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September 3, 2008

Putting a $3 million lotto ticket in the offering plate

A mystery man won $3 million in the lottery, and then gave the winning ticket to his pastor at True North Community Church on Long Island.

“Our congregation has outgrown its facility,” Pastor Bert Crabbe said. “We’re having four services a week and adding a fifth. We needed another place to meet and I told the congregation, ‘Unless God drops a couple of million on us…’ I was joking, I wasn’t asking for it or praying for it. ‘Unless this happens we’ll end up renting a facility somewhere.’ And then this happened.”

Either this guy has a skull filled with stones or a heart of gold. Either way, good for him.

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Michele Obama’s cousin’s cousin is a rabbi; Abbas met with Kuntar

Michelle Obama’s Cousin Has Family Link to Most Prominent Black Rabbi in U.S.

A cousin of the wife of Barack Obama, the Democratic presidential nominee, is a cousin of this country’s most prominent black rabbi, according to a report in The Forward.

Rabbi Capers Funnye is chief rabbi at the Beth Shalom B’nai Zaken Ethiopian Hebrew Congregation in southwest Chicago.

He is well-known in Jewish circles for acting as a bridge between mainstream Jewry and the much smaller, and largely separate world of black Jewish congregations, sometimes known as black Hebrews or Israelites.

Funnye described himself as an independent in an interview with The Forward and said he has not been involved with the Obama campaign, but that he has donated money and was cheering it on.

Freed Terrorist Reports Meeting With Abbas

Lebanese terrorist Samir Kuntar said he met Mahmoud Abbas at the Palestinian Authority president’s request. Kuntar said in a statement that Abbas asked for the meeting, for which Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert rebuked Abbas, when the two leaders met Sunday.

Kuntar, who was responsible for the murder of three members of one Israeli family and an Israeli police officer in a 1979 attack, was released from an Israeli prison in July as part of a prisoner swap that repatriated the bodies of two kidnapped Israeli soldiers. Abbas told Olmert that Kuntar initiated the unplanned meeting.

Israel Foils Hezbollah Kidnapping Attempts

Israel has stopped at least two attempts to kidnap its citizens abroad. Defense Minister Ehud Barak confirmed Tuesday that Israel recently foiled attempts to abduct Israelis abroad, Yediot Achranot reported. The newspaper reported that five attempted kidnappings by Hezbollah operatives had been foiled; other Israeli publications put the number at two.

The attempted kidnappings were prevented with assistance from foreign intelligence services. Israel’s military censor has banned publication of details of the attempts. The plots were stopped at advanced stages, the newspaper Ha’aretz reported.

The attempted kidnappings are reportedly being planned as revenge for the killing of Hezbollah’s operations chief, Imad Mughniyeh, killed in February in a car bombing in Damascus. Hezbollah blames Israel for the attack, although Israel has denied involvement in the bombing.

The revelation of the foiled kidnappings came two weeks after Israel’s counterterrorism bureau issued a travel advisory warning Israelis traveling abroad of the danger of being kidnapped by Hezbollah and asked travelers to take certain precautions.

Israel Can Enforce U.S. Decision Ordering PA to Pay Terror Victims, Judge Rules

Israel can enforce a U.S. court ruling ordering the Palestinian Authority to compensate terror victims, an Israeli court ruled. Jerusalem District Court Judge Aharon Farkash on Monday rejected a petition filed by the Palestinian Authority (PA), which said that Israel could not enforce a 2004 U.S. Supreme Court ruling awarding $116 million to the family of terror victims Yaron and Efrat Ungar.

The Ungars, who were American citizens, were killed in 1996 when they were attacked in their car by Palestinian terrorists. The family sued the Palestinian Authority and, following the Supreme Court ruling, petitioned the Jerusalem court to ensure that the ruling was enforceable in Israel. The Palestinian Authority argued that enforcing the lawsuit in Israel and requiring it to pay the compensation could lead to other lawsuits against the organization and bankrupt the PA.

Peace Activist Abie Nathan Dies

Abie Nathan, whose Voice of Peace pirate radio station broadcast from a ship in the Mediterranean Sea, has died. The peace activist died in Tel Aviv last week after a long illness. He was 81.

