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March 20, 2018

U.S. Media Largely Ignored Abbas’ ‘Son of a Dog’ Slur Toward U.S. Ambassador

Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas is in hot water for calling United States Ambassador to Israel David Friedman a “son of a dog” over the weekend, yet it didn’t really receive much coverage from U.S. media outlets.

In their weekly talking points brief, The Focus Project – an organization that features the consensus view of various Jewish organizations on matter the of Israel and anti-Semitism – noted the lack of attention on Abbas’ comments in U.S. media.

“Major news outlets in the U.S., such as the New York Times, Washington Post and CNN ignored this story entirely or buried it by carrying syndicated wire reports instead of doing original reporting,” The Focus Project wrote. “Statistics show they are obsessed with a narrative where Israel is the oppressor and Palestinians are passive victims.”

The links provided in the aforementioned statement show nothing from CNN about Abbas’ comments; the New York Times and Washington Post covered Abbas’ by running a report from Reuters and the Associated Press (AP), respectively. ABC News also relied on the AP’s wire service to report on the matter and Yahoo News used a report from Agence France-Presse (AFP).

The Journal searched the sites of NBC News, CBS News and Fox News and found nothing on Abbas’ comments.

This would certainly not be the first time that the U.S. media has been accused of having an anti-Israel bias, as Newsbusters has documented how the media once falsely reported that Pope Francis called Abbas “the angel of peace” and didn’t give much coverage on Abbas declaring in 2011 that he would never recognize a Jewish state and that Israel was committing “ethnic cleansing.”

Abbas’ latest comments stemmed from him being angry that Friedman claimed they were building settlements on land that belonged to Israel, prompting the PA president to exclaim, “You son of a dog, building on their own land? You are a settler and your family are settlers!” Abbas is now attempting to walk back that comment, as one of his advisors is now saying that “dogs are pets in the Arab world, and they are generally viewed positively.”

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Campaign for Religious Equality in Israel

“We are doing great things at Kehilat Mevaseret Zion with families, adults, social justice work, and building community, but we receive no funding from the Israeli government, as opposed to orthodox synagogues one of which is just down the street from us and is fully funded because it is orthodox.” So said Rabbi Alona Nir Keren of Kehilat Mevaseret Tzion, a Reform synagogue community in the Judean Hills just down the road from Jerusalem.

Rabbi Nir Keren joined with four other Israeli Reform Rabbis on a stage on Monday night at the 129th annual meeting of the Central Conference of American Rabbis in Long Beach, CA. She was part of a panel discussing the vitality and challenges of the Israeli Reform movement.

She was joined by Rabbi Chen Or Tsfoni of Kehilat Raanana, Rabbi Yoki Amir, Professor of Jewish History and Philosophy at the Hebrew Union College in Jerusalem, Rabbi Nava Hefetz, the Director of Education for Rabbis for Human Rights-Israel, and Rabbi Gilad Kariv, the CEO and President of the Israel Movement for Progressive and Reform Judaism.

Rabbi Kariv spoke about the growing influence of Israel’s Reform movement in Israel as a whole. He noted that 800,000 Israelis have attended in recent years weddings, b’nai mitzvah celebrations, britot milah, baby namings, and funerals conducted by our 100 Israeli Reform Rabbis. Israelis are not only taking notice of the Israeli Reform movement, they are joining Reform synagogues. Taken together (according to a recent poll), the Reform and Conservative movements attract 11% of the Israeli population, equal to the 11% of the Israeli population that are ultra-Orthodox Haredim.

Rabbi David Stern, President of the CCAR, questioned these rabbis on a wide range of issues including human rights, religious pluralism in the state, the impact of Reform Judaism on Israeli culture, the spiritual and educational needs of Israelis young and old, liberal religious practice in Israel, and the reasons so many secular Israelis are attracted to the Reform movement.

