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June 28, 2019

Gaza Balloons Ignite Several Fires During Border Riots

A series of incendiary balloons from the Gaza Strip ignited several fires in southern Israel on June 28, despite a reported agreement between Israel and Hamas to end the arson attacks.

The Times of Israel reports that the balloons ignited 14 fires on June 28 during the weekly riots at the Israel-Gaza border, putting the total number of incendiary balloon fires up to 100 for the week. There were no injuries from any of the reported fires.

Under the reported ceasefire agreement earlier on June 28, Hamas would ensure the incendiary balloons would end in exchange for Israel increasing the permitted fishing zone 10 nautical miles to 15 nautical miles and restoring gasoline and diesel fuel imports to Gaza.

“If Hamas will not abide by this commitment, Israel will reinstate sanctions,” an Israeli official told the Times of Israel.

Eshkol Regional Council head Gadi Yarkoni told the Jerusalem Post, “We have turned into a place where the enemy can do as he pleases, and if there’s a ceasefire agreement, it seems that [Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu does not have to update us.”

According to the Post, the incendiary balloons have sparked more than 2,000 fires in Israel since they were first utilized in March 2018, burning down around 8,500 acres of Israeli land.

There were around 7,000 Palestinian protesters at the June 28 riots; IDF fire injured 19 protesters, according to the Hamas-run Gaza Health Ministry.

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Rep. Wasserman Schultz Praises Warren, Harris in Democratic Debates

Addressing Jewish Democrats, U.S. Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D-Fla.) praised the performances of Sens. Kamala Harris and Elizabeth Warren in the first Democratic presidential debates, held on June 26 and 27.

“They both had an opportunity to shine and they took advantage of it,” Wasserman Schultz, the former chair of the Democratic National Committee (DNC), said of Harris of California, and Warren of Massachusetts during a June 28 phone call convened by the Jewish Democratic Council of America (JDCA). “They spoke with passion, with empathy and … moral authority and brought ideas to the table.”

Wasserman Schultz said Warren, who participated in the first debate on June 26, has emerged as one of the more progressive nominees in the Democratic field because of her positions on “Medicare for All” and support for the Green New Deal. As such, Wasserman Schultz said Americans heard from a candidate who is electable.

“She was measured, practical and earnest. I think she was specific and substantive and did it in a way that you didn’t come away feeling like she was promising the moon and proposing things out of reach,” Wasserman Schultz added. “She was ambitious and aspirational, certainly, but as a legislator for 25 years now, the things she talked about and way she spoke about them, I could see a pathway.”

Regarding Harris, Wasserman Schultz said that the former California attorney general performed well during the second debate, largely due to her taking on former Vice President Joe Biden’s previous remarks on working with segregationists and busing in U.S. public schools.

“I think Kamala Harris did a fantastic job demonstrating she is ready for prime time,” Wasserman Schultz said.

“[Warren and Harris] spoke with passion, with empathy and … moral authority and brought ideas to the table.”  — Debbie Wasserman Schultz

During the hourlong call with JDCA leaders, including JDCA Executive Director Halie Soifer and JDCA Board Chair Ron Klein, Wasserman Schultz said she thought that the debate format worked against Biden because “holding Joe Biden to 30 seconds [to respond] never will give him the opportunity to shine. He has such vast experience and the breadth to which he is able to communicate is limited in that type of format.” Wasserman Schultz added, “It’s important for [DNC Chair] Tom Perez and the DNC to mix up the formats as they mix up these debates.”

Wasserman Schultz has served in Congress since 2005 and currently represents Florida’s 23rd District, which, she noted during the call, has a large Venezuelan population. She said she was disappointed that neither of the debates addressed the foreign policy crisis in the Latin American country. Likewise, she said the omission of any discussion about Israel was regrettable.

“I don’t know how you have debates in Florida, [which has] one of the largest Jewish populations, without discussing what is happening in the Middle East around Israel,” Wasserman Schultz said.

The moderators, however, did pose questions to candidates during both debates about one of Israel’s most dangerous enemies — Iran — asking whether candidates, if elected, would reenter the Iranian nuclear agreement President Donald Trump withdrew from in 2018.

During the first debate, most of the candidates, with the exception of Sen. Cory Booker D-N.J.), said they would enter back into the agreement.