Abraham Jacob Nathan was born in Iran and grew up in India. He immigrated to Israel in 1948 during the War for Independence, in which he served in Israel’s air force, building on his experience as a fighter pilot in Britain’s Royal Air Force.

Nathan tried to accelerate peace between Israel and the Arab world by making a solo flight to Egypt in 1966. He was unsuccessful then in meeting with Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser. He was again unsuccessful in 1967 and was jailed in Israel for the attempt, because Egypt and Israel did not have diplomatic ties at the time.

The activist went on several hunger strikes in the 1970s to press Israel and the Arab world to make peace, and he met with leaders such as Pope John Paul VI and Robert Kennedy in his quest. Nathan’s Peace Ship, which broadcast pop music and messages of peace, was partially funded by John Lennon. After Israel and the Palestinians signed an interim peace agreement, Nathan sank the ship in 1994.

He was jailed for meeting with Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat when it was illegal for an Israeli citizen to do so. He later met with Arafat again in 1993 after the law was repealed. He is survived by his daughter, Sharona.

Briefs courtesy of the Jewish Telegraphic Agency

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Convention Notes: Hadassah Lieberman — ‘I’m not a Republican’

ST. PAUL (JTA) — Like her husband, Sen. Joseph Lieberman (I-Conn.), Hadassah Lieberman is backing John McCain for president. On Monday afternoon, she was the featured speaker at the Republican Jewish Coalition’s (RJC) National Women’s Committee fundraiser and fashion show in Minneapolis.

But, Lieberman insisted that doesn’t mean she’s become a Republican.

A global ambassador for the Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation, Lieberman said she attended Monday’s event at the Neiman Marcus store because the RJC women’s committee was raising money for the organization. Because of Hurricane Gustav, proceeds from the fundraiser will go to the American Red Cross Hurricane Relief Fund, but Linda Law, women’s committee chair, said she would match the total raised Monday and donate it to the breast cancer organization.

Lieberman told reporters after the event that she had been a registered independent until she married her husband, and she was advised to become a Democrat. When Sen. Lieberman was defeated in the Democratic primary in 2006 and then won as an independent, she returned to political independence — and has no plans to change.

As for the presidential race, she said, “I love John … I hope he wins,” but she said she wasn’t officially endorsing anyone. When asked about the presumptive Republican nominee’s opposition to reproductive rights, she acknowledged that there were differences between some of her views and McCain’s.

In her speech to the 200 at the RJC event, which was pegged to the Republican convention, Lieberman alluded to the support her husband received from Republican Jews in his 2006 Senate win.

“When [Joe] decided to run as an independent, a lot of you were out there, and we did not forget that,” she said.

Lieberman lost in the Democratic primary to challenger Ned Lamont but then beat Lamont in the general election.

Among the other luminaries in attendance Monday afternoon were Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings, Florida state Rep. Adam Hasner, former Massachusetts Lt. Gov Kerry Healey, Rep. Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.), Texas state Sen. Florence Shapiro, radio talk show host Dennis Prager and NBC newswoman Norah O’Donnell.

Paula Waterfield wears three items around her neck: a Star of David for her religion, a flag for her country and a silver star for her son James, who is on his sixth tour of duty in Iraq.

Waterfield is a member of Families United for Our Troops and Their Mission, which was in Minneapolis for a Support Our Troops rally on Monday to coincide with the Republican National Convention. On Sunday afternoon, the Nebraska City, Neb., resident and other members of the organization were invited guests to the film premiere of “An American Carol.” The movie was directed by “Airplane!” director David Zucker, who just happened to be a Sunday school classmate of Waterfield’s when they both were growing up in a suburb of Milwaukee.

Waterfield said she doesn’t often talk to her son, 41, about being Jewish in the military — although she said he does wonder if wearing a Star of David around his neck is a good idea — but did say that he does get to attend religious services on holidays “once in a while.”

The chair of Families United, Merrilee Carlson, was in Denver last week outside the Democratic National Convention. Carlson said she had been “underwhelmed by the strength of the anti-war protesters,” feeling that the “wind has been pulled out of their sails” by the success of the surge in Iraq.

When film director Zucker was first told there was a RJC, he replied, “That’s like Indians for Custer!” But it turned out that the RJC was how Zucker, co-creator of “Airplane!” met Myrna Sokoloff, co-writer for his latest film, “An American Carol.”

