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September 24, 2020

N.Y. Town Votes to Keep ‘Swastika’ Name

An unincorporated community in upstate New York will keep its name as “Swastika” after a unanimous vote by officials on Sept. 14.

The proposal to change the name stemmed from a visitor from New York City, Michael Alcamo, saw the town sign while he was riding his bicycle in the area this past summer.

“I think it should be obvious that the town should update its name and should pick a name that is not so offensive to so many Americans and so emblematic of intolerance, hate and tyranny,” Alcamo told National Public Radio (NPR).

The four members of the town of Black Brook’s board, which has jurisdiction over the hamlet, rejected a proposal to change the name. The town’s supervisor, Jon Douglass, told CNN: “We regret that individuals, for out of the area, that lack the knowledge of the history of our community, become offended when they see the name. To the members of our community, that the board represents, it is the name that their ancestors chose.”

The town was named Swastika in 1913 after the name appeared on the hamlet’s post office at the time, according to the Associated Press (AP). Douglass told the AP that there have been numerous efforts to change the hamlet’s name and they have all failed; he pointed out that the hamlet’s World War II veterans have in the past opposed changing the name.

“There’s a long history there,” he told NPR. “For the uneducated that immediately assume it’s connected to Germans and Hitler, it’s not. Swastika means ‘to prosper.’ ”

According to CNN, the word “swastika” comes from the Sanskrit word svastika, which is defined as good fortune. The Nazis appropriated the symbol in 1920; before that, the symbol commonly had been used among Hindus and Buddhists.

In 2019, a town in Colorado just outside of Denver was renamed from Swastika Acres to Old Cherry Hills. The town had been named after the Denver Land Swastika Co. in 1908.

N.Y. Town Votes to Keep ‘Swastika’ Name Read More »

Univ. of Illinois Student Gov’t Passes BDS Resolution

The student government at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign (UIUC), passed a resolution on Sept. 23 calling for the school to divest from companies that conduct business with Israel.

The Illinois Student Government (ISG) passed the resolution by a vote of 22-11 with seven abstentions, Jewish News Syndicate (JNS) reported. The resolution specifically called on the university to divest from Caterpillar, Elbit Systems, Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman and Raytheon Co., alleging that these companies provide “surveillance technology for the separation wall in the occupied West Bank” as well as “weapons guidance system and missiles used in attacks on civilians and civilian infrastructure, resulting in thousands of civilian casualties in Lebanon, the West Bank, and Gaza.”

The divestment language was part of a resolution supporting the Black Lives Matter movement, the university said.

The university released a statement after the resolution passed, stating that it’s “unfortunate that a resolution before the group tonight was designed to force students who oppose efforts to divest from Israel to also vote against support for the Black Lives Matter movement.” The statement later added, “This resolution includes several points on which we can agree, but a foundational value of this institution is inclusion, and this resolution includes language that we cannot and will not support. As one of the country’s top public universities, we find ourselves in the difficult position of defending speech and expression, so we can talk together about difficult circumstances and have uncomfortable conversations. We must always balance that with our need to create a community where it is safe to live, learn and work.”

Illini Chabad Rabbi Dovid Tiechtel denounced the resolution’s passage in a statement.

“The Illinois Student Government (ISG) has once again used its power to exclude, bully, and intimidate Jewish students,” he said. “ISG’s behavior does not represent Illini’s values, but rather deepens division within the Illini community.

“The resolution was written purely to back Jewish students in a corner. Jewish students should never have to choose between standing up for social and racial justice while also having to shed their Jewish identity and their connection to the Jewish homeland to do so. Fighting for the rights of one marginalized community should not come at the expense of another marginalized group.”

The American Jewish Committee similarly tweeted, “We are disheartened to learn that @ILStudentGov passed a BDS resolution this evening. The BDS movement is rooted in antisemitism and only hurts the cause for peace. [UIUC]’s student body deserves better from their leaders.”

StandWithUs CEO and co-founder Roz Rothstein also said in a statement, “This vote was a shameful example of how anti-Israel activists exploit racial and social justice causes to promote hate. The truth is there is no contradiction between supporting justice and opposing anti-Israel and antisemitic agendas. We are proud of students who spoke out against this transparent and manipulative effort to spread hate through the UIUC student government.”

