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August 28, 2020

10-Page Summary of New Movement for Black Lives Platform Contains No Mention of Israel, 4 Years After Divisive Condemnation

(JTA) — Four years ago, the Movement for Black Lives put out a platform that, among a long list of detailed policy recommendations, accused Israel of genocide.

Several major Jewish organizations expressed their outrage and put out statements condemning the platform.

On Friday, the Movement for Black Lives is convening a Black National Convention, where it’s going to unveil another policy platform. A 10-page summary of the 2020 platform obtained by the Jewish Telegraphic Agency contains no mention of Israel, Zionism, Palestinian rights or the movement to boycott Israel.

A representative of the Movement for Black Lives who spoke with JTA could not say for certain whether the full platform would include any mention of Israel.

But to hundreds of Jewish organizations across the country, that question doesn’t seem to matter as much as it used to. On Friday morning, a Jewish statement in support of Black Lives Matter appeared in a full-page New York Times ad, signed by more than 600 national and local Jewish groups and synagogues, including a major umbrella body and three of the four major Jewish religious movements.

“We speak with one voice when we say, unequivocally: Black Lives Matter,” said the statement, which was first published in June. “The Black Lives Matter movement is the current day Civil Rights movement in this country, and it is our best chance at equity and justice.”

The Movement for Black Lives is a coalition of organizations that aims to formulate policy and develop strategies to advance the goals of the Black Lives Matter movement. It is not representative of all of Black Lives Matter, which is a loose grassroots coalition, and does not speak for Black Lives Matter as a whole.

The list of signatories to the statement in The New York Times included several of the organizations that publicly criticized the 2016 platform, including the Reform and Conservative Jewish movements, the Anti-Defamation League and others.

“Right now the focus is really on the desire to eliminate systemic racism and find justice for all the members of our society, and it’s less on our own specific Jewish concerns,” said Rabbi Jacob Blumenthal, CEO of the United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism and the Conservative Rabbinical Assembly.

In 2016, the Rabbinical Assembly stated that it “appreciate[d] the emergence of the Black Lives Matter movement” but said “we were stunned and outraged by the erroneous and egregious claims of genocide and apartheid that it levels against Israel.”

But on Friday, Blumenthal said that if this year’s platform includes the criticisms of Israel, “we’ll be able to express our disapproval of that particular piece of their platform but that does not affect our desire to see change when it comes to systemic racism and justice for every person in our society.”

The 2016 Movement for Black Lives platform was primarily focused on domestic concerns but included several lines about Israel. “The US justifies and advances the global war on terror via its alliance with Israel and is complicit in the genocide taking place against the Palestinian people,” the platform said. It also referred to Israel as an apartheid state and called for the end of U.S. aid to Israel.

If the new platform does include harsh criticisms of Israel, it could lose the support of some American Jews, notwithstanding the New York Times ad. Expanding the platform to take aim at other countries accused of oppressing minority groups would address the criticism that Israel was being singled out, but it would further dilute the movement’s focus on domestic concerns of racial justice. And losing the language entirely could make Black Lives Matter vulnerable to criticism from pro-Palestinian activists who are often in coalition with anti-racist groups.

So far this year, the Movement for Black Lives has steered clear of discussion of Israel in 2020. A bill called the BREATHE Act put out by the movement focuses primarily on incarceration and policing. Policy papers already published as part of the movement’s 2020 platform do not mention Israel or related issues.

In the 10-page summary platform, Israel is likewise absent. A short section on demilitarization calls for reparations to nations harmed by U.S. military intervention but does not specify any foreign conflicts. It calls for divesting from the fossil fuel industry, school policing, immigration enforcement and surveillance, but not from Israel.

The document calls for reparations for Black Americans, a federal minimum wage of at least $15 per hour, a repeal of the 1994 crime bill, a 50% reduction in defense spending, investment in environmentally friendly programs, an end to deportations of immigrants and more.

The Black National Convention, the event where the full platform will be unveiled, is billed as a “series of conversations, performances, and other activations geared toward engaging, informing, and mobilizing Black communities.”

