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Monday, July 30, 2018

UK Jewish activist warns 'stampede' of Jews would leave if Corbyn rules

A “stampede” of British Jews would immigrate to Israel if UK Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn was elected prime minister, according to a Jewish activist in the country. “At the moment I don’t believe that they’re (Jews) in danger. I believe that the Jewish people in this country are very concerned about anti-Semitism and it’s rife in the Labour Party,” said Sharon Klaf in an interview with Ynet. “We’ve been monitoring anti-Semitism in the Labour Party since just about before Corbyn became leader of the Labour Party,” she said, adding that one of the fundamental problems under Corbyn’s leadership is its refusal to adopt the international definition of anti-Semitism.

Interview with UK Jewish activist

Britain was one of the first countries to adopt an international definition of anti-Semitism to clamp down on hate crime after an increase in the number of reported incidents targeting Jews. "It means there will be one definition of anti-Semitism—in essence, language or behavior that displays hatred towards Jews because they are Jews—and anyone guilty of that will be called out on it," Prime Minister Theresa May said in pre-released extracts from a speech she was due to deliver in 2016. “The Labour Party needs to find a way to use the definition because the definition … I think the part of the definition that upsets the Labour Party is the part that talks about Israel,” said Klaf. Asked why Jeremy Corbyn is such a threat to the Jewish community, Klaf lamented that “He’s been an activist against Israel” since his youth. Corbyn is known for supporting boycotts against Israel, referring to Hamas and Hezbollah as his friends and generally failing to take seriously complaints of anti-Semitism within his party.
Jeremy Corbyn (Photo: Reuters)

Jeremy Corbyn (Photo: Reuters)

“He referred to Israel as a rogue state” after the deadly Mavi Marmara flotilla incident in 2010, Klaf noted. “He wasn’t talking so much about Palestinian rights. He was talking about Israel as a rogue state. “This is his thinking, that Israel isn’t actually a member of the nation states of the world, of the Western world that is a democracy," she said.  Klaf was asked whether she would advocate Jews from Britain making Aliyah to Israel en mass similar to significant numbers of French Jews leaving for Israel amid a spike in anti-Semitism. “I’m not sure the British Jews are going to be leaving en mass in that way,” but “if Corbyn ever became prime minister, then there would be a mass stampede to leave the country.” Earlier this week, three British Jewish newspapers said that there would be an “existential threat to Jewish life in this country” if Corbyn won power from the ruling Conservative Party. The Jewish Chronicle, Jewish News and Jewish Telegraph said in a joint editorial titled “United We Stand” that the Labour Party had shown a tolerance of anti-Semitism since Corbyn was elected leader of the party in 2015.

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Swastika, Nazi flags and Iron Crosses graffiti at Indiana synagogue

Graffiti including a swastika, an anti-gay slur, and two large painted Nazi flags have been found on Saturday at Congregation Shaarey Tefilla synagogue in the city of Carmel, near Indianapolis.

The heads of the local Jewish community who came to pray in the synagogue on Saturday were shocked to discover graffiti drawings of swastika and two iron crosses identified with the Third Reich on the synagogue's walls.

 (Photo: Debby Barton Grant facebook page)

(Photo: Debby Barton Grant facebook page)

 

The conservative congregation’s Rabbi, Benjamin Sedrow, said that the community was “deeply disappointed in the horrific vandalism that occurred at our Congregation.”

“Intolerance, hatred, and violent acts against Jews are significant realities today. The response to this heinous act affirms that America is collectively outraged at these hateful acts in our neighborhood,” said Sendrow.

Mayor of Carmel Jim Brainard expressed solidarity with the Jewish residents and said that the police had opened an investigation into the attack. No arrests were reported.

 

“There is no place for this kind of hatred in Carmel. This attack does not represent the dignified and welcoming nature of our residents who come from a variety of cultural and religious backgrounds," the mayor said.

"As we are reminded each year during our city's Holocaust Remembrance Ceremony, we must never forget and never stop fighting against the hatred that led to the murder of 6 million Jews. These images that represent the ideas that led to those crimes are not reflective of what our City stands for,” he added.

According to the congregation's Facebook page, all relevant information was given to the Jewish organizations in the area in order to prepare for similar events.

"Congregation Shaarey Tefilla is working with law enforcement as they continue their investigation. In addition, we are working with representatives of the Jewish community in Indianapolis and the Jewish Federation of Carmel to appeal to other synagogues and Jewish organizations and to ensure that they are taking appropriate measures", the Jewish congregation stated.

 (Photo: AFP)

(Photo: AFP)

 US Vice President and former governor of Indiana, Mike Pence wrote on Twitter that he is "Sickened and appalled by the cowardly act of vandalism at Congregation Shaarey Tefilla; a beautiful synagogue in Carmel, Indiana where I have many good friends. Those responsible must be held accountable. These vile acts of anti-Semitism must end.”

