWORK)

So its timely to recognize Special Olympian Loretta Claiborne and forensic pediatrician Leslie Strickler, who gained Women of the Century honors in Pennsylvania and New Mexico, respectively.

Dallastown graduate and forensic pediatrician Leslie Strickler is among 10 women found to be the most inspiring in New Mexico.(Photo: _JOHN ARNOLD, UNIVERSITY OF NEW MEXICO HEALTH SCIENCES, ILLUSTRATION_ USA TODAY NETWORK)

And Logos Academys Arlette Morales was named among 12 Faces of Activism.

Arlette Morales is a 17-year-old York, Pennsylvania activist who advocates for Latino, immigrant and Black rights by way of protesting and and other forms of community involvement, July 24, 2020.(Photo: Cameron Clark, York Daily Record)

All three honors came from national surveys published by the USA Today Network.

With all this in mind, we turn to women from history with York County ties, all deceased, who influenced, inspired and, in many cases, created change locally and nationally. Here are 15, among scores of deserving accomplished women from our past:

Susanna Wright: This native of England came to Columbia in Lancaster County in 1726, before York County separated, and lived in the river town for the rest of her life. This daughter of widowed Quaker John Wright ran the household that supported the family ferry business and other enterprises. In addition, she mediated legal disputes, wrote poetry and essays, owned an extensive multilanguage library and corresponded with Benjamin Franklin and others of prominence. Also, Ann Jessop came to York in the 1780s, and like Susanna Wright, was the genesis of one of the region's most influential and productive families.

Shinah Etting: A visitor to York in 1773 admired this young matriarch of what is believed to be York's first Jewish family. Those who have known York ... cannot fail to recollect the sprightly and engaging Mrs. E., the life of all the gaiety that could be mustered in the village, he wrote. After her storekeeper husband died, this mother of eight relocated to Baltimore, where her family gained a spot on a short list of the city's most influential and respected residents.

Widow Mihmims: Massachusetts statesman Timothy Pickering, visiting York as part of the Continental Congress nine-month stay, observed his landlord, the Widow Mihmims, constantly working alone at her spinning wheel. Perhaps she was spinning to make ends meet in times of the wars scarcities and high prices. Or perhaps she was making clothing for those serving in the military. Either way, she was contributing to the community alone at her machine. She is representative of the untold number of women who contributed to the community and beyond from their homes: hosting and working. Pickering wrote: She lived all alone and now sets from morning till night at her spinning wheel, which, by the way, is a very modest one.

Amanda Berry Smith: The household near Shrewsbury where this freedwoman grew up served as an Underground Railroad station before the Civil War. Later, she committed her life to Christian missionary work and traveled internationally. Smith also founded and operated an industrial home for Black children in suburban Chicago. Similarly, two other late 19th-century Black women with York County links, Mary J. Small and Frances Harper, were widely known for missionary and social action work, respectively.

Mary Cadwell Fisher: A trained teacher, this respected woman learned nursing and humanitarian work at the Civil War Hospital in York. This leader in the Ladies Aid Society traveled to Gettysburg after the battle to tend to the wounded. The experienced nurse later wrote in a Philadelphia newspaper that "no imagination could paint the picture in that wood" as she aided the fallen soldiers.

Isabel Small: An early York County philanthropist, Isabel Small, with her husband, Samuel, created and funded institutions that formed a foundation in York. For example, when Samuel died in 1885, he bequeathed $8,000 to the Childrens Home of York. Upon her death in 1890, Isabel earmarked $30,000.

And she bequeathed a similar amount to another Small family enterprise, York Collegiate Institute, one of the forerunners ofYork College. The Small family also started and supported York Hospital and the York Benevolent Association.

Mary A. and Eleanor D. Wallace:These sisters took over operation of their father's gristmill near Cross Roads a couple of years after his death in 1861. Alexander Wallace had operated the southeastern York County mill for about two decades, and his daughters carried on his legacy until 1895. Women typically were not involved in milling in those days. Mary Wallace gained another distinction. She lost an arm in the machinery but kept working in what is known as the Wallace-Cross Mill today.

