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July 2, 2019

Netanyahu: Iran’s Recent Actions Are Attempts at ‘Blackmail’ for Money

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in a July 2 speech that Iran’s belligerent behavior of late is nothing more than an attempt to strong-arm Western countries into giving the regime more money.

Speaking at a Jerusalem reception, Netanyahu said that “Iran openly violated the [2015] nuclear deal by increasing the stockpile of enriched uranium (to beyond that) allowed under the deal” because they’re aiming “to blackmail the world into making concessions and reducing the economic pressure on it.” The Israeli prime minister urged the world not to fall for Iran’s gambit and reiterated his July 1 for European countries to ramp up sanctions on Iran.

“Now is the time to increase the pressure,” Netanyahu said. “Now is the time to stand firm.”

Iran announced on June 1 that they had exceeded the 300-kilogram uranium enrichment limit under the deal. President Donald Trump told Fox News later in the day that Iran was “playing with fire.” White House National Security Adviser John Bolton tweeted that Iran’s move was likely “part of an effort to reduce the breakout time to produce nuclear weapons.”

Britain, France and Germany said in a joint statement to the European Union’s High Representative on Iran, “We regret this decision by Iran, which calls into question an essential instrument of nuclear non-proliferation. We urge Iran to reverse this step and to refrain from further measures that undermine the nuclear deal.”

Israeli Foreign Minister Yisrael Katz told Army Radio on July 2 that Israel will do whatever it takes to prevent Iran from obtaining “nuclear weapons, even if we have to act alone on that.”

Iran’s economy has been reeling ever since the Trump administration exited from the Iran deal in May 2018 and ramped up sanctions.

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Protecting Our Environment Shouldn’t Hurt Our Communities

We talk a lot about sustainability in our state’s communities. It is a matter of common sense, of stewardship, of decency and a moral and religious imperative for us to make the right decisions to protect the world we live in. This plays out in the things we choose to buy or not buy, and the companies and causes we support or choose not to engage with, based on their environmental footprint. Over the last decade, California has grown tremendously in the area of environmental conservation, and it’s something to be proud of. 

But we must remember that our ability to make environmentally conscious decisions as consumers is a choice. It is a positive choice, but a choice nonetheless, and many would argue it is a privilege.

And I think the issue of proactive environmental action becomes less noble and in some cases dangerous when it comes to taking away choices, most especially from large communities that rely on certain resources and options for their way of living and for their livelihood. 

There are current efforts and growing coalitions underway working to address this very issue. Groups such as Californians for Smarter Sustainability are pushing back on legislation, specifically Assembly Bill 792, authored by Assemblymember Phil Ting in San Francisco and Senator Ben Allen’s Senate Bill 54, which both aim to instill aggressive and highly unrealistic requirements for the rate of recyclable material to be included in the production of plastic bottles. 

On the surface, taking strides to reduce our environmental footprint seems virtuous. But because these bills would impose impossible to achieve timelines and recycling rates, we can see a plan that has sweeping environmental change in mind, but one that lacks perspective and consideration of the actual people that make up our state, particularly those from disadvantaged communities that will be detrimentally affected by both of these short-sighted bills. 

At the root of the issue is the simple fact that as our state reaches its lowest recycling rates in a decade, we lack enough recycled plastic to meet the demands of either AB 792 or SB 54. If these bills pass they will significantly raise the cost of essential items such as bottled water, which would be devastating for many working families in our state. 

Our faith teaches us to respect our world and environment, but it also tells us that we must care for the least fortunate among us. What we are seeing is that these bills would do very real harm to some of the most vulnerable Californians, who lack access to clean water that many of us take for granted. 

Across the state, lack of access to clean drinking water plagues the homes and schools of 1 million people — particularly those living in disadvantaged communities — and for these Californians, raising the price of bottled water could be disastrous for their health and well-being. We need to appreciate the importance of clean drinking water as one of our most fundamental human rights. 

It is wonderful that our community has taken a lead in environmental stewardship, and it is something we really should be proud of. But we are also a community that considers the bigger picture, a community that looks beyond the surface and one that is forever committed to a more just society. 

