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July 8, 2020

Hatzalah Zoom Call on Anti-Semitism Zoombombed With Pornographic Images

A  July 8 Zoom call hosted by United Hatzalah with around 75 attendees was disrupted with sexually explicit images.

Friends of United Hatzalah Los Angeles Executive Director Carolyn Kangavari told the Journal in a phone interview the attack took place 15 minutes into the call.

The event was on the rise of anti-Semitism and featured Journal Editor-in-Chief David Suissa and journalist Lisa Daftari. Kangavari said the Zoombombers shouted hate speech in addition to posting the pornographic images.

“No matter what I did, I couldn’t mute them,” Kangavari said. “I couldn’t get them out of the chat.”

The call was cut short and will be rescheduled for some time in the next couple of weeks.  

“We just wanted to talk about the rise of anti-Semitism,” Kangavari said. “We wanted to have an open dialogue between two experts and two amazing co-hosts… and it got shut down by hate, and it’s important now more than ever to talk about this.”

Zoombombing is the term used to describe instances whereby Zoom calls are  disrupted, often with anti-Semitic and racial slurs as well as pornographic imagery.

Hatzalah Zoom Call on Anti-Semitism Zoombombed With Pornographic Images Read More »

After Less Than a Year, Senior Rabbi Ben Goldstein Leaves Beit T’Shuvah

On July 8, Beit T’Shuvah — the Jewish residential addiction treatment center and congregation in Los Angeles — sent out an email stating that Rabbi Ben Goldstein, who was hired as senior rabbi on July 1, 2019, was no longer with the organization, effective as of late June.

The email also stated that there is no plan to replace the role of senior rabbi, but that Beit T’Shuvah (BTS) is “blessed with a talented clergy team …. The clergy, along with other staff members, are working diligently to continue to fulfill our mission of providing the highest standard of integrated care to those seeking recovery, as well as to those who are part of the BTS congregation and community.”

Goldstein worked at Temple Aliyah in Woodland Hills for three years before joining Beit T’Shuvah. He was previously a rabbinic intern and spiritual counselor at Beit T’Shuvah while he was a student at the American Jewish University Ziegler School of Rabbinic Studies.

He told the Journal in an interview last July, “As somebody who has worked [on] the pulpit for 10 years and [has seen] diminishing returns of Shabbat and Saturday morning services, I think Beit T’Shuvah, with its emphasis on spirituality and mindfulness and psychology and walking the path toward recovery, has so much to say to people who otherwise feel alienated from religion. I hope I can be a good person to facilitate that.”

Goldstein did not respond to the Journal’s requests for comment regarding his departure.

Beit T’Shuvah Board Chair Janice Kamenir-Reznik told the Journal in a phone interview that Goldstein simply “wasn’t a great fit and everyone decided to move on.”

Executive Director Sergio Rizzo-Fontanesi told the Journal in a separate phone interview that sending out the announcement was simply “keeping everyone updated in terms of our clergy.”

Kamenir-Reznik said, “We have a whole host of rabbis at Beit T’Shuvah. We have five clergy staff, so our plan is for our current clergy to be able to cover the various tasks that are required in our spiritual department and for our community.”

The other clergy are Rabbi Micha’el Akiba, Rabbi Kerry Chaplin, Rabbi Miriam Green, Rabbi Joseph Shamash and Chaplain Adam Siegel. According to the email, Rabbi Mark Borovitz, former senior rabbi, founding rabbi and the co-director of the Elaine Breslow Institute at Beit T’Shuvah, is currently on leave/sabbatical until the late fall. When he returns, he’ll work in a new consulting role.

“Some of our clergy have been around for quite some time,” Rizzo-Fontanesi said. “Chaplain Adam Siegel has been around for 10 years and Rabbi Akiba has been around for five years and is highly respected by the community and residents alike.” He added, “Rabbi Akiba will be overseeing the congregation. But we expect all the rabbis, with their diverse array of experiences, will be rotating in terms of officiating our services.”

Rizzo-Fontanesi also noted that although Goldstein was the senior rabbi, he never lead Shabbat morning services, only Friday night services. “Even when [Goldstein] was employed with us, the other members on the clergy were also rotating in on a schedule.”

“We have five clergy staff, so our plan is for our current clergy to be able to cover the various tasks that are required in our spiritual department and for our community.” — Janice Kamenir-Reznik

“The most important thing,” Kamenir-Reznik said, “is the services provided to our residents. That’s where our focus is. We give them the spiritual and clinical experience we can to help with their recovery. I think we do a really great job at that.”