The Midwest, especially in the states of Indiana and Ohio, is prone to neo-Nazi organizations' attacks.

In fact, the White Aryan Resistance was founded in Indiana by white supremacist and former Klanssman, Tom Metzger.

Moreover, the American neo-Nazi who was charged with second-degree murder after killing one person and injuring 19 in Charlottesville's riots, James Alex Fields Jr., came from the area.

 (Photo: AP)

(Photo: AP)

In addition, the city of Paoli in Indiana is home to the Traditionalist Worker Party, a relatively influential neo-Nazi, white nationalist group

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Thursday, July 26, 2018

UK Jewish newspapers: Labour leader Corbyn poses 'existential threat'

Three British Jewish newspapers said on Wednesday that there would be an “existential threat to Jewish life in this country” if the opposition Labour Party, led by Jeremy Corbyn, won power from the ruling Conservative Party.

 

The Jewish Chronicle, Jewish News and Jewish Telegraph said in a joint editorial titled “United We Stand” that the Labour Party had shown a tolerance of anti-Semitism since Corbyn was elected leader of the party in 2015.

It said their response was needed “because of the existential threat to Jewish life in this country that would be posed by a Jeremy Corbyn-led government.”

Jeremy Corbyn (Photo: Reuters)

Jeremy Corbyn (Photo: Reuters)

“The party that was, until recently, the natural home for our community has seen its values and integrity eroded by Corbynite contempt for Jews and Israel,” the editorial said.

A Labour spokesman said the party recognized the concerns raised by the Jewish community and acknowledged there was a “huge amount of work to do” to build trust and confidence.

“The next Labour government poses no threat of any kind whatsoever to Jewish people,” the spokesman said.

“The security and wellbeing of Jewish people is a priority for our party and in government we will always ensure schools, synagogues and institutions are properly protected.”

 

Corbyn talks about anti-Semitism

  

Labour is benefiting from turmoil in Prime Minister Theresa May’s Conservatives over Brexit, and has taken the lead in some opinion polls.

While an election need not be held for another four years, the wrangling over Britain’s divorce from the European Union has raised the possibility of a vote much sooner as May struggles to keep her government together.

But, Labour has been wrestling with accusations that it has been tolerant of anti-Semitism among some of its members, and in April leaders of Britain’s 270,000 Jews organized a protest accusing Corbyn of failing to address their concerns.

British Jews protest against Corbyn (Photo: EPA)

British Jews protest against Corbyn (Photo: EPA)

“With the government in Brexit disarray, there is a clear and present danger that a man with a default blindness to the Jewish community’s fears, a man who has a problem seeing that hateful rhetoric aimed at Israel can easily step into anti-Semitism, could be our next prime minister,” the newspapers wrote.

Corbyn has previously apologized for what he called “pockets” of anti-Semitism in the party and promised to stamp them out. He has responded to protests by meeting with Jewish community leaders reassuring Jews they are welcome in the party.

The latest flashpoint was the party’s decision to approve a new code of conduct which Jewish groups said watered-down internationally accepted definition of anti-Semitism. Labour said it had concerns about part of the definition but had re-opened discussions on the code to take into account Jewish community concerns.

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Monday, July 23, 2018

Polish couple uncovers Jewish gravestones in their barn

While overhauling and organizing their large yard, Monika and Christopher Frelian, residents of Klępie Górne, a Polish town near Kielce, were shocked to discover that the floor of their barn was paved with Jewish tombstones.

 

Just as they began tearing down their old barn, Monika noticed “something weird” in the paving stones placed below the barn’s wood floor. “The stones were covered with decades worth of dirt. Only after the rain and wind washed the grime away was the Hebrew writing on the stones revealed,” she said, adding that she knew she had to return them to their natural place, she told a Ynet reporter.

Jewish Gravestones, Poland

Kielce, about a 2.5 hour drive from Warsaw, was a thriving Jewish center before World War Two. About 20,000 Jews lived in the city before the Nazis moved them into the ghetto. Most perished in Treblinka. Monika and her husband gathered all the stones etched with Hebrew writing and placed them in a corner of their yard, between the chickens, rabbits and cows, as a sort of monument. They covered the stones with plastic to avoid further damage.
Jonny Daniels, Mimaamakim, retrieving Jewish gravestones

Jonny Daniels, Mimaamakim, retrieving Jewish gravestones

“About a year ago I saw a similar incident on a television program and I recalled the name of a Jew by the name of Jonny who spoke about how important it is to return the stones to a Jewish cemetery. I sought him out and eventually got hold of him,” Monika told the reporter. Jonny Daniels is the chairman of Mimaamakim (From the Depths), an organization dedicated to preserving the memory of the Holocaust and Jewish culture. Monika called him and “begged that we come and gather the stones. She believed that if she did not find a solution for them something bad would befall her,” he said.
Jonny with the Frelian's

Jonny with the Frelian's

It is believed that during or after the war, Jewish graveyards were used as a source for raw material and gravestones were used as paving stones. Monika’s parents bought the property about 50 years ago, after the barn was already built. They probably had no idea about the gravestones in the barn.

