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Young couples find love in Israel on the Masa program – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on August 12, 2020

Each year, thousands of young adults from countries across the globe come to Israel through programs like Masa, founded by the Jewish Agency and the government of Israel. Coming to teach, study and take part in a variety of programs for two to 10 months, many come hoping to get closer to the Jewish state. Some come to soak in culture and see the world, while others seek personal and professional growth. Many leave with experiences and memories to last a lifetime and for some lucky people, this isn't just memories and souvenirs, but many find love during these trips.Mark and Lauren Gilbert are one such couple. The two came from different places and background Lauren from a small town in Colorado from a family with Jewish and Christian parents, and Mark from California with an active background in Jewish youth groups. They joined Masa's Aardvark Israel program eight years ago at the age of 18.During their time in Israel, the two lived in Tel Aviv and Jerusalem, volunteered, interned and learned about Zionism and the Jewish state. But most importantly, they found each other.Eight years later, the couple are married, and live together with their nine-month-old baby in Colorado.This program changed my life, Lauren said in a statement. I built my family thanks to my life in Israel. After the program, we went together to university and then continued to travel the world. Our experience in Israel made me leave my comfort zone and challenged my way of thinking and everything I knew beforehand, and Im very happy with the place that Im at today. My experience in Israel gave me the opportunity to grow, learn and develop, and [Lauren] is the person that stood by me along the journey and decisions of my personal and professional life, Mark added.Another couple, David and Kylie Klein, had a similar experience. Meeting during their Masa trip in 2011, the two met in the program's Faceook group. Before their program was over, Kylie bought tickets to meet David in California after spending just 10 days at home. They've been together ever since, living in San Francisco with their two-year-old son.And this trend is continuing. Mathias and Andrea Albos, both originally from Argentina, met only two years ago, falling in love on the first day of their Masa program while working together at an Eilat hotel. The couple married last year in their home country, and have even decided to make aliyah.Masa, and other similar heritage trip programs such as Taglit Birthright, are important pillars of Israel and the Zionist mission. They serve a major role both ideologically and economically, with the programs bringing in 80,000 Jewish teenagers and young adults every year, as well asan annual revenue of approximately $300 million.Due to the coronavirus pandemic, many such trips were canceled when travel restrictions were put in place in March. However, thousands of Masa fellows chose to remain in Israel when the borders were closed, and others were allowed into the country in June.Masa is adapting, however, having even started a new program for young professionals titled Masa Remote Israel to allow them to move to Tel Aviv for four months while continuing their current jobs at home, as well as participating in special social and educational programs scheduled to accommodate their jobs.As the program, and society in general, continue to adapt, more love stories from Masa's participants are sure to follow.Zachary Keyser and Marcy Oster/JTA contributed to this report.

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Young couples find love in Israel on the Masa program - The Jerusalem Post

This Month in Milwaukee: 16 Things to Do in August 2020 – Shepherd Express

Posted By on August 12, 2020

As uncertainty continues, local arts groups stage events virtually and musicians venture cautiously onto Milwaukee stages. Be sure to check ahead in case of cancellations.

Milwaukee County Zoo

The decision to transition to reopen parts of the Milwaukee County Zoos indoor spaces has involved much careful thought, planning, and review, with staff, visitors and animals safety as the first priority, said Milwaukee County Executive David Crowley last month. And he wasnt being overly cautious about the zoos permanent residents. Animals at the Bronx Zoo have contracted COVID. In Milwaukee, the zoos outdoor habitats were already reopened in June to limited numbers of daily visitors. Physical distancing, masks and reservations continue to be required.

360 Degree Tour @ Milwaukee Public Museum

The Streets of Old Milwaukee has long been one of the museums most visited permanent exhibits. History books show pictures and tell stories of the citys past, but the Streets of Old Milwaukee allows us to step inside and connect the senses to imagination. The narrow brick-paved lanes and small storefronts selling goods made on-site paint a living portrait of an all but forgotten, hand-crafted time. One thing an observant eye will appreciate: theres not a screen in sight.

Free Admission @ Milwaukee Art Museum

For the first half of the month, the Milwaukee Art Museum will continue to offer free admission to all visitors. New protocols are in place, including robust cleaning procedures, signage to promote social distancing and hand sanitizing stations throughout. Staff and visitors must wear face coverings. Only the first floor will be open but paintings from the American collection and masterworks from the Bradley Collection have been moved to areas open to the public. The Museum Store and Windhover Caf are open. Advance tickets can be reserved at mam.org/visit.

The Dog Show @ Tory Folliard Gallery

Forget about all those pet dog pictures on Facebook. When Wisconsin surrealist Fred Stonehouse paints a dog, the canvas is filled with a tearful beast under a full moon, grasping an egg in clawed palms. A sad were-dog? Stonehouse is curator of The Dog Show, an exhibition of paintings, photographs, prints, drawings and sculpture by more than 30 artists. Stonehouse is celebrating the canines role as mythic surrogate and formal muse.

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The Girl in the Diary: Searching for Rywka in the d Ghetto @ Jewish Museum Milwaukee

When the Soviet army liberated Auschwitz, a Russian officer found a diary in the rubble of the crematorium. The author, a teenage girl named Rywka Lipszyc, had been locked inside the dz Ghetto along with the Polish citys other Jews. Seventy years later, her journal was translated and published as The Diary of Rywka Lipszyc. The journal is at the heart of the most recent exhibition at the Jewish Museum Milwaukee, which continues as a virtual tour.

A Community of Voices @ Museum of Wisconsin Art

The West Bend museum presents work by six Milwaukee artists associated with the Sisters of Creativity, an art collective that seeks to recognize African American women who have long been marginalized from the mainstream art world. The diversity of the exhibition includes assemblages, collages, sculptural work and works on paper by Blanche Brown, Rhonda Gatlin-Hayes, Chrystal Denise Gillon, Ruthie Joy, Tia Richardson and 2019 City of Milwaukee Artist of the Year Rosemary Ollison. While their media vary, they are united in purpose: championing social justice and civil rights, giving voice to the voiceless, expressing spirituality and coping with trauma.

