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Monday, October 30, 2017

Train named Anne Frank sparks anger in Germany

German railway operator Deutsche Bahn (DB) stirred up a storm after deciding to name one of its new Inter City Express (ICE) trains after Anne Frank, ignoring the fact that she—like many other Jews at the time—perished after being hauled to a Nazi extermination camp via the same method of transportation.

The name was chosen when in mid-September DB called on its customers to choose the names for its new generation of urban express trains. Within a month, 19,400 suggestions for more than 2,500 names were received—one of them being Anne Frank.

A naming committee established by the company then selected names for the 25 new trains from a list of the most popular suggestions. DB explained that their goal was to eternalize Frank's memory even further in German society.
 (Photo: Shutterstock)

(Photo: Shutterstock)

Antia Neubauer, DB head of public relations and member of the naming committee, was quoted by the British tabloid Daily Mail as saying that her name was picked for her representation of tolerance. "It stands for tolerance and for a peaceful co-existence of different cultures, which in times like these is more important than ever," she said. Other names chosen for the trains include famous Germans such as theoretical physicist Albert Einstein, philosopher Karl Marx and composer Ludwig van Beethoven. "As different as the selected personalities are, they have one thing in common: they were curious about the world," said naming committee member and gender history professor, Gisela Mettele. Many, though, took to social media to condemn the decision, with Iris Erberl, a German politician from the conservative Christian-Social Union party, calling the decision "disrespectful." One wrote: "Am I actually the only one who finds it strange to call a train of the legal successor of the Reichsbahn Anne Frank?" The Deutsche Reichsbahn was Germany's national railway company that operated during the Third Reich, and the predecessor of DB. It gathered infamy for transporting Jews and other victims of the Holocaust to Nazi concentration and extermination camps. "The legal successor to the Reichsbahn, which does not compensate forced laborers to this day, baptizes an ICE train Anne Frank. As an historian I unfortunately find this terribly wrong," wrote another scholar.
Anne Frank

Anne Frank

The new trains, including the one named after Anne Frank, are set to make their first voyage in December.

Over the past month, complaints have been raised in different parts of the world over the use of Anne Frank's name.

An American website that sells Halloween costumes for children, for instance, came under fire for including in its range an outfit of Anne Frank.

Moreover, Italian police and soccer authorities this month opened investigations after Lazio fans posted anti-Semitic stickers of Anne Frank wearing the jersey of their top-flight city rivals AS Roma.

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Saturday, October 28, 2017

Jewish grandma stars in series of viral videos

Did your son remember to put on a sweater? Is your daughter taking her sweet time to get married? Are the grandkids always forgetting to call? In a series of videos that have gone viral, Jewish grandmother Judith Cohen pledges to take care of these issues, which plague every Jewish grandmother, with her own patented apps.

 

The videos were actually produced by American Friends of the Hebrew University (AFHU) as part of an effort to raise donations from the American public for future development of slightly more useful apps (and some other things the Hebrew University dabbles in).

American-Jewish grandma Judith Cohen stars in a new series of videos for AFHU (Photo: AFHU)

American-Jewish grandma Judith Cohen stars in a new series of videos for AFHU (Photo: AFHU)

Judith Cohen, meanwhile, is in fact 84-year-old actress Barbara Malley, who easily took to the Yiddish inflection and mannerisms of a Jewish grandma.

Indeed, the myth of the Jewish grandma managed to garner tens of thousands of cumulative views on YouTube.

AFHU Chief Marketing Officer Eileen Hume was the driving force behind the series of videos and told Ynet, "Everybody has a bubbe (Yiddish for 'grandmother'), and she encapsulates the ultimate shared experience of American-Jewish culture."

In describing her "Would it kill you to call?" app, Cohen explains in the video, "After seven days without a call, a text is automatically sent to your loved ones: 'It's been a week, would it kill you to call?'"

The other two videos in the series also transform "grandmotherly" problems and concerns to a kindly Jewish app. For instance, one that updates bubbe's loved ones when it's called and cautions them against dressing improperly for the weather, or one explaining how to set up eligible Jewish bachelors with a stubborn single grandchild.

"Our starting point was stereotypes, but we handled them lovingly. We hit upon this idea by matching the famous, timeless qualities of the Jewish grandmother with life in the modern world," Hume explained with a smile.

Audience embraced the Jewish bubbe, and nearly forgot the grandmother was just as pretend as the apps she was proffering.

"It's actually really funny. Viewers responded with, 'I wish it were a real app, I'd download it.' Nevertheless, the purpose of the social media campaign is to increase awareness of the Hebrew University among a new, younger audience," Hume said.

"In that respect, the message was absolutely well received, as it reached a whole new public. We wanted it to be light-hearted and to speak to people through humor, because humor works. And we wanted to balance out the very serious and important subject matter behind the campaign with something with a little more brevity," she concluded.

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Wednesday, October 25, 2017

German woman pens apology to US man who lost home to Nazis

Peter Hirschmann has often recounted his own story of fleeing Germany as a teenager to escape Adolf Hitler's persecution of the Jews, then joining the US Army to fight the Nazis.

But the 92-year-old started to cry as he read a three-page letter, neatly printed in blue fountain pen, which arrived out of the blue from Nuremberg and stirred very different thoughts of his past.

Its author, Doris Schott-Neuse, told him how her grandfather had acquired Hirschmann's family home under the Nazis, expressing her shame and imploring him for forgiveness.