It is one of two national Black convenings taking place Friday night. The other is the final event of the Virtual March on Washington, an event that commemorates the 1963 March on Washington and that is calling attention to the current protests against police violence. Jewish groups will be participating in that event.

“Jews are realizing, and Americans are realizing, that our society is not equitable,” said Rabbi Sandra Lawson, a Black Jewish leader who serves as assistant chaplain for Jewish life at Elon University in North Carolina. Elon’s Hillel signed the statement supporting Black Lives Matter.

“You can choose to ignore that police treat people differently but when it keeps showing up on your television screen… we’re now at a point where many in America cannot ignore this anymore or turn a blind eye to it,” Lawson said.

Some Jewish leaders who spoke to JTA said they signed the statement because they see anti-Semitism and anti-Black racism as related evils. Rabbi Jonah Pesner, director of the Reform movement’s Religious Action Center, which advocates for progressive policies, said COVID-19 and the upcoming election make it even more urgent to stand in solidarity with the Black Lives Matter movement.

“We as Jews know what it is to be at the receiving end of violent systems of oppression and bigotry,” he said. “And for those of us who are white Jews in America, we benefited from our privilege and our whiteness and therefore cannot abdicate our place, those of us who are white Jews, to build the power to truly transform the United States into the country that will confront the centuries that created these systems.”

Some Jewish organizations have continued to oppose Black Lives Matter because of the 2016 platform. Most vocal has been the Zionist Organization of America, a right-wing group, which has sent out a series of press releases against the movement. One such statement, in June, said the movement supported “virulent, institutional antisemitism, other discriminatory hatreds, and anti-Israel blood libels.”

But Rabbi Jill Jacobs, the executive director of the liberal rabbinic human rights organization T’ruah, said Jewish groups placed disproportionate focus on the Israel statements in the 2016 platform at the expense of a larger cause.

“In there, there were about two sentences about Israel, and one can disagree with the particular phrasing of that critique, or anything else in those 200 pages, without rejecting the entire movement,” she said. “And so, for example, we still don’t think that the word genocide, according to international law, is appropriately applied to Israel. What is most important right now, in the United States is that Black people not be killed by police or vigilantes.”

Lawson called the controversy over the 2016 platform “a hard time for me.” She said she’s grateful to Jews who remained in conversation with the Movement for Black Lives, and other Black Lives Matter activists, to educate them about anti-Semitism while continuing to combat racism. She hopes this year’s platform does not include the statements condemning Israel, though she said criticism of the Israeli government is fair game for the movement’s platform.

“What myself and other Jews of color have been trying to get Jewish communities to understand is, if you are not part of the conversation, then you can’t really complain about the outcome,” she said. “Many in the Jewish community have built really strong relationships with many of the organizers of Black Lives Matter. For me as a Jew of color, whatever’s in that statement doesn’t matter, because I’m still going to chant ‘Black Lives Matter.’”

10-Page Summary of New Movement for Black Lives Platform Contains No Mention of Israel, 4 Years After Divisive Condemnation Read More »

Israeli Foreign Ministry Announces Delegation to Help Combat CA Wildfires

The Israeli Foreign Ministry announced on Aug. 28 that an Israeli delegation will be sent to California to help combat the ongoing wildfires in the state.

The Times of Israel reported that the delegation will consist of firefighters, experts and a Foreign Ministry representative; the team will leave Israel on Aug. 30 and will stay in California for two weeks.

The delegation was formed in conjunction with the Public Ministry and came about after discussions between the American Embassy in Israel and the San Francisco Israeli consulate.

“I praise the members of the delegation and wish them success on their mission,” Israeli Foreign Minister Gabi Ashkenazi said in a statement.

Shlomi Kofman, the Consul General of Israel to the Pacific Northwest, tweeted, “This would not have been possible without the strong partnership that Israel & California have forged over many decades. This mutual aid operation is being conducted in the spirit of friendship and as a reciprocal gesture for the US providing critical firefighting resources to Israel in 2016.”

 

AIPAC [American Israel Public Affairs Committee] tweeted, “Israel: An ally we can count on.”