About two weeks ago, in the midst of a light rain, and as if to give the event an emotional touch, Daniels organized a group of volunteers to travel to the Frelian home and "do the last mitzvah (good deed)," as he put it.

The Frelian couple were excited to see the small delegation at their home. The stones were apparently taken from a number of different tombs and while connecting them proved impossible, the engravings left no doubt as to their origins: "The memory of the righteous is blessed," "May his memory be a blessing" and other fragments of Hebrew sentences attested to the purpose they once served.

After an hour of collecting the stones, weighing a few hundred kilograms, the final task was to find the nearest Jewish cemetery. After a few phone calls, one was found about 20 minutes away in Busko-Zdrój.

The cemetery there looked well groomed. Daniels spoke to the custodian, who was not in the area, and it was decided to place the stones at the gate of the cemetery and he would arrange for them to be placed in a proper place.

A few minutes later, after a candle-lighting ceremony, the mission was completed. "It's always exciting to carry out such an operation," said Daniels. "The fact that there are still people in Poland who call on us to come and preserve the memory of the Jewish people is heartwarming, and every event like this, and certainly the return of tombstones to their natural place, is an important event, although it is often impossible to identify to whom they belonged."

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Saturday, July 21, 2018

Kosher meat only for 'registered Jews'

Gottfried Waldhäusl, a member of the far-right Freedom Party of Austria (FPO), has recently proposed to allow vending kosher meat only to Jews whose names appear on a special list as part of the ongoing initiative against kosher slaughter across Europe.

According to the Halacha (Jewish law), mammals and birds used for food are slit with a knife with no anesthetization.

File photo (Photo: EPA)

File photo (Photo: EPA)

According to Oskar Deutsch, the head of Austria’s Jewish community, the vending of kosher meat will be restricted only to Jews registered as Jews who observe Kashrut on a regular basis.

Furthermore, export of kosher-slaughtered meat will be completely barred.

Vienna's kosher restaurants and businesses receive most of their kosher meat from the Lower Austria region where the proposal was initiated.

The Department of Environmental Protection in the Lower Austrian government, which is responsible for animal welfare approved Tuesday the proposal, stressing it is merely a draft.

Waldhäusl who heads the department said that, "to prevent cruelty to animals, I support the kosher slaughter restrictions in any legal way possible."

If the proposal will be passed in law, it would restrict both Jewish and Muslim slaughter ritual.

The initiative sparked uproar mainly since it proposes to hold lists of Jews who keep kosher. "Waldhäusl is seriously suggesting that Jews and Muslims who want to purchase kosher meat will have to register," Austria's former chancellor Christian Kern wrote on his Facebook page.

"The proposed registration of observant Jews (and Muslims, who also require animals to be slaughtered without prior anesthetization) “reminds one of the darkest chapter in our history,” he added.

Animals slaughter without prior anesthetization as required by the Halacha is forbidden in several countries throughout Europe, including Norway, Switzerland, Sweden, Denmark and Iceland.

Austria has a strict supervision over animal slaughter. In addition, animal slaughter without prior anesthetization requires the presence of a veterinarian.

An initiative such as this appears to be a prevalent trend across Europe. Nevertheless, the fact it was crafted by the FPO—a prominent partner in Austria's coalition since December 2017—causes its critics an unease to say the least.

The far-right party that gained a quarter of the constituents' vote in the last elections was established in the 1950's by a former S.S officer and became on of Austria's largest parties in the 1990's.

"We are not sheep that go along with everything," the head of Austria’s Jewish community vented. "I've spoken to Lower Austria's prime minister who promised me the proposal will not pass. However, Waldhäusl's words are an indication of the nature of the Freedom Party's members and (is the proof) we have to be our guards."

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Finding the Jews of Montenegro: One man’s mission

“For centuries Montenegro never had a Jewish community…never,” began Jasa Alfandari, the man who would take it upon himself to change that. “The last known Jewish community was somewhere in the 17th or 18th century, comprised of Portuguese Jews running to Turkey.” That remained the situation until a dynamic force called “Jasa” (pronounced “Yasha”) decided it needed to change and descended upon the region intent on revitalizing not only Montenegro, but the Balkan region as well. When I had the opportunity to meet Jasa several weeks ago I was immediately reconciled to the belief that this larger-than-life man could, indeed, pull-off what we had already been informed was a self-inflicted mission to traipse across the length and breadth of the country finding one Jew at a time to become another link in the first Jewish communal chain after three centuries. What I didn’t know is that it would be the last time I would see Jasa. He died unexpectedly on July 13 in a hospital where he was being treated for back pain and contracted angitis.
Jasa Alfandari, former president of Montenegro's Jewish community.

Jasa Alfandari, former president of Montenegro's Jewish community.

