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July 31, 2015

West Bank settlements hit by fires in suspected Palestinian revenge attacks

Dozens of residents of a West Bank settlement were evacuated from their homes after inhaling smoke from a brush fire suspected of being set by Palestinians.

Thirty residents of Beit Hagai, a settlement in the Hebron Hills, were treated for smoke inhalation Friday, the Jerusalem Post reported. The fire is believed to be a revenge attack for the deadly fire that killed a Palestinian toddler and injured his family Thursday.

Thursday’s fire, allegedly started by Jewish extremists, has been widely condemned by Palestinian and Israeli leaders and has triggered rioting throughout the West Bank.

A Palestinian passerby who had tried to help put out Friday’s fire was among those injured in the Beit Haggai blaze, according to the Post.

Similar fires were also reported in Yitzhar, another West Bank settlement, and there are also reports throughout the West Bank of Palestinians hurling rocks at Israeli motorists.

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Rosner’s Torah-Talk: Parashat Va’etchanan with Rabbi Gary Pokras

Our guest this week is Rabbi Gary Pokras, Senior Rabbi of Temple Beth Zion in Buffalo, NY. After being ordained at the Hebrew Union College Campus in New York, Rabbi Pokras served as associate rabbi at Temple Beth Zion from 1999 to 2002.  He then left to assume the pulpit at Temple Judea in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, returning to Beth Zion as Senior Rabbi in 2011. Before entering the rabbinate, he was a professional guitarist specializing in classical and jazz music. Rabbi Pokras studied economics and guitar at Northwestern University and also received masters' degrees in guitar performance and music theory from The Meadows School for the Arts at Southern Methodist University. In Western New York, Rabbi Pokras is known beyond the walls of Temple Beth Zion for establishing “Mitzvah Day” in 2002 as a community response to the 9/11 terrorist attacks. The event continues to draw Jews, Christians and Muslims together each year to perform volunteer projects on behalf of others.

This Week's Torah Portion – Parashat Va'etchanan (Deuteronomy 3:23-7:11) – continues to present Moses' review of the Torah. Moses tells how he implored God to let him into the Promised Land and how God refused. He recounts the story of the Exodus from Egypt, declaring it an unprecedented event in human history. He predicts how in the future the people of Israel will sin, worship other gods, get exiled, and return to obey the lord outside the Promised Land. The portion also includes a repetition of the Ten Commandments and of the verses of the Shema. Our conversation focuses on the idea of being commanded to love God and on the difficulties that it entails.

Our Previous discussions of Parashat Va’etchanan:

Rabbi Julie Schonfeld on the connection between Tisha B’Av and parashat Va’etchanan

Rabbi Terry Bookman on Moses’ plea to God and on the idea of not getting what we want despite our earnest prayers

Rosner’s Torah-Talk: Parashat Va’etchanan with Rabbi Gary Pokras Read More »

Rude on the rise

Auntie’s very reason for being has recently been validated—rudeness is not only rampant in the workplace—it’s apparently something you can catch. But fear not, my dears, there is a solution or two or three.  Yes, Auntie has been subjected to rudeness in all sorts of workplaces—from a sloppy, Napoléon- esqe bullying editor at a radio station who nastily critiqued her lipstick choices (“I can’t look at you with that purple on your face.” That purple being Mac Heroine-très chic, but I digress) to a fellow Special Ed teacher who did not understand irony or humor at all. A teacher—without a sense of humor— I feel for her students. Everything, my darlings, is not serious. Auntie pities anyone who slogs through life without a few laughs a day.

So what’s a non-rude person to do? Auntie suggests keeping your sense of humor and never, ever sinking down to the level of the rude, crass, and obnoxious. Sometimes, or  shall we say it’s almost always necessary to push back—because once the rude start ruling your work environment, it is just a matter of time until world-rude domination is complete.  And it’s our job to stop them before things get worse.

The rude are just bullies, and who wants to deal with rude, work-bullies? Well, none of us—in fact, you’d have to be a masochist to like bullies—but not to worry—if  worse comes to worse, use Auntie Jodi’s Helpful Hint #192:

While on your commute to work, should you find yourself weeping uncontrollably, getting lost en route, or plotting the murder of your boss, it may be time to consider a career change. Dramatic exits from a wretched work environment will be a welcome diversion for your soon-to-be ex-colleagues.

