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April 6, 2020

This Passover Door Opens for Elijah, Not Relatives


Like millions of Jews around the world, Persian Jews will have to decide whether to host large Passover seders or to do something something unfathomable: have a seder alone. Or at least without extended family.

Not to be hyperbolic, but Persian Jews haven’t faced such a divisive dilemma since they had to decide whether to leave Iran after the 1979 Islamic revolution.

We take seders very seriously. Although there’s some flexibility in sporadically skipping weekly Shabbat dinners with family, one’s rear end must be present at a Persian Passover seder, even if the family is unaffiliated.

In early March, I scoffed at the notion of not having my parents, in-laws, my sister and her family at our seder table because I refused to entertain the idea that our annual family seder could be canceled. Simply put: It’s never happened.

Not in my lifetime or even in my mother’s lifetime (She’s 70). I’d speculate that none of our ancestors spent a Passover seder without their children or extended family in the 2,700 year history of Iranian Jewry. It’s that ingrained in our culture.

Maybe, hundreds of years ago in the Persian Empire, a few ancestors — most likely teenagers — began to lose interest in the seder. At that point, a sage visionary must have offered adding scallions as part of the “Dayenu” recital and encouraged family members to diplomatically (or enthusiastically, depending on their interpersonal history), beat others with scallions. After that, no one lost interest in Persian seders for a long time.

But in mid-March, I finally had to accept the news. Worse, I had to deliver the news.

“Tabby, are we coming to you the first or second night?” my mother asked.

“We are not having any guests this year because it’s too dangerous to be together. We’ll miss everyone so much.”

Maybe some families will argue they’ve been through too much to let a virus scrap their seders together.

And then, coward that I am, I hung up. I simply couldn’t bear to hear the disappointment in my mother’s voice. I also am devastated that our extended family will not join us this Passover.

When she asked the same question the next day, I said, “Mom, believe me, there’s nothing in the world I’d love more than to beat you with scallions, but the separation especially is meant to keep you and Dad safe, so next year, God willing, we can all be together.”

My mother was very sad, but understood. That can’t be said for all Persian mothers. Some families still are planning to host large seders  despite the threat of spreading the coronavirus. That’s dangerous, to say nothing of the irony: Imagine infecting someone with a plague during a Passover seder.

Maybe these families have plans to avoid physical contact, to seat guests one foot away from one another (that still won’t be enough distance), and to offer lamb shank, charoset and hand sanitizer on the Passover plate, but if I were a guest at one of those seders, I wouldn’t want even a single scallion that had been held by someone else to touch me.  I’d politely decline the invitation.

Maybe some families worry this will set a terrible, irreversible precedent: children who voluntarily separate from their parents and hold their own “rogue” seders. Perhaps parents worry they’re abandoning their adult children, or adult children will feel they are abandoning their parents, and will be shamed by the community. If that’s the case, we as a community need a serious self audit.

Maybe some families will argue they’ve been through too much — revolutions, wars, resettlement and the trauma to survive — to let a virus scrap their seders together. I’d argue that precisely because they’ve survived so much, they should assign more worth to the gift of life.

For those staying home this year, I applaud you. I know how hard it is especially if you live alone. But maybe you’ll make history. You’ll be among the first Persian Jews to host a seder via video teleconference in 2,700 years.

For well-intentioned, hospitable hosts or their enthusiastic guests, I beg you to stay home this year. It’s just one Passover. A seder alone is worth everything if it means not having to die alone in a hospital. Having your children around your seder table is meaningless if no one will be allowed around your deathbed, not even to recite a prayer.

As for the scallions, there’s always next year, if we do our part and God does His. May we all be healthy enough to enjoy extended family seders next spring with many hugs and kisses and a few whacks.


Tabby Refael is a Los Angeles-based writer, speaker and activist.

This Passover Door Opens for Elijah, Not Relatives
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The 11th Plague: How COVID-19 Forces Us to Ask Disturbing Questions During Passover

God might have gone a little too far this time. An actual plague before Passover? Seriously? And not just against Egyptians — but everyone, including Jews?

The Chosen People, especially Orthodox Jews, given the early outbreak in New Rochelle, New York, have no immunity to a modern-day plague that plays no favorites and refuses to pass over anyone — even on the holiday of Passover. We are now all exiled — not in the desert or even the Diaspora — but to dreary self-quarantines and the anxiety from incomplete and convoluted information.

Lives have been placed on hold while those untested for the coronavirus wait for symptoms to appear. In the meantime, we have ritualized handwashing, treating it like a daily prayer, repeatedly performed while playing double-dutch with scalding water.

The consequences of the coronavirus will be severe. Books will be written about it as a history lesson, public policy manual and morality tale, serving as global haggadahs of remembrance. Millions will die; many more will be sick. The sadistic properties of COVID-19 are such that possibly millions more of the infected will show no symptoms at all.

