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May 29, 2018

Jewish Organizations Denounce Vatican’s Sainthood Candidate for History of Anti-Semitism

Jewish organizations are urging the Vatican to not give sainthood to a cardinal due to his history of anti-Semitism.

The candidate, Cardinal August Hlond, was Poland’s leading church official from 1926-1948 and is seen as a protector of the church in the face of Nazism and communism. However, he called for boycotts against Jewish business and rebuffed a meeting with survivors of the post-Holocaust pogroms against Jews, according to Jewish Telegraphic Agency (JTA).

“Jews do not usually speak out about a candidate for Sainthood, but such a move by Pope Francis to elevate a lifelong anti-Semite to Sainthood would be shameful,” Rabbis Marvin Hier and Abraham Cooper of the Simon Wiesenthal said in a press release.

Hier and Cooper highlighted a 1946 report from the State Department stating, “Catholic leaders from Cardinal Hlond on down, preached anti-Semitism and an economic boycott of the Jews.”

They added, “We urge Pope Francis to put a halt to the campaign to bestow Sainthood upon a man who was anything but when it came to three and a half million Polish Jews before the Nazi Holocaust and the 80,000 survivors who desperately tried to reconstitute a Jewish presence in post-War Poland.”

Similarly, the American Jewish Committee (AJC)’s Rabbi David Rosen, who initially brought up the issue, wrote in a letter to the Vatican that giving Hlond sainthood would be seen “as an expression of approval of Cardinal Hlond’s extremely negative approach towards the Jewish community.”

A person can become a candidate for sainthood five years after their death or if the Pope issues a waiver. An investigation can then begin to determine if the candidate met the proper standards of holiness and virtue. If a candidate meets that threshold, there has to be miracles attributed to that candidate in order to reach the status of sainthood.

In the case of Hlond, the Pope has already determined that he meets the virtue and holiness and threshold; it has not yet been determined if any miracles can be attributed to him.

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Genesis Prize Foundation to Hold Competition for Women’s Rights Grants

The Genesis Prize Foundation announced on May 27 that they will hold a competition where Israeli women’s rights non-governmental organizations (NGOs) could win $1 million in grants.

These NGOs can apply for the grants on Matan-United Way Israel’s website. According to a press release, the Genesis Prize Foundation is putting an emphasis on the following attributes when determining the grant winner: promoting economic opportunities for women and gender equality, working toward ending discrimination among women in minority groups and helping end violence toward women.

The Genesis Prize Foundation decided to use women’s equality as their theme when they chose Natalie Portman to receive its 2018 Laureate. They will be sticking with that theme even though she decided not to attend.

“Empowering women in Israeli society is an inseparable and integral part of Israel’s social strength,” Matan-United Way Israel CEO Ahuva Yanai said in the press release. “Promoting gender equality of rights and opportunities is an important challenge we are facing. Women lead, donate, volunteer, create and establish, and they deserve respect in both their personal and public spheres. Harming or disrespecting women because they are women is discrimination based on ignorance and we must demolish it.”

The winners of the competition will be announced just before Rosh Hashanah in September. More details can be found at http://www.matanisrael.org.il/?page_id=4676.

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Hamas, Islamic Jihad Launch Over 60 Missiles Toward Israel

Hamas and Islamic Jihad launched over 60 mortars and missiles from Gaza toward Israel on May 29, resulting in at least three Israeli soldiers and one civilian injured, all of whom are expected to survive.

Additionally, the Netivot town suffered minor damage after parts of a rocket struck down by the Iron Dome hit part of the town.

According to The Times of Israel, Hamas and Islamic Jihad took responsibility for the attacks launched from Gaza in a joint statement, claiming that they were retaliatory measures for Israeli strikes.

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) responded by launching over 35 strikes against Hamas and Islamic Jihad strongholds in Gaza, followed by strikes against 25 Hamas military targets.

“We will work in every way to ensure security and calm for the citizens of Israel,” Israeli Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman tweeted.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu tweeted:

United States Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley called for the U.N. Security Council to hold an emergency meeting on Hamas and Islamic Jihad’s attacks against Israel.

“The Security Council should be outraged and respond to this latest bout of violence directed at innocent Israeli civilians, and the Palestinian leadership needs to be held accountable for what they’re allowing to happen in Gaza,” Haley said.

The meeting is set to occur on Wednesday.

The strikes against Israel have been roundly condemned by the international community.

“The rocket and mortar fire by Palestinian militants from Gaza towards Israel must stop immediately,” the European Union said in a statement. “Indiscriminate attacks against civilians are completely unacceptable under any circumstances.”

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A Moment in Time: When Something Fairly Ordinary Touches Your Soul

Dear all,
It wasn’t an easy day.  I had entered the local cemetery for a funeral, and an aura of melancholy hung over me.
But as I ascended the road toward the gravesite, I noticed a motionless deer staring into the distance.  (Yes, I stopped the car to capture the photo!)
There was nothing miraculous about the deer.  It was actually something fairly ordinary. But its presence stirred me.  The melancholy lifted, and I was able to embrace that moment in time.
This didn’t change the reality that we endure sadness in life.  But it gave a little reminder to keep the shutter of our souls receptive to the Divine fingerprint.  And THAT, I believe, is when the real miracle occurs!
With love and shalom,

 

Rabbi Zach Shapiro

A change in perspective can shift the focus of our day – and even our lives.  We have an opportunity to harness “a moment in time,” allowing our souls to be both grounded and lifted.  This blog shows how the simplest of daily experiences can become the most meaningful of life’s blessings.  All it takes is a moment in time.
Rabbi Zach Shapiro is the Spiritual Leader of Temple Akiba, a Reform Jewish Congregation in Culver City, CA.  He earned his B.A. in Spanish from Colby College in 1992, and his M.A.H.L. from HUC-JIR in 1996.  He was ordained from HUC-JIR – Cincinnati, in 1997.