We share many goals with Senator Ben Allen and Assemblymember Phil Ting, but we must urge them to think wisely on the larger impact behind their legislation and amend their bills to realistically address the reality and needs of all communities in California. Senator Allen is, after all, the Chair of the Jewish Caucus, and as we support him, we must also hold him accountable to his commitments to the greater good. 

If we are going to address our state’s environmental challenges, we have to look holistically at community-based solutions for recycling and sustainability that consider the broad impact such legislation will have on millions of Californians. And we must do so in a way that takes care of our most vulnerable communities and protects their most basic rights to clean drinking water. 

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Former Miss Iraq Slams ‘Biased Media’ Coverage of Israel

Sarah Idan, who was Iraq’s representative at the Miss Universe 2017 pageant, criticized the “biased media” coverage against Israel in a June 25 speech at the United Nations.

Idan recalled the Iraqi government ordering her to take down a photo she had posted to social media of Idan and the 2017 Miss Israel, Adar Gandelsman. The Iraqi government also forced her to condemn Israel. She later received death threats.

“Since then, I can no longer return to my homeland,” Idan said. “Why did the Iraqi government fail to condemn the threats, or allow my freedom of speech?”

She added that conflicts between Israel and myriad Arab countries stem from “belief systems taught in Muslim countries that which are anti-Semitic.” A “biased media” reinforces these beliefs, Idan said.

“When I watched the news last month, why did they never report that the Hamas terrorist organization fired nearly 700 rockets at Israeli civilians in one weekend, or that Hamas used Palestinians as human shields?” Idan said. “Why do they never condemn Hamas for initiating the attacks? Instead, they only show those killed by the response, in self-defense, and blame Israel.”

Idan also pointed out that “Arab media” never asks for her opinion on Middle East issues; they only “publish false translations of my statements.” She urged Arab states to make common cause with Israel since they have more in common with the Jewish State than with Islamic terror groups.

“Negotiating peace for both states isn’t betraying the Arab cause but a vital step toward ending conflict and suffering for all,” Idan said.

Idan currently heads the philanthropy organization Forward Humanity; she criticized former Pink Floyd bassist Roger Waters’ calls to boycott Israel in May, tweeting, “I never understood artists who boycott an entire country, you’re singing for people not for governments.”

Idan was on Journal Editor-in-Chief’s David Suissa’s May 24 podcast.

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A Filipino-American Dancer Turned Rabbi Wants to Change the Conversation About Jews of Color

NEW YORK (JTA) — There’s a small framed sign in Rabbi Mira Rivera’s office that reads “mizrach,” the Hebrew word for “east,” so she knows how to face Jerusalem when praying.
On the opposite wall hangs a bright blue sign with the word “peace” written in four languages — English, Arabic, Hebrew and Sanskrit. Rivera made it from a cardboard box for a solidarity event at the Islamic Cultural Center here following deadly shooting attacks at two mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand.

On a third wall hangs a colorful Tibetan silk cloth that displays symbols associated with peace, fertility and unity.

Though an unexpected combination, the three somehow mesh in Rivera’s small office, similar to how her identities — a Filipino-American yoga teacher turned dancer turned rabbi — seem to meld effortlessly.

But it wasn’t always the case.

“People would say things like, oh so when did you covert? Are you marrying somebody [and] that’s why you’re Jewish?” she recalled in an interview Monday with the Jewish Telegraphic Agency. “It’s always up to now the same story, the same language.”

Things are different at Romemu, a popular Jewish Renewal congregation where this week Rivera celebrates her anniversary as a rabbinic fellow.

Rivera, who is in her 50s and the first Filipino-American woman to be ordained a rabbi, recalled attending Sukkot services at the congregation in 2016, before working there or becoming a regular. She was “shocked” when she was approached and asked if she wanted an aliyah. Though it’s common to offer visitors to a synagogue the honor of reciting the blessing during the Torah reading, Rivera said she never had the experience.

“For me, a person of color, that never happens, ever,” she said.