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Israeli sports minister asks Italy to rein in soccer racism

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In a letter to her Italian counterpart, Miri Regev condemns 'despicable' stickers plastered by Lazio fans mocking Anne Frank, saying they openly identify with neo-Nazi symbols; passage from Frank's diary to be read out at all Italian soccer matches this week. Israeli sports minister asks Italy to rein in soccer racism : http://ift.tt/2yNZWft

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: http://ift.tt/2ur2mzd

Tuesday, October 24, 2017

Polish bill adds stringent requirements for Holocaust reparations

A new Polish bill made public on Friday by the Justice Ministry in Poland includes several draconian clauses that would prevent the vast majority of Holocaust survivors and their family members from receiving any sort of reparations.

According to the bill, a Holocaust survivor seeking to file a claim for reparations must be a current citizen of Poland and needs to have lived in the country when his or her property was seized by the post-war communist regime.

Additionally, under the proposed law, heirs will be able to file a claim, but they must be children or grandchildren of the survivors.
Museum of the History of the Polish Jews, Warsaw, Poland (Photo: Reuters)

Museum of the History of the Polish Jews, Warsaw, Poland (Photo: Reuters)

The stringent conditions preclude most survivors from filing a claim, since many Jewish families living in Poland were annihilated during the war by the Nazi regime, leaving no heirs to claim the property, while most who survived left Poland during the Holocaust or shortly afterwards. The bill also overrules reparation treaties signed between Poland and various countries after the war, meaning that survivors eligible to file a claim will no longer be able to.

Three million Polish Jews, about 90 percent of the Jewish community in the country, were murdered in the Holocaust.

Nevertheless, Poland is the only major European country that has not yet enacted a law for the restitution of Jewish property seized by the Nazis or the country's regime.
Prime Minister of Poland Beata SzydƂo (Photo: AP)

Prime Minister of Poland Beata SzydƂo (Photo: AP)

Following the publication of the bill's content, World Jewish Congress (WJC) President and World Jewish Restitution Organization (WJRO) Chairman Ronald Lauder and WJRO Chair of Operations Gideon Taylor, said that the WJRO is "profoundly disappointed that the Polish government’s proposal excludes the vast majority of Polish Holocaust survivors and their families."

"Polish Holocaust survivors and their families were an integral part of Polish life for centuries. Their property is often their last tangible connection with the life they lived before the destruction of the Holocaust,” they added. "We strongly urge the Polish government to ensure that the legislation, when introduced to the Parliament, will have eligibility criteria and a claims process that are fair and just to those who suffered and lost so much."

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Jewish leader opposes Austrian right party in government

The head of Vienna's Jewish community warned of the dangers of including the right-wing Freedom Party in the Austrian government, asserting that it remains xenophobic despite its newly moderate tone.

 

Oskar Deutsch says even if the "nationalistic wolf puts on a (...) sheepskin, it changes only its appearance and not character."

Freedom Party head Heinz-Christian Strache toned down his rhetoric to increase electability (Photo: Reuters)

Freedom Party head Heinz-Christian Strache toned down his rhetoric to increase electability (Photo: Reuters)

Deutsch's weekend Facebook posting comes as the People's Party prepares to seek a coalition partner after winning elections. The Freedom Party is seen as its most probable partner given that both parties campaigned on an anti-migrant platform. Freedom Party head Heinz-Christian Strache has sought to reach out to voters that reject extremist messages by toning down his inflammatory rhetoric. He also has tried to move the party away from anti-Semitism, but it continues to attract the neo-Nazi fringe.

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Italy investigates anti-Semitic Anne Frank stickers at soccer stadium

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Fans of Lazio soccer team post anti-Semitic stickers of Holocaust victim Anne Frank wearing jersey of top team rival AS Roma; Italian police, soccer authorities open investigation; 'This is not soccer, this is not sport,' tweets head of Rome’s Jewish community Dureghello; head of Italian Left party Fratoianni says those guilty should be made to memorize Anne Frank’s diary. Italy investigates anti-Semitic Anne Frank stickers at soccer stadium : http://ift.tt/2yKnS37

Saturday, October 21, 2017

Scaramucci polls Twitter followers on nr. of Holocaust victims

The official Twitter account for a media venture started by former White House Communications Director Anthony Scaramucci published a poll Friday asking its followers to vote "How many Jews were killed during the Holocaust?", only three days after publishing a similar poll—and removing it after an hour and a half.

 

Scaramucci, who served as communications director for only 10 days before being ousted by President Donald Trump, announced the creation of an eponymous news site—The Scaramucci Post—back in September.

Scaramucci during his brief tenure as WH Communications Director (Photo: EPA)

Scaramucci during his brief tenure as WH Communications Director (Photo: EPA)

While the site itself is not yet operational, its official Twitter account is, boasting some 25,500 followers. On Friday, it polled them on how many people they thought were killed in the Holocaust.

 

The poll options were "less than a million", "between one and two million", "between two and three million" and "more than five million." As of this writing—and with almost 33,000 people voting—25 percent of the voters chose the first option of less than one million victims, whereas 69 percent chose the last option of more than five million.

The poll's results

The poll's results

This was the second time the poll was floated by The Scaramucci Post, whose Twitter account is operated by Scaramucci's business partner Lance Laifer, who is Jewish. After the first poll was taken down, Laifer wrote on Twitter that, "The intent of the poll was to highlight ignorance of the basic facts of the Holocaust. I take full responsibility for it."