It is a sickness that is playing Russian roulette with all of humanity.

The proximity to Passover, however, the way COVID-19 quarantined the Jewish world just when the community normally comes together is leavened with great meaning. After all, as viruses go, this one produced the ultimate Passover paradox. Individual members of families will sit in separate rooms in compliance with seder distancing. Many will skip seders altogether. What else can one do? The exacting rituals of the holiday are wholly untenable and too unsanitary to perform. For instance, reciting the biblical plagues requires the dipping of fingers into wine glasses 10 times!

What does the Talmud say about latex gloves?

The four questions will be left unanswered because even the Wise Son has no idea how to “flatten the curve.” Seders the world over will feature an abundance of empty seats for Elijah, who, this year, will be visibly wearing a mask. The Red Sea will remain at high tide. Signs and Wonders are suspended until further notice or until a vaccine is found.

“COVID-19 has created a blockade not seen since the British Mandate.”

This is one heartless, joyless virus for sure. Those most susceptible, the elderly, who the coronavirus favors most cruelly, happen to be the ones most indispensable to the seder experience. What kind of a seder leaves grandparents alone in their homes, apartments and elder-care facilities? But we can’t have them anywhere near coughing children scampering for the afikomen.

What alternatives are there? The new normal in seder etiquette requires an ingenuity far beyond the making of flourless cake and tiramisu for dessert. This moment requires special cleaning instructions that surpass the usual search-and-destroy mission on chametz. We’re talking Lysol tsunamis. A stray morsel of bread is of lesser significance than airborne COVID-19 droplets. Don’t be surprised to see a seder guest dressed in a HAZMAT suit.

This is why people and communities are scheduling virtual seders as part of an overall mitigation strategy that has marooned everyone to the tedium of their own homes. Welcome to digital seders via FaceTime and Zoom. Good luck with that. It will look as though “The Brady Bunch” and “Hollywood Squares” converted to Judaism. Dozing off without anyone noticing will be a challenge. Drones will be called in to uncover the afikomen. Any mention of the Ten Commandments being brought down from Mt. Sinai will cause genuine confusion for those using their own tablets.

Let’s face it: The liberation story of Passover is a misnomer this year. You can point to the haggadah as precedent all you want, but it won’t lift the curfews and quarantines. We are dealing with an 11th plague without mercy. Lambs’ blood on doorposts is no inoculate. And the coronavirus has already made its presence known in the land of our biblical forebears. Israel is under quarantine, too. Throughout its modern history and endlessly fought wars (often with those same Egyptians), never before has there been a disruption to the making of aliyah. COVID-19 has created a blockade not seen since the British Mandate.

“Next year in Jerusalem,” the coda to every seder and the longing to return after a 2,000-year absence was, for Jews — until the creation of Israel — just a fantasy, wish fulfillment that ended seders but could not put an end to our exile. This year, it might become a trending phrase among the Diaspora. American, Canadian and European Jews once believed all it took were plane tickets on El Al. For the time being, travel restrictions to Israel remain one of the cruel jokes of this Passover. Fleeing Jews have a better chance of seeing the Pyramids than the Western Wall.

Slavery itself takes on new meaning in the form of mandatory stay-at-home orders. Admittedly, it is a more polite bondage. No mud and whips, but the despair and loneliness that comes with isolation will be unabated. The Israelites at least had one another. However, no one can miss the irony: We are about to commemorate an Exodus amid our present-day confinement. Our movement has come to a halt. Everything about our once-frenzied, mobile lives is now suspended, placed on hiatus, postponed indefinitely. Wandering Jews are now forcibly stationary. New York City subways, London tubes and LA’s 405 are eerily empty. Home confinement put an end to all that gridlock.

“Wandering Jews now are forcibly stationary.”

Momentarily overcoming his speech impediment, Moses delivered to Pharaoh what is still the most declarative ultimatum on behalf of the Jewish people: “Let my people go!”

Today, our plea is far more modest and directed not to a pharaoh, but to any deity or epidemiologist willing to listen: “Please, just let my people go … outside.”

Of course, the very fact that the coronavirus spares no one is no reason for implacable anti-Semites not to charge Jews with having caused it. The ancient blood libel against Jews has always lacked imagination. It has surfaced throughout history as a most stubborn and adaptable urban legend, even in places where there are no Jews. Isn’t the coronavirus bad enough without perpetuating absurd lies? Christian pastor Rick Wiles recently delivered a sermon scapegoating Jews as the perpetrators of a coronavirus conspiracy, all emanating from synagogues. Sound familiar? That medieval canard of disease-carrying Jews is alive and well, no matter the pandemic.