Wasserman Schultz said that was the right position. “It was grossly irresponsibly [for Trump to withdraw] and I would think it is incumbent on a new president to make it one of his [or her] first priorities,” Schultz said.

Wasserman Schultz also denounced the president’s continuous trafficking in anti-Semitic tropes, saying anti-Semitism, along with the issue of immigration, presented the candidates in the Democratic Party an opportunity to “contrast the nightmare that is Donald Trump and the light at the end of the tunnel our nominee will represent.”

Rep. Wasserman Schultz Praises Warren, Harris in Democratic Debates Read More »

Iran in Talks to Salvage Nuclear Deal

(JTA) — Officials from Britain, France, Germany, Russia and China asked Iranian counterparts not to abandon the nuclear deal that the United States has left.

The officials, whose countries still subscribe to the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action spearheaded by former President Barack Obama, met the Iranians in Vienna on Friday, Reuters reported.

The talks were a “last chance for the remaining parties … to gather and see how they can meet their commitments towards Iran,” Reuters quoted Iranian diplomat Abbas Mousavi as saying. He complained that the deal is falling short of providing the economic benefits envisaged by Iran when the United States was still a party to the deal.

President Donald Trump last year took the United States out of the deal, citing Iran’s expansionism and involvement in terrorism. US sanctions were snapped back on Iran and on international firms conducting business with it.

Israel also opposes the deal, which offers Iran relief from some international sanctions in exchange for its scaling back for 10 years parts of its nuclear program.

The renewed sanctions and other developments have sent the Iranian currency into a free-fall. Traded at 3,500 rial for $1 in 2016, it is now traded at 132,000 to the dollar. Several major firms have left Iran following the US withdrawal from the deal.

The deal specifies several thresholds — limitations imposed on the size and nature of nuclear activity in Iran. Iran said it may enrich uranium to a purity forbidden under the deal unless it is changed to its satisfaction by July 7.

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A California Gamer Who Called Himself ‘Adolf Hitler (((6 Million)))’ Threatened to Kill Jews. Then He Was Let Out on Bail.

SAN FRANCISCO (J. The Jewish News of Northern California via JTA) — A 23-year-old East Bay man who threatened on a gaming website to murder “over 30” Jews and police officers wants his gun back.

Ross Farca of Concord, California returned to court this week to contest a restraining order that would extend a prohibition on his possession of firearms.

Farca was released on bail days after his arrest on June 10. The move shocked the local Jewish community: According to a police investigation, Farca professed admiration for the Poway and Christchurch shooters, assembled his own AR-15-style assault weapon, and on a gaming website detailed a plan to mow down “clusterf***s of Kikes.”

Jewish Vocational Service, based in downtown San Francisco, circulated an email with Farca’s mugshot, warning recipients to contact police if they saw him. One congregation hired a professional guard for Shabbat services on June 21 and requested an increased police presence, according to a community-wide email.

A group of anxious parents and grandparents from the East Bay Jewish community who attended a preliminary hearing in Contra Costa County Superior Court in Martinez on Tuesday wanted to know why Farca was released on bail in the first place.

One father in the group described Farca as looking “creepy” and “disturbed.”

“I sat behind him in the courtroom while he was talking quietly with his lawyer,” said the individual, who wished to be identified only as a “concerned East Bay Jewish parent” out of fear of being targeted. “Reading about his boasts of body counts, I thought — this man wants to kill my son.”

The father told J. that while exiting the building, Farca approached one of the grandmothers in the group, looked her in the eye and said, “I hope it goes well for you.”

“Then he walked away,” the parent said. “What did he mean by that? It was very bizarre.”

According to the county bail schedule, standards for being held without bail are quite high and include crimes such as aggravated murder and possession of a deadly weapon by a prison inmate.

“Under the law, he’s allowed to make bail,” said Scott Alonso, a spokesperson for the Contra Costa County District Attorney’s office. “It’s a very high burden to ask a judge to keep a defendant in custody on no bail.”

Still, Alonso said, “the charges in this case were very serious.” He said as part of the conditions of Farca’s release — in addition to a prohibition on handling firearms — he is subject to search and seizure by police “any time day or night.”

Farca’s bail was initially set at $225,000 and approved by Judge Anita Santos on June 12; $100,000 was allocated each for the charges of manufacturing an assault weapon and possessing an illegal assault weapon, and $25,000 for making criminal threats.