Scaramucci himself commented on the poll's original removing, writing on his private Twitter account Thursday that, "If anyone was offended by this act, you have both my sincere personal apology and commitment that it will never happen again."

"I have publicly criticized the white supremacy movement and understand that the Holocaust was one of the most abhorrent moments in world history," Scaramucci added.

Scaramucci shared the poll again despite apologizing for its creation

Scaramucci shared the poll again despite apologizing for its creation

Nevertheless and despite the above statements, Scaramucci retweeted the new poll to his 850,000 followers, adding, "Please vote and retweet. Do not let Holocaust deniers and anti-Semites control this poll. Six million Jews perished in the Holocaust." Many were outraged at the poll, including Jewish-American writer and journalist John Podhoretz, who tweeted, "Delete this disgusting thread AND the poll, you unimaginable fool."

 

Scaramucci, originally a New York financier, was a large donor to the Republican Party. He was considered part of Trump's inner circle and defended him on television numerous times. On July 21, Trump returned the favor by appointing Scaramucci his White House Communications Director, a position he held for only 10 days, until July 31.

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Friday, October 20, 2017

German prosecutors charge former Majdanek death camp guard

A former guard at the Majdanek death camp in Nazi-occupied Poland has been charged in Germany with being an accessory to murder for allegedly serving there during a period when at least 17,000 Jews were killed, Frankfurt prosecutors said Friday. The 96-year-old Frankfurt resident, whose name wasn't released under German privacy regulations, is alleged to have served at the death camp near the Polish city of Lublin between August 1943 and January 1944.
Majdanek concentration camp (Photo: AP)

Majdanek concentration camp (Photo: AP)

Prosecutors allege that as a 22-year-old member of the SS's Death's Head division, the man worked as a perimeter guard and in the camp's guard towers. "According to the known evidence, the suspect, as well as all other SS members of the camp, knew of the cruel and organized mass murder," prosecutors said in a statement.

"He also knew that these people, facing their fate innocently and defencelessly, were killed for inhuman reasons based on race," it added.

In particular, the indictment accuses the man of supporting the so-called Operation "Erntefest"—Operation Harvest Festival—on November 3, 1943. On that day, at least 17,000 Jewish prisoners from the Majdanek camp and others who were being used as forced laborers in and around Lublin were shot in ditches just outside the camp. Music was blared from the Majdanek loudspeakers to mask the sound of the executions. The Frankfurt resident charged Friday "contributed in his role as a perimeter guard and as a tower guard, and thus knowingly and deliberately aided" the killings, prosecutors said.

"By being part of a chain of guards and a tower guard, he made a contribution to (the Erntefest) and knowingly and willingly supported the malicious and cruel acts."

The prosecutor's charges are based on an investigation by the Central Office for the Investigation of Nazi Crimes and on historical documents found as part of the investigation.

No trial date has been set.

More than 70 years after the end of World War II, German prosecutors continue to bring new cases against former Nazi war crimes suspects. Due to their advanced ages, the task of getting suspects to trial is getting increasingly difficult, but prosecutors have secured notable convictions in recent years.

Reuters contributed to this report.

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Tuesday, October 17, 2017

'Nazi grandma' Holocaust denier sentenced to jail in Germany

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ŚŠŚ™ŚœŚ•Ś: AP
Ursula Haverbeck, 88, receives six months in jail for repeated Holocaust denial, an illegal offence in German law; Haverbeck has repeatedly described Holocaust as 'the biggest and most sustainable lie in history,' denied existence of gas chambers in Auschwitz. 'Nazi grandma' Holocaust denier sentenced to jail in Germany : http://ift.tt/2x1Plu0

Monday, October 16, 2017

Anne Frank becomes a halloween costume on US site

An American website that sells halloween costumes for children has come under fire for including in its range an outfit of Anne Frank, a German-born diarist who became one of the most prominent victims of the Holocaust. Frank was betrayed and handed over to the Nazis while hiding in the Netherlands between 1942 and 1944 and her diary became one of the most heavily examined historical sources of the period.

The website, which also delivers to Israel, advertized a costume labelled “WW2 Costume for Girls.” However the URL link read “girls-anne-frank-costume.html” and the costume can also be found by searching for her name on the site.

Anne Frank costume

Anne Frank costume

While the American site attempted to disguise the URL with a different label on the site, the European, Canadian, Australian and British versions of the site are less discreet, which shows a picture of a girl clad in WWII-style clothes next to the title: “Anne Frank Costume for girls.” The costumes in Europe can be purchased for between approximately 14-24 Euros while in Canada the sinister costumes are on sale for between $19-32. The costume didn't go on sale for the first time in 2017. At the beginning of the current decade, consumers complained about the insensitive branding and sale. The costume was described as “the worst costume of all time” by The Blaze website which also displayed the costume’s packaging.
American version labelled as 'WW2 Costume for Girls'

American version labelled as 'WW2 Costume for Girls'

“It seems every year Halloween costumes get more tasteless and more controversial. This year’s winner might just be the ‘World War II Evacuee’ costume for young girls,” The Blaze wrote. According to one manufacturing company called Girls Fantasy, “all that is missing here is a yellow star.” As a result of the ensuing furor, a British blogger named Nick Douglas sought to defend the sale of the costume, insisting that it had its origin in British educational tradition and that it actually has no connection to halloween. Douglas claimed that as part of an educational day called “Evacuation Day,” British children are asked to dress up as British children of the Second World War to help them feel greater empathy toward those who suffered during its course.
Anne Frank

