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Factbox: Latest on the Worldwide Spread of Coronavirus – The New York Times

Posted By on August 24, 2020

(Reuters) - India reported a record daily jump of coronavirus infections on Saturday, bringing the total of cases near 3 million and piling pressure on authorities to curb huge gatherings as a major religious festival began.

DEATHS AND INFECTIONS

* For an interactive graphic tracking the global spread, click: https://tmsnrt.rs/3aIRuz7

* For a U.S.-focused tracker with state-by-state and county map, click: https://tmsnrt.rs/2w7hX9T

EUROPE

* Around 1,500 volunteers equipped with face masks, hand disinfectant and tracking gadgets attended an indoor concert in Germany as part of a study to simulate how the coronavirus spreads in large gatherings.

* Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskiy urged people to act on health advice after official data showed daily COVID-19 infections had risen to a record level.

* The head of Israel's coronavirus task force has asked Zelenskiy to ban an annual pilgrimage in which Hasidic Jews visit the central Ukrainian town of Uman, over concerns the site may become a virus hotspot.

AMERICAS

* The United States on Friday closed lanes at select ports of entry at the border with Mexico and will conduct more secondary checks to limit non-essential travel and the spread of coronavirus, a U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) official said.

* New York City has managed to contain the virus as it reopens, but risks an increase in cases later in the year, public health experts told Reuters.

* The scale of the COVID-19 pandemic in Mexico is "under-represented" and "under-recognised" and testing is limited, the World Health Organization's Dr Mike Ryan said.

ASIA-PACIFIC

* South Korea said it will roll out tougher social distancing guidelines to curb the spread of coronavirus nationwide as it battles a new outbreak spreading from the capital.

* Finding the pandemic scary? A Japanese group is trying to take people's minds off COVID-19 - by putting them in coffins surrounded by chainsaw-wielding zombies.

MIDDLE EAST AND AFRICA

* Saudi public sector employees will return to on-site work on Aug. 30, state TV reported, quoting the human resources ministry, further relaxing coronavirus restrictions.

* South Africa's confirmed COVID-19 cases have surpassed 600,000, the health ministry said on Friday, although the number of new cases has been declining since a peak in July.

* Lebanon imposed a partial lockdown for two weeks starting on Friday to counter COVID-19 infections that have doubled since the catastrophic explosion at the Beirut port.

MEDICAL DEVELOPMENTS

* China has been giving experimental coronavirus vaccines to groups facing high infection risks since July, a health official told state media.

* China has approved human testing for a potential coronavirus vaccine cultivated within insect cells, local government in the southwestern city of Chengdu said.

* The U.S. Food and Drug Administration could update its emergency use authorization for Gilead Sciences Inc's drug remdesivir to include patients hospitalized with moderate COVID-19, despite mixed trial results, the company's top research executive said on Friday.

ECONOMIC IMPACT

* More than half the companies in Spain that closed at the height of the coronavirus pandemic have reopened, according to government data, suggesting the economy is recovering slowly.

(Compiled by Frances Kerry)

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Factbox: Latest on the Worldwide Spread of Coronavirus - The New York Times

Global coronavirus death toll surpasses 800,000, WHO hopes it will be over in two years – NBC News

Posted By on August 24, 2020

Global coronavirus deaths surged past 800,000 people on Saturday, according to Johns Hopkins University data, which came less than 24 hours after the World Health Organization said it hoped the pandemic would last for less than two years.

Cases took an upward turn in eastern European countries Saturday as Ukraine recorded 2,328 new cases and 37 deaths between Friday and Saturday, figures from the national council of security and defense showed.

It prompted President Volodymyr Zelenskiy to urge people on Saturday to adhere to health advice, wear masks and maintain social distancing as data showed daily infections had risen to a record level.

"Please help doctors, be careful," Zelenskiy said in a televised interview. "We really did not have the first wave (of infections) when it happened in Europe. Now it is coming."

The head of Israel's coronavirus task force also urged Ukraine on Saturday to ban an annual pilgrimage in which tens of thousands of Hasidic Jews descend on the central Ukrainian town of Uman, for the Jewish New Year in September.

Fearing it could become a virus hotspot, the two governments have already issued a joint statement pleading with pilgrims to cancel their trips, although huge crowds are still expected to fly in.

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Nearby, in the Czech Republic authorities recorded 506 new coronavirus cases on Friday, the highest number of new infections in one day since the outbreak began there.

The Czech government was among the first in Europe to introduce social curbs but began to lift restrictions in May.