 

According to the Associated Press (AP), the fires have burned more than 2,000 square miles across the state, with Northern California bearing the brunt of the fire damage. More than 50,000 people who have had to evacuate because of the fires were allowed to go back their homes on the evening of Aug. 27, the AP reported.

Israeli Foreign Ministry Announces Delegation to Help Combat CA Wildfires Read More »

Sarsour Says ‘Right-Wing Zionists’ Are Aligning With White Nationalists to Smear Her

Former Women’s March, Inc. leader Linda Sarsour said in an Aug. 26 appearance on a YouTube channel that “right-wing Zionists” have allied with white nationalists to smear her.

Nomiki Konst, host of “The Nomiki Show,” argued that “there is a powerful arm of right-wing AIPAC interests” that have worked to smear Sarsour, former Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn, Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison and Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.).

“This is coming from the right wing,” Konst said to Sarsour. “This is not coming from normal Jewish Americans — even Israelis, frankly — this is from the right wing. So can you clarify just like, where you actually stand?”

Sarsour replied: “Where this comes from is the alignment of right-wing Zionists with the white nationalists, and it’s such an unlikely allyship because the white nationalists are in fact very unapologetically anti-Semitic and … the root of white nationalism is anti-Semitism. That’s why, for a lot of people, they get confused when they see the very staunch pro-Israel folks align with white nationalists, with the Republican Party, with Donald Trump.”

Associate Dean and Director of Global Social Action Agenda at the Simon Wiesenthal Center Rabbi Abraham Cooper said in a statement to the Journal, “I am always amazed by the level of chutzpah when anti-Semites want to tell the Jewish community what constitutes an anti-Semite and anti-Semitism. Hypocrite Sarsour says that right wing Zionists hate her but she is the self anointed gatekeeper who bars left wing Zionists from the Women’s movement.”

Sarsour also said that “new groups have emerged as a front for AIPAC, like the Democratic Majority for Israel (DMFI) and others that are trying to rebrand themselves as Democrats who are progressive on other issues except for this issue of Israel-Palestine and we’re onto them.”

DMFI President and CEO Mark Mellman said in a statement to the Journal, “These fact-free allegations from Sarsour are outrageous lies, but they are far less important than the vile antisemitic statements for which she is infamous.”

Sarsour went on to tell Konst that she’s against a two-state solution in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

“Just by looking at a map of that region, there is no way to have a two-state solution with the types of settlements that have [been] built and the way in which the land has been divided up,” Sarsour said. “I believe in a one-state solution. I believe in democracy. I believe that Jews and Palestinians, that those who live in that land can live under one democracy where we all can participate, where we can all have access to high quality education [and] health care, where there’s no apartheid, where there’s no separate bus lines for Jews and Arabs, where we could really live in a society [where] we’re integrated, where people in our community can be judges and lawyers and they can be in parliament. That’s what I believe.”

Sarsour also expressed support for the boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) movement, arguing that it’s a “tactic, it’s not an organization. They used it in the civil rights movement with the Montgomery [Ala.] bus boycott, we used it to stand up against South African apartheid, and now we are in 2020 using it to stand up for the rights of the Palestinian people, which again live under military occupation funded by our U.S. taxpayer dollars.”

She went on to accuse Israel of human rights violations for its treatment of the Palestinians and said that she’s also critical of Saudi Arabia and China for their respective human rights violations.

“If you are a dictator, if you are a nation that engages in human rights violations, I will say what I need to say and I will do whatever I need to do to help,” Sarsour said. “I can’t be the spokesperson for every justice cause, but you would think that as a Palestinian that people would expect these views from somebody like me. These are by default mainstream views in the communities that I come from.

“So when the Biden campaign wants to condemn these views and say that they do not belong in the Democratic Party or that they reject them as representatives of the Democratic Party and the Democratic ticket, what you in fact are saying is that you condemn the views that my communities hold, which means you condemn my communities and are saying that people who are pro-BDS, people who support Palestinian human rights, are not welcome in the party.”