But in a hearing the following day, presided by Judge David Goldstein, the bail amount was lowered by $100,000.

Alonso said the judge reduced the bail because two charges were related to the same weapon, and the California Penal Code prevents “stacking” of punishments related to the same criminal behavior.

“Basically, they were alternative charges for the same gun,” Alonso said.

An emergency order that has kept guns away from Farca since his arrest expires on July 1. He appeared in court with a private attorney on June 26 to protest the new order, sought by the Concord Police Department, that would continue the prohibition through July 15.

Police Department Lt. Mike Kindorf, who helped prepare the emergency order, said the suspect appears ready to “oppose and fight our request.”

Farca was arrested following a tip to the FBI that he made online threats to commit a mass shooting and boasted that he possessed an assault rifle, according to a court filing.

Farca used the screen name “Adolf Hitler (((6 million)))” on the video game site Steam to inveigh against Jews. He threatened an attack that would exceed the number of victims in the April 27 shooting at a synagogue in Poway, California, in which one woman died and three were injured. He said he would do so while “wearing a Nazi uniform” and livestream it, like the shooter who killed 51 people and injured 49 in March during two consecutive terrorist attacks at mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand. Farca said he would add “Nazi music.”

“I have a fully semi automatic weapon AR15 with multiple high capacity magazines,” Farca wrote in his tagline, according to police. “Wanna see a mas[s] shooting with a body count of over 30-subhumans?” He anticipated he could “probably get a body count of like 30 kikes and then like five police officers, because I would also decide to fight to the death.”

In a press release, police said a search warrant of Farca’s Concord home at the time of his arrest turned up an illegally assembled AR-15 semi-automatic rifle, several high-capacity magazines and “Nazi literature, camouflage clothing and a sword.” A Concord police officer later told J. that the literature included “some old-looking books” that appeared to be from the 1940s and “related to Hitler Youth.”

Farca was arrested and booked into Contra Costa County Jail on felony charges.

Farca did not stay in custody for long. On June 13, Judge Goldstein reduced the bail, according to court records. The following day, Farca posted bond through a bail bonds company, paying a 10 percent fee.

Rafael Brinner, director of Jewish Community Security with the S.F.-based Jewish Community Federation, said he was encouraged by how swiftly authorities arrested Farca after receiving a tip from the FBI, which “averted a developing threat.” Brinner also said authorities continue to be “focused on mitigating any threat [Farca] might pose” after his release.

Still, some in the community remain uneasy. Farca’s next scheduled court date for the criminal charges is July 30.

The group of parents and grandparents who attended the preliminary hearing got a chance afterward to speak with the prosecutor, Deputy District Attorney Rachel K. Piersig. One Jewish parent was in tears as she told Piersig that she had taken her daughter out of school because she was so afraid of what Farca might do.

“It was very difficult,” the concerned dad said about the scene on Tuesday. “There was a feeling of real helplessness watching this person walk free.”

A California Gamer Who Called Himself ‘Adolf Hitler (((6 Million)))’ Threatened to Kill Jews. Then He Was Let Out on Bail. Read More »

Consolation Meal

What Do Your Cravings Really Mean?

You are a miracle. Your body maintains a temperature of 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit, your heart never misses a beat, and your lungs never miss a breathe. Notice that your body constantly adjusts to your environment to help keep you balanced and alive. Believe it or not your body’s desire to keep you balanced and alive reflects the reason for your cravings. Cravings are often viewed in a negative light, but the truth is cravings are important messages from your body to guide you into maintaining balance.

When you experience a craving, deconstruct it. Ask yourself, “What is my body trying to tell me?” 

THREE WAYS TO DECONSTRUCT YOUR CRAVINGS.

Deficiency of Nutrients
When the body is craving a specific food it could potentially mean it is craving the nutrients that are in that food. This is our body’s way of telling us what nutrients we need to maintain balance and stay alive. Craving chocolate could mean you are deficient in magnesium. A way to combat this craving is eating more magnesium- rich foods like almonds, flax seeds, chickpeas, and dark leafy greens. Craving soda could mean you are deficient in calcium. Try switching out soda for healthy caffeine alternatives like matcha or plant-based organic teas. Craving oily rich foods like french fries could mean you are deficient in healthy fats. Again, you can combat this by adding in healthy fats like avocado, walnuts, and olive oil to your diet. I highly suggest getting a blood test to check out your vitamin levels! This could be the key to conquering your cravings.