News of the spikes came less than 24 hours after the WHO's Director General, Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told a briefing in the Swiss city of Geneva that the organization hoped "to finish this pandemic (in) less than two years."

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"We have a disadvantage of globalization, closeness, connectedness but an advantage of better technology," he said, calling for global solidarity in the hunt for a vaccine. Adding, that the 1918 Spanish flu had also taken around two years to end.

Elsewhere, India reported a record daily jump of infections on Saturday, bringing the total near 3 million and piling pressure on authorities.

South Korea said on Saturday it would roll out tougher social distancing measures to curb the spread of the virus, as it battles a new outbreak spreading from the capital, Seoul.

Meanwhile, there was a glimmer of hope in Spain, which suffered badly during the peak of Europe's outbreak, as more than half of companies in the country have reopened, according to government data released on Saturday.

However, France was forced to delay unveiling details of its 100 billion euro ($118 billion) recovery plan to reinvigorate the economy until September, while it focuses on preparing to open schools for the new term, the government said.

Reuters contributed to this report.

Adela Suliman is a London-based writer and reporter for NBC News Digital.

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Global coronavirus death toll surpasses 800,000, WHO hopes it will be over in two years - NBC News

Crown Heights riots anniversary shows a surprising rift – Forward

Posted By on August 24, 2020

Jewish Crown Heights residents remember microscopic details about the riots of 1991 29 years ago, on Wednesday.

They recall the acronyms used to differentiate between the different types of ambulances that served the victims of the car crash that started it all. They remember the ins and outs of the court cases for one of the killers of Yankel Rosenbaum. They talk about the word the murder weapon was etched with (killer), the words that Al Sharpton said in a eulogy about Jews in the neighborhood (diamond merchants), the minutiae of the days and nights that were dissected and argued over for decades afterwards.

I still hear the footsteps, the pounding of people running along Eastern Parkway, screaming, Get the Jews and Hitler didnt finish it, said Crown Heights resident Devorah Halberstam, who co-founded the Jewish Childrens Museum that sits at the heart of the neighborhood. I didnt read it in the paper. I didnt hear it from somebody else. I watched it with my own two eyes.

About 60% of Crown Heights is Black, according to census data, and most of the foreign-born population claims a birthplace in the Caribbean.

Census data do not track religion, but about 2,500 homes reported speaking Yiddish, out of about 34,600 homes that spoke a language other than English. The neighborhood is home to the Chabad-Lubavitch movement, a Hasidic sect that stayed in the area during white flight in the 1960s and 1970s at the behest of the Lubavitcher Rebbe Menachem Mendel Schneerson.

The riot began after a car in the motorcade of a Hasidic leader accidentally struck and killed seven-year-old Gavin Cato, the child of Guyanese immigrants. Rumors circulated that the Jewish ambulance service, Hatzolah, abandoned the child; that EMTs treated the driver first; that the driver was drunk. Violence erupted in the neighborhood. Residents marched in the street for four days and a group of young Black men surrounded Yankel Rosenbaum and stabbed him.

Now, nearly 30 years later, New York City saw 242 anti-Semitic hate crimes in 2019, according to the NYPD. In Crown Heights, an Orthodox rabbi was attacked with a paving stone. That same week, an Orthodox Jewish driver was hit in the eye with what news reports said was a block of ice or a rock.

This anniversary, coming as it does after a year of violence perpetrated against both Orthodox Jews and Blacks, lays bare a rift, said Jewish residents of Crown Heights. And its not between them and the Black people they share the neighborhood with; its between them and non-Orthodox Jews they felt abandoned them in 1991, and who still havent really come through.

These feelings of bitterness and trauma run so deep that they persist to this day.

A number of the perpetrators of the violent incidents that happened in 2019 were reportedly Black men, and Jewish leaders question whether the response would have been more unified had perpetrators fit a more politically convenient profile.

Also, Jewish news outlets, including the Forward, called out citizens and especially fellow Jews for not doing or saying enough.

If the perpetrator wasnt a white supremacist who voted for Trump, then it didnt really happen, did it? asked Forward Life editor Avital Chizhik-Goldschmidt in late August of 2019.

To be sure, the Jewish community broadly did respond to violence against visibly Orthodox Jews more quickly, and with more concern, in 2019 than they did in 1991.

The ADL doubled funding last year for an anti-bias education program in public schools, and has offered dozens of cash rewards for information about perpetrators of hate violence.