How many Jews live in the Wuhan Province of China, do you figure?

Meanwhile, officials from both the Palestinian Authority and Hamas publicly blamed Israel for deliberately spreading the coronavirus within the territories. Anti-Semites throughout history may have been underachievers, but they never failed to display tremendous resourcefulness in tailoring the blood libel to apply to new situations. Don’t allow a global catastrophe to go to waste without pointing the finger of blame at the Jews — whether in the form of the bubonic plague, 9/11, financial collapse and crashes, and, of course, mysteriously “missing” Christian children, as if their blood actually improved the taste of matzo.

Note to Jew-haters everywhere: There is no “kavod” to having COVID-19.

But all is not lost. Curiously, even without a medical cure, we have been preparing for the coronavirus for decades now. The introduction of the internet and the rise of social media fortuitously and in some cosmic way, have allowed us to be in rehearsal for this very moment. Social distancing has been in progress all along, and the distance between us has continued to expand exponentially. We never realized that all of this “staying apart while pretending to be together” would one day become a necessity due to a global pandemic that absolutely forbade social contact as a health risk.

Tragic in so many ways, COVID-19 now makes official and even tests the dramatic asocial, pseudo-social changes in our lives. The pandemic exiled everyone to the claustrophobic confines of their own homes. But we were more than ready for it. We already had outfitted our homes with the toys and tools that would fortify us for such trials in hibernation. Hopefully, this forced isolation won’t make permanent what we believed we could always take back — if our grand experiment in distancing left us emotionally unmoored and simply too far apart physically. We knew all along that the “social” part of the social network always belonged in quotations. Surely, we were never so foolish as to believe that Facebook was the equal of actual socialization.

Yet we perfected such efficient but empty contact with other human beings, and bought into the premises of a forever isolating, shrinking existence. The moment of truth has now arrived. It is the culminating triumph of social media itself, the endgame we were lulled into adopting, the complacency of the couch potato, homebody, video-gamer, Facebook voyeur — all packaged into one pale, lonely face. Face-to-face contact with friends and family has been rapidly vanishing with each passing year. Hearing an actual voice was replaced by the reading of atonal texts. Along the way, we forgot that pressing the send button is no substitute for human intimacy.

Well, at least there is Siri and Alexa.

We have voluntarily self-quarantined so many facets of our lives, and it should serve us well during this health crisis. Gone are Sunday strolls, gym pit stops and coffee runs. The virtual has replaced the actual. Human personality filtered through machines became our preferred mode of contact with others, warping our connection to the living world. The art of life indoors and the severing of human interaction evolved into performance art. No one seemed to pay any attention to the deadening of our senses, the atrophying of our sight and smell.

 “Anti-Semites throughout history may have been underachievers, but they never failed to display tremendous resourcefulness in tailoring the blood libel to apply to new situations.”

Even our minds have narrowed to better fit our respective captivities. Tweets limited the scope of our conversations. News websites with their meddlesome beeping notifications closed us off from differing opinions. We have been left alone with our confirmation biases intact, the cacophony and rigid partisanship of cable news only reinforcing what we already believe and what we steadfastly refuse to know.

More and more people had already shifted to teleworking and telecommuting. Yes, it added efficiency to the workplace, but it also slowly eliminated the experience of going to an office altogether — and put an end to the once-essential socialization of watercooler gossip. The cyber economy, combined with free shipping and delivery, eliminated the experience of actually going to a market. Cyber Monday is every day. Making selections that required the discernment of human touch ended. Being “picky” became overrated, then lost all meaning.

While we’re home, why bother sweating outdoors? The Peloton bicycle not only created virtual spin classes, but also introduced the delusion of bouncing on cobblestones while traversing the Tour de France — all the while going actually nowhere. Online courses made a college degree possible without ever stepping foot on an actual leafy or ivy-covered campus. Receiving a degree over the Internet gave new meaning to home-schooling. And it didn’t actually matter if you were wearing pants to class.

We’re now all on the full digital package. The Internet is our one reliable lifeline in the coronavirus darkness.

This simplified all the health risks that came with our romantic attachments. Human intimacy is now immune from contagion. The Gabriel Garcia Marques novel could properly be retitled, “Love in the Time of Corona.”

The only marginal benefit that arises from this altered way of life is the death blow it already has dealt to stalkers, perverts and the paparazzi. Home confinement comes with certain advantages: the maintenance of a strictly private life for those who want it. And, of course, the coronavirus may save some marriages from the hurt and betrayal caused by now-aborted marital affairs.