Catherine Meyer: This Red Lion businesswoman was blessed with one of the most respected business minds in the area. Her ventures included development of a general store and rail station, and she played a role in the incorporation of Red Lion in 1880. Despite these accomplishments, Meyer never voted in a national election. She died in 1919, a year before the 19th Amendment was ratified. For her leadership, she gained the title of the "Mother of Red Lion."

Anna Dill Gamble: This Paris-born, York County-educated writer, activist and historian served as county chairwoman to persuade men to vote for women's suffrage. Gamble spent about two years in an intense campaign, though defeated in the county and state in the general election in 1915. Later, she became involved in peace and international relations, speaking widely on behalf of the International Council of Catholic Women. Also, the effort to win the suffrage vote in 1915 crossed racial lines. Ethel Armstrong Cowles chaired efforts in the Black community to gain the vote.

Florence M. Gipe: This longtime head of nursing at York Hospital went on to earn her doctorate in nursing at the University of Maryland. She later served as dean of the Maryland School of Nursing, and her teaching and published works helped establish nursing academically rather than as vocational training. Historian June Burk Lloyd quotes a story on the University of Maryland School of Nursing website that sums up Gipes philosophy: You train dogs, you educate nurses.

Katherine Beecher:This businesswoman founded Katherine Beecher candies in Manchester, an example of a woman-operated business that started in the kitchen. Western York County snack food makers Martins, Utz and Wege are others. The military's demand for candy during the war nourished Beechers candy making. Beecher was at home in the company's kitchen or dealing with customers and other business matters.

Martha Bailey: This Dillsburg native, one of the county's early women medical doctors, started as a country doctor. Her contributions to health care extended thousands of miles farther. She contributed to rural health care with the Pennsylvania Health Department, served at a Presbyterian mission school for Black people in Alabama and worked for native American and Alaskan rights. Some years earlier, Laura J. Dice, a pioneering York physician, was secretary of the county medical society and a leading suffragist.

Lillie Belle Allen: This visitor from South Carolina was shot while visiting York in the race riots of 1969. Her assailants were not brought to justice for more than 30 years. That was a gap that has caused her family to point out at a recent memorial that Allen had no voice and was seemingly a nonexistent person. Also, two Black women of this era with county ties are remembered for their civil rights work: Gladys Rawlins, who founded Green Circle, an international program to promote racial understanding, and Daisy Myers, who earned the title Rosa Parks of the North. She and her family endured racial discrimination in Levittown in the 1950s, and Gov. George Leader, a York native, sent in the state police to bring order.

Mattie Chapman: County voters elected this Albany, Georgia, native to the post of county prothonotary in 1975, the first Black woman elected to county office. She started in the prothonotary's office as a clerk 19 years earlier, the first Black person to work in the courthouse. She led the entire ticket in winning a second term. When the popular Chapman died in 1982, Judge James Buckingham said: I believe when (Prothonotary) Mattie Chapman passed, a light went out in this Court House.

Delma Millain Rivera: Delma Rivera, served on numerous community boards, including the Salvation Army, the York Health Corp. and the United Way of York County. She and her husband, pioneering Latino physician Edwin A. Rivera, helped found Yorks Spanish American Center. Legacies, an AAUW publication, said this about Delma Rivera in 1984: Love of people and her heritage remains the motivating force behind Delma Rivera's years of work with the Hispanic community of York.

We add one more because this accomplished womans life and times so greatly represented the qualities of the 15 influencers already named.

Flo Snyder Neff started in the office of York Corp., writing poetry of hope in newsletters sent to Yorkco employees working on defense jobs at home and away at war. You could accurately say this office worker, one of 5,000 Yorkco employees, inspired a critical defense company with her pen in a time of crisis in World War II.

She later trained as a nurse and then continued her education in a different field to become a pioneering guidance counselor in the Red Lion Area School District. Her work is remembered in the school district today.