Back in February, the ISG had passed a similar divestment resolution that then-ISG President Connor Josellis vetoed.

“One of my primary obligations as student body president is to make sure that all students are able to participate in a campus environment where all feel safe to learn and be themselves,” he said at the time. “Approving a resolution that hundreds of students have said will do the opposite would not be doing my job.”

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Arab Nations’ PA Funding Declined 85% in 2020, Report Says

Funding from Arab nations to the Palestinian Authority (PA) has declined 85% so far in 2020, The Jerusalem Post reported on Sept. 24.

Citing sources from the London-based news outlet The New Arab and data from the Palestinian Finance Ministry, the Post noted that Arab nations’ funding to the PA declined from $267 million in 2019 to $38 million in 2020. Arab nations haven’t given the PA any financial aid since March, according to the Post.

Foreign aid to the PA as a whole has similarly declined from $500 million in 2019 to $255 million in 2020, nearly a 50% decrease. The PA’s yearly revenues have also fallen 70% from 2019 to 2020.

PA Foreign Minister Riyad Al-Malki said in a Sept. 24 press conference that the decline in funding is due to Arab nations not following “the decisions of the Arab summits to provide a financial safety net of $100 million for Palestine in the face of US and Israeli sanctions. We do not know if this was the result of the financial repercussions of the coronavirus pandemic, or at the request of the United States, as President (Donald) Trump said.”

Al Araby Al Jadeed, The New Arab’s Arabic-language outlet, reported that Trump had told Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that he “asked the rich Arab countries not to pay the Palestinians.”

International human rights lawyer Arsen Ostrovsky tweeted that the report is indicative of “signs that [the] #Arab world is growing increasingly tired with #Palestinian intransigence and rejectionism.”

 

Jonathan Schanzer, senior vice president of research at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies think tank, similarly tweeted, “The Palestinians have very few Arab friends or supporters left. This will be Mahmoud Abbas’ legacy.”

 

The United States ceased all funding to the Palestinians in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank in 2019. The European Union is the largest donor to the PA, providing them with “hundreds of millions of euros” every year, according to the Post.

Arab Nations’ PA Funding Declined 85% in 2020, Report Says Read More »

Letters: The Court Without Ginsburg; Israel, the UAE and Bahrain

The Court Without Ginsburg
With the death of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, America has lost a pioneer and icon of the movement for equal rights for women, and the Supreme Court has lost one of its most renowned and respected jurists.

Ginsburg, who died on erev Rosh Hashanah, also was one of eight Jewish justices, and the first female Jewish justice, to serve on the nation’s highest court. In a 2004 speech at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, she connected her heritage with her passion for justice: “I had the good fortune to be a Jew born and raised in the U.S.A. … My heritage as a Jew and my occupation as a judge fit together symmetrically. The demand for justice runs through the entirety of Jewish history and Jewish tradition. I take pride in and draw strength from my heritage.”

Ginsburg was a feminist, a Zionist, a proud Jew, a lawyer, a judge and a devoted wife and mother. She will be remembered as someone who fought injustice and left the world a better place for her having been here.
May we all find inspiration in the example she set, the values she embodied and the legacy she leaves us.
Stephen A. Silver, San Francisco

Israel, the UAE and Bahrain
During the signing ceremony of agreements normalizing relations between Israel, the UAE and Bahrain on Sept. 15, I had a sickening feeling in the pit of my stomach because previous accords always have been bittersweet, with Israel trading land for an obscure peace arrangement. I felt that way until I realized Israel wasn’t giving away anything but instead, hopefully gaining new friends.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, with all the legal and political issues surrounding his tenure, is the best representative Israel has to strengthen its  standing in the world. These new agreements are convenient for Israel’s new allies as they face the Iranian threat but it doesn’t diminish what Netanyahu has helped to achieve.
Allan Kandel, Los Angeles 

