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May 28, 2020

Trump Signs Holocaust Education Bill Into Law

President Donald Trump signed the Never Again Education Act into law on May 28.

The bill, which had passed the Senate on May 13, provides $10 million in five years for schools across the country to implement the United State Holocaust Museum’s programming on the Holocaust.

Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-N.Y.), who co-authored the bill, told Jewish News Syndicate (JNS), “Our children are not born with hate in their hearts, and by providing educators with the tools they need to teach about the Holocaust, we can ensure they never learn it. Teaching our children about the dangers of anti-Semitism and hate is a proactive way to stop anti-Semitism before it even starts.”

Hadassah, the Women’s Zionist Organization of America National President Rhoda Smolow and CEO and Executive Director Janice Weinman issued a joint statement that read, “Hadassah applauds President Trump for signing the Never Again Education Act into law. His act caps a bipartisan effort to ensure educators will have enhanced resources available to teach the critical lessons of the Holocaust. America’s commitment to ‘Never Again’ is unwavering and unifying. Studying how the Holocaust happened, to whom and why is not just simply history. It’s a lesson for today and for the future. You cannot stand up against hatred if you can’t identify it. The Never Again Education Act will help educate millions of Americans to be prepared to act.”

Christians United for Israel (CUFI) founder and chairman Pastor John Hagee similarly said in a statement, “This is an important win for our country. With the abhorrent rise in anti-Semitism sweeping across the nation we’ve seen the dramatic impact that ignorance about the Holocaust can have. No student’s education is complete without a firm understanding of the greatest genocide ever committed. This legislation takes an important step forward in ensuring the next generation understands the horrors and dangers of anti-Semitism. I am very grateful to the President for signing this bill into law.”

Writer Melissa Braunstein wrote in Arc Digital that getting the bill signed into law was the easy part, the hard part will be properly implementing it.

“Designing and implementing a curriculum that is meaningful to millions of students who have no familial connection to the Holocaust and are unlikely to ever meet Holocaust survivors (as time marches on) will be harder,” Braunstein wrote. “That’s especially true if the goal is not only to ‘provide insight into the past,’ but also ‘to prevent anti-Semitism now,’ as Sen. Jacky Rosen (D-Nev.) said, after the bill’s passage.”

She added that Holocaust education should include identifying modern anti-Semitism, debunking common anti-Semitic myths and humanizing Jews.

“Highlight personal courage through stories of the Righteous Among the Nations — the non-Jewish individuals honored by Yad Vashem, the Israeli Holocaust Museum, who risked their lives to help Jews during the Holocaust — and underscore the importance of breathing life into the phrase ‘never again,’” Braunstein wrote. “Because without the public actively remembering the horrors of the Holocaust and opposing rising anti-Semitism in our time, ‘never again’ is just a slogan.”

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Despite COVID-19, Gal Gadot, Andy Samberg, Jon Stewart Move Forward with Summer Projects

Gal Gadot has a new home for her limited series about screen legend Hedy Lamarr. The eight-episode series is moving from Showtime to Apple TV+ and will be written and produced by Sarah Treem (“The Affair,” “House of Cards,” “In Treatment”). Gadot and her husband Jaron Varsano will executive produce.

The series spans 30 years in Lamarr’s life, from her youth in Vienna to her rise to Hollywood stardom, covering her marriages, her contributions as an inventor to the war effort during World War II, and the troubles and decline she suffered later.

Gadot’s “Wonder Woman 1984,” the sequel that was originally set to open in theaters on June 5, now has an Aug. 14 release date. That may change, of course, depending on the state of the COVID-19 pandemic.

gal-gadot
Gal Gadot in the 2017 film “Wonder Woman.” Photo by Clay Enos/DC Comics

The Coronavirus pandemic has already impacted Jon Stewart’s latest project. His latest film, the political comedy “Irresistible,” was originally set to premiere in theaters on May 29, but it will now be available to rent beginning June 26 on Amazon, Apple, DirecTV, and Fandango for $19.99.