I Am a Story: Self-Portraits at The Warehouse @ The Warehouse

Fifty self-portraits from the collection of John Shannon and Jan Serr were chosen for this exhibition at their Menomonee River Valley art space. At the heart of this exhibition is that through these self-portraits each artist is telling us a story, curator Nick Pipho says. This concept has become even more appropriate given the current state of the country and the world. At a time when meeting new people, interacting with them face to face and learning their stories has become increasingly fraught, this exhibition offers a new way to have that experience. The concept of a self-portrait is also one that permeates our society perhaps more than any time in the pastin an age of selfies and social media.

Better, Bigger, Brighter: 150 Years of Milwaukee Politics @ Milwaukee County Historical Society

In most ways, Milwaukees story fits in with the national narrative, but it contains significant twists that stand out, says Milwaukee County Historical Society curator Ben Barbera, including a half century under what was a particularly Midwestern Socialist Party focused on fiscal responsibility, municipal services and the health and well-being of its citizens. The exhibit will feature photographs, banners, buttons and other artifacts from the Historical Societys archives that relate to Cream City politics from the 19th and 20th centuries.

Alejandro Escovedo @ The Back Room at Colectivo

Alejandro Escovedo has become a familiar face to Milwaukee music fans in his visits over the last few decades. His career has moved from punk rocker opening for The Sex Pistols to performing with the likes of Ian Hunter and Bruce Springsteen. Able to move from acoustic ballads to melodic, high-energy guitar music, Escovedos songs draw from his rich heritage and rock n roll adventures. This show was rescheduled from March.

GGOOLLDD with special guests Lex Allen and Seasaw @ Turner Hall Ballroom

GGOOLLDD singer Margaret Butler has always dreamed big. The bands pop-synth sound and accompanying stage spectacle makes no bones they are out to deliver a show to remember. As Butler once told the Shepherd Express, Theres a reason that I made the band name obnoxious and huge and in all caps. Thats the vibe were trying to give off.

The Exotics @ Captain Pabst Pilot House

The Beach Boys sang about surf, but the real surf bands never sang a word. Surf instrumental acts such as Dick Dale and The Ventures expressed the exhilaration of surfing through trebly guitar-powered music. Milwaukees long-running surf/instrumental quartet will deliver a master class lesson in the genre. Like their 60s forbearers, The Exotics evoke a wider range of emotions than is usual in pop music. Urgent melancholy chases the elation of danger; Latin and Oriental cadences with resonant guitars and moist timbres ride on a big rolling beat.

The Verve Pipe @ The Back Room at Colectivo

Multi-platinum selling alt-rock band The Verve Pipe are one of the few acts continuing their 2020 touring schedule, and that includes a pair of Milwaukee dates. Best known for hits like The Freshmen and Photograph, the band is set to play the pair of rescheduled dates from this past April. All previously issued tickets for the shows will be honored. In the interest of public safety, the Pabst Theater Group has provided a list of safety guidelines and policies on their website for concerned concert-goers to reference.

Strummerfest MKE 2020 @ Walkers Point Music Hall

EEven before his untimely death in 2002 at age 50, The Clash, Mescaleros and 101ers outspoken front man, Joe Strummer, was known as a born leader. In death, he is nearing rock n roll sainthood. Expect a full night of music paying homage to Strummers wide-ranging influence.

The Bel Airs w/The Blues Disciples @ the baaree (105 S. Main St., Thiensville)

For three decades, the Pruitt brothers trio, The Bel Airs, have played the circuit with a danceable mix of authentic and eclectic blues/country/soul/rock n roll, a sound influenced by the likes of Wilson Pickett, Slim Harpo, Howlin Wolf and Johnny Cash.

Joe Louis Walker @ Shank Hall

With more than two dozen albums to his credit, Joe Louis Walker, a Blues Hall of Fame inductee and four-time Blues Music Award winner celebrates a career that exceeds a half a century. He began by playing psychedelic rock, detoured into gospel music and came around to the blues by the time of his 1986 debut album, Cold is the Night.

Kathy Mattea @ Sharon Lynne Wilson Center for the Arts (3270 Mitchell Park Drive, Brookfield)

Grammy-winning country singer Kathy Matteas has enjoyed many hit songs across the years, including Goin Gone and Whereve You Been. Her 2018 album, the independently released Pretty Bird, was her 17th long-player. The recording showed changes in her voice, the effects of aging that could have put a permanent end to her performing. Heeding the advice of Tony Bennett, who suggested Mattea find a teacher and re-learn to sing, she returned to performing after extensive vocal training.

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This Month in Milwaukee: 16 Things to Do in August 2020 - Shepherd Express

Vandals spray paint swastika on Harrisburg synagogue – ABC27

Posted By on August 12, 2020

HARRISBURG, Pa. (WHTM) A Harrisburg synagogue was the target of a hate crime after two swastikas were discovered spray painted on the front of its building.

Police believe Kesher Israel Congregation was targeted, because it appears that a stencil was used in the vandalism.

What the vandals might not have planned for is the outpouring of love for the Jewish community that followed.

Any targeted group just they feel so vulnerable and lonely and in pain, and I just thought it was right to reach out as soon as possible, said Rep. Patty Kim, (D) Dauphin County.

Kim said this is the most recent pain her district has seen, but not the first.

This is serious, and the repercussions for what it does to a community is real. Its raw, she said.

While the wounds are fresh, Kim is supporting the synagogue, and shes not alone.

Reacting quickly, condemning the actions is very important to me, and Im glad to see other elected officials joining me in that, Kim said.

We live by the edict that we should never see what happened in Nazi Germany again, and that means stamping it out, said Congressman Scott Perry, (R) Dauphin, Cumberland and York County.

The Midstates entire interfaith community was also ready to get stamping, on Tuesday. More than a dozen congregations condemned the vandalism in a joint statement.