All of this enforced seclusion naturally comes with its own possibilities for reflection. With all this spare time on our hands — when we’re not washing them — we should consider whether our acquired digital skills actually readied us for the challenges the coronavirus presents. Here’s an early verdict: We’re already going stir-crazy. How much banana cake and peanut butter cookies can a family possibly consume? How many cringing lip-syncing performances can be posted on Instagram? How many home workouts without any exercise equipment can be devised for the cardio-addict grounded by COVID-19?

There are so many things one can Google, websites to surf, postings that receive your Like(s) on Facebook, and the cute but now nauseating photos and videos on Instagram created as a public service to entertain increasingly cramped Friends. Sorry, Skype and Facetime do not make a life. And if the perfect mate has been discovered online, all will be unrequited and unsatisfied until there is an actual meeting in the flesh.

We are left to wonder whether this time spent disconnected from people will even be well-spent. Will keeping our distance coincide with retaining our humanity? We must remain mindful of the tragic circumstances that forced us inside: the vast numbers the coronavirus killed, and those who would not have survived had it not been for available respirators. With no panacea in sight, this Passover is just all too sobering — and not just because many of us will be without our five cups of wine.

If anything, these past few weeks — now combined with a radically improvised Passover — has revealed our many vulnerabilities. Yes, the iPhone is a miracle device, but while in the midst of a global pandemic, we somehow don’t have enough surgical masks for healthcare workers or beds for patients stricken with COVID-19.

What does that tell us? Many things. But most importantly: We are far from invincible. The world beaters and machers among us were not more resilient. They just had a second, more-secluded home to which to escape. But once there, they, too, were forced to sit, fidget and wait.

“We remain hopeful that soon, we will glimpse a return to normalcy, salvage our future and emerge from our remote locations, squinting in the light of an unfamiliar sky.”

Perhaps all this homebound confinement for Jews − at least, during this time of year − brings us closer to a shared experience in bondage with our biblical ancestors. After all, we are reminded each Passover that the eating of matzo and the avoidance of leavened grains are only parts of a Jew’s obligation to imagine a hasty exit across a desert. Jews also must adopt the fiction that they once were slaves in Egypt; not just to imagine it, but to feel it, as well.

This bit of haggadah hubris always bordered on chutzpah. How can we possibly identify with the Jews who built the pyramids? How can we imagine our backs scarred from repeated whippings? Doing so trivialized the experiences of actual Jewish slaves. The tragedy and inconvenience of the coronavirus bring us no closer to them, either. It’s just another plague that reinforces that we haven’t figured everything out yet.

COVID-19 might have little in common with locusts, frogs and hail and, hopefully, it will prove to be far less deadly than the killing of the firstborn. But like it or not, from now on, it will serve as a coda to the haggadah, an ill-timed update to the Passover story − one we all will seek to vaccinate against once we make our exodus from home confinement.

There is, however one definitive, and unflattering, takeaway from this tragedy. We are uncomfortably reminded that it is, for the most part, only on Passover when we make a commitment to see one another. Family gatherings always depended on a breadless holiday. Without it, we would be strangers not just in a strange land but, tragically, to one another. After the holiday, families dispersed until next year. Our seder plates this year will have the bonus symbolism that we should not take next year’s seder for granted.

In the meantime, we remain hopeful that soon, we will glimpse a return to normalcy, salvage our future and emerge from our remote locations, squinting in the light of an unfamiliar sky. And because this holiday requires the asking of questions, the Simple Sons among us will wonder why this light is not blue like our only companions, those devices always blinking back at us.

 


Thane Rosenbaum is a novelist, essayist, law professor and Distinguished University Professor at Touro College, where he directs the Forum on Life, Culture & Society. He has written numerous works of fiction and nonfiction and hundreds of essays in major national and global publications. He is the legal analyst for CBS News Radio and appears on cable TV news programs. His most recent book is entitled “Saving Free Speech . . . from Itself.”

 

The 11th Plague: How COVID-19 Forces Us to Ask Disturbing Questions During Passover Read More »

Catalyst Campaigns’ Scott Goodstein on Yebiga, Working with Faith No More’s Bill Gould and Future Projects

Scott Goodstein is probably best known for his work with unique political campaigns that blend art, music, and culture. Having co-founded Punkvoter.com, Rock Against Bush, Artists For Obama, Artists For Bernie, DailyAction, CreativeMajority, and LadyPartsJusice, he has built impactful programs that have changed the world in which we live.

Goodstein also founded Revolution Messaging, which would grow to become America’s leading progressive digital agency. With Revolution Messaging, he created infrastructure and new technology for different types of grassroots movements. His tech firm specialized in revolutionizing call, mobile, and online communications. Under his leadership the company was awarded “Digital Agency Of The Year” by the American Association of Political Consultants and “Best Global Presidential Campaign” by the European Association of Political Consultants, as both awarded in 2016.