Our meeting was arranged by Rabbi Ari Edelkopf, who upon hearing our interest in Montenegro’s story informed us that what we sought was a 72-year-old man named Jasa who will be pleased to travel an hour to meet us. And he did.

Who, upon first introduction, admonishes his new acquaintance with a warning that “you no doubt are opposed to cigarette smoking, but I’m not stopping?” In the very first minutes of our conversation a distinct melding of the great strength that clearly served him well as he pursued classified security missions for the state of Israel and a loving persona that made his lost flock a personal responsibility that would consume the remainder of his days. Prior to his sudden death, Jasa had single-handedly identified and contacted each Jew living in Albania, Kosovo and Montenegro, worked with the government of Montenegro to have Judaism formally recognized as the nation’s fourth official religion, and created the Machar (Tomorrow) conference—a veritable ingathering of Jews from the Balkan nations.

In a rented apartment in the capital city of Podgorica, set up as a small synagogue and repository of holy books, some dating back one hundred years, wearing his hat as president of Montenegro’s Jewish community, Jasa Alfandari explained that the nation’s ten Jewish families at the time fled when World War Two broke out. In 1941, Jews from Yugoslavia escaped to Albania which was also under Italian occupation until 1943 when the Germans came in to Montenegro and Albania.

“Montenegro and Albania are the only two countries in Europe, where after the war, there were more Jews (1000) than before (200) the war, with the exception of Denmark because they saved all the Jews, and they had 7,000 Jews before the war,” remarked Jasa.

Of the Jews in Montenegro, ninety percent are Ashkenazim (Jews of European descent), and all are intermarried. “We had a couple of intermarriages and it’s a total acceptance of non-Jewish culture, with no Jewish tradition left in the families.

Jasa himself grew up in a very mixed family. Using the Yiddish word for religiously observant, Jasa said, “My mother’s mother was really frum, a fanatical Jew, who was somewhere from Galicia. My grandfather, my mother’s father originally came from Germany and he was a Bundist, the movement that countered Zionism. They didn’t want the Jews to leave Europe before the forming of the Jewish state. They called Israel “Palestina” and said if Jews leave Europe it would be very dangerous. My father was a Sephardi (Oriental) Jew, born in Belgrade where ninety percent of the Sephardi Jews in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia were fans of Hashomer Hatzair, a distinctly anti-religious movement very active in the state’s early days.

“Can you imagine this house I grew up in? In the morning, my grandmother was teaching me prayers and Jewish things; and then in the afternoon my father and mother were teaching me assignments and about Hashomer Hatzair and leftism. So, I picked up everything. Plus there was no one left from my family, so I grew up alone without anybody,” Jasa explained.

In 1968, Jasa left for kibbutz life in Israel followed by army service as a paratrooper. There, he was an outstanding soldier who participated in many serious undercover operations. In 1991, Jasa left Israel to return home where his elderly mother was ailing. Four children and seven grandchildren live in Israel today.

All the time, Jasa was determined to create a Jewish community, to find the Jews of Montenegro. He visited each family one by one.

“We visited all 300 families. They asked me, ‘What for do I need a community? I’m now 65…okay, you told me that I’m Jewish. Good, so what?’

“I found them through the police, through the election list, through informers. Look I used my knowledge from those years in Israel to scratch out the Jews. I have a neighbor and she asked me not to come to her house. Her brother is the president of a European Jewish community.”

One by one, Jasa began to build a community for the Jews, almost all of whom had assimilated “because they felt no danger.” Almost all knew nothing of Judaism, the rituals, traditions or history.

“We have a Jew here who even has a ‘sefer Torah’ (scroll of the Five Books of Moses) given to him by his mother in his house.”

Jasa sent another young girl to Israel several times and nothing changed, “but after the second time she started to wear a Magen David (‘Jewish star’). Five years before there was no chance, but now…,” he told The Media Line.

Ivana was one of the many people Jasa helped by sending her young children to a Jewish day camp. “My mother and grandmother were Jews but both married Montenegrins. I started to go deeper into Judaism for my children. They will have choices whether to follow or not that I did not have.”

Jasa was proud of what he called the “special relationship between the community and government” citing the official contract with the government that made Judaism an official religion—a document Jasa signed on behalf of the Jewish community. “It’s not like the US. Here it is law. The government officially recognizes us as the fourth religion in Montenegro including the Jewish holidays.”

With a broad grin Jasa explained how he called on former Israeli chief rabbi Yona Metzger whom he had known years ago in the army, invited him to Montenegro and told the government that a chief rabbi is “like a pope to the Jews.” So, a meeting was arranged with the prime minister, the president and the speaker of the parliament. As Jasa told it, “before the meeting the prime minister asked me, ‘So what do I request?’”

He replied, “nothing.” But he added that, “I want recognition of the Jewish religion and the community,” and they said ok.

