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April 8, 2020

Zoom Provides Update Addressing Zoombombing

The video conferencing platform Zoom made available a security update to help users prevent Zoombombing.

Zoombombing is when people disrupt a call, often with anti-Semitic memes and messages in the group chat and sometimes with pornography. According to an Anti-Defamation League (ADL) post, the update provides a security button allowing hosts to lock the meeting – meaning new users can’t join – as well as requiring all attendees to be put in a virtual waiting room, allowing the hosts to screen attendees before the call starts. The security button also gives hosts the option to stop call attendees from sharing screens and the option to disable the chat feature in the call.

“This update is an important step,” the ADL wrote. “These updates, if they function as intended, will provide quicker access for users to some of the basic security measures on the platform, and will likely ensure greater safety for users from Zoombombing.”

The ADL also published a post on April 8 outlining steps hosts can take when a call is Zoombombed. It recommends recording the incident and taking screenshots to provide evidence to law enforcement on the matter. Under the “participants” icon, hosts can remove Zoombombers from the call.

The New York City Department of Education and Nevada’s Clark County School District have banned schools in their respective areas from using Zoom for their online classes. Additionally, on April 8, Google banned its employees from using Zoom on their corporate laptops. Google spokesperson Jose Castaneda told Buzzfeed that Zoom “does not meet our security standards for apps used by our employees. Employees who have been using Zoom to stay in touch with family and friends can continue to do so through a web browser or via mobile.”

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Coronavirus Kills 15 At Amsterdam’s Jewish Old-Age Home

AMSTERDAM (JTA) — At least 15 people have died at the main Jewish elderly home in Amsterdam and another 22 are infected with the disease.

COVID-19 began infecting Beth Shalom residents in the middle of March, just before management imposed a lockdown, a spokesperson for the medical administration Cordaan, which runs the home, told Het Parool, the daily reported Wednesday.

The death toll makes Beth Shalom the hardest-hit old age or nursing home in the kingdom.

On March 4, when the Netherlands had dozens of confirmed coronavirus patients, children from the Rosh Pina Jewish school visited Beth Shalom.

The Netherlands has opted for a relatively lax containment policy that Prime Minister Mark Rutte calls “intelligent lockdown.” Schools, some stores as well as gyms and restaurants have closed and old-age homes are under total lockdown, but public transportation remains operational and there is no ban on movement in Dutch cities, as is the case in France.

Jewish communities throughout Europe have been hit particularly hard. In the United Kingdom, at least 152 Jewish funerals for people who died of the coronavirus have been held, according to the Board of Deputies of British Jews.

In France, at least one cemetery with a Jewish section, Thiais, is nearing capacity after receiving several dozen bodies in the past two weeks.

Experts estimate that Jewish communities have been susceptible to the virus because their members travel often, have an extended circle of friends and family, and are concentrated in large cities.

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Bernie Sanders’ Exit Is A Painful Necessity For Jews

Like millions of young people across the country, my understanding of what it meant to be an American changed when that 70-something year old socialist announced his candidacy for president that brisk April day in Vermont.

I proudly carried the moniker of “The Bernie Kid,” sporting Bernie 2016 sweaters and t-shirts, attending every Bernie rally within a 200 -mile radius of Phoenix, Arizona. 

I wept upon his concession to Hillary Clinton the following July. I wept for the Bernie movement; the first community in which I felt instrumental. I wept for the man who had undoubtedly captured the hearts of those who had not yet been engaged in the political process. 

So why, why, in March 2019, did I take the controversial plunge to publicly oppose Mr. Sanders and his candidacy? Why did I insist on Elizabeth Warren, and place Mr. Sanders at the absolute bottom of my list of favorable Democratic candidates? My reluctance to rejoin the Bernie movement lies squarely in my exposure to anti-Semitism. 

