The Forward published a report on April 22 detailing how thousands of Orthodox Jews who have recovered from COVID-19 are donating their blood to help patients fight the coronavirus.
The report explains it started with Chaim Lebovits, who runs a shoe company in Monsey, NY, rallying other members of the Orthodox Jewish community to donate blood at the urging of his friend, John Hopkins University infectious disease specialist Dr. Shmuel Shoham. Lebovits started connecting Orthodox rabbis and organizations with hospitals and other medical personnel. Organizations such as the Orthodox Union and Agudath Israel of America, and various Orthodox rabbis now have gotten involved in encouraging the community to donate blood to be tested for antibodies.
NEW YORK, NY – APRIL 02: An Orthodox Jewish man walks by the Maimonides Medical Center which has seen an upsurge of patients on April 02, 2020 in Borough Park section of Brooklyn in New York City. Hospitals in New York City, which has been especially hard hit by the coronavirus, are facing shortages of beds, ventilators and protective equipment for medical staff. Currently, over 92,000 people in New York state have tested positive for COVID-19. (Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images)
The result has been more than 3,000 Orthodox Jews in the New York area donating their blood in an effort to provide antibodies to COVID-19 patients, and Lebovits hopes he can get up to 45,000 Orthodox Jews in the area to donate their blood.
“We as observant Jews have an obligation to preserve life, and save life, and help as many people as we can,” Lebovits told The Forward.
Lebovits’ efforts have trickled down to Lakewood, NJ, as Dr. Mike Joyner of the Mayo Clinic told The Forward that he has received a thousand blood donations from Orthodox Jews in the area − and he thinks he will receive thousands more.
The Forward’s report received praise from Jewish organizations.
“The Orthodox community is donating plasma to help fight #COVID19. This is how opportunities to do good arise from a dire situation,” Anti-Defamation League New York and New Jersey tweeted. “[Thank you] for taking the initiative to think of others during this difficult time #HopeNotHate.”
The Orthodox community is donating plasma to help fight #COVID19. This is how opportunities to do good arise from a dire situation. TY for taking the initiative to think of others during this difficult time #HopeNotHate. Read the @jdforward article here: https://t.co/SLjLAZuGSQ
The American Jewish Committee (AJC) and New York City Councilmember Mark Levine touted that more than half of the blood samples donated to Mount Sinai Health Center in New York City were from Orthodox Jews.
“Way to #BeAMensch!” the AJC tweeted.
“Thank you to all who are giving of themselves so selflessly,” Levine wrote.
More than half of @MountSinaiNYC's plasma donors are Orthodox Jews.
New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D), announced on April 23 that 21.2% of New York City residents tested positive for COVID-19 antibodies, which translates to about a million residents. The number was 13.9% statewide.
Israel has been developing what is known as a “passive” vaccine to treat critically ill COVID-19 patients with antibodies from patients who have recovered from the coronavirus. At least two Israeli patients were treated with the passive vaccine on April 12.
Tony Award-winning composer, lyricist and Broadway legend Stephen Sondheim turned 90 on March 22, and some of the Great White Way’s biggest stars will pay tribute to him and his musical oeuvre in “Take Me to The World: A Sondheim 90th Birthday Celebration.”
The virtual program will stream free of charge at Broadway.com and its YouTube channel on April 26 at 5 p.m. PT. The date marks the 50th anniversary of the opening of “Company,” for which Sondheim won two of his eight Tonys.
Ben Platt, Jake Gyllenhaal, Linda Lavin, Beanie Feldstein, Stephen Spielberg, Mandy Patinkin, Victor Garber, Stephen Schwartz, Joanna Gleason and Brandon Uranowitz are among the MOTs set to take part in the benefit, which will raise funds for Artists Striving to End Poverty.
Others scheduled to appear include Lin-Manuel Miranda, Meryl Streep, Bernadette Peters, Patti LuPone, Audra McDonald, Neil Patrick Harris, Josh Groban, Nathan Lane, Christine Baranski, Kristin Chenoweth, Sutton Foster, and Brian Stokes Mitchell.
“The world is in a hard place and we are all searching for something great,” host Raul Esparza said in a statement. “Well, Stephen Sondheim is greatness personified.”
