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January 18, 2019

‘I Want Jexit’ Graffiti Found In Front of D.C. Businesses

The words “I Want Jexit!” were spray-painted in front of two businesses in Washington, D.C. on Friday morning.

The aforementioned words were found in yellow spray-paint in front of Shalom Tire and Auto Repair in northeast D.C. as well as in front of a construction company that hasn’t been publicly identified as of publication time:

A spokesperson’s for D.C.’s Fifth District Metropolitan Police Department, told the local D.C. news website Hillrag that the word “Jexit” has been appearing as graffiti at multiple locations in D.C.

“At this time, there is no consensus on what it means, or whether it is motivated by hate,” the spokesperson said.

One such prior instance occurred in December, when the same words were spray-painted in the same yellow paint on the American Federation for Teachers (AFT) headquarters in D.C.

“Defacing our community with hateful rhetoric is meant to intimidate, otherize and sow fear, and to divide our community and make people feel unsafe and unwelcome where they live and work,” AFT President Randi Weingarten said in a statement at the time. “But this type of hate crime does just the opposite: It mobilizes us to come together and unite around the common causes of tolerance and peace, and to continue fighting for a more inclusive, more just world.”

“Jexit” is frequently used on anti-Semitic websites as a slur; it’s an apparent shorthand for “Jew exit,” based on the term “Brexit.”

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Israeli Lunar Spacecraft Lands in Florida En Route to the Moon

Israeli non-profit SpaceIL and Israel Aerospace Industries (AIA) began their journey to send a spacecraft to the moon by safely transporting it from Ben Gurion Airport to Orlando, Florida on January 18. The spacecraft will then launch next month at the SpaceX Launch Complex 40 at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, according to SpaceIL.

“After eight years of hard work, our dream has come true: We finally have a spacecraft,” SpaceIL CEO Ido Anteby said in a statement. “Shipping the spacecraft to the United States is the first stage of a complicated and historic journey to the moon.”

SpaceIL was founded by three engineers in 2011 who were competing for the international Google Lunar XPRIZE challenge to build, launch and land an unmanned lunar spacecraft.

“This is the first of many exciting moments, as we look forward to the forthcoming launch in Cape Canaveral,” Anteby said.

The spacecraft will be deployed from the SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket when it reaches approximately 60,000 kilometers above Earth’s surface and begin orbiting the Earth.

IAI Director of Logistics Eyal Shitrit said that though IAI has extensive experience in complex shipping projects, “the transporting of Beresheet [Hebrew for “In the Beginning”] is a unique challenge since this is a once-in-a-lifetime mission and there is no backup plan – this spacecraft must arrive safely.”

Upon completing its first lunar mission, Israel will join China, Russia, and the United States in landing a spacecraft on the moon. ­

Morris Kahn, philanthropist, businessman and SpaceIL’s president, took the lead in completing the mission and financed $40 million for the project.

“The excitement we all feel today will only intensify moving forward, and I can’t wait for the next milestone,” Kahn said in a statement. “This is only the beginning.”

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Man Arrested for Rape, Murder of Israeli Student in Australia

A 20-year-old man was arrested on Friday for allegedly raping and murdering 21-year-old Israeli student Aiia Maasarwe in Melbourne, Australia.

Maasarwe, who was studying abroad in the country, was talking to her sister on the phone on Tuesday evening as she was on her way home from a comedy show when she was attacked. Her partially clothed body was later found in the bushes; investigators have reportedly concluded that she was raped.

The man, identified as Codey Hermann, was arrested after forensics testing connected him to clothes left behind at the crime scene.

Hermann was reportedly aiming to be a rapper. He had several social media posts discussing his mental health issues, which he described as battles “with the devil.” He also had a Jan. 10 post that read, “Shoutout to all the men going through a lot, with no one to turn to, because this world wrongly taught our males to mask their emotion & that strong means silent.”

