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April 1, 2019

L.A. Junior Hockey Team Suspended for Anti-Semitic Video

Several members of a Los Angeles junior hockey team was suspended on March 29 for posting an anti-Semitic video to social media.

The Athletic, which obtained a copy of the video, reports that a member of the Los Angeles Junior Kings program can be seen “appearing to do the [Nazi] salute while several others laugh” earlier in March.

“Individuals can then be heard saying what sounds like ‘Are you a Nazi?’ and then ‘fuck the Jews’ and ‘fucking Jews,’” the Athletic report states. “Not all the players in the video comment and only one raises his arm in what appears to be a Nazi salute.”

The L.A. Junior Kings, which has no affiliation to the Los Angeles Kings but does use their practice facility in El Segundo, announced on a statement on their website that 15 players and three coaches in the program have been suspended and will be forced to undergo “a mandatory educational program” that is “comprised of sensitivity and social media training administered by outside professionals experienced in impactful positive youth education.”

“We are a club that prides itself on being a community; one that fosters values such as friendship, respect and teamwork, and upholds ideals like diversity, equality and tolerance,” L.A. Junior Kings president Steve Yovetich said in the statement.

Simon Wiesenthal Center Founder and Dean Rabbi Marvin Hier told the Journal in a statement that the video is “outrageous.”

“At a time when anti-Semitism is so prevalent all over the world, we discover that in our own backyard an LA Junior Kings hockey team made anti-Semitic remarks and Nazi salutes mocking Jews,” Hier said. “Every day we are shocked to find out how prevalent this cancerous malignancy is in our society. If this is what they can say in their youth, what can we expect of them when they mature into adults?”

The Simon Wiesenthal Center has invited the hockey team to visit the Museum of Tolerance.

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‘90210’ Stars Arrive in the Holy Land

Looks like the cast of “Beverly Hills, 90210” is switching area codes and spending time in the land of Milk and Honey.

Tori Spelling and Jennie Garth are in Israel this week shooting a commercial for fashion company Castro. The two actresses were hired to shoot a new ad campaign for the kid’s chain, Castro Kids.

Both have been active on Instagram documenting their trip.

“Woke up to the beautiful coast of Israel,” Garth wrote March 31.

https://www.instagram.com/p/Bvs6_j8H2kd/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link

“Not a bad way to start your workday,” Spelling, who is Jewish, wrote while cruising on the Mediterranean Sea.

Screenshot of Tori Spelling’s Instagram story in Israel.
Spelling and Garth who are known for their roles as Donna and Kelly on the iconic teen drama series will only be shooting in Israel for 24 hours until they have to return to Los Angeles according to the Jerusalem Post. 
The show, which aired for 10 seasons on FOX, will return this summer featuring original cast members Ian Ziering, Gabrielle Carteris, Brian Austin Green and Spelling (who are Jewish) plus Jason Priestley and Garth who will reprise their roles in a six-episode “90210” miniseries.

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Columbia Prof Says Zionists Are ‘Beneficiaries of Anti-Semitism’

Columbia Iranian Studies Professor Hamid Dabashi wrote in a March 17 op-ed for Al Jazeera that Zionists are “the beneficiaries of anti-Semitism.”

Dabashi began the op-ed by calling for Muslims and Jews to unite against anti-Semitism; however, he proceeded to accuse Zionists of using the anti-Semitism label “to silence, paralyze and neutralize their political opponents.”

“Today, anti-Semitism is real and Zionists are categorically unqualified even to detect, let alone to fight it. Jews are the victims, Zionists the beneficiaries of anti-Semitism,” Dabashi wrote. “The Prime Minister of Israel, Benjamin Netanyahu, freely and openly elected as the top political figure of the Zionists, is a rank racist with a widespread coalition with all other racists, including anti-Semites, chief among them the US President, Donald Trump.”

Dabashi added that Zionists don’t have the “moral authority” to combat anti-Semitism because they are “hardcore or liberal advocates of that ideology of land theft, occupation and incremental genocide of Palestinians.” He went onto write that anti-Semitism is a “deadly European disease” and cited a March 7 op-ed from Peter Beinart at The Forward arguing that anti-Zionism isn’t anti-Semitism.