Rabbi Elisha Friedman expressed his gratitude in one of his own saying:

The perpetrator(s) hoped to sow division and fear, but through the overwhelming outpouring of so many coming forward to express their support and friendship for our synagogue and the broader Jewish community, what was intended to divide and alienate us and make us feel unwelcome and scared, failed miserably and instead reminded us of what a strong and loving community we are part of.

Its a community that agrees on one thing hate has no place in Harrisburg.

We need to do that every time. Every time that happens, Kim said.

Everybody seems really polarized these days, and its good to know that we can agree on one thing, Perry said.

Mayor Eric Papenfuses Interfaith Advisory Council will be holding a vigil for Kesher Israel Congregation at the synagogue on Wednesday at 5 p.m.

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Vandals spray paint swastika on Harrisburg synagogue - ABC27

Woman arrested in connection with trash can fire outside Berkeley synagogue – Berkeleyside

Posted By on August 12, 2020

Congregation Netivot Shalom at 1316 University Ave. Photo: Netivot Shalom/Facebook

Berkeley police have arrested a 39-year-old woman on suspicion of setting a fire in a trash can behind Congregation Netivot Shalom synagogue at 1316 University Ave. (at Acton Street).

The arrest of Shameka Adams, address unknown, on Aug. 7 came a little more than a week after someone set fire to some trash cans in the rear parking lot of The Way Christian Center, 1305 University Ave. The two religious institutions are located on the same block and across the street from one another.

Berkeley police do not know if there is any connection between the two arsons, said Officer Byron White, the department spokesperson. We dont know if its related but they are very close together, he said.

Rabbi Chai Levy, who heads the congregation, said her understanding is that the woman who was arrested in connection with the fire may have a mental illness. The woman has been seen around the synagogue and has even gotten food from its kitchens.

We dont believe the fire at our synagogue was a hate crime, said Levy.

The Berkeley Fire Department got a call at 8:51 p.m. on Aug. 6. about a fire at the synagogue. When firefighters arrived, they learned that someone had set fire to a plastic trash bin behind the synagogue and then had run away. Bystanders called the fire department and worked to extinguish the flames.

Police detectives got a good description of the person suspected of setting the fire and also were able to review video surveillance recordings. They started to look for the person suspected of setting the fire the following day and found her, wearing the same clothes as in the video, in Ohlone Park, said White.

Adams was arrested on suspicion of arson and providing false identification to the police. She is being held on $55,000 bail.

There have been 10 trash can fires in Berkeley in 2020, according to Assistant Chief Keith May, a spokesman for the Berkeley Fire Department. There have been an additional 93 fires involving burning leaves and burning rubbish on the side of a road, he said.

Berkeley police still do not know if the fire set outside The Way Christian Church on July 29 was a hate crime, said White. No writing about the arson or other evidence to suggest it was hate-motivated has been discovered, he said.

We havent any information to say its an actual hate crime, said White.

That fire involved two trash cans. It also scorched the side of the church.

Police released a video of a person walking near The Way around the time of the fire. But the quality of the video is poor and does not give a clear indication of the persons sex, age or race, said White.

The arson at The Way came a day after the church hung a Black Lives Matter, banner across its facade. Since the fire happened soon after, Pastor Michael McBride, who leads the church, said he thought the two events were connected and he called it an act of terror. McBride castigated elected officials, the Berkeley city manager and the police chief for not quickly calling him on the phone to offer support. He said their timid response was similar to the indifference politicians have shown over the decades to the long racist history of burning churches.

The fire at The Way brought around 100 people to the church the day after to show their support for McBride and his congregants. McBride said they would not be intimidated.

Levy said many of the members of Congregation Netivot Shalom, as well as the synagogue, showed support with their neighbors at The Way by attending the gathering, signing a card and donating to The Ways GoFundMe campaign to repair damage to the church and help it buy security cameras. Donations now exceed $43,000.

Update, 6:30 p.m.: This article was updated to add that members of Netivot Shalom supported The Way at its gathering and by writing a card.

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Woman arrested in connection with trash can fire outside Berkeley synagogue - Berkeleyside

Changes to synagogue worshiper limits to be proposed by next week – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on August 12, 2020

Health Minister Yuli Edelstein,coronavirusproject managerProf. Roni Gamzu and Knesset Constitution,Law and Justice Committee chairman Yakov Asher (United Torah Judaism) held discussions on Sunday about changing the restrictions on the number of worshipers allowed in synagogues.No official announcement was released, but there was speculation the restrictions might be eased, possibly for areas with low levels of infection.Haredi (ultra-Orthodox) MKs and their community have criticized the limit of 10 worshipers allowed in a synagogue, regardless of size. When compared withlighter restrictions for restaurants, gyms and other indoor establishments,they have complained of discrimination.

Protesters at a demonstration outside the Israeli Embassy in Washington Sunday morning demanded that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu resign over corruption charges.

The international protests against Netanyahu, which were first reported in The Jerusalem Post, have spread from San Francisco to England, Germany, Switzerland, Australia, Canada and across the United States.

The current limit on worshipers in prayer services was arbitrary, Chief Rabbi David Lau said last month. It was illogical that the same number of worshipers be permitted in both very small and very large synagogues, he said.

Edelstein and Gamzu had promised that the regulations for synagogues would be changed by the beginning of next week following discussions held last week among the relevant officials, a spokesman for Asher said Sunday.

Earlier on Sunday, Asher had threatened that his committee would not hesitate to annul changes that are illogical and unjust.

There shouldnt be discrimination against synagogues for no reason that synagogues should be different from everything else with no reason, his spokesman said.

Last week, Health Ministry deputy director-general Itamar Grotto told the Knesset Constitution, Law and Justice Committee the government was examining options to ease restrictions in cities with low rates of infection, according to the proposed traffic light system.

Edelstein said haredi population centers have a high rate of infection. He expressed concern that infections could spike if restrictions are eased too much ahead of the High Holy Days.