Written and directed by Stewart, the film stars Steve Carell as a political consultant to helps a retired Marine colonel (Chris Cooper) run for mayor in a right-wing Wisconsin town. Rose Byrne co-stars as his nemesis, who is representing the competing candidate. Also in the cast: Mackenzie Davis, Topher Grace and Natasha Lyonne.

Andy Samberg is bringing his latest film to Hulu on July 10. He’ll star in “Palm Springs,” a romantic comedy that takes place at a wedding there. “We’re subverting a lot of the tropes you usually see in wedding movies and rom-coms,” director Max Barbakow told Variety. “Tonally, it’s that really nice charged area between laughter and deep feeling and then just bonkers stuff. We’re trying a lot of things.”

The movie, also starring Cristin Milioti, J.K. Simmons, Meredith Hagner, Camila Mendes, Tyler Hoechlin, and Peter Gallagher, will also be released in drive-in theaters nationwide.

Wedding bells are also ringing in Alicia Silverstone‘s next movie. In the comedy “Sister of the Groom,’ she plays a woman who tries to stop her brother from marrying a much younger French woman. This nuptial affair is set in the Hamptons and co-stars Tom Everett Scott, Jake Hoffman, Noah Silver, Mark Blum, Julie Engelbrecht, and Ronald Guttman. Amy Miller Gross directed from her own screenplay. No release date has been announced.

Yael Grobglas, the Israeli-born actress best known for playing scheming Petra Solano on “Jane the Virgin,” will star in the dark comedy “Here She Lies” for HBO Max. From writer-producer Gracie Glassmeyer and producer Jennie Snyder Urman, the series stars Groblas as a pathological liar with a tragic past who’s trying to extricate herself from the web of lies she has told while falling in love with someone similarly damaged. Groblas will executive produce.

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Israeli Torah Study Zoombombed With Nazi Imagery, Chants of ‘Free Palestine’

An Israeli organization’s online Torah study was Zoombombed on the evening of May 27 with Nazi imagery and chants of “free Palestine.”

The Jerusalem Post reported that the Jerusalem-based Steinsaltz Center was holding its Shavuot study session on Zoom when eight people disrupted the call. The Zoombombers shouted “free Palestine” and “f—ing Jews,” among other cuss words and anti-Semitic slurs.

Additionally, one of the Zoombombers shared an image of a “Jaws” poster that was modified to read “Jews” with Adolf Hitler as a shark right below it. The Zoombombers also had swastikas in their profile picture. The Zoombombers were booted from the call within a couple of minutes.

Rabbi Meni Steinsaltz told the Post that the Steinsaltz Center reported the incident to Zoom and to law enforcement.

Liora Rez, director of the Stop Anti-Semitism watchdog, said in a statement to the Journal, “The fact that someone can spread such vile hate during a religious virtual study session on the eve of a sacred holiday shows just how serious of a problem ‘Zoombombing’ has become.”

The term “Zoombombing” is used to describe instances in which calls on video conferencing platforms are disrupted, often with anti-Semitic and racial slurs and sometimes with explicit images. Notable instances of Zoombombing include Oklahoma State University’s May 9 graduation ceremony being Zoombombed with swastika imagery and the N-word as well as two Holocaust Remembrance Day events in April being Zoombombed with Nazi imagery and anti-Semitic slurs.

American Jewish Committee Director for Combating Anti-Semitism Holly Huffnagle told the Journal in a May 11 story that only a handful of people are perpetuating Zoombombing but it is “affecting multiple Jewish student meetings; they’re affecting board meetings where there’s Jewish chairs, so this has been a huge problem.”

The Anti-Defamation League has outlined a series of steps for Zoom hosts to take to prevent Zoombombing from happening and how to properly respond to Zoombombing if it occurs.

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Jewish Schools Have Reopened in the Netherlands, but Some Worry That Their Security Is Compromised

AMSTERDAM (JTA) — The Dutch government’s decision to reopen the country’s schools came none too soon for Channa Feige, a mother of nine who teaches Torah at a Jewish elementary school here.

“It was very cozy and full of togetherness, but it was also tough,” Feige, 44, said of the two-month shutdown of schools in the Netherlands. “It’s good to be returning to normal.”

