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February 19, 2019

Why Is Israel’s Foreign Minister Attacking Poland After Their Stand Against Iran?

Just a week ago, I penned a column extolling the miraculous effect of witnessing a conference against Iran – co-hosted by the United States and Poland – take place on the very streets of Warsaw, whose ghetto has become synonymous with the Nazi Holocaust. In our generation, too, yet another evil enemy of the Jews has stood up with plans to annihilate them. Having personally heard Vice President Mike Pence declare Iranian intentions to enact a “new Holocaust” before delegates from across Europe and the Arab world — whose own leaders have not shied away from drawing on the obvious parallels between Ayatollah Khamenei and their Nazi forbearers — I felt that, at last, the world might finally have understood that threats leveled against the Jewish people are not to be ignored.

That day wouldn’t pass before its cathartic effect was interrupted; now, by a small scandal that erupted from Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s supposed remarks reported by the Jerusalem Post that “the Poles cooperated with the Nazis.”

These were not the prime minister’s words. What he did say was that “a not insignificant number of Poles had cooperated with the Nazis,” which means something entirely different. The Jerusalem Post corrected their story and the prime minister’s office released a statement reaffirming that “PM Netanyahu spoke of Poles and not the Polish people or the country of Poland.”

Still, Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki chose to cancel his trip to Israel this week to the Visegrad Group summit of Central European powers, set to be hosted in Jerusalem, dispatching his foreign minister instead.

Despite a brief, heated exchange between the foreign offices of Poland and Israel, it seemed the scandal would be short lived and that we could resume the pursuit of our shared and stated goals of countering Iran and deepening bilateral ties between our nations. However, just as the tension began to subside, Israel’s brand new foreign minister Israel Katz — halfway through his first day on the job — decided to chime in with a diplomatic bombshell of his own.

Speaking to reporters on Sunday, Katz declared that “Poles collaborated with the Nazis, definitely. Collaborated with the Nazis.” However, Katz would take things further, quoting the words of former Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir who said that Poles “suckled anti-Semitism with their mothers’ milk.” He ended with his own observation that “[one] cannot sugarcoat this history.”

The words had barely left his mouth when Poland announced their intentions to withhold the visit by their foreign minister, too, which has since led to the cancellation of the entire Visegrad Group summit.

To be sure, the issue of Polish complicity in the Holocaust needs to be properly addressed in its full historical context. After all, this is an exceptionally sensitive issue, one better defined by nuance and exception than by broad generalizations and oversimplification.

On the one hand, few doubt the centuries of anti-Semitism in Poland, fueled as it was by a Catholic Church that saw Jews as deicides (this was prior to the radical revamping of Catholic attitudes toward Judaism undertaken by the greatest Pole of the 20th century, and the greatest of all Popes, John Paul II). Few, too, dispute the fact that tens of thousands of Poles abetted the Nazi slaughter of their nation’s three million Jews, with Holocaust researchers having collected significant evidence of a large swath of Polish villagers who murdered Jews fleeing the Nazis, as well as the existence of Polish blackmailers who saw in Jewish helplessness an opportunity for financial gain. The Poles’ very own Underground State’s wartime Special Courts investigated 17,000 Poles who collaborated with the Germans, sentencing about 3,500 to death. The devastating Kielce pogrom of July 4, 1946 — in which Polish villagers massacred 42 Jews returning from Nazi camps — all but confirmed the presence of deep-seated anti-Semitism among many Poles, as did the efficacy of the anti-Semitic persecutions set into motion by Soviet-backed Polish minister of the interior General Mieczysław Moczar in March of 1968, which spurred the mass emigration of what was left of Poland’s Jewish community.

However, all of that is only a part of the story. There is another that puts forth a picture of a nation that fought bitterly against the Nazi beast and had many citizens take great risks to save Jewish lives and suffered brutally at the hands of the Germans as a result of both.

