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November 27, 2019

University of Cape Town Senate Votes Against BDS Resolution

The University of Cape Town’s (UCT) Senate voted down a resolution to boycott Israeli institutions on Nov. 22.

The Senate had passed the resolution in March, but the UCT council vetoed it and sent it to back the senate, saying that it needed a “more consultative process.”

The resolution came back to the senate for a vote on Nov. 22, and 68 percent voted against it.

South African Jewish Board of Deputies National Director Wendy Kahn told the Jerusalem Post that the vote was “a victory for academic freedom in our country and globally,” as the resolution “would have achieved little to contribute to peacebuilding in the region.” 

She added that the effort to get UCT to pass such a resolution had been ongoing for three years; with the resolution’s failure, UCT should focus on “the building and strengthening of this important South African tertiary institution,” Kahn said.

The Palestine Solidarity Forum at UCT, on the other hand, told the South African news outlet Independent Online (IOL), “It is a clear indication of the persisting conservatism of UCT and the fact that UCT, and the vice-chancellor, in particular, is beholden to its donors and the Zionist lobby. It sets a remarkably dangerous precedent that donors can dictate university policy – an affront to and violation of academic freedom.”

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Does Anyone Still Use the Word ‘Comely’ – A poem for Parsha Toldot

Lest the men of the place kill me because of Rebecca,
for she is of comely appearance.

I couldn’t be happier we don’t
still use the word comely as a compliment
for someone’s appearance.

It’s as old fashioned as
worrying about someone’s appearance.
I wish the seeds of this objectivity

weren’t sowed in our most ancient text.
The one we revolve our whole
everything around.

Yeah but what does it have to
do with you today is the question
I try to answer every week.

I’d like to say, this week,
nothing, but that would ignore
all the time I spend at the mirror

or picking the right sweater colors or trimming
my eastern European hirsutiveness
(a word I had to make up) away.

I’d like to say I don’t care what
anyone looks like, but I’m bound by
the laws of chemistry like

any other human. It’s times like this
I’m not sure I want to say amen
after hearing God thanked for

giving sight to the blind. You’re all
as comely as hell as far as I’m concerned.
That’s the way the kids would

say it today, if they had to
rewrite this book from scratch.
Let’s rewrite this book from scratch.


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.

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Report: 30% Increase in Serious Anti-Semitic Incidents in Australia

A new report from the Executive Council of Australian Jewry (ECAJ) found that there was a 30 percent increase in serious anti-Semitic incidents from 2018 to 2019.

The report, which was published on Nov. 24, states that there were 114 instances of anti-Semitic verbal abuse, harassment and intimidation from Oct. 1, 2018, to Sept. 30, 2019. That number was 88 over the same timeframe the year prior. 

“Jews continued to be verbally abused and harassed around synagogues on a regular basis, especially over the Jewish Sabbath of Friday evening and Saturday, and on other Jewish holy days and festivals,” the report states. “These are periods when many Jews are congregating at, and walking to or from, synagogue, providing anti-Semites with an easy target for verbal abuse, harassment and intimidation.”

Among the instances listed in the report include a man shouting at people in front of a Sydney synagogue in April, “All Jews are f—ed! You’re all s—.” Another instance involved a man shouting “Sieg Heil!” and making a Nazi salute while driving past a Melbourne synagogue in September.

The report also noted that instances of anti-Semitic graffiti increased from 46 in 2018 to 95 in 2019; examples listed in the report included graffiti stating, “Kill Jews” with swastikas surrounding it found in March on a building in Sydney.

Additionally, the number of anti-Semitic assaults increased from three in 2018 to four in 2019.

There have been 368 anti-Semitic incidents in Australia overall in 2019, compared to 366 in 2018.

“We need not only strong anti-incitement laws but also systematic education programs at schools and universities and responsible messaging from [the] community and political leaders,” ECAJ Research Director of Anti-Semitism Julie Nathan said in a statement. “It’s not just a government responsibility. Everyone stands to lose if racism continues to worsen. The responsibility falls on all of us”.

The Zionist Council of New South Wales said in a statement, “Despite being an overwhelming multicultural success story, Australia is not immune to anti-Semitism and there must be zero tolerance for this kind of hatred in our society. We acknowledge the bipartisan leadership and determination by our elected officials to combat anti-Semitism, including in the most recent remarks of Prime Minister Scott Morrison, who reiterated that ‘Anti-Semitism has no place in this country,’ rightfully calling it ‘absolutely sickening and disgraceful.’”