People who knew Hermann told the Stuff newspaper that he struggled with depression due to family issues, which resulted in him turning to drugs and alcohol. One former classmate of Hermann’s reportedly said that when he recently saw Hermann “he looked like he didn’t care for his life.”

“[He] was walking in front of moving cars [and] crossing the street without looking,” the classmate said.

A week before Maasarwe’s murder, Hermann had posted, “International girl Of mystery You knows who you are.” Shortly after the murder occurred, Hermann posted a “b4 An afta” photo of himself as a baby and of him holding a Jack Daniels.

Hermann was reportedly out on bail over minor charges around the time of Maasarwe’s murder.

A silent vigil for Maasarwe was held on Friday. Maasarwe’s father, Saeed, said tearfully that he was moved by the tributes to his daughter.

“This is the last place my daughter… was here,” Saeed said. “I had many dreams to be with her.

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The Mountaintop and Planting Trees for Eternity

In 2013, American Jews celebrated “Thanksgivukkah,” the once-in-a-lifetime chance to have Thanksgiving and Hanukkah at the same time. While that double feature will not happen again (at least not for us!), this coming Monday brings another opportunity to observe an American holiday and a Jewish holiday simultaneously: Martin Luther King, Jr. Day and Tu B’Shevat, the birthday of the trees.

On the surface, these two holidays might have little, if anything, in common. What does planting trees and eating fruit have to do with the legacy of a civil rights icon? More than you might think.

The Talmud tells the story of Honi Ha-Me’agel, who came across an old man planting a carob tree. Knowing that the man would not live to see the carob fruit, he asked the old man why he was doing this. The man replied that he enjoyed eating carob on Tu B’Shevat and that, when he was a little boy, someone had planted trees for him to enjoy. He was now doing this as a gift for the generations yet to come.  This story is retold frequently as we plant trees to remind us that although we may not see them grow fully, we are still fulfilling an important mitzvah.

At a different time and place in history, King understood that lesson as well. On April 3, 1968, what was to be his last speech, he said as much. In words now famous and extraordinarily prescient, he said:

“Like anybody, I would like to live a long life. Longevity has its place. But I’m not concerned about that now. I just want to do God’s will. And He’s allowed me to go up to the mountain. And I’ve looked over. And I’ve seen the Promised Land. I may not get there with you. But I want you to know tonight, that we, as a people, will get to the promised land!”

While King probably did not know he would be assassinated the following afternoon, he did know that the journey for equality did not begin with him nor would it end with him. He was right. While this country has come a long way since 1968, still much work has yet to be done. But just like the old man planting the carob tree, none of Dr. King’s work was in vain.

So, here I am in 2019. In the cold of winter. While raising two young girls and working a full-time job outside the home. So much uncertainty in the world. It is exhausting. And frustrating. Go online and moms can quickly see that we are our own worst critics. It would be easy to shut out all of the world’s ills and believe we can’t do anything. I hear it all the time from friends and coworkers.

Perhaps, this is why we need Tu B’Shevat now more than ever. To remind us of renewal. To remind us of the gifts we can offer to the world. There are positive things we can do for others, even if we do not see it. Because of the women who came before me, I can vote. Because of those who invested in my synagogue, I grew up receiving a quality Jewish education. Because of King, the seeds were planted for a civil rights movement that continues to this day.

So go ahead and plant that tree. Volunteer for that cause. Speak out for issues that are important and mean something. Every little bit matters. For as it says in Pirkei Avot, “It is not your responsibility to finish the work of perfecting the world, but you are not free to desist from it either.” Chag Sameach!


Lisa Rothstein Goldberg is a social worker and Jewish educator. She currently lives in Louisville, Ky., with her husband and two young daughters.

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Rep. Wasserman Schultz Denounces D.C. Women’s March

Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D-Fl.) condemned the national Women’s March in a Friday USA Today op-ed, stating that she would not march with them until they denounce Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan.

Wasserman Schultz wrote that she supports the march’s “values and mission,” she can’t “walk shoulder to shoulder with leaders who lock arms with outspoken peddlers of hate.”