“Three months later, they called me from the cabinet of the prime minister telling me in three days to be the signature on the contract between the Jewish community and the state.”

A recent addition was Rabbi Ari Edelkopf, a Chabad protégée who was chosen to lead the Jewish community. It was one of Jasa’s final moves to infuse religious rituals and practice into Montenegro, as plans for a Jewish community center and synagogue are underway.

Rabbi Ari Edelkopf, a Chabad protégée who was chosen by Jasa Alfandari to lead the Montenegro Jewish community.

Rabbi Ari Edelkopf, a Chabad protégée who was chosen by Jasa Alfandari to lead the Montenegro Jewish community.

Rabbi Edelkopf grew up in Los Angeles where his father was a Rabbi for many years. He served in Sochi, Russia, until he was one of the rabbis who were deported by President Putin.

Rabbi Edelkopf sat in our meeting that day as Jasa spoke of the 300 people who came to celebrate Hanukkah. “Most of them are Jews and they never stepped foot into the community. But they came to see the rabbi and sing songs and lay the cornerstone for the synagogue.

The synagogue and Jewish Community center will stand on prime property donated by the government, right next to the Turkish Embassy. “It’s the most expensive land in Podgorica,” Jasa boasted. “Plans call for a 500-seat center. Such a center, such a place does not exist in the Balkans.”

As the synagogue’s building plans were moving along, Rabbi Edelkopf and his wife decided to celebrate their son becoming a Bar Mitzvah with the Montenegro community. What the Edelkopfs believe will be a first, the festivities will take place in a hotel in Budava City, the same venue that hosted “a real Seder (Passover celebratory meal) with kosher food!”

Six years ago, Jasa created Mahar (which in Hebrew means tomorrow) whose goal is “to teach to those who do not even know what Israel is.” This year’s special guest for the three-day event in October, celebrating Israel’s 70th anniversary, at which more than 500 participants are expected as in previous years, is legendary Israeli general Avigdor Kahalani. Jasa summed up the purpose of Mahar by telling us that, “I don’t know if you can believe that on the first Mahar six years ago, 50 percent of the participants didn’t know the Israeli national anthem, Hatikva. Now, everyone knows Hatikva. It’s enough for me.”

Jasa’s parting words are just the beginning of what lies ahead for the Jewish community leaders. Jelena Djurovic, who is one of the founding members of the community and a vice president says that it is still a mystery how Jasa found her years ago. A politician and a journalist professionally, Jelena’s family was prominent in Balkan life. Her late grandmother was Lotika Zellermeier who was the inspiration of the main character of Ivo Andric’s noble prize-winning novel The Bridge on the Drina, a story about the Jews of Bosnia.

But, Jelena only was told she was Jewish at 11 years of age when the book was about to launch. Her grandmother forbade her mother to disclose her identity until the last moment because people in the community were not aware her family was Jewish.

Government contract signed by Jasa Alfandari recognizing Judaism as an official religion in Montenegro.

Government contract signed by Jasa Alfandari recognizing Judaism as an official religion in Montenegro.

“We grew up in a completely non-Jewish home and we lived together because my grandmother lost some part of her family in Belgrade and some in Dachau. In 1936, she obtained false papers to keep herself and her parents alive and were able to move to Belgrade without being recognized as Jews because we had money.

“’Until I am alive you cannot come to be involved in anything’ Jewish my grandmother told me. And the next 13 years, while my grandmother was alive, I became Jewish but not on the outside. This is irrational, but I needed to fulfill her wish.

From the moment my grandmother died I started wearing a Magen David and never took it off. My mother helped me understand more about religion, politics, history and the Holocaust.

“Today we have 300 members of the Jewish community and we have a rabbi. People are getting in touch, people didn’t practice religion and even more complicated didn’t know they were Jews. We need to take baby steps. We now have a full house of up to 150 people for Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur,” she told The Media Line.

Jelena is still in shock over Jasa’s sudden death. She called him a substitute father, a mentor, teacher and friend. “I can never express what he meant to me. I was ten years old when my father, a Montenegrin and famous lawyer died,” she said.

The community will now need to divide the tasks and determine who will be the president after the Mahar conference in October. They are looking toward their partners, The World Jewish Congress, the Euro-Asian Jewish Congress, and Jewish National Fund to assist them in moving forward.

Hana, Jasa’s youngest daughter, told The Media line that her father established two other Jewish communities in the Balkans: Albania and Kosovo, bringing 150 and 100 Jews into the open. Hana explained that, “It means Jews living here forgot who they are and pushed people to see if they had Jewish roots.

“Growing up I knew I was special but I was not connected with other families. It changed when I was 15, when we started celebrating holidays, learning about tradition and today we have a Rabbi. I don’t feel alone anymore.”

Jasa Alfandari in a makeshift synagogue in Montenegro.

Jasa Alfandari in a makeshift synagogue in Montenegro.