Music to Their Ears
The Ella Fitzgerald Charitable Foundation would like to thank the Journal for its wonderful conversation with Ben Bram (“Ben Bram on Creating A Cappella During a Pandemic,” Sept. 18). We have happily helped support his A Capella Academy, offering “camperships” to talented young singers. Ella Fitzgerald would be so proud.
Fran Morris Rosman, Executive director, The Ella Fitzgerald Charitable Foundation, Pacific Palisades

Ethnic Studies Are Unfair
The Ethnic Studies Model Curriculum (ESMC) presents a limited view of California history, as being exclusively dedicated to minorities’ suffering and disenfranchisement, mostly in the past, with the implication that nothing has changed in the present. The ESMC’s authors have stated: “Ethnic studies teaching is grounded in the belief that education can be a tool for transformation, social change, and liberation.” That sounds very similar to Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels’ “Communist Manifesto.”

Our educators deserve a much more appropriate model in a state comprising dozens of ethnic groups that have participated in creating the sixth largest economy in the world. California teachers would be better off guided by a factual and objective, not Marxism-driven, ethnic study curriculum.
Vladimir Kaplan, via email

SFSU: Aiding and Abetting Terrorism
San Francisco State University, by inviting Leila Khaled, a known terrorist and member of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), to participate in a forum on Sept. 23, could be in violation of 18 U.S. Code 2339A, “Providing material support to terrorists.”

SFSU, if it does include Khaled in this forum, is raising Khaled’s profile, thereby assisting her efforts to raise funds for the PFLP, a possible violation of 18 U.S. Code 2339A.
Richard Sherman, Margate, Fla.

A Letter From God
Forgive me please for allowing you,
To sink to this emotional low.
Believe me, I’m not testing you,
To see how low you’ll go!
I know that you believe in me.
Maybe more than most folks, too.
But Faith must be 100%,
You see what less will do.
I’ll decide if the mistakes you make
need punishment or not,
And from what I’ve seen the past few days,
You’ve punished yourself a lot.
You sometimes feel alone in life,
And wonder why you’re here —
But I really don’t understand that,
What is it that you fear?
There are a lot of people on Earth, you know,
And in order to be fair,
I try to answer all requests,
That are asked of me in Prayer.
Only I can help you,
To really have peace of mind.
Belief in yourself — or anyone else,
Will pull you further behind.
I have much more power than anyone,
And I control the land —
In any accomplishment man has made,
I have had a hand.
So take a load off your shoulders,
And depend on me a bit,
The last thing you should do now,
Is throw up your hands and quit.
You must believe I’m watching,
And I guide you, when I can.
You certainly also must realize,
That I’m your biggest fan!
So tonight when you are sitting,
Feeling lonely as can be.
At least have the satisfaction of knowing,
You’re sitting there with me.
Alan Ascher, via email

We Have A Dream
My father, Nachman, a Jew From Wlodawa
His friend, Berman, who died on the way
Uncle Victor, bad boy from Vienna
My mother — all the others
Who came before and after
Had a dream for two thousand years
to return home to Zion
They didn’t hate or want to destroy
But to share, to build up
To leave behind pogrom winters
Walk free among the orange blossoms
Like anybody else
So, in America, in the Diaspora,
we don’t need to feel ashamed
Or on “the wrong side”
When we speak out for Israel
Proudly, despite Her imperfections
Can’t we, too, have a dream?
Mina Stern, Venice


Now it’s your turn! Don’t be shy. submit your letter to the editor. Letters should be no more than 200 words and must include a valid name and city. The Journal reserves the right to edit all letters. letters@jewishjournal.com.

Letters: The Court Without Ginsburg; Israel, the UAE and Bahrain Read More »

Sing it to us Mo! — A Poem for Torah portion Ha’azinu

Remember the days of old; reflect
upon 
the years of [other] generations

I’m as nostalgic as they come.
I remember walking around my high school
during the first week of my senior year
the entire year in front of me, thinking
this is all going to end.

I’m so nostalgic. I get teary-eyed
about things that haven’t happened yet.
This is the curse of the poet –
forever removed from actual experiences
as we’re too busy assessing them.