Or what about the child who misbehaves in pubic? Is it the child or is it the childish parents who do not parent? Most of us have had enough of the overly-cute, not-so-cute precocious kiddie—there is a simple two-letter word solution to the problem—solve it with Auntie Jodi’s Helpful Hint #93:

Auntie Jodi knows your child is the most adorable creature to have ever been born—but tantrums at restaurants and screaming fits at department stores are, in reality, not so cute. Perhaps Mummy and Papa are the ones who need some home training—saying “No” early on might just prevent spawning yet another generation of the overly and unjustly entitled brat-child-parent cycle.

A very kind and thoughtful acquaintance—let’s call her Denise, asked Auntie, “I have a friend who cannot be around children. When we’re in a restaurant she is constantly complaining and pointing out anything and everything wrong with any kid’s behavior. She picks and picks and picks until I can’t stand being with her. This happens every time we go anywhere. What should I do?”

Dear Denise, If your friend picks, and picks, and picks, why are you friends with her? Pick someone else to call a friend. Chances are if she picks and picks on those children, she probably picks and picks on everything else too.  Give yourself a break—pick yourself up and leave if (when) she acts this way.  It might be difficult, but Auntie is betting that in the long run, you’ll feel much better.

Have a question for Auntie Jodi? Here’s a hint: send her a question on twitter @jodiadler or Instagram @auntiejodishints

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Jewish terror draws Netanyahu’s focus homeward

Ahead of what may be the toughest diplomatic battle of his career, a final bid to kill the Iran nuclear deal, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has suddenly found himself facing down a terrorist threat – apparently from Jews.

The flow of Iran messaging from the Prime Minister’s Office was interrupted Friday by Netanyahu’s fierce condemnation of a predawn arson attack in the West Bank village of Duma, near Nablus, which killed an 18-month-old boy, Ali Saad Dawabsha.

Extremist Jewish settlers were suspected. Hebrew slogans were spray painted at the scene, and witnesses reported seeing masked men fleeing toward a nearby settlement. Netanyahu ordered an all-out manhunt to find the killers.

“We condemn this,” Netanyahu said after a bedside visit with Dawabsha’s 4-year-old brother, Ahmed, who was hospitalized along with his parents for severe burns. “There is zero tolerance for terrorism wherever it comes from, whatever side of the fence it comes from, we have to fight it and fight it together.”

The attack, and Netanyahu’s attempt to tamp out a flare-up before it begins, distracts from his last-ditch attempt to quash the nuclear agreement between Iran and the major powers, which Netanyahu has repeatedly said endangers Israel.

Israeli ambassador to Washington, Ron Dermer, has been working overtime to rally Congress to kill the deal within the next two months — the window for legislative action. Netanyahu is scheduled to speak to American Jews in a webcast Tuesday in a bid to fortify opposition to the deal, which polls show many American Jews have embraced.

The U.S. State Department commended Netanyahu for quickly ordering the manhunt and made clear that the last thing the Obama administration wanted to see was an escalation.

“We welcome Prime Minister Netanyahu’s order to Israel’s security forces to use all means at their disposal to apprehend the murderers for what he called an act of terrorism and bring them to justice,” said a statement from spokesman Mark Toner. “We urge all sides to maintain calm and avoid escalating tensions in the wake of this tragic incident.”

B’Tselem, a human rights group, said the fatal attack came after a string of arson attacks in the West Bank and accused Israeli authorities of not doing enough to track down the perpetrators.

“Since August 2012, Israeli civilians set fire to nine Palestinian homes in the West Bank,” B’Tselem said. “Additionally, a Molotov cocktail was thrown at a Palestinian taxi, severely burning the family on board. No one was charged in any of these cases.”

Jewish groups in the United States were quick to condemn the attack, and in a sign of the challenge facing Netanyahu as he tries to rally the community on issues like Iran, the Reform movement, like B’Tselem, suggested the attack was part of a broader resurgence of Jewish terrorism in Israel.

“All indications are that the perpetrators of this violence are Jews, engaged in the kind of ‘price tag’ attacks that have become all too frequent,” Rabbi Jonah Pesner, the director of Reform’s religious Action Center, said in a statement.

“The growing phenomenon within Israel of racist incitement violates the values of democracy and compassion. It contributes to an atmosphere in which the violence like that seen last night can occur.”

In addition to the Iran tangle, Israel faces a likely bid in September by the Palestinians to once again seek statehood recognition at the U.N. Security Council. With the backing this time of France, one of the council’s permanent members, they may be closer than ever.

