fbpx

August 1, 2010

Hebrew charter school to open in N.J.

New Jersey has given final approval to open the state’s first Hebrew-language charter school.

The state’s Department of Education in a July 6 vote gave permission to open the Hatikvah International Academy Charter School in East Brunswick, according to The New Jersey Jewish News.

The school, which will open next year with 108 students in kindergarten through second grade, had to ensure that 90 percent of its students came from East Brunswick. The rest will be chosen by lottery.

Hatikvah will open in rented space but plans to build a permanent site in East Brunswick.

Hebrew charter schools, which offer non-religious but Hebrew-focused curricula, are being looked at across the country as less-expensive alternatives to Jewish day schools.

Several of the schools exist in New York and Florida.

Hatikvah received start-up grants of $35,000 and $50,000 from Michael Steinhardt’s Areivim fund to help build a Hebrew charter school movement.

Hebrew charter school to open in N.J. Read More »

Peres calls British ‘anti-Israeli,’ sees UK anti-Semitism

Israeli President Shimon Peres has caused a storm in England after accusing the British establishment of being “deeply pro-Arab” and “anti-Israeli.”

In a recent interview with the Jewish news website Tablet, Peres said also that there is anti-Semitism among the British.

“In England there has always been something deeply pro-Arab, of course, not among all Englishmen, and anti-Israeli, in the establishment,” he told Tablet in a Q&A conducted by the Israeli historian Benny Morris.

Peres, who in 2008 received an honorary knighthood from Queen Elizabeth II, said the British “abstained in the [pro-Zionist] 1947 U.N. partition resolution … They maintained an arms embargo against us in the 1950s … They had a defense treaty with Jordan, they always worked against us.”

The Israeli president went to say that the British “think the Palestinians are the underdog … “Even though this is irrational.”

On British anti-Semitism, Peres, 86, noted that “There is in England a saying that an anti-Semite is someone who hates the Jews more than is necessary.”

Peres accused British lawmakers of pandering to Muslim voters in order to retain their seats in Parliament.

“There are several million Muslim voters, and for many members of Parliament, that’s the difference between getting elected and not getting elected,” he said.

British Prime Minister David Cameron last week described Gaza as a “prison camp” during a visit to Turkey.

Peres’ comments generated angry reactions from Jewish and non-Jewish members of Parliament.

Conservative lawmaker James Clappison, vice chairman of Conservative Friends of Israel, said Peres “got it wrong.”

“There are pro- and anti-Israel views in all European countries,” Clappison said in an interview that appeared Sunday in the Telegraph of London. “Things are certainly no worse, as far as Israel is concerned, in this country than other European countries.”

Rabbi Jonathan Romain of the Maidenhead synagogue also told the newspaper, “It is a sweeping statement that is far too one-sided,” adding that “The tolerance and pluralism here make Britain one of the best countries in the world in which to live.”

However, Jacob Vince, the director of Christian Friends of Israel, described Peres’ remarks as “measured and moderate.” He added that there was anti-Semitism in Britain, although many people had a positive view of Israel but were unwilling to express it publicly.

Vince said it was “difficult to see how many MPs would not be influenced by the number of Muslim voters in their constituencies.”

The past decade has seen a significant rise in anti-Semitic incidents in Britain, according to data collected by the Community Security Trust, which was established in 1984 to monitor such incidents. In 2009 there were 924 anti-Semitic incidents—55 percent higher than the record set in 2006.

The incidents include only verifiable reports of physical assaults, verbal abuse and racist graffiti.

Peres calls British ‘anti-Israeli,’ sees UK anti-Semitism Read More »

Bibi: Direct peace talks look set for mid-August

Direct peace talks between Israel and the Palestinians could begin as early as mid-August, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said.

The Israeli leader told his Cabinet Sunday that the timing has not been confirmed, but “It appears that direct talks will begin in mid-August.” Netanyahu said the timing for the direct talks would “become clear in the next few days.”