 

On Aug. 18, a spokesperson for the Biden campaign condemned Sarsour after her appearance on a Muslim Delegates and Allies Virtual Assembly panel during the Democratic National Convention a day earlier. Middle East Eye reported on Aug. 23 that the Biden campaign had apologized for the comments against Sarsour in an off-the-record phone call with Arab and Muslim activists.

However, Biden senior adviser Symone Sanders told CNN’s Jake Tapper that the Aug. 23 call was “to affirm Vice President Biden’s unshakeable commitment to working with Arab, Palestinian and Muslim Americans and to standing up against anti-Muslim prejudice, and to make clear that we regretted any hurt that was caused to these communities. We continue to reject the views that Linda Sarsour has expressed.”

Sarsour Says ‘Right-Wing Zionists’ Are Aligning With White Nationalists to Smear Her Read More »

Doug Emhoff on How Joe Biden and Kamala Harris Will Keep Standing Up for the Jewish Community and Israel

Los Angeles resident and potential “Second Mensch” of the United States Doug Emhoff knows what it means to stand up against anti-Semitism and is confident that Joe Biden and Kamala Harris will fight for all people, including the Jewish community. 

Speaking at the virtual Jewish Floridians Summit on Aug. 28, Emhoff, who is Jewish, spoke about his Jewish upbringing — which included playing sports at his Jewish summer camp and wearing a three-piece suit to his bar mitzvah — his work with the California-based Jewish nonprofit Bet Tzedek, his family, and why his wife will make a great vice president.

Mentioning Harris’ work as a lawyer, district attorney in San Francisco, senator and California’s attorney general, Emhoff also touched on her passion for climate change legislation, protecting health care and immigrants, helping win marriage equality for Californians and fighting racism, anti-Semitism and all forms of hate.

Tzedek Tzedek Tirdof, (Justice, Justice, you shall pursue) is a major Jewish value and Emhoff noted, “Every bit of her core is this pursuit of justice. It’s who she is as ‘mamala,’ as a friend, as a pillar of the community. It comes from a deep place within her, which is so deep in our Jewish tradition,” he said. “It elevated my game to do more just by watching her.  … It’s not just a chapter of her story, it’s the whole book.”

Emhoff also spoke to the predominantly Jewish Floridian audience about the escalating anti-Semitic incidents that have occurred under President Donald Trump’s administration. He cited the 2017 Charlottesville Unite the Right rally in Virginia, the 2018 Tree of Life synagogue shooting in Pittsburgh, the various Crown Heights attacks on the Orthodox community in New York, the 2019 Chabad of Poway synagogue shooting in San Diego County and, most recently, the arson attack at the Chabad center at the University of Delaware.

“Jewish Americans have seen hatred rise against us, and just the other day an arsonist intentionally set a fire at the Chabad center in Joe’s home state of Delaware,” Emhoff said. “Joe sent out a powerful statement. I hope you all have seen it. We need more than ever reassurance that our political leaders have our backs. A Biden-Harris administration will stand strong against anti-Semitism, period. They have a comprehensive plan to tackle both the violence that stems from anti-Semitism and hateful and dangerous lies that drive it. Joe and Kamala will call hate by its proper name, whatever its source, and condemn it, each and every time. They will also restore funding to address domestic extremism which the Trump administration has cut.”

Emhoff also spoke about Israel-United States relations under a possible Biden-Harris administration. While Emhoff was becoming bar mitzvah, Harris was going door-to-door raising money for the Jewish National Fund to plant trees in Israel. Having been there three times, once with Emhoff, he said, “For Kamala, Israel isn’t a political football. Its future as a secure Jewish and Democratic state is non-negotiable. I can assure you all of that.” 

He added even on their first date, Kamala listed “Jewish bona fides,” saying her mother spent years working for a Jewish hospital, and how much her trips to Israel meant to her. “To this day, she always talks about visiting one of the great places of the world, the Israeli Supreme Court, which I got to go see because of her,” Emhoff said. “Now she wants to use this leadership, this platform and this opportunity to lay down roots of peace and safety for all of Israel and Israel’s children.” 