Both Sokoloff and Zucker were “9/11 Republicans.” Larry Greenfield of the RJC’s Los Angeles chapter introduced Zucker to Sokoloff because the filmmaker wanted to write a letter to Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.), whom he had previously supported, telling her he now supported President Bush.

“We never wrote the letter,” recalled Sokoloff, who had been a campaign operative for Democrats, including Boxer, in the 1980s and 1990s, has a master’s degree in Jewish education from Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion and was an aspiring screenwriter.

They teamed up to make an anti-Kerry ad for the 2004 presidential race and partnered to make “An American Carol,” a spin on the classic “A Christmas Carol,” in which a documentary filmmaker with a remarkable resemblance to Michael Moore is taught to love America. Kevin Farley, brother of the late comedian Chris Farley, plays “Michael Malone,” and Leslie Nielsen, Kelsey Grammer and Jon Voight are among the stars who appear in the film.

The movie was previewed in Minneapolis Sunday before the Republican National Convention. After the film received a standing ovation, Zucker pointed out to the crowd that the producer of his movie, Stephen McEveety, also produced Mel Gibson’s film, “The Passion of the Christ.”

Zucker joked that since McEveety had been so successful with a film that consisted mostly of “Jews beating up God,” he had urged Zucker to insert scenes of “Jews beating up the pope or Gandhi.”

As for the film, there is some of the slapstick and classic sight gags that Zucker’s films are known for — at an anti-war protest, the back of one protester’s sign reads, “See Other Side.” And there are a few uproarious scenes, particularly a training film early in the movie showing the right and wrong ways to carry out a suicide bombing: Ahmad finds his target, while Ahman doesn’t have the proper directions and blows up before he gets there.

However, as the film goes along, the humor seems to give way to the political message, which gets very heavy-handed at times. The filmmakers seem to really dislike Moore — the character is even called unprintable names by his niece. It will open nationally on Oct. 8.

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GOP platform offers strong support for Israel, veers right domestically

MINNEAPOLIS (JTA)—John McCain’s Jewish supporters characterize him as a Republican maverick who shares his party’s bedrock support for Israel and combating anti-Semitism. Critics dismiss him as the standard-bearer of a staunchly conservative party at odds with the Jewish community on a host of issues.

They’re both right, judging from the platform approved this week at the Republican convention in St. Paul and Minneapolis.

The platform includes a call for an end to all government-funded embryonic stem-cell research and a ban on all abortions—positions that, polls show, are contrary to those of most Jewish voters. Of course, they also do not conform to the views of McCain, who has said that he would revoke President Bush’s restrictions on federal funding for stem-cell research, permit abortions in cases of rape, incest and threats to the life of the mother.

On immigration, McCain, the U.S. senator from Arizona who is the presumptive Republican nominee for president, has pressed for legislation that would provide undocumented workers with a path toward citizenship, but the platform declares: “We oppose amnesty.”

The McCain campaign reportedly decided to avoid significant fights over the platform rather than upset leaders of the party’s conservative base, many of whom have expressed concern over the GOP nominee. His supporters argue that the platform is irrelevant to understanding McCain and that voters will make their decisions based on how they view the candidate.

Texas state Sen. Florence Shapiro, the only Jewish female Republican in her state legislature, said that the platform is “not what guides my everyday” decision-making and doubts voters will be using it to make decisions either.

They will and should be “looking at John McCain and his positions and record,” she said.

Another Jewish delegate from Texas, Houstonian Stuart Mayper, said the strong “pro-life” language in the platform could be a problem for some Jews. But, he quickly added, the platform contains language strongly supportive of Israel that should be attractive to the Jewish community.

Sources familiar with the formation of the platform say the language dealing with Israel and fighting anti-Semitism was drafted in consultation with the American Israel Public Affairs Committee and other Jewish groups.

The platform echoes AIPAC’s position on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, calling for a two-state solution but placing the onus on the Palestinians to take several key steps and calling on nearby Arab countries to play a more constructive role. It also declares support for “Jerusalem as the undivided capital of Israel and moving the American embassy to that undivided capital of Israel.”