The reopening this month — one of the first such moves by any European government – brought her relief from supervising her own children’s education under lockdown. It also let her return to her cherished colleagues at Cheider, a prestigious institution favored by the city’s most strictly observant Jews.

But the new normal at Jewish schools here is not what it was before the shutdown. Social distancing and other coronavirus protocols have introduced dramatic changes that are likely to recur elsewhere, including in the United States and United Kingdom, when Jewish schools reopen there.

Furthermore, in Europe, where Jewish schools are guarded with thick gates and security guards, the new precautions being implemented in the Netherlands point to a new and specific problem: Should the buildings’ gates be left open in an effort to minimize COVID-19 exposure, or does that compromise security to a dangerous extent?

Big changes: Plastic protectors, fewer hours and more

At Cheider, whose elementary division reopened partially on May 11, teachers are now separated from students by plastic sheets that hang from the ceiling and divide the classrooms.

“It’s difficult, you can’t walk around and the pupils can’t show you their notebook, for example, unless they press it up to the sheet,” Feige said. “It’s almost unworkable.”

All of the Netherlands’ Jewish schools are located within the space of two blocks in Buitenveldert, a southern and leafy neighborhood of Amsterdam with large 1970s residential buildings that are sandwiched between the Amsterdam Woods and the Amstel Park.

This capital city’s two elementary schools — Cheider, which has 110 students, and Rosj Pina, with 270 students — have significantly slashed classroom hours for students. (The high school, Maimonides, has yet to reopen.) The cut, mandated by the Education Ministry, is designed to halve the number of students staying in one classroom at any given time in order to better observe social distancing and curb the spread of COVID-19.

Parents also are not allowed to enter schools. Instead, faculty members greet the younger students and escort them into the classroom.

At Rosj Pina, a time-slot system was required to coordinate parent and child traffic. But even at half capacity, pickup and drop-off times have had to be extended.

“When we looked at the space we have, we understood we needed to make changes to how children come in and leave,” said Jacqueline Brecher, the head of Rosj Pina. “There was just no way of keeping social distancing without those changes that take up a lot of time and effort.”

The security issue

Security around Rosj Pina has changed in several ways, including some the school has declined to discuss, citing the safety of its students and faculty.

In the days immediately after the reopening, Rosj Pina’s main gate, a fortified metal grill that is normally closed, was kept ajar, presumably so that its surfaces would not be touched. Cheider also opened its gates.

Following the change, the streets where the two schools are located were closed for traffic during pickups and drop-offs as guards secured the entrance.

Feige said she’s confident that the new security arrangements provide the necessary safety. But Herman Loonstein, Cheider’s board chairman, conceded that “the need to prevent infection has added a layer of complexity to the need to provide security to Jewish institutions.”

Robust security at schools and other Jewish institutions across Europe has been in place since a spate of terrorist attacks over the past couple of decades. In 2012, an Islamist killed four people — three children and a rabbi — at a Jewish school in Toulouse, France. Last year, police in Germany arrested an armed man whom witnesses said had tried to enter a synagogue in the city of Halle. Kept at bay thanks to a newly installed reinforced door, he killed two people at a nearby kebab restaurant.

Ophir Revach, the CEO of the European Jewish Congress’ Security and Crisis Center, wasn’t thrilled to hear of the change in the portal policy of Amsterdam’s Jewish schools.

“I don’t know the specifics in Amsterdam but to us, an open gate, an open door, that’s not an option,” he said.

This tension is manifesting itself elsewhere in Europe, too. In Italy, the government allowed synagogues to reopen on the condition that they keep their doors open to improve airflow, said Milo Hasbani, the president of the Jewish Community of Milan.

“For us, this is a problem,” he said.

In Amsterdam, the changes in security arrangements haven’t been convenient for teachers, parents and the neighborhood’s residents, but they work, Brecher said.

“Right now, as things stand, I feel we can provide a safe environment,” she said.

Brecher, who has worked as Rosj Pina’s director for a year and a half, is worried about the Dutch government’s decision to bring schools back — including the Jewish ones, which are public but mostly run by Jewish community members — to normal capacity on June 8.