Being a friend to Israel, he added, and lending support to a two-state solution, as well as aiding the Iron Dome and intelligence cooperation, is something that is important to her.

“Everything we care about is on the line,” Emhoff said. “We need to do more than win. We need a mandate. We are so much better than this. It’s up to us to prove it.”

Watch the full summit below:

https://www.facebook.com/FlaDems/videos/749276952297727

 

Doug Emhoff on How Joe Biden and Kamala Harris Will Keep Standing Up for the Jewish Community and Israel Read More »

The Anti-Semitic Site Behind the ‘Jews Want a Race War’ Highway Banner Was Removed From the Internet. But Another Quickly Took Its Place.

(J. the Jewish News of Northern California via JTA) — Goyim TV, an anti-Semitic video-sharing website that was promoted with a “banner drop” from a Los Angeles freeway overpass on Saturday, has been taken down by its domain host under a flood of complaints.

Jon Minadeo Jr., 37, was behind both the website and the banner drop, J. the Jewish News of Northern California reported earlier this week, as were a handful of Minadeo cronies known as the “Goyim Defense League.”

However, just days after Goyim TV was taken offline, Minadeo directed his followers to a similar site — disseminating the same hateful ideology — on BitChute, a U.K.-based company described by a London-based Jewish security firm as a “cesspool” of racist and anti-Semitic content. It reportedly solicits financial support via cryptocurrency.

The rapid resurfacing of Minadeo’s videos, on a different but similar channel, reflects the challenge of controlling hate-spewing websites on the internet, and the whack-a-mole-like effort it can take by anti-hate groups and concerned members of the public to confront them.

“It is similar to what happened with the Daily Stormer website and other bad actors,” said Seth Brysk, the San Francisco-based director of the Anti-Defamation League’s Central Pacific region.

The neo-Nazi Daily Stormer was rejected by a number of domain registrars after the highly anti-Semitic 2017 Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, but ultimately found a new host in the Canadian-based company BitMitigate, whose founder at the time cited “a commitment to liberty.”

“The norms, rules and laws for online behavior are still evolving,” Brysk added. “So the public can and should continue to play a role in pushing back against harassment, lies and extremism.”

It appears that is exactly what happened with Goyim TV, which had been hosted since December by Epik, a domain registrar with more than 560,000 websites, according to DomainState.

The three hastily painted banners promoting Goyim TV — which read “Honk if you know the Jews want a race war” and were hung above the busy I-405 freeway — shocked the Los Angeles Jewish community and captured the attention of organizations such as the American Jewish Committee and the ADL.

The incident was reported in news outlets across the country and in Israel, and a spokesperson for Epik said that the company received a number of “anonymous Gmail reports” taking issue with their hosting of the site.

The nonprofit StopAntisemitism.org, which monitors the internet for anti-Semitic content, reported that “hundreds of complaints” were made to the web host.

The Epik spokesperson said that the company had been receiving complaints from both sides — those demanding the website be taken down, and those demanding the opposite. Many of the latter came with violent threats, some of which the spokesperson shared.

“Unfortunately we do not win ever in these cases,” wrote the person, who asked to remain anonymous for their own safety.

“A site goes up — we get 300 complaints calling us neo-Nazis and harbingers of death,” they said. “We take it down instantly — we get 300 complaints telling [us] we are fascists, threatening to put bullet holes in our head.”

The person said Epik removed the website “within hours” of receiving complaints, and after attempts to get the platform owner to remove the objectionable content failed.

Publicly, on Twitter, Epik responded to some of its critics.

“Free speech is not coming into our house, declaring war on a mass group of people based on their religion or belief, publishing videos inviting them to be killed by horrific genocide, then celebrating the work that has been done,” the tweet read.

Jon Minadeo Jr. in a video on the Goyim TV website. (Screen shot from Goyim TV)

But by Thursday, the BitChute-hosted channel — called Handsome Truth GDL (for Goyim Defense League) — was publishing the same content from the old Goyim TV site.