“With anti-Semitism and white nationalism apparently on the upswing in America and globally, the associations that [Linda] Sarsour, [Carmen] Perez and [Tamika] Mallory have had with Nation of Islam (NOI) leader Louis Farrakhan have been most troubling,” Wasserman Schultz wrote.

Wasserman Schultz added that it was “alarming” that Mallory attended NOI’s Saviour’s Day in 2018.

“At almost every turn, Mallory has failed to clearly denounce Farrakhan,” Wasserman Schultz wrote. “Instead, she has attended Farrakhan’s speeches and posted her support for him on social media, referring to him as the ‘GOAT’ — or, the Greatest Of All Time. Just this week, she was repeatedly asked on national television to clearly condemn him, and she instead dodged the question, taking issue with the words he chose and the fact that Minister Farrakhan is male, rather than acknowledging the hurtfulness of his rhetoric toward Jews and the LGBTQ community.”

The former Democratic National Committee chairwoman also noted that Sarsour has said that progressives criticizing Rep. Ilhan Omar’s (D-Minn.) support for the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions put “their allegiance to Israel over their commitment to democracy and free speech.”

“This rhetoric is hurtful and shames the Jewish women who have stood for equality and inclusiveness since before the Women’s March even came into being,” Wasserman Schultz wrote.

Wasserman Schultz concluded the op-ed by stating that she will not march with the national Women’s March until they fully denounce anti-Semitism in all forms. In the meantime, she said she’ll march with local marches that have distanced themselves from the national march.

The Women’s March Los Angeles is one of the marches that has made clear that they have zero affiliation with the national Women’s March and that “hate speech” against Jews and Israel isn’t welcome.

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Dr. Sheila Nazarian On Success, Parenting and Grit

When Dr. Sheila Nazarian was 7 years old, she left Iran and didn’t speak a word of English. Today, she is one of the few physicians in the United States  who has emerged as a leading medical authority and personality.

Nazarian, a board-certified plastic surgeon, has earned her stripes not just for her work, but among the Jewish community for her devotion to family—her husband and three children,for her outspoken confidence and for her ability to serve as a role model to younger women who are reaching for more as the glass ceiling is shattered.

With more than 208,000 followers on Instagram and a strong business acumen, Nazarian launched The Skin Spot, a curated collection of medical-grade skincare, and founded The Nazarian Institute, a conference that helps luxury brands think BIG (Branding, Innovation and Growth). This year, the Nazarian Institute’s keynote speaker is Bethenny Frankel.

Patients from all over the world fly in to see Nazarian in her Beverly Hills office, which consists of an all-female staff, and is located among 30 other plastic surgeons who work in the same building. To rise above so much competition in such a short amount of time requires tenacity, skill and persistence—or what Nazarian refers to as “building her Shabbat dinner.”

“You don’t invite people over for Shabbat when you haven’t learned how to cook and your kids’ LEGOs are all over the floor,” Nazarian says. “So first you have to build your home and then you can go advertise and invite people over.” And that’s exactly what she did. Upon graduating, Nazarian treated her friends and family for the first two months until she ran out of clients, after which she devoted a year to building her practice and her media presence.

“Of course, you have to do good work, you have to take good care of people, have good bedside manner, good reviews, but that’s not enough,” says the physician, who is also known for giving back to the community.

In a sermon not too long ago, Rabbi David Wolpe of Sinai Temple told his congregation about a free joint treatment he received from Nazarian and her husband—a neurosurgeon—when he fell and hit his head at a wedding he was officiating.  Wolpe was also the rabbi who married the two physicians years ago.

Prior to meeting her husband, Nazarian said she encountered many men who seemed intimidated by her title. “I was dating a lawyer and he said ‘I don’t want our wedding invitations to say Mr. And Dr.’ so I went home and cried to my dad and I was like ‘no one’s going to marry me.’ But in the end, the right man wants a strong woman,” she says.