His daughter’s description of her dad reveals the strength and other attributes that one would need to seek out and reunite the “missing” Jews in three nations.

“My Dad was a simple man who started from the bottom. He hunted Nazis in South America, Argentina, Uruguay, and Venezuela. He was like the Europeans (didn’t look Jewish), fluent in 12 languages including Arabic and German. He was basically an undercover spy acting as a German who was able to disguise himself in the German Nazi communities in South America.”

As the community plans its memorial for Jasa, all agree it will take several to do his “work of one” and that the greatest tribute will be to continue his work. Co-vice president Giorgio Raicevic is temporarily filling the office of president of the community.

As daughter Hana told The Media Line, “We cannot replace all the great things he did, we can just follow his path and it is an honor to do so. Mahar will continue, the synagogue will be built and the Jewish community will continue to exist. We will continue to carry his torch. We need to make him proud.”

Article written by Felice Friedman

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Reprinted with permission from The Media Line

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Friday, July 20, 2018

Tisha B'Av fast to begin day late due to Shabbat

Jews the world over will begin fasting on Saturday night until the following evening as they mark the Tisha B’Av mourning the destruction of the First and Second Temples which led to the 2,000-year-old Jewish exile. The annual fast, which falls on ninth of the Jewish calendar month of Av, is supposed to begin on Friday night but was postponed by a day since Jews are forbidden from fasting or mourning on Shabbat.
 (Photo: AFP)

(Photo: AFP)

In addition to remembering the destruction of first and second temples in Jerusalem by the Babylonians and Romans respectively, Tisha B’Av also commemorates the anniversary of a number of disasters in Jewish history.
 (Photo: Reuters)

(Photo: Reuters)


The fast will begin in Jerusalem and Be’er Sheva at 7:43pm, and at 7:45pm in Tel Aviv and Haifa. Over the years, Tisha B’Av has become not merely a time of national mourning, but also a time for introspection, with Jews reminding themselves of Torah Mitzvot (positive deeds and commandments), particularly on positive behavior toward human being.
 (Photo: Reuters)

(Photo: Reuters)

In Israel particularly, it provides an opportunity to hold a discourse on conflicts and divisions within society.

On the night of Tisha B’Av, Jews read from the Book of Lamentations (Kinot), also known as the megillah (book) of Eicha while worshipers gather inside synagogues at night and sit on the floor to symbolize the suffering their ancestors underwent.

 (Photo: Reuters)

(Photo: Reuters)

The entire mourning period lasts for three weeks, and culminates with the 24-hour fast. It is customary not to shave during the three weeks as a sign of mourning while on the 9 days preceding Tisha B'Av, many refrain from purchasing new clothes or other non-essential items, eating meat, except on Shabbat, or listening to live music. On the day of the fast itself, leather shoes which are considered to symbolize wealth and comfort are not worn.

 

The main event of the fast takes place each year at the Western Wall sees a turnout of thousands of Jews flocking to the holy site—the last surviving remnant of the temple, as they pray and lament the its destruction.

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Saturday, July 14, 2018

Hungary soccer team, Jewish leaders remember heroic coach

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Photo: AP
Istvan Toth, a former Ferencvaros player and coach, was in the anti-Nazi resistance and helped save hundreds of Jews during the Holocaust before he was executed in 1945; he was honored ahead of team's Europa League qualifying match against Maccabi Tel. Hungary soccer team, Jewish leaders remember heroic coach : https://ift.tt/2uoMBHR

Wednesday, July 11, 2018

Martin Luther letter critical of Jews is up for auction

A letter written nearly 500 years ago by Martin Luther in which he refers to Jews as "devils incarnate" during a tirade against a former ally is up for auction, but Luther scholars warn that the man responsible for the Reformation should not be called anti-Semitic. The single-page letter, with writing on both sides, is expected to sell for at least $300,000 at the auction being conducted by Boston-based RR Auction that concludes Wednesday.

"Martin Luther items don't come to auction often, and this is in incredibly great shape for a 500-year-old letter," said Robert Livingston, RR's executive vice president.

The letter was written around September 1543 to a top official at Berlin's St. Nicholas Church in response to a letter from the official requesting Luther's interpretation of some Biblical verses by which former Luther friend Johann Agricola justified his positive treatment of Jews in what is now Germany.