Also looming is the International Criminal Court’s consideration of whether to bring war crimes charges against Israelis involved in last summer’s war with Hamas in the Gaza Strip. Palestinian officials were quick to add the killing to their case.

A spokesman for Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas said the Israeli government’s support for settlements drove the attack, and urged the international community to respond. The killing will be among issues brought to the International Criminal Court against Israel, said spokesman Nabil Abu Rudeineh.

Netanyahu usually counters such threats with counter-threats, including in the past to funds the Palestinian Authority receives from Israel in customs and taxes. But on Friday, Netanyahu was notably conciliatory toward Abbas.

In a statement, Netanyahu said he had called Abbas and told him: “We must fight terrorism together regardless of which side it comes from.”

Israeli President Reuven Rivlin, who has made outreach to Israeli Arabs and Palestinians a hallmark of his presidency, also visited Ahmed Dwabsha in the hospital and cast the protection of Palestinians as a Zionist imperative.

“We have returned to our homeland, and from a position of sovereignty we must maintain law and order, and prevent all forms of inexplicable horrors, in the name of any kind of religious conviction, from any side,” he said.

Netanyahu deployed troops throughout the West Bank to prevent a flare-up of violence.

An Israeli policeman was lightly wounded in one of several riots and attacks by Palestinians following the toddler’s funeral. The officer was hit by a stone hurled at him by a Palestinian during a riot near the Temple Mount in eastern Jerusalem Friday, Army Radio reported. Security forces arrested a suspect in connection with the incident.

Separately, unidentified individuals opened fire on an Israeli vehicle near the West Bank settlement of Kochav Hashachar. The car was hit by bullets, but the passengers were not hurt.

In a third incident, rioters in the Jerusalem-area Palestinian village of Isawiya threw firebombs and stones at police officers, resulting in no injuries.

Jewish terror draws Netanyahu’s focus homeward Read More »

Assailant in Jerusalem LGBT parade stabbing deemed fit for trial

The Charedi Orthodox man charged with stabbing six participants in the Jerusalem Pride Parade has been deemed psychologically fit to stand trial.

[Community reactions to the attack]

Yishai Schlissel, who is in police custody, was found fit to stand trial after a psychiatric evaluation Friday, a day after he allegedly stabbed six, seriously injuring two, i24news reported.

Schlissel had been released from prison three weeks earlier after serving 10 years for a similar attack at Jerusalem’s 2005 gay pride parade.

Schlissel waived his right to an attorney and said he did not recognize the court’s authority, because it did not adhere to biblical laws.

In addition to government officials like Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and President Reuven Rivlin, numerous Orthodox groups and leaders, including the country’s two chief rabbis, have condemned the attack.

“Judaism and bloodshed do not go together,” Jerusalem Chief Rabbi Aryeh Stern said Friday, during a visit to the wounded, according to i24news.

Assailant in Jerusalem LGBT parade stabbing deemed fit for trial Read More »

West Bank riots flare up after Palestinian baby’s funeral

An Israeli policeman was lightly wounded in one of several riots and attacks by Palestinians following the funeral of a baby who died in a fire near Nablus allegedly started by Jewish extremists.

The officer was wounded in eastern Jerusalem when he was hit by a stone hurled at him by a Palestinian during a riot near the Temple Mount Friday, Army Radio reported. Security forces arrested a suspect in connection with the incident.

Separately, unidentified individuals opened fire on an Israeli vehicle near the West Bank settlement of Kochav Hashachar. The car was hit by bullets, but the people inside were not hurt.

In a third incident, rioters in the Jerusalem-area Palestinian village of Isawiya threw firebombs and stones at police officers, resulting in no injuries.

The attacks occurred hours after the burial of Ali Saad Dawabsha, an 18-month-old baby who died in a fire started by unidentified individuals at his home in the Nablus-area village of Duma. The arsonists left Hebrew-language graffiti about revenge at the site, and Israeli police suspect Jewish extremists caused the fire.

Several of Dawabsha’s relatives, including his parents, were injured in the fire. His older brother has burns in 60 percent of his body. The arson occurred amid a string of violent attacks by Jewish extremists, including a near-fatal stabbing at the Jerusalem gay pride parade Thursday and the torching last month of a church in the Galilee.