From the moment the Nazis invaded Poland at 5 a.m, am on September 1, 1939, the Poles fought back. They were no match for the Germans and, within weeks, their country fell. Even so, the Poles never established a collaborative government with the Nazis in the way that France, Hungary, Norway and even Belgium did. Even the Soviets, whom we credit with the liberation of the worst Nazi camps, willingly cooperated with Hitler far more than Poland did (the invasion of Poland, of course, being the best example.) The government of Poland never even surrendered to the Germans, choosing instead to evacuate their government and armed forces via Romania and Hungary to allied France and England, where they continued to direct an allied Polish resistance force known as the Home Army. The Polish government in exile even had Jewish members, the most famous being Szmul Zygielbojm, who committed suicide in London after the fall of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising in order to protest the Allies’ reluctance to intervene on behalf of the hapless revolt. Another renowned member of this government was the non-Jewish Jan Karski, who stood at the forefront of Polish efforts to inform the global community of the atrocities being committed against his country’s Jewish community (he would later be made an honorary citizen of Israel.) The Polish Foreign Minister Count Edward Raczyński, too, used Karski’s work to provide the Allies with one of the earliest and most accurate accounts of the Holocaust.

Clearly, there’s more to the story than either side of this political debate currently claim. My own grandfather moved to the United States from Poland about 1905, and often lamented the anti-Semitism he faced on a regular basis. Shamir’s own father was murdered by Polish villagers outside his hometown after jumping from a Nazi transport. Still, to equate actions like these with the industrialized slaughter of the Holocaust is both inaccurate and unjust. Worse, it shifts the blame away the German people who singularly planned, manned, and implemented the mass-killing of European Jewry. For a foreign minister of the Jewish State, sophisticated historical insight and diplomatic sensitivity must outweigh popular sentiment and emotion in delivering the Israeli government’s understanding of issues like these. His words were certainly not a great way to kick-off his appointment as the chief foreign diplomat of the Jewish State.

Besides the question of content, there is also that of timing. Why would an Israeli official choose to attack Poland just four days after they stood with the Jewish state against Iran? Placing itself at odds with the entire EU, the small Eastern European nation chose to host the State Department’s conference primed to enlist global support in reenacting critical sanctions against Iran. They did this even as England, France and — outrageously — Germany plot to undermine President Trump’s courageous decision to leave the Iran deal and punish the Mullahs for their promise to enact a holocaust of their own.

If this doesn’t bespeak a positive offer of friendship, I’m not sure what does.


Rabbi Shmuley Boteach “America’s Rabbi,” whom The Washington Post calls “the most famous rabbi in America,” is the international bestselling author of 32 books, including his most recent, “The Israel Warrior.” He served as rabbi at Oxford University for 11 years and won The London Times Preacher of the Year Competition. Follow him on Twitter @RabbiShmuley.

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Rep. Omar Apologizes for AIPAC Comments in Reported Phone Call With Jewish Groups

Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.) reportedly apologized for her AIPAC (American Israel Public Affairs Committee) tweet in a Feb. 19 phone call with several Jewish groups, which included the Anti-Defamation League (ADL).

According to the Times of Israel, Omar told the Jewish groups – including the ADL, Americans for Peace Now, Bend the Arc, HIAS (Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society) and the Jewish Democratic Council of America – during the confidential call that she is apologizing again “for any actual hurt my words have caused.”

“I know there are a lot of people who in the last weeks have expressed support in trying to say this isn’t anti-Semitic or this shouldn’t be looked at in that way,” Omar said.

She added that Jews need to have a consensus definition of anti-Semitism since she doesn’t want to provide anyone who wants to downplay “the hurt” with the time of day.

Omar also reportedly pledged to meet with each of the groups in person in the call.

The congresswoman, who serves on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, was apologizing for her Feb. 10 tweets accusing AIPAC of buying off politicians to support Israel. She released a statement the next day saying that she was still in the process of learning anti-Semitic tropes.

The most commonly used definition of anti-Semitism is the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance’s definition, which includes the demonization and de-legitimization of Israel as among the modern forms of anti-Semitism.

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N.Y. Prof Alleges Discrimination for Being Conservative Zionist

A professor at a New York community college wrote a Feb. 13 op-ed in the New York Daily News alleging that he’s being targeted on campus for being a Zionist and politically conservative.