Being a woman in the field of medicine also has its own challenges, and to those who are looking to follow in her footsteps she says, “you have to be able to stand up and say ‘I’m good at this,’ and I feel like a lot of women have a really tough time with that.”

“I think when men accomplish something, they’re like ‘look at what I did, I’m amazing, I’m incredible.’ Whereas women are discouraged from expressing this sentiment, especially [in some] communities.”

And while she has worked hard to earn her credentials, there is the tacit pressure of being Persian that requires a woman to uphold a majority of the family responsibility, no matter how stressful work gets. Nazarian says that while she does receive grocery shopping help from a personal assistant, she makes sure to drop her own kids off at their Jewish day school every morning. Because of this, she starts her surgeries at 9 a.m., where most surgeons start at 7 a.m.

She reads to her children often, and recommends the book “Grit” by Angela Duckworth to parents who are looking to emphasize the value of hard work to their kids. This quality—grit—is what Nazarian says separated her from many of  her peers.

“I feel like I peaked at the SATs. And then as you go up in training everybody’s smart and they’re smarter than you or they’re more hardworking than you and you thought you were the most hardworking person ever in your high school class and in college you’re not. But I had the most grit,” she says.

“I was first in the hospital and the last to leave. That’s why that book really resonated with me, so I kept reading it aloud to my kids and then also I try to tell them about our background and how we came here with nothing and how we have to work hard no matter what circumstances life presents us with.”

For more information visit her website.

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WATCH: Tamika Mallory Won’t Say If Israel Has Right to Exist

Women’s March co-president Tamika Mallory wouldn’t directly say if Israel has a right to exist when pressed on the matter on PBS’ “Firing Line.”

Mallory told program host Margaret Hoover that “the Palestinians are native to the land” because they’ve been there “for a very long time.” When Hoover asked if Mallory thought that Jews were native to the land, she replied, “I understand the history that, you know, that there are people who have a number of, sort of ideologies around why the Jewish people feel this should be their land.”

“I’m not Jewish, so for me to speak to that is not fair,” Mallory said.

Hoover pointed out that Mallory isn’t Palestinian either, prompting Mallory to reply, “I’m speaking of the people we know are being brutally oppressed in this moment.”

Hoover then asked Mallory if she thinks Israel has a right to exist.

“I have said many times that everyone has a right to exist,” Mallory said. “I feel everyone has a right to exist. I just don’t feel that anyone has a right to exist at the disposal of another group.”

“In your view, does that include Israelis in Israel?” Hoover asked.

“I believe that all people have a right to exist, and that Palestinians are also suffering with a great crisis,” Mallory replied. “And there are other Jewish scholars who will sit here and say the same.”

Mallory then said, “I’m done talking about this. You can move on.”

StandWithUs tweeted that Mallory’s statements in the interview were “insane.”

Muslim reformer Shireen Qudosi pointed out that Mallory had referred to “Jewish faith or identity” as “an ideology.”

Mallory’s remarks come on the heels of her refusing to condemn Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan’s anti-Semitism on ABC’s “The View.” In an interview with Elle magazine published on Wednesday, Mallory said that while she doesn’t agree with everything Farrakhan says, “It does not make sense for me to throw away an organization—like the Nation of Islam—that has been very effective at reaching the hearts and minds of young black men to turning them away from violence.”

The Women’s March is set to take place on Saturday.

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Netflix Wants More ‘Kominsky Method’

On the heels of its Golden Globe Award wins for best comedy series and best actor for Michael Douglas, Netflix has renewed “The Kominsky Method” for a second season.  

The series, in which Douglas stars as the titular actor-turned-acting coach and Alan Arkin plays his agent and best friend, is a buddy comedy about aging in Hollywood. It marks Douglas’ return to series television for the first time since ”The Streets of San Francisco” in the 1970s.

Created by Chuck Lorre (“The Big Bang Theory,” “Mom,” “Young Sheldon”), who was honored with the Creative Achievement Award at the Golden Globes, “Kominsky” will begin production later this month on eight new half-hour episodes.

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