The announcement comes just days after the Arab League said it would back direct talks between Israel and the Palestinians when the Palestinians are ready to proceed, and also expressed support for continuing indirect talks between Israel and the Palestinians.

Palestinian chief negotiator Saeb Erekat said the Palestinians had submitted a “far-reaching” peace proposal to President Obama that would end the conflict with Israel and resolve all Palestinian claims, Haaretz reported Saturday.

Also Saturday, the White House reportedly declined to comment to Politico’s Laura Rozen on reports that Obama had sent a letter to Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas warning that relations with the United States could be affected if Abbas did not agree to enter direct talks with the Israelis during the month of August, as reported in the Israeli daily Maariv and the London-based Arabic Al Hayat newspapers.

According to the newspapers, which cited Erekat as well as a leaked copy of the letter, Obama pledged that if Abbas agreed to go into direct talks, there would be an extension of a West Bank construction freeze that is set to end late in September.

Bibi: Direct peace talks look set for mid-August Read More »

Report: U.S. companies helped finance Dubai slaying

Money transfers made through U.S. companies may have used to help finance the January assassination of a senior Hamas leader, the Wall Street Journal reported.

The transfers were discovered by American investigators cooperating with the probe into the Jan. 20 assassination of Mahmoud al-Mabhouh in a hotel room in Dubai.

Some 33 members of an assassination team widely speculated to have been agents of Israel’s Mossad used forged passports from Britain, Ireland, Australia and Germany to enter and leave Dubai. Israel has neither confirmed nor denied that its intelligence service was behind the assassination.

Saturday’s report in The Wall Street Journal shows American authorities playing a larger role in the investigation than previously thought.

Following the trail of the money transfers made through the U.S. companies could provide clues to identifying the suspects in the case, sources told the Journal. The companies include Internet-based businesses that process payments between employers and freelance employees into prepaid, cash-card accounts. The suspects in the Dubai killing reportedly used such accounts to pay for airplane tickets and hotel rooms.

The companies did not know the money would be used in the plot, a source told the newspaper.

Earlier this year, Dubai police identified 13 U.S.-issued cash-card accounts that they said suspects used in the operation, obtained with false passports, the Journal reported.

Report: U.S. companies helped finance Dubai slaying Read More »

Rockets from Gaza strike Israel, which retaliates

Several rockets were fired from Gaza into Israel over the weekend, leading to Israeli airstrikes in retaliation.

In one of the retaliatory attacks, a top Hamas commander was killed, according to the Jerusalem Post, which cited Palestinian reports.

On Sunday, a mortar shell landed in the western Negev, causing no damage or injuries, according to reports.

The rocket followed an attack Saturday night in which a Kassam rocket struck the roof of an empty public building near Sderot. The building’s roof and three rooms were damaged, but there were no injuries.

Israel’s Air Force retaliated later Saturday with a strike on what the military identified as a Hamas-linked terror tunnel and a weapons-smuggling tunnel in the southern Gaza Strip.

A long-range Grad rocket fired last Friday from Gaza landed in the city of Ashkelon, causing damage to buildings and cars, according to the Israel Defense Forces.

Israel’s Air Force responded later in the day, striking a Hamas-linked terror activity site in the northern Gaza Strip, a weapons-manufacturing warehouse in the central Gaza Strip and a weapons-smuggling tunnel in the southern Gaza Strip, according to the IDF.

A top Hamas commander was killed and 11 Gazans were wounded in the retaliatory strike, the Jerusalem Post reported, citing Palestinian reports. The dead commander was identified as Issa Batran, 42, a commander of the group’s Izzadin Kassam military wing in central Gaza and a senior rocket maker.

“I view Hamas as directly responsible for all the attacks on Israel, and I believe the international community should see it the same way,” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said at the beginning of Sunday’s regular Cabinet meeting.

The Israel-based Office of the United Nations Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process (UNSCO) condemned the attack on Ashkelon.

“Indiscriminate rocket fire against civilians is completely unacceptable and constitutes a terrorist attack,” the statement from Special Mideast coordinator Robert Serry’s office said. “We call on the de-facto authorities in Gaza to ensure that these kinds of actions do not occur.”