Anne Frank

While Douglas is correct, as demonstrated by a simple google search for “evacuee costume,” he was not able to explain why the site had explicitly named its costume after the Jewish girl who was murdered by the Nazis. One of the site representatives on the chat forum of halloweencostumes responsible for the tasteless sale said he was unable to answer a question on the matter when asked directly, claiming that he was not authorized to act as a spokesperson for the company. After being referred to the customer service of the company, Ynet was told: “This is the Second World War. These are costumes that are similar to what was worn then. It doesn’t portray anything, it is a style of the dress at the time.” When asked why the costume was called “Anne Frank” on the site, the representative shirked responsibility: “I don’t make decisions and anyone who answers you here has been working here for two months and help people buy. It isn’t something I can change. If you call here no one will help you. You can send a complaint via mail.”

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Friday, October 13, 2017

Israelis mark end of Simchat Torah with Second Hakafot

With the High Holy Days now over, Jews in Israel celebrated the end of Simchat Torah on Thursday night, with Second Hakafot events held nationwide, marking one last joyous hurrah before a return to normalcy.

   
Second Hakafot in Tel Aviv's Rabin Square (Photo: Kobi Richter/TPS)

Second Hakafot in Tel Aviv's Rabin Square (Photo: Kobi Richter/TPS)

Hakafot (Hakafah in singular) is a Jewish custom in which the worshipers walk or dance around the synagogue's reader's platform with the four species on each of the seven days of the holiday. Second Hakafot, held at the conclusion to Simchat Torah both in Israel and abroad, are the same ceremony enacted outdoors.

Second Hakafot events in the settlement of Elkana saw joy intermixed with great sadness. This is the fifth time the settlement celebrated Second Hakafot, this time dedicated to the memory of Reuven (Moti) Shmerling, who was murdered on Sukkot eve, with the third Hakafah dedicated to him.

Shmerling's family began sitting Shiva (the 7-day Jewish mourning period) only Thursday, when the holiday ended, and were therefore not present, but his granddaughter Nir Betzer spoke at the event.

Reuven Shmerling's granddaughter Nir speaks at the Elkana Second Hakafot

Reuven Shmerling's granddaughter Nir speaks at the Elkana Second Hakafot

  

"Exactly a week ago my dear grandfather, Reuven Zerach Shmerling—who we called Grandpa Moti—was so cruelly taken away from us by miscreants," she said.

"Grandpa was a one of a kind person, whom we got to know closely and enjoy some wonderful years by his side, learning from his good graces and extraordinary qualities. Grandpa was a man of grace and boundless, anonymous charity, he was a man of peace and the love of man—any man, regardless of religion or race," his granddaughter continued.

The late Reuven Shmerling was honored in Elkana

The late Reuven Shmerling was honored in Elkana

"Grandpa was a family man, who gave each and every one of us the feeling we were his favorite. But more than anything else, Grandpa was a man of joy! Everywhere he'd go, he'd bring an air of a sheer joy for life with him. His sparkling blue eyes also glowed with warmth, love and mirth. "Grandpa was both born and taken away during Sukkot, on the day he turned 70. And such a fitting time it is, during a holiday commanding you to be joyous. That was exactly what my grandfather was all about, emanating joy at all times. We, his family members, who had to 'hold back' all customs of bereavement during the holiday, now share a special joy at the fact God is with us and for having had the fortune of having such a special grandpa whose memory will never leave our hearts. "We feel the legacy of joy he has instilled in us will be forever with us, and this year's Hakafot during Simchat Torah will grow even stronger as a result, instilling his legacy to all the people of Israel," she concluded her moving eulogy.

The Western Wall inaugurated its own Second Hakafot events with a band and many revelers, in what some hope will become an annual tradition.

The Kotel has some 100 Torah books, enough for people to dance with and carry out the traditional seven circles, or Hakafot.

Meanwhile, at the Barby club, Tel Aviv's well-known rock institution, Hakafot have been a tradition for eight years now, first initiated by the Rosh Yehudi center in Tel Aviv.

The Barby events are now a hallmark of the holiday, with thousands of joyous participants rocking to the tunes of Yoni Genut and the Nosei Hakelim band until the wee hours of the morning.

Second Hakafot at Tel Aviv's Barby club have been a tradition for the past eight years (Photo: Noam Cohen)

Second Hakafot at Tel Aviv's Barby club have been a tradition for the past eight years (Photo: Noam Cohen)

This year, the Barby event was attended by several VIPs, including the police commissioner, who was honored by doing a Hakafah himself; Deputy Minister of Defense Rabbi Eli Ben-Dahan; Bayit Yehudi MK Shuli Mualem-Refaeli; and Minister of Justice Ayelet Shaked, who welcomed the US's decision to withdraw from UNESCO before a cheering crowd.

The evening was kicked off at Dizengoff Center, where partygoers removed the Torah scrolls from the synagogue and marched in a dancing procession towards the club. The party then combined modern workings of Hassidic music and contemporary Jewish music.