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Changes to synagogue worshiper limits to be proposed by next week - The Jerusalem Post

Public invited to visit Colonial Jewish Cemetery on August 16 – What’sUpNewp

Posted By on August 12, 2020

Newport, RI Touro Synagogue Foundation announces the once-a-year opportunity for the public to visit the Colonial Jewish Burying Ground, established in the 1670s to serve Newports early Hebrew congregation. The cemetery is located up the hill from Touro Synagogue, at the intersection of Kay Street, Touro Street and Bellevue Avenue.

Cemetery gates will be open from 11:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m., weather permitting. Guides will be on hand to answer questions and provide information. Visitors are required to wear masks and social distancing protocols will enforced. A $5 donation per person is requested.

Immortalized in poems by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow and Emma Lazarus, the burying ground features an Egyptian revival gate and gravestones lettered in Hebrew, Latin, Spanish, Ladino, and English. Visitors may see the graves of many members of Newports original Jewish community, including the resting place of Moses Seixas, author of the letter that welcomed President George Washington to Newport in 1790 and contained the famous words, to bigotry no sanction, to persecution no assistance.

Guests are also invited to visit the grounds of Touro Synagogue, a National Historic Site, and enjoy a 20-minute seated history presentation in the park, before or after visiting the cemetery. The site is opened Sunday through Friday, from11:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m., weather permitting. Guests should enter the site through the courtyard of the Loeb Visitors Center at 52 Spring Street, between Touro and Barney Streets.There is no fee to enjoy the grounds and history presentation, but donations will be accepted.

Reservations are not necessary to visit the cemetery on August 16 nor the grounds of Touro Synagogue. Because the synagogue and Loeb Visitors Center buildings remain closed due to COVID-19 restrictions, there are no on-site public bathroom facilities available.Schedule updates may be found on the Visit page attourosynagogue.org. or on the Touro Synagogue Facebook page. For more information, please emailtours@tourosynagogue.orgor phone (401) 847-4794, extension 207.

Source: Touro Synagogue Foundation

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Public invited to visit Colonial Jewish Cemetery on August 16 - What'sUpNewp

Letters to the Editor: August 12, 2020: Colombia cooperation – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on August 12, 2020

