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June 27, 2019

Lena Wilson Announced New CEO of Vista Del Mar

Lena Wilson, who got her JD from University of Detroit Mercy, was announced the new CEO and President of Vista Del Mar, on June 3, 2019. A prime mental health and welfare center in Los Angeles, Vista Del Mar provides services in areas such as mental health, autism, adoption, and Jewish life programs for children. 

For the last 20 years, Mrs. Wilson served 1000 children in foster, 1000 children in the adoption program, and 6,000 individuals in the preservation and prevention program in Samaritas, a nonprofit organization based in Michigan. But, for Wilson, Vista Del Mar is her “dream job,” as she described it. 

Founded in 1908, Vista Del Mar has been a center and home for children and their families for 111 years. Once an orphanage for Jewish children, it now provides services to all communities from various different backgrounds, Wilson, the new CEO and President told the Journal. Although Vista is no longer only a Jewish orphanage, it still maintains its Jewish roots. Wilson, making reference to the Holocaust, said, “I think from that experience its really ingrained…that when you see an individual in need, that you extend that hand.”

Only three years ago, on June 14 2016, Vista Del Mar welcomed the ninth President and CEO, Nancy Tallerino.

Vista’s Board Chair, Laurie Konheim offered the following:  “On behalf of the Board of Directors, we are pleased and proud that Lena will be Vista Del Mar’s new President and CEO. Together, we will ensure that Vista remains a cornerstone of the Los Angeles community in 2019 and beyond, providing exceptional, comprehensive, and compassionate services to the children and families most in need of them.”

Although Wilson has many goals for Vista Del Mar, she said her first plan of action is to meet and create relationships with the key players involved with the organization. She also wants to establish a a more financially sustainable organization, “making… [this] organization as flexible and nimble [as possible] and making sure we can change as the tides change. As well as being a part of driving change.”

Then, Wilson wants to make sure she addresses the service gaps, and ultimately provide for those services at Vista Del Mar wherever they may be lacking. In the end, she said,  “We are the last hope or the last opportunity that these children have to reach their ultimate potential.” 

Vista Del Mar is located at 3200 Motor Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90034. Learn more about their services here.

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Pro-Palestinian Protesters Storm Bahrain Embassy in Iraq

More than 200 protesters carrying Palestinian and Iraqi flags stormed the Bahrain embassy in Baghdad, Iraq on June 27 following the United States-led economic summit in Bahrain.

The Jerusalem Post reports that the protesters climbed over the embassy walls and into the embassy garden where they burned United States and Israeli flags and took down the embassy’s Bahrain flag. They also held signs protesting the summit, accusing the Arab states that participated of being “Arab Zionists who have sold their Arab identity for a failed deal.” Iraqi police fired live rounds in the air to disperse the crowd.

“We used our vehicle loudspeakers to encourage protesters to leave the compound,” a police officer told Reuters. “After they refused, police had to fire into the air.”

Bahrain recalled its ambassador and condemned the protests.

The U.S. held the summit on June 26 and 27 in Manama with Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia and the Gulf Arab states to discuss economic development for the Palestinian territories. White House Senior Adviser Jared Kushner, who is also President Donald Trump’s son-in-law, proposed an investment fund of nearly $28 billion to the Palestinian territories and another $22 billion to Jordan, Egypt and Lebanon through “loans, grants and private investment,” according to CNBC.

Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas said at a June 27 press conference in Ramallah that he would reject any U.S. peace proposal, arguing that Palestinian “national rights are not pieces of real estate that are purchased and sold.”

Hamas also condemned the conference.

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ADL Report: 7% Increase in White Supremacist Activity on College Campuses

The Anti-Defamation League’s (ADL) Center for Extremism released new data on June 27 concluding that there was a 7% increase in white supremacist recruitment efforts on college campuses in 2019.

The ADL documented 313 instances of such activity from Sept. 1, 2018 to May 31, 2019. That number was 292 during the same timeframe in 2017-18. From January to May 2019, California saw the most cases with 33 incidents. Second was Kentucky with 18 instances, and Oklahoma was third with 16 instances.

The white supremacists’ recruitment efforts included using flyers, stickers and posters featuring “veiled white supremacist language” as well as “explicitly racist images and words that attack minority groups, including Jews, blacks, Muslims, non-white immigrants and the LGBTQ community,” according to ADL Los Angeles.

ADL Center for Extremism Director Oren Segal told the Journal that the 2017-18 academic year saw a 77 percent increase in white supremacist recruitment efforts on college campuses because that was the year it became their “go-to tactic.”