Jewish Renewal, the tiny but influential movement from which Romemu emerged, is among a number of organizations working to educate and promote diversity in the Jewish community. Eleven percent of American Jews do not identify as white, according to the Steinhardt Social Research Institute’s American Jewish Population Project, although a new report suggests the number may be higher. Jews of color remain few and far between in the rabbinate and community leadership roles.

At Romemu, Rivera works alongside its founder and senior rabbi, David Ingber, helping him with everything from visiting sick congregants and representing the synagogue at political and interfaith events to occasionally leading services. Her position is part of a project by the Jewish Emergent Network, which represents seven nondenominational and innovative communities across the country.

Romemu is nontraditional in many ways. It does not have a synagogue building and services are hosted at a Presbyterian church on the Upper West Side. Its services combine traditional prayer with meditation, song and dance. This summer, the congregation is hosting a Jewish learning program combining Torah study with meditation that is open to both Jews and people of other faiths.

Outside her work at Romemu, Rivera works to build community among Jews of color — something she lacked until recently.

After converting, she asked a rabbi and Jewish community leaders if she could speak to others like her. She was told that “people don’t want to be outed” as converts.
Seeing other people of color in synagogues, she would think, “They told me I shouldn’t really approach them.”

That experience led to “years of isolation and loneliness,” she said.

Now Rivera works with organizations such as Jews For Racial and Economic Justice and Bend the Arc: Jewish Action to build community among Jews of color.

Ingber said Rivera’s advocacy on behalf of Jews on the margins makes her “an inspiration for others to live their life in service of that truth and of that longing to see justice, to see human beings treat one another with respect and integrity and dignity.”

Rivera, who attended Catholic school but started practicing yoga as a teen, came to Judaism through her two lifelong passions: meditation and dance.

A Detroit native, she was raised in the Philippines by her grandmother from the age of 2. After finishing high school, Rivera went to India to study meditation and yoga. She studied there with Jewish teachers from around the world and had her first exposure to social justice teachings rooted in the Jewish precept to heal the world.

Rivera later moved to Israel to teach yoga, where a visit to the Western Wall had a profound impact. She recalls seeing the Kotel lit up by the sun and having an urge to “plaster my body against the wall.”

“I had this feeling of emptying, emptying, emptying, emptying, until there were no more tears to come out, and I just felt a total sense of calm,” she recalled. “Then this really subversive thought in my brain, ‘I am home.’”

Eventually, that thought would lead her to convert to Judaism, raise a Jewish family and become a rabbi. She and her husband, Jerome Korman, the music director for the National Dance Institute, have two children and would often lead musical programs at B’nai Jeshurun, an unaffiliated synagogue on the Upper West Side.

But first Rivera went to New York to pursue her dream of becoming a dancer for the Martha Graham Dance Company, the oldest dance troupe in the country. She performed modern dance with the New York-based company from 1987 to 1991.

There, too, she found Jewish connections. Among her teachers were the prominent Jewish dancers Gabriela Darvash and Pearl Lang, as well as conductor Stanley Sussman, who all encouraged her to further explore her connection to Judaism.

“The Jewish world was the dance world for me,” Rivera said.

In 2009, her religious journey led her to enroll in rabbinical school at the Conservative movement’s Jewish Theological Seminary.

During the application process, a rabbi asked about her family origins. That led Rivera to look into and discover something unexpected: Her family might have Jewish roots. Her maternal great-grandmother’s family came from Spain to the Philippines, and Rivera believes they were conversos, Jews forced to convert to Christianity during the Inquisition. She points to food practices that her family passed down that bear similarities to the rules for keeping kosher.

Following her ordination in 2015, Rivera worked as a chaplain for Mount Sinai Hospital and Dorot, an organization that provides services to Jewish elders, before eventually landing at Romemu in 2017.

With Romemu, Rivera has found a spiritual home where she feels welcome. She wants other Jews of color to find one, too, whether in a congregation or through connections — physical or virtual — with others who share their identity.

“I think in many ways we are possibly where the LGBTQ community was attempting years and years and decades ago,” she said. “Now we have language and we can find each other.”

