fbpx

June 7, 2016

Fears of terrorism turn Moishe Houses into a lifeline for young Paris Jews

When David Harroch moved from his native Morocco to France 12 years ago, he found a vibrant Jewish scene with a plethora of activities for young adults like himself.

The social circle was something of a lifeline for Harroch, 30, an introverted finance executive who left home to study in France. With neither childhood friends nor family here, he relied on community events to find companionship and the occasional date.

But he arrived at a time of change for Parisian Jewry, as many community members started skipping cultural events out of fear of increasing anti-Semitic attacks. France saw a 10-year record of 851 incidents in 2014, and several deadly shootings by Islamists.

As recently as four years ago, “there was a social event for young Jews in Paris every other night,” Harroch said. “Now this scene for people my age has taken a huge step backwards.”

Partly to deal with the problem, leaders of French and European Jewry are preparing to open an $11 million community center in central Paris next year.

But on the ground, young French Jews like Harroch are already taking part in efforts to restore the Jewish cultural scene through Moishe House, an international project offering subsidized housing to young Jews willing to turn their home into a social hub for other Jews their age.

The newest Paris Moishe House is a sunny three-bedroom apartment overlooking a large boulevard. The organization subsidizes half the rent for the three residents of the Beaubourg home, which could easily cost $3,000-$4,000 a month on the market. In exchange, the residents, all females in their 20s, need to host at least six events each month.

Established 10 years ago in California by David Cygielman and the late philanthropist Morris Squire, Moishe House has made France and Belgium priority areas, according to Josh Moritz, Moishe House’s regional director of global communities. A third France Moishe House is planned to open this year outside Paris with funding from the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, UJA-Federation of New York and local French partners, including Fonds Social Juif Unifie. Additional French locations being envisaged include Marseille, Lyon and Strasbourg.

The expansion is part of a larger growth by Moishe House, which has used funding from U.S. Jewish communities as well as organizations like the Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family Foundation and others to grow into a global network comprising 86 homes in 20 countries. But it has an added impact on France’s at-risk communities, Moritz said.

Approximately 20,000 French Jews have immigrated to Israel since 2011. Of those who remain, most avoid wearing Jewish symbols in public frequently or habitually, according to a European Union survey from 2012. A third are too fearful to attend Jewish community events. The slaying of four Jews at a kosher supermarket last year did not help matters.

France’s first Moishe House opened in 2014. Since then, more than 2,500 Jewish young adults have attended some 130 peer-led Moishe House programs in Paris.

“It’s an intimate setting that lets you really get to know people. We don’t have much of that here,” Harroch said at a recent board game-themed soiree at Paris’ new Moishe House, or MoHo, which the organization opened in March in the 3rd arrondissement, near the Beaubourg Complex and the Georges Pompidou Center.

If not for the subsidy, “there is no way I could have afforded to live here,” said resident Carole Bouzaglou, a 25-year-old online sales specialist. “It’s much better than a tiny student apartment.”

But balancing family, friends, career and Moishe House duties can be challenging, says MoHo resident Noemie Grausz, a physician training to become a gynecologist. Rushing home from the gym, she got off to a late start preparing the board game evening but made up for lost time by preparing a quick salad and ordering pizza.

Pointing with dismay at the bare light fixtures, she said: “And then there’s interior decorating that still needs to happen.”

Her guests for the board game event didn’t seem to mind. An eclectic crowd of 15 mostly single men and women in their 20s and 30s, they trickled in alone or in pairs. Some men looked synagogue-ready in cologne-drenched designer clothes and kippot. Others sported a stubble and plain T-shirts.

Noemie chatted up the guests to make them feel less awkward — a knack she’s perfected working as a doctor. The first game, she explained, gives players 30 seconds to name a randomly chosen celebrity described to them. She replaced the game’s celebrity cards with handmade notes featuring Jewish personalities like the late Israeli prime minister Golda Meir, the philosopher Bernard-Henri Levy and comedian Gad Elmaleh.

Other Moishe House Beaubourg events include jam sessions featuring Israeli music, Israeli Independence Day parties and even yoga classes.

Terrorist threats notwithstanding, Paris’ 350,000 Jews have no shortage of community events. Less than a mile away from Moishe House Beaubourg, the Edmond Fleg Jewish Community Center offers not only yoga classes but Jewish meditation and study groups.

But the regulars there are much older than the Moishe House crowd, said Louigi Hayat, a 32-year-old accountant. Like Harroch, Hayat said he came to Moishe House activities to make friends, but also in the hope of finding a date.

“So, honestly, it’s not a very attractive option for me,” he said of the Fleg center.

