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August 19, 2014

New tourism app for Jewish Basel, Switzerland

Going to Basel, Switzerland and interested in Jewish life and heritage?

 

Then you'll want to get a new app for smartphones and tablets that is officially being launched on August 26.

 

Called “Baleph,” the app is designed for both IOS and Android platforms and is in English and German.

 

It leads the user on a “stroll through Basel's Jewish history” via a 13-stop, multimedia walking tour that highlights Jewish history in the city from the middle ages to the present. Featuring  text, sound, and images, an Interactive timeline, and a city map with GPS function, it contains 65 minutes of audio material covering a tour lasting 1 ½ to 2 hours.

Here are the links:

iOS:“>https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=ch.merianstiftung.baleph&hl=en

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The RAW Series Pt.9- No Bake, Scrumptious Carrot Cake With Macadamia Frosting (Vegan & Gluten-Free)

This quick-make, scrumptiously delicious cake is seriously to die for. Scratch that, to live for! Not only is it going to make your taste buds break out into dances of delight, but this raw carrot cake is high in Omega 3's and friendly fats. Serve it to your kids for an after dinner dessert, serve it to your guests at your next social event, or even better, bring it along next time you visit your in-laws! Everyone will fall in love with you. And wait until you see their face when you revel to them that this cake contains no flour, eggs, oil, butter, or sugar!

No Bake, Scrumptious Carrot Cake With Macadamia Frosting (Vegan & Gluten-Free)


Serves 8 -12
Prep time: 10 minutes
Cook time: 0 minutes

Ingredients for macadamia frosting:

2 cups raw macadamia nuts
(soaked in water for 2-4 hours)
2 Tbsp. lemon juice
1 Tbsp. rose water or orange blossom ( optional)
2 1/2 Tbsp. coconut oil, melted
1/3 cup agave nectar, coconut nectar, or maple syrup
3/4 Cup water


Ingredients for carrot cake:

2 large carrots, peeled and chopped into small pieces
1 1/2 cups almond meal
2 cups dates, pitted and chopped into small pieces ( I like Madjool)
1/2 cup unsweetened shredded coconut flakes.
3/4 tsp. cinnamon

 

Options for Toppings:

*Shredded carrots
*Chopped walnuts
*Chopped pistachios
*Golden Raisins
*Combination of all of the above

 

Preparation:

 

Macadamia Frosting:

1. Add all ingredients to your high speed blender ( or vitamix), and blend for few minutes, until creamy and smooth.

 

Preparation For The Cake:

1. In your food processor ( or your high speed blender) add all ingredients and pulse for few minutes, until all ingredients sticks together and becomes like a dough like.

 

Assembling The Cake

1. In a lined springform cake tin, press half of the cake mix into the bottom of the cake tin and press firmly with your hands.

3. Spread 1/2 of the macadamia frosting on top. Place into the freezer until the macadamia frosting is hard.

4. Remove from freezer and add the rest of the cake mix into the cake tin and press firmly with your hands.

5. Spread the rest of the macadamia frosting into the cake tin and place back into the freezer until the frosting becomes hard.

6. Remove from freezer and decorate with your favorite toppings. Serve and let the compliments begin

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Rockets fired into Israel, violating cease-fire extension; IDF retaliates

The Israeli military struck sites in Gaza after rockets were fired from the coastal strip into southern Israel in violation of a cease-fire extension.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu reportedly also recalled Israeli negotiators from cease-fire talks in Cairo after the rockets from Gaza were  fired into Beersheba on Tuesday afternoon. Israeli government officials told Haaretz that the talks had collapsed.

The rockets broke a 24-hour cease-fire extension agreed to at midnight Monday. They landed in an open area; no injuries or damage were reported. The Iron Dome missile defense system did not attempt to intercept the rockets — the first targeting Israel in nearly a week.

Netanyahu and Defense Minister Moshe Yaalon reportedly ordered the Israel Defense Forces to retaliate. One Israeli TV report said the IDF had hit 10 sites in Gaza.

“Yet again, terrorists breach the ceasefire and renew fire at Israeli civilians from Hamas ruled Gaza Strip. This continued aggression will be addressed accordingly by the IDF; we will continue striking terror infrastructure, pursuing terrorists, and eliminating terror capabilities in the Gaza Strip, in order to restore security for the State of Israel,” IDF spokesman Lt. Col. Peter Lerner said in a statement.