ADL has worked for almost three decades to improve relations in the aftermath of the riots, said Alexander Rosemberg, ADL NY/NJ Deputy Regional Director in a statement.

Do we need to reclaim Jewish social justice? Should Jewish social justice focus on helping Jewish communities or on leading the way for others? Forward editor-in-chief Jodi Rudoren moderates a talk in partnership with BINA on August 25 at 1 p.m Eastern. Sign up here.

The community also staged a massive march in January to protest the violence against visibly Orthodox Jews, such as those in Crown Heights.

Yet those whom the event purported to stand up for had some qualms about it. It generated criticism from some Haredi Jews who are culturally opposed to organizing events around negative subjects. Was this really an event in partnership with the affected community?

For some Crown Heights Jews, it felt a lot like the time of the riots.

Image by Chana Pollack

The Forwards coverage of the Crown Heights riot from 1991.

One Jewish leader from outside their community did speak out on their behalf, and articulated some of what they were feeling. Abraham Foxman, then-national director of the Anti-Defamation League, criticized his own organization from within: You could say, What took the Anti-Defamation League 10 days to call you together and to say there is anti-Semitism in Crown Heights? he said, as printed in the Sept. 6, 1991 issue of the Forward, There seems to be a self-imposed self-restraint. There seems to be a color consciousness operating when the issue comes to anti-Semitism.

Residents describe a disconnect, a feeling of being misunderstood, mischaracterized and blamed for the riots, memories that still buzz like phantom phone calls in the back pocket.

Our enemy wasnt really the Black, our enemy was the successful Jew living in suburbia, said Rabbi Shea Hecht, a Crown Heights resident and the chairman of the board for the National Committee for the Furtherance of Jewish Education. They had no understanding of what really took place in Crown Heights, and they were quick to pass judgement and say that it was the rich Jews taking advantage of the poor Blacks. That was not what was going on in this neighborhood at all.

Indeed, Jewish residents of Crown Heights say that justice was never served. They feel their fiercest and most effective advocate was not a Jewish New Yorker. Instead, it was Norman Rosenbaum, Yankel Rosenbaums brother and fiercest advocate.

And less than a month ago, he died at age 63, likely closing the book on finding the rest of the crowd that killed the 29-year-old student. The brothers were Australian, and thats where Norman died.

One man did go to prison for Yankels murder, but it took a lot of work on Normans part. Lemrick Nelson received a 10-year prison sentence after an acquittal in a state murder trial, a conviction in a federal civil rights trial that was eventually overturned and an eventual retrial. Norman flew back and forth from Melbourne to keep the issue in the public eye as apathy threatened to soak into the community like syrup.

The family eventually sued the hospital that treated Yankel, winning a $1.25 million settlement for medical malpractice after doctors did not address one of his four stab wounds for an hour.

But according to those who knew Norman, that was not enough.

There were still many people who participated that night in a stabbing that never had to answer to anybody, said Hecht, the rabbi, who used to host Norman Rosenbaum at his home during trips from Australia. Thats painful, and that was one of the things that Norman went to his grave with, saying, I didnt complete my entire mission.

Yet despite this history, and recent acts of violence, todays residents dont see Black-Jewish tension ratcheted up by gentrification at the root of their problems. Instead, its the individual person on the street who fails to understand the complicated and intentionally insular lifestyle of the Orthodox Jews of Crown Heights.

You cant blame a whole community because of individuals who have committed those crimes, said Devorah Halberstam of her Black neighbors. You just cant live in that mindset, otherwise youll never be free.

Halberstams son, Ari, was killed in a terror attack in 1994, three years after she witnessed the Crown Heights riot. Shes learned from her own experience, she said, that you never get complete justice, and whatever justice you do get you have to fight tooth and nail for.

Halberstam has devoted her life to building bridges in Crown Heights and beyond, co-founding the Jewish Childrens Museum that she devoted to her late son. She described a Black child visiting the museum and making a shofar by hand.

Image by Paul Stremple

Devorah Halberstam in front of the Jewish Childrens Museum

This, she said, is the kind of thing that prevents violence from happening again. Education is the key to peace, said Halberstam and others in the neighborhood.

She and Richard Green, the head of the Crown Heights Youth Collective, are working this week on One Crown Heights, a day of festivities usually held outdoors, that this year is all virtual. This Thursday and the following, from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m., storytellers and musicians will perform and parents will fill out the census and help children meditate.

For Crown Heights most devoted peacekeepers, the work does not stop, even though 29 years have passed.