That content largely includes wild anti-Semitic conspiracy theories, cell-phone footage of Minadeo and others driving around California and shouting anti-Semitic phrases (often through a megaphone) and other far-right fringe conspiracy theories (about coronavirus, Dr. Anthony Fauci and the Black Lives Matter movement, for example).

BitChute, according to the company, earns $23,485 per month via what it calls community funding sources.

The switch was written about on Twitter, where Minadeo’s account, Handsome Truth, remains active. It was implied that the takedown was, naturally, a Jewish conspiracy.

“The you know whos temporary shut down GTV,” Handsome Truth posted. “But i got a bitchute channel…so please GO & SUB.. and support IRL [in real life] activist like myself and others.”

The Anti-Semitic Site Behind the ‘Jews Want a Race War’ Highway Banner Was Removed From the Internet. But Another Quickly Took Its Place. Read More »

This Activist Converted a Strip Club Into a Center for Jewish Learning

On the eve of Tisha b’Av 2019, Yakir Segev tore down the sheetrock in one of Tel Aviv’s most iconic buildings — the repurposed Pussycat Club — a strip club in central Tel Aviv.

That night, people would gather inside to mourn the destruction of the Temples and read from the book of Lamentations. The symbolism was not lost on Segev. The sheetrock had for years covered the rotunda’s glass windows and its licentiousness. With every ray of sun that burst through the exposed windows, the salacious became sacred. “It was an almost mystical experience,” Segev said. 

A veteran social activist, Segev’s plan was to turn the building into a headquarters of Jewish learning and social impact. Today, its 9,000 square feet accommodates the activities of 600 nonprofits and on any given (non-COVID-19) month, some 5,000 people walk through its doors. 

One area of activism that Segev stresses is helping at-risk women. Women come to the space — now named Israel’s Impact Center — and take part in a host of courses including self-defense, web design or cooking. It’s a far cry from the exploitation of women that the building used to represent. The Pussycat Club made headlines for allegedly housing a prostitution and sex trafficking ring. “What we did was a very important statement,” Segev said. “Not just to [remove] the club but to turn it into the total opposite of what it was.”

People congregating in the new space.

Today, Segev doesn’t shy away from the venue’s former past. “In the beginning, we thought, ‘Let’s go in and renovate it entirely so every remnant of its past would be forgotten.’ But we realized we just can’t compete with the story of the place. It’s too powerful. And people wanted to connect to it,” he said. “Every activity that takes place now is charged with a special significance because of that history.” Today, visitors can take part in an audio tour that showcases the history of the building.

The fact that the structure stands on Atarim Square overlooking the Mediterranean Sea on some of the costliest real estate in Tel Aviv is central to its appeal, Segev said. “Social activism often happens in the periphery. I wanted to take the best place in Israel, the heart of Tel Aviv — with all the money, the good life, the startups — and say, ‘Yes, here’s where we’re doing good.’ ”

Segev is grateful for the real estate group JTLV, which purchased the square in 2017. Owner Amir Biram refused to let the Pussycat Club continue to operate on his newly acquired asset. Segev knew Biram from his days at New Spirit, a Jerusalem-based organization that Segev chaired in the mid-2000s. New Spirit was founded to breathe reanimated life into the capital city and turn it into an attractive place for young people. 

Despite years on the social activist circuit, Segev remains indefatigable. “It moves me still,” he said. 

This Activist Converted a Strip Club Into a Center for Jewish Learning Read More »

david suissa podcast curious times

Pandemic Times Episode 82: Countdown to Elections. The Plot Thickens.

New David Suissa Podcast Every Monday and Friday.

Reflections on how to manage our lives and our minds during a very uncivil election season.

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 82: Countdown to Elections. The Plot Thickens. Read More »

Table for Five: Ki Teitzei

One verse, five voices. Edited by Salvador Litvak, the Accidental Talmudist

If you see your brother’s ox or sheep gone astray, do not ignore it; you must take it back to your brother. If your brother does not live near you or you do not know who he is, you shall bring it home and it shall remain with you until your brother claims it; then you shall give it back to him. –Deuteronomy 22:1-2

Miriam Gittle Mill
Tzaddik Foundation, mother of four

I remember when my yeshiva-educated 11-year-old son, Mendy, dissected this verse in his Gemara class about returning a lost ox or sheep. The laws are much more complicated than the verse suggests but the main idea still remains. What stands out with the verse is the contrast between secular and Torah law. As Jews, we are responsible for one another in order to fulfill God’s will. We have to work against our natural selfish instincts. I would bet no other legal system in the world demands such care of another person’s property. Not only don’t we allow “finders keepers” but we have to make an effort to safeguard and return lost property, the standard being much higher than simply “do not steal.”