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Chabon’s Criticism Backfires

Celebrated author Michael Chabon caused a stir last week with his sharp criticism of Israel in his speech to the graduating class of the Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion in Los Angeles. His criticism was not new. Chabon has already gone on record as saying, “The Israeli occupation of the West Bank is the most grievous injustice I’ve ever seen in my life.”

His May 14 speech had some deep and eloquent moments, but on the subject of Israel, Chabon seemed to throw that depth away. This disconnect was captured in a Journal op-ed last week by Morin Zaray, a graduate student who attended the commencement ceremony.

“Chabon, as eloquent as he was, viewed Israel in black-and-white terms,” Zaray wrote. “He condemned Israel’s security wall, proclaiming, ‘Security is an invention of humanity’s jailors … putting up the separation barriers and propagandizing hatred and fear of people on the other side of the wall. Security for some means imprisonment for all.’”

In response, Zaray wrote: “Unlike Chabon, I lived in Israel throughout the Second Intifada, and know that the security wall is not a prison. It is a lifeline. I know that the fear of people on the Israeli side is not driven by fake fear or government propaganda, but by constant terrorism that we experience and the loved ones we have lost. I know that the same wall he said he despised enabled me to live a normal life and to use the bus as a young girl.”

Chabon’s criticism was so one-sided that it just fed into the polarized verbal food fights that characterize much of the political debate today.

Zaray’s decision to walk out with her family after the speech added fuel to the controversy, and it became a national story in the Jewish world. JTA characterized Chabon’s criticism, which included a questioning of the mainstream mission of in-marriage among Jews, as a “diatribe.” An online initiative began circulating asking HUC-JIR leaders to issue an apology for inviting Chabon.

In an op-ed in JTA, HUC-JIR administrators responded to the criticism:

“As both an Israeli and American institution, belonging to two proud democracies defined by lively civil discourse, it does not occur to us at HUC-JIR to quash or vilify political criticism of Israel out of a pre-emptive fear of controversy,” wrote Rabbi David Ellenson, the interim president and chancellor emeritus, and Joshua Holo, the dean of the Los Angeles campus of HUC-JIR. “On the contrary, we know that the confidence to invite challenging ideas both defines and validates democracy in the first place.”

As a free speech junkie, I fully endorse Chabon’s right to criticize Israel and HUC-JIR’s position not to “quash or vilify” this criticism.

My problem is not with the criticism per se, but rather, with the nature of the criticism itself. Chabon’s criticism was so one-sided that it just fed into the polarized verbal food fights that characterize much of the political debate today. Chabon may sincerely believe that Israel’s occupation of the West Bank is “the most grievous injustice I’ve ever seen in my life,” but how much does that add to the conversation?

Has Chabon, for instance, ever considered the possibility that Palestinian elites benefit from the continuation of the conflict, which may explain why they so often have rejected peace offers?

As Ben-Dror Yemini writes in his new book, “An Industry of Lies”:

“The Palestinian refusal to accept any peace proposal is not only due to historical reasons or a sense of injustice. It is not about more or less concessions. It stems from the fact that the Palestinian elites only benefit from the continuation of the conflict. The Palestinians have become not only the ultimate global symbol of a ‘victim’ and an ‘oppressed people,’ who are supposedly fighting against colonialism and occupation. They have become global celebrities.”

I wish Chabon would have met the Palestinian I met once in Ramallah who was terrified that the minute Israel left the West Bank, terror groups like Hamas, Islamic Jihad and ISIS would swoop in, destroy Fatah and start murdering thousands of Palestinians. You rarely hear such complications from self-proclaimed moral arbiters who rail against Israel.

Incorporating complicating factors to enrich debate is precisely what an institution of higher learning should do, especially at an event such as a commencement address.

Indeed, the danger of Israel critics like Chabon is that their one-sided takes reinforce the erroneous perception that the conflict is all Israel’s fault, which is exactly the narrative promulgated by Israel’s enemies and the BDS movement.

Incorporating complicating factors to enrich debate is precisely what an institution of higher learning should do, especially at an event such as a commencement address. No, not all criticism is created equal. Self-righteous diatribes that just pile on and repeat tired tropes are not as valuable as criticism that urges people to consider the complexity of an issue.

As Zaray wrote: “For someone who presents himself as an intellectual — steeped in nuance — Michael Chabon has a remarkable ability to present a one-dimensional reality in which the Jews are evil oppressors and the Palestinians are powerless victims, with no agency, no responsibility and no blame.”

Maybe she should be next year’s commencement speaker.

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1,475 missing immigrant children

David Leonhardt, NYTimes Op-Ed Columnist writes:

Two disturbing stories about immigrants have been getting attention in recent days: one, that the federal government has lost track of almost 1,500 immigrant children; and, two, that the Trump administration has begun separating children from their parents at the United States-Mexico border.”

Last week on MSNBC’s Chris Hayes, he discussed the separation of the children of immigrants coming into America who are seeking political asylum in the United States because of a “well-founded fear of persecution” should they return to their countries of origin. One child was reported to be 53 weeks old. In all, close to 1500 children have been taken away from their parents and housed in a military compound.

I have never seen an MSNBC commentator bow his head in confusion, disgust, and moral outrage as I did Chris Hayes. I felt exactly as he did.

Then he called upon all listeners to write to their congressional representatives and protest this callous and outrageously immoral act of cruelty perpetrated by the Trump Administration.

See – https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/?shva=1#inbox/163abc3cdb5d2ba9

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