PHOENIX, AZ – MARCH 05: Democratic Presidential Candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) speaks at a campaign rally at Arizona Veterans Memorial Coliseum on March 5, 2020 in Phoenix, Arizona.There were several disruptions during the rally, including a white nationalist brandishing a Nazi flag. The Arizona Democratic primary will be held on March 17. (Photo by Caitlin O’Hara/Getty Images)

Progressive, liberal Jews like myself have been betrayed at American universities. Even if a Jewish student is a far-left socialist, if she cannot jettison the compulsion to defend the state of Israel and Jewish people-hood, she is targeted, talked over, smeared and ex-communicated from the burgeoning hyper-leftist culture at liberal arts college campuses. Any Jewish college student can assure you of the close association between a “From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free” chant and a Bernie Sanders 2020 laptop sticker. The unifying banner that the exploding population of “anti-Zionists” seemed to unite under was that of the Democratic Socialists of America’s candidate. 

At first, the “leftist anti-Semitism” debate was a mere culture war that covered no ground beyond the quad. It had little to do with the race for president and everything to do with student government resolutions and Middle Eastern Studies professors. That was until Bernie seemed to embrace these harassers with open arms into his campaign. 

The orthodoxy of Bernie-ism no longer mandated a strict allegiance to Medicare For All and a Green New Deal, but also a sharp disdain for Jewish people-hood.

The ground shifted in 2019, to where the orthodoxy of Bernie-ism no longer mandated a strict allegiance to Medicare For All and a Green New Deal, but also a sharp disdain for Jewish people-hood. This hostility was encouraged by a growing list of Sanders surrogates and supporters. Indeed, the Bernie mob on Twitter has become a hotbed of calling Israelis Nazis, calling Jews colonizers and referring to Zionists as baby-killers. The excuse you could expect to hear for their incessant bullying? They staunchly supported the Jewish candidate. 

2020 Democratic candidate Bernie Sanders with IfNotNow volunteers in New Hampshire on June 29, 2019. (Photo courtesy of IfNotNow)

The nail in the coffin for my vote against Bernie Sanders was Jeremy Corbyn. As the Labour-Jewish nightmare erupted in the United Kingdom, the parallels between Sanders and Corbyn refusing to condemn anti-Semitism in their own situation rooms became irresponsible to ignore.

Leftist populism around the world is hurtling toward a future in which Jews are either uncomfortable or conservative.

Bernie Sanders is not an anti-Semite nor trafficked in anti-Semitism as Mr. Corbyn is, but his agonizing refusal to acknowledge the virus in his campaign struck many Jewish Americans as a blatant warning. Leftist populism around the world is hurtling toward a future in which Jews are either uncomfortable or conservative. Jews acted upon this warning. Biden is winning the majority of Jewish voters across the map in the primary.

When Sanders felt compelled to address these rising concerns, he would always resort to his “proud to be Jewish” sermon, in which he pensively told the story of his immigrant father and the horrors his family endured under the Nazis. This answer, while powerful, highlighted why so many 2016 Jewish Bernie supporters were abandoning ship. 

One cannot view Jewish culture and people-hood through the lens of only our trauma, only defining oneself as a Jew to counteract the hate inflicted upon us by oppressors.

Bernie seldom, if ever, talked about Jewish culture as it lives and breathes now in Israel and across the world, and the religious, ethnic and spiritual meaning of Judaism as a celebration of life. One cannot view Jewish culture and people-hood through the lens of only our trauma, only defining oneself as a Jew to counteract the hate inflicted upon us by oppressors. This is irresponsible, especially as hostility to Jewish people flourishes in your backyard. Bernie Sanders wasn’t capable of seeing either. 

Screenshot from a video posted by the Bernie Sanders campaign, highlighting the candidate’s Jewish identity, on January 23, 2020

I still love Bernie. I am a Democrat, a liberal, a progressive and politically engaged because Bernie Sanders forced me to be. He demanded I ask the question of my country: why are things so unfair? Can we be better? Should we be better? I believe no less in the fight for universal healthcare, in powerful unions and criminal and environmental justice, and in campaign finance reform than I did in 2016. 

What led me astray from Sanders was my identity as a Jew.

What led me astray from Sanders was my identity as a Jew. If it takes a Bernie Sanders loss to remind the Democratic Party that one of their most reliable voting blocs will not be intimidated, so be it.

