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April 30, 2019

NYU President: I Wouldn’t Have Given SJP an Award

New York University (NYU) President Andrew Hamilton wrote in a Wall Street Journal op-ed Monday that he would not have given the President’s Service Award to the university’s Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) chapter.

NYU SJP received the award, which is given to clubs that positively contribute to the campus community at large, on April 17. Hamilton did not attend the ceremony.

On April 21, Susan Shapiro, an NYU writing professor, wrote in a Wall Street Journal op-ed that SJP receiving the award as well as the assault of a pro-Israel student during a Yom Ha’atzmut rave in April 2018 were examples of anti-Semitism becoming pervasive at NYU.

Hamilton’s Monday op-ed was a response to Shapiro’s, article that he would not have given the award to SJP because their “behavior has been divisive.” The award selection process typically involves “a committee of volunteer staffers and a student” selecting 150 clubs and individuals to receive the award, Hamilton wrote.

The NYU president declared in his op-ed that the university “has compiled a long, strong record of support for the Jewish community, a record that surely must count for more than a single student award.” i

Adela Cojab, the NYU student spearheading a legal complaint filed against the university earlier in the month, told the Journal in a Facebook message, “I appreciate the sentiment of President Hamilton’s article, but much of the damage has already been done. The university has not been transparent about their actions, leaving myself and my community to feel unsafe and unsupported— made evident by the fact that his article was written in response to an alumnus op-ed in the Wall Street Journal, not in response to students directly aggrieved.”

She added, “I wish it didn’t take public attention plus a lawsuit for the President to come forward, and as graduation draws closer, I can only hope the university takes meaningful steps to build a campus climate centered on mutual respect and communal values.”

Judea Pearl, chancellor professor of computer science at UCLA and Daniel Pearl Foundation president who asked NYU to rescind his 2013 Distinguished Alumnus Award, told the Journal in an email, “What the NYU campus needs to hear from Hamilton’s office is a morally-motivated defense of Zionist and Israeli students, not well-meaning yet generic support of the Jewish community. Since Zionism is central to the identity of so many students at NYU, anti-Zionism should be treated like any other identity-maligning form of racism, e.g., Islamophobia, homophobia, xenophobia or white  supremacy; though protected by free speech, they are morally deplored by shapers of campus norms.

Pearl added, “Asserting publicly the moral imperative of Israel’s existence (read: Zionism) is the key to maintaining respectful campus climate.  No Jewish student can feel safe on a campus surrendered to a racist slander machine.”

NYU President: I Wouldn’t Have Given SJP an Award Read More »

ADL: 2018 Was Third Highest Year for Anti-Semitic Incidents

The Anti-Defamation League’s (ADL) latest Audit of Anti-Semitic Incidents found that 2018 was the third highest year for anti-Semitic since the ADL started the audits in 1979.

According to the report, a total of 1,879 anti-Semitic incidents occurred in 2018, which was a five percent decline from 2017, but was a 48 percent increase from 2016 and a 99 percent increase from 2015.

Among states, California had the highest number of incidents at 341, followed by New York at 340, New Jersey at 200 and Massachusetts at 144.

Incidents on college campuses slightly declined from 204 in 2017 to 201 in 2018; in 2016, there were only 108 incidents. K-12 schools, on the other hand, declined from 457 incidents in 2017 to 344 in 2018.

ADL CEO Jonathan Greenblatt said in a conference call with reporters Tuesday that “higher degrees of awareness” among teachers and educators likely accounted for the decline in anti-Semitic incidents in K-12 schools. However, Greenblatt acknowledged that there were still some bad incidents that occurred at these schools, including Wisconsin students holding Nazi salute poses in a November photo.

There were 39 instances of known assaults against Jews in 2018, an increase of 105 percent from 2017. Fifty-nine Jews were victimized by the 39 assaults, 11 of whom were killed in the October shooting in Pittsburgh.

Instances of anti-Semitic harassment increased from 1,015 in 2017 to 1,066 in 2018, a 5 percent increase, while anti-Semitic vandalism declined from 952 in 2017 to 774 in 2018, a 19 percent decrease.

White supremacist groups and individuals constituted 13 percent of the 2018 incidents; Oren Segal, director of the ADL’s Center on Extremism, said during the conference call that this was the “highest levels we’ve recorded since 2004.” White supremacist groups and individuals mainly used flyering and robocalls to promulgate their ideology in 2018, which included supporters of avowed white nationalist GOP Senate candidate Patrick Little calling his opponent, Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), “a traitorous Jew” in a series of May robocalls. Instances of flyering included the neo-Nazi website Daily Stormer coordinating efforts in September to spread flyers blaming Jews for the sexual assault allegations against then-Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh.