Colombia cooperationThank you for the article about the virtual event launching the Colombia-Israel Free Trade Agreement. (Colombia Innovation Center to open Tuesday in Jerusalem, August 11).In this regard, it is important to point out that the Free Trade Agreement has now entered into force, and in effect, its implementation, will be essential for the bilateral trade relationship. In this context, Colombia is also in the process of strengthening cooperation and work on innovation in Israel, as was announced by our president.In the coming weeks and months we will have a corresponding series of events and promotions on these issues, with the competent Colombian entities, Ministry of Commerce, Procolombia and Innpulsa, among others.MARGARITA MANJARREZAmbassador of Colombia in IsraelTashkent taleRegarding Uzbekistan Jews fight to save 124-year-old synagogue from demolition (August 1), I would like to explain what really happened with Beit Menachem, the oldest Ashkenazi synagogue in Tashkent.According to information from the Committee on Religious Affairs under the Cabinet of Ministers of Uzbekistan, the synagogue building will not be demolished in order to construct a housing complex on its site as the article stated. On August 5, the Absolute Business Trade construction company abandoned the demolition plan and withdrew the lawsuit against the Tashkent Jewish religious community of European Jews.There are several other clarifications. Beit Menachem was established not 124 years ago but in 1973. The building itself may be 124 years old, but its use as a synagogue was approved in 1973. This in itself was remarkable. In 1973, at the peak of the Soviet regime, it was extraordinary to establish a synagogue for European Jews in the USSR. It was possible only in the territory of multinational Uzbekistan, where a wide variety of ethnic groups, cultures and religions have coexisted for centuries in peace and harmony.The decision to turn the privately owned building at No. 15 on 2-1 Sapernaya Street (now Mirabad Street) into a synagogue for the community of European Jews was made by the Executive Committee of the Tashkent City Council on May 4, 1973. Recently, this unique document was published on the website of one of Uzbekistans popular newspapers.In the article, it seems unclear why the situation regarding the synagogue was linked with the issue of corruption. Today, Uzbekistan is undergoing a period of large-scale modernization. In particular, important reforms are being carried out in the sphere of combating corruption. An anti-corruption law has been adopted, a number of anti-corruption programs are being implemented and an anti-corruption agency has been created.The resolution to safeguard Beit Menachem is evidence of the fact that Uzbekistan espouses genuine religious and cultural tolerance and is committed to the preservation of its Jewish cultural heritage. More than 130 nationalities, representing 16 religions, live in Uzbekistan as one community.VICTORIA MARTYNOVMedia adviser, Uzbekistan Embassy in IsraelAirmail from GazaRegarding Hamas signals Qatar via Israel: Send more money (August 11), since 2012, Israel has been paying protection money to Hamas (via Qatar) so they will refrain from attacking us. It is hard to accept that any self-respecting country would go to such lengths to placate its enemies and buy quiet. In essence, the enemy runs our country, stepping up and ending attacks at will, presently restarting with incendiary balloons and rockets. When one thinks of the sacrifices made by so many for this Jewish Land, it hurts to see it now being humiliated by and capitulating to terrorists. People have a right to demonstrate against the PMs alleged corruption, but a main thrust of those demonstrations should also be against the surrender of our land to our enemies.PHYLLIS STERNNetanyaA perfect 10Rabbi Shmuley Boteach describes in great detail his superhuman efforts to say kaddish for his late father of three months in New York, largely deserted because of the Corona virus. Frenzied gathering of a minyan of ten males required extraordinary, even, bizarre efforts; calling friends, going to the Jewish butcher shop, the kosher Teaneck shopping market, stopping passersby on the sidewalk and in the subway (Corona kaddish chronicles, August 11). All this in order to mourn and honor his father in the Jewish Orthodox manner. One wonders whether in exceptional circumstances brought on by the corona the obsessive/compulsive obedience to ritual could not be tempered by some moderation. Perhaps the kaddish ritual in this case could have been replaced by solitary contemplation on his fathers life. YIGAL HOROWITZBeershebaWhile I share Rabbi Boteachs grief at the loss of his father and admire the extraordinary efforts he has gone through in the US to say kaddish, my biggest takeaway from his article is how dramatically different from his my experience is here in Israel.I lost my own father about the same time that Boteach lost his, yet saying kaddish has been almost ridiculously easy for me. When I am at home in Beit Shemesh, our neighborhood prays together outdoors masked and/or socially distanced three times a day. I need only step outside. When I am at work in Jerusalem, there are three robust minyanim I know of within a few moments walk of my workplace including at the Central Bus Station, which has almost non-stop, on-demand minha prayers.I wish Rabbi Boteach 1) comfort over his loss and 2) ease in saying kaddish in the coming months, and would like to thank my co-religionists at home and near my work for helping to create the prayerful and spiritual environment we enjoy and benefit from in our homeland.YAIR WEBMANBeit ShemeshCheers and jeersKudos to Rafael Korenzecher for telling it as it is (Hagia Sophia Jordans crimes against International Law, August 9). At last someone has had the guts to tell it as it is. I only hope he has a good bodyguard to watch over him.And kudos to The Jerusalem Post for printing this article in such a prominent position in the newspaper. It is so refreshing to read an article with real facts and not fake news.BARBARA A. PFEFFERRehovotThe Hagia Sophia article shows us the true face of Islam and the hypocrisy of the UN and the world at large. Moslems have desecrated, destroyed and built on top of holy sites all over Israel and beyond.CHAIM WEISSMANJerusalemI want to congratulate David Weinberg on his 30th year of aliyah and that of his outstanding family. His articles are always superb but his Aliyah: A 30th year Retrospective (August 7) definitely hit home! It certainly brought back vivid memories. I was so impressed with his comparison examples and his choice of words! It was all so true!. His weekly articles are an asset to your paper!RUTH KREVSKYJerusalemHerb Keinons analysis (Whats good for the goose is good for the gander, August 7), while timely and certainly expressing the frustration we all feel in observing groups of all kinds disobeying the practices suggested by the Health Ministry concerning the use of masks and social distancing, only addresses one aspect of the problem. The other aspect is not a group problem but an individual problem. What has happened to the responsibility we all share as individuals in avoiding spread of the virus either by passing it on to others or contracting it from others? Both of these points are the responsibility of the individual. If those with responsibility for organizing group activities choose not to ensure that participants wear masks and socially distance, then those individuals bear the responsibility for those who might contract the virus because of their indifference. But lack of responsibility by leaders does not absolve individuals of their responsibility. The battle against this virus will only be won if we all (leaders and individuals) share in the efforts to control its spread and minimize the danger to ourselves and others. STEVE GARDNERJerusalemI totally agree with Herb Keinons A different country (August 3). The news media decide to show what they want and make those of us at home feel like Israel is on fire. But it is not. We have shown through our numerous elections, what we, the citizens of Israel, want and would likely vote the same way again. The media decided that the minority should get all the attention. Who is funding the demonstrators? Why are their opinions and voice more important than the majority? But the media wont cover that since it does not support their cause.On a different topic, I recently read that diners across the UK will see their restaurant bills slashed by as much as 50% from today as the governments landmark Eat Out to Help Out scheme. What an amazing idea! If I go out to eat, I only pay half of the bill and the government pays the other half. I get to go out at a reasonable cost, and the restaurant gets some needed help from the government win-win! Lets hope our leaders will be as creative in helping us all get through these challenging days!REBECCA RAABMaaleh AdumimWho will be the one to save Israel? (August 7) was beyond the pale in insults and generalizations that, written by a disgraced former prime minister, made me boil.Referencing the readers letter (August 10) talking about uncivil speech in an article about US President Donald Trump, where is The Jerusalem Posts responsibility when former prime minister Ehud Olmert calls the current prime minister a crook and the backbone of his crazy family, among quite a few other gratuitous insults.Not only does Olmert never talk about the positive, but is constantly exacerbating the negative. He wants us to go back to the 1949 ceasefire lines and establish another Arab state in much of the land we now control and cut the defense budget, while were at it.So, a former PM who spent jail time and tried to give away a large chunk of our land is giving us advice on how to manage the country over the coming years? Seriously?DEBRA FORMANModiinRegarding A budget battle that has nothing to do with economics (August 10), Jeff Barak may have been a former editor-in-chief at The Jerusalem Post, yet when reading his anti-Netanyahu pieces one cant help but feel they are a conglomeration of trash against the prime minister. No rhyme or reason just pure Netanyahu hatred that I am amazed the Post publishes.YOSSI BLASBALGKiryat MotskinWho are the victims?Regarding Cabinet okays directives in bid to stop COVID-19; Death toll hits 600 (August 10), every loss of life is tragic. Death leaves in its wake mourning family members and friends and a ripple effect of those whose lives were touched by the person who has died. I am sure there are many who also are very distressed that with six to 10 lives on average lost daily due to the virus there is no mention in the press of any of the victims identities, their age, or the number of children and grandchildren they have left behind. The loss of a life in a fire or car accident is no less tragic, but how can it be that that unfortunate persons identity is publicized and not the identities of people who succumbed to the ravages of the pandemic? Have we become so insensitive and numb that they are reduced to a simple global statistic? May their memories be a blessing.DR CHAYA RABNETTJerusalemA better wayInstead of the prime minister providing a financial handout to all the population to help alleviate the burden resulting from restrictions imposed due to the coronavirus, by a single stroke he could have temporarily removed VAT from basic essentials such as food, electricity, water and gas immediately.This way the Finance Ministry of would not have had to maneuver cash around from various budgets, it would not have had to pass the cash to Bituach Leumi, the latter would not have to transfer the sums to the banks to make payments and the public would not have to withdraw from their bank accounts this would additionally eliminate the huge charges incurred in transferring money levied on both the state and the individual by the banks. This way the benefits would not reduce the overall state exchequer, the financial burden would be shifted to the future and those in need would not have had to wait for this largesse.DR. COLIN L LECIJerusalem