“Jews and Muslims are natural allies in this battle against racism in the intertwined forms of entrenched anti-Semitism and widespread Islamophobia,” Dabashi concludes his op-ed. “Zionists and racist Europeans know this. The conflation of Zionism and Judaism, as recently staged by [French President Emmanuel] Macron, is a false flag to confuse the issue and prevent the active solidarity of these two main victims of their racism.”

Simon Wiesenthal Associate Center Associate Dean Rabbi Abraham Cooper told the Journal in an April 1 email, “The article is brilliantly constructed. At first blush, a call for solidarity between Muslims and Jews in the fight against hate. But the real goal emerges- denigrating, demonizing, and delegitimizing Zionism and decoupling it from anti-Semitism. Along the way, this academic cleverly ascribes anti-Semitism as an exclusively European phenomenon, but nothing about anti-Jewish animus and dhimmitude in the Arab and Muslim world.”

“Yes there are some Jews who are anti-Zionist, but they choose to be willfully blind to the fact that Democratic Israel in 2019 is home to the world’s largest Jewish community whose roots to their land is 3,000+ years old,” Cooper wrote. “And they willfully turn their back on every prayer uttered by millions of Jews for 2000 years. We reject anyone who talks of solidarity in the fight against anti-Semitism while simultaneously fueling it by delegitimizing the love and lovers of Zion .”

In May, Dabashi called Zionists “hyenas” on Facebook and blamed Israel for “every dirty treacherous ugly and pernicious happening in the world.”

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Sami Rohr Prize for Jewish Literature Declares 2019 Finalists

Carolyn Starman Hessel, the executive director of the Jewish Book Council Sami Rohr Prize for Jewish Literature notified five authors on April 1 that they will each be recognized as a Fellow competing for a $100,000 prize to support their writing.

The five finalists for fiction this year take readers on a world tour of Jewish life: Rachel Kadish, author of “The Weight of Ink”; Michael David Lukas, author of “The Last Watchman of Cairo”; Dalia Rosenfeld, author of “The Words We Think We Know”; Mark Sarvas, author of “Memento Park”; and Margot Singer, author of “Underground Fugue.”

The winners will be announced in the beginning of May at the Moise Safra Center in New York City.

This writing competition is one of the largest literary prizes in the United States

“It is thrilling to experience the extraordinary depth and range of the works of this year’s fiction finalists” George Rohr, who established the award with his sisters, said in a statement. “It is deeply gratifying for our family to be able to recognize these emerging writers, and to play a role in their futures.”

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More Swastikas Found in Brooklyn Area Where RBG Poster Was Vandalized

(JTA) — Swastikas were found spray-painted on a sidewalk in the Brooklyn neighborhood of Greenpoint on Monday morning.

Police are investigating the graffiti found on Newel Street near an intersection with Norman Avenue, according to the Greenpoint Post.

Less than a month ago, a poster hung in a Greenpoint subway stop advertising a book about Jewish Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg was vandalized with a swastika and the phrase “Die, Jew bitch!”

Stickers with swastikas and other hate speech were found in the neighborhood in January, prompting responses from several local city and state lawmakers.

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Kalman Yeger Who Tweeted ‘Palestine Does Not Exist’ Will Lose Committee Seat

Kalman Yeger, a New York City councilman who tweeted, “Palestine does not exist” will lose his seat on the City Council’s Immigration Committee.

According to the New York Times, the city council’s leadership team met for more than an hour April 1 and decided to remove Yeger from the immigration committee.

The tweet which was posted March 27, was a response to a tweet by local Brooklyn journalist, Zainab Iqbal, who works for Bklyner. Yeger, who also represents the Orthodox Brooklyn neighborhood of Borough Park, called Minnesota Rep. Ilhan Omar an anti-Semite.

Following the tweet, a protest broke out within the Orthodox and Pro-Palestinian communities outside of Yeger’s office March 28 in which Zainab was in attendance live Tweeting.

According to the JTA, New York City Mayor Bill De Blasio condemned the statement and said Yeger should step down from the Immigration Committee if he does not apologize.

The New York Times also reported that Council Speaker Corey Johnson was unhappy with the statements made.