Young people ask me all the time questions about that Why do they do this? Why do they do that? Why cant a man shake a womans hand? What are those little tassels that they wear? said Richard Green. Those are questions that young people have and once they understand what is going on there, its much easier for them to accept it.

Green has been at the forefront of community-building efforts in Crown Heights since before the 1991 riot that has forever stained the neighborhood. At the center of his philosophy is finding common ground between people living in seemingly different universes on the same block.

Green helped Hasidic families in the neighborhood turn on the lights and the fan on Shabbat when he was a child. He recalled being gifted with a coin left on a plate for his service.

Sometimes it feels a little tough: some say it may feel like carrying water in a strainer, he said. But to me, at least well get some of it to the other side.

Image by Paul Stremple

Richard Green in his office at the Crown Heights Youth Collective

And he said that the neighborhoods progress showed this spring, when protests in other neighborhoods about George Floyds killing by a police officer descended into chaos, but Crown Heights remained mostly calm.

We were able to keep our communities from going to that level that weve seen happening, he said.

Towards the end of our interview, Green took out a photo he took on his cellphone and printed out on a sheet of photo paper. He handed over the picture, which showed three Hasidic boys and one Black boy on a basketball court.

One thing they have in common is the game theyre playing, he said. All the other stuff? Secondary.

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

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Crown Heights riots anniversary shows a surprising rift - Forward

Unorthodox Star Shira Haas on Her Mixed Emotions Shaving Her Head on Day 1 of Shooting – Yahoo Entertainment

Posted By on August 24, 2020

A version of this story about Shira Haas first appeared in the Emmy Hot List issue of TheWraps Emmy magazine.

Shira Haas is one of the discoveries of this years Emmy season. The petite 25-year-old Israeli was nominated for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Limited Series or Movie for Unorthodox, a Netflix limited series loosely based on the Deborah Feldman memoir about a young woman who runs away from her husband and family in the ultra-Orthodox Hasidic community in New York. To play the role, Haas had to learn to speak Yiddish and shave her head, among other challenges. She spoke to Sharon Waxman from her home in Tel Aviv, Israel.

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Youve played an ultra-Orthodox character before Ruchami on the Israeli series Shtisel, and now Esty in Unorthodox. How much did you know about the Hasidic community before taking on these characters?I didnt know really much. When I started, I read a lot about the Satmar community, which Esty is in, and I read also Deborahs book, of course. And I talked to a lot of women and people in general that left their community, so it really helped me. It was important for me to do justice with the place that Esty was coming from. But at the same time, what I really loved in Unorthodox is what I felt like when I read it. I got a look into a new world that I didnt know before and a community and a character thats very different from me. But I felt like I can really see myself within Esty. I understand her, I have empathy for her and it doesnt matter where she comes from.

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Its about understanding her desire for independence its almost like a prison-break role.It was really an instinct for me to truly understand her urge to have a place that she can call home, to find yourself. I think its the most universal thing, this search to find yourself. I want to believe thats also the reason that a lot of people from so many different countries and cultures religious and nonreligious and Jewish and Muslim, it doesnt matter they all relate to this character.

Not every actor could learn this ancient Yiddish language and to speak it so naturally, which you do. How did you master that?To be honest, I did not know Yiddish at all, and in Shtisel some characters talk Yiddish but my character doesnt. I had an amazing teacher. His name is Eli Rosen. He was also our religious consultant, he also plays the rabbi in the show and we just spent hours together every day. I recorded him and recorded myself and I would write the lines in English and in Hebrew and I remember doing my dishes or going for a run and just listening to Yiddish. It was so important for me to know the language so well that once I went on set, I wouldnt have to think about it. It was definitely one of the biggest challenges, but it was worth it and I really fell in love with it. I was suddenly into Yiddish poems at one point, I started reading a little bit and sometimes I even miss it. My grandparents talked (Yiddish) so it was close to me.

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In a way, Unorthodox feels connected to so many stories of how women are kept down or controlled or treated as something other than fully authentic human beings. Did you see it that way?Yes! Of course, its a story about a woman finding her voice. Maybe my favorite moment when I read the script is when she sings at the end of the show sorry about the spoilers because its something that (ultra-Orthodox) women are not allowed to do. And when she sings, (her friend) Dasia tells her, I didnt know you could sing like that. And she says, You dont know lots of things about me. I myself dont know a lot of things about me.

Talk a little bit more about the very intimate moments of this series. I read that the scene in which you shave your head was the first day of shooting. How was that?Yeah! It was one heck of a first shooting day. The first scene was the mikveh (ritual bath) scene and then the second scene was the shaving scene. That was the first day of shooting.