“I feel less comfortable about the return to full capacity because we don’t have a lot of information on what this means in terms of risks,” she said. “But we’re preparing for it nonetheless.”

The emotions of returning

Children at Rosj Pina are still getting used to their return to school, Brecher said.

“They were kind of timid and quiet in the first week back, which is pretty unusual for our kids,” she said. “Now they’re already beginning to act more lively, but there’s some adjusting to the insecurity around the whole situation.”

All of the Netherlands’ schools began giving interactive online lessons on Zoom and Microsoft Teams within days of the shutdown, lending out tablets and laptops to families that needed them. Outside the Jewish education system, many other schools in the Netherlands took two to three weeks to produce short, non-interactive videos for homebound students.

All parent-teacher meetings, teacher staff meetings and some classes continue to take place online at Dutch schools to reduce the chances of infection.

“Our kids didn’t have the attention span to sit through all the virtual classes that Rosj Pina offered,” said Ruti Dankner, a mother of two elementary-age children from Israel who settled in the Netherlands two years ago. “We gave them a pass on some stuff.”

Her 9-year-old daughter, Dorit, said she’s fine with her part-time attendance at Rosj Pina.

“I wanted school to begin because I missed my friends. It’s great that it’s back,” she said. “But there’s no need for more hours at school. The way it is works great for me.”

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I Was at Sinai – A Shavuot Poem

I was at Sinai

I remember what I was wearing
what the ground felt like
who was standing next to me

the looks on everyone’s face
when Moses came down with the stones
telling us, this is gonna be good
pay attention people
you’ll be telling your children about this

I was at Sinai
my wisdom was young and old then
now I’m just old and my wisdom
has left the building or
maybe it’s still at the mountain

I was at Sinai well before they put in the gift shop
Back when the only gift was a golden calf and in the end
no-one wanted it
Not our best moment, but it was our moment
we’ve had so many moments
like remember the time when

When I was at Sinai
we didn’t look at our watches
Forget about the fact that there weren’t watches
we didn’t even want them

Don’t you get it, we’re still there now
we are all a part of the circle
we are the beginning and the end
we receive it every day
This is your permanent online status

Sinai was the first place we held hands
but not the last, in fact I never let go
we are still holding hands
I choose to be a part of the circle
as if I have a choice

I could ignore the circle
travel a thousand miles from the circle
but turn around and see I haven’t gone anywhere
It’s a big circle orbiting you Sinai
where the property values are holding steady

Oh Sinai, to say I was with you is to pretend I left
is to conceive I was ever anywhere else

Oh Sinai, I tweet your commandments to the masses
I spin around in your circle
I see the world through your eyes

your holy eyes


God Wrestler: a poem for every Torah Portion by Rick LupertLos Angeles poet Rick Lupert created the Poetry Super Highway (an online publication and resource for poets), and hosted the Cobalt Cafe weekly poetry reading for almost 21 years. He’s authored 23 collections of poetry, including “God Wrestler: A Poem for Every Torah Portion“, “I’m a Jew, Are You” (Jewish themed poems) and “Feeding Holy Cats” (Poetry written while a staff member on the first Birthright Israel trip), and most recently “Hunka Hunka Howdee!” (Poems written in Memphis, Nashville, and Louisville – Ain’t Got No Press, May 2019) and edited the anthologies “Ekphrastia Gone Wild”, “A Poet’s Haggadah”, and “The Night Goes on All Night.” He writes the daily web comic “Cat and Banana” with fellow Los Angeles poet Brendan Constantine. He’s widely published and reads his poetry wherever they let him.

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‘Fiddler on the Roof’ to Get Movie Remake

A new version of “Fiddler on the Roof” is in the works from “Hamilton” director Thomas Kail and MGM. The remake comes 56 years since the Tony-winning musical’s premiere on Broadway (it won nine of the awards) and 49 years after Norman Jewison’s film version hit theaters, later earning three of the eight Oscars for which it was nominated.