Additionally, 140 of the 2018 incidents referenced Israel or Zionism in some way; Segal said boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) resolutions were not included in the total because they didn’t directly target individual students.

Greenblatt said that the data reflects “troubling signs of the times in 2018.” George Selim, Anti-Defamation League Senior Vice President of Programs and a former Department of Homeland Security official, said in a statement, “It is incumbent upon our leaders to continue fighting anti-Semitism at every opportunity. We will continue to advocate for legislative and other remedies to ensure that there is no place for anti-Semitism in our society.”

ADL: 2018 Was Third Highest Year for Anti-Semitic Incidents Read More »

Man Harasses and Lunges at Chabad Rabbi in NY

NEW YORK (JTA) — Rabbi Uriel Vigler was heading to morning prayers on Tuesday as he does every day on Manhattan’s Upper East Side, just before 7 a.m., when a man began shouting anti-Semitic insults at him.

Vigler said the man called him a “f***ing Jew.”

“Instinctively, I moved away,” he told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency. “I moved to the other side of the street, and he follows me and he said, ‘Are you nervous, are you scared?’”

As Vigler neared the synagogue, he said the man lunged at him. When the assailant noticed the congregation’s security guard, he turned around and called the rabbi “the devil.” The rabbi recorded the end of the incident and shared the video on Facebook.

Though the man did not harm Vigler, the rabbi believes that if the security guard had not been present, the assailant would have physically attacked him. Vigler has filed a report with the New York Police Department but has yet to hear back.

The incident comes just days after a shooter attacked a Chabad synagogue in Poway, California, killing one and wounding three.

Vigler, who leads the Chabad Israel Center on the Upper East Side along with his wife, Shevy, said he would not let the incident deter him from doing his work.

“We are not afraid,” he said. “We are going to continue our mission to spread goodness and kindness in the world, to reach out to Jews with unconditional love.”

Man Harasses and Lunges at Chabad Rabbi in NY Read More »

Florida Senate Passes Anti-Semitism Bill

(JTA) — The Florida Senate unanimously passed an anti-Semitism bill.

Prior to the discussion and vote Monday, the senators held a moment of silence for the victims of the Poway shooting.

Using the State Department definition as its template, the legislation defines as anti-Semitism calls for violence against Jews, advancing conspiracy theories about Jewish control and Holocaust denial. The measure also mandates that discrimination against Jewish people be treated the same as acts of racial discrimination in Florida’s public education institutions.

The bill moves on to Gov. Ron DeSantis for his signature. It had been passed unanimously three weeks ago by the state House of Representatives.

DeSantis will travel to Israel next month for a weeklong visit, his first official international trip, that will include a Florida Cabinet meeting at the U.S. Embassy in Jerusalem.

Florida Senate Passes Anti-Semitism Bill Read More »

‘Who Will Write Our History’ Honors Yom HaShoah

In honor of Yom HaShoah, Holocaust Remembrance Day, the documentary “Who Will Write Our History” from director Roberta Grossman and executive producer Nancy Spielberg will be shown in more than 20 countries on May 1 and 2. On May 3, the film will be available on iTunes for two weeks and on May 17, it begins streaming via Amazon Prime Video, Vudu, FandangoNow, Google Play and Vimeo On Demand.

Set in the Warsaw Ghetto, the documentary is about Jews who defied the Nazis to secretly compile essays, letters, poems, newspapers, records, Nazi propaganda and photographs that documented life in the ghetto from the Jewish point of view as well as the atrocities endured there.

“In an era of rising totalitarianism and the truth being re-branded as ‘fake news, audiences have resonated to the story of the members of the secret archive in the Warsaw Ghetto, brave spiritual resisters who were, literally, willing to die for the truth,” Grossman and Spielberg said in a statement.

Locally, the film will screen at Laemmle’s Town Center in Encino on May 2 at 1 p.m.

‘Who Will Write Our History’ Honors Yom HaShoah Read More »

NY Times Ends Cartoon Syndicate Over Anti-Semitic Cartoon

The New York Times announced to The Daily Beast Monday that they are cutting ties with a cartoon syndicate after an anti-Semitic cartoon was published in the April 25 international edition of the paper.