In that vein, Kamenir-Reznik also noted the challenges that Beit T’Shuvah has had to take on during the pandemic. “COVID has been a huge challenge for a facility like Beit T’Shuvah,” she said. “We’ve done a great job in a challenging situation. You have over 100 residents in the middle of the most difficult challenge going forward, especially in a place like Beit T’Shuvah, which is so much about community.”

She added, “People are feeling very isolated. Those residents —  about 75 who stayed through the entire time of being isolated in their rooms — still got their services but it was all digital and no contact. No one was allowed to come into the facility. We had to keep it very tightly monitored. It’s been challenging but it’s really amazing that we’ve had no residents become ill.”

The community email, signed by Kamenir-Reznik and Rizzo-Fontanesi, also stated, “We are fully confident that Beit T’Shuvah will continue to provide exceptional spiritual guidance and services to all of our residents and to our community.”

After Less Than a Year, Senior Rabbi Ben Goldstein Leaves Beit T’Shuvah Read More »

Civil Rights Groups Leading the Facebook Ad Boycott Met With Mark Zuckerberg. They Say Nothing Has Changed.

(JTA) — Mark Zuckerberg hasn’t changed his tune about Facebook’s stance on the spread of hate on the social media platform.

That’s what the heads of several civil rights groups, including the Anti-Defamation League, said following a meeting Tuesday with Zuckerberg and other Facebook executives to discuss the demands of the advertisers that joined the #StopHateForProfit movement.

“It was abundantly clear in our meeting today that Mark Zuckerberg and the Facebook team is not yet ready to address the vitriolic hate on their platform,” read a statement issued by the leaders after the meeting. “Zuckerberg offered the same old defense of white supremacist, antisemitic, Islamophobic and other hateful groups on Facebook that the Stop Hate For Profit Coalitions, advertisers and society at large have heard too many times before.”

Dozens of Facebook’s largest advertisers are boycotting the platform this month, according to the movement. Among them are Starbucks, Hershey, Coca-Cola, Ben & Jerry’s, the North Face and Patagonia.

Led by the ADL, the groups launched the campaign to protest Facebook’s unwillingness to police hate speech or monitor posts for misinformation. The campaign has issued a list of 10 demands, including a permanent civil rights infrastructure, independent audits of identity-based hate and misinformation, and an internal mechanism to automatically flag hateful content in private groups for human review.

The Stop Hate for Profit leaders said the Facebook executives — COO Sheryl Sandberg and the chief product officer, Christopher Cox, joined Zuckerberg — only addressed one item on the list, and that it was unsatisfactory.

The leaders of the ADL, NAACP, Color of Change and Free Press were in the meeting.

Afterward, Facebook spokesman Andy Stone called the meeting “an opportunity for us to hear from the campaign organizers and reaffirm our commitment to combating hate on our platform. They want Facebook to be free of hate speech and so do we.”

Stone said that Facebook has banned more than 250 white supremacist organizations and created new policies to prohibit voter and census interference.

Civil Rights Groups Leading the Facebook Ad Boycott Met With Mark Zuckerberg. They Say Nothing Has Changed. Read More »

Benny Gantz Enters Quarantine as Israel Hits Highest Total of Confirmed Coronavirus Cases in 24 Hours

JERUSALEM (JTA) — Israel recorded more than 1,300 new cases of the coronavirus in 24 hours ending on Wednesday morning, its highest total since the start of the pandemic.

Benny Gantz, the defense minister and prime minister designate, entered quarantine on Wednesday after he came into contact with a family member with COVID-19.

The Cabinet met to discuss whether to declare some areas with high numbers of cases restricted areas. Jerusalem is among the cities where restricted zones could be declared, Israel’s Channel 12 reported Wednesday night. The restrictions would differ in each area, including up to a complete closure.

Gantz said in a statement that he feels good and will continue to work from quarantine. His contact with the confirmed coronavirus carrier took place more than a week ago. He will have a coronavirus test.

On Tuesday, the Knesset’s Ministerial Committee on Declaring Restricted Zones declared Beitar Illit, a haredi Orthodox city in the West Bank, restricted for a week beginning on Wednesday.

The Cabinet directed the Ministerial Committee on Declaring Restricted Zones to meet following the formulation of final recommendations from the Health Ministry. Other cities that could be declared restricted are Ashdod, Beit Shemesh, Bnei Brak, Kiryat Malachi, Lod, Modiin Illit, Ramla and Raanana.