For many years in the home, she cared for her mother and then for her husband.

Like so many county women, she achieved on many fronts, whether with quiet work in the home or as a pioneer in her professional field.

Sources: James McClures Never to be Forgotten, YDR files, AAUWs Legacies, Friends of Lebanon Cemetery and York County History Center archives; June Burk Lloyds Universal York blog.

I will present in the OLLI-Penn State Fall Series on two womens history-related topics: Women in World War II, 11 a.m. Oct. 8 at York JCC, and When Women Marched: Suffrage in York County, 1 p.m. Nov. 12 at York JCC.

Also, this OLLI presentation: When Streetcars Shrunk York County and the World, 11 a.m. Nov. 18 at Wisehaven, Terrace Room. Registration details, $8 for OLLI members, $15 for nonmembers: https://olli.york.psu.edu/.

Jim McClure is the retired editor of the York Daily Record and has authored or co-authored seven books on York County history. Reach him at jimmcclure21@outlook.com.

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15 women from York County's past who influenced, inspired and created change - York Daily Record

The Jews are an inextricable part of the world at large – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on August 26, 2020

Underpinning much of the divisions in Israeli society is the tension between the particular and the universal, between the biblical prophecy that the Israelites will dwell alone, and the medieval philosophy that regarded Jews living among the nations as the heart of a body.A dichotomy between globalists, open to the world, and isolationists, between those who reject outside influence and those who cherish it, between voyagers and homebodies.The argument is moot. Whether we like it or not, we are part of the world. The past, present and future of the Jews and Israelis are intertwined with those of the world. We are all travelers, all globalists.Even the groups most committed to the isolationist Jewish ethos, the ultra-Orthodox and religious Zionists, embody our connection to the world. The ultra-Orthodox dress code, for example, hearkens back to the fashion popular among non-Jews in 19th-century Eastern Europe, which they chose to distinguish themselves from the modern world threatening their values.However, the garb also indicates a persistent link with the world and history of the Jewish people dwelling among the nations. Similarly, a central tenet of contemporary religious Zionism expresses reservations about outside cultural influences and political alliances, citing the uniqueness of the People of Israel. However, religious Zionism itself is a relatively new ideological construct born in response to European ideas of nationalism and the right to self-determination. Moreover, the circumstances of the Jewish people dictate a constant connection with the world. Most Jewish history occurred in exile. Any true attempt to appreciate it lies in seeing the broader framework of history in Europe, the Middle East and, in recent generations, the United States and Latin America. Today, too, about a half of our people live outside Israel, interacting with a physical and ideological non-Jewish environment.The constant movement of these Jews (and Israelis, too) from here to there means a constant opening to the world. Israel, by law the state of the Jewish people, must understand the world and learn from it if it seeks to understand the other half of the Jewish people. cnxps.cmd.push(function () { cnxps({ playerId: '36af7c51-0caf-4741-9824-2c941fc6c17b' }).render('4c4d856e0e6f4e3d808bbc1715e132f6'); });There are also utilitarian reasons for adopting an approach that is open to the world, as non-Israeli Jews offered crucial help for Israel over the years, so much so that some were even asked to undertake leadership roles in Israel, such as the 1952 proposal to name Albert Einstein president or the 2005 appointment of Stanley Fischer as Bank of Israel governor.The biographies of many Israelis reflect this reality, too. For example, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and former defense minister Naftali Bennett were both previously US citizens. Israel was further effective in mobilizing key international actors in achieving the states goals. From the Zionist success in securing support for its independence in 1947 from the two (rival) great powers, the US and Soviet Union, all the way to securing US economic, diplomatic and military aid in recent decades.The tremendous success of Israel as the Start-Up Nation is also owed to its links with the world, as the sector has flourished through a global network of education, finance and trade.Under these circumstances, Israel would do well to give up the pretense of barricading itself off from the world. Isolationist ideas, such as not sending our officers to study at elite foreign institutions lest they return with ideas incompatible with the uniqueness of the State of Israel must be rejected out of hand.The challenge Jews and Israelis faced in the past and are facing today is in shaping an identity that balances the local and the global, one that encompasses the best of the two, rather than rejecting one for the other. An effective balance between the particular and the universal is one of the secrets of success of the Jewish people and the State of Israel; violating the balance reflects a narrow understanding of the past, a limited perception of the present and a potential risk for the future of both Israelis and Jews. Dr. Ehud Eiran is an associate professor of international affairs at the University of Haifa. Nadav Tamir is a former diplomat adviser to president Shimon Peres. Both are board members at Mitvim - The Israeli Institute for Regional Foreign Policies.