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Andy Samberg to Host Cooking Show on Quibi

TV cooking competitions just got a little smaller. Andy Samberg will host and executive produce “Biggest Little Cook-Off,” in which two chefs battle to create a delectable single bite of food. Fittingly, it’s for Quibi, a new streaming service specializing in short-form programming. 

“Anyone who knows me knows I love dinky stuff. So when this show about dinky food came my way I said, ‘I like the dinky food,’” Samberg said in a statement. “I’m excited to bring my expertise in dinky things to the dinky cooking arena, and I’m also excited to bring a bag lunch because the food is so dinky I’m for sure going to still be hungry after the shows.”

Samberg is also producing and starring opposite J.K. Simmons and Cristin Milioti in the comedy “Palm Springs,” about two people who meet at a wedding. His NBC series “Brooklyn Nine-Nine” has been picked up for its eighth season.

Quibi, aimed at millennials and their mobile devices, is the brainchild of Jeffrey Katzenberg and Meg Whitman. It will launch in April 2020.

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‘Incitement’ and ‘Forgiveness’ Win at Israel Film Fest

The top honor at the 33rd Israel Film Festival’s resulted in a tie this year: “Incitement” and “Forgiveness” share Audience Choice Award for best feature film. “Picture of His Life” was chosen as favorite documentary.

“Incitement,” directed by Yaron Zilberman, won the top prize at Israel’s Ophir Awards and is the Israeli entry for best international feature at the Academy Awards this year. It’s about the assassination of Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, told from the assassin’s point of view. “Forgiveness,” from Guy Amir and Hanan Savyon, deals with life after prison for an ex-con and his family.

“Picture of His Life,” Yonatan Nir and Dani Menkin’s film about nature photographer Amos Nachoum and his underwater adventure with a polar bear.

The honors came with prizes of post-production services worth $92,500 for the feature filmmakers and $5000 for the documentarians. IFF founder and executive director Meir Fenigstein thanked the festival’s many sponsors for their funding support that will enable filmmakers “to continue to bring their visions to the screen. [These] supporters are the reason that the Israel Film Festival in Los Angeles continues to exist and flourish and allows Israel to showcase its gifted filmmakers to American audiences,” he said. “This year’s record-breaking attendance at the Festival is a testament to the creative force and exceptional work produced by Israeli filmmakers and talent.  This symbolizes how Los Angeles audiences are eager to embrace the very best of Israeli filmmakers.”

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Florida Pastor Calls Trump Impeachment a ‘Jew Coup’

Florida Pastor and founder of the TruNews YouTube channel Rick Wiles called efforts to impeach President Donald Trump part of a “Jew coup.”

In a Nov. 21 video, Wiles said, “That’s the way the Jews work. They are deceivers. They plot. They lie. They do whatever they’ve have to do to accomplish their political agenda. This impeach Trump movement is part of a Jew coup, and the American people better wake up to it fast.”

Wiles went on to say that the country will devolve into a civil war if Trump is impeached, which could happen at around the time of Christmas.

“We have until Christmas to take a stand because of this Jew coup in the United States,” Wiles said. “We have weeks to stop it. That’s why I’m speaking out. That’s why I’m putting everything on the line saying this is a coup led by Jews to overthrow the constitutionally elected president of the United States.”

He proceeded to claim that there will be “a purge. That’s the next thing that happens when Jews take over a country – they kill millions of Christians.”

Anti-Defamation League CEO Jonathan Greenblatt tweeted on Nov. 27, “#AntiSemitic platform TruNews is now perpetuating an #antiSemitic conspiracy claiming Jews are “orchestrating” impeachment. There should be no place for this kind of hate on any platform. @YouTube should take down this content and their channel ASAP.”

StandWithUs CEO and Co-Founder Roz Rothstein similarly tweeted, “This creepy man is a danger to civil society. His name is Rick Wiles, and he should not be allowed to broadcast hate like this. Wow. Get him OFF every possible platform!”