When interviewing Faith No More bassist Bill Gould – also the head of Koolarrow Records and a member of Talking Book – I was connected with Scott Goodstein, with a partner of Yebiga. Yebiga is a true Balkan rakija (a famed Serbian spirit) and it happens to be kosher. I learned about Yebiga and plenty more by doing Q&A with Goodstein.

Darren Paltrowitz: How did you and Bill first meet?

Scott Goodstein: I first met Bill in 2003. I was helping Fat Mike of the music group NOFX build PunkVoter. We kept in touch over the years and worked on a number of fun projects. We both appreciate underground culture, from all over the world, and turn each other onto interesting people and resources all the time.

DP: How long did it take from coming up with Yebiga to having a finished product? 

SG: We started discussing our love of slivovitz and Balkan culture years ago. It became more than swapping drinking stories, as we realized there has not been quality slivovitz in the U.S. in years. Most of my family and friends only knew the cheap bottle of slivovitz that everyone drank at Passover. Unfortunately, this stuff tasted like kerosene more than finely-aged and distilled plums.

We had a dream of introducing our friends to traditional small-batch liquor that you find in villages all across the Balkans. The type that grandparents made with pride for their families.

So it took almost two years before we were able to launch. We have an amazing supplier that has been making slivovitz on their family’s farm for four generations. We are just now slowly rolling it out in limited quantities.

DP: So why Slivovitz?

SG: I wanted to get involved in doing something that has history, value, and meaning. Yebiga is not just about importing a foreign liquor. It’s about preserving part of a culture that was vanishing.

Re-introducing slivovitz has been a fun experience. Everywhere I go, there are one or two folks that have Balkan ancestors and light-up with joy hearing that they can get quality slivovitz again. They immediately share stories with me about old celebrations, toasts, songs, etc.

DP: Yebiga comes from Serbia. So how exactly did it get a kosher certification?

SG: From the very beginning, I wanted to make sure I would proudly be able to have Yebiga sit on my family’s Passover table for the seder. On my first trip to Belgrade, I reached out to the Head Rabbi of Serbia through a friend and he was unfortunately out of town.

Nonetheless, we stayed in touch and talked throughout the certification process. He was clear that everything would need to be inspected to make sure there were no additives, sweeteners or grapes. He visited the farm and observed the quality that goes into each bottle. Everything is done on the premises: growing, harvesting, distilling, aging, bottling, and labeling. Everything is done by hand and he approved.

DP: What’s coming up for Yebiga in the near future? 

SG: We will grow this slowly in the years ahead and make sure the quality never changes. Each batch needs to impresses both those that have never tried slivovitz as well as those that have not had good slivovitz in years.

DP: Your credits are extensive, beyond Yebiga, to say the least. What else are you currently working on?

SG: I run a communications and impact strategy firm called Catalyst Campaigns. I help organizations around the world evolve their technology and communications infrastructure. Currently, I am advising Invisible Hands Deliver as they scale their efforts to deliver more groceries to those in need during the Coronavirus.

DP: Since this is for the Jewish Journal I feel compelled to ask: Did your bar mitzvah have a theme?

SG: I called and asked my folks. They said that my theme was simply “Bar Mitzvah” — the centerpieces were little bar mitzvah boys with glasses.

I grew up on the east side of Cleveland, where old-men at my synagogue would all talk about the best slivovitz that they had ever tasted, and every once in a while a bottle would show up and be passed around after morning minyan. Especially during Passover.

DP: In honor of Bill, to you, what are the best songs by Faith No More and Talking Book?

SG: He’s done some cool projects over the years. I just saw him play with Wayne Kramer of the MC5 as part of the supergroup the MC50. For this article, I’ll have to say Faith No More’s song “Take This Bottle” seems appropriate.

DP: Finally, Scott, any last words for the kids?

SG: I don’t want slivovitz to be relegated to distant memories anymore. I’m excited to be part of helping a new generation toast with slivovitz.

More on Scott Goodstein can be found here and here.

Catalyst Campaigns’ Scott Goodstein on Yebiga, Working with Faith No More’s Bill Gould and Future Projects Read More »

Israeli Babysitter Maven Comes to Corona Rescue [VIDEO]

I know it sounds cliché already, but it’s true that some good things are coming out of the Corona crisis. For one, I’ve gotten to know Galit Bauer, one of two Israeli founders (the other being Ela Slutski) of a babysitting booking service called “Holiday Sitters,” which I learned about from a “Mommy Café” near my house that books her sitters. I had no idea that the founders were Israeli until I booked a babysitter for the first time in Berlin (because my “regular” got sick—before Corona hit). I got a “Whatsapp” from Galit letting me know that the babysitter I chose wasn’t available but that she’d send someone else.