Israel and the Palestinians had agreed to the extension of a five-day cease-fire reportedly because significant progress had been made on a long-term agreement.

 

 

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Hamas fighters show defiance in Gaza tunnel tour

Hamas fighters, clad in black and armed with assault rifles, navigated the dimly lit tunnel with ease, saying they felt at home in their network of underground passages in the Gaza Strip.

A rare tour that Hamas granted to a Reuters reporter, photographer and cameraman appeared to be an attempt to dispute Israel's claim that it had demolished all of the Islamist group's border infiltration tunnels in the Gaza war.

“We are speaking to you today from inside one of those tunnels, which Israel said it had destroyed. Our men are still operating in those tunnels prepared for all options,” said a masked fighter from Hamas's Izz el-Deen al-Qassam Brigades.

But driven, blindfolded, to the secret location in a Hamas vehicle that made a series of turns, it was impossible for the Reuters crew to tell whether it was close to the frontier or further inside the Gaza Strip in tunnels untouched by Israeli bombing. It was not clear where the tunnel led.

By Israel's own account, its ground forces focused only on destroying tunnels within 2 to 4.5 km of the border, while ignoring more distant connecting passages. During the Gaza offensive, Israel's military took reporters through tunnels it discovered at the frontier.

Chatting in soft voices and laughing at times, Hamas men guided the Reuters crew through corridors less than a 3.3 feet wide that are reached by descending a thin metal ladder through a tiny shaft.

“It feels just like home,” their commander said. “Fighters dug these tunnels with their own hands just like they built their houses, so they live here at comfort and assurance like they do at home.”

SOUND OF SILENCE

The ceiling in parts of the tunnel was high enough so we could walk through – alternately on dry, concrete floors and muddy ground – without having to bend our heads.

It was impossible to gauge the tunnel's length, but it had offshoots leading in different directions. Once inside, the sounds of traffic and Israeli drones that routinely fly over the territory of 1.8 million people could not be heard.

Israel said the tunnel network is used by Hamas to move and store weapons and keep fighters out of sight of Israeli aircraft.

It is separate from smuggling conduits that ran under the Egypt-Gaza border. Egypt, which regards Hamas as a security threat, destroyed those tunnels before the current war.

Israel launched its Gaza offensive on July 8 after a surge in Hamas rocket fire across the border. Israeli ground forces invaded on July 17 with the declared aim of destroying infiltration tunnels and left on Aug. 5 after saying that mission had been accomplished.

Egypt is trying to finalize a long-term ceasefire after a five-day truce was extended by 24 hours into Tuesday.

On the battlefield, Hamas met Israeli forces with an array of tactics, including the use of tunnels to launch surprise attacks. Israel's military lost 64 soldiers, more than six times the number of troops killed in its previous invasion of Gaza in early 2009. Three civilians in Israel were also killed.

Israel says it has killed hundreds of Hamas fighters and destroyed more than 30 tunnels. Funeral marches were held for several members of the Qassam Brigades but there has been no official word from the group on its losses.

The Palestinian Health Ministry puts the Gaza death toll at 2,016 and says most were civilians in the small, densely populated coastal territory.

In the tunnel, a Hamas fighter said the group would press on with restocking its arsenal or rockets and other weaponry and shoring up its underground network.

“In peace we make preparations, and in war we use what we have readied,” he said.

Editing by Jeffrey Heller in Jerusalem and Giles Elgood in London

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Holocaust survivor activist arrested in Ferguson protests

A 90-year-old Jewish Holocaust survivor was arrested in St. Louis during protests over the shooting death by police of Michael Brown.

Hedy Epstein of St. Louis was one of nine protesters arrested Monday for blocking the entrance to the downtown state office building that houses Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon’s office, the Nation reported.

“I’ve been doing this since I was a teenager. I didn’t think I would have to do it when I was 90,” Epstein told The Nation, as two officers walked her to a police van. “We need to stand up today so that people won’t have to do this when they’re 90.”

Epstein escaped Nazi Germany for England in 1939 on the Kindertransport. Her parents and other family members died in Auschwitz, according to her personal website.