Having grown up in the public school system and graduated from New York University School of Law, I am often in awe of my son’s yeshiva education. Imagine a world where all children from a young age are intensively taught moral and legal reasoning based on the guidebook created by the Creator of the World. This book teaches us to care about another person’s possessions because a loving God is watching and will judge us accordingly. Instead of raising a generation that is mainly concerned with “making a living,” they are concurrently involved in “making a moral life.” A natural by-product of such an education is the ability to think and reason well. Imagine that. 

Rabbi Avraham Greenstein
Academy for Jewish Religion, California professor of Hebrew

These verses constitute the second of two primary sources for the mitzvah of returning lost property. Whereas Exodus 23:4 commands that lost property be returned, the verses here emphasize that one is not allowed to ignore lost property. Moreover, they indicate that the one who finds lost property becomes its guardian until it can be properly returned. The iteration of this commandment is a reflection of the unique regard that Jewish tradition has for personal property. 

The Mishnah in Avot likens one who defrauds another to one who steals from God. This is because in Jewish tradition, all personal property is a loan from God, which we are each tasked to use for the divine purposes that are particular to us. It is worth noting that Maimonides describes one of the defining features of the Messianic Era as being a time when no one takes that which does not belong to him. In this light, it is perhaps striking that the second half of the Ten Commandments (the laws governing human relations) all have to do with the avoidance of unjustly depriving others of that which is theirs. More fundamentally, it is possible to see the primal sin of the Tree of Knowledge as a form of stealing. Judaism reminds us that we cannot overlook the material deprivation of others; we must go out of our way to look out for others. At the same time, we must look to use our material goods for worthy and holy ends.

Rabbanit Alissa Thomas-Newborn
B’nai David-Judea Congregation

This text calls out a very human — not so pretty — impulse: that of ignoring the needs of our fellow. This instinct is our yetzer harah (evil inclination), which the Torah requires we battle and overcome. 

Rashi explains specifically that our verses tell us not to “cover our eyes,” pretending not to see our fellow’s ox or sheep gone astray. This teaching goes far beyond lost property — it gets at our religious imperative to respect God’s creations and to not become callous, immune to pain. How many times have we walked down the street and averted our eyes from someone who is homeless? Or pretended not to notice a friend or stranger asking for a favor — not responding for our own convenience? Has COVID-19 magnified this? 

Our parsha teaches that this is not only unacceptable behavior, it’s also something God notices. Sometimes it seems easier to ignore and literally look away, but the Torah reminds us that easy does not mean right. We are now fully in Elul, the time on our calendar to open our hearts to humility and transformation. Let’s examine ourselves: How have I covered my eyes, ignoring my fellow this past year? What pain/burden/fear/sorrow am I avoiding by spiritually and emotionally covering my eyes to another’s need? How does it feel when I choose to open my eyes and respond? Our verses reveal that in unexpected moments, we can find ourselves tasked as keepers and protectors of one another. Do I recognize those moments?

David Brandes
Screenwriter and producer

Why shouldn’t we ignore or hide ourselves from a brother’s animal gone astray? And since when does someone who’s lost an animal become a brother? 