“I found Council Member Yeger’s comments completely unacceptable,” Johnson said in a statement. “As I said before, they were dehumanizing to Palestinians and divisive, and have no place in New York City.”

Johnson added, “I do not believe that someone who engages in the type of rhetoric we heard from Council Member Yeger belongs on the immigration committee, which is supposed to welcome and support immigrants in our city.”

Yeger defined his statements in a recent interview with the New York Post saying, “There is no state by that name; there is no place by that name…That’s a fact. I did not make it up.”

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Harvard Will Provide More Than $2,000 Toward Israeli Apartheid Week

Harvard’s Undergraduate Council voted at a March 31 meeting to provide a $2,050 grant toward the Palestine Solidarity Committee’s (PSC) Israeli Apartheid Week.

The Harvard Crimson reports that the margin of the vote was 21 in favor, 13 against and four abstentions to provide the PSC with the grant. Council Financial Committee Chair Noah Harris said that while the council doesn’t normally provide more than $2,000 in funding, there was a “compelling interest” to fund Israeli Apartheid Week since it addresses “race relations.” The money will go toward the event’s “venue, food and decorations,” per the Crimson.

PSC co-president Christian LaBash told the Crimson after the meeting that the group was happy with the council’s decision because “we have no outside funding, and our main purpose is to uplift the voice of the voiceless.”

One Jewish student, Gabriel Dardik, said at the meeting, “One of the speakers that is slated to come, Omar Barghouti, has said that he supports the euthanasia of Zionism. Really, it makes me feel unsafe that this kind of person could come here.”

PSC will be hosting Israeli Apartheid Week from March 30 to April 4. During Israeli Apartheid Week at Harvard in 2017, the PSC spearheaded an effort to put up faux notices in Harvard dormitories that a resident in the dorm had been indefinitely detained; the PSC later apologized for “any trauma and pain” the notices caused.

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University of Cape Town Blocks Israeli Academic Boycott Resolution

The University of Cape Town’s Council blocked a resolution from the university’s senate on March 30 that would have boycotted all Israeli academic institutions.

The Jerusalem Post reports that the resolution stated that the university would “not enter into any formal relationships with Israeli academic institutions operating in the occupied Palestinian territories, as well as other Israeli academic institutions enabling gross human rights violations in the occupied Palestinian territories.”

The university senate had passed the resolution earlier in the week with 62 in favor, 43 against, and 10 abstentions.

The university council sent it back to the senate, stating that the resolution needed a “more consultative process.”

Zvi Ziegler, professor emeritus of the Israel Institute of Technology (Technion) and head of the Inter-University Forum to Combat Academic Boycotts, told Haaretz, “Both in the U.S. and Europe, the opinion prevails that an academic boycott is not legitimate. The BDS movement is losing momentum in the academy, with most of its attempts failing.”

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The Jewish Love Affair with Food

Anyone who has heard a Jewish joke here and there has probably heard the one about how every Jewish holiday is the same. They tried to kill us. They failed. Let’s eat. While certainly comical in nature, there is something truthful about how intrinsic food is to Judaism.

Think about it. Panera Bread recently made waves around social media for their bread-sliced bagels. Before that, Cynthia Nixon, caused an outrage in New York when she ordered a cinnamon raisin bagel with lox, cream cheese, capers, tomato and onion (gag!). Then there’s the debate over bagel bread, bagel thins, the list goes on. Jews are very opinionated about our bagels!

As if that isn’t enough, every holiday has some sort of signature dish. Even on Yom Kippur when we are fasting, we have carefully planned out our meal to “break the fast.” Try heading over to “The Nosher,” an entire website devoted to all things Jewish and food. My favorite is the March Madness Jewish Food Bracket. What is it about Jews and food?

I thought about a lot of this lately, as I spent the month of March doing the Whole 30 diet. It is incredibly restrictive, but as someone with almost no willpower and a lifelong battle with weight, I needed to do it. The Biggest Loser competition at work was definitely a motivating factor as well. I lost fourteen pounds, but what I gained was a greater understanding of just how hard it is to be Jewish and struggle with food issues.