White supremacists “view colleges as these bastions of diversity, multiculturalism, PC culture — everything that they oppose,” Segal said. “For them it’s a cheap and easy way to bring their message to their enemies. Now, for this school year, we’re seeing this consistent high level that seems to have become the norm.”

White supremacists’ tactics include couching their propaganda in more benign language to “lure” college students into going to their respective websites, Segal said. According to the ADL’s website, examples of such propaganda include the use of  phrases such as “diversity destroys nations” and “keep America American.”

However, Segal said there hasn’t been anything to indicate a significant rise in white supremacist membership since white supremacists started focusing on college campuses for recruitment.

“White supremacists view colleges as these bastions of diversity, multiculturalism, PC culture — everything that they oppose. For them it’s a cheap and easy way to bring their message to their enemies.” — Oren Segal

“I think they’re clearly trying to create publicity for themselves, generate public outrage and generate fear and anxiety on these campuses,” Segal said. “But the secondary goal is to cast as wide a net as possible. Some people on campus may be turned on to their messages.”

Segal pointed to the American Identity Movement, Patriot Front and the Daily Stormer Book Clubs as the main groups behind the recruitment efforts. “These are all essentially white supremacist groups who not only have attended rallies and do other events around the country, but have put a premium on this sort of propaganda distribution,” he said.

Among those groups is the Daily Stormer Book Club, which placed flyers on Citrus College in Glendora in October stating, “Every time some anti-white, anti-America, anti-Freedom event takes place, you look at it, and it’s Jews behind it.”

Segal said that the “silver lining” surrounding this activity is that University presidents and leadership are issuing statements condemning hate.

“Writing statements and amplifying values of diversity and inclusion… is an important response,” Segal said. “Some schools hold a town hall meeting and an educational program to demonstrate support of the campus community and rejection of this hatred. So these are all opportunities for response and education.”

ADL CEO Jonathan Greenblatt said in a statement, “This data clearly demonstrates that white supremacists in the United States are emboldened by the current political and social climate. Our campuses and communities should be places for learning and development, not places for racists and bigots to propagate hate speech and search for potential recruits.”

ADL Los Angeles Regional Director Amanda Susskind similarly said in a statement that the organization is working “with campus law enforcement, administrators and other university stakeholders to identify these incidents and respond to them effectively.”

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If We’re Going to Occupy A Promised Land, There’d Better be Grapes – A poem for parsha Sh’lach

 

All of them were men of distinction;
they were the heads of the children of Israel.

Not all men of distinction are worthy of their title.
Just ask the woman who recalls being raped by
the President of the United States twenty three years ago
in a department store. No security footage,
No police report – just a fear of his two hundred lawyers
and a memory of how large a man of distinction he was.

 

You shall see what [kind of] land it is, and the people who
inhabit it; are they strong or weak?

The sub-text here is can we take them?
Is this land they live on, which has been promised to us

take-able. Do they live in tents or fortresses?
We want to know if this is going to be difficult

redeeming this promise, and also, our spies
are asked to see if there are any trees.

Because if we do take this land
this promised land

If we kill the people there
If we tear down their tents

and seize their fortresses
will we have anything to eat for our efforts?

It is the season where grapes first
begin to ripen

after all.


God Wrestler: a poem for every Torah Portion by Rick LupertLos Angeles poet Rick Lupert created the Poetry Super Highway (an online publication and resource for poets), and hosted the Cobalt Cafe weekly poetry reading for almost 21 years. He’s authored 23 collections of poetry, including “God Wrestler: A Poem for Every Torah Portion“, “I’m a Jew, Are You” (Jewish themed poems) and “Feeding Holy Cats” (Poetry written while a staff member on the first Birthright Israel trip), and most recently “Hunka Hunka Howdee!” (Poems written in Memphis, Nashville, and Louisville – Ain’t Got No Press, May 2019) and edited the anthologies “Ekphrastia Gone Wild”, “A Poet’s Haggadah”, and “The Night Goes on All Night.” He writes the daily web comic “Cat and Banana” with fellow Los Angeles poet Brendan Constantine. He’s widely published and reads his poetry wherever they let him.