TruNews tweeted on Nov. 26 that their impeachment video resulted in a YouTube ban.

https://twitter.com/TruNews/status/1199380701746995201?s=20

According to YouTube, the video was in fact removed on Nov. 26. YouTube has a “three-strike policy” in which channels are permanently removed from the site when they receive three strikes in three months.

The Times of Israel (TOI) reports, “TruNews has more than 185,000 subscribers on YouTube and its videos have garnered 17 million views on the site.” 

TOI also notes that TruNews has had White House press credentials in the past; Trump took a question from TruNews during a 2018 press conference and TruNews interviewed Donald Trump Jr. in March during a rally. A Trump Jr. spokesperson told The Washington Post at the time that the interview wasn’t planned.

Additionally, Wiles claimed in September that TruNews gets invited to a lot of White House events, Mediaite reports.

“We don’t go to all of them because we just don’t have the funding and the manpower to go to every single event that the White House invites us,” Wiles said. “We are very appreciative that the White House invites us to these things.”

The ADL’s background on Wiles and TruNews highlights several prior statements from Wiles, including:

  • Saying Jews are part of the “synagogue of Satan.”
  • Alleging that “Israel took out John Kennedy.”
  • Accusing Israelis and Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner of attempting to “completely exterminate the Palestinian people.”
  • Saying that Zionists are attempting to take “over the world in the Last Days and [persecute] the body of Christ and makes war against the saints…. And it’s not Muslims that are going to kill us. It’s the Jews.”
  • Calling Trump’s daughter, Ivanka Trump, “Kabbalah-practicing evil woman whispering evil things in the ear of her father.”

The White House did not respond to the Journal’s request for comment.

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Israel Fires on Hamas Targets in Gaza in Retaliation for Rocket Attack

JERUSALEM (JTA) — The Israel Defense Forces launched airstrikes on Hamas targets in Gaza in response to two rockets fired from Gaza on southern Israel.

The airstrikes on what the IDF called “terror targets” came late Tuesday night and early Wednesday.

One of the rockets fired on the southern Israeli city of Sderot was intercepted by the Iron Dome missile defense system and a second landed in an open area. Another rocket was fired on Monday night from Gaza on Israel.

No group has claimed responsibility for the attack.

“Hamas will bear the consequences for actions against Israeli civilians,” the IDF said.

“If someone in Gaza thinks that he can raise his head after Operation Black Belt, he is sorely mistaken. We will respond vigorously to any attack against us and we will continue to guard the security of Israel on all fronts,” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said late Tuesday night.

Operation Black Belt refers to Israel’s air strikes earlier this month on Palestinian Islamic Jihad military infrastructure after the group fired 450 rockets at Israel from Gaza over two days in retaliation for Israel assassinating one of its leaders. A cease-fire went into effect between Israel and Palestinian Islamic Jihad, as well as other terrorist groups in Gaza, nearly two weeks ago.

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Impressions from ADL Conference: Future, Not Fear

Last week in New York, I was the lone son of a British Methodist amid 1,800 Jews and people of other faiths at the Anti-Defamation League’s (ADL) annual Never Is Now conference on anti-Semitism. As the leader of the USC Shoah Foundation and a scholar of genocide and remembrance, I’ve spent much of my professional life in similar settings. But the crowd at the ADL conference stood apart in a key respect: It wasn’t  bound by fear, but singularly focused on action.

Don’t get me wrong: Diaspora Jewry has many reasons to fear. Anti-Semitism is on the rise and is poised to get worse. Two recent reports confirm the alarming global trend. The first, by the ADL, found that more than 1 billion people worldwide harbor anti-Semitic attitudes. The second, “The New Anti-Semites” concludes that the boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) movement is the “main driver of Jew-hatred on campus.” It revealed more than 100 links between Palestinian terrorist groups and BDS organizations, and demonstrated how they work in concert to pursue their goal of delegitimizing the Jewish state.

We felt the lethal dimension of resurgent anti-Semitism most acutely a year ago at the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh, where 11 congregants were killed, including family members whom I interviewed at the conference. At the Chabad of Poway, where Lori Gilbert-Kaye was slain in cold blood during Shabbat services last spring, the loss of life would have been much higher but for a jammed semiautomatic weapon. This year’s hate crime figures in the U.S. show a doubling of anti-Semitic assaults and, on average, more than 150 anti-Semitic incidents per month, the third-highest year on record since tracking began in the 1970s.