Kail directed the off-Broadway and Broadway productions of “In the Heights” and “Hamilton,” winning the Tony for Best Director. He also directed five episodes of “Fosse/Verdon and won Emmys for directing and producing the TV musical “Grease Live!” His filmed stage version of “Hamilton” will premiere July 3 on Disney+.

Kail will produce the movie with Dan Jinks and Aaron Harnick (nephew of “Fiddler” lyricist Sheldon Harnick). Steven Levenson (“Dear Evan Hansen”), who collaborated with Kail on “Fosse/Verdon,” will write the screenplay.

“It has been a life-long dream of mine to directFiddler,’ though I always imagined I would do it on stage,” Kail told Deadline. “I am overjoyed to have the opportunity to make a new film version of my favorite show with Mike DeLuca at MGM, where so many transcendent musical movies have been made. I’m proud to partner with Dan Jinks, Aaron Harnick and my great pal, Steven Levenson, to honor this work that has profoundly inspired me and millions of others.”

Added Levenson, “Fiddler on the Roof’ was the first piece of theater I saw, at the age of five. Today, more than fifty years after it changed the face of Broadway forever, the story of Tevye and his beloved village of Anatevka feels more timely than ever. I am beyond grateful to Mike DeLuca and MGM, Dan Jinks, and Aaron Harnick for the opportunity to tell this unforgettable story of resilience and hope in the face of hopelessness, and I am delighted to be collaborating again with the inimitable Tommy Kail.”

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david suissa podcast curious times

Pandemic Times Episode 48: Interviewing David Suissa

New David Suissa Podcast Every Morning.

In honor of David’s Hebrew birthday on the first morning of Shavuot, his daughter Shanni flips the script and interviews him.

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.

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ADL Backs Harvard in Lawsuit Challenging Race-Based Admissions Policies

BOSTON (JTA) – The Anti-Defamation League is supporting Harvard University in its effort to beat back a high-profile legal challenge to the school’s race-conscious admissions policies.

In an amicus brief filed May 21 with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 1st Circuit, the ADL argued against a claim by Students for Fair Admissions that Harvard’s treatment of Asian-American applicants is similar to the discrimination it practiced against Jews in the early decades of the 20th century.

The court is considering whether to uphold a landmark decision last fall by a lower court that upheld the Ivy League school’s admissions practices, finding they do not discriminate against Asian Americans.

Students for Fair Admissions filed its appeal in February reasserting its comparison of Harvard’s admission practices now restricting Asian-American students to those that limited the number of Jews.

In a May 22 news release announcing its brief in support of Harvard, the ADL disputed the assertion.

“The lack of evidence of racial animus, intent to discriminate, or imposition of quotas by Harvard distinguish the college’s current admissions practices from those during the 1920s and 1930s, which were motivated by antisemitism and designed to decrease Jewish enrollment,” said Joe Berman, chair of ADL’s national legal affairs committee.

The case, first brought in 2014, seeks to broadly undermine race-based affirmative action policies at the nation’s universities and has high-profile backers on both sides. The Trump administration filed an amicus brief in support of the Students for Fair Admissions appeal, while the Harvard Crimson reports that the lower court decision is supported by the other seven Ivy League colleges, attorneys general from 15 states and the District of Columbia, as well as large corporations including Apple and Microsoft.

Students for Fair Admissions was founded by the conservative Jewish legal activist Edward Blum. In its appeal, the group said it would carry the case as far as the U.S. Supreme Court.

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‘Zionist Police State’ Banner Hung Next to U.K. Jewish Cemetery

A banner stating “Welcome to the Zionist police state” was hung next to the Bancroft Road Jewish Cemetery on May 24 and was taken down the next day.

The Jewish News reported that Sunday Times journalist Gabriel Pogrund first tweeted a photo of the banner on May 25:

 

Labour Member of Parliament (MP) Wes Streeting subsequently tweeted that the banner had been removed and thanked the police for quickly taking down “the anti-Semitic banner.”

 

The Simon Wiesenthal Center tweeted, “During #CoronavirusPandemic as Jewish families burying loved ones, greeted by this sickening hate. Anti-Semitism in #UK will be overcome only when neighbors and leaders express revulsion.”