During a seminar in my graduate program in Israel, a professor concluded a lecture on terrorism and political violence claiming: “The tears of a grieving Palestinian mother, whose son was responsible for carrying out a suicide attack are equal to the tears of an Israeli mother whose son fell in service to the country.”
It took me a while to understand that the statement itself was not really problematic. The issue was that there was no follow-up with what needed to be said: while the mothers may feel an equal amount of sorrow, the world must never draw a moral equivalence between the terrorist and the soldier. This rule must apply to the stakeholders of any armed conflicts and the reason is simple: The frequency and normalization of terrorism, as a legitimate tactic of resistance, will increase unless it is universally condemned and categorized as an unjustifiable evil.
JORDAN VALLEY, WEST BANK – JANUARY 28: An abandoned house adorned with graffiti stands empty next to the Israel-Jordan border on January 28, 2020 in Jordan Valley, West Bank. (Photo by Lior Mizrahi/Getty Images)
While their mothers may feel an equal amount of sorrow, the world must never draw a moral equivalence between the terrorist and the soldier.
This is exactly what Combatants for Peace, an Israeli nongovernmental organization (NGO) founded in 2006, is failing to do. The organization’s goal, as it is introduced to the general public, is very appealing:
“Raise the consciousness in both publics regarding the hopes and suffering of the other side, and to create partners in dialogue.” “Educate towards reconciliation and non-violent struggle in both the Israeli and Palestinian societies.” “Create political pressure on both governments to stop the cycle of violence, end the occupation and resume a constructive dialogue.”
Understanding one another’s narrative is a beautiful message. But what is the price, proposed by Combatants for Peace? Accept the false premise that Israel’s presence in the West Bank (“occupation”) is the source of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Not only does this erroneous premise label Israel as an aggressor but it categorizes the Palestinians as victims of that foreign aggression. By proposing such an outrageous premise, that is unfortunately widely accepted, Combatants for Peace is able to host its annual and most controversial event: a joint- Israeli-Palestinian memorial ceremony on the eve of Israel’s Memorial Day for her fallen soldiers. (To grasp how controversial this annual event is, imagine an American NGO hosting an event every year with the families of fallen US soldiers and the families of Taliban members killed during the war in Afghanistan.)
ELI, WEST BANK – MARCH 18: Israelis mourn during the funeral of Rabbi Achad Ettinger on March 18, 2019 in Eli settlement, West Bank. Rabbi Achad Ettinger, 47, was shot on 17 March during an attack by a Palestinian who stabbed and killed the Israeli soldier Gal Keidan and seized his weapon before opening fire in two other separate locations in the West Bank. Rabbi Ettinger is survived by his wife and 12 children. (Photo by Lior Mizrahi/Getty Images)
While this event has been held every year for the past decade, it remains widely controversial and unpopular in Israel. The most common criticism was exemplified by Israel’s former Minister of Defense Avigdor Liberman who announced:
“I will not lend my hand to the desecration of Memorial Day. This is not a ceremony but an exhibition of bad taste and lack of sensitivity that hurt the bereaving families we hold dear.”
This reaction from a government official should not come as a surprise. After all Yonatan Shapira, founder of Combatants for Peace, repeatedly referred to Israel’s military as a terrorist organization and has accused Israel of engaging in massacres.
Combatants for Peace’s rhetoric and attempts to legitimize Palestinian terrorism transcend the Israeli public. For the last couple years, J Street, the liberal advocacy group operating on significant sectors of the progressive Jewish American community, has endorsed Combatants for Peace. It even announced its role in co-sponsoring this year’s joint ceremony.
While J Street’s decision to co-sponsor this event is not groundbreaking news, the organization did surprise by issuing its first presidential endorsement of Democratic candidate Joe Biden. Biden, a few hours later, welcomed the endorsement:
“I’m honored to have earned J Street’s first-ever presidential endorsement. J Street has been a powerful voice to advance social justice here at home, and to advocate for a two-state solution that advances Middle East Peace. I share with J Street’s membership an unyielding dedication to the survival and security of Israel, and an equal commitment to creating a future of peace and opportunity for Israeli and Palestinian children alike.”
How can the stakeholders of the conflict’s peace process hope to achieve any meaningful progress if they continue to dismiss Palestinian terrorism?