Despite their amorous agendas, Harroch and Hayat largely ignored the group of attractive single ladies in attendance during the board-game event. Instead they engaged in a fierce two-man battle of Stratego rather than the main celebrities game.

Like most other guests, Hayat and Harroch learned of Moishe House Beaubourg through word of mouth or on Facebook. They had to pass a short interview with organizers to get the address, which is neither listed nor published online for security reasons. There are no Moishe House signs on the building or the apartment door. The apartment’s slot on the intercom board bears the name of the previous tenant.

Despite these precautions, the absence from Moishe House Beaubourg of soldiers and police, who are guarding other Jewish institutions across France, makes some guests reflect nostalgically on better days.

“The way this Jewish institution is set up means that coming here gives you a measure of normalcy,” said Gabriel Saban, a 30-year-old television composer. “You just ring the bell and walk in, like it used to be when we were children.”

Fears of terrorism turn Moishe Houses into a lifeline for young Paris Jews Read More »

Hailing a first, Clinton declares herself the Democratic nominee

Hillary Clinton declared herself the Democratic Party nominee for U.S. president on Tuesday, saying she had made history as the first woman to lead a major party in a race for the White House.

The former first lady, senator and U.S. secretary of state beat rival Bernie Sanders in New Jersey's nominating contest, expanding her lead a day after she captured the number of delegates needed to clinch the nomination.

“Together, we secured the Democratic nomination. For the first time ever, a woman will be a major party's nominee to become President of the United States,” Clinton, 68, wrote in a fundraising email to supporters.

New Jersey was one of six states holding contests on Tuesday, including California, the big prize where Clinton was still at risk of an embarrassing loss to Sanders as she heads into a campaign against presumptive Republican nominee Donald Trump in the Nov. 8 election.

Sanders, 74, was projected to win in North Dakota, and there were no immediate projections in Montana, New Mexico or South Dakota in the final series of big presidential nominating battles that began on Feb. 1 in Iowa. The District of Columbia, the last to vote, holds a Democratic primary next Tuesday.

In the fundraising email to supporters, Clinton declared her campaign had broken “one of the highest, hardest glass ceilings.”

“Tonight, we can say with pride that, in America, there is no barrier too great and no ceiling too high to break,” Clinton wrote on Twitter. “To every little girl who dreams big: Yes, you can be anything you want – even president. Tonight is for you,” she tweeted.

Clinton's race against Trump, 69, will unfold as she faces an ongoing investigation of her use of a personal email server while secretary of state. Opinion polls show the controversy has hurt Clinton's ratings on honesty and trustworthiness.

UNITY AN ISSUE

Clinton, who now must try to unify the party and win over Sanders supporters, was expected to highlight the historic nature of her nomination at an event in Brooklyn on Tuesday night. Her campaign has compiled a video tying her to women's rights movements in American history.

She wants to move beyond the primary battle and turn her attention to Trump. But Sanders, a democratic socialist U.S. senator from Vermont, has vowed to stay in until July's party convention that formally picks the nominee, defying growing pressure from party leaders to exit the race.

Although Sanders will be unable to catch Clinton even if he wins the primary in California, America's most populous state, a triumph there could fuel his continued presence in the race and underscore Clinton's weaknesses as she heads into the fight with Trump.

Polls in California were due to close at 11 p.m. ET (0300 GMT on Wednesday).

Sanders has commanded huge crowds, galvanizing younger voters with promises to address economic inequality. Clinton has edged him out, particularly among older voters, with a more pragmatic campaign focused on building on President Barack Obama's policies.

Steven Acosta, a 47-year-old teacher living in Los Angeles, voted for Clinton on Tuesday, saying that was partly because he believed she stood a better chance of winning in November.

“I like what Bernie Sanders says and I agree with almost everything that he says,” Acosta said. “The problem is that I think Republicans would really unify … even more against him.”

'RUSH TO JUDGMENT'

Sanders was determined to stay in the race, even after the Associated Press and NBC reported on Monday night that Clinton had clinched the number of delegates needed to win the nomination. A Sanders campaign spokesman castigated what he said was the media's “rush to judgment.”

Under Democratic National Committee rules, most delegates to the July 25-28 convention in Philadelphia are awarded by popular votes in state-by-state elections, and Clinton has a clear lead in those pledged delegates.

But the delegate count also includes superdelegates, party leaders who can change their minds at any time. Clinton's superdelegate support outnumbers Sanders' by more than 10 to 1.

The Sanders' campaign has said it can still persuade superdelegates to switch to him, although in practice superdelegates who have announced their intentions are unlikely to change their minds.