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Why did you have your head shaved?In this specific community, after a woman gets married she shaves her head and wears a wig or a tichel, which is a hat that you see in some scenes. I knew I was going to shave my head from the very beginning. I wasnt questioning it. And the day arrived, and I remember I was really cool and I wasnt nervous and I was ready to do it. And then suddenly we arrived at the location of the shaving scene and suddenly I felt the butterflies. I was nervous but I was very excited at the same time. I always had the longest hair as a child, so I had all these mixed emotions which is also kind of like what Esty is going through, right? She is very happy that she is getting married and she has this peek into a new life, but she is also very scared. You can see some Shira in that scene as well. Of course I changed the volume and was acting, but it was definitely a very intense, in the most amazing way, experience for me as well.

What do you mean, There was some Shira in there?I mean the fact that I myself had so many mixed emotions. I had all these conflicts within me like Esty does. So I think it helped me, and I tried to bring it to this scene. And its important to say its two cameras but its one take. You only have one head of hair, right?

Thats right, you can only do it once.I talked with Maria Schrader, our amazing director, two days before and I asked her, Should it be excitement? Should I be terrified? She told me, Just be. It was great advice in general, and its really what happened. I told myself, Whatever will come, I will just let it be.

Read more from the Emmy Hot List issue of TheWrap Emmy magazine.

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Unorthodox Star Shira Haas on Her Mixed Emotions Shaving Her Head on Day 1 of Shooting - Yahoo Entertainment

You can join RBG and other celebs at DC synagogue for the High Holy Days virtually, that is – Cleveland Jewish News

Posted By on August 24, 2020

(JTA) Wanna join Daveed Diggs, Idina Menzel and Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg for High Holy Days worship?

The Sixth & I Historic Synagogue in Washington, D.C., has a way virtually.

The synagogue/arts and entertainment center, which has hosted dozens of Jewish celebrities in the past 15 years, has launched its You In A Pew fundraiser in which members and others can pay $36 to have a photo of themselves placed next to a cardboard cutout of one of the famous folks, like the trio noted above.

The pews will be shown during livestreams of virtual Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur services. Proceeds from the fundraiser will go to pay for the production of the services.

We miss seeing your face around Sixth & I, the synagogue said in an Instagram post Wednesday announcing the program. Although this year isnt quite what many of us pictured, a picture of you in our sanctuary during the High Holy Days would help us feel more connected to you at a time when we especially want to be together. You might even see yourself on screen sharing a prayerbook with Matisyahu.

The post You can join RBG and other celebs at DC synagogue for the High Holy Days virtually, that is appeared first on Jewish Telegraphic Agency.

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You can join RBG and other celebs at DC synagogue for the High Holy Days virtually, that is - Cleveland Jewish News

One week to go, battle continues over how to open schools – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on August 24, 2020