But perhaps this wasn’t the case with
those of us across the river from the
promised land. We’d been looking forward
for forty years and we already want to be
on the other side, drying our feet off

Our sights were set on the battles ahead
the buildings to be built, the seeds we’d
need to put in the ground. We’d practically
already named our future children
hardly a brain cell left to remember Egypt

the lessons of the rock, and the fire that
moved us from place to place.
Sing us of our history, Oh Moses.
I, personally, don’t need the reminder as
I’m already weeping about my wet feet.

I’ve been dreaming of dipping my toes
in the river of our freedom. But I’ll never
forget how I got here. Praises will be sung.
Holidays invented, festive meals galore.
The past isn’t even the past, they’ll say one day.

I’m choking up thinking about it.


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 “The Tokyo-Van Nuys Express” (Poems written in Japan – Ain’t Got No Press, August 2020) 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.

Sing it to us Mo! — A Poem for Torah portion Ha’azinu Read More »

Boston’s 118-Year-Old Jewish Advocate Ceases Publication

(JTA) — The Jewish Advocate, a 118-year-old newspaper in Boston founded by Theodor Herzl, is the latest victim of the coronavirus crisis.

The weekly announced Wednesday that it will suspend publication.

“The decline of advertising revenue and now in the current pandemic its virtual disappearance, has not been sufficiently offset by contributions and organizational support, and The Jewish Advocate has been left with no alternative but to suspend publication,” the Advocate said on the front page of its Sept. 25 issue.

“Please know that we have done everything in our power to continue for as long as possible, and it is with tears in our eyes that we concluded that our decision to suspend publication is a sad but necessary response to this crisis.”

The paper said that plans are being developed to launch a digital edition focusing on advocacy for Jews, the Jewish community and Israel, thus allowing the Advocate “to continue the mission envisioned by Theodor Herzl,” the journalist and political activist behind modern Zionism, in founding the paper.

Financial stress has taken a toll on a number of major Jewish newspapers, including several for whom the drop-off in advertising during the pandemic spelled disaster. The Canadian Jewish News, for example, ceased publication in April, and The New York Jewish Week announced in July that it was going online only at the close of that month. Two longstanding British Jewish newspapers also announced that they would shutter because of the pandemic, though they later changed those plans and remained open with different management.

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RBG and the Lone Dissent

In the Babylonian Talmud, there is a tale about King Yannai and Shimon ben Shetah, a prominent sage and head of the Sanhedrin (the high court), who both lived — at least in the rabbinic imaginary — around the first century before the Common Era (Sanhedrin 19a). In the story, one of King Yannai’s servants killed a person, so Shimon summoned him for judgment. But Shimon also summoned Yannai as the ultimately responsible party and ordered him to stand and give testimony.

The king was insulted that he was forced to stand in front of 71 seated justices. So Yannai refused, saying that he would testify only if all of Shimon’s colleagues on the court ordered him to do so. Yannai had hoped that not every judge had Shimon’s spine — and he was right. When Yannai looked at each judge, they all buried their heads. Realizing that the rest of the court had not backed his decision, Shimon cursed them, and the angel Gabriel smote them. For this reason, the Talmud mandates that a king neither judges nor is he judged. 

This story is obviously not the reason for this law. The law instead grew out of the tension between a justice system and a monarch. In the story, though, the Mishnah’s authors captured the limits of jurisprudence, the fragility of judicial institutions and the danger of relying on the courage of one justice. The fact the sages inscribed this story as the law’s origin story demonstrates the weakness of law in the face of raw power. The sages all were killed. Shimon ben Shetah miscalculated, and he lost. The law lost. 

On the first night of Rosh Hashanah this year, Shimon ben Shetah died.

As Jill Lepore recently wrote, “Ginsburg bore witness to, argued for, and helped to constitutionalize the most hard-fought and least-appreciated revolution in modern American history: the emancipation of women.”

Ruth Bader Ginsburg was born on March 15, 1933, in Brooklyn, N.Y., to immigrant parents. As the second female on the Supreme Court, she became a legend and an icon of the feminist movement. However, this was not the obvious trajectory of her life. 