Epstein has been active in civil rights and human rights causes as well as social justice, including fair housing, abortion rights and anti-war activities. She also has been active in pro-Palestinian causes, including demonstrating against Israel’s security fence, Israeli settlements and the demolition of Palestinian homes.

She is a member of the Speakers Bureau of the St. Louis Holocaust Museum and Learning Center.

Brown, an 18-year-old black male, was unarmed when he was shot and killed by police in Ferguson, Mo., on Aug. 9 after being stopped for walking in the street.

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The masks are off: anti-Semitism across the world revealed its ugly self, and got out of hand

Shouts of “Jews to the gas!”; An article claiming that “Israel’s military operation in Gaza showed why Jews “have been so frequently expelled.”; A sign reading, “Well done Israel, Hitler would be proud,”; Use of the anti-Semitic blood libel…

These are merely a few examples of how anti- Semitism made its way to pro-Palestinian rallies around the world. According to “>New Anti-Semitism as they hid it behind an “outrage” towards Israel and its “inhumane” actions in Gaza. Others simply said it the way it is – in the old, classic form of anti-Semitism, including blood libels and signs hung above coffee shops, saying: “> declared the city as an “Israel-free zone.”

If a month ago, it was hard to find the pure anti-Semitism among the calls for Israel to “stop the massacre in Gaza,” it is now getting harder and harder to find the latter between the purest form of anti-Semitism. After decades of it being a taboo, people are no longer ashamed to admit they hate the Jews. Will this storm soon blow over, or will this dark cloud hovering above our heads only grow bigger? It’s hard to determine, but we sure can help bring back the sun.

We must show we are aware of the problem and that we are not willing to make it a part of our life. We must show our selected governments that we are not willing to sit tight and “wait for the storm to pass,” because this method did not work eight decades ago. We must take a stand, and get our friends and family to take it with us. We must stand together and speak up. Together, united in our battle against anti-Semitism, we’ll wake up the world from a long-lasting coma and push hatred back in the shadows.

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German panel says Nazi-looted painting should go to Jewish heirs

Another painting from the collection of the late Cornelius Gurlitt should be returned to the descendants of its previous Jewish owner, a panel of art experts determined.

The experts, appointed by the German government, said the painting — “Two Riders on the Beach” by Max Liebermann — was wrongly taken by the Nazis and properly belongs to the heirs of David Friedmann, a German-Jewish industrialist and art collector. David Toren, a great-nephew of Friedmann, had sued the Bavarian and German governments for the return of the painting.

The determination makes the Liebermann work the second of 458 contested artworks to be designated for restitution to the heirs of a Jewish owner, The New York Times reported.

The painting by Liebermann, a leading German Expressionist and himself a German Jew, could be worth upwards of $3.4 million, according to The Wall Street Journal.

Gurlitt, the son of German art dealer Hildebrand Gurlitt, who worked closely with the Nazis, was discovered by German tax authorities to be in possession of more than a thousand works by some of Europe’s most famous 19th- and 20th-century artists. Gurlitt, who died in May, signed an agreement with the German government that any paintings determined by experts to have been improperly taken from their original owners would be returned.

Upon his death, it was revealed that Gurlitt willed his collection to the Kunstmuseum Bern in Switzerland. The Kunstmuseum has not yet agreed to accept the paintings, leaving them in a legal limbo.

 

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Alleging U.N. bias, Israel again keeping distance from Gaza probe

The United Nations probe into the Gaza conflict hasn’t even begun, but Israel already is convinced that it won’t end well.

In a resolution adopted by a vote of 29-1 with 17 abstentions, the U.N. Human Rights Council moved last month to establish a commission of inquiry “to investigate all violations of international humanitarian law and international human rights law in the Occupied Palestinian Territory.” The United States cast the sole vote against.

Last week, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu criticized the council for choosing to investigate Israel rather than nearby crisis zones such as Iraq or Syria, and implied he would not cooperate with U.N. investigators.

“The report of this committee has already been written,” Netanyahu said following a meeting with visiting New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo. “The committee chairman has already decided that Hamas is not a terrorist organization. Therefore, they have nothing to look for here. They should visit Damascus, Baghdad and Tripoli. They should go see ISIS, the Syrian army and Hamas. There they will find war crimes, not here.”