As the notoriously relevant Isaac Babel wrote in Red Cavalry, describing the dilemma of Jews feeling the bite of anti-Semitism from all around them, “So let’s say we say yes to the Revolution! But does that mean we’re supposed to say no to the Sabbath?”

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LA County Requires Residents to Wear Masks in Public to Curb Coronavirus

Beginning April 10, Los Angeles County will be requiring residents to wear masks in public for an indefinite period to combat the coronavirus.

The Los Angeles Times reported masks must be worn when people are inside essential businesses, such as grocery stores and pharmacies. Masks are not required when exercising outside. Any form of face covering, such as scarves, meets the requirement.

On April 7, Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti said essential businesses may refuse to provide services to those not wearing masks. “Every Angeleno will share this responsibility with employers: to keep workers and everybody else safe, which is why we are requiring customers to wear face coverings to enter those businesses,” he said.

Garcetti acknowledged the measure largely will be self-enforced. “Our idea is not to be arresting and fining people for the face coverings,” the mayor said. “Just as if tomorrow everybody decided to jaywalk across the street, we wouldn’t have close to enough law enforcement officers or city workers to stop everybody from jaywalking.”

As of this writing, there are 7,350 confirmed cases in the county and 198 deaths from COVID-19. On April 8, County Public Health Director Dr. Barbara Ferrer said the county still is trying to reach 10,000 tests a day and that until they reach that goal, positive cases will continue to increase in the county.

Ferrer thanked medical personnel for their work. “You’re heroes, and we appreciate your commitment to continuing to take excellent care for all of us, while we know you’re facing the impossible task of juggling caring for your families while showing up every single day on the front lines,” Ferrer said.

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Swastika Found on Boston-Area Chabad

A swastika was found on a Chabad in the Boston area on April 5.

A man can be seen on surveillance footage at around 1:40 a.m. committing the vandalism on the Chabad Center of Brookline, Mass. He’s wearing sunglasses and a navy blue beanie while smoking a cigarette.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=49&v=vYb4ha6TTK4&feature=emb_title

According to police, the graffiti appeared to look like a swastika with Russian words written below it.

The Chabad said in an April 7 Facebook post that the suspect did not damage the property and that police have identified the individual in the surveillance footage.

“We feel confident that we are safe and there are no current threats to our security,” Chabad officials wrote. “We appreciate all those who expressed their concern and offered assistance.”

Anti-Defamation League New England Regional Director Robert Trestan said in a statement, “This anti-Semitic act represents a direct threat to the Jewish community and is a reminder that hate never rests, even in a pandemic. We are grateful to the Brookline police who remain on the frontlines, sacrificing themselves to keep us safe.”

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Wiesenthal Center Demands Social-Media Giants Delete Viral Anti-Semitic Posts

The Simon Wiesenthal Center is urging social-media platforms to remove posts that use the coronavirus pandemic to promote anti-Semitism and violence against Jews.

“This is exactly the breeding ground for extremists,” Rabbi Abraham Cooper, associate dean and director of global social action of the Simon Wiesenthal Center, told Fox News.
Its new study “Deadly New Virus Intersects with History’s Oldest Hate: Report and Analysis,” released in April, highlights one of many posts on Telegram, the popular instant-messaging app, that shows an image of the coronavirus with the words ”Holocough: If you have the bug, give a hug, spread the flu, to every Jew.”

“The coronavirus pandemic may be new, but Jews have a long and tragic history of being accused of spreading deadly viruses,” the report stated. Such anti-Semitic posts are being used “to incite lone-wolf-type of attacks, God forbid, one-on-one, and to demonize a community,” said Cooper.

He added about Telegram, “It’s a hot spot in which extremists can promote and communicate with each other. While they occasionally take things off, I’m not holding my breath that we’re going to get any positive results.”

Cooper contacted the U.S. Department of Justice, and is calling on the FBI and local law enforcement to take action when necessary, reported Fox News.

He also addressed the increase in hate crimes against Asian-Americans since the start of the virus, which originated in Wuhan, China.