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Anti-Semitic Trolls Hijack Adidas Campaign

Adidas deleted anti-Semitic tweets on July 2 stemming from trolls hijacking their social media campaign.

The sportswear manufacturer was promoting new London Arsenal gear on its United Kingdom Twitter account, where it encouraged users to tweet out the #DareToCreate hashtag. Under the automated campaign, Twitter users who tweeted the aforementioned hashtag would have their Twitter handles featured on the back of Arsenal jerseys.

However, this campaign went awry when Twitter handles such as “@GasAllJewss” and “@InnocentHitler” took part in the #DareToCreate hashtag.

https://twitter.com/WalkerBragman/status/1145890137232084992

https://twitter.com/ZachAJacobson/status/1145883221994831872

Adidas eventually deleted the offensive tweets.

“As part of our partnership launch with Arsenal we have been made aware of the abuse of a Twitter personalization mechanic created to allow excited fans to get their name on the back of the new jersey,” Adidas said in a statement through a spokesperson. “Due to a small minority creating offensive versions of this we have immediately turned off the functionality and the Twitter team will be investigating.”

Microsoft and the New England Patriots are other examples of having prior social media campaigns upended by trolls.

The Simon Wiesenthal Center tweeted, “.@adidas owes our community an apology. @Twitter – After billions of #Tweets what part of Gas/Jews/Hitler/innocent can’t you stop?”

Anti-Defamation League (ADL) CEO Jonathan Greenblatt wrote in a July 1 Times of Israel piece that “there’s a bright through-line from online hateful ecosystems to in-person violence,” and explained how the ADL is partnering with Moonshot CVE and the Gen Next Foundation to counter online hate.

“The program, dubbed the Redirect Method, will use advertising to provide individuals who search Google for violent extremist material with content that exposes the falsehoods of extremist narratives, providing searchers the choice of an off-ramp to radicalization,” Greenblatt wrote. “Targeting content potential extremists search for — rather than focusing, for example, on what they post to social media — can directly address their harmful online behavior and desires. By providing them with credible sources, we hope to decrease the impact of extremist content and increase the spread of the truth, such as, there is no one ‘European’ identity that is under threat. In this way, we speak directly to those who may be at risk of radicalization, and we incentivize re-thinking those ideologies with accurate information.”

This article has been modified to correct Gen Next Foundation’s name.

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47 Israeli Officers Wounded During Protests Against Police Killing of Ethiopian Man

Around 47 Israeli police officers were injured during July 2 protests stemming from an Israeli police officer killing a 19-year-old Ethiopian man, the Jerusalem Post reports.

An unidentified police officer shot and killed the Ethiopian, Solomon Tekah, during an altercation in Kiryat Haim on June 30. The officer alleged that Tekah and two other male youths were beating up a 13-year-old male and he intervened to stop them; Tekah and the two other males then allegedly threw stones at the officer, prompting the officer to open fire in self-defense. A bullet ricocheted from the cement and struck Tekah, the officer claims. At least one witness, identified as a youth counselor named Eli, disputed the officer’s claim that he was in danger when he fired at Tekah.

Thousands of Israelis are protesting in anger over the shooting, and are shutting down at least 12 junctions. Protesters reportedly chanted, “End the killing, end the racism!” and threw stones at police officers. At least one car was set on ablaze. Around 60 protesters were arrested.

Tekah’s funeral took place earlier on July 2 in Kiryat Haim; the Israeli police are conducting an investigation into Tekah’s shooting. 

“We didn’t come to Israel for our children to be murdered,” Tekah’s father, Varkah, said during the eulogy. “We will not pay the expensive price of our children dying young. Why are we burying a child?”

Ethopian Israelis have alleged that Israeli police single them out for abuse due to racism.

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Holocaust Survivors Get More Aid and Non-Jewish Rescuers Receive Benefits Under New German Government Agreement

(JTA) — The spouse of a Holocaust survivor will continue to receive a monthly pension for nine months after the survivor’s death under new agreements with the German government.