If We’re Going to Occupy A Promised Land, There’d Better be Grapes – A poem for parsha Sh’lach Read More »

Letters: One Book as a Bridge, Use of Slurs Shouldn’t Be a Surprise

One Book as a Bridge
Yasher koach to Yossi Klein Halevi for his creative, innovative and empathetic “ice pick” of a book (“Letters From My Palestinian Neighbors,” June 21). In my eyes, the conflict isn’t equal, certainly not because of the lack of any ability to compromise, and thankfully an ability to lose their wars of annihilation upon the Jewish people, and also a robust political and religious anti-Semitism on the part of one side. Despite all that, this is opening new, practical connections between bitter enemies.

It’s important that some voices from the other side of the divide are resonating with the profound religious attachment that Zion represents to Jews and asking us, “Why didn’t you let us know?” (Answer: We thought you knew because it is so obvious). Regardless, it opens up a small door, which can lead we know not where.

Halevi is thinking as a pragmatist, and his project has little downside. With a media force multiplier like Al-Jazeera and a celebrity endorsement, maybe we can all be dreamers, which is what we are wont to do.
Eric Biren, via email

As a young Sunni boy living in the Libyan Sahara during the Six-Day war of 1967. I was crazed like the Arab population and swept into the irrational and self-destructive anger and hatred for Jews and Israel. Now, as a mature Jewish man living in Los Angeles, I accept the painful realty of the inability of Israelis and Palestinians to value the mutual benefits of tolerance and coexistence.

In his story, Halevi elucidates the religious, historical, political and cultural issues that are the obstacles to the current impasse. He has uniquely achieved this feat with honesty and compassion like no other contemporary writer.

Although his hope for mainstream religions to be the bridge of understanding seems contradictory to the current appeasement and patronizing, I share his possible path to peaceful coexistence. This new, uncharted and challenging path accompanied with honesty is suited to the practitioners of Conservative Judaism and to Reformist Muslims. The Shalom Hartman Institute and American Islamic Forum for Democracy, founded by Zuhdi Jasser, are excellent candidates to forge this dialogue.

May Halevi’s efforts continue to bear fruit for both sides to pursue the exchange of honest and workable solutions rather than the exchange of bullets and rockets.
Ed Elhaderi, Los Angeles

Of our “two narratives,” one is truth and the other is lies. We need not abase ourselves by showing respect to lies to gain anyone’s admiration. Our enemies will despise us regardless.
We are indigenous to the Land of Israel, according to history supported by archeology and foreign sources (like the Arch of Titus). Arabs are indigenous to Arabia. That’s why the Romans named it Arabia and named our country Iudea. We know exactly when Arabs first invaded our land — 632 C.E. We also know what they were calling it at that time: dar el Yahud (the abode of the Jew).
If the “premeditated land grab” mentioned by Halevi refers to our liberation of Samaria and Judea from Jordanian occupation, I can attest that we not only didn’t intend to enter those territories, we were unprepared to fight Jordan at that moment. When the shooting started, Jerusalem and the Corridor were defended by nothing but a few battalions of the Old Men’s Corps with three days’ brush-up training — hardly an attack force. It wasn’t until the Jordanians had shelled Jerusalem for an entire day and cut the only highway connecting the city with the rest of the country (and bombed our cities) that we sent up reserves from the coast to relieve the siege. I know because I was in the signals network of those battalions.
Louis Richter, Reseda

Use of Slur Shouldn’t Be a Surprise
Ariel Sobel seems perplexed by the ugly spectacle of the progressive movement using “Zio,” an epithet used by the KKK (“Why are Progressives Using an Anti-Semitic Slur Coined by the KKK?” June 21). An overview of history, though, should prove that this phenomenon is not an aberration but a natural outcome of similar ideologies.

Three totalitarian movements of the past and present, Nazism, Communism and Islamism, have embedded in their DNA a hatred of Jews, from Hitler’s “Mein Kampf”; to Karl Marx (self-hating Jew) shifting the hatred of “Jews” to “capitalists”; to Mohamed’s statement in the Quran calling Jews “descendants of apes and pigs” (a vile expression revived by the late Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood leader Mohamed Morsi). Crosscurrents can be observed in recent history: The Soviets trained and supplied Arab terror groups, the founder of the Muslim Brotherhood Hassan al-Banna as well as the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem were allies of Adolf Hitler. Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.), CAIR-affiliated anti-Semite, operates as a radical leftist yet is supported by the KKK’s David Duke.

These disparate groups may seem like strange bedfellows but they are bedfellows nonetheless, united by their common doctrinal hatred of Jews and Israel.
Richard Friedman, Culver City

An Open Letter to AOC and Katie Porter
Dear Congresswomen Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Katie Porter,

As the daughter of a Holocaust survivor, I am deeply offended by your interpretation and comments that the U.S. is running migrant concentration camps. I understand what you’re trying to say, and perhaps another term would have been more effective and less offensive to Jewish people who lost family members in the Holocaust. 