How can the stakeholders of the conflict’s peace process hope to achieve any meaningful progress if they continue to dismiss Palestinian terrorism? There can be no moral equivalency drawn between Israel’s military and Palestinian terrorists who indiscriminately target civilians or between Israel’s military, which does everything to preserve the value of life (on all side of the battlefield) and Palestinian terrorists who have been indoctrinated all their lives to believe that Jews are responsible for their people’s suffering. There can be no moral equivalency between the most moral military in the world, to Palestinian leaders who chose to name schools after former terrorists.
Any attempt to understand the conflict, by seeking to establish a moral equivalence between the Middle East’s only liberal democracy and an oppressive Arab dictatorship, which continues to dilute Nazi-style propaganda, is bound to fail.
More importantly, any organization involved in the establishment of this false moral equivalency, indirectly contributes to the continuation of the cycle of violence.
Yoni Michanie is a former IDF paratrooper and has an MA in diplomacy and international security from IDC Herzliya. He is a campus advisor and strategic planner for the Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting and Analysis (CAMERA).
He got the idea, federal authorities said, from the internet.
The incendiary device was planted near Ruth’s House in suburban Springfield, in western Massachusetts, on April 2. That was a day before the date designated as “Jew killing day” on a thread on white supremacist social media allegedly read by the suspect. The preferred target, the thread said, was a “Jew nursing home.”
Jewish security insiders have been fretting since January about the possible dangers of a pandemic. Chief among them: that spiking online activity during quarantine would bring more people in contact with the toxic brew of racism, anti-Semitism and the glorification of violence that occupies the dark corners of the web.
Jewish officials who track anti-Semitism are concerned that “a more captive audience, more people spending time online, the ability for these messages to resonate with certain people” could increase, said Oren Segal, the vice president of the Anti-Defamation League’s Center on Extremism.
NEW YORK, NY – MARCH 3: (L to R) Evan Bernstein, Anti-Defamation League New York Regional Director, and Oren Segal, Director of the Anti-Defamation League Center on Extremism, field questions during a press conference to discuss the arrest of a St. Louis man charged in connection with bomb threats against Jewish Community Centers and the Anti-Defamation League national headquarters building in New York City, March 3, 2017 in New York City. After making numerous threats against Jewish community centers, Jewish schools, a Jewish museum and the Anti-Defamation League, Juan Thompson was arrested Friday morning in St. Louis by authorities with the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). (Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images)
Amy Spitalnick, who directs Integrity First for America, a group that litigates against white supremacists, said a cohort of extremists with time on their hands posed the risk of increased and more sophisticated attacks.
“All of these people are staying at home online and have all the time in the world to take part in these attacks and spread their hate and plan,” Spitalnick said.
Michael Masters, who directs the Secure Community Network, the security arm of national Jewish groups, said the April 15 revelation of the arrest made concrete the worries his group had been relaying to its constituents across the United States since January, when SCN started considering the pandemic in its bulletins.
“This incident goes exactly to our short- and long-term concerns: the increased anti-Semitism, fomenting hatred and incitement to violence in online forums and on platforms that motivates, encourages or supports individuals to potentially take action against our community,” he said. “This is not conceptual.”
While the volume of anti-Semitic expression has increased online, and in at least two cases has spurred white supremacists to action, Masters said that other manifestations of anti-Semitism, like vandalism and graffiti, have not increased since the pandemic.
Here are some of the ways that the pandemic has changed, and potentially amplified, the threat of violent white supremacists.
Big, vulnerable targets
Ten days before the attempted attack on Ruth’s House, Timothy Wilson was shot dead by FBI agents serving him with a warrant. The pandemic presented the known white supremacist, who blamed Jews for the coronavirus, with an opportunity.
Wilson, who had contemplated attacking a synagogue among other targets, “decided to accelerate his plan to use a vehicle-borne improvised explosive device in an attempt to cause severe harm and mass casualties,” according to the FBI’s alert.
Segal said the same logic applied to the chatter allegedly heeded by the Massachusetts suspect, advising attacks on Jewish homes for the elderly. Senior homes have made news as coronavirus hot spots.
“It’s doubling down,” he said. “Who are the most susceptible, the most threatened by this pandemic — it’s older people.”
The conspiracy contagion
Ancient theories of Jewish responsibility for plagues are resurfacing and gaining wider exposure, Masters said.