Not wanting to pass on the fun, I took my five-year-old daughter to communal hamantaschen and challah bakes. And did not eat either. This was the first Purim I can ever remember not having a single piece of hamantaschen. The challah is in my freezer. Potatoes were the only carbohydrates I ate during the entire month of March. Passover this year will be a breeze! I’ve already done it four times over and as of this writing, rice is the only thing I have re-introduced into my diet. Dairy and sugar are still out…for now. Sugar and various forms of it are in just about everything. For those who abstain from corn syrup for Passover, you know. I read more labels in the past month than I have in my entire life.

So what did I learn? Yeah, I learned that sugar (and various forms of it) is in just about everything. But, I also learned that as you go about your daily life in the Jewish community, it is hard to eat healthy. None of the foods on that “Bracket Challenge” are what could be called healthy. Now imagine going through the communal motions as a Jew—an oneg, a holiday celebration, a Shabbat dinner. I did it all. And I often had to eat later when I got home. Aside from the synagogue dinner for Purim where I ate a plate of very tasty roasted vegetables, the healthy options are rarely there when it comes to Jewish celebratory meals.  

Purim itself includes the Talmudic custom of drinking so much that the “person cannot distinguish between cursing Haman and blessing Mordechai” (Megillah 7b). While I have never been one to drink, I can imagine that this can be problematic for someone who struggles with alcoholism.

I am in no way trying to be the “Debbie Downer” of Jewish food. I fully recognize and appreciate the rich value that food brings to our culture. I can think of no stronger symbolism in Judaism than the upcoming Passover seder. And I was choked up when I read about how Joyce Feinberg’s z”l (one of the 11 murdered at Tree of Life in Pittsburgh) daughter-in-law still has a batch of her matzah ball soup in the freezer.  But, I also recognize and appreciate the value of inclusiveness and embracing modernity.

So, just as you might add an orange to your seder plate, I hope you will consider that Passover, like all holidays, is about more than just the food. It is about celebrating the fact that indeed, they tried to kill us and they failed. And, we eat. And drink. Whatever that might be. And be supportive of others in their own choices. As my dad reminded me, “It’s not a sprint, but a journey.” True that.


Lisa Rothstein Goldberg is a social worker and Jewish educator living in Louisville, Kentucky with her husband and their two young daughters.

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AJU Alum David Singer Becomes Limmud North America’s First National Director

The Limmud North America (NA) Board appointed David Singer as its first National Director April 1. Singer is a rabbi, educator and innovative Jewish professional who will help Limmud across the United States and Canada.

“We are very excited to move Limmud NA forward with the addition of David as National Director,” Limmud NA Co-Chair Sivya Twersky said in a statement. “As Executive Director at UC San Diego Hillel, he dramatically increased student participation through innovative programming and robust leadership development. He also inspired wide-ranging community partnership, including successful fundraising. Working hand-in-hand with our Board and volunteers, these strengths will help propel Limmud NA to greater heights.”

Founded in the UK in 1980, Limmud enables Jewish learning as an international charity and has been serving communities in 42 countries, including the United States and Canada.  

Singer was ordained at the Ziegler School of Rabbinic Studies at American Jewish University. During his time at Congregation Shearith Israel in Dallas, he co-founded and directed Makom, a way for young adults to get involved in reimagining Jewish community, cultivated volunteer leadership, and piloted groundbreaking educational initiatives teaching Jewish thought and practice.

He was also a Dvar Tzedek Writing Fellow at the American Jewish World Service and is involved in Rabbis Without Borders.

“Now more than ever, Jews crave opportunities to build communities that cross traditional boundaries,” Singer said in a statement. “Limmud has perfected a uniquely successful model for celebrating Jewish diversity while manifesting lifelong Jewish learning as a paramount value. I am ecstatic to join this effort, working with our Board, volunteers, partners and talented professionals around the globe as we grow and strengthen the Limmud movement across North America.”

Singer’s appointment coincides with the addition of four new Limmud NA Board members: Shoshana Bloom, global chair of Limmud; Caroline Kelly, who will work with Los Angeles Police Department of Mental Health; Sandra Lilienthal, founding co-chair of Limmud Boca in Florida; and Tony Ramsey, treasurer of Limmud NA.

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