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Letters to the Editor: August 12, 2020: Colombia cooperation - The Jerusalem Post

Taking my rabbinic pulpit mid-pandemic wasn’t what I’d planned on | Opinion – NorthJersey.com

Posted By on August 12, 2020

Benny Berlin, Special to the USA TODAY NETWORK Published 8:40 a.m. ET Aug. 9, 2020

These last six months have been challenging for all of us as COVID-19 and its impact (both health and economic) ripple through nearly every town and city across America. It has been a time when those of faith turned to their spiritual leaders and where members of the clergy have been working around the clock to provide pastoral care to help as people go through these scary and tumultuous times. For me, taking over as the rabbi of one of Long Island, New Yorks most prestigious synagogues during this pandemic has provided both a challenge and an opportunity, but most of all, it has forced me to be creative to develop ways that we can be physically distanced, and socially together. For four years, as I took course after course in my rabbinic seminary, I learned different ways to ingrain myself in the future community which I would lead; however, these last few months tore up the roadmap which we were taught in school, because all the normal ways to bond and get to know our congregants were thrown out the window and we needed to quickly develop new ways to do so.

Instead of attending welcome barbecues and meeting everyone at the synagogue on Friday evening or Saturday morning, I needed to get creative to figure out a way to meet with each member family and show my genuine desire to get to know them while also upholding the strictest COVID-19 guidelines. When I accepted this position back in January before there was discussion of COVID-19 here in the United States my wife and I would talk about our grand plans to host members of the community for Shabbat meals in our home, our hope to have young families come for Shabbat to experience the magic of the community, the upcoming Jewish High Holidays and our desire to create a dynamic youth program that would been children and teens from all over the community to our synagogue to rejoice in prayers and appreciate the Torah and its lessons. Fast-forward to my first day on the job on June 1 and the synagogue was still closed out of an abundance of caution due to the pandemic.

It forced us to be creative and think outside of the box; we came up with the idea to deliver home-baked challah bread and cookies to each congregants home. Wearing our masks and standing six feet apart at all times, we stood on peoples lawns to share a taste of Shabbat since we couldnt share meals yet. We talked about how their family was faring during the pandemic and anything that we, or the broader synagogue family, could help them with.

When houses of worship received the green light to re-open a few weeks later, we gathered for prayers but consciously decided not to host the weeklyKiddush the blessing over a cup of wine or grape juice to sanctify the Shabbat which is usually followed by a lunch spread of traditional cholent, potato kugel, baked goods and more. However, for many in the community, this weekly fest provides an important opportunity to mingle and interact with fellow community members. Pre-COVID-19, some would stay more than an hour to chat with friends. While are still not hosting these gatherings, we wanted to come up with an innovative solution to theKiddushitself, and so we created Kiddushto go, in which each congregant on their way home from the Shabbat morning service picks up an individually wrapped portion size container of food along with a bottle of grape juice. It allows me the opportunity to stand at the door when people were leaving and to personally greet them.

While synagogues like ours have now started to re-open, albeit in smaller services and while practicing COVID-19 recommended guidelines such as wearing masks and standing six feet apart, there are many elderly members of the community who are not yet comfortable returning. It is important that they feel part of the community because our synagogues are much more than just the physical structure where we go to pray, they are a place where we find community. Therefore, my wife and I call the elderly in our community once a week to check in on them.

Taking over as the rabbi of a synagogue in the middle of this pandemic has provided both a challenge and an opportunity it has forced us to be creative and develop ways to remind the community that while we are physically distant as we practice social distancing guidelines, we must find ways such as the ones above to be socially together. Certainly, this was not how I envisioned the beginning of my pulpit, but it has taught me an incredible lesson one of resilience.

Rabbi Benny Berlin(Photo: Provided)

Rabbi Benny Berlin is one of the Jewish modern Orthodox worlds most dynamic young spiritual leaders. He is the rabbi of BACH Jewish Center located in Long Beach, New York.

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It’s been 3 years since Charlottesville. We’re suing to break the cycle of terror that followed. – JTA News – Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Posted By on August 12, 2020

NEW YORK (JTA) Three years ago today, the country watched in horror as neo-Nazis and white supremacists attacked Charlottesville, Virginia. Three years later, as far-right extremists continue to spread disinformation, hate and violence, its clear that Unite the Right was a harbinger of what would follow and that we still have much to learn from that weekend.

My organization, Integrity First for America, is supporting a coalition of Charlottesville residents in a federal lawsuit against the individuals and groups that orchestrated the violence. The trial is scheduled for October.

These extremists didnt come to Charlottesville to peacefully protest the removal of a Confederate statue, as they claimed. Rather, for months in advance, in private social media chats, they methodically planned a weekend of violence. Next stop: Charlottesville. Final stop: Auschwitz, they wrote amid discussions of which weapons to carry and whether they could claim self-defense if they hit counterprotesters with cars.

And thats exactly what happened. First, the violent tiki torch march, meant to evoke the KKK and Nazis, with chants of blood and soil and Jews will not replace us. Then, the next day, the attack on downtown Charlottesville, culminating in James Fields driving his car into a crowd of peaceful counterprotesters exactly as planned in those chats and killing one, Heather Heyer.

Don't miss the voices that kept the Jewish world talking and thinking all week long.

Charlottesville and the many incidences of white supremacist violence that followed were not accidents. They are part of a cycle in which each attack is used to inspire the next one, nearly always online: the white supremacist who killed 11 at the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh communicated with the Charlottesville leaders on the far-right site Gab before his attack; the Christchurch shooter painted on his gun a white power symbol popularized by one of our Charlottesville defendants; the livestreamed Christchurch attack in turn inspired massacres in Poway, El Paso and elsewhere.

In all cases, the attackers were motivated by anti-Semitic and racist conspiracies, like the idea that the white race is being systematically replaced by Black and brown people with Jews as the puppet masters.