Michael Goldstein, an adjunct professor of communications and government relations at Kingsborough Community College (KCC), wrote that in February 2018, a photo of his late father, former KCC President Leon Goldstein, was defaced “with anti-Semitic graffiti, including the words ‘F–k Trump Goldstein, Kill the Zionist Entity.’”

“I later learned the incident came one day after Kingsborough Professor Katia Perea apparently told an administrator who refused her request to fire me, “I guess I will have to handle this myself,” Goldstein wrote. “Perea, whom I have never met or spoken to, is a member of the Progressive Faculty Caucus, a radical faculty group at Kingsborough.”

Goldstein added that the school refused to label the graffiti on the photo of his father as a hate crime. The school also initially denied to provide him with extra security, although they eventually relented after “many months” of Goldstein requesting it.

The professor also noted that flyers were distributed around campus that called for his firing based on “false allegations of racism, sexism and anti-Muslim sentiments to me.”

“I’ve never promoted any of my private or religious opinions in the classroom — or anywhere else on campus. Nor have I held any of the hateful views the flyers attached to me,” Goldstein wrote. “In her earlier attempt to get me fired, Perea went from office to office showing staff my private Facebook photos as her ‘evidence’ that I’m racist and sexist. The PFC’s efforts then escalated into what the flyers described as an imperative to ‘build a movement’ against me.”

Goldstein wrote that he filed a complaint with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) and the New York Human Rights Division, with The Lawfare Project’s help, over the matter and there at least five other Jews on the school’s staff who have filed complaints to the school about the PFC.

“None of this has anything to do with academic freedom or free speech. This is about anti-Semitism and religious discrimination, pure and simple,” Goldstein wrote. “There is no longer a safe space in academia for individuals with opposing views — especially if you are Jewish or pro-Israel.”

Lawfare Project executive director Brooke Goldstein told Campus Reform in September, “The pervasively hostile environment for Jews at CUNY is only getting worse and is part of a larger, very disturbing trend. Throughout the US we are seeing campuses taken hostage by radical professors, students and faculty, whose goals are to silence, marginalize and harass Jews. This is not only illegal but a serious threat to our liberal democracy.”

Perea and the KCC didn’t respond to the Journal’s requests for comment as of publication time.

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Farrakhan: Rep. Omar Shouldn’t Have Apologized for AIPAC Comments

Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan said during his Feb. 17 keynote speech at the Nation of Islam’s annual Saviours’ Day conference that Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.) shouldn’t have apologized for AIPAC (American Israel Public Affairs Committee) remarks.

Omar tweeted on Feb. 10 that AIPAC buys off politicians’ support for Israel, prompting her to issue a statement the following day saying that she was still learning about anti-Semitic tropes.

Farrakhan, who has a lengthy history of promulgating anti-Semitic epithets himself, said that Omar was under pressure to apologize.

“Sweetheart, don’t do that,” Farrakhan said, adding that Omar is attempting to “shake the government up.”

“You have nothing apologize to for,” Farrakhan said. “Israel and AIPAC pays off senators and congressmen to do their bidding. So you’re not lying.”

Farrakhan added, “So if you’re not lying, stop laying down! You were sent there by the people to shake up that corrupt House. Shake it up!”

Farrakhan also blamed the “wicked Jews” for causing the Women’s March, Inc. controversy during his keynote speech.

Omar’s office did not respond to the Journal’s request for comment as of publication time.

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AMIDAH Founders Lisa and  Jordanna Cantor on their Cruelty-Free Fashion Brand

Founded by Lisa and Jordanna Cantor, AMIDAH has been widely praised for producing an innovative vegan leather, cruelty-free, fair-trade-based bag. All in one, this bag is a waist-belt, a backpack, a cross-body, a shoulder and a clutch. It is 100 percent unique in its design and versatility, chic in appearance yet priced at just $95.

Many bloggers and influencers have praised AMIDAH – as founded in 2015 by the British mother and daughter duo. The brand is solidified in the belief that humans should not have to sacrifice anything in order to carry their belongings, hands-free. Also of note is that AMIDAH’s compact, convertible bag was designed in England; after all, as the saying goes, “think Yiddish, dress British.”