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The Jews are an inextricable part of the world at large - The Jerusalem Post

Is Israel really interested in a confrontation with resistance groups? – Middle East Monitor

Posted By on August 26, 2020

Is Israel really interested in a confrontation with resistance groups? The continuous escalation between the groups and the Zionist entity has the potential for turning into a full blown confrontation. However, eliminating the security risks that the Gaza Strip poses to the occupation state requires Israel to consider a complete reoccupation of the Palestinian territory and staying there for a long time.

The resistance groups want to persuade the Zionists to back down from tightening the blockade which has created very severe economic and humanitarian conditions in the Strip. Israel, meanwhile, apparently has no interest in a full-blown confrontation, as its decision-makers realise that they will be back to square one in the end. However, threats made by Zionist leaders, especially Minister of Defence Benny Gantz, and hints about the possibility of Israel assassinating the leaders of resistance groups and their members, could suggest otherwise.

Before delving into the prospects for further escalation, it is important to stress that recent Israeli efforts have focused on a return to the crisis management strategy that it has pursued since 2009; its a strategy that Gaza has succeeded in turning around and imposing new rules. The resistance groups have secured their legitimate right to disrupt security in the southern regions of the Israeli entity in response to the tightened blockade.

READ: Why besieged Gaza is a ticking time bomb

Israel has failed to deter legitimate resistance because, quite simply, the Palestinians in Gaza have nothing to lose, with the current humanitarian and economic situation being so dire, and the Israelis will be forced to return to the same old truce terms. At the same time, Israel is aware that no Palestinian or Arab party can take over the management of the Strip.

This means that any large-scale military offensive against the Gaza Strip will lead to one of two results: the offensive will end and Gaza will return to being a direct threat to the Zionist state, despite the loss of life and the economic and political hardship which that entails; or the escalation will lead to Israel getting bogged down in the hot sands of Gaza for a long time, with the enormous challenges this would pose on every level.

At the same time, Israel has challenges away from the Gaza Strip. It faces uncertainty on the northern front with Lebanon and Hezbollah; the new academic year is approaching and, domestically, the state is not ready, with deteriorating economic and social conditions in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic; and there is real fear about the change in the regional atmosphere following the agreement with the UAE. All of this makes the Zionists less than enthusiastic about further escalation.

What applies to Israel also applies to the resistance groups, which have no interest in a full-blown confrontation. They are mainly concerned with persuading Israel to ease the siege of Gaza. However, incidents can happen which push both sides to take the plunge. Israels killing of Palestinian citizens, for example, or missiles launched from Gaza, could automatically trigger a major confrontation.

It goes without saying that the situation depends not only on the Israeli position and the resistance groups, but also on the role of mediators, including Egypt, Qatar and the UN. The impact of internal and regional events must also be taken into account.

Nevertheless, the resistance groups must act according to their interests and the interests of the Palestinians in the Gaza Strip. This requires them to continue communicating with mediators, not to leave matters to Zionist influence, and to increase their role in providing improvements to the economic and humanitarian conditions in the besieged territory.

Netanyahu vs Gantz: Gaza Escalation as Reflection of Israels Political Rivalry

Translated from The New Khalij, 24 August 2020

The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Monitor.

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Is Israel really interested in a confrontation with resistance groups? - Middle East Monitor


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