In a statement to Palestinian media, Hamas said that “now every Israeli is a legitimate target” following the arson, according to Ma’ariv. The terrorist group also called for “a day of rage” to protest the killing and to “defend the Al Aqsa Mosque” in Jerusalem.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who visited the Dawabsha family at the Israeli hospital where several of them are recovering, spoke with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas on the phone Friday and said that everyone in Israel was shocked by the “reprehensible terrorism against the Dawabsha family,” his office wrote in a statement.

“We must fight terrorism together regardless of which side it comes from,” said Netanyahu, adding that he had ordered the security forces to use all measures to locate the murderers.

Abbas’ spokesperson has blamed Israel’s settlement policy for the killing and vowed to bring the case to the International Criminal Court.

Israeli President Reuven Rivlin said in a statement released in both Hebrew and Arabic that Israel had not done enough to combat Jewish extremists:  “I feel a sense of shame, and moreover a sense of pain. Pain over the murder of a small baby. Pain that from my people, there are those who have chosen the path of terrorism, and have lost their humanity.”

West Bank riots flare up after Palestinian baby’s funeral Read More »

Podcast news and reviews – 7/31/15

For millions of listeners, podcasts have overtaken radio as their primary destination for entertainment while commuting, working and/or exercising. Without defined structure, censorship or other common barriers, podcasts give their hosts the chance to be creative and interesting without many of the expectations that apply to other entertainment personalities. Podcasting may not have popularized until a few years ago, but many people — this writer included — spend an unhealthy amount of time listening to programs every week, relying on it for both learning and entertainment.

While I currently subscribe to dozens of podcasts, what I listen to is based on both guests and recommendations from others. As many readers are unlikely to be able to keep up with more than a handful of podcasts, the purpose of this column is help you — the readers of the Jewish Journal — keep up with great moments in the podcast world. Some of these highlights may bring a laugh, some of these highlights may bring inspiration, and some of these highlights may simply surprise you. Whichever result you are left with, it is my goal to keep you enthusiastic about podcasts.

Highlights from the week of July 31, 2015:

  • Fitzdog Radio “Mike Gibbons Is Back!” – A Howard Stern Show regular, comic “>The Late Late Show With James Corden and co-creator of “>http://gregfitz.libsyn.com)
  • The Steve Austin Show “Steve Austin Says…RELAX!”“>http://podcastone.com/Steve-Austin-Show-Clean)
  • WTF with Marc Maron “Episode 623 – Jason Segel” – As with Fitzsimmons, WTF host “>Judd Apatow has been to his life. Later on, Segel shared interesting tidbits about prior projects of his like Freaks And Geeks, The Muppets Movie, and Forgetting Sarah Marshall. (“>Randy and Jason Sklar (a.k.a. “The Sklar Brothers”) and “>David Huntsberger of Syfy's Reactor, the four participants debate the difference between “few,” “several,” “couple” and “many” within the context of a renaissance festival's total attendance. The episode was capped off with an appearance by Dick Vitale, as impersonated by Van Kirk, a talented impressionist. (“>Tim Daniels and “>MTV program The Grind. The two hosts raise a good point when pondering the purpose of the show and if it was meant to be as filthy as it comes across in retrospect. (Darren@Paltrowitz.com.

    Darren Paltrowitz is a New Jersey resident (and Long Island native) with over 15 years of entertainment industry experience. He began working around the music business as a teenager, interning for the manager of his favorite band Superdrag. In the years following, he has worked with a wide array of artists including OK Go, They Might Be Giants, Mike Viola, Tracy Bonham, Loudness, and Amanda Palmer. Darren's writing has appeared in dozens of outlets including the All Music Guide, Downtown Magazine, hMAG, Inside Pulse, TheStreet.com, and The Improper. When not consulting or writing (or handling MTV, VH1 and CMT clearances at Viacom), Podcast news and reviews – 7/31/15 Read More »

Accepting the deal and protecting Israel

Concluding the nuclear deal with Iran has intensified political arguments not only in Washington but also within the pro-Israel community. Many groups are devoting significant time and resources to opposing the  agreement and attempting to prevent its approval by Congress out of a  belief that  it will leave both the United States and Israel less safe. In view of the political reality however, the energy being spent to fight it is misplaced.  Instead, we  must prepare for the day after the  agreement goes into effect to ensure that the U.S. and Israel are in the best possible position to  confront the new realities that this deal will create in the Middle East

Halting Iran’s nuclear program was the core purpose of the negotiations that led to the agreement. The Obama administration believes the accord represents the best means for achieving a C

oncluding the nuclear deal with Iran has intensified political arguments not only in Washington but also within the pro-Israel community. Many groups are devoting significant time and resources to opposing the agreement and attempting to prevent its approval by Congress out of a belief that it will leave the United States and Israel less safe. In view of the political reality, however, the energy being spent to fight it is misplaced. Instead, we must prepare for the day after the agreement goes into effect to ensure that the U.S. and Israel are in the best possible position to confront the new realities that this deal will create in the Middle East.