I had the pleasure of doing Q&A with both Lisa and Jordanna Cantor, and highlights from that interview are below.

Jewish Journal: I’ve heard AMIDAH be called “the smartest bag of 2019.” How would you describe your offerings to someone who hasn’t yet seen them?

Lisa Cantor: Our AMIDAH bag offers itself as a unique, multifunctional, must-have staple accessory. With the ability to convert into a belt bag, mini backpack, and shoulder bag, the AMIDAH 3-in-1 hands-free design offers a sense of liberation knowing your items are close to you, and safe. While the classic design provides purpose for a variety of occasions. 

 JJ: Are your items entirely made and designed in England?

Jordanna Cantor: The items are designed with our English roots in mind; a classic design with industrial accents. We designed the items in the USA. 

JJ: Do you have a favorite of the AMIDAH offerings?

LC: They are all our favorites, it’s our staple accessory wherever we go.  

JJ: Had you two worked together on professional projects besides AMIDAH?

JC: This is our first professional project. We are exceptionally close and our ideas are always cohesive. 

JJ: Did you know all along that your items would be cruelty-free?

LC: Absolutely, that was our first requirement.  

Lisa and Jordanna Cantor creators of AMIDAH; Images courtesy of Amidah official/ Josh Salcedo

JJ: Who or what first made you interested in cruelty-free fashion?

JC: Seeing the cruelty inflicted on animals purely for the sake of luxury or fashion is unacceptable. It was an absolute conscious decision to not have any animal derived materials to make any of our products. 

JJ: Does your interest in cruelty-free items also apply to your diet and nutritional preferences?

LC: Being that our household was kosher, kosher meat is a preference. Although we both tend to avoid incorporating a lot of meat in our diet, red meat is a rarity.  

JJ: What does the rest of 2019 look like for AMIDAH?

JC: Work and consistency! I don’t think that drive will ever stray when you’re passionate about your business. 

JJ: When not busy with work, how do you like to spend your free time?

LC: With our family, friends and our dogs! Exercising, and the beach. of course. 

JJ: Finally, any last words for the kids?

JC: Do what makes you happy. Always expand your creativity. Follow your intuition.

For more on Lisa and Jordanna Cantor and AMIDAH, please visit their website or find them on Instagram @amidahofficial 

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Baldwin’s ‘SNL’ Trump Does Schumer Impersonation: Oy Vey!

“Saturday Night Live” has been in the eye of the political commentary storm for years. On the Feb. 16 episode, the show’s cold open featured Alec Baldwin as Donald Trump at a press conference where he declared the national emergency to build the wall on the southern border of the United States.

In a response to a question from a reporter (Cecily Strong) asking if he felt enough progress had been made in the talks with China to end the tariff by March 1, Baldwin’s Trump says that no matter how awesome the deal, that Senate Minority Leader Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) would say “and I’m not going to do the voice,” he assures the crowd…“he will say something like ‘Oy Vey’ you know what, I WILL do the voice.”

Then, in what would be Baldwin doing Trump doing Schumer, he loudly says: “Oy vey! What are you? Meshugeneh?”

Later in the episode, during the Weekend Update segment, Schumer (Alex Moffat) and Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) (Kate McKinnon) came on to comment on the passing of the budget. Responding to the loud applause Moffat, as Schumer, tells the crowd (with a grin) “no no you’re being silly” as the two say they will not “gloat” over the outcome of the bill.

Schumer didn’t respond to Baldwin’s impression but did respond to Moffat’s portrayal.

Watch the full clip below:

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Bernie Sanders Announces 2020 Presidential Run

Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) is throwing his hat into the Presidential ring once again after losing in the primaries to Hillary Clinton in 2016.

The senator announced his run early Feb. 19 to “CBS This Morning.” 

“We’re gonna win. We are gonna also launch what I think is unprecedented in modern American history and that is a grassroots movement,” he told CBS.   

The 77-year-old is running in a field that already includes many Democratic candidates  Sen. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.), Former HUD Secretary Julián Castro of Texas, Rep. Tulsi Gabbard (D-Hawaii), Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass,) South Bend Indiana Mayor Pete Buttigieg, Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.), and Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) that share his same views on major policies.