With school about to start in a week, not everyone is so confident in the plan to open them that was laid out by the education and health ministries, with the support of coronavirus commissioner Prof. Ronni Gamzu. At the same time, with the High Holy Days only weeks away, there is still no agreement about how synagogues will operate.Health Minister Yuli Edelstein and Education Minister Yoav Gallant stressed in a statement on Monday that the school year will open as planned on September 1. The only schools that might be shuttered are high schools in red cities, their opening possibly delayed until after Sukkot. However, they said that this decision would only be finalized at the very end of the month.The ministries also agreed to synchronize reporting of coronavirus cases in school with the Health Ministry so that they could keep a careful watch on the level of infection in the countrys schools.On Sunday, there were 964 people diagnosed with coronavirus, the Health Ministry reported, plus another 1,155 between midnight and press time. Some 417 people were in serious condition, including 116 who were intubated.The death toll rose by seven on Monday, reaching 844.The coronavirus cabinet is expected to convene on Tuesday, after a meeting the day before was pushed off due to scheduling and to allow Gamzu to work with the haredim (ultra-Orthodox) to determine a plan for how synagogues could operate on the High Holy Days.The outline will likely involve determining the number of people who can pray per synagogue based on each synagogues size. MK Yaakov Asher (UTJ), chairman of the Knesset Constitution, Law and Justice Committee, has warned that if he is not happy with the plan for synagogues, his committee may not re-approve the coronavirus regulations, which are due to expire Tuesday at midnight. cnxps.cmd.push(function () { cnxps({ playerId: '36af7c51-0caf-4741-9824-2c941fc6c17b' }).render('4c4d856e0e6f4e3d808bbc1715e132f6'); });Gamzu has harshly clashed with haredi leaders over the last several days amid his request that the government halt all flights to the Ukrainian city of Uman over the holidays to help prevent the spread of the disease. According to media reports, Gamzu now understands that he cannot stop all flights to the country, but he is hoping to at least stop charter flights and to work with the Ukranian government to track travelers and ensure they enter isolation upon their return to Israel.Thousands of religious hasidim and others flock to Uman on Rosh Hashanah to visit the grave of Rabbi Nahman of Breslov.BACK TO the schools: On Monday, amid pressure from the Knesset Coronavirus Committee, Health Ministry deputy director-general Itamar Grotto agreed to review the decision, with Gamzus expert cabinet, to require children in grades five and six to learn from home part of the week and consider allowing all elementary school students to learn in the classroom.According to the outline that was approved, students in grades five and up will learn at school two days a week in capsules of 18 students, and the rest of the week would be centered on e-learning. However, the plan upset both the committee and the Israeli National Parents Association. The associations leadership announced that if the hybrid learning situation does not change, they will consider keeping their kids at home and forcing the school year to start late.At Mondays meeting, committee chairwoman Yifat Shasha-Biton (Likud) said that leaving fifth and sixth grade students at home is a crime.Similarly, MK Ram Shefa (Blue and White) said that he believes the price these students will pay is very heavy.The committee meeting was attended by experts who said they support opening elementary schools in full because younger children have less of a chance of getting infected and infecting others. Moreover, they are less likely to become seriously ill or die if they do contract the virus.Shasha-Biton even presented a document at the meeting that was written by doctors who say that the school year could open up classes in full for all students up to age 12, the Hebrew website N12 reported.The risk of opening in full all kindergartens, primary schools, middle and high schools is low in terms of infection rate, the document said, and even lower in terms of expected burden on the health system or mortality.ACCORDING TO N12, the document further states that the health benefits of regular activity physical and social and the possibility of becoming immune to the virus, far outweigh the risks.The committee asked that the Health Ministry provide data to justify its decision to keep kids home three days per week.But after hearing what happened at the committee meeting, Gallant said that there would not be any reevaluation at this stage because the train had already left the station.Also, on Monday, Gallant vocally criticized the Education Committees decision not to vote on the payment reduction plan, which would reduce parent payments toward certain school activities. According to the Education Ministry, the delay could put certain programs at risk, such as the hot meals program, the textbook lending program and certain cultural activities.There was an argument in the Knesset State Audit Committee, too, after chairman MK Ofer Shelah (Yesh Atid) pushed back against Gallants plans. He expressed concern that in a previous discussion Gallant indicated that about half of Israels schools are not doing e-learning at all, which would render the ministrys outline impossible to carry out.My main concern ahead of the start of the school year is that on September 1 the plans of the Education Ministry will not materialize, Shelah said.

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One week to go, battle continues over how to open schools - The Jerusalem Post

The rabbi who is neighbor to Mark and Patricia McCloskey speaks out: They are bullies – Forward

Posted By on August 24, 2020

When Rabbi Susan Talve heard that Patricia and Mark McCloskey would be among the speakers addressing the Republican National Convention, she decided she could no longer stay quiet.

Its so upsetting that they have a national audience, Talve said. Its upsetting we make heroes out of people who hate.

The McCloskeys are Talves neighbors. Their propertys northern wall abuts the property of St. Louis Jewish Central Reform Congregation, where Talve is the rabbi.

Image by Karen Kotner

In 2013, the synagogue placed beehives along the wall to produce honey for Rosh Hashana, the Jewish New Year. One morning they found the hives destroyed and all the bees dead. Mark McCloskey had taken an ax or sledgehammer to them.

His issue? The fence between them sat six inches inside the McCloskeys property line. The hives were his to wreck.

He could have picked up the phone and said, Hey, those beehives are on my property, and we would have happily moved them, said Talve.

She said children at the synagogue wept when they heard the news of the hives. The synagogue maintains raised bed gardens on its property that supply some 2000 pounds of fresh produce to a local food pantry, as well as pear, fig and apple trees.

We were going to have our own apples and honey for Rosh Hashana! she said.

She said the McCloskeys didnt contact the temple at all before lashing out.

Instead, McCloskey left a note threatening to sue the synagogue for damages if the shattered hives were not removed at once.