I consider myself a Democrat but if the people of the party I support can be so insensitive and inaccurate in comparing Nazi concentration camps to migrants being held at our borders, I have to re-evaluate where I stand.

How can you compare the atrocities of the Holocaust to migrants being held at the border? Are the migrants being beaten, shot at, denied food? Is there medical experimentation taking place on detainees?

Are they in “work camps?” Are they subject to extermination and annihilation? Do they fear some crazy person will beat and shoot them if they don’t do what they’re told?

I am sensitive to what’s taking place at the border. I don’t condone the actions of President Donald Trump but to make the comparison that the U.S. is running migrant concentration camps is inaccurate, offensive and insensitive to those who perished or survived the Holocaust and their families.

“Never Again” is the motto about never repeating the Holocaust. This slogan shouldn’t be thrown around as a catch phrase for other issues. You both need to be educated about the Holocaust so you can appreciate and use proper language when speaking about issues.

Your comments demean the victims of the Holocaust but I am hopeful that this wasn’t your intention. Please be mindful. Unlike the president, I hope you realize that words matter.
Anita Heber, Los Angeles

CORRECTIONS
In a story about Bnai Zion Medical Center (“U.S.-Based Nonprofit Spearheads Fortified Hospital in Haifa,” June 14), George Schaeffer’s title was incorrect. He is Bnai Zion’s current board chair.

In a story about a fundraiser to fight hunger (“MAZON Highlights Food Insecurity at ‘Hunger Bites’ Event,” June 14), the amount of money raised was incorrect. The event raised $100,000. 

In a story about online harassment of Jewish women (“The Sexual Harassment of Jewish Women Speaking Out Against Anti-Semitism,” June 14), a quote was misattributed. Chris wrote, “It might do you some good to get a tougher skin.”

A headline about a music performance at the Colburn School of Music (“Colburn School Performs Music by Two Jewish Emigres,” June 21) misstated the ensemble that performed. Pittance Chamber Music performed the pieces.


Now it’s your turn. Submit your letter to the editor. Letters should be no more than 200 words and must include a valid name and city. The Journal reserves the right to edit all letters. letters@jewishjournal.com.

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A Moment in Time: Creating Whole out of Brokenness

Dear all,
I was recently at a museum where there was a mirror created from shards of broken glass. As I saw my reflection, I was reminded of the many broken images in Jewish tradition:
The broken glass at the wedding.
The broken matzah at the Passover Seder.
The broken sounds of the shofar at Rosh HaShanah.
There is a mystical teaching that when the world was created, sparks of God’s Divine presence went to every corner of the universe. Every spark, every element of the world that is a little shattered …. they all are part of a holy vessel.
Every soul that has been broken is holy.
Every heart that has been crushed is holy.
Every body that has been wounded is holy.
Every mind that has suffered illness is holy.
Our mission on earth is to gather these holy sparks and create whole (or rather – to create holy) out of the brokenness. It starts when we take a moment in time to do our part to mend the world. And it can begin with a smile.
What will you do …. today … to begin to make the world whole?
With love and Shalom,
Rabbi Zach Shapiro

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Witness Tells German Court That Palestinian Killed Local Man Because He Was a ‘Rich Jew’

(JTA) — A Palestinian accused of killing a German man said he had targeted a “rich Jew,” a witness said during the murder trial.

The 31-year-old Palestinian man, identified in court as Iyad B., is accused along with an accomplice of strangling real estate investor Michael Reicher in November. The witness, a barber, said the accused said he had targeted a “rich Jew” whose people “destroyed my homeland,” according to a report in the local newspaper Shwartzwalder Bote.

The case is being heard in Horb am Neckar in the southern German state of Baden-Wurttemberg.

It is not clear whether Reicher, 57, is actually Jewish, according to the Jerusalem Post, which first reported the case in English. Reicher helped a local synagogue renovate its sanctuary and worked to assist Syrian refugees, according to the Post.

Iyad’s alleged accomplice was a Syrian refugee, Mohammed Omran Albakr, 28, who allegedly came up with the plan to attack and rob Riecher, with whom he had business dealings.

Iyad had not said anything to the witness about Reicher being killed as part of the attack. Reicher was ill with a lung condition.