“Starting in mid-January, we were identifying on our duty desk a lot of historic anti-Semitic tropes related to viruses and disease, bubonic plague and post-bubonic plague,” he said. The tropes “from the Middle Ages were resurrected related to the coronavirus, and it broke down to ‘the Jews are spreading it, the Jews are responsible for it and intending to spread it for monetary gain.’”
Accusations that Jews are profiting from the pandemic have been circulating for months on social media favored by white supremacists, like Telegram and Gab, and then breaking through to mainstream platforms like Instagram and Twitter. Rick Wiles, a Christian pastor who runs a far-right news site, TruNews, said last month that the pandemic was simultaneously God’s means of punishing the Jews and spread by them.
There has been chatter on white supremacist social media suggesting attacks on Jewish and other sites using the virus by licking doorknobs or violating social distances to spread disease.
“Go to synagogues, travel to Israel, wear a kippah and cough on people” were some of the scenarios that Masters said he has seen.
Masters said the threats to weaponize the virus itself seemed to be more trash talk than actual planning. Nonetheless, he said, they were emblematic of how the association of the virus with Jews was metastasizing among white supremacists.
“What we assess in our conversations with law enforcement [is that] rather than being indicators of what people were going to do, it’s a troubling narrative arc from white supremacists,” he said.
Uninvited guests
Another facet of the pandemic landscape is “Zoombombing,” malicious intrusions of the online gatherings that have replaced in-person ones for now.
White supremacists have interrupted online Jewish get-togethers, Torah study sessions and classes with Nazi slogans and obscenities. Just this week, a Holocaust memorial event organized by Israel’s embassy in Berlin ended after virtual intruders began displaying images of Hitler and shouting anti-Semitic slogans.
Masters said the phenomenon was as much a manifestation of white supremacism as it was malign mischief-making.
“It’s what they say about idle hands being the devil’s workshop, people will exploit weaknesses where they can — those who are trolling, and those who have a desire to scare the community,” he said.
Masters said that Jewish Americans may also be more susceptible to the fears stoked by expressions of anti-Semitism because the pandemic is keeping people in isolation.
“Incidents of anti-Semitic vandalism and graffiti have been no more pernicious than normal,” he said. “We see that sort of harassment and anti-Semitism regularly. But it is psychologically impactive to the community because the community is closed and everyone is vulnerable and socially isolated.”
The pandemic may go but the sickness remains
Jewish Americans already were facing “the most complex and dynamic threat environment we’ve ever seen facing the Jewish community in our nation’s history,” Masters said, describing the wave of violent attacks on Jewish community targets in the year or so before the pandemic hit, including two deadly assaults on synagogues.
The social upheaval that undergirded those attacks will manifest at exponentially greater levels as we get out of the pandemic, he said, with massive increases in unemployment creating more alienation and people who may look for scapegoats for their misfortune. At the same time, Jewish institutions will be cutting back expenses, possibly in security.
“As we reconstitute services and open the doors to congregants, JCC members, and students get back on campuses, with that increase in online hate speech as an excuse to spread anti-Semitism and hatred, there is a real concern that the individuals susceptible to that message will see our community get back to work, and they will pick up that call to violence and take action,” Masters said.
Spitalnick, whose group is suing the organizers of the deadly 2017 white supremacist march in Charlottesville, Virginia, noted that they were able to exploit online platforms to spread their message of hate ahead of the march.
She said more must be done to prevent the current moment from magnifying those opportunities.
“Our Charlottesville case shows social media enabled and allowed some of the violence to happen,” Spitalnick said. “There needs to be an approach that brings in the private sector instead of playing whack-a-mole in which we take them off from one site and they go to another.”
California Gov. Gavin Newsom, a Democrat, announced that the state had its highest jump in COVID-19 deaths on April 23.
There were 115 deaths over the past 24 hours, bringing the total statewide death total to 1,469. Additionally, there was a 5.6% increase in new cases, bringing the statewide total to 37,378 confirmed cases.
However, there was a 0.4% decline in hospitalizations and a 1.2% decline in intensive care unit (ICU) patients.
“We’re not out of the woods yet,” Newsom said. “I know there’s a deep desire, people are making calls on an hourly basis, saying it’s time to open back up — consider the deadliest day in the state of California the last 24 hours.”
In Los Angeles County, there were 68 COVID-19 deaths and 1,081 confirmed cases on April 23, bringing the county total to 797 and 17,508, respectively. County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer pointed out that more than 50% of the new cases were asymptomatic.