Stressful Lifestyle
Food is often used as a form of escape when you’re under stress. We often try to cope with uncomfortable emotions or lack of passion in our careers by seeking relief through food. When we start to engage in actions that bring us joy there is a great shift to a stress-free energy. Start to  take action in simple steps to help release endorphins (the feel good hormone) such as spending quality time with loved ones, engaging in your favorite exercise, or simplifying your to-do list because often less is more. Remember, quantity influences quality and sometimes we compromise on our happiness by trying to do too much. Notice how your cravings will diminish once you stop seeking balance through food and commit to a change in lifestyle.

Lack of Water
Our body is made up of 75% water. The first thing I do in the morning is drink a glass of water to flush out all toxins and rehydrate my body. Drinking a glass of water before a meal could also help reduce cravings. Hydration is critical in maintaining your electrolyte balance and providing your heart with adequate oxygenated blood. When hydration levels start to fall below what’s “healthy” you may start to crave salty foods. This is your body’s way of encouraging you to drink more fluids. If drinking water sounds bland you can try other hydrating replacements like celery juice, lemon water, or coconut water. You can also add fruits/veggies like strawberries and cucumbers into your water to help satisfy your taste buds.

When you dig deeper into the meaning of your cravings, you will solve the root of the problem. Start to take notice of what you are craving and take a blood test to see if you are deficient in any essential vitamins. Cravings often link to habit. Try to create a change by breaking a habit that is leading to your craving so that your brain does not sense the urge for that craving.


Jessica Mehraban is a Registered Nutritional Health Coach and wellness influencer. Jessica created Healthy Life by Jess as an online community for people to gain valuable and easy-to-follow tips they can use in everyday life. The Healthy Life by Jess mission is to empower people to find their healthy balance and to love and nurture themselves in their body, mind and spirit.

Follow more nutrition, wellness, & lifestyle tips follow Jessica on Instagram.

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Report: 71.4% Increase in Germany Anti-Semitic Violence

German’s Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution intelligence agency found that there was a 71.4 percent increase in anti-Semitic violence in Germany in 2018.

The agency’s report found that there were 48 instances of anti-Semitic violence in Germany in 2018; in 2017, there were 28 such instances.

The report also found that there were 24,100 right-wing extremists in Germany in 2018, an increase of 100 people from 2017. Around 12,700 are at risk of being violent. The report also noted there was also anti-Semitism rooted in “left-wing extremists” and “Islamists extremists” in Germany.

Overall, there was a 20 percent increase of anti-Semitic crimes in Germany in 2018, according to German Interior Ministry data released in May. Around 90 percent of those crimes were attributed to right-wing extremists, however a plurality of German Jews told a May European Union survey that they experienced anti-Semitism from Islamist extremists.

“We can find in almost all areas of far-right extremism hostile attitudes toward Jews … it’s a development that we must take, very, very, very seriously,” German Interior Minister Horst Seehofer said.

Anti-Defamation League (ADL) CEO Jonathan Greenblatt tweeted, “Germany’s domestic intelligence agency notes #antiSemitism is a core element of both right & left-wing extremism, and also essential to Islamist extremist ideology. We must tackle this rise in anti-Semitism and extremism, no matter the source.”

German Commissioner Felix Klein said in May that it’s too dangerous for Jews to be publicly wearing kippahs in Germany, and later backtracked after backlash ensued from his comments. The German parliament passed a resolution in May condemning the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement as anti-Semitic; the German government has yet to decide on whether to adopt the parliament’s resolution.

A 2015 ADL survey found that 51 percent of Germans believe that Jews discuss the Holocaust too much and 30 percent believe that anti-Semitism stems from “the way Jews behave.” Germany’s Jewish community is split on whether the biggest threat to Jews comes from right-wing extremists or Islamist extremists, according to The New York Times Magazine.

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Man Sentenced to Life in Prison for Killing Woman in Charlottesville Riots

James Fields Jr., 22, was sentenced to life in prison on June 28 for murdering a woman during the 2017 Charlottesville riots.