The agreements negotiated by the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany also provides a $50 million increase in funding for social welfare services for survivors, bringing the total for 2020 funded by Germany to over $587 million. Also, monthly pensions will increase by 46 percent from now until Jan. 1 to about $650 a month.

For the first time, righteous gentiles — non-Jews recognized by Yad Vashem for saving Jews during the Holocaust — will receive a monthly pension from the German government.

The agreements were announced Monday and will take effect Jan. 1.

Under the deal, the pensions for the surviving spouses are designed to help with funeral and living expenses, as well as other financial adjustments.

Prior to the negotiations, the German and Claims Conference delegations met Holocaust survivors living in New York City in their homes.

“This new agreement will benefit tens of thousands of the poorest Holocaust survivors,” Claims Conference Executive Vice President Greg Schneider said in a statement. “As survivors age, their needs grow ever greater and our persistence does not wane; we continue to achieve ‘firsts’ for survivors while achieving increases in pensions and social welfare services at the same time.”

Holocaust Survivors Get More Aid and Non-Jewish Rescuers Receive Benefits Under New German Government Agreement Read More »

U.S. Holocaust Museum Takes ‘Radical Position’ in Migrant Camps Debate, Hundreds of Scholars Say

(JTA) — Hundreds of scholars criticized the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum for its “unequivocal” rejection of analogies between the Holocaust and other events.

An open letter published in the New York Review of Books said the museum is taking a “radical position that is far removed from mainstream scholarship on the Holocaust and genocide. And it makes learning from the past almost impossible.”’

The museum in a strongly worded statement rejected such analogies in the wake of the recent debate over comparisons between concentration camps and the migrant detention camps established by the Trump administration, most on the border with Mexico.

Some 375 scholars and academics, many who write on and teach about the Holocaust and genocide, wrote to museum director Sara Bloomfield that they “strongly support” the museum, whose resources many have used for their academic research.

But, their letter said, the museum’s decision to reject drawing any possible analogies to the Holocaust or the events leading up to it is fundamentally ahistorical.”

“It has the potential to inflict severe damage on the Museum’s ability to continue its role as a credible, leading global institution dedicated to Holocaust memory, Holocaust education, and research in the field of Holocaust and genocide studies,” they wrote. “The very core of Holocaust education is to alert the public to dangerous developments that facilitate human rights violations and pain and suffering; pointing to similarities across time and space is essential for this task.”

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., last month likened migrant detention camps on the border to concentration camps, and invoked the phrase “Never again.” The lawmaker later said she was not likening the detention camps to the camps run by the Nazis, but to other detention camps, including those that imprisoned Japanese Americans during World War II. But it raised a firestorm among Jewish critics and others.

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Richard Dreyfuss is More Worried About How Jews Treat Others Than Anti-Semitism

(JTA) — Academy Award winner Richard Dreyfuss said he is more concerned about “Jews not behaving like Jews” than he is about the global rise in anti-Semitism.

Dreyfuss told the Hollywood Reporter ahead of the release of his new movie, “Astronaut,” that Jews “sound very much like our own worst enemies in trying to protect Zionism and protect our own reputations. We really do need to explore what it means to be Jewish and not let it go away.”

Dreyfuss appeared to criticize Israel’s treatment of the Palestinians, saying that “most Jews are willing to celebrate their own history of being oppressed, and then they’ll get up and oppress other people. so I don’t want Jews to do that.”

He acknowledged that he is “more spiritual and less Jewish than I have been.” The actor explained that he is not what he calls a “temple Jew,” and that he is “very proud of being Jewish and I’m very proud of being a cultural Jew.”

Dreyfuss, who starred in the popular films “Jaws,” “The Goodbye Girl” and “Close Encounters of the Third Kind,” noted that he is a distant relative of Alfred Dreyfus, the Jewish officer in the French army who was tried and convicted for treason in 1894.

In “Astronaut,” Dreyfuss plays a retiree who wins the chance to travel to space. He won the Oscar as best actor for “The Goodbye Girl,” a film written by Neil Simon.

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