Ginsburg grew up in an immigrant Jewish neighborhood in Flatbush, and she always retained loyalty to her heritage. As she said in a speech to the American Jewish Committee in 1996: “I am a judge, born, raised and proud of being a Jew. … The demand for justice, for peace and for enlightenment runs through the entirety of Jewish history and Jewish tradition.”

Her mother, Celia Bader, supported her daughter’s intellectual ambitions, and she set aside money so her daughter could attend college. Ginsburg married young and followed her husband, Martin Ginsburg, to his military post and then to Harvard Law School. Martin Ginsburg became an officer to fulfill his ROTC requirements, and she, being pregnant, was allowed only to be a secretary because any other job would require that she travel for training. An often-told anecdote recounts that at the end of her first year at Harvard, Ruth Bader Ginsburg and the eight other women in her class were summoned to the dean’s residence for dinner. At that dinner, the dean asked the women to justify why they were taking a man’s place at the school. Ginsburg replied that she was studying the law to understand her husband’s profession better. To many, Ruth Bader Ginsberg seemed destined to fulfill the role that many white Jewish women filled in mid-century America — housewife with a profession secondary to her husband’s. 

Yet, as Jill Lepore recently wrote, “Ginsburg bore witness to, argued for, and helped to constitutionalize the most hard-fought and least-appreciated revolution in modern American history: the emancipation of women. Aside from Thurgood Marshall, no single American has so wholly advanced the cause of equality under the law.” 

How did she get from there to here? Despite her qualifications, Ginsburg couldn’t obtain employment as a lawyer because of her religion and gender. Instead, she began work at Columbia University on a comparative project, which required that she learn Swedish and spend time in Sweden. Ultimately, Ginsburg wrote a treatise on Swedish civil law, which remains a leading work. More importantly, she witnessed a society that was more equitable than the United States. Feminism was flourishing in Sweden, child care was readily available, and it was not unusual for women to combine their parenting and professional roles. As they say, “You can’t be what you can’t see.” 

After this period, Ginsburg embarked on her feminist legal career, teaching law at Rutgers and then at Columbia. Outside of the classroom, Ginsburg handled discrimination cases for the American Civil Liberties Union. One of the more notable cases she worked on — although she didn’t argue the case in front of the court — was Reed v. Reed. It challenged an Idaho statute that gave preference to men in executing estates. In writing the majority decision, Chief Justice Warren E. Burger used Ginsburg’s now famous phrase, proclaiming, “The choice in this context may not lawfully be mandated solely on the basis of sex.” Ginsburg also co-authored a first-of-its-kind textbook on sex discrimination and law. By the time she was nominated and confirmed as a Supreme Court justice in 1993, she was able to rule from precedents in cases that she had argued in front of the court. 

However, the political winds shifted, and Ginsburg attained her “Notorious RBG” moniker from her scathing dissents. She called out the Conservative wing of the court for gutting the Voting Rights Act (Shelby County v. Holder); for not recognizing the realities of employment in the Lilly Ledbetter pay-discrimination case, which led to new congressional legislation; and on and on. She was fearless in calling out power in her dissents. In the Shelby case, Ginsburg likened the majority opinion to a person holding an umbrella in a storm and deciding he does not need it any more since he is dry. Her dissents extended beyond the bench. In 2016, for example, Ginsburg got into trouble for calling President Donald Trump a “faker” and had to apologize. Her last public statement, dictated to her granddaughter Clara Spera, was, “My most fervent wish is that I will not be replaced until a new president is installed.” 

Like Shimon ben Shetah, however, Ginsburg also miscalculated and erred. Many who urged her to retire in 2012, when President Barack Obama could have nominated a new justice who would have been approved by the Democratic majority in the Senate. However, this calculation comes with great hindsight. Although RBG seemed to have mastered popular culture, she missed the shift in culture that was represented by the Black Lives Matter movement. She spoke disparagingly of Colin Kaepernick’s protest, and she was part of the majority (with Sonia Sotomayor the lone dissent) in Kansas v. Glover, a case that legitimated traffic stops for no discernible reason.