Fields had plead guilty to 29 of the 30 federal hate crime charges levied against him, which included the murder of 32-year-old Heather Heyer and injuring more than 30 others when he drove his vehicle into Charlottesville counterprotesters. Fields was among those participating in the “Unite the Rally” of white supremacists protesting against the removal of confederate statues.

The final charge was dropped as part of the plea agreement so Fields wouldn’t get the death penalty.

Fields’ lawyers had asked for a lesser sentence, arguing that Fields’ age and history of bipolar disorder and schizoid personality disorder should be taken into consideration; before his sentencing, Fields apologized for his actions.

Prosecutors argued that Fields deserved nothing less than a life sentence because he has a long history of anti-Semitism, pointing to testimony from a high school classmate saying that Fields was “elated and happy” during a field trip to the Dachau concentration camp, where Fields allegedly said, “This is where the magic happens.”

Additionally, prosecutors argued that Fields has shown “no remorse for his actions and continues to espouse his hateful ideology,” citing a phone call between Fields and his mother four months after the Charlottesville riots where Fields allegedly told his mother that Susan Bro, Heyer’s mother, was the “enemy” because she’s an “an anti-white liberal.”

Fields will be sentenced in state court on July 15.

The ADL tweeted, “We welcome sentencing of the white supremacist convicted of a hate crime for murdering #HeatherHeyer in #Charlotesville. Every state should have a hate crime law — and every state/city should count and report hate crimes to the @FBI.”

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Ruth Bader Ginsburg Donates $9,000 to Israeli Schools Teaching Arabic and Hebrew

(JTA) — Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg said she is donating $9,000 to a network of bilingual Hebrew and Arabic schools in Israel.

The grant to schools operated by Hand in Hand comes from prize money that Bader Ginsburg, who is Jewish, was awarded in winning the 2019 Gilel Storch Award from a Stockholm-based organization called Jewish Culture in Sweden, Haaretz reported.

Ginsburg decided to divide the award of 250,000 Swedish krona (almost $27,000) evenly between Hand in Hand and two other organizations that also work to promote tolerance, one in Sweden, the other in the United States.

“From the earliest grades, the children are taught to speak, read, and write in Hebrew and Arabic. They learn the shared values of Jews, Muslims, and Christians, among them, helping others, welcoming guests, opposing oppression, and caring for the earth,” Ginsburg said of her decision to grant part of her award to Hand in Hand during her acceptance speech.

Hand in Hand thanked Ginsburg in a post on Facebook: “Justice Ginsburg has fought her entire career for equality, civil rights, and democracy, and this award credits her lifelong commitment to enshrining these values in the American legal system. We feel incredibly honored that Justice Ginsburg wished to include Hand in Hand in this distinction.”

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Palestinian Shot Dead in Eastern Jerusalem Rioting

(JTA) — Police in Jerusalem shot and killed a 19-year-old amid riots in the eastern neighborhood of Isawiya.

Mohammed Abid launched a firecracker from short range at police during riots on Thursday, police told Israel Hayom. Officers fired back at him to neutralize a threat, saidpolice.

Abid was recently jailed by Israel for planning to carry out a shooting attack, the report said. He was released in recent weeks.

Nine Palestinians were arrested and several others injured in the riots.

Additional violence ensued at Hadassah Medical Center on Mt. Scopus, where Abid’s family tried to claim his body. It is being held until a forensic autopsy is performed on it, in keeping with regulations concerning gunshot victims. Family members attacked security guards, who restrained some of the attackers, Mako news reported.

Palestinian Shot Dead in Eastern Jerusalem Rioting Read More »

Second Democratic Debate Has a Dramatic Moment About Race, and Foreign Policy Barely Features

WASHINGTON (JTA) — The most dramatic moment in the second Democratic presidential debate was a showdown about race and generational differences between front-runner Joe Biden and Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif.

In a debate that focused heavily on immigration, health care, income equality, civil rights and taxation policy, foreign policy barely featured Thursday, in part because the NBC moderators did not emphasize it as much as they did when a separate tranche of 10 candidates appeared on the stage the night before.

Tensions with Iran, which featured prominently on Wednesday, came up only a handful of times on Thursday and only because two among the 10 candidates on stage raised the issue.

The former vice president, 76, appeared wounded and uncertain during the exchange Harris initiated over his record of praise for segregationist senators with whom he once worked to advance legislation, and his opposition in the 1970s to busing as a means of desegregation.