Sanders would have to get more than 60 percent of the superdelegates backing Clinton to switch their votes. So far, his campaign manager, Jeff Weaver, acknowledged they had yet to convert a single delegate.

Trump, who became his party's presumptive nominee last month, outlasting 16 Republican challengers, is struggling to get the party's leaders solidly behind him after a bitter primary campaign during which he made a series of controversial statements directed at Muslims, Latinos, women and the disabled.

On Tuesday night he addressed a crowd of supporters in New York, welcoming Sanders supporters “with open arms” should they decide to support him and declaring a new phase of the campaign had begun.

“Tonight we close one chapter in history and we begin another,” Trump said.

He said he planned to deliver a speech next week about Clinton and her husband, former President Bill Clinton.

Hailing a first, Clinton declares herself the Democratic nominee Read More »

Primary Day: How Bernie Sanders’ contribution goes beyond winning

Prior to California’s primary election, several news outlets reported that Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has “clinched” the Democratic nomination, though Senator Bernie Sanders remained in the conversation amongst voters as they went to the polls on June 7.

“Even though it looks like Hillary has it, I like Bernie Sanders,” said Irwin Zucker, an 89-year-old Beverly Hills resident. “He’s creating sincere conversation in an election that otherwise would be easy to ignore.”

Haley Albert, a student at Northeastern University, urged primary voters not to take Clinton’s clinching of the nomination at face-value.

“For me, Bernie has been invigorating; the pressure he puts on Clinton and the fight he leads for all different kinds of people is necessary,” she said. “It’s far from over.”

Since February, the Democratic party has undergone an internal split between Clinton and Sanders. Despite recently reported numbers indicating Clinton had enough pledged delegates along with the promise of super delegates, to become the Democratic presidential candidate in the fall, Sanders and his supporters say they will seek a “contested national convention.”

As a Jew, Zucker finds Sanders’ “innate Judaism” to be good for the election.

“Sanders keeps many Jewish interests alive by simply being at the table,” he said. “And outside of being Jewish, he’s a good man, and a good challenger.”

Rabbi Sarah Bassin of Temple Emanuel said that Sanders’ Judaism is not his main appeal to Jewish voters.

“Most Jews voting for Sanders aren’t voting for him solely because he’s Jewish. We Jews feel secure, and are able to talk about his policies rather than his Jewish identity, which hasn’t been a detriment to his overall popularity,” Bassin said.

Rabbi Jonathan Aaron, also of Temple Emanuel, also said he appreciates the conversations the Sanders-Clinton race has helped to cultivate in the past few months, relating the democratic nature of this specific political instance to the ideals of the Talmud.

“In the Talmud, there is a majority and a minority, and both parties listen and adapt to each other until it’s time to make a decision,” Aaron said. “The presence of these two candidates has stimulated so many conversations pertaining to different ideas and goals, and it’s activating the public in a good way.”

Aaron, who seeks to avoid intertwining faith and politics, hopes to see that, once the conversations are concluded, the “minority” will be able to support and enhance what the “majority” has decided.

“At Emanuel, we put all aspects of a conversation out there, and allow for discussion to make and back the best possible decision. I’d like to see the political scene adopt some Talmudic ideals and honor the real democratic process that this primary election has displayed,” he said.

After the reports from the AP of Clinton’s delegate count, Dan Schnur, director of the Jesse M. Unruh Institute of Politics at USC, said he believes the time for the Sanders minority to concede has come, as the “contentious conversations are no longer productive.”

“In most normal elections, this kind of interparty division can create difficulty for the nominee in the general election…but this isn’t a normal election,” Schnur said. “It’s a continued and ongoing fight with Sanders, and where this used to strengthen Clinton as a candidate, now it’s merely a distraction.”

Schnur said he believes Sanders has inspired a more “whole primary election,” and that he and his supporters could be of service to Clinton’s general election campaign.

“There’s no question that Sanders candidacy has provided energy and enthusiasm,” he said. “He excited a lot of people to participate, but now he has to decide when it makes sense to encourage those same people to stand behind her, both for the sake of her candidacy and for the party. It’s not whether Bernie supports her, it’s when. And the more he waits, the more difficult it will be for the Democratic party to focus on defeating Trump.”

Nevertheless, Sanders’ supporters remained unwavering as California voters continued to go to the polls.

“It sort of feels like I’m throwing my vote away,” Zucker said. “But if my vote means that Bernie can keep pressuring Hillary to be thinking about Israel and the economy, even to be a better candidate, then that’s how I’ll vote.”

Primary Day: How Bernie Sanders’ contribution goes beyond winning Read More »

The Battle for Yourself (Omer Day #46)