Civility, Talve said. Im willing to speak out now because theres such a lack of civility thats happening, and I dont feel like I can be a part of that, and silence is complicity.

Talve paused.

They are bullies, she said. The fact that theyre speaking at the convention is a win for bullies.

When reporter Jeremy Kohler broke the storyof the McCloskeys anti-beehive rampage in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Talve confirmed what happened but otherwise refrained from speaking out against the couple.

Image by Jewish Central Reform Con...

Mark McCloskey left this note after he destroyed bee hives owned by neighboring Jewish Central Reform Congregation

At the time, we decided not to, because it was on their property, she said. Theyre both attorneys. Theyve caused a lot of trouble for people. The advice that we got was, let it go. We live next door to these people that have guns and we have children. But every once in a while you have to speak up and say enough.

The McCloskeys made national headlines by waving guns at Black Lives Protesters who neared their mansion on tony Portland Place on the evening of June 28.

But by then they already had a long and well-documented history of litigation, threats and neighborhood feuds.

They were locked in litigation to make their neighborhood association enforce a rule against unmarried couples residing there. Talve said they only cared because a gay couple had moved into the exclusive neighborhood.

Certain people on Portland Place, for political reasons, wanted to make it a gay issue, Mark McCloskey told The Post-Dispatch.

But Talve doesnt buy it.

Any chance they have to sow division theyll take it, she said.

She said the couples actions during the evening of the Black Lives Matter march are a case in point.

The protesters were peaceful, Talve said.

She said she knew this because many members of her synagogue marched with them, and she works closely with many of the local BLM activists.

In 2017 Talves synagogue opened its doors to provide refuge for protesters when a march against police violence itself turned violent.

At the time, a trending Twitter hashtag called on the police to #GasTheSynagogue.

Talve is certain such stances did not make her congregation popular with the McCloskey or the well-armed people in the area who support them. During the June 28 march, she said BLM members stationed themselves in the parking lot and protected the synagogue from possible attack from militia-like groups.

Instead of raising up the McCloskeys as heroes, Talve said the real hero in the June 28 confrontations is St. Louis circuit attorney Kimberly Gardner, who filed charges against the couple for unlawful use of weapons and pointing firearms at protesters, which is a class E felony. President Donald Trump publicly criticized Gardner for prosecuting the McCloskeys.

These are the values that this administration has been putting forward, values that sow hate among people, said Talve. They stand for a kind of white supremacist system. Our resistance is to love each other.

The rabbi who is neighbor to Mark and Patricia McCloskey speaks out: They are bullies

Link:

The rabbi who is neighbor to Mark and Patricia McCloskey speaks out: They are bullies - Forward

Synagogue in Abu Dhabi will be a place to learn tolerance and humanity: Rabbi – Khaleej Times

Posted By on August 24, 2020

Currently, the Jews in the UAE - consisting of around 200 families - pray at a synagogue housed in a Bur Dubai villa.

The synagogue in Abu Dhabi, which is expected to be completed in 2022, will be a place where residents and tourists can understand religious tolerance and humanitarian values, the chief rabbi of the Jewish community in the UAE has said.

The Abrahamic Family House, which will come up on Saadiyat Island in Abu Dhabi, will have a mosque, a church and a synagogue - bringing three major faiths together.

"This project is not just about each house of worship, but what I particularly like is the garden with the educational centre and museum. I think it will inspire people to think more deeply about what makes something sacred and how the values they stand for can be protected and nurtured," said Rabbi Yehuda Sarna in an interview with Khaleej Times.

Currently, the Jews in the UAE - consisting of around 200 families - pray at a synagogue housed in a Bur Dubai villa.

Speaking about the opportunities for face-to-face interaction that the UAE-Israel peace accord will open up, Rabbi Sarna said it is 'culturally transformative'.

"There are currently a few places in the world where Jews can interact with Arabs. Most Arab countries do not have a relationship with Israel. Within Israel, Arabs and Jews tend to live in separate areas."

But with the normalisation of relations between the two countries and the new opportunities for travel, Rabbi Sarna said many Israelis are curious to come and learn more about the UAE.

If it were not for the pandemic and the travel restrictions, "hundreds of Jews" would have already flown into the country, he said.

"You do not know how many rabbis - not just from Israel but also from the US - have already asked me to get them there because they want to learn about the educational and cultural movement happening across the region. They want to know how religious leaders are working towards fighting radicalisation and extremism."

According to him, anything that connects people with each other, opens up conversations, and encourages them to understand each other - is good for humanity.