Consider the story told by the great tzadik of Jerusalem, Reb Aryeh Levin (1885-1969), to his grandson, Benji when asked how he, Reb Aryeh, befriended so many, many people: 

A father and son went to a famous rav to adjudicate their problem. It was winter and, sadly, they had only one coat between them. “This is my only coat,” the father said. “I am an old man and I need it to keep warm.” “I need it more,” replied the son. “I am outside all the time.” The rav thought it over and promised a decision if they would each tell the story from the other’s point of view. The son spoke emotionally, “My father needs the coat more than me. The weather is freezing cold and he is older.” “No,” pleaded the father. “My son takes care of me — he needs it.” The rav got up, walked to the hallway and brought back another overcoat. “I have an extra overcoat. Take it.” “Was the coat in your closet all along?” the confused son asked. “Yes,” the rav answered. “Then why didn’t you give it to us immediately?” “Ah,” the Rav replied. “It was when you opened your hearts that I was able to open my heart and that reminded me of the overcoat.” 

We become brothers when we become unhidden to each other. 

Rabbi Jonathan Leener
Base: BKLYN and Prospect Heights Shul

What’s the difference between being lost and being astray? Inside the Warsaw Ghetto in 1939, Rabbi Kalonymus Kalmish Shapira answered, “The outcast person has merely been exiled from his location to another place, but he can still be seen and recognized. A person who is lost, however, is neither visible nor recognizable.” In fact, sometimes a person can be so lost that they can’t even recognize themselves. 

This month of Elul is the beginning of this painful and inspiring search for self. It is a time when we admit how far we have gone astray from our true being, and it’s because of this that we find ourselves so distant from God. Shapira concludes, “The blessing is that God will give not only when the Jew is visible and recognizable but also when he is lost, when he is neither visible nor recognizable as a Jew.” Man is capable of returning a misplaced item like an ox, but only God has the capacity to return something that is totally lost because God always can see the depths of every being. The sages argue at great length whether a person ever gives up finding what he has lost. One thing is certain: God never gives up on finding us. “Ein shum yeush baolam clal,” said Rebbe Nachman of Breslov, “There is no despair in the world.” 

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NYC City Councilmember Denounces BDS as ‘Anti-Semitic at Its Core’

New York City Councilmember Ritchie Torres condemned the boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) movement as “anti-Semitic at its core” during a Democratic Majority for Israel webinar on Aug. 18.

Torres, a self-described “pro-Israel progressive” who currently is running for Congress, was asked during the webinar if he felt “outnumbered” as a pro-Israel Democrat in the Democratic caucus. Torres responded that although he thinks that “there is a silent majority for Israel” in the Democratic caucus, he feels “drowned out” from extremist voices in the caucus that are amplified on social media.

“In New York City, we’ve see the rise of the Democratic Socialists of America, which is explicitly pro-BDS,” Torres said. “The Democratic socialist left endorsed in about 11 races [in New York and Kentucky] and won every single one except mine, so it’s proven to be effective at winning elections, and I worry about the normalization of anti-Semitism within progressive politics.

“I consider BDS, the attempt to delegitimize Israel, to be anti-Semitic at its core and any movement that embraces anti-Semitism is destined to rot from within.”

He added that it’s personal for him as someone who is openly gay, as to him, being part of the LGBTQ+ movement means being authentic and honest.

“If the message to those who are both progressive and pro-Israel — especially people who are of Jewish descent — that in order for you to be part of the progressive community you have to renounce your identity and your history and your ties to your own homeland and you have to be in the closet, that to me is profoundly evil,” Torres said. “That’s a perversion of progressivism, and that’s something that pro-Israel progressives have to fight against it, and so it’s incumbent upon us to create space within the progressive movement for pro-Israel voices.”

StandWithUs tweeted out a clip of Torres’ comments, calling them “powerful.”

According to Jewish Insider, Torres, 32, first was elected to the New York City Council in 2013. If he wins his congressional race in November, he and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) would among the youngest members of Congress.

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The Bagel Report

Schmoozing and Shtisel and Sequels, Oh My!


The Bagels are back, talking High Holy Days prep, anticipating Rachel Bloom’s new book, and parsing the news from the Shtiselverse. Esther objects to a “Dirty Dancing” sequel and Erin can’t conceive Zac Efron in a “Three Men and a Baby” remake. Plus, our first-ever podcast mention of Steve Guttenberg, and our hopes and dreams that Olivia Wilde’s Marvel movie will feature a Spider-Beanie Feldstein.

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