FiveThirtyEight Editor-in-Chief Nate Silver tweeted on April 22 that California’s COVID-19 numbers are difficult to analyze because of “substantial lags in reporting,” although he thinks it’s “likely that the situation in California is improving.”
California has some of the worst data in the country. Substantial lags in reporting, very hard to get a handle on its testing situation. https://t.co/PuN8N7a7rH
I’ve been at home for five weeks
mostly sitting in this same office chair.
My exercise consists of long walks to
the bathroom and meager weights at night.
I overheard someone in a poem recently say
To heck with birds. I’m not sure why that
resonates with me today, as the outside
becomes a memory. As my car doesn’t
remember what it’s like to be on.
As the delivery people I know by name
now ring the doorbell and flee before
I have the chance to thank them for their service.
As the seven day quarantines mandated in
this week’s Torah portion seem so quaint.
We used to dream of quarantines that
lasted only seven days. When all we had
to worry about were spots on our skin
and the occasional discolored hair.
When the priest’s job was to behave like
a doctor, and that examination was holy.
Now there is nothing on my skin and
all my hairs are the color they are supposed to be.
Even the grey ones are giving me a
comforting thumbs up.
When this is all over, the ritual bath I’ll take
will last seven days. I’ll send photos to the past
to gain priestly assurances. I’ll never
not leave the house again.
Los 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.
Actor Hugh Jackman teamed up over video chat with late-night host Jimmy Fallon to indulge in a weekly Shabbat tradition.
On a segment on “The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon,” the comedian joined Jackman and his wife Deborra-Lee Furness in their separate kitchens to learn how to make challah.
Why? “It’s really easy but looks really impressive,” Jackman said.
Fallon’s attempt at braiding the dough was enough to remind viewers he should keep his day (night) job. Jackman told Fallon it took him 20 minutes to braid the challah off-screen before the segment.
While it baked, Fallon put on tap shoes to show off his moves to the Broadway icon. The two talked about how sad they were that Broadway shows have had to close during the pandemic. They also discussed Jackman’s new HBO film “Bad Education.”
“Look at us, men baking bread, so cool!” Fallon declared while checking on his challah in the oven. When Fallon’s daughter appeared, Jackman asked her to look at the bread and decide if her dad’s skills were good enough to braid her hair. She wasn’t all that impressed.
When Fallon took his challah out of the oven, he said, “This is the best thing I’ve ever made.”
You can watch the full segment and learn how to make your own challah here:
WASHINGTON (JTA) — The man President Donald Trump just named to speak for the Health Department accused George Soros and the Rothschild family of seeking to exploit the pandemic for control and to advance their agendas.
Michael Caputo, who advised Trump’s 2016 campaign, last week became the spokesman for the Department of Health and Human Services, reportedly in part because of Trump’s dissatisfaction with how the department secretary, Alex Azar, was handling communications during the crisis.
Caputo, known for his pugilistic style, deleted tens of thousands of tweets just before the appointment. CNN on Thursday uncovered dozens of the tweets, including attacks on the Chinese tinged with racially charged imagery, accusations that Democrats wanted people to die so Trump would not be reelected and disparagement of the media.
On March 17, responding to David Rothschild, an economist who often is caustically critical of Trump and accused Trump of “wanting to murder” people to stay in power, Caputo said that Rothschild “is an inbred elitist sphincter whose family craves control. That’s one reason why he constantly lies about President Trump.”
The New York economist is not related to the European family, which for centuries has been the target of anti-Semitic slanders that it is seeking world dominance.
On March 15, Caputo responded to a far-right figure, Jack Prosobiec, who wondered on Twitter why George Soros, the liberal philanthropist was ready to give to his favored political causes but not to efforts to combat the coronavirus.
“Are you kidding? Soros’s political agenda REQUIRES a pandemic,” Caputo said. Soros has given tens of millions of dollars to coronavirus relief.
On March 27, Caputo tweeted a photo of Soros captioned “The real virus behind everything,” and added skulls and crossbones.
Soros has frequently featured in anti-Semitic attacks as someone seeking world control.
CNN said it was unable to obtain comment from the Trump administration or Caputo.
A conversation with Rabbi Ilana Grinblat on the ways we “can come out of hell not empty handed.”