Benny Gantz Enters Quarantine as Israel Hits Highest Total of Confirmed Coronavirus Cases in 24 Hours Read More »

DoorDash, Other Businesses Cut Ties With Toronto Restaurant Over ‘Zionists Not Welcome’ Post

DoorDash and numerous other businesses have followed Uber Eats in cutting ties with a Toronto restaurant over a post saying that Zionists aren’t welcome.

On July 2, Foodbenders posted on its Instagram that it is open for “non-racist shoppers” and added hashtags that read “#freepalestine” and “#zionistsnotwelcome.” On July 6, Uber Eats said in a letter to Foodbenders its agreement with the restaurant has been “terminated effective immediately.”

DoorDash followed suit on July 7, telling multiple accounts on Twitter that it has ended delivery services for Foodbenders.

“We have removed Foodbenders from our platform for their failure to follow the community guidelines and our partner code of conduct, as we do not tolerate malicious, discriminatory or hateful behavior,” DoorDash tweeted.

 

B’nai Brith Canada praised DoorDash in a tweet, writing: “Thank you for your principled stance @DoorDash! #EradicateHate.”

 

The Stop Anti-Semitism.org watchdog similarly tweeted, “Thank you @DoorDash
for caring about your Jewish customers and saying NO TO HATE.”

 

Other delivery platforms that have followed suit in cutting ties with Foodbenders include Ritual Technologies and the coffee vendor Blue Heaven Café.

“We are witnessing here corporate citizenship at its very best,” Simon Wiesenthal Center Executive Director Rabbi Meyer H. May said in a statement. “These companies are sending a powerful message that hate will not stand in our community and are outstanding models for other companies to emulate.”

Israellycool blogger David Lange caught a screenshot of a since-deleted July 7 Instagram post from Foodbenders stating that it isn’t anti-Semitic to criticize “the Israeli Zionist occupation state” or the “zionist journalists in Toronto and now Israel have written slander fake news pieces about me to present me as racist.”

“Once again, Jews are very welcome to shop with us, zionists may also shop if they can do so without insisting they’re (sic) right to a homeland justifies killing other people,” the post read. “When a zionist tells us Palestinians should be murdered, something that happens all day long, we ask them to leave because THAT is hate speech.”

DoorDash, Other Businesses Cut Ties With Toronto Restaurant Over ‘Zionists Not Welcome’ Post Read More »

Pittsburgh Steeler Gets Emotional Speaking Out About DeSean Jackson and Anti-Semitism

Eagles Wide Receiver DeSean Jackson is currently under fire for sharing a highlighted quote attributed to Adolf Hitler claiming that “the Jews will blackmail America.” While most NFL players have been silent on the issue, the controversy prompted Pittsburgh Steeler offensive tackle Zach Banner to speak out in support of the Jewish community and against anti-Semitism.

On July 8, Banner posted a video on Instagram stating he did so “to transition from the incident, and move forward as a community. Not to harp on @DeSeanJackson10 mistake, but to progress by educating ourselves.”

In his video message, Banner addressed Jackson’s inflammatory Instagram stories, stating that after watching his apology video the wide receiver’s “heart is in the right place.” However, Banner also felt compelled to educate his fans about the underlying anti-Semitism behind Jackson’s posts.

“There’s a common misbelief that among Black and Brown people — and I know this from growing up and I’ve heard it and I’ve listened to it — that Jewish people are just like any other white race,” Banner said. “You mix them up with the rest of the majority and you don’t understand that they are a minority as well.”

He went on to discuss how playing college football for the University of Southern California, where he studied until 2016, enlightened his understanding of Jewish people. “I didn’t know this until I went to USC and I had friends who are now family members, believe it or not, who are part of the Jewish community,” Banner continued.

He said his empathy for Jews was solidified following the 11 Jews who were shot and killed at the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh in 2018. He said he was hit particularly hard by the attack because it occurred while he was in Pittsburgh playing for their home team.

“I was here on the team, my first year with the team a couple of years ago,” he said. “It’s just tough man…During that synagogue shooting. This beautiful city of Pittsburgh.

“We need to understand that Jewish people deal with the same amount of hate and similar hardships and hard times,” Banner continued, his voice shaking. “I’m not trying to get emotional right now but I want to preach to the Black and brown community that we need to uplift them and put our arms around them just as much. When we talk about Black Lives Matter and talk about elevating ourselves, we can’t do that while stepping on the back of other people to elevate ourselves.”

PHILADELPHIA, PA – NOVEMBER 03: DeSean Jackson #10 of the Philadelphia Eagles catches a pass prior to the game against the Chicago Bears at Lincoln Financial Field on November 3, 2019 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Mitchell Leff/Getty Images)

On July 6, Jackson apologized for sharing his post in an Instagram story. “Anyone who feels I have hate towards the Jewish community took my post the wrong way,” he wrote. “I have no hatred in my heart towards no one!!”