Violent anti-Semitic tragedies rightfully command our attention. But political anti-Semitism — an insidious force that often simmers below the surface — also is rising. We see it in my native United Kingdom, where a sympathizer of known terrorist organizations such as Hamas leads the Labour party. We see it in the United States, where activists such as Linda Sarsour gain a national following as an advocate for women’s rights, and then use their bully pulpit to espouse anti-Semitic views and promote antisemitic fringe organizations.

Despite this backdrop of rising hate, I didn’t hear fear in New York. I heard realism, pragmatism and activism –– I heard the future.

Ruth Westheimer, 91, an author and former sex therapist and media personality who rarely speaks about her experiences in Nazi Germany, told a packed house that she is breaking her silence to ensure that young children learn for the future. Alice Greenwald, who worked at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum for almost two decades and now directs the 9/11 Memorial & Museum, had a similar message. She said that listening carefully to our past is how we secure our values.

So, too, believes Ivy Schamis, the schoolteacher from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., who was teaching a class about the 1936 Berlin Olympics when the gunman entered her classroom last year. “We must not be afraid!” she said. “We must stand for who we are and stand together, from all walks of life.” Schamis has every reason to be afraid: She saw a swastika-emblazoned barrel of an AR-15-style assault rifle spray her classroom of more than 30 students, and watched two of them die. Yet she does not fear.

Schamis told me that her Holocaust class reconvened several weeks after the shooting. The students in her class now are survivors. “Was teaching the Holocaust traumatizing?” I asked her.

“On the contrary!” she replied, “We listened to the testimony of Jewish survivors who had lost every member of their family. We got perspective and healing.”

The conference’s honoree, comedian and actor Sacha Baron Cohen, who is more known for his character Borat than bravery, gave a rousing speech that took on the purveyors of half-truths and downright lies on the internet. Baron Cohen stood up for the principles of common decency, editorial standards and fair play. He was not defending the Jews; he was defending our civilization’s universal values.

I study what happened in the 1930s and how Jews reacted to Nazi persecution. European Jews were acutely aware of their circumstances. They felt the overwhelming threat and were actively working on solutions. But quite simply, it was too late. We do not live in the same time — although we should act as forcefully as if we did.

We live in a democracy; we have a free press, freedom of religion, and human rights, all of which we must use. After a Jewish cemetery was vandalized in Philadelphia in 2017, Holocaust survivor Naomi Adler told her grandchildren that when she was their age, she couldn’t go to the police or the media because both were enemies. She urged them to do both, and to never overlook the privilege of freedom.

We have much to fear but last week we set that aside and took the future into our own hands, which is precisely where our future belongs.


Stephen Smith is the Finci-Viterbi executive director of USC Shoah Foundation and UNESCO Chair on Genocide Education.

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Episode 168: Middle East Breakdown Vol. III

In mid October, the IDF chief of staff, Aviv Cohavi, briefed both Netanyahu and Blue and White leader Benny Gantz on the state of Israel’s security. The situation according to Cohavi, is grim. With regional stability at a low and threats of war on multiple fronts, Israel faces serious security challenges.

Some pundits argue that Cohavi is simply trying to enrich the IDFs coffers. Others claim that this time it’s for real.
So, the question still stands: is Israel going to war? And if so, what will it look like?

Joining us today is Seth Frantzman. Seth is the Oped Editor and Middle East affairs analyst at The Jerusalem Post. He has covered the war against Islamic State, three Gaza wars, the conflict in Ukraine, the refugee crises in Eastern Europe and also reported from Iraq, Turkey, Jordan, Egypt, Senegal, the UAE, Ukraine and Russia.

We’re super excited to be joined by Seth Frantzman to discuss the next Israeli war.

Seth on Twitter and the Jerusalem Post

(Photo by the Kremlin)

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Eileen Greene: Becoming a TED-X speaker at 87

No matter how old we get, Eileen Greene believes we can always reinvent ourselves.

This podcast is Sponsored by the IAC ANNUAL NATIONAL SUMMIT December 5-8, 2019 in South Florida. Register Today at www.iackenes.org and use the Discount Code JJLAIAC for an exclusive 10% discount! 
Eileen Greene

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