He explained that “what it shows [is that] in a time of uncertainty and fear, people naturally look for a scapegoat or an outlet for their anger … or they have a predisposition, they might hate Asians or Jews, and use this as an excuse … this is indicative of the climate.”

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UK Jewish Newspapers Fold in Harsh Economic Climate

The Jewish Chronicle and Jewish News in the United Kingdom announced on Wednesday that they will fold after their parent company has become financially insolvent as a result of both the state of print newspapers, coupled with the coronavirus pandemic, which negatively impacted sales and revenue.

The staff at both outlets, which merged in February in an effort to keep British Jewish journalism financially afloat, will be laid off.

The Guardian first reported on the closures and layoffs.

The newspapers and their parent company, the Kessler Foundation, later confirmed the report with similar statements.

“Despite the heroic efforts of the editorial and production team at the newspaper, it has become clear that the Jewish Chronicle will not be able to survive the impact of the current coronavirus epidemic in its current form,” stated The Jewish Chronicle on website in publicizing the move.

Both outlets stated that the liquidation of their respective papers will be completed in two to three weeks.

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Haredim Are Being Scapegoated for Coronavirus in Israel

Well done, Israeli media.

After the deluge of negative headlines over the last two weeks, when COVID-19 is finally beaten back, it will be the scenes of police cordoning off Bnei Brak like a medieval plague city that will define the corona crisis for most Israelis and international observers.

These media attacks, which would never be aimed at Arabs or other minorities, are depressing because they’re so predictable. Every crisis needs its fall guy, and so like the Jews accused of poisoning wells during the Black Death, Public Enemy No. 1 is now the haredi Orthodox world.

Every crisis needs its fall guy, and so like the Jews accused of poisoning wells during the Black Death, Public Enemy No. 1 is now the haredi Orthodox world.

Accompanied by a constant drip of condescending commentary from outsiders about haredi society’s lack of media access and slavish adherence to rabbinic leadership, Israelis will remember the sight of riot police in Mea Shearim, not the masses breaking lockdown to saunter along Tel Aviv’s promenade or frolic in the parks, when they think back on the era of pandemic.

Headlines in national newspapers like “Israel heads to full shutdown — because of the haredim” and “Optimistic note: Corona will send the haredim into the 21st century” have become the norm. Now that it’s again open season on the haredim, Channel 12’s Rina Matzliach was able to accuse the entire haredi public of nearly 1 million people of mass tax evasion and keep her job.

It’s an indictment of the media coverage that the breathless stories of schools that refused to close are well-known, but the fact that 12% of early infections came from restaurants, most of which are not frequented by haredim, and only 7% from yeshivas, was barely mentioned.

So to provide some of the context that the media omitted, here are a few pointers:

Ultra-Orthodox Jews gather in Bnei Brak (Photo by Reuters)

Hindsight is 2020 

It was only on Thursday night after Purim that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu addressed the country and said the school system and much of the economy would have to shut down. But according to medical authorities, the mass outbreak now underway likely broke out on Purim, when gatherings of up to 100 people were still permitted; large parties took place in Tel Aviv as much as in Bnei Brak. The horse had already bolted out of the barn by the time authorities slammed the door shut.

No apologetics

There’s no question that the haredi world has its share of rule breakers. A disturbing trend of people suspicious of scientific authority, and a mentality of “oiber chochom” (thinking we always know best) has reared its head again.

But this represents a tiny part of the booming haredi demographic. When the Netanya beachfront featured a number of gangland killings a decade ago, no one dismissed it as a city of mobsters. Why are the haredim besmirched in one go?

It’s the same story everywhere, from New York’s Borough Park to London: In a highly distinct community, the irresponsibility of a small minority is very noticeable. And where there are high levels of social interaction, the contagious nature of coronavirus has had a tragically high impact.

Mirror called corona

COVID-19 is a mirror that reflects society’s bigotries. When hard times come, the natural human reaction is to look for a scapegoat. That very often takes the shape of whichever group you’re already suspicious of. There’s a famine? Blame the gypsies. A shortage of work? It’s the foreigners. The haredim are Israeli society’s perennial “other,” making everyone else uncomfortable by refusing to be normal.