Sanders’ campaign will touch on many of the policies he fought for in 2016 including health care for all, higher minimum wages, environmental protection and gun safety laws.

“Our campaign,” he said in an email to his supporters, “is about transforming our country and creating a government based on the principles of economic, social, racial and environmental justice. They may have the money and the power. We have the people.”

The kickoff to election season, the Iowa Caucus, is scheduled for Feb. 3, 2020.

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Two Nice Jewish Boys: Episode 127 – Israel’s Social Media Ambassador

Being Pro-Israeli is hard enough, doing it on social media is a whole other story. It’s more than an uphill battle, it’s more than bearing the brunt of the mainstream global media. In a way, you might say it’s more like a social media suicide mission.

However, a few brave profiles manage to rise up, through the rubble, as pro-Israel, pro-Zionist, social media vanguards.

One of these people is Hannya Naftali. Hananya was a regular soldier in the IDF who just couldn’t stand the onslaught of fake news about Israel and the IDF  that circulated around the world. So he decided to do something about it. Fast forward 4 years – his videos have got MILLIONS of views, he has a huge following on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram, and he even had the privilege of interviewing the Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu. We are super thrilled to be joined by Hananya Naftali.

Hananya of FacebookInstagram and Youtube.

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German University Students Denounce BDS

The student parliament at the University of Cologne condemned the boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) movement in an October 2018 resolution.

The resolution calls the BDS movement “anti-Semitic” and affirms that the student government bodies at the university will combat BDS “by all available means,” including preventing pro-BDS events from being held at the university.

The resolution referred to modern anti-Semitism as taking the form of anti-Zionism.

“There are several attempts to delegitimize the existence of the state of Israel from the fact that the founding of the state has already been ‘unlawful,’” the resolution states. “And followed by the statement that Israel is the authoritarian and racist state par excellence, to assertions denigrating Israel as an ‘apartheid state.’”

The resolution adds, “BDS is a transnational political campaign that wants to isolate the state of Israel economically, culturally and politically, using various anti-Semitic stereotypes. The implementation of these campaign goals – as well as the related requirement that Israel should allow all Palestinians, not only those who left the country, but also all their descendants to ‘return’ – would be the de facto liquidation of the State of Israel.”

According to the BBC, anti-Semitic acts in Germany increased by 10 percent from 2017 to 2018; there was also a 60 percent increase of anti-Semitic violent acts in that same timeframe.

La Croix International, an independent Catholic newspaper, reports that German law enforcement is attributing the increasing anti-Semitism to the rise of the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD); however, a plurality of Jews (41 percent) told the European Fundamental Rights Agency believe that Muslim migrants bear the most responsibility for the rise in anti-Semitism.

Josef Schuster, president of the Central Council of Jews in Germany, told La Croix that the statistics “reflect a very alarming trend” and require a “much stronger commitment by politicians, police and the justice system with regards to anti-Semitism.”

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Nearly 80 Jewish Gravestones in France Found Covered in Swastikas  

About 80 Jewish gravestones in a cemetery in France were discovered vandalized with swastikas Feb. 19, hours before 14 political groups, French Jews and allies started marching against the recent rise of French anti-semitism.

French President Emmanuel Macron visited the eastern French village, Quatzenheim, where the cemetery is located, that afternoon and promised that his government would take action.

“This looks like absurd stupidity,” the French leader told the Associated Press. “We will take action.”

The French president is also scheduled to hold a moment of silence with other French leaders, including National Assembly President Richard Ferrand and the head of Senate, Gerard Larcher, Tuesday evening at the Holocaust memorial in Paris.

The marches were organized following French authorities reporting a 74 percent increase in anti-Semitic incidents in 2018 over 2017.

Among the leaders scheduled to march are Prime Minister Edouard Philippe and former French Presidents Francois Hollande and Nicolas Sarkozy.

“Anti-Semitism is deeply rooted in French society. We would like to think otherwise, but it is a fact,” Philippe told L’Express magazine. “We must be totally determined, I would say almost enraged, in our will to fight, with a clear awareness that this fight is an old one and will last a long time.”

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