Both McCain and Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.), the Democratic nominee, have said that the status of Jerusalem ultimately would be decided in negotiations between the two sides. McCain has pledged to move the embassy to Jerusalem right away—a promise that the Obama campaign rejected, essentially calling it a lie.

The GOP platform calls for the isolation of Hamas and Hezbollah and vows to maintain Israel’s qualitative edge in military technology over its enemies—all positions shared by Obama and McCain.

In several contexts, the platform stresses the need to combat anti-Semitism—on university campuses, in Europe and across the world—and declares that “discrimination against Israel at the U.N. is unacceptable.”

It says that Iran cannot be permitted to obtain nuclear weapons, calls for a “significant increase in political, economic, and diplomatic pressure” on Tehran and insists that the United States “must retain all options” in dealing with the situation.

Without naming Obama, the platform draws a contrast with the Democratic nominee’s previously stated willingness to meet with the Iranian president. It states: “We oppose entering into a presidential-level, unconditional dialogue with the regime in Iran until it takes steps to improve its behavior, particularly with respect to the support of terrorism and suspension of its efforts to enrich uranium.”

GOP platform offers strong support for Israel, veers right domestically Read More »

Sarah Palin tells AIPAC she’s pro-Israel

MINNEAPOLIS (JTA)—Sarah Palin, the Alaska governor who was tapped last week by Sen. John McCain to be his vice-presidential running mate, met for 45 minutes Tuesday in the Minneapolis area with several leaders of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee.

Also in attendance at the AIPAC meeting was U.S. Sen. Joseph Lieberman (I-Conn.), the McCain campaign’s most prominent Jewish backer.

McCain campaign spokesman Michael Goldfarb said Palin spoke about “the relationship between Israel and American national security, and the threats to Israel from Iran and others.”

“She was extremely well received,” Goldfarb said, noting that Palin was interrupted by applause twice.

AIPAC also praised the meeting.

” We had a good, productive discussion on the importance of the U.S.-Israel relationship, and we were pleased that Gov. Palin expressed her deep, personal and lifelong commitment to the safety and well-being of Israel,” the group’s spokesman, Josh Block, said in a statement.

“She expressed her support for the special friendship between the two democracies and said she would work to expand and deepen the strategic partnership between the U.S. and Israel.”

Block also praised the Democratic ticket.

“Now that both the Democrats and the Republicans have determined their respective tickets, AIPAC is pleased that both parties have selected four pro-Israel candidates,” he said. “In so doing, they have reaffirmed the broad bipartisan support that exists in our country for a strong U.S.-Israel relationship.”

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Putting the Bible’s stories, not books, in order

When did bloggers—the proverbial man on the cyberstreet—become expert sources that an entire story can hinge one? Case in point is this article from the Christian Post that discusses a new chronological bible coming out next month. The story begins:

A new Bible that arranges Scripture according to when the events occurred – as opposed to when it was written – has re-opened debate in the Christian blogosphere over whether chronological ordering leads to clarity or confusion.

Bible publishing giant Thomas Nelson is set to debut the Chronological Study Bible next month, marketing the book as the “only study Bible that presents the text of the New King James Version in chronological order”.

In the edition, well-known books in the Bible like the Gospels, Psalms and the Epistles of Apostle Paul are chopped up and re-woven with other texts to fit the historical timeline.

Yes, the phrase Christian blogosphere actually appears in the first sentence. It is later complimented by this marvelous transition to controversy:

But some Christians see a dead end to this journey.

“It bothers me when bad historical criticism trumps narrative structure,” writes one blogger by the name of Drew. “It’s primarily a set of theological texts that have historical significance, not a set of historical texts that have theological significance.”

Since it apparently matters what bloggers think, and I am a blogger, I’d be fascinated to read this new Bible version. On my bookshelves, I already have “The Narrated Bible,” which places the book, though not the stories themselves, in chronological order. Sure, this won’t be the traditional canon Christians are familiar with—and let’s remember, there are three different “traditional” Christian Bibles—but it will offer a beneficial additional perspective, like the Skycam at football games: You rarely are shown footage from this behind the quarterback angle, but when it is used, it reveals something new.

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Palin visits AIPAC, promises to strengthen U.S.-Israel ties

Just days after John McCain plucked Sarah Palin as his running mate, the Alaskan governor paid a visit to AIPAC to voice her support for Israel, something she definitely needed to do because of her support for Pat Buchanan’s 2000 presidential campaign.