COVID-19 is a mirror that reflects society’s bigotries.

That leaves me with a suggestion for the country’s journalists. If you’re looking to tell a new story, here’s a question that doesn’t get much coverage:

What do Israel’s headlines say about the biases of those who write and read them?

A version of this article was also published on Mishpacha.com.

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The Debate About Israeli Annexation is Disingenuous

The list of signatories to a new letter organized by the Israel Policy Forum protesting the possibility of Israel passing legislation in the upcoming months to annex parts of the West Bank is full of familiar names to those who have followed American Jewish organizational life in the last few decades. Some on the list—like current Reform movement leader Rabbi Rick Jacobs—are still important players in contemporary Jewish life. But many of the big donors and veteran activists mentioned could have been recycled from a host of similar efforts by liberal groups in the distant past.

The letter is a direct response to the latest news about the terms of a still not finalized coalition agreement to form a unity government led by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his chief rival, Benny Gantz. But the tone and the language used seem straight out of the early 1990s, when some of the same people were speaking up in favor of the Oslo Accords and its promise of land for peace, or later in the decade when they were disingenuously protesting Netanyahu’s policies during his first term as prime minister for being too slow to make concessions to PLO leader Yasser Arafat. Then, too, they were admonishing Israelis not to defend their rights because doing so would alienate the tender sensibilities of Americans.

Indeed, if a Jewish Rip Van Winkle were to have dozed off during the Clinton administration and awakened in the last week, he would feel right at home with the rhetoric admonishing Israelis not to alienate Americans or to sabotage hopes of peace with the Palestinians.

Indeed, if a Jewish Rip Van Winkle were to have dozed off during the Clinton administration and awakened in the last week, he would feel right at home with the rhetoric admonishing Israelis not to alienate Americans or to sabotage hopes of peace with the Palestinians.

The push to annex parts of the West Bank, where hundreds of thousands of Jews currently live in settlement blocs, as well as the strategic Jordan Valley divides Israelis. Yet the notion that formalizing Israel’s control over these lands is an obstacle to peace is as much a relic of the past as some of the IPF letter’s signatories.

The land-for-peace formula that Yitzhak Rabin tried as a result of the Oslo Accords failed because first Arafat and then his successor, Mahmoud Abbas, in addition to their Hamas rivals, have consistently rejected peace efforts because of their inability to accept any deal that would require them to accept the legitimacy of a Jewish state, no matter where its borders might be drawn.

A housing development in the Israeli West Bank settlement of Efrat, a bedroom community outside Jerusalem. (Ben Sales/JTA)

Even in a theoretical scenario where the Palestinian Authority would finally make peace, Israel would have insisted on keeping the settlements on the land it now seeks to annex. Nor would any Israeli government, including one led by Gantz, ever give up the Jordan Valley. Indeed, the letter, which was addressed to Gantz, and his Blue and White Party colleague Gabi Ashkenazi, fails to take into account that their electoral success was primarily due to their rejecting the land-for-peace ideology of the Israeli left before it declined into irrelevance.

Nor, despite the complicated nature of the maps of the land that Israel intends to keep as part of the plan put forward by the Trump administration, would the implementation of this scheme prevent the creation of a Palestinian state in the West Bank with contiguous borders, even should the P.A. or Hamas ever be willing to make peace.

There are valid arguments to be made against Israel’s new government moving towards annexation right now.

There are valid arguments to be made against Israel’s new government moving towards annexation right now, and one of them is mentioned in the letter.

Should the new government move on an annexation proposal in the next weeks or months, the timing will be terrible. Both Israel and the United States should be focusing all of their energy on dealing with the coronavirus pandemic. Neither Trump nor his presidential adviser/son-in-law Jared Kushner—the moving force behind the administration’s proposal for the Middle East and who is now working on the response to the pandemic—have the time or the interest to be dealing with annexation.

