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October 7, 2020

New Roles for ‘Schitt’s Creek’ Star Sarah Levy

“Schitt’s Creek” may have ended, but Sarah Levy is just getting started. Levy, who played Twyla Sands in the Emmy-winning series created by her father Eugene and brother Dan, has been cast in two new roles. She’s currently in Newfoundland, Canada shooting “The Surrealtor,” a Syfy drama series about a real estate agent who specializes in haunted houses. It co-stars her “Creek”-mate Tim Rozon, with whom she posed on set as production began.

https://www.instagram.com/p/CFe-_UXgQck/

Levy has just been cast in the timely indie film “Socially Distancing,” about relationships and their challenges in these pandemic times. Writer-director Chris Blake will shoot the film in New York, Los Angeles and Vancouver using remote technology.

The sixth and final season of “Schitt’s Creek” is now streaming on Netflix.

New Roles for ‘Schitt’s Creek’ Star Sarah Levy Read More »

Rabbi Uri Regev

Rabbi Uri Regev: The 2020 Israeli State and Religion Index

Shmuel Rosner and Rabbi Uri Regev discuss the new Israeli state and religion index published by Hiddush, and its implication on Israeli and world jewry.
Uri Regev is a lawyer and rabbi of the Reform movement in Israel, and an active civil rights and religious pluralism advocate. Currently he serves as the president and CEO of “Hiddush – For Freedom of Religion and Equality,” a trans-denominational nonprofit organization aimed at promoting religious freedom and equality in Israel, a partnership between Israeli Jews and World Jewry, founded in 2009.

Rabbi Uri Regev: The 2020 Israeli State and Religion Index Read More »