 

Additionally, The Jerusalem Post reported on May 25 that a University of Oxford study found that 20% of those in Britain believe that Jews created and spread COVID-19 to tank the economy for their own financial benefit. Anti-Defamation League CEO Jonathan Greenblatt tweeted that this was troubling given “the lethal history of anti-Semitic conspiracies.”

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Days of Our [Pandemic] Lives

The following is a work of satire. None of the people or incidents is real.

Late January

Cindy Upton, a 37-year-old mother of three from Calabasas, committed to a healthier lifestyle. She also vowed to spend a few hours a week doing something that made her feel alive, which meant secretly Googling “celebrities without makeup” while consuming an entire box of thawed churros.

Cleveland resident Kevin Harrison-Levi, 24, was inconsolable when faced with the possibility of having to close his online clothing store, Top Banana, which sold only tops. Perhaps, he thought, his mother, girlfriend, banker and therapist had been right: Why would customers invest only in the top half of their attire when dressing for work?

After eight years of marriage, Mr. and Mrs. Latifeh were thrilled to be renovating their home in Beverly Hills. Their contractor assured them everything would be done by Memorial Day, just in time to host sumptuous barbecues for dozens of friends on their newly renovated deck.

Late February

Mrs. Upton subscribed to a weekly produce delivery service that offered ugly but delicious vegetables and also bought a spiralizer, which promised to make healthy “noodles” out of veggies ranging from zucchini to carrots. When the contraption arrived at her door, followed by a box of misshapen legumes and tomatoes, she was devastated to learn neither made particularly good noodles.

During Sunday brunch with his parents/investors, Mr. Harrison-Levi presented a business plan for swapping out the clothes and turning Top Banana into a one-stop-shop for organic, cruelty-free banana scones and biscuits, if only to retain the name of his online domain.

Mr. and Mrs. Latifeh had spent nearly every weekend at home, arguing over issues ranging from upholstery to the right shade of coral-colored paint. They wisely decided to be more careful about how much time they spent at home together.

With quarrels over structural carpentry a near-daily occurrence, Mr. Latifeh lashed out at his wife at the supermarket, threatening to lick the handle of the shopping cart and “end it all.”

Late March 

With the children and her husband home all day because of the COVID-19 pandemic, and the hiding place of her churros no longer a secret, Mrs. Upton found herself struggling to maintain a healthy lifestyle. She hired a health coach and bought a salad spinner. One hour later, after her children used her face mask as a diaper for the dog, she bought a KitchenAid stand mixer with a bread hook.

Mr. Harrison-Levi noticed a steady increase in purchases from his online company. Between preparing batches of banana-rhubarb scones, he wondered if there was a correlation between nice dress shirts and taking work meetings from home via videoconferencing.

With quarrels over structural carpentry a near-daily occurrence, Mr. Latifeh lashed out at his wife at the supermarket, threatening to lick the handle of the shopping cart and “end it all.”

Late April 

Having been forced into the role of maid, cook, teacher and baby-sitter, Mrs. Upton used the salad spinner bowl to soak her feet in Epsom salts. Forty-five minutes later, she fired her health coach and bought a deep fryer.

Mr. Harrison-Levi’s income soared to the point that he could buy his parents, girlfriend and therapist enough banana scones to last the rest of the year without having to leave their homes.

Mrs. Latifeh burned off both her eyebrows when she tested the new grill immediately after rubbing her forehead with 90% isopropyl alcohol. Mr. Latifeh made matters worse by reassuring her she no longer had to worry about grooming her own eyebrows in quarantine.

Late May 

Confronted with her ex-health coach on Zoom, Mrs. Upton held up a homemade sourdough baguette and declared where she was going to shove the crispy loaf.

Mr. Harrison-Levi made plans to open a clothing store at a nearby strip mall. He tasked his mother with wearing a banana suit outside the store to attract customers.

From opposite sides of their new deck, Mr. and Mrs. Latifeh spent Memorial Day Weekend enjoying margaritas and giving each other the silent treatment. Their divorce hearing is set for late June.


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

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