If the Israeli right is pushing for annexation now, it’s because they fear that if Netanyahu hesitates, a golden opportunity to achieve one of their long-term goals will be lost if Trump is defeated for re-election in November.

If the Israeli right is pushing for annexation now, it’s because they fear that if Netanyahu hesitates, a golden opportunity to achieve one of their long-term goals will be lost if Trump is defeated for re-election in November. But they need to put a lid on any talk that takes a Trump defeat for granted. The thin-skinned president doesn’t appreciate such assumptions, nor will he view kindly any Israeli action that is perceived as an attempt to take advantage of his being distracted as the coronavirus spreads across the United States.

Houses in Shvut Rachel, a West Bank Jewish settlement. Photo by Baz Ratner/Reuters

Whether or not the timing is correct, American Jewish jeremiads about the issue are understandably falling on deaf ears in Israel.

The underlying presumption of those who claim that annexation will undermine Jewish support for Israel is that peace will require a retreat to the 1967 lines. That’s something the overwhelming majority of Israelis have repeatedly rejected—and for good reason. Repeating former Prime Minister Ariel Sharon’s experiment in which he withdrew from Gaza in the far more strategic West Bank strikes most Israelis as madness. If, despite the urgings of liberal American Jews, Gantz backed away from his objection to annexation in the coalition negotiations with Netanyahu, it is because he is a realist. The idea of Israel ever giving up places where so many Jews live on – land where Jews have rights—based on history, law and faith—is no longer a viable option.

The idea of Israel ever giving up places where so many Jews live on – land where Jews have rights-based on history, law and faith—is no longer a viable option.

Living in the past and clinging to the false hopes of the 1990s won’t build support for Israel or nurture the alliance between the two democracies. It’s long past time for liberal American Jews, even the old Oslo-cheering squad, to accept the reality of Palestinian rejectionism and the permanence of the West Bank settlements, whether or not they believed that they were a good idea in the first place. Trying to undermine the new Israeli government or setting the stage for a conflict with the Democrats should Trump lose in the fall isn’t consistent with their claim of being ardent supporters of the Jewish state. Nostalgia for the illusions of the past should never be confused with activism that actually helps Israel.

Jonathan S. Tobin is editor in chief of JNS—Jewish News Syndicate. Follow him on Twitter at: @jonathans_tobin.

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Obituaries: April 9, 2020

Marilyn L. Bachner died March 23 at 86. Survived by sons Evan (Lisa), Robert; 5 grandchildren. Mount Sinai

Jewel Brager died March 23 at 93. Survived by daughter Sandra (Gordon) Santee; son Jeffrey; 2 grandchildren; sister Jeanette Zimmerman. Mount Sinai

Shirley Kekst Cohen died March 31 at 93. Survived by husband Marshall Cohen; daughters Thelma (Eliot) Samulon, Linda (George) Jennings, Sara (Stephen) Wessells; 7 grandchildren; 5 great-grandchildren. Mount Sinai

Arthur Friedman died March 27 at 92. Survived by daughter Lauri (David) Carey; son David (Ellen); 6 grandchildren; 1 great-grandchild. Malinow and Silverman

Sidney Freund died March 30 at 94. Survived by daughter Sharon Eichner; son Richard (Deborah Morris); 3 grandchildren; 4 great-grandchildren Mount Sinai

 Ehud S. Giladi died March 22 at 61. Survived by son Oren. Mount Sinai

Arthur Alan Gillis died March 21 at 73. Survived by wife Linda; sons Brian, Joshua, Daniel. Mount Sinai

Ann Grossman died March 29 at 93. Survived by daughters  Lora (Igor) Kesler, Bella (Fefim) Lurye; 4 grandchildren. Mount Sinai

Lusia Gushansky died March 20 at 84. Survived by son Felix (Larissa) Gushansky; 2 grandchildren. Mount Sinai

Phyllis Horn died March 21 at 92. Survived by husband Irving; daughter Tamar (Bruce) Raff; son Stuart (Pearl) Horn; 4 grandchildren. Mount Sinai