Photo: Hagai Dekel (Photo: Hagai Dekel)

Photo: Hagai Dekel

According to Barby owner Shaul Mizrachi, "Everything started when I was contacted to do Hakafot at the club. At first, I didn't know what exactly that entailed, but when I saw the unbridled joy experienced by both the partygoers and I, I decided to make it a tradition and open the Barby's gates every Simchat Torah for Hakafot. After the celebrations, people walk up and thank me, but all the thanks I need are the people who come in every year and make it the experience it is."
Second Hakafot in Tel Aviv's Rabin Square (Photo: Kobi Richter/TPS)

Second Hakafot in Tel Aviv's Rabin Square (Photo: Kobi Richter/TPS)

Photo: Kobi Richter/TPS (Photo: Kobi Richter/TPS)

Photo: Kobi Richter/TPS

Second Hakafot in Jerusalem's Mea Shearim neighborhood (Photo: Reuters)

Second Hakafot in Jerusalem's Mea Shearim neighborhood (Photo: Reuters)

Photo: Reuters (Photo: Reuters)

Photo: Reuters

Photo: Reuters (Photo: Reuters)

Photo: Reuters

In Giv'at Shmuel, widely regarded as a stronghold of religious Zionism, thousands of the town's residents danced alongside members of the Bnei Akiva and Ezra youth movements.

Second Hakafot in religious-Zionist town Giv'at Shmuel (Photo: Shlomit Mantel)

Second Hakafot in religious-Zionist town Giv'at Shmuel (Photo: Shlomit Mantel)

Netanel Kuperman, a proud resident of the town, presided over the party with his band. Similarly to Elkana, the Giv'at Shmuel festivities were also not without a hint of sadness, as the third Hakafah was dedicated to Hadar Goldin, Oron Shaul and out Israeli MIAs, following a call made by Israel's chief rabbis on Sukkot eve to dedicate the Hakafah to "our brothers whose location is unknown."

As they do every year, students, parents and teachers from Giv'at Shmuel's Bnei Akiva yeshiva—led by yeshiva head Shraga Fruchter—went out to bring some happiness to the patients hospitalized at the Sheba Medical Center at Tel Hashomer and their families.

Students of the Bnei Akiva yeshiva performing second Hakafot at Sheba

Students of the Bnei Akiva yeshiva performing second Hakafot at Sheba

A Sheba patient assisted during the Second Hakafot

A Sheba patient assisted during the Second Hakafot

Photo: EPA (Photo: EPA)

Photo: EPA

Photo: EPA (Photo: EPA)

Photo: EPA

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Wednesday, October 11, 2017

Swastika sprayed on UK synagogue

Members of the Jewish community in Leeds, England were shocked to discover Wednesday morning that a swastika had been sprayed on the entrance sign of the Etz Chaim Synagogue. Rarely hit by such instances of anti-Semitism, members of the congregation found that a red swastika had been scrawled on the entrance sign above the word “Kikes,” a derogatory term for Jewish people.
Etz Chaim Synagogue vadalized in anti-Semitic attack

Etz Chaim Synagogue vadalized in anti-Semitic attack

The anti-Semitic vandals also sprayed in black writing at the foot of the main gate through which cars enter the synagogue’s premises “Kikes get out.” One Orthodox member of the community, who spoke to Ynet on condition of anonymity, said that while the incident was regrettable, there was no need for undue panic to spread throughout the community. “If I’m to be honest, I wasn't particularly worried when I saw it,” the man said. “Yes, it’s infuriating to know there are certain people out there who go and do things like that, who probably should not be given as much time on this earth as they currently have, and especially if they have decided to actively go and buy a bottle of graffiti paint just to go and do something stupid like this,” he added.
“Generally though, I think we are in a very good place. Leeds has had very little of this sort of stuff happening. We are quite fortunate in that way, but it is always important to be vigilant as well."

Another member of the synagogue, Ben Levy, also agreed that while it was worrisome, the act did not typify treatment of Jews in the northern English city.

“Does it make me fearful about acts of anti-Semitism in the UK? I think acts like this are the work of ignorant individuals rather than any sort of more serious incident. But I think the issue is the demonization of Israel and anti-Semitism that is becoming more mainstream in the media in the Labour Party under Jeremy Corbyn, which is far more insidious than the odd work of ignorant acts of vandalism, even though there is no excusing that."

An email circulated by a member of the The Community Security Trust also sought to allay unnecessary fears as Jews in the community and around the world prepare to celebrate Simchat Torah, concluding the festival of Sukkot.

Urging any “unnecessary chatter” about the incident, the CST informed the community that it had been made aware, together with the police.

“Incidents like this occur with some regularity,” the email read, while also acknowledging that “we have been lucky in Leeds that we haven’t seen anything like this in a while.”

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Saturday, October 7, 2017

First fully disabled-accessible synagogue built in Jerusalem

Construction of the first fully disabled-accessible synagogue in Jerusalem is about to be finished, giving disabled worshipers easy access to the compound, with comfortable sitting arrangements for wheelchair-bound visitors, Braille bibles and more. According to estimates, about 90% of the synagogues in Israel do not have accessibility for the disabled.

 

The synagogue is currently being built as part of the Herzog Hospital complex in the capital. 

There are 1.4 million people with disabilities in Israel, and some of them cannot attend a synagogue due to accessibility problems.
Jerusalem synagogue (Photo: Gil Yohanan)

Jerusalem synagogue (Photo: Gil Yohanan)

Micha Oberman, CEO of Lavi Furniture Industries, has been hired to build the special furniture installed in the synagogue. "We have worked hard to develop special furniture that provides easy access to the entrance and exit, seats and benches suitable for people with disabilities, a removable Torah ark with easy access for wheelchair-bound people and more," he said.

Oberman said his company has already carried out furniture work for synagogues around the country and the world, with accessibility for the disabled in mind, but that this is the first time a project has been carried out with the entire synagogue planned as to be accessible to the disabled from the ground up.