Now, even during a global pandemic and a national reckoning on racism, the cycle continues. Far-right extremists have tried to bomb hospitals and turn the coronavirus into a bioweapon against Jews and other minorities. Others, like the white supremacist group Identity Evropa (a defendant in our Charlottesville suit), have spread disinformation posing as antifa on Twitter to urge violence in white neighborhoods. Meanwhile, vehicle attacks have skyrocketed, with dozens reported since May, like the KKK leader who plowed his car into a crowd of Black Lives Matter protesters in Richmond, Virginia.

So how do we break this cycle? To begin, we must understand how these extremist leaders and groups operate.

We must acknowledge the central role of social media in allowing these white supremacists to find one another, connect and plan and promote violence. White supremacists are no longer meeting in the woods wearing white hoods. Rather theyre connecting online turning social media into a place where extremists conspire before their car attack memes and other violent hate become real world action.

While there are some in power who seek to legitimize white nationalism and the anti-Semitism, racism, Islamophobia, xenophobia and other forms of hate that fuel it social media companies have no obligation to allow it on their platforms. For the sites that have built business models on platforming extremism, domain registration and web hosting services can act.

Second, we need to understand how these white supremacists use disinformation and deception to pit communities against one another.

The fake antifa tweet was intended to fuel racial tensions, pitting white neighborhoods against Black Lives Matter protesters in an effort to undermine the critical message of the protesters. This is the same tactic we saw when white supremacists posed as Jews online to spread anti-Black hate and sow tensions between our communities.

From the antifa boogeyman to the fake accounts, to the age-old canard that George Soros is paying the racial justice protesters, its all part of a larger effort to distract and deflect a tactic used frequently by the Unite the Right leaders.

Finally, we must treat the crisis of violent extremism with the urgency it deserves.

Anti-Semitic and other forms of extremism tend to fall out of the news and off peoples radar until the next attack.

This is compounded by a federal government that wont treat far-right extremism with the urgency it requires. Instead, it also deflects by blaming antifa and offers dog whistles and, increasingly, explicit support to the far right while disinvesting in counterextremism and dramatically cutting civil rights investigations.

In the absence of federal leadership, it makes brave private plaintiffs like ours especially vital. With this Charlottesville lawsuit, we are taking on the leaders and groups at the center of this movement, holding them accountable in court for the violence they orchestrated, with the potential to bankrupt and dismantle them through large civil judgments.

Three years after Unite the Right, history continues to repeat itself. When the leaders of this violent movement are put on trial this fall, our plaintiffs will take a critical step toward breaking this cycle of violence. But this country will fail them, and the Charlottesville community, if we dont finally take the lessons of that horrific weekend to heart.

The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of JTA or its parent company, 70 Faces Media.

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It's been 3 years since Charlottesville. We're suing to break the cycle of terror that followed. - JTA News - Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Lifting voices for the High Holidays, even in COVID times – JNS.org

Posted By on August 12, 2020

(August 11, 2020 / JNS) Like Maestro Leonard Bernstein guiding young people through the joys and intricacies of classical music two generations ago, Joey Weisenberg is a gentle, but no less passionate, tutor. Hes not teaching about the bravado of a bassoon or the timbre of a tympani, but rather giving would-be High Holiday prayer leaders an intimate tour of the wordless melodies and ancient modes of the Jewish liturgical tradition. Its nigunim and nusach for a new generation, and with the latest video technology. And its a place where, if you get it right, prayer and musicality meet, the goal being what Weisenberg calls spiritual artistry.

From a studio in a Philadelphia synagogues choir loft, outfitted in a billowy white shirt with a Nehru collar as casually stylish as Bernsteins trademark turtleneck, Weisenberg is the picture of a hip baal tefillah, or prayer leader. His extensive library of master classes for those looking to lead High Holiday services, newly posted online, ranges far and wide. It moves from the bluesy feeling you get from a flatted seventh note to the emotional punch of a wordless Chassidic melody (nigun) to the beauty of Rosh Hashanahs opening Amidah prayer to the majesty of the Neilah service at the end of Yom Kippur as the gates are closing, he says.

Called the High Holidays Training Initiative, Weisenberg, a leader in the movement to re-energize congregational singing and spirituality, has filmed 128 episodes (most run six or seven minutes) that amount to a curated trip through the entire arc of High Holidays davening. Along the way, there is also instruction in the scales and modes that define what Weisenberg refers to as Nusach Ashkenaz in America.

A prayer leader will pick up hints about the Freygish and the Ukrainian Dorian, modal scales that give ancient chanting its distinctive musical flavor. If that prayer leader has an ear for jazz, he or she might find echoes of the modal jazz that defined the art form in its golden age in the 1950s and 60s. Weisenberg himself is something of an improviser. Nusach is heavily modal, he says. Most of the time when people are davening, there are a confined set of notes. But in the singing youre sliding in between the notes. Once you know the sound of the mode, you can improvise within it.

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That tension between the fixed and the spontaneousthe dialogue between tradition, and the here and nowis central to Weisenbergs musical and spiritual ethic. At 38, hes an old soul, with a foot in the old world and one in the new. With a ready smile and wide Midwestern vowels courtesy of an upbringing in Milwaukeewhere he soaked up the blues playing guitar and harmonica in the citys clubs, and the soaring Chassidic chanting at Rabbi Michel Twerskis renowned shulWeisenberg is both a musician steeped in many strains of American music and a natural educator.

Joey Weisenberg performing at the Lincoln Square Synagogue in 2017. Source: Joey Wesienberg via Facebook.

The COVID-19 crisis, of course, has cramped his style. Weisenberg is used to being smack in the middle of a circle of singers or on a tightly packed stage next to fellow musicians with fiddles and banjos and lap-steel guitars in the Hadar Ensemble. But, like many creative types in these plague months, he sees a window opening.

Every time one thing gets shut down, something else opens up, he says about lockdown and isolation. Ive spent the last 10 or 15 years with the Hadar Ensemble and the Rising Song Institute [both are affiliates of Yeshivat Hadar, the traditional egalitarian yeshiva on Manhattans Upper West Side] getting close to people and spilling globules via singing. Thats not possible now; singing is verboten. But what this time does do is open up a more introverted path toward music-making.