Unlike McCain and Barack Obama, who dueled at AIPAC’s policy conference in June, Palin offered no sweeping statements regarding Jerusalem or Israel’s threat from Iran. She settled for the much more diplomatic commitment to “work to expand and deepen the strategic partnership between U.S. and Israel.”

Every legitimate candidate pays such respect to AIPAC and the U.S.-Israel relationship. But does she mean it? Considering McCain’s record, I’d imagine so.

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Evangelicals and the Palin pregnancy

From the all-Sarah-Palin-all-time file, Perez Hilton says, “It’s called karma.”

I don’t believe in karma and I don’t think the Palin parents are to blame for a mistake made by their daughter. We all make mistakes—even though some of my Christian friends who have been where Bristol is would say their baby was no mistake. And while this case of teen pregnancy hits quite close to home—actually, right at home—for Sarah Palin, I don’t suspect it will change her stance on funding for teen moms.

The amazing thing to me, so far, has been the way that Bristol Palin’s pregnancy, and commitment to keep the baby, has energized evangelical Christians. Instead of being a liability, as I suspected, they see her case as a courageous example of owning up and taking responsibility for your mistakes.

I wonder if the McCain campaign had polled this possible reaction before selecting Palin …

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McCain team: Palin rejects views of church’s Jews for Jesus speaker

NEW YORK (JTA)—Vice presidential pick Sarah Palin says she doesn’t share the views of a Jews for Jesus leader who in a speech at her church suggested that violence against Israelis resulted from God’s judgment against Jews who have failed to embrace Jesus.

David Brickner, the executive director of Jews for Jesus, suggested in his Aug. 17 sermon at Wasilla Bible Church that the refusal to accept Jesus was responsible for the long history of devastation visited upon Jerusalem. He also described his group’s successful targeting of Israeli Jews, both in Israel and elsewhere.

“Judgment is very real, and we see it played out on the pages of the newspapers and on the television,” said Brickner, according to a transcript posted on the church’s Web site. “It’s very real. When [my son] Isaac was in Jerusalem he was there to witness some of that judgment—some of that conflict—when a Palestinian from East Jerusalem took a bulldozer and went plowing through a score of cars, killing numbers of people. Judgment—you can’t miss it.”



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Joe Biden: AIPAC doesn’t speak for all Jews

Joe Biden pledged to respect Israel’s autonomy, but defended his willingnes to oppose some AIPAC-backed measures.

In a 20-minute conference call Wednesday with members of the Jewish media, Biden said it was up to the Israelis to make decisions about war and peace, including the question of whether to launch a strike aimed at disrupting Iran’s nuclear program.

“This is not a question for us to tell the Israelis what they can and cannot do,” said the Democratic vice presidential candidate said. ”I have faith in the democracy of Israel. They will arrive at the right decision that they view as being in their own interests.”

That said, Biden added, the Bush administration could have done much more on the diplomatic front to help avert the potential need for military action. He also accused the White House of not doing enough to promote Israeli-Palestinian negotiations and faulted it for reportedly ordering Jerusalem not to engage in talks with Syria.

Even as he pledged to respect Israel’s decisions on peace and security, Biden vigorously defended his record of occasionally breaking ranks with the pro-Israel lobby.

“AIPAC does not speak for the entire American Jewish community,” Biden said. “There’s other organizations as strong and as consequential.”

Despite any occasional claims to the contrary, AIPAC does not speak for Israel, the longtime Delaware senator added.

Biden made a point of stressing that he and the organization agreed on the fundamentals.

“I’ve never disagreed with AIPAC on the objective,” Biden said. “Whenever I’ve had disagreement with AIPAC it has always been a tactical disagreement, not a substantive disagreement.”

Biden then addressed his opposition last year to an amendment sponsored by U.S. Sens. Joe Lieberman (I-Conn.) and John Kyl (R-Ariz.), and heavily backed by AIPAC, that called on the Bush administration to declare the Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps a terrorist group.

During the conference call, Biden stressed that he shared the view that the Iranian group is a terrorist organization and said the Bush administration already had the power to designate it as such. His fear was that the White House would misuse the measure to justify a military attack against Iran.

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