Also over the weekend, Israel’s U.N. envoy in Geneva, Aharon Leshno Yaar, submitted an official complaint to the Human Rights Council over the continuing rocket attacks. The complaint pointed out that the attacks targeted civilian targets.

Some 110 rockets and mortars have been fired at Israeli territory since the beginning of 2010, and more than 400 rockets were fired from the Gaza Strip into Israel since the end of Operation Cast Lead, the monthlong 2008-09 Gaza war, according to the IDF.

Rockets from Gaza strike Israel, which retaliates Read More »

Aboriginal elder to be honored by Yad Vashem

An Aboriginal elder who protested the “cruel persecution” of the Jews by the Nazis will become the first indigenous Australian to be honored by Yad Vashem.

A memorial garden in honor of William Cooper of the Yorta Yorta tribe will be unveiled at the national Holocaust memorial in Jerusalem on Dec. 15, it was announced last Friday in a statement issued by Albert Dadon, the founder of the Australia Israel Cultural Exchange.

Cooper was 77 years old when he led a small march to deliver a petition to the German consul general in Melbourne just weeks after Kristallnacht. Although Cooper and his Australian Aborigines League were denied entry to the consulate on Dec. 6, 1938, their protest did not go unnoticed, even though they were half a world away from Europe.

He died in 1941 at the age of 80.

Researchers at Yad Vashem have spent the past year verifying the details of Cooper’s protest after Dadon was inspired to leave a lasting legacy following a recent visit to Israel with an Aboriginal activist.

Dadon and Warren Mundine, head of the Australian Indigenous Chamber of Commerce, were on a tour of Yad Vashem when a guide told them of Cooper’s protest.

“Warren and I became quite emotional,” Dadon recalled. “I believe a garden in the memory of William Cooper at Yad Vashem is a just recognition of his courage and will be there to remind people that individuals and minorities can and must speak out when the rest of the world stays silent.”

Trees were planted last year in the Martyrs’ Forest near Jerusalem in recognition of Cooper’s protest.

Aboriginal elder to be honored by Yad Vashem Read More »

Calif. Chabad synagogue vandalized

Sheriff’s deputies are investigating the defacement of a Chabad synagogue in Southern California.

The spray-painted words “Get Out Of Oak Park” were discovered July 27 on the building’s front wall ahead of a pending hearing on a Chabad request to raise the legal occupancy of the building.

Chabad of Oak Park was established as a shtiebel 15 years ago in the rustic Conejo Valley community of some 16,000 residents in what had been a private home on a quiet residential street.

Under Chabad’s conditional-use permit, attendance was limited to 70 worshipers, but as the young families grew and hosted occasional visitors, space became tight and Chabad requested that legal occupancy be raised to 145—a figure deemed safe by the Fire Department.

Neighbors who have objected to the requested modifications say the expansion will increase traffic and parking problems on their tranquil street. Chabad counters that most of its members walk rather than drive to Shabbat services.

A hearing is pending before the Ventura County Planning Commission.

Rabbi Moshe Bryski, who oversees the Chabad of Oak Park, said in a statement that “Oak Park has been hospitable to our little ‘shul’ for more than 15 years. Bryski went to say that “the majority of our neighbors are truly supportive of Chabad’s presence in the community … as the only synagogue in the neighborhood.” 

Neighbors Brad and Lenore Lewis have opposed Chabad’s growth plans, but told the Ventura Star that they were “stunned” by the vandalism.

“We only want to maintain the small neighborhood shtiebel we were promised,” the couple said. “As Jews, we are doubly distressed that anyone would think of doing something like [the graffiti].”

Calif. Chabad synagogue vandalized Read More »

Orthodox Jew voted off ‘Big Brother’

The first Orthodox Jew to appear as a contestant on the reality show “Big Brother” has been sent packing.

Andrew Gordon, a Miami podiatrist, was voted off the CBS show in which contestants live in a house and each week oust other contestants based on their feelings toward each other. The winner receives a pot of cash.