Weisenberg had been getting a lot of calls from people asking for private lessons in prayer leading. He had a library of material he had created a year agoin a month-long video spree, he says. And, given the coronavirus, he spotted an opportunity. This is the perfect time to let people into the world of the ancient tradition for leading prayers and singing wordless melodies. If this terrible pandemic can open up a doorway for people to study and become empowered in their ability to lead song and Jewish prayer, that would be a great outcome from my perspective.

The training-initiatives pilot launched in June; about 200 people are already taking part (it costs $18). People are joining with very different sets of expectations, says Weisenberg. There are some established cantors looking to learn a few new melodies. And there are people who have never led prayers and will be using the material as a crash course for their initial forays into prayer leading this High Holiday season.

The Days of Awe in late September will be filled with uncertainty given the constraints of social distancing. Weisenberg says some of the people taking the master classes will be leading prayers online from their living rooms. Others might be leading small groups of worshippers in backyards. (Hell be leading prayers online for the Kane Street Synagogue in Brooklyn, N.Y., where he was music director; for the last seven years, hes been living in Philadelphia with his wife and four children.) The pandemic, he says, represents an unparalleled opportunity for people to lead davening. If people can clear away some of the chaotic busyness of their lives, theres a chance to focus in on what they always wanted to learn.

For Weisenberg personally, this time of isolation has sent him into the woodshed, a musicians colorful shorthand for working alone, often for intense periods, on ones craft. Despite what I do [in front of the camera on video or live on stage], Im an introvert, he says. Its nice to have quieter time with fewer people around to start to dig into the musicto go into the woodshed and practice, compose, study, work in a more solo way.

Jewish character in the accents and wordlessness

His work and his old-new aesthetic can perhaps best be gleaned from his Lincolns Nigun. (Its recorded on his CD, Brooklyn Spirituals, the fourth of seven collections of nigunim.) A student of American history (he says most of his German-Jewish family has been in the United States since before the Civil War), Weisenberg was reading Doris Kearns Goodwins examination of President Abraham Lincolns politically mismatched cabinet, Team of Rivals. There is a passage in the book that describes Lincolns visits to the battlefield during the Civil War to meet the Union troops. As he came down the ranks, says Weisenberg, recalling a scene sketched in the book, the troops would part ways and theyd let him through, welcoming him in style.

Weisenberg says he read the passage on a Friday night, adapting the new melody he wrote then to the Lecha Dodi prayer welcoming the Sabbath Queen, which contains the words, To your right and your left you will burst forth/And the Lord will you revere. The tune, with its military march riff played on snare drum and with the Hadar Ensembles old-timey string-band instrumentation, has a Civil War-type sound, describes Weisenberg. But it has a Jewish character in the accents and the wordlessness.

I feel committed to the old Jewish tradition, but as a musician, I have my ears open. You cant close your ears. My music draws from the depth of the Jewish tradition and the depths of the American tradition.

Weisenberg expands on this interplay of the past and the present.

Ive spent a lot of time studying the old traditions, and Im deeply immersed in it. I feel as if the new compositions are outpourings of the soulthe overflow of the cup of tradition, as in the verse from Psalms 23, My cup overflows. I keep learning old things, the bowl gets full and spills out; that overflow is the new composition, and it fits in the lineage of the older tradition.

Joey is a unique talent: he has adapted traditional nusach and given it new meaning, says Nancy Abramson, director of H.L. Miller Cantorial School and College of Jewish Music at the Jewish Theological Seminary. Source: Joey Weisenberg via Facebook.

The guide who passes along Jewish musical wisdom

Weisenbergs musical-spiritual approach has won over many people. His 2017 book, The Torah of Music, earned a National Jewish Book Award. His work at the Kane Street Synagogue in Brooklyn put that congregation at the forefront of the neo-nigun movement, and as the founder and co-director of Hadars Philadelphia-based Rising Song Institute, he is credited with helping to reinvigorate synagogue singing.

Joey is a unique talent: he has adapted traditional nusach and given it new meaning, says Nancy Abramson, director of H.L. Miller Cantorial School and College of Jewish Music at the Jewish Theological Seminary. His use of accessible music and the participation of all congregants during services continues a trend that began in the 1970s. (In some ways, Weisenberg is working the field first tilled by two beloved folk music-inspired figures: the Chassidic/counterculture troubadour Rabbi Shlomo Carlebach and Debbie Friedman, the sweet-voiced singer-songwriter most associated with Hebrew Union College.)

Joey has been collaborating with JTS for a number of years, continues Abramson. He teaches our clergy students and has led joyous singing circles with us. Several JTS cantorial and rabbinical students have been active in the Rising Song Institute, some as teachers and some as learners. And many of our students incorporate Joeys unique style in their toolbox when leading services.

That toolbox is on vivid display on the master class videos for the High Holidays. Like providing a glimpse into the private marginalia on a composers score, Weisenberg opens up his own machzor to reveal to the student his personal musical markings (for instance, 1-5-3, to remember proper notes in a given mode). There are scribbles, sections bracketed off to denote where to start and stop, and notes to self squeezed into the narrow white space between two lines of black text. Its all in the service of offering hints to the arc and emotion of a melody. There are times when he loses himself in demonstrating a nigunhead raised up, eyes closed, ancient Jewish chanting pulled along into the present day.

The longstanding tradition of the musician-educatorthe guide who passes along the Jewish musical wisdom of earlier generations to the new oneis close to Weisenbergs heart. He learned to play harmonica at 11 from Jon Gindicks Country and Blues Harmonica for the Musically Hopeless. (Thats how I got into playing blues, he says.) And he devoured instructional videos from guitar masters like Nashvilles Brent Mason and the late jazz-blues virtuoso Danny Gatton.

Those videos and instructional materials have been really important to me. They opened up a whole world of music for me. These virtuosos saw beyond their own expression and saw the importance of bringing more music into the world through their teaching. Im following in that lineage.

Its not enough just to make music, Weisenberg says, articulating his rising song vision. You have to make everyone make music.

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