We are at another moment when it seems that “you can’t be what you can’t see.” Activists in the streets, especially Black activists, are showing us that there is a new vision — a vision of a different kind of safety that is not dependent on armed police and an out-of-control carceral system. That vision is not yet in the court, and if the Senate is able to confirm Trump’s choice for a new justice, that vision may be denied. Without the vision and the courage of Shimon ben Shetah to back it up, the court will be a subsidiary of the executive branch — a rubber stamp to the president’s will. 

Ginsburg’s legacy is that brilliance, tenacity and vision matter. And as Ginsburg showed in her Ledbetter dissent, it is crucial for justices to understand the lived reality of impacted peoples (Ginsburg, for instance, had suffered pay discrimination). This humanity is also part of her legacy. The law cannot be so distant from the people that it loses touch. 

As we enter this new year, it seems that we may have a Yannai that threatens the justices and has no regard for justice. Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s legacy must live on in the form of courage, a courage that all justices must muster to protect our democracy against our president. We must show that courage, too. We must take to the streets to demonstrate that we will not abide a cowed and cowering Supreme Court, that we will have the backs of justices like Sotomayor, who can voice dissent. This will be the way we honor Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s memory.


Aryeh Cohen is professor of rabbinic literature at American Jewish University, the rabbi-in-residence at Bend the Arc: Jewish Action, Kogod Research Fellow of the Shalom Hartman Institute and immediate past co-chair of the Board of Clergy & Laity United for Economic Justice. His latest book is “Justice in the City: An Argument From the Sources of Rabbinic Judaism.”

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The Yom Kippur Sermon Stephen Wise Didn’t Give

Rabbi Stephen S. Wise, the most prominent American Jewish leader of the 1930s and 1940s, was a renowned orator who did not shy away from using his sermons to address social and political controversies. But on Yom Kippur in September 1942, as the Holocaust raged in Europe, the cat got his tongue.

On Aug. 25, 1942, Wise had received a telegram from his trusted colleague in Geneva — World Jewish Congress representative Gerhart Riegner. Citing an informant connected to “the highest German authorities,” Riegner reported that the Nazis intended to deport “all Jews in countries occupied or controlled by Germany” to locations in “the East,” where they would be “exterminated, in order to resolve once and for all the Jewish question in Europe.”

Wise immediately contacted the State Department, where Undersecretary of State Sumner Welles pretended to be surprised. In reality, he and other Roosevelt administration officials had received Riegner’s information days earlier, but suppressed it for fear it would cause Jewish leaders to press for U.S. intervention. Welles said he would investigate Riegner’s message and asked Wise to withhold it from the public in the meantime.

Wise’s agreement to temporarily suppress the telegram has been the subject of much controversy ever since. Several factors need to be considered. First, it is clear from Wise’s private correspondence that he believed Welles would be able to confirm or deny the news in a matter of days. Second, Wise had no way to independently confirm the information and he did not want to risk spreading news that might turn out to be false. He also feared that defying Welles’s request would jeopardize his relationship with the State Department, whose assistance he might need in responding to the mass killings.

Yet Wise went much further than Welles requested. The undersecretary asked him only not to reveal the Riegner telegram but didn’t ask him to refrain from discussing any other Nazi atrocity reports. In the weeks to follow — the three and a half weeks leading up to Yom Kippur — there were many such reports. Yet Wise chose to hold his tongue about them, too.

On Sept. 3, Wise and other Jewish leaders received a telegram from Switzerland-based Orthodox rescue activists that reported, “German authorities have recently evacuated Warsaw Ghetto and bestially murdered about 100,000 Jews. These mass murders are continuing.” A few days later, Wise received a report from the Geneva office of the Jewish Agency for Palestine, based on “two reliable eyewitnesses (Aryans),” that over 100,000 Jews had been systematically slaughtered in Poland and Lithuania “in camps especially prepared for the purpose.”