I admit, knowing the founder was Israeli and talking Hebrew added to my trust of this service. Galit now lives in Amsterdam, where she started the business, with her husband and two children. Since then she’s expanded to Berlin, Hamburg, Munich, Frankfurt, the Hague, Rotterdam, Dublin, and Vienna. From the moment she called me, we’ve been in touch because, as a single mom, I need some TLC, which she was happy to provide, She said she doesn’t think there is anything particularly Israeli about the business, but her improvisation skills, dedication, and out-of-the-box thinking are typical for Israeli start-ups.

Then Corona hit, and we started crying together. I couldn’t manage all day alone with my adorable 8-month-old daughter and stay sane. Also, I still had work, fortunately, writing about Corona in Europe. Galit was there to personally set me up with babysitters (with her special Corona discount). Talk about customer service!

I said I needed help in the kitchen, and she sent Gem, who made a killer pasta bolognese. Malen, who had to leave Berlin for her homeland Argentina because the restaurant where she worked closed down, took loving care of Hanna while I worked. And then, of course, there is the multi-talented Nana, a film student who contributed her camera skills to my Corona Blues music video. A cameraperson and babysitter in one? Galit will find them!

Hopefully this “Corona Blues” music video captures what we moms are going through when schools are closed, when we’re alone in the house. It’s not easy. In fact, this situation is not tenable, and it would be much less tenable without Holiday Sitters. I hope our leaders find a way to turn this around—and fast. Otherwise, the Corona Blues will kill us….

Here’s a short interview I conducted with Galit. Contact her via the e-mail on the website. She’ll get back to you right away!

How and why did you start your business? What’s “Israeli” about it?

Holiday Sitters idea was born on the beach in Mexico as my simple request for some adult time which wasn’t possible due to the lack of the proper child care. It ignited the idea of what will be the perfect solution, and that’s how Holiday Sitters was born.

How have you adjusted your business in these Corona times? How do you normally vet sitters and what special precautions are you taking?

We’ve adjusted our business by adding an another level of safety and security to the process we already have in place. Our normal vetting process is very thorough. We starts with online application, check references and finally have a personal interview. Only then to we upload them to the platform. They also all hold a First-Aid certificate.

As for Corona, we made sure, as much as possible, that they are healthy and have absolutely no symptoms of any illness. We have also checked that they have not travelled in the last two weeks and practice the general guidelines for social distancing.

What is some advice you can give to mothers who are forced to now be stay-at-home moms?

Our advice is: Get help! There’s nothing more frustrating than the feeling that you need to do it all alone. It’s understandable that people might be cautious about letting people into the house right now, but the babysitter can also take kids outside, while parents can catch up on work or rest or anything else. That’s why we are still open and offering this much needed help while making sure that all the regulations are kept.

Did you see a spike in bookings?

No, we don’t see a spike in bookings. I think the situation is still very new and unstable; people need to get used to it and trust it before they will do anything else.

What extra services do we cover during the Corona crises?  

We are now busy creating live video workshops for kids, offered by our talented sitters, which will be offered in coming days. These include a juggling workshop, a puppet show, a ballet class, and a music workshop– all done in a fun and entertaining way.

We want to be extra flexible for the parents as well.

Why don’t you offer this in Israel, too, and only in Europe?

We don’t rule out Israel, but right now we are focusing on Europe simply because we live in Europe and there are many options for us here. Israel is very close to our hearts and I am sure we will open Holiday Sitters there in the near future.

 

 

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West Bank Settlers Sue Airbnb Over Listings Ban, Palestinian Americans Sue Settlers Back

Palestinians are taking on Israeli settlers in U.S. court over Airbnb’s ban on listings in Jewish West Bank settlements.

Two Palestinian Americans and two Palestinian villages in the West Bank have countersued the Jewish Americans who filed a lawsuit against Airbnb over the ban.

The Center for Constitutional Rights, which filed the suit on behalf of the Palestinians, says the motion is the first time that Palestinians are directly challenging Israeli settlers in a U.S. court, The Times of Israel reported.

The original lawsuit, Silber et al v. Airbnb Inc., filed in November under the Fair Housing Act, accuses Airbnb of redlining the Jewish-owned properties while continuing to allow Muslim and Christian homeowners to rent theirs, and thus taking sides in the dispute between Israel and the Palestinians over West Bank land. It asks the court to prevent Airbnb from discriminating against Jewish homeowners and seeks compensation for lost rental income.

The countersuit filed Monday in U.S. District Court in Delaware argues that “as the settlements are both unlawful and inherently discriminatory, the plaintiffs are in effect claiming that Airbnb is discriminating against settlers’ ability to dispossess Palestinians and exclude them from their own land.” It says some of the homes are located on land belonging to their clients and they should be compensated.

Airbnb announced in November that it would remove the some 200 listings for rentals in the West Bank, but the listings remain on its website.