The cartoon depicted Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as a guide dog leading President Donald Trump, who is wearing sunglasses and a yarmulke in the cartoon. António Moreira Antunes, a Portugese cartoonist, drew the cartoon; CartoonArts International, a New York-based cartoon syndicator, supplied the cartoon to the Times.

Another Antunes-drawn cartoon was published in the weekend edition of the paper, depicting Netanyahu as Moses holding a tablet with the Star of David in one hand and a selfie stick in the other.

“The cartoon that ran in the international print edition of The Times last Thursday was clearly anti-Semitic and indefensible and we apologize for its publication,” Times spokesperson Eileen Murphy told The Daily Beast. “While we don’t think this [second] cartoon falls into that category, for now, we’ve decided to suspend the future publication of syndicated cartoons.”

Greenblatt told The Daily Beast that the April 25 cartoon reflected “the normalization of anti-Semitism” and that it was “unconscionable” for the Times to run a cartoon “that clearly communicates that Jews have excessive control, or that Jews manipulate events.”

Antunes defended his April 25 cartoon in an April 30 email to The Jerusalem Post, arguing that the cartoon showed that Trump’s “often blind politics” are emboldening Netanyahu’s “expansionist radicalism.”

“An analogy occurred to me with a blind man (Trump) led by a guide dog (Netanyahu) and, to help identify him, little known in Portugal, I added the Star of David, symbol of the State of Israel and central element of its flag,” Antunes wrote.

Other controversial Antunes cartoons involving Israel include a 1983 cartoon comparing Israeli soldiers to Nazis and a 2006 cartoon with a bloody Star of David tied around an American flag-themed leg and the Islamic crescent moon tied around another leg with dynamite.

NY Times Ends Cartoon Syndicate Over Anti-Semitic Cartoon Read More »

A Christian Killer in Poway

There has been a long history of Christians persecuting and murdering Jews. Antipathy toward the Jews began in the first few centuries of Christendom, became widespread and violent during the Crusades in the 13th Century, even more violent during the Pogroms of the late 1800’s, and then just when it seemed it could not get worse, the Holocaust resulted in millions of Jews murdered at the hands of baptized Christians, while church leaders watched on.

Only then did the churches come to their senses. In 1965, Pope Paul VI declared in Nostra aetate that “from enemies and strangers, we have become friends and brothers.” It seemed that, even if the “Christ killer” accusation and the “blood libel” did not entirely become a thing of the past, such myths would no longer result in the murder of Jews.

And then came Poway.

The shooting in the synagogue at Poway was a racially and theologically driven Christian killing. It is a most terrible flash point in the history of Jewish-Christian relations. Once again, the killed and wounded are victims of Christian Antisemitism. In the shooter’s own letter, posted online before the shooting, there was a clear and unequivocal Christian call to action. “To my brothers in Christ… although the Jew who is inspired by demons and Satan will attempt to corrupt your soul with the sin and perversion he spews, remember that you are secure in Christ.”

If ever words could kill: This letter epitomizes the link between ideas and actions. The shooter describes himself as having “a loving family,” and “great friends.” He was training to be a nurse, he went to church. He also knew the history of antisemitism very well. Not that he had any sympathy. In fact, he accuses Jews of harming Christians, from the killing of Christian martyrs St. Stephen in the first few centuries, to Simon of Trent, in the 15th century, through to the recent deaths of Christians in Syria.

We are familiar with Neo Nazi white supremacists, including the Pittsburgh killer, and Islamist killers such as the shooter in Toulouse in March 2012. But we are not so familiar with a white supremacist who is not a part of a radical organization, who goes to Church on Sunday, is training to be a nurse, and wants to kill Jews.

We are familiar with Neo Nazi white supremacists, including the Pittsburgh killer, and Islamist killers such as the shooter in Toulouse in March 2012. But we are not so familiar with a white supremacist who is not a part of a radical organization, who goes to Church on Sunday, is training to be a nurse, and wants to kill Jews.

When I read the killer’s letter as a trained theologian and Holocaust historian, it gave me the deepest sense of disquiet I remember in my adult life. This was an entirely rationalized killing. The shooter knew what his purpose was, first to defend Christianity from Jewish influence, then to defend his European heritage, and finally to make a personal sacrifice on behalf of all white Christians. He even describes his task as a sacrifice. He is prepared to die, but believes he will survive, serve his time, and then return to society to complete his task.

At Poway the threat of Christianity has joined the lethal theological threat of the Islamist terrorists. It now needs the full and unequivocal denunciation of Christian leaders across the United States, and across the world.


Stephen D. Smith is Finci-Viterbi executive director of the USC Shoah Foundation. 