"I think we have to realise that this world is coming into contact with more and more cultures with greater and greater frequency. And we just have to build our ability and resilience in listening. For me, this peace accord represents an opening up of conversations."

anjana@khaleejtimes.com

Excerpt from:

Synagogue in Abu Dhabi will be a place to learn tolerance and humanity: Rabbi - Khaleej Times

Sixth & I to fill seats with celebrities (sort of) for virtual High Holiday services – Jewish News of Greater Phoenix

Posted By on August 24, 2020

Members of the historic Sixth & I Synagogue in Washington, D.C., will be able to sit next to Jewish celebrities, including U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, during High Holidays services next month.

Kind of.

The synagogues virtual High Holidays services will feature its members next to cardboard cutouts of Jewish celebritiessomething members can get for contributing $36 to the synagogues You in a Pewfundraiser, which was launched on Wednesday.

Other celebrities include, but are not limited to, CNN news anchor Wolf Blitzer, TV and radio host Andy Cohen and comedian Amy Schumer.

Sixth & I communications manager Michelle Eidertoldthe local outletDCistthat the cardboard-cutout idea originated in a recent fundraising meeting and the staff was immediately excited.

Funds raised will go towards the synagogues production of virtual Yom Kippur and Rosh Hashanah services, according to Eider.

This is a time of year when people really crave that feeling of being in community with each other, and weve just really been missing those face-to-face interactions with our community, said Eider. We knew that although we cant gather physically for the High Holidays, we wanted to create something special to help people find meaning and connection, and I think also a little bit of levity, too. JN

Excerpt from:

Sixth & I to fill seats with celebrities (sort of) for virtual High Holiday services - Jewish News of Greater Phoenix

Texas Man Admits to Bomb Threat Targeting Federal Reserve – Courthouse News Service

Posted By on August 24, 2020

BROWNSVILLE, Texas (CN) A 19-year-old Texan faces up to five years in federal prison after pleading guilty Monday to threatening to mail a bomb to the Federal Reserve building in Washington.

Local police executed a search warrant at Joel Hayden Schrimshers parents home in Harlingen on June 6, 2019 and arrested him after they received a tip from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives in Washington about his Twitter account on which his user name is Hayden Ter(rawr)ist.

The police found evidence he had sent a Twitter message to members of his family stating in part, Im gonna mail a bomb to the Federal Reserve.

They also found bomb-making chemicals, handwritten recipes for napalm, nitroglycerin, smoke bombs, flash powder and white-supremacist literature in Schrimshers room, local media reported.

According to his plea deal, Schrimsher admitted to FBI agents the day of his arrest he had made the threat.

The defendant claimed to agents that he was being edgy when he made these threats. The defendant admits he falsely claimed that he was going to mail a bomb to the Federal Reserve, the agreement states.

FBI agents also found a photo on Schrimshers phone of a fake certificate naming him Most Likely to Damage Federal Property.

Reached by phone Monday, his retained attorney Rolando Garza of Edinburg, Texas, said his client is a nice kid and plans to attend college.

At this point the case is ongoing so I dont really think I can comment. I find him to be a nice kid. You know hes 19 years old. So hes got a ways to go, Garza said.

The bio information on his Twitter page states, Let me be your arms dealer; High IQ individual; Disabled (wears braces); fluent in cookery and includes a link to a YouTube video of a man giving instructions on how to make Kool-Aid.

Schrimsher was initially taken into state custody. He was transferred to federal custody on Nov. 6, 2019, after a federal grand jury charged him with six counts two involving his threats against the Federal Reserve, and four others charging him with making threats to blow up a mosque and shoot up a synagogue. The indictment does not name a specific mosque nor synagogue.

Appearing via video in federal court Monday, Schrimsher pleaded guilty to conveying false information and hoaxes. In addition to prison time, he could be fined a maximum of $250,000 at his Nov. 30 sentencing hearing.

Schrimsher is also facing state charges: three counts of possession of explosive components with intent to combine them into an explosive weapon and three counts of making terroristic threats, the Valley Morning Star newspaper reported last November.

Some of the state charges have been enhanced with prosecutors claiming he intended to commit hate crimes.

U.S. Magistrate Judge Ignacio Torteya III refused to release Schrimsher on bond after a November 2019 detention hearing in which his attorney, Garza, said he was being denied adequate treatment for his diabetes in jail.

He will remain in custody until he is sentenced.

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Texas Man Admits to Bomb Threat Targeting Federal Reserve - Courthouse News Service


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