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Israel Declares Full Curfew Starting on Passover Eve

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Interior Minister Aryeh Deri have agreed to declare a full nationwide curfew for Passover eve, which begins at sundown on Wednesday.

Speaking to Channel 12 News, Deri explained, “We considered a curfew a few weeks ago, but we didn’t want to paralyze the country. On Passover, no one works and offices are closed. Especially on seder night, we don’t want people moving around from one family to another. As much as it wrings our hearts, this year seder must be held with only the nuclear family.”

Once the lockdown goes into effect, drivers will be stopped by police, said Deri.

Once the lockdown goes into effect, drivers will be stopped by police.

“On the night of Passover no one is shopping, everyone has already bought what they need. Occupants of a car on the road on seder night will have to explain their business to the police,” he said.

When asked how long the curfew would remain in place, Deri said he wasn’t sure. “We are discussing that, so people will be able to plan for it,” he said.

On Monday, Acting Police Commissioner Moti Cohen was slated to hold a situation assessment ahead of the police deploying to enforce the Passover curfew. In addition to checkpoints at city borders and spot checks on the highways, traffic police will be conducting patrols in unmarked cars. A source in the police said that the focus would mainly be on large family vehicles or cars carrying more than two passengers.

Earlier Sunday, Deri had warned that certain neighborhoods in Jerusalem were “in worse shape than Bnei Brak” in terms of the number of coronavirus cases. The city of Bnei Brak has been particularly hard-hit by the coronavirus pandemic.

Earlier Sunday, Deri had warned that certain neighborhoods in Jerusalem were “in worse shape than Bnei Brak” in terms of the number of coronavirus cases. The city of Bnei Brak has been particularly hard-hit by the coronavirus pandemic.

The Health Ministry, he said, wants nearly all the city’s haredi (ultra-Orthodox) neighborhoods—Har Nof, Bayit Vegan, Givat Mordechai, Ramot, Ramat Shlomo, Sanhedria, Shmuel Hanavi, Beit Israel, HaBukharim, Mea She’arim, Geula, Zichron Moshe, Makor Baruch, Givat Shaul and Kiryat Moshe—put under quarantine.

Discussing the possibility of quarantining these neighborhoods, Deri said, “We’ve found a solution. The city will be divided into … eight districts. People can do their shopping and their errands within each district, but not move from one district to another. Of course, anyone who works and has a permit will be able to leave.”

The ministry is demanding that certain corona hot spots be added to the list of quarantined cities and towns to check the spread of the epidemic: haredi neighborhoods in Beit Shemesh and Jerusalem; Modi’in Illit and Beitar Illit; and the settlement Elad.

On Sunday, the city of Beitar Illit decided to ban entry to non-residents after Mayor Meir Rubenstein held a meeting with police officials who asked that the city step up vehicle checks to keep tabs on who was entering and leaving the city limits.

According to reports, Netanyahu and his ministers reached an agreement overnight Sunday to place these locations under quarantine, with entry and exit patrolled by the military. An announcement was expected on Monday.

On Sunday, the Jerusalem District Police erected checkpoints at the entrance to the capital to enforce public-health orders to check every incoming vehicle, leading to lengthy traffic jams.

“Checkpoints have been set up at the entrance to Jerusalem to ensure the well-being, safety and health of the public. We provided explanations [of the public health orders] while enforcing them,” a police statement said.

The ministry is also asking the cabinet to discuss quarantines for other corona hotspots, including Tiberias, Ashkelon and Migdal HaEmek.

This article first appeared in Israel Hayom.

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New York State Legislature Passes Hate Crime Legislation Honoring Monsey Stabbing Victim

The New York state legislature passed a hate crimes act that considers murders committed due to the victims’ race or religion as “acts of domestic terrorism.”

The legislation, passed Thursday as part of the state budget, was renamed the Josef Neumann Hate Crimes Domestic Terrorism Act, to honor the victim of a stabbing attack in December at the home of a Monsey rabbi.

Neumann had remained in a coma from the time of the Dec. 28 attack to his death on March 29. The assailant’s knife penetrated Neumann’s skull. His right arm also was shattered. Four others were injured in the attack, which took place on Hanukkah.

The state budget also included funding for the State Police Hate Crimes Task Force, established in the 2018 to address the increase in bias-motivated threats, harassment and violence in New York state, AMNY reported. The budget includes $2 million to support the task force’s work, and to increase the monitoring of digital media for violence, intolerance, drug dealing and terrorism.

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First Plane Bringing Vital Medical Supplies to Israel from China Touches Down

The first in a convoy of 11 El Al planes carrying tons of critical medical equipment to Israel from China touched down at Ben-Gurion International Airport on Monday morning, as the nation continues to battle the coronavirus pandemic.