The kipah-wearing Gordon, 39, observed the Sabbath and kept kosher.

“Big Brother” is in its 12th season.

Orthodox Jew voted off ‘Big Brother’ Read More »

Sendak gives $1 million to N.Y. Jewish agency

Children’s book author Maurice Sendak has given $1 million to the Jewish Board of Family & Children’s Services of New York.

Sendak, 82, who wrote the iconic children’s book “Where the Wild Things Are,” gave the money in honor of his life partner, Eugene Glynn, a longtime psychiatrist for the organization.

The money will go toward general operating support, and the organization will name one of its 15 clinics after Glynn, who died in 2007, according to The Wall Street Journal.

“He was very alarmed at the position of children in New York and wanted to be part of that salvation, if that’s not too grand of a word,” Sendak told The Wall Street Journal about Glynn. “Leading a selfish life is unbearable … what Eugene did to save lives, I am trying to do artistically.

Sendak added, ” I’m getting to be an old man, and the only point in my life is to do these books, to tell children the truth.”

Sendak gives $1 million to N.Y. Jewish agency Read More »

Top 10 Current Most Important Jews in Sports

A while back we posted the top 10 best Jews in sports. That will be an annual list, forever rotating. But today TGR takes a look at the most important Jews in sports. This includes more than just players. We searched owners, executives, players (current and retired), sports writers, commissioners, and anyone else related to the sports world. See what you think about the list below. Here are the Honorable Mentions: Al Davis, Mike Cammalleri, Kevin Youkilies, Jeff Idelson, Chris Berman, Shahar Peer, and Ike Davis.

THE LIST

10) Sandy Koufax
So you be like, Koufax doesn’t play anymore! Yes, I am aware of this. But Koufax is an will always be the most influential Jewish athlete. He is who every Jewish athlete aspires to be. I could not make this list without him.

9) Ryan Braun
If Koufax was then, Braun is now. While Youkilis might be better (the debate continues), Braun is the Hebrew Hammer. He has better PR and was voted in by the fans as an All Star, a team Youkilis didn’t make.

8) Yuri Foreman
Foreman’s rabbinical future and national exposure places him on this list. While he lost the big fight, he won the hearts of Jewish sports fans everywhere. Mike Cammalleri was heavily debated for this spot as well because of his dominance in the NHL playoffs.

7) Jerry Reinsdorf
Other owners were considered, but Reinsdorf owns two winning teams, the White Sox and Bulls. He also made a bid for the Coyotes. With 7 total championships (6 Bulls, 1 White Sox) it would impossible to leave him off this list.

6) Theo Epstein
Epstein is the name running one of the most powerful franchises in all of sports. That is enough right?

5) Mark Cuban
Cuban is the most vocal of anyone on this list. He has been desperately trying to buy a baseball team. He cares and lets you know. Cuban’s Mavericks are always in contention. His passion, success, and recognition make him #5.

4) David Stern
He could have been higher. As the commissioner of the NBA, Stern has made major decisions like the WNBA and forcing players to go to college for a year. Stern is influential, just not always in the the spotlight.

3) Omri Casspi
Casspi has made news. He has a huge following. And most importantly has put Israel on the map for a major sport. He has handle the success with class.

2) Bud Selig
Selig runs baseball, which is the most important sport in America (at least for Jews). While he is in the spotlight mostly for the steroid scandal, Selig is the powerful Jew in sports.

1) Micky Arison
A month ago Arison was not even on the list. So why is he number 1? Well when you as an owner convince Wade, Bosh, and that other guy to come and play for your basketball team, you become important. Very important. While I hate to say this, Arison will be racking up championships and that is just a fact.

Comment if you think I left someone out. Our shoot me an email at info@thegreatrabbino.com
And Let Us Say…Amen.
-Jeremy Fine
For more in Jewish Sports check out WWW.THEGREATRABBINO.COM

Top 10 Current Most Important Jews in Sports Read More »