Israel has been down this road before. Following the end of the last Gaza conflict, in early 2009, its government refused to cooperate with a U.N. investigation led by the South African jurist Richard Goldstone. The probe, dubbed the Goldstone Report, alleged that Israel had intentionally targeted civilians, though Goldstone later personally retracted that allegation. Israel rejected the original report as inaccurate and biased.

This time, the commission will be chaired by William Schabas, a Canadian-born professor of international law at Middlesex University in London. Schabas said in an Aug. 12 interview with Israel’s Channel 2 that it would be “inappropriate” to assert that Hamas is a terrorist organization. Last year, Schabas said that Netanyahu would be his “favorite” leader to see tried at the International Criminal Court.

Schabas’ father is Jewish and he sits on the advisory board of the Israel Law Review. In the Channel 2 interview, he said he would not let his personal opinions affect his investigation.

“What someone who sits on a commission or a judge has to be able to do is to put these things behind them and start fresh, and this is of course what I intend to do,” Schabas said. “It’s in Israel’s interest to be there in that discussion and give its version of events. If it doesn’t, then that leaves an unfortunate one-sided picture of it.”

Israeli cooperation could have softened his report’s conclusions, Goldstone wrote in the 2011 Washington Post Op-Ed in which he backed down from the report’s most scathing criticism of Israel. Goldstone noted that subsequent investigations by the Israeli military indicated that it was not Israel’s intent to target civilians.

“Although the Israeli evidence that has emerged since publication of our report doesn’t negate the tragic loss of civilian life, I regret that our fact-finding mission did not have such evidence explaining the circumstances in which we said civilians in Gaza were targeted, because it probably would have influenced our findings about intentionality and war crimes,” Goldstone wrote. “Israel’s lack of cooperation with our investigation meant that we were not able to corroborate how many Gazans killed were civilians and how many were combatants.”

Among Israeli legal experts, there is broad agreement that Israel must do its part to present its version of events, even while disagreeing about how best to do that. Only Israel’s state comptroller has indicated that he will be investigating the Gaza conflict.

Amichai Cohen, an international law expert at the Israel Democracy Institute, said the comptroller’s probe is insufficient and that Israel should launch an investigation by experts.

“The comptroller himself doesn’t have knowledge in international law, in criminal law, in military law. That’s not his specialty,” Cohen told JTA. “You need something independent and transparent.”

Hillel Neuer, executive director of the Geneva-based NGO UN Watch and a vocal critic of the Human Rights Council’s treatment of Israel, said Israel should do what it did in 2009: publish accounts from the conflict that show its side of the story without directly cooperating with the investigation.

“If the U.N. decides to have a one-sided inquiry, they will write a one-sided report,” Neuer said. “I’m confident Israel will make sure that the commission will have no excuse to say they didn’t have the information.”

Shlomy Zachary, a lawyer with the Palestinian legal rights group Yesh Din, urged Israel to cooperate with the United Nations, noting that its decision to work with a 2010 U.N. investigation of the so-called flotilla incident helped mitigate criticism of Israel.

That probe, known as the Palmer Commission, was charged with investigating the storming of a Turkish boat aimed at breaking Israel’s naval blockade of Gaza. The report ultimately condemned the raid, but it also criticized the conduct of protesters on board the ship and determined that the Gaza blockade was legal.

“When Israel cooperated with international bodies, the results were in favor of Israel,” Zachary told JTA. “When Israel is not willing to cooperate, it creates the suspicion it has something to hide.”

Neuer agreed that the 2010 probe was a good model for U.N. investigations, but he noted that it was supervised by the U.N. secretary-general, not the Human Rights Council. Neuer said that given the commission’s record of bias, Israel’s options are more limited.

Ultimately, the conclusions of the latest investigation will not be legally binding on Israel. But if its conclusions are harsh, it could further ratchet up international criticism. Cohen said that could put added pressure on Israel to exercise restraint should another round of conflict take place.

“The point in these commissions isn’t just to research the past, it’s to tell the future,” Cohen said. “The main problem is that a commission will say from now on, this or that should be prohibited. This is very problematic for Israel. That will make it harder next time.”

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