The synagogue will have easy access to it and inside the building. A ramp is to be built next to stairs leading from floor to floor. The synagogue will have wide aisles and entryways, doors made of glass and marked with yellow stickers for the visually impaired, bright lighting and special seating accommodations for those using wheelchairs.

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Friday, October 6, 2017

It’s not easy being a European rabbi in 2017

AMSTERDAM—Europe's rabbis are losing sleep at night: Radical Islam is taking root in the continent, the far right is growing stronger as a reaction—and the Jews, as always, are caught in the middle. Not to mention the assimilation issue and the difficulty of bringing Jews closer to Judaism.

Some 300 rabbis and rabbinical judges gathered recently in Amsterdam for the 60th anniversary convention of the Conference of European Rabbis (CER). In dozens of sessions and discussions, they dealt with key decisions on cardinal Jewish issues like conversion courts, kashrut matters, the rabbi’s role, etc.

Senior European Union officials and members of its agency for combating anti-Semitism chose to participate in the convention, as the burning issues on the Jewish community’s agenda are only a microcosm of the issues concerning Europe as a whole: Anti-Semitism, radical Islam, freedom and the far right.
Photo: Eli Itkin

Photo: Eli Itkin

“When I say good morning to the neighbor next door, and meet non-Jewish people as part of my job, I can’t stop thinking about their grandfather murdering my grandfather,” the chief rabbi of Vilnius, Rabbi Shimshon Isaacson, tells Ynet. “This is something which hasn’t gone away and won’t go away, definitely not over two generations.”

He remembers how during one of his tours of the city, he ran into a local man who started accusing him of murdering Jesus. The rabbi didn’t panic and noted pleasantly that if there was any truth to the accusation, he must have supernatural powers that he used to kill a god, which raises the question how dare that man scream at him. “Anti-Semitism is in the European DNA, not in its cognitive part.”

Katharina von Schnurbein, the European Commission coordinator on combating anti-Semitism, clarified that “the European Commission can’t accept the fact that 72 years after the Holocaust, Jews still question whether they have a future in Europe.”

CER President Pinchas Goldschmidt, Moscow’s chief rabbi, believes that “it’s in Europe's soul.” Radical Islam, he says, “wants to return to the Middle Ages, to the era of the caliphs. The far right wants to divide Europe and go back to 1914. We, the Jews, want to march forward and turn to the future with the experience of the past.”
he rabbis of Frankfurt and Odessa (Photo: Eli Itkin)

he rabbis of Frankfurt and Odessa (Photo: Eli Itkin)

Post-war Amsterdam had 50,000 Jews and as many as 50 rabbis. “Today, there are only 2,000 left,” a local Jew tells me at the Ibis Hotel where we stayed, which caters to Jewish guests. This is in fact the story of many European communities. Among the many rabbis, there are tens and hundreds of young men in their 30s who lead communities in different corners of Europe, some of which most Israelis have likely never heard of. These rabbis aren’t just dealing with questions of anti-Semitism or complex religious issues, but with what they refer to as “the Jewish life itself.” “Before I became the rabbi of the (southern French) city of Montpellier, I knew there was a ‘Shabbat Jew’ and a ‘Yom Kippur Jew,’” says local rabbi Benhamo. “Now I have learned that there is a Jew of purification, of death.”

He says he often holds ritual purification and burial ceremonies for Jews who have already become ‘gentiles for all intents and purposes’ from a genealogical aspect, but what is left from Judaism is the handling of the dead.”

Rabbi Isaacson of Vilnius adds with a bitter smile, “Many Jews see themselves as Jews because they belong to the global Maccabi movement, that’s all. Sound strange? Foolish? But that’s how it works.”

The assimilation rate, which in many cases reaches 90 percent, is also an implication of the unstable Jewish infrastructure. “It’s important for everyone to be Jewish,” a British congregation rabbi explains. “The thing is that if there’s no kosher meat, if there’s no Jewish education or a kindergarten to teach basic concepts, there’s a detachment from the values and from the Jewish communal activity, and it is only then that the barrier of being married to a non-Jewish spouse is lifted.”

The young rabbis are highly motivated, and with the help of the CER and senior rabbinical figures in Europe, they are trying to revive their communities with Jewish education and Zionism. No one here talks about “repentance” in its classical sense, but about instilling basic Jewish values.
Photo: Eli Itkin

Photo: Eli Itkin

The activity is carried out mainly by students, whose age is similar to the rabbis’ age. “Today, everyone understands that the young 15- to 40-year-olds are our future,” says Rabbi Isaacson. “They are the ones who will give birth to children in the community, and they are the ones who will revive and activate it. You can’t work with the old generation when you want to build a community, and when the rabbi is their age and speaks their language, it’s obviously an advantage.” Surprisingly, however, the rabbis seem to have quite a few opponents in the community itself. One of the rabbis, who asked to remain anonymous, says that “the community committee, which is made up of people who have lived here for years, is afraid of us. It sees our success and it’s afraid that people will get swept away and it will negatively affect their position.”
Rabbi Shimon Isaacson

Rabbi Shimon Isaacson

“This is a familiar phenomenon in many communities,” the young rabbi of Vilnius explains. “The committee or the community leaders maintain a certain Jewish status quo, and every change terrifies them. Many times, they are unwilling, for example, to fund communal activity—beyond putting the synagogue at the rabbis’ disposal. If dozens of people suddenly show up for a lesson or a party around a Jewish issue or event, they ask themselves: When will this harm me? When will the community members ask for other things and dismiss me?”