Halting Iran’s nuclear program was the core purpose of the negotiations that led to the agreement. The Obama administration believes the accord represents the best means for achieving a highly effective nuclear arms control agreement for the next decade and a half.

But there are reasons to be wary. Although Iran’s known nuclear facilities will be constantly monitored and its quantity and levels of enriched uranium capped, concerns remain over Iran’s ability to cheat and create a covert nuclear program outside the scope of inspections. Even assuming that Iran complies with the deal’s restrictions, it will be left with a vast nuclear program on the verge of producing a bomb after most of the constraints on enrichment expire in 15 years. Moreover, sanctions relief and the gradual lifting of restrictions on Iran’s importation of ballistic missiles and other conventional arms will enable Iran to increase its support for Hezbollah and other regional terrorist proxies.

Despite the regional instability that the agreement could intensify, the campaign to scuttle it is a Sisyphean one. Even if a majority of senators and congressmen have strong misgivings, it will be extremely difficult for the deal’s opponents to siphon off enough Democratic votes to make its rejection veto-proof. In addition, most polling confirms that a majority of Americans, including Jews, support it. Although nothing is ever certain, the deal’s passage in Congress and eventual implementation appears assured. Thus, the vital task at hand is to ensure that, in the post-deal world, American and Israeli shared interests are protected. This undertaking, which cannot be pushed off for 60 days, should address three primary issues:

First, the U.S.-Israel relationship cannot afford to sustain any more damage as a result of the discord about Iran. Washington, D.C., and Jerusalem must now repair ties at the highest levels while continuing to coordinate in the closest possible manner on regional defense, security and intelligence matters. Israel’s security is harmed when its support is seen as partisan, and the recent period of rancor between American and Israeli leaders must be set aside as an aberration rather than a new baseline. There is no more important component to Israeli security than the relationship with the U.S., and it must be beyond challenge. This will involve an American effort toward not only maintaining but increasing Israel’s clear, qualitative military edge and providing an explicit plan to deal with Iranian violations of the nuclear accord, and an Israeli resolve not to sabotage core American diplomatic initiatives. An ironclad American commitment to Israel’s safety and close coordination with Israel and regional allies to contain a newly empowered Iran will reset the U.S.-Israel relationship in a positive way and contribute toward regional stability.

Second, the forest of the two-state solution cannot be lost in the trees of the Iran deal. There is no better way of guaranteeing Israel’s future as a safe, prosperous and democratic state than preserving the ability to negotiate a separation from the Palestinians when conditions allow. In no way should efforts to counter Iranian regional mischief be conditioned on Israeli movement toward a Palestinian state, but by the same token, a strong Israel is more important than ever in the face of a strengthened Iran, and the two-state solution cannot remain on the back burner given how imperative it is for Israel’s long-term security. On a regional level, the Iran agreement provides an opportunity for cooperation between Israel and Arab states to counter Iran and to use such cooperation as a stepping stone toward normalized relations, but tangible and public cooperation will be possible only if Israel demonstrates its willingness to make progress on the Palestinian front. Israel should take advantage of the opportunity that the Iran deal presents to shore up its security, and doing so effectively will mean devoting attention to the Palestinian issue.

Finally, the squabbling over the Iran deal has opened large fissures in the Jewish-American community, and the wounds will not easily heal should they be allowed to fester. Principled policy differences and heated debate over the wisdom and efficacy of the agreement should not derail the universally shared goals of a strong U.S.-Israel alliance and a commitment to Israel’s security. Although there are strongly held differences of opinion on how to achieve these goals, surely everyone can agree that a Jewish-American community that has policy debates in a vigorous yet respectful manner makes them more achievable.

We must deal with the world that we have. The international community has reached an agreement on Iran’s nuclear program. Let us now work together to shape a post-deal environment that advances important U.S. national interests, especially the security of Israel and our other regional allies.

Peter A. Joseph is chairman of Israel Policy Forum, Charles R. Bronfman is chairman of the organization’s advisory committee, and Susie Gelman is a member of the board.

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