However, the wide receiver then re-shared a passage of the falsely-attributed Hitler quote, claiming Jews will “extort America” and that “their plan for world domination won’t work if the Negroes know who they were.”

Jackson then posted a video apology on July 7 stating, “I didn’t really realize what this passage was saying. Hitler has cause terrible pain to the Jewish people like the pain African Americans have suffered. We should be together fighting anti-Semitism and racism. This was a mistake to post this and I truly apologize for posting it.”

In his video message, Banner concluded: “We can’t preach equality but as a result just try to flip the script and change the hierarchy.”

Banner’s heartfelt message to Jewish fans has been well received.

ADL Philadelphia thanked Banner for “urging us all to be part of the fight against hate.” The American Jewish Committee wrote: “Thank you for your beautiful words and for standing with the Jewish community against all forms of hatred and bigotry.”

Among numerous Jews dubbing Banner a “mensch,” was Fantasy Football expert and New York Times best selling author Matthew Berry. “To the best of my knowledge (I’d love to be wrong here — please send me any I have missed) the Steelers @ZBNFL is the first and only current NFL player to condemn DeSean Jackson’s anti-Semitic IG posts,” Berry wrote. “Appreciate you and your words, Zach.”

Banner responded to the support he’s received. “I stand in solidarity with all my Jewish brothers and sisters,” he tweeted with a GIF of him dancing with Adam Sandler and Jerry Seinfeld. “So now I’m just wondering… where the family bbq at?”

Pittsburgh Steeler Gets Emotional Speaking Out About DeSean Jackson and Anti-Semitism Read More »

Swastikas Found on George Floyd Mural at Ohio University

Multiple swastikas were found on a mural of George Floyd and Ahmaud Arbery at Ohio University (OU) in Athens on July 1.

The Cleveland Jewish News reported that the swastikas were painted in red on the foreheads of images of Floyd and Arbery, both Black men; Floyd died while in Minneapolis police custody on May 25 and Arbery died in a confrontation with two white men on Feb. 23 in Georgia. Both men were unarmed when they died.

Additionally on the mural, an “SS” symbol was painted on the forehead of Breonna Taylor, a Black woman who was shot and killed during a police raid on her apartment on March 13 in Kentucky. The SS was a paramilitary organization in Nazi Germany.

The words, “Welcome to Athens Now Leave” also were painted on behind the mural.

Anti-Defamation League Cleveland Regional Director James Pasch and Senior Associate Director Sara Scheinbach said in joint statement with OU Hillel Executive Director Sarah Livingston, “We know all too well that hate speech doesn’t stop with speech, it can grow and deepen and turn into real world violence. We stand unified in our condemnation of this hateful graffiti, and in our work to fight hatred and bigotry.”

They added: “We are actively working to connect with University administration and community leaders to prevent an escalation of racist and anti-Semitic rhetoric on campus and in our community. Ohio University is better than this; Ohio is better than this.”

A swastika had been found on the same mural at OU on June 13. The university condemned the swastika in a June 15 statement.

“Anti-Semitism is not tolerated on our campuses and does not reflect our strong commitment to diversity and inclusion,” the statement read. “We condemn anti-Semitism and all bigotry as a direct contradiction of our values.”

In April, 11 swastikas were found on a separate wall at OU; the campus Hillel painted over them with messages of love.

Swastikas Found on George Floyd Mural at Ohio University Read More »

Former NBA Player Defends DeSean Jackson’s Social Media Posts As ‘the Truth’

Former basketball player Stephen Jackson, who is currently an analyst for ESPN, defended Philadelphia Eagles wide receiver DeSean Jackson’s recent social media posts as “the truth” in a since-deleted July 7 Instagram video.

Jackson has been under fire for posting a quote from Adolf Hitler over the weekend — a quote that Snopes.com said is fabricated — as well as a post glorifying Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan. The Eagles posted a statement condemning Jackson’s remarks.

ESPN reported that Stephen Jackson (no relation to DeSean Jackson) was responding to the Eagles statement in his July 7 video.

“[Jackson] was trying to educate himself, educate people, and he’s speaking the truth,” Stephen Jackson said. “Right? He’s speaking the truth. You know he don’t hate nobody, but he’s speaking the truth of the facts that he knows and trying to educate others.”

Stephen Jackson proceeded to claim that racism is “at an all-time high” and accused NFL owners of being silent on the matter. He also pointed out that the Eagles gave then-wide receiver Riley Cooper an extension in 2014 despite Cooper shouting the N-word on video a year earlier.