The aliyah issue is constantly present in the air too, although it’s not always explicitly discussed. The Brexit, Marine Le Pen’s impressive achievement and the massive waves of immigration to Europe make it impossible to avoid the issue.

“France is experiencing a serious identity crisis, and there’s no doubt that if Le Pen had won, many of us would have considered leaving and immigrating to Israel, says Rabbi Moshe Sabag of the Great Synagogue in Paris. The aliyah issue is extremely complicated as far as Europe's rabbis are concerned. As a congregation rabbi in Germany put it, half joking: “The unofficial response is that if the community members make aliyah, the rabbi would lose his livelihood, as a community with no Jews needs no rabbi, and then what would the rabbi eat?”
Photo: Eli Itkin

Photo: Eli Itkin

They say there is a grain of truth in every joke, but there is a more “formal” answer, the rabbi says: “There are Jews in the community who can be brought closer to Judaism, even if they are currently far. If they go to Israel, they’re more unlikely to move closer to Judaism.” His comment reflects the perception of many of Israel’s senior rabbis, who have spoken against bringing Europe's Jews to Israel, fearing a spiritual decline. “People are free to choose,” says Rabbi Weil of France. “I really think this is a matter we shouldn’t intervene in. Each person should know if their time has come to make aliyah.” It seems, however, that the general heart’s desire is to immigrate to Israel, but there is still a long way to go. As Rabbi Isaacson says, “In my parents’ apartment, on top of my toy chest, there are boxes which they have kept since I was a child. When I asked my mother what’s in there, she said: ‘Those are new instruments which we’ll use when we get to Israel.’ Decades have passed since then. So there’s a great desire at heart, but it’s not an easy road to take, and it could take an entire lifetime.”

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Thursday, October 5, 2017

New Canadain Holocaust museum neglects to mention Jews

The inauguration of a new Holocaust memorial museum in Ottowa, Canada, which opened last week, quickly drew criticism after observars noticed that a plaque set at the entrance to the site did not mention the words "Jews" and "anti-Semitism."

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau took part in last week's inauguration ceremony, stressing that the place symbolizes how much hatred and tyranny can carry a heavy price. Trudeau noted Canada's commitment to combating anti-Semitism, racism and discrimination.

However, the new site quickly raised eyebrows, as the memorial plaque stating the museum was erected "in memory of millions of men, women and children who were murdered in the Holocaust" without mentioning the number six million or referring to the Jewish people.

MP David Sweet criticized the lack of mention, which has been going on for more than a decade: "If we are going to eradicate hatred against the Jews, we should be accurate about history."

Trudeau (L) at the memorial

Trudeau (L) at the memorial


Trudeau (Photo: AP)

Trudeau (Photo: AP)

Canadian Heritage Minister Melanie Joly replied to Switt, explaining that the plaque would be removed, saying that the Holocaust Memorial Museum is a place in memory of six million Jews and another five million victims who were murdered during the Holocaust, and that the sign has since been removed.

Trudeau at the memorial (AP, Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press)

Trudeau at the memorial (AP, Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press)

This is not the first time the Canadians have become embroiled in the memory of the Jewish people. Last year, shortly after taking office, Prime Minister Trudeau tweeted "in tribute to the millions of victims who were murdered in the Holocaust," on International Holocaust Remembrance Day, without mentioning the Jewish people. After receiving criticism over this, his office stressed the importance of battling anti-Semitism.

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Tuesday, October 3, 2017

Who betrayed Anne Frank's family?

A former FBI agent is heading up a cold case team more than 70 years after Nazi occupation police stormed the secret Amsterdam canal house annex where Anne Frank was hiding and sent her to her death in a concentration camp.

Suspicions that someone betrayed the Frank family are not new, but the latest attempt will seek out new connections in the case of the Jewish girl whose diary has captivated millions of readers worldwide.

Retired agent Vincent Pankoke said he had high hopes of solving one of the biggest World War Two mysteries in the Netherlands with the help of Big Data and modern policing techniques. "This is the ultimate cold case," Pankoke, who is heading a 20-member team working out of Amsterdam, told Reuters in an interview. "Seventy three years after the arrest, forget forensic evidence, most of the people who could give witness statements are no longer alive."

Anne Frank (Photo: AP) (Photo: AP)

Anne Frank (Photo: AP)

A master database will be compiled with lists of Nazi collaborators, informants, historic documents, police records and prior research that could provide new leads.

"We are going to load every piece of data we can find from the time period," he said. "There is so much information that is out there that has never been looked at."

Frank (L) (Photo: AP)

Frank (L) (Photo: AP)

Combing through archives has already yielded material not previously linked with the Anne Frank case, including a list of Nazi collaborators in Amsterdam found in the US national archives, he said.

The "Cold Case Diary" is not aimed at seeking prosecution. It is intended to be completed by August 4, 2019, to mark 75 years since Anne Frank's arrest.

"We are doing it because we feel the case must be solved," said Thijs Bayens, a Dutch filmmaker, who helped launch the project, which has been self-funded with experts donating time.

Photo: AFP

Photo: AFP

The team, which is relying on crowd funding and is estimated to need up to $5 million to complete its work, has appealed to the public to come forward with information that may shed new light on the arrest.

Anne was discovered on August 4, 1944 after two years in hiding. Miep Gies, one of the family's helpers in hiding, kept Anne's diary safe until it was published by Anne's father, Otto, in 1947, two years after Anne died in the Bergen Belsen camp at age 15. It has been translated into 60 languages.

"The nicest part is being able to write down all my thoughts and feelings; otherwise, I'd absolutely suffocate," she wrote in March, 1944.

The Anne Frank Foundation, which maintains the Frank's Amsterdam house for visitors, is assisting Pankoke's team.

"We shared our investigation on the arrest," said spokeswoman Annemarie Bekker. "It looks good and we are curious about their results.

Respected historians who have published prior research on the subject, including those from the Dutch World War Two research center NIOD, will work as consultants on the project.

"They have agreed to help us and share everything without conditions just to try and solve this mystery: Was it a betrayal? Was it an accident? What happened?" Pankoke said.

Amsterdam-based data company Xomnia has developed algorithms that Pankoke said may reveal new links and connections based on the wealth of information "that a human in their lifetime might not be able to review".

Police investigations in 1948 and 1963 too narrowly focused on one individual, warehouse manager Willem van Maaren, without examining alternative scenarios.

In its 2016 study, the Anne Frank Foundation concluded that it was possible that the family had not been betrayed at all, but discovered by accident during a raid by German intelligence officials.

"Despite decades of research, betrayal as a point of departure has delivered nothing conclusive," Ronald Leopold, executive director of the Anne Frank House, said.

"We are pleased that 'Cold Case Diary' is also carrying out research into the arrest and following new leads, and we are interested to see the results."

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Monday, October 2, 2017

Terror trial reopens wounds for French Jews

The trial of Abdelkader Merah, who allegedly helped his brother prepare a nine-day shooting spree in southern France in 2012, began Monday, bringing back haunting memories of the bloodshed for the country's Jews.

  Merah's trial is the first arising from the wave of Islamist attacks that have hit France in recent years. Abdelkader's brother Mohamed killed three soldiers before targeting a Jewish school in Toulouse, gunning down a teacher and three children aged three, five and eight.

The self-proclaimed Al-Qaeda militant was shot dead in a police raid two days later.

French forces gaurd Jewish center in France (Archive photo: Yisrael Bardugo)

French forces gaurd Jewish center in France (Archive photo: Yisrael Bardugo)

"The terrible shock of 19 March, 2012—we still go through it every day, every time we bring the children to school or come to pick them up," France's chief rabbi, Haim Korsia, told AFP. Some 300 Jewish families have since left Toulouse for Israel or other countries, according to Jewish federation CRIF—adding to the estimated 20,000 who emigrated from 2014-2015, spurred by fears over anti-Semitism. Jerome Fourquet, head of opinion at pollster Ifop who wrote a study on the exodus, said the attack on Ozar Hatorah School was the "trigger event" for the mass departures. And while the emigration and reports of anti-Semitic abuse have both since slowed, Europe's biggest Jewish community—numbering half a million people—"remains on edge", he said.

Abdelkader Merah, 35, has been charged with complicity in terrorism, accused of knowingly helping his younger brother with preparations for one of the deadliest attacks against French Jews since World War II.

He helped him steal the scooter used for the three separate shootings.

Mohamed Merah, the terrorist (Photo: AFP)

Mohamed Merah, the terrorist (Photo: AFP)

Another suspect, 34-year-old Fettah Malki, will also go on trial in Paris for giving Merah a bulletproof jacket, an Uzi submachine gun, and the ammunition he unloaded on his victims.

Neither denies giving Merah the items, but both insist they were unaware of his intentions.

Abdelkader faces a possible life sentence, and Malki 20 years behind bars.

Like his brother, Abdelkader—nicknamed "Bin Laden" in the neighborhood—was known to intelligence services for his ties to radical Islamists in Toulouse.

Abdelkader Merah (Photo: AFP)

Abdelkader Merah (Photo: AFP)

Prosecutors claim he shared his brother's ideology, and the two men were repeatedly in contact in the days before the killings.

Simon Cohen, a lawyer representing 160 civil parties including the school, said the trial "comes at a historic moment where we are not finished with the wave of jihadist terrorism."

Merah's shooting spree preceded a string of attacks from 2015 in France that left 239 people dead.

They include four killed by an Islamic State gunman at a kosher supermarket in Paris in January 2015, two days after the attack at satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo.

After that, 10,000 troops were deployed across France under an anti-terrorism operation known as Sentinelle, guarding sensitive sites including synagogues and Jewish schools.

This is credited with contributing to a 58.5 percent drop in reports of anti-Semitic attacks in 2016 compared to a year earlier.

Yet French Jews continue to worry over their security.

There was outrage over the murder of a Jewish woman in April, pushed from a third-floor window by a Muslim neighbor, and over an attack on a Jewish family in their home in the capital's suburbs earlier this month.

Prime Minister Netanyahu and then French President Hollande visiting graves of Toulouse terror attack victims (Photo: Haim Zach, GPO)

Prime Minister Netanyahu and then French President Hollande visiting graves of Toulouse terror attack victims (Photo: Haim Zach, GPO)

Chief rabbi Korsia said Jews were comforted by the outpouring of solidarity that followed the Charlie Hebdo and supermarket attacks, with 3.7 million taking to the streets of France against terrorism.

But he added that many still feel a lack of support.

"There is a kind of keeping us at a distance, an indifference," he said.

"At demonstrations, at ceremonies, we find ourselves very alone."

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