The Jewish Telegraphic Agency’s (JTA) Daily News Bulletin, which was required reading for American Jewish leaders and served as the major source of international news for the U.S. Jewish news media, provided additional information in the days to follow concerning atrocities in German-occupied territory. In Velizh, the JTA reported, 900 Jews had been confined to a pigsty, which the Germans locked and set ablaze. In Kovno, 800 Jews were herded into a fire station where they were starved for eight days and then shot en masse.

Most alarming was the report that landed on Wise’s desk on Sept. 20, the morning before Yom Kippur, presumably just as he was preparing his remarks for that solemn occasion. According to that day’s JTA Bulletin, “Massacres of Jews on an unprecedented scale are now taking place all over Nazi-occupied Poland,” as part of Germany’s strategy “of total extermination of the Jews in Poland.”

Wise’s annual High Holy Days sermons at his Free Synagogue in Manhattan, attracted the largest audiences of the year, as well as the possibility of coverage by the “New York Times” or other news media. It was a prime opportunity to call attention to the issue that most concerned him. And as the name of the synagogue indicated, Wise founded it on the principle that the rabbi should be completely free to speak his mind.

Yet when he rose to speak on Kol Nidrei evening, the issue Wise chose was not the escalating persecution of the Jews in Europe, it was the compatibility of Judaism and American citizenship. Others might find themselves confounded by “conflicts of loyalties” between their religion and their country, but not the Jews. He assured his congregation, “We have long known that there is no such conflict for us, that our own is an utterly undivided and indivisible allegiance to our country.”

When he rose to speak on Kol Nidrei evening, the issue Rabbi Wise chose was not the escalating persecution of the Jews in Europe. It was the compatibility of Judaism and American citizenship.

Then, on Yom Kippur morning, Wise began his sermon by posing what was apparently the second most urgent question on his mind: “Who is not enthralled by life’s grandeurs?” His answer: While others lived lives in which “barbarism and willful savagery obtain,” the Jews appreciate that “every day presents new and thrilling proofs of the deathless quality of life.” This, he concluded, “was what our fathers meant” in their teachings concerning Yom Kippur.

Wise’s decision to refrain from speaking on Yom Kippur about the mass slaughter in Europe was not the result of his promise to suppress the Riegner telegram. Nothing in Wise’s pledge to Undersecretary Welles precluded him from using his Yom Kippur sermons to speak about the other reports of mass murder.

Wise made a tragic choice — one that should serve as a cautionary tale for Jewish leaders in all generations. They should never be afraid to speak out on behalf of the Jewish people— whether on Yom Kippur or any other day.

Dr. Rafael Medoff is the founding director of The David S. Wyman Institute for Holocaust Studies and the author of more than 20 books about Jewish history and the Holocaust. This essay is based on his most recent book, “The Jews Should Keep Quiet: Franklin D. Roosevelt, Rabbi Stephen S. Wise, and the Holocaust,” published by the Jewish Publication Society of America / University of Nebraska Press.

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More Restrictive Lockdown Set for Israel as Coronavirus Cases Remain at Record Levels

(JTA) — Israelis are facing a much more restrictive general lockdown, including the closure of synagogues, to prevent the record spread of the coronavirus.

The stricter measures approved early Thursday would go into effect hours before Yom Kippur, which starts on Sunday evening. The full Knesset was set to vote on the new restrictions later in the day.

Coronavirus czar Dr. Ronni Gamzu said the new regulations are stricter than they need to be and will cause great economic harm. Gamzu said he was overruled by the government.

On Wednesday, 7,000 new cases were recorded for the second consecutive day. Some 12.9% of the over 50,000 tests conducted were positive.

Under the new regulations, which are set to last for at least two weeks, nearly all businesses will be closed except for those that sell food, pharmacies and others that provide “essential services,” according to a joint statement from the Health Ministry and the Prime Minister’s Office.

People will be restricted from venturing more than 0.6 miles from their homes except for approved reasons, which include individual exercise and the transfer of minor children from one parent to the other in the cases of divorce. Synagogues will be closed except for Yom Kippur, when 25 worshippers are permitted to gather with social distancing. Outdoor worship and demonstrations can include 20 people. Public transportation will be severely reduced.

Much of the debate in the Cabinet centered on whether to allow anti-government protests as well as how much to limit prayer services.