Rabbi Hefetz told of her work in human rights with the Eritrean and Sudanese asylum seekers. Rabbi Or Tsafoni, the daughter of Iraqi immigrants, shared her experience growing up in Israel as a child of immigrants from a Muslim country. Rabbi Kariv reviewed the wide range of issues that the Reform movement’s Israel Religious Action Center is actively confronting on a daily basis in the Knesset and in courts of law.

The evening was sponsored by the Association of Reform Zionists of America (ARZA), and as the Chair of the national Board, I had an opportunity to thank our Israeli colleagues for the important work they are doing and to present the “Campaign for Religious Equality” that ARZA and the Union for Reform Judaism began several months ago at the URJ Biennial Convention in Boston attended by 5000 delegates from Reform synagogues around the world.

We are asking every Reform synagogue in North America (now numbering more than 900 communities) to contribute $3600 each as we prepare to celebrate Israel’s 70th anniversary in May. The money we raise will go directly to our Israeli Reform movement to support our Israeli synagogue communities (which receive no financial support from the Israeli government), our legal and lobbying efforts on behalf of religious pluralism, democracy, women’s rights, human rights, against racism and bigotry, and to conduct a massive public relations campaign to promote Reform Judaism in Israel with the intent to draw more Israelis to liberal progressive Judaism.

For North American congregations that would like to contribute $3600, please see ARZA’s website – www.arza.org .

 

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Broward County Sheriff Department Suspends Deputy for SLEEPING While On Duty At Parkland High School

The Broward County Sheriff Department announced on Mar. 20 that they’re suspending a deputy sheriff for sleeping while on duty that day at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School.

The deputy, identified as Dep. Moises Carotti, was found to be sleeping in his patrol car on Mar. 20 just after 5 pm local time by a student, who alerted another deputy; Carotti was subsequently replaced with another officer. He was assigned to cover the building that the gunman had entered on Feb. 14.

While Carotti was sleeping, the Feb. 14 gunman’s brother was arrested for trespassing. Three Majory Stoneman Douglas students were also arrested on Mar. 20, two for bringing knivies and another for issuing a threat on social media.

Carotti will receive pay during his suspension and will be investigated by the department for his conduct.

The Carotti announcement is the latest black eye on Broward County Sheriff Department. Recently released video and audio evidence showed that disgraced former Deputy Scot Peterson was well aware on Feb. 14 that there was shooting ongoing inside a school building, yet he simply stayed outside and told other officers to stand down. In doing so, Peterson clearly violated the department’s procedures.

The department as a whole also visited the gunman 45 times prior to the shooting but did nothing, which is looking like it was due to an Obama administration policy.

Broward County Sheriff Scott Israel is the second highest paid sheriff in Florida, as Israel is making $186,631 in the 2017/18 fiscal year.

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City Councilman Becomes Israel’s First Gay Mayor

Eitan Ginzburg, who had been serving as a councilman for the Israeli city of Ra’anana for the past 15 years, was selected to serve as the city’s mayor on Mar. 16, making him the first ever gay mayor in Israel.

The Jerusalem Post reports that Ginzburg was appointed by the Ra’anana city council, which included members of the Orthodox community, to the position after the prior mayor, Ze’ev Bielski, was tapped to lead the National Housing Authority in the Finance Ministry.

“I am happy the fact that I am gay did not stop me from getting elected with the support of the Bayit Yehudi,” Ginzburg told the Post. “I was chosen not because I am gay and not in spite of it, but because of the work I have done.”

He also said “that another glass ceiling was shattered, showing the progress in Israeli society.”

Additionally, Ginzburg is the youngest mayor in Israel at 41 years of age. He has been on the city council for 15 years; during his first term on the council he was also serving as an aide to former Labor Party MK Matan Vil’nai.

October’s nationwide elections in Israel will determine if Ginzburg will be able to serve a full term as mayor. In the meantime, Ginzburg is planning “to run the city in a stable and responsible way” to earn that full term. He doesn’t have any plans to seek higher office than mayor.

It’s worth noting that, as Erielle Davidson of The Federalist pointed out on Twitter, Israel is the only “country in the Middle East where this would be possible,” a blow to the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) narrative.

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