Israel’s Defense Ministry announced on Sunday that planes carrying 20 tons of vital medical supplies, including 900,000 surgical masks, 500,000 protective suits, several ventilators and other equipment would touch down one after another over the course of the next several days, in a coordinated effort with Israel’s Foreign Ministry, El Al Airlines and Israel Chemicals.

Due to an international run on coronavirus testing reagents, Israel has not been able to perform the 30,000 tests per day that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called for last week, but has still managed to continue testing on a smaller scale.

As of Monday, Israel’s coronavirus death toll stood at 51, with 8,611 confirmed cases of infection. So far, 585 people have recovered from the virus since the first official case was registered on Feb. 2.

First Plane Bringing Vital Medical Supplies to Israel from China Touches Down Read More »

Is Coronavirus Really “Dismantling the Ultra-Orthodox Model?” Questions and Comments

My article from last week prompted a lot of responses. Some of which were inquisitive, some doubtful, some angry. A rabbi friend wrote that he was “pained” by the article. A secular Israeli friend told me (in response to the Hebrew version) that I was not aggressive enough in describing the disaster. Those who didn’t read it, can read it here. Or make do with the following paragraph, after which I will answer a few questions and comments sent by readers.

This is a crisis in Charedi society — a crisis that is shaking the foundations of the entire Charedi society. This is a time when there is no external enemy, social trend or abusive regime harassing the community. The Charedi way of life is the enemy…  [its] model for success is the enemy.

 

Question (Abby Friedland): Aren’t you concerned about the incitement against Charedim all over the world?

 I am, for three reasons: the implications of this for intra-Jewish relations; the implications of this for the safety and security of Charedim; the implications of this for the image of all Jews and their safety.

I’ll make it short: The Charedi group is an important and vibrant group within the Jewish world, but also one that challenges this world in many ways, cultural and material. For the Jewish people to thrive, a dialogue between groups is essential, and such dialogue is more difficult when one group feels that the other group is spreading disease and the other group feels that the first group is spreading hate.

The safety of Charedim could be compromised if non-Charedim (Jews and non-Jews) become worried when they see Charedim in their midst.

The image of the Jewish people is harmed in the obvious way: When Charedim, who “look Jewish,” become highly visible as a community in which the disease is widespread, this opens the door for all kinds of bigots to utilize facts as they promote hate.

 

Comment: You know better than others that the “Ultras” (by the way, a degrading term) are not a “they” and a far from monolithic.

That is obviously true. And thus, it is somewhat unfair to use general terms and say that “Charedi society” failed to respond to the pandemic. Some did, some did not. And yet, there are three reasons to still refer to this group as one entity in this case. First – because it’s the fastest way to describe what’s happening. Generalizations are not the finest brushes, and yet they are needed to paint a broad picture. Second – because while not all Charedim shared a view concerning the response to the pandemic, very few of them were able to escape the fate of the community as a whole. If you live in Elad, or Bnei Brak, or Boro Park, you are implicated by what happened, no matter your personal views. Third – because the community is somewhat “monolithic” when it comes to certain features that made the situation so dire. Example: it is “monolithic” in its tendency to trust elderly rabbis on questions regarding which they have no clue. Another example (mentioned in my article):  it is “monolithic” in its tendency to not trust non-Charedi bodies (98% do not trust the media!).

So, I do not feel a need to blame anyone for anything. No Charedi leader wanted the pandemic to spread. I do think that looking at the community and asking questions about its ways as a group is fair and necessary under the current circumstances.

 

Question (Alex Israel): After this, will anything change? People periodically predict cracks and collapse in the Charedi way of life. But in the main, they are not changing, not drafting, not accepting secular education.

Well, who knows? But here’s a small matter that could be relevant. In the late 1980s, Israel’s Central Bureau of Statistics predicted that in the year 2000 there would be just over five and a half million people in Israel. Ultimately, this number was about half a million off. A significant error, that can be easily forgiven. The excellent experts of the CBS could not imagine that the Soviet empire would collapse and that hundreds of thousands of Jews would come to Israel as a result.

Unforeseen events can throw even the soundest forecasts out the window and usher in surprising new realities. So, what is going to happen when the crisis is over? maybe nothing will happen. Maybe the outbreak will be forgotten, and life will go back to what it was. Historian Barbara Tuchman wrote of the Black Death in the 14th century that no sudden or dramatic change in the habits of humans could be detected when the plague was over.

On the other hand, maybe when the plague is over, Charedi society will no longer be the same. Maybe the Coronavirus will be like the fall of the Charedi Berlin wall. In other words, the plague is a good reminder that the world can turn on a dime. Charedim live in the world, they are part of the world. Change is not beyond them.

 

 

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