Bettijune Kruse died March 25 at 96. Survived by daughter Liane Enkelis; son Steven (Penny). Mount Sinai

Ethel Leder died March 23 at 97. Survived by daughters Geraldine (George Beckerman), Mimi (Gary Wernez); son Ruben (Foyne Mahaffey); 3 grandchildren; 1 great-grandchild. Mount Sinai

Lynn Leo died March 23 at 86. Survived by daughter Pamela (Patrick) Porter; son Randal (Esther) Hauck; 12 grandchildren; 17 great-grandchildren. Mount Sinai

Martin Lutin died March 27 at 89. Survived by wife Evelyn; daughter Robin; son-in-law, Michael Scott; 3 grandchildren. Mount Sinai

Leonard Malin died March 16 at 70. Survived by wife Sherry; sisters Joan Sherman, Merna Buylink. Mount Sinai

Shaoul Moshi died March 10 at 94. Survived by wife Gracia Doris; daughters Orna (David), Lily (Allan); sons Allen (Sandra), Elias (Ronit), Daniel; 11 grandchildren; 5  great-grandchildren. Chevra Kadisha

Jerry Muchin died March 21 at 75. Survived by wife Carol; sons Neal (Andrea), Michael (Emma), Jonathan (Jackie) Mates-Muchin; 10 grandchildren; sister Nadine (David) Prosperi; brother Daniel (Natalie). Mount Sinai

Tsiliya Nisman died March 20 at 87.  Survived by her daughter Marina (Arkadiy); son Yevgeniy (Nina); 3 grandchildren. Mount Sinai

Evelyn Gail Packer died March 24 at 84. Survived by sons David (Lori), Alan (Margaret), Richard (Laura), Andrew (Roberta); 10 grandchildren. Mount Sinai

Frida Reich died March 21 at 96. Survived by daughter Miriam (Joav) Gersten; 2 grandchildren; 2 great-grandchildren. Mount Sinai

George J. Rembaum died March 23 at 94. Survived by wife Eleanor; daughter Michelle (Robert) Fox; sons Stewart (James Post), Mathew; 2 grandchildren. Mount Sinai

Albert Morris Rosenblatt died March 19 at 90. Survived by wife Linda; daughters Elisa (Mark) Pomerantz, Shira; son Ira (Helene). Mount Sinai

Rosalyn Sanders died March 24 at 90. Survived by daughter Sheri; son Steven (Elise); 2 grandchildren. Mount Sinai

Paula Savett died March 22 at 85. Survived by daughters Alison Fishman, Andrea Fishman; stepdaughter Deborah (Stacey) Savett Olliff; stepson Bruce (Susan) Savett; 2 grandchildren; 4 step-grandchildren; sister Judy Garry; brother Ivan (Barbara) Garry. Mount Sinai

Arlene Schlig died March 28 at 92. Survived by daughters Audrey (Bennett) Miller, Debbie (Bob) Wambach; son Mark (Katie); 5 grandchildren; 5 great-grandchildren. Mount Sinai

Sidney Sicoff died March 27 at 79. Survived by wife Janet; daughter Julie (Mike) Hayek; son Brad (Chris); 3 grandchildren. Mount Sinai

Sara Sion died March 11 at 90. Survived by daughter Joyce (Victor) Massarano; son Joe (Christina); 3 grandchildren; 1 great-grandchild. Malinow and Silverman

Mendel Vidergauz died March 25 at 99. Survived by daughters Bettina (Leonard) Brenner, Paulette (Richard) Kan; sons Mark (Sharon), Anthony (Lisa). Mount Sinai

George Welland died March 27 at 92. Survived by daughter Fay (Bill) Bevans; son Al (Marcy); 5 grandchildren; 3 great-grandchildren. Malinow and Silverman

Vladimir Yusin died March 21 at 77. Survived by wife Lily; daughter Jennifer; stepdaughter Ada (Daniel) Katz; 7 grandchildren. Mount Sinai

Levi Gregory Zlotin died March 22 at 27. Survived by mother Karen Pyudik; father  Gregory (Oksana). Mount Sinai

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