How do we manage our lives during the Coronavirus crisis? How do we keep our sanity? How do we use this quarantine to bring out the best in ourselves? Tune in every day and share your stories with podcast@jewishjournal.com.
Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine, a Republican, issued a statement condemning an anti-Semitic sign at a recent protest as well as a state lawmaker’s Facebook comment comparing the state’s actions to Nazi Germany.
The sign in question was at an April 18 protest at the state capitol building against the state’s shelter-in-place order. The sign said, “The real plague” with a rat wearing a Star of David and a yarmulke.
The man holding the antisemitic sign at yesterday’s protest against coronavirus restrictions in Columbus, Ohio (on right), appears to be a member of the neo-Nazi NSM and also participated in the Motor City Pride protest last June (on left).👇https://t.co/s6V50murbEpic.twitter.com/Uk3QyMwzOY
Ohio State Sen. Andrew Brenner’s (R-Powell) wife, Sara, had written in an April 22 Facebook post that since has been deleted, “This actually feels like Hitler’s Germany where you had to have blonde hair and blue eyes to be able to function, and you were damned otherwise.” She was responding to Ohio Department of Health Director Dr. Amy Acton saying on April 21 that some countries should issue certificates to those who have recovered from COVID-19.
Brenner responded to his wife’s post with a comment that read, “We won’t allow that to happen in Ohio.”
Days after anti-Semitic protests and hours after @DrAmyActon spoke about hope on Holocaust Remembrance Day, here is Ohio Republican Rep. @andrewbrenner + his wife comparing Acton (who is Jewish) to Nazi Germany and concentration camps. pic.twitter.com/RBkNJMZiSf
DeWine said in a statement that the sign at the protest “was vile and disgusting. While even disgusting speech is constitutionally protected, it still demands condemnation.”
He then turned to Brenner’s Facebook comment, saying that it “showed a complete lack of understanding of the Holocaust — made even more offensive by posting on Holocaust Memorial Day — and was a slur on a good, compassionate, and honorable person who has worked non-stop to save lives and protect her fellow citizens.”
DeWine added: “Any complaints about the policy of this administration need to be directed at me. I am the office holder, and I appointed the Director. Ultimately, I am responsible for the decisions in regard to the coronavirus. The buck stops with me.”
I am deeply concerned by the anti-Semitic sign at Ohio’s Statehouse during a recent protest rally. The sign was vile and disgusting. While even disgusting speech is constitutionally protected, it still demands condemnation.
The recent Internet post by Ohio State Senator Andrew Brenner, likening Ohio’s Department of Health Director’s actions to fight coronavirus to those taken by the Nazis in Germany during World War II, must also be condemned.
The comments showed a complete lack of understanding of the Holocaust — made even more offensive by posting on Holocaust Memorial Day — and was a slur on a good, compassionate, and honorable person who has worked non-stop to save lives and protect her fellow citizens.
Any complaints about the policy of this administration need to be directed at me. I am the office holder, and I appointed the Director. Ultimately, I am responsible for the decisions in regard to the coronavirus. The buck stops with me.
The American Jewish Committee thanked DeWine for his statement.
“Thank you, @GovMikeDeWine, for your zero-tolerance stance on anti-Semitism,” the Jewish organization wrote. “Hate has no place in Ohio or anywhere else in America.”
Thank you, @GovMikeDeWine, for your zero-tolerance stance on antisemitism. Hate has no place in Ohio or anywhere else in America. https://t.co/CQVMlIvZHV
Conference of Presidents of Major Jewish Organizations CEO William Daroff similarly tweeted, “Thank you @GovMikeDeWine for condemning the outrageous Facebook post by [the wife of] an Ohio State Senator likening COVID restrictions to Nazi Germany. Using Nazi references in politics cheapens the sacredness of the true horrors of the Holocaust and is deeply offensive.”
Thank you @GovMikeDeWine for condemning the outrageous Facebook post by an Ohio State Senator likening COVID restrictions to Nazi Germany. Using Nazi references in politics cheapens the sacredness of the true horrors of the Holocaust and is deeply offensive. https://t.co/kElgHUPSqi
Colorado Gov. Jared Polis and Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer — both of whom are Democrats — as well as Idaho Gov. Brad Little, a Republican, also have been subjected to Nazi comparisons for their shelter-in-place orders.