 (Photo: AP)

(Photo: AP)

In his reply, Luther tells Georg Buchholzer that he has done well to preach against the Jews and should continue to do so, ignoring Agricola, who Luther accused of being a habitual liar. "For these Jews are not Jews, but devils incarnate who curse our Lord," Luther wrote, according to RR Auction's translation. Luther, whose Ninety-Five Theses in 1517 triggered the Protestant Reformation and seismic rift in Christianity that still exists, sympathized with Jews early on because of the poor way they were treated by the Catholic Church, said Eric Metaxas, author of the 2017 book "Martin Luther." There is no doubt that Luther had strong negative feelings about Jews later in life when he was "cranky and sick," but Metaxas cautioned against comparing 16th century anti-Semitism with 21st century anti-Semitism. "We don't mean what Luther would have meant by it," he said. Luther became frustrated that Jews would not convert to his version of Christianity. "Later in his life, after he had in a sense re-presented the Christian faith the way he thought it should be presented, he was depressed and discouraged by the fact that many Jews of that era did not in fact accept this free gift of grace through Jesus," Metaxas said. Europe had a long history of mistreating Jews, said Christopher Boyd Brown, an associate professor of church history at Boston University. "Luther plays a part in this grim history," Brown said via email. "Yet as appalling as Luther's intolerance of his Jewish contemporaries was, Luther was not an anti-Semite. His criticism of Judaism was rooted in theological disagreement over the reading of shared Scriptures, not in racial animus."
 (Photo: AP)

(Photo: AP)

Luther denounced medieval Christian charges that Jews were responsible for the death of Jesus and was a strong voice for nonviolent religious tolerance, Brown said. The letter, which includes a leather clamshell case, is likely to be sold to a museum or private collector who will know how to properly preserve it, Livingston said.

Lost to history until 1914, when it was discovered in the private collection of a German baron, it is being sold by a German document collector.

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Tuesday, July 10, 2018

Germany agrees to $88 million more for Holocaust survivors

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צילום: דוברות ועידת התביעות
Germany also agrees to increase pensions paid to 55,000 Holocaust survivors in Central and Eastern Europe, and expand eligibility for child survivors. Germany agrees to $88 million more for Holocaust survivors : https://ift.tt/2JaZwlb

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Sunday, July 8, 2018

German police arrests group suspected of assaulting Syrian Jew

A group of people in Berlin has been arrested on suspection of assaulting a Jewish Syrian wearing a necklace with the Star of David, German police said Sunday.

 

The 25-year-old victim told police he got into an argument early Saturday after asking a group of men and women for a lighter for his cigarette.

He said one of the men discovered the necklace, launched into anti-Semitic insults and punched him.

Kippah march in Berlin (Photo: EPA)

Kippah march in Berlin (Photo: EPA)

  

The victim ran off but fell, and was punched and kicked by several people in the group.

The group of seven men and three women, including six Syrians and three German nationals, was detained after passers-by intervened, then released pending further investigation.

Last month, a young Syrian migrant who carried out an anti-Semitic attack on a man wearing a kippah was sentenced to four weeks detention and ordered by the court to visit a museum to learn about the history of anti-Semitism in Germany.

The court in Berlin ruled that the 19 year old had used a belt to hit an Israeli Arab who was wearing a kippah in Berlin as an experiment. He was convicted of insult and grievous bodily harm.

Video of the attack caused a public outcry in April when it was posted on the internet. Anti-Semitism remains a sensitive issue in Germany after more than 6 million Jews were murdered during the Nazi-era Holocaust.

In April, 500 people donned skullcaps for a "Kippah March" in Berlin as a show of defiance against the rising tide of anti-Semitism and as many Jews wonder about their safety in Germany.

The rising tensions have come as a time when Germany has been grappling with an influx of more than 1 million mostly Muslim migrants, along with the rise of a nationalist party, the Alternative for Germany, which was elected to Parliament last year. Its leaders are known for their openly anti-Muslim stance, but their anti-Semitism is less apparent.

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Saturday, July 7, 2018

New Jersey town sued over denial of Chabad expansion plans

It has become a familiar narrative: a religious group seeks to expand on or build a house of worship, a town rejects the application and the parties end up in court.