A Christian Killer in Poway Read More »

Parents of Alleged Poway Synagogue Shooter Issue Sharp Statement Condemning Their Son

(JTA) — The parents of the alleged Poway synagogue shooter issued a statement condemning their son and the “darkness” that led to “this evil and despicable act.”

“Our son’s actions were informed by people we do not know, and ideas we do not hold,” the mother and father of John Earnest wrote Monday. “Like our other five children, he was raised in a family, a faith and a community that all rejected hate and taught that love must be the motive for everything we do. How our son was attracted to such darkness is a terrifying mystery to us.”

Earnest, 19, was charged with murder Sunday afternoon in the attack of the previous morning at Chabad of Poway. Before the shooting, on the last day of Passover, someone identifying himself as John Earnest posted a link to a hate-filled “manifesto” filled with anti-Semitic and white nationalist sentiment.

His father, John, is a longtime science teacher at Mt. Carmel High School in San Diego, from which the younger Earnest graduated in 2017.

Lori Gilbert-Kaye, 60, was killed in the Shabbat morning attack and three people, including the synagogue’s rabbi and an 8-year-old girl, were injured.

The family said they will likely not comment further “until after the criminal case is resolved.”

Read the full statement here.

Parents of Alleged Poway Synagogue Shooter Issue Sharp Statement Condemning Their Son Read More »

April 2019 WSGT News: The Power of Being Picked

April News 2019 with We Said Go Travel:

I loved being live on KTLA TV on the Sunday Morning News!

Click here to watch me on “Spring into Summer”

with Rocky Mountaineer on KTLA TV

This was my 4th segment in 2019.
Lisa Niver on KTLA Sunday Morning News

Watch the first three KTLA segments this year here:

Lisa Niver for Ms Magazine: The Power of Being Picked

In my March news for Women’s History Month, I shared many of my stories about women and have a new page for them all: LisaNiver.com/Women.

 

We Said Go Travel Top 50 Most Amazing Travel Blogs
More recent stories:
Ms. Magazine: The Power of Being Picked
Jewish Journal: Happy 85th Birthday Jane Goodall
Earth Day: Saving our Reefs from invasive Lionfish
We Said Go Travel was listed in the top 50 Most Amazing Travel Blogs!
To see more of We Said Go Travel videos, articles, social: CLICK HERE

 

Lisa Niver speaking at Metro Womens Leadership Summit
Lisa Niver will be speaking at Metro Womens Leadership Summit June 7, 2019

Thank you to Metro Women’s Leadership Summit and Travel Media Showcase for inviting me to speak June 7, 2019. I hope to see you there!

Workshop #10: Wonder Woman Needs To Wander Also! Why Travel Is So Important For Females

As women, we carry guilt for taking time out for ourselves. Here we will learn how traveling with your BFFs not only restores your positive energy, it actually improves your health! Beaches BFF Girls Getaway events are hosted twice a year at Beaches Turks & Caicos.

 

Lisa Niver and Wyland on the NCL BLISS
Lisa Niver and Wyland on the NCL BLISS
I was asked to share about my inaugural sailing on the NCL Bliss May 2018 from Long Beach, California:

“Wyland, the artist who painted the hull, was on board and painted in the atrium. It was amazing to meet him in person and see the new features of the ship like the two-level electric-car race track, the tandem Aqua Racer slide and an open-air laser tag course, themed like an abandoned space station.”

Lisa told us why it is the perfect family ship: “The Norwegian Bliss is great for families because they have so many new activities onboard like the race cars, water slides and laser course, but it is also a top choice for luxury cruisers with the Haven area and the high-end spa with the snow room, salt room and sauna. The fantastic choices for food include dessert at Coco’s and Japanese hibachi at Teppanyaki. The live entertainment was outstanding and included the Tony Award-winning musical Jersey Boys, and The Cavern Club, where a Beatles cover band brings the magic of Liverpool to the sea. I think there is something for everyone on Norwegian’s newest ship.”

Watch Lisa’s video below to see more of her experience:

 

Find me in the news and at events:

 

Please enjoy my videos from Sandals Montego Bay in Jamaica!
Sandals Montego Bay Sunset photo by Lisa Niver
Sandals Montego Bay Sunset photo by Lisa Niver
Thank you to everyone who entered our 2018 Travel Photo Award.

I am publishing the fantastic photos once a day! Click here to see the most recently published entries. Once all the entries are published in July 2019, I will announce the finalists. I expect to announce the winners in September 2019.