A final decision on demonstrations is set to be made by the Knesset, according to the statement. No final decision had been made on closing Ben Gurion Airport.

Gamzu said that perhaps the measures could have been less restrictive, “but it’s OK that the government made this decision.”

“It’s a message to the public,” he said. “If the government reached the point where it’s imposing such a hermetic seal of all commerce and economic activity, that should say something about how widespread the infections have become.”

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Living Life According to Justice Ginsburg

“A Jew, a woman and a mother, that was a bit much. Three strikes put me out of the game,” Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg once recalled.

Ginsburg’s life meant a lot of things to a lot of people. To Jewish working women and mothers, she was our patron saint. Before the term “glass ceilings” was coined, she shattered them. Before we conceptualized intersectionality or a diversity, equity and inclusion movement, she defined them.

On the morning of Sept. 19, Rosh Hashanah morning, I came down the stairs. Before I even reached the last step, my husband called out to me, his voice shaking, “Randi, I have terrible news.” I thought somebody we loved had died —  and indeed, she had.

As we dwell in the 10 Days of Awe between Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur, we’re asked to seriously consider our mortality and stand in awe of life itself: If we’re inscribed into the Book of Life this year, what will we do with this life?

This year, as we dwell in the Days of Awe, we also are in awe of Ginsburg. Not just of what she accomplished, but what she meant to us. For many of us, that is overwhelming — and that’s OK; awe is, by its very definition, overwhelming in all its wonder and reverence. So as we sit a communal shivah for RBG during these Days of Awe, let’s take time to wonder and marvel at her. Let’s tell her stories and celebrate her life with reverence.

Through reverent tears, many of the Jewish women I’ve spoken with in recent days are overwhelmed because they just can’t imagine the Supreme Court, the country or the world without her. That’s why we should be obligated to take RBG’s legacy with us into our daily lives — which is in and of itself a very Jewish idea.

Famous for chipping away at the wall of gender bias instead of toppling it, the petite associate justice taught us the power of winning the war by winning small battles.

As we say l’dor v’dor, (from generation to generation) we don’t just honor RBG’s legacy as the most influential Jewish American woman of the 20th century. We remind ourselves that it is our responsibility to write the next chapter. One of us will be the RBG of the 21st century: the most influential and beloved Jewish American woman of a century. As we move from generation to generation, many more of us will touch and change the lives of others in the process.

So where do we go from here, at this intersection of grief, memory, celebration and legacy?

Look no further than RBG herself. Honoring her legacy daily and in perpetuity feels like a tall order, but it was she who taught us the power of seemingly “small” actions. Famous for chipping away at the wall of gender bias instead of toppling it, the petite associate justice taught us the power of winning the war by winning small battles. Kabbalah similarly teaches us that each one of us has the ability to tilt the energy of the universe toward good or evil with each of our thoughts, words and deeds. So why not tilt it toward that RBG side each day?

As we consider how to honor her legacy, let’s look to her words for inspiration:

On being more than what you do: “If you want to be a true professional, do something outside of yourself.”

On hope: “So that’s the dissenter’s hope: that they are writing not for today, but for tomorrow.”

On persistence: “Real change, enduring change, happens one step at a time.”

On women in leadership: “Women belong in all places where decisions are being made. It shouldn’t be that women are the exception.”

On being allies as Jewish Americans: “Perhaps I should start by saying, I grew up in the shadow of World War II, and we came to know more and more what was happening to the Jews in Europe. The sense of being an outsider — of being one of the people who had suffered oppression for no sensible reason. It’s the sense of being part of a minority. It makes you more empathetic to other people who are not insiders, who are outsiders.”

On goals and expectations: “You can’t have it all, all at once.”

On being our best self: “I would like to be remembered as someone who used whatever talent she had to do her work to the very best of her ability.”

As we say zichronah livrachah, we know her memory will indeed be a blessing. It’s also a call to action. She personally broke the rules for women in the workplace, then rewrote them for a nation. We should be obligated to follow them — and her.

Randi Braun is an executive coach, consultant, speaker and the founder of Something Major

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