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Gaza Arson Balloons Cause 20 Fires in One-Day Blitz

JERUSALEM (JTA) — At least 20 fires started by incendiary balloons sent from Gaza were burning in southern Israel on Thursday.

Some officials put the number of fires set from Thursday morning until late Thursday afternoon at 24, the largest number of fires started by the arson balloons in one day since the attacks became an almost daily occurrence last spring, the Times of Israel reported.

Most of the fires have burned agricultural fields, grasslands and woodlands.

Two of Thursday’s fires were ignited in the courtyards of residential homes, the Kan public broadcaster reported. There were no injuries reported. Two of the fires broke out in the Be’eri Forest, which has already been gutted by Gaza arson attacks.

Israel on Tuesday halted the transfer of fuel into Gaza following the rise balloon attacks.

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Jewish Groups Condemn British Society for Middle East Studies’ BDS Endorsement

Myriad Jewish groups condemned the British Society for Middle East Studies’ (BRISMES) June 26 resolution endorsing the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement in statements to the Journal.

BRISMES’ website describes the organization as urging people to study and get involved in Middle Eastern history. The resolution, which passed with nearly 80 percent in favor at BRISMES’ yearly general meeting in Leeds, calls for Israeli academic institutions to be boycotted until they “publicly end their support and complicity in violating Palestinian rights as stipulated in international law.”

“Israeli universities are playing a key role in planning, implementing and justifying Israel’s illegal military occupation and are maintaining a close and supportive relationship with the Israeli military, including involvement in developing weapon systems, providing justification for military actions and extra-judicial killings, rewarding students serving in the occupation forces, designing and delivering special programs for soldiers and officers, building on occupied land, and systematically discriminating against non-Jewish students,” the resolution states.

Associate Dean and Director of Global Social Action Agenda at the Simon Wiesenthal Center Rabbi Abraham Cooper said in a statement to the Journal, “Here is the true face of BRISMES: They release as letter in January of 2019 denouncing the IHRA [International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance] definition of anti-Semitism, because it allegedly would limit the free speech to condemn Zionism and the Jewish State. However, their concerns for free speech disappear like invisible ink when it comes to Israel academic institutions of higher learning with a smug 80% of the members voting for an academic boycott of Hebrew University, Tel Aviv University, etc.”

He proceeded to call member of BRISMES “smug, hypocritical ‘academics’ committed to demonize and delegitimize the lone democracy in the Middle East- the Jewish state and people of Israel.”

American Jewish Committee Los Angeles Assistant Director of Interreligious and Intercommunity Affairs Saba Soomekh similarly said in a statement to the Journal, “Academic boycotts are the antithesis of what universities stand for. Universities should be the place where students hear explanations of why people believe their narratives are valid; where professors help students understand the complexities of Israeli-Palestinian conflict.” Soomekh added that the BRISMES resolution was “one-sided” and didn’t put any blame on Hamas or the Palestinian Authority.

StandWithUs UK Executive Director Raphael Wein also said in a statement to the Journal that “BRISMES is choosing to stand on the wrong side of history and progress,” arguing that the resolution will negatively impact “Middle Eastern Studies students across the UK and BRISMES itself, not Israel.”

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Jewish Labor Committee Joined Wayfair Workers Walkout In Solidarity

The Jewish Labor Committee (JLC) participated in the Wayfair home goods workers’ walkout on June 26 protesting the company’s decision to sell furniture to migrant detention facilities at the southern border.

New England JLC Regional Director Ari Fertig led the walkout from the company’s headquarters in Boston, saying in a statement, “Our history informs us on what refugees and immigrants confront. Workers understand how hard it is to make demands of your employer, and we salute these brave workers now. That’s why the Jewish Labor Committee stands in solidarity with Wayfair workers. It is imperative that we fight for the safety and well-being of children at our border.”

Earlier this week, Wayfair executives received a letter signed by 547 of their employees calling on them to “make sure that Wayfair has no part in enabling, supporting, and profiting from this practice.” When the company refused, the employees formed a walkout protest calling for the company to donate the $86,000 in profit they made from this sale to the Refugee and Immigrant Center for Education and Legal Services (RAICES), a non-profit which provides free legal advocacy services for immigrants and refugees.  

JLC President Stuart Appelbaum said in a statement, “The violence, poverty and oppression in Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras are forcing men, women and children to flee for their safety and in many cases their lives” and that the JLC believes it is wrong to profit from a humanitarian crisis.”

The JLC is an independent secular non-profit organization that works to protect labor movements. 

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