WHERE CAN YOU FIND MY TRAVEL VIDEOS?

Here is the link to my video channel on YouTube where I have 933,965 views on YouTube! Thank you for your support! Are you one of my 2,101 subscribers? I hope you will join me and subscribe!

Thank you for watching my videos, reading my stories, following along on social media and asking me about booking your travels!

Where do you want to wander? Find more information about me and my luxury travel advising as an independent affiliate of CRUISE and RESORT, Inc with Virtuoso Luxury Travel Network on my new microsite!

My fortune cookies said:

“You are always entertaining and delightful!”
“In being kind to others, you receive kindness back.”
“Fortune knocks at least once at everyone’s door. Be sure to answer.”

I hope your Spring celebrations of Easter, Passover and Earth Day were fantastic and you are making your 2019 dreams blossom into realities! Thank you for your all of your support. Lisa

Discover more on my social media accounts:  InstagramFacebookTwitterPinterestYouTube, and at LisaNiver.com. My social media following is now over 150,000 and I am verified on both Twitter and Facebook.

 

3 fortune cookies

Sandals Montego Bay Sunset photo by Lisa Niver
Sandals Montego Bay Sunset photo by Lisa Niver

April 2019 WSGT News: The Power of Being Picked Read More »

Israeli Ambassador Calls New York Times ‘Cesspool of Hostility’ on Holocaust Remembrance Day

WASHINGTON (JTA) — The Israeli ambassador to the United States linked The New York Times to the “Jew-hatred of growing parts of the intellectual class.”

Ron Dermer was speaking Monday in the U.S. Capitol at the annual Holocaust Days of Remembrance organized by the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum.

It was an unusually political attack on a day and at an event organized by an institution that generally focuses on the historical meaning of the Holocaust.

Dermer listed recent lethal attacks against Jews, including Saturday’s deadly shooting at the Chabad of Poway, a suburb of San Diego. His remarks were posted on his Facebook page.

He attributed the California attack, which killed one congregant and injured three , and the October massacre at a Pittsburgh synagogue that killed 11 worshippers, to white supremacists. But Dermer added that “we have also seen anti-Semitism increasingly poison minds in the political classes of what once proudly called itself the West.”

Describing what he termed “the Jew-hatred of growing parts of the intellectual class,” Dermer referred to anti-Semitism plaguing Britain’s Labour Party and rising anti-Israel activity on campuses.

“We have also seen one of the world’s most prestigious newspapers become a cesspool of hostility towards Israel that goes well beyond any legitimate criticism of a fellow, imperfect democracy,” Dermer said.

“The same New York Times that a century ago mostly hid from their readers the Holocaust of the Jewish people has today made its pages a safe space for those who hate the Jewish state. Through biased coverage, slanderous columns and anti-Semitic cartoons, its editors shamefully choose week after week to cast the Jewish state as a force for evil.”

Over the weekend, The Times apologized for including in its international print edition a cartoon depicting Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as a guide dog wearing a Star of David collar and leading a yarmulke-clad President Donald Trump.

The cartoon led to intense criticism of the newspaper, including by some of its op-ed page columnists who are consistently pro-Israel. Among them is Bret Stephens, who wrote a column about the cartoon excoriating his newspaper for “an astonishing act of ignorance of anti-Semitism,” coming from a news outlet “that is otherwise hyper-alert to nearly every conceivable expression of prejudice, from mansplaining to racial microaggressions to transphobia.” Stephens said the paper should apologize to Netanyahu.

However, Stephens, a former editor in chief of The Jerusalem Post, added: “I have now been with The Times for two years and I’m certain that the charge that the institution is in any way anti-Semitic is a calumny.”

Dermer has long been a critic of The Times, particularly its op-ed pages. In 2011, as a top aide to Netanyahu, he angrily declined an invitation to write an op-ed.

“It would seem as if the surest way to get an Op-Ed published in The New York Times these days, no matter how obscure the writer or the viewpoint, is to attack Israel,” he said in a letter responding to The Times’ invitation that he released to The Jerusalem Post.

Dermer in his Holocaust remembrance speech also alluded to a recent controversy surrounding a freshman Democrat, Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., who has been accused of invoking anti-Semitic slanders in some of her statements critical of Israel. She has apologized for some, but not all of the statements.

“Its noxious fumes have even penetrated this marble-domed sanctuary of democracy,” Dermer said of anti-Semitism.

Israeli Ambassador Calls New York Times ‘Cesspool of Hostility’ on Holocaust Remembrance Day Read More »