“I do not believe you are a racist,” Harris, 54, said, directly addressing Biden. “And I agree with you when you commit yourself to the importance of finding common ground, but I also believe — and it is personal, and it was actually very hurtful to hear you talk about the reputations of two United States senators who built their reputation and career on the segregation of race in this country. And it was not only that, but you also worked with them to oppose busing. And you know, there was a little girl in California who was a part of the second class to integrate her public schools, and she was bused to school every day. And that little girl was me.”

Biden, who was for decades the senior Delaware senator, tried to argue that busing was often a local decision, but Harris noted his record of opposing federal enforcement of desegregation. Biden has so far been by far the front-runner, while Harris’ polling has been in the middle tier of candidates.

The exchange, at least according to the cable TV pundits commenting on the debate, made Harris the evening’s winner. Her campaign immediately posted on Twitter a photo of her as a child, captioned, “There was a little girl in California who was bussed to school. That little girl was me.”

President Donald Trump’s campaign team, which until now barely had paid attention to Harris, immediately launched attacks on Twitter. In one instance, their feed pointed to a CNN town hall earlier this year where Harris said she was open to prisoners being allowed to vote.

Iran had featured large in the Wednesday debate when nine out of 10 of the candidates who were on the stage said they would reenter the nuclear deal with Iran that Trump abandoned a year ago. (Only Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., said he would not automatically rejoin the deal.)

It came up just twice on Thursday night, when moderators asked candidates what their first acts as presidents would be. Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., said she would seek to tamp down tensions with Iran, exacerbated in recent weeks after Iran downed an unmanned U.S. drone, and Trump came close to a lethal retaliatory strike on an Iranian target, only to pull back at the last minute.

“President Trump is hell-bent on starting a war with Iran,” Gillibrand said. “My first act will be to engage Iran to stabilize the Middle East and make sure we do not start an unwanted, never-ending war.”

Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., also said his first focus would be the Middle East and sought to distinguish himself from Biden, who supported the 2003 Iraq War. Sanders often ranks second or third in polling, behind Biden.

“One of the differences that Joe and I have in our record is Joe voted for that [Iraq] war, I helped lead the opposition to that war, which was a total disaster,” he said. “Second of all, I helped lead the effort for the first time to utilize the War Powers Act to get the United States out of the Saudi-led intervention in Yemen, which is the most horrific humanitarian disaster on Earth.” Trump vetoed the congressional bid launched earlier this year by Sanders to stop U.S. support for Saudi Arabia’s war in Yemen.

“And thirdly, let me be very clear. I will do everything I can to prevent a war with Iran, which would be far worse than the disastrous war with Iraq,” Sanders said.

The Trump campaign Twitter feed, called Trump War Room on Twitter, posted an attack on Democrats for not mentioning Israel or the increase in anti-Semitic attacks. “Two nights, four hours, 20 candidates and still ZERO mentions of threats to Israel or the menace of anti-Semitism,” it said.

Biden did attack Trump for his remarks after a deadly neo-Nazi march in Charlottesville, Virginia in August 2017, when he said there were good people among the marchers and the counterprotesters.

“I’m ready to lead this country because I think it’s important we restore the soul of this nation,” Biden said. “This president has ripped it out. It’s the only president in our history who has equated racists and white supremacists with ordinary and decent people.”

Sanders and Marianne Williamson, a self-help author, were the Jewish candidates on the stage. Sen. Michael Bennet, D-Colo., does not identify as Jewish but often notes that his mother is a Holocaust survivor, and did so again at Thursday’s debate, talking about the Trump administration’s policy of separating migrant children from their adult relatives.

“When I see these kids at the border, I see my mom, because I know she sees herself because she was separated from her parents for years during the Holocaust in Poland,” Bennet said.

The other candidates on stage Thursday were Rep. Eric Swalwell, D-Calif., former Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper, South Bend, Indiana Mayor Pete Buttigieg, and entrepreneur Andrew Yang.

On Wednesday night, in addition to Booker, the candidates appearing were Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, Sen. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota, Rep. Tim Ryan of Ohio, Rep. Tulsi Gabbard of Hawaii, former Rep. Beto O’Rourke of Texas, former Rep. John Delaney of Maryland, former Housing Secretary Julian Castro, New York Mayor Bill De Blasio and Washington Gov. Jay Inslee.

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