“I play for the Big3,” Stephen Jackson said, referencing the basketball league founded in 2017. “We have a Jewish owner. He understands where we stand and some of the things we say, but it’s not directed to him. It’s the way we’ve been treated.”

Fred Katz, a reporter for The Athletic sports website, reported that Stephen Jackson defended his remarks on DeSean Jackson in a July 8 Instagram Live session and accused the Rothschild family of owning “all the banks.”

“He’s perpetuating propaganda that’s been a core of anti-Semitism for a long, long time,” Katz tweeted.

Jackson also said that he’s “a fan of Minister [Louis] Farrakhan.”

Various people on Twitter criticized Stephen Jackson.

“Really sad to see Stephen Jackson looping in anti-semitism into some valid criticisms of the NFL,” Jared Weiss, a writer for The Athletic, tweeted. “A huge part of my childhood in a reformed jewish household was education on systemic racism & supporting its eradication for anyone oppressed. We want to be allies in this fight.”

Pro-Israel writer Claire Voltaire tweeted, “These pernicious beliefs are infiltrating mainstream culture and pushback is slow and painful.”

One Twitter user, Cameron Gray, pointed out that CNN has had Stephen Jackson on as a guest to discuss racial issues.

“You recently had this man on your show, @ChrisCuomo, what time is he booked to come back on and talk about this?” Gray tweeted. “Same question to you too, @donlemon and @JohnBerman.”

 

DeSean Jackson has issued two apologies over his social media posts. David Adelman, chairman of the Philadelphia Holocaust Remembrance Foundation, tweeted on July 7 that DeSean Jackson agreed to a tour of Philadelphia’s Horwitz-Wasserman Holocaust Memorial Plaza.

“Confident we can turn this into a positive together,” Adelman wrote.

Former NBA Player Defends DeSean Jackson’s Social Media Posts As ‘the Truth’ Read More »

david suissa podcast curious times

Pandemic Times Episode 67: What is the root of anti-Semitism?

New David Suissa Podcast Every Monday, Wednesday and Friday.

A conversation with David Weinberg of the ADL on fighting anti-Semitism in the greater Middle East region.

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.

Pandemic Times Episode 67: What is the root of anti-Semitism? Read More »

If These Disabled Leaders Can Put on A Mask, So Can You, Demonstrates Viral PSA

A new public service announcement from Tel Aviv, Israel in which disabled luminaries highlight the importance of putting on a mask has gone viral.

In the video, four disabled adults – some missing limbs – despite their significant physical challenges put on a mask and tell the audience: “Don’t give us any excuses. If I can put on a mask, so can you.”

One even puts the mask on using her foot.

The video was spearheaded by Paralympic gold medalist Noam Gershony and ad maker Stephan Miller of 202 Strategies. It features Jessica Cox, who was born without arms; Beza Nebeva, who was born blind; Ziv Shilon, who lost an arm in the line of duty serving in the military; and Carmel Yogev, who lost her lower arm and hand due to a bacterial infection contracted as a child.

Gershony is an wheelchair tennis player who represented Israel in the Paralympics in London in 2012. He lost his ability to walk in a helicopter crash while serving in the Israeli Defense Forces. He has since committed himself to activism, fighting for disability rights ad emergency rescue services. He also works as a motivational speaker.

COVID-19 inspired Gershony to team up with Miller.

“We saw the numbers of infected people continue to rise all over the world and we felt that we were becoming a bit numb to the numbers. Behind every number is a person, a friend, a family member, a loved one,” said Gershony.

The video has already gone viral, garnering over 2 million views on Twitter and Facebook – without any paid promotion.

“Both in the US and in Israel, too many people aren’t wearing face masks when they easily could,” said Miller. Both nations are experiencing surges in COVID-19. In recent days, Israel’s number of infections has skyrocketed to 1,100 a day, which is twice the peak the Jewish state saw during its initial outbreak in the spring. Meanwhile, in the United States, new regions such as Arizona and Texas are seeing explosive rates of infection.

“Too many people give excuses. The incredible people in this ad really make it clear – there is no good excuse,” Miller added.

The team hopes that the perseverance of disabled people to put on a mask despite immense challenges will help public health.

“If we can convince a few more people to wear a face mask – even just one person who could have infected his or her parents, grandparents, family or friends,” said Gershony. “Then the video can actually save lives.”

You can watch the full PSA below:

If These Disabled Leaders Can Put on A Mask, So Can You, Demonstrates Viral PSA Read More »