  In the latest battle between a religious group and a town's zoning board, the US attorney's office claims Woodcliff Lake, New Jersey, in northern Bergen County, has illegally barred an Orthodox Jewish group from expanding its current facility or buying property to build a new one. The town "took actions that prevented Valley Chabad from purchasing alternative sites in the Borough over an eight-year period, and then denied Valley Chabad's efforts to expand on its current site, thus imposing a substantial burden on its religious exercise," a lawsuit filed last month contends. The town has denied the allegations and contends traffic and safety issues were primary sticking points, and that Valley Chabad didn't meet zoning requirements for houses of worship, including that lots be at least three acres.
The Woodcliff Lake suit contains echoes of other recent disputes. Last year, the town of Bernards agreed to pay $3.25 million to a group whose plan to build a mosque it had rejected over several years. Similarly, Bridgewater Township settled a lawsuit with an Islamic center for nearly $8 million after a four-year legal battle. Bayonne approved a Muslim group's plans to build a mosque this year after a lawsuit charged the group was the target of hate-filled attacks. Orthodox Jewish groups have been at the center of other disputes. The US attorney's office sued the town of Mahwah last year, alleging it used local ordinances to discriminate against Orthodox Jews from nearby New York state. After a series of council meetings marked by angry confrontations between residents, in January the town voted to settle a separate suit filed by a local religious organization, and settlement talks with the US attorney's office are ongoing. Both Mahwah and Woodcliff Lake are within miles of Rockland County, New York, where towns such as Monsey and Airmont have concentrations of Orthodox Jews. At a 2013 council meeting referenced in the Woodcliff Lake lawsuit, one resident told council members "we do not need to bring an influx of people from other towns," and a council member spoke of "keeping Woodcliff Lake the town that it is." In the early 2000s, the lawsuit alleges, Rabbi Dov Drizin was asked by a borough official for a letter "that would explain how Valley Chabad differed from the religious community in Monsey." Valley Chabad alleges it began looking for a larger facility more than 10 years ago to accommodate its growing needs. It currently is located in a large house on a hill overlooking the Garden State Parkway. Twice the group entered into contracts to purchase property and both times the town stepped in and bought the land using eminent domain, according to the lawsuit. On a third occasion, the suit alleges, the town modified zoning laws so townhomes could be built on a property Valley Chabad was seeking to buy, leading the property's owner to cancel his contract with Valley Chabad. The group alleges the town rejected its numerous requests for zoning modifications to expand its existing property. The town's response to the lawsuit is due later this month, and an attorney representing the town declined comment, as did Mayor Carlos Rendo, a Republican who ran unsuccessfully for lieutenant governor last year. The town's statement denied discrimination played any part, and said it was "saddened by the response of the Valley Chabad in their choice to take this action against our quiet New Jersey town, comprised of hard working people of all faiths that welcomed them into our community."

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Sunday, July 1, 2018

Panthon burial honors French rights icon, Holocaust survivor Simone Veil

Thousands of people gathered in Paris on Sunday to pay their final respects to Holocaust survivor and women's rights icon Simone Veil as she was given the rare honor of burial at the Panthéon a year and a day after she died.

Veil's death at the age of 89 prompted an outpouring of emotion as she had long been considered one of France's most popular and trusted public figures.

The Panthéon in the heart of Paris houses the remains of many great French figures, including Voltaire, Victor Hugo and Emile Zola. But Veil is only the fifth woman to be buried there, being laid to rest alongside her husband Antoine, a high-ranking civil servant who died in 2013.

French Republican Guards arrive to carry the coffins of Simone Veil and her husband Antoine Veil to the Panthéon on Sunday (Photo: EPA)

French Republican Guards arrive to carry the coffins of Simone Veil and her husband Antoine Veil to the Panthéon on Sunday (Photo: EPA)

Their two coffins were escorted by Republican Guards through Paris from the Holocaust Memorial where they had stood for 48 hours to allow the public to pay their last respects. The coffins were then placed on funeral biers before carried by pall-bearers on a blue carpet leading to the Pantheon.

Among the crowds were many women wearing T-shirts with the slogan: "Thank you Simone."

Simone Veil had long been considered one of France's most popular and trusted public figures (Photo: AFP)

Simone Veil had long been considered one of France's most popular and trusted public figures (Photo: AFP)

"She broke every glass ceiling, in terms of women in society, but also that of (France's role in) the extermination of the Jews: it was taboo," said Bernard Greensfeld, one of those standing outside the Holocaust memorial.

"She's not going into the Panthéon as a Holocaust victim but as someone who overcame this horror and that's why she's in people's hearts," he told AFP.

Simone Veil was 16 when she was deported along with family members in 1944 to Auschwitz. Her mother, father and brother were killed in the Holocaust. After her return, she became a resolute advocate of women's rights as well as European reconciliation, securing her biggest political victory in 1974 by convincing the French parliament to legalize abortion despite fierce opposition.

She also became the first elected president of the European Parliament in 1979, a post she held for three years.

 (Photo: EPA)

(Photo: EPA)

The move to have Veil's remains transferred to the Panthéon began immediately after her death on June 30, 2017, with two petitions quickly gaining hundreds of thousands of signatures.

Until now, only four women have been interred there: scientist Marie Curie, Sophie Berthelot, who was buried alongside her chemist husband Marcellin Berthelot and two resistance fighters Genevieve de Gaulle-Anthonioz and Germaine Tillion.

As the sun beat down, a large crowd gathered for the ceremony which was attended by members of her family, and a host of politicians and dignitaries, among them the former presidents Francois Hollande and Nicolas Sarkozy.

At the ceremony, President Emmanuel Macron said the decision to bury her in the Panthéon was a decision taken by the entire nation.

President Macron stands by the coffins (Photo: EPA)

President Macron stands by the coffins (Photo: EPA)

"It is... what all French people wanted," he said. "With Simone Veil, all the women that have made France are here."

The transfer of Veil's remains had began on Friday, when the couple's coffins were exhumed from the Montparnasse cemetery and brought to the crypt of the French Holocaust Memorial in central Paris, which she helped found.

After Macron's address, the two coffins were transferred into the Panthéon where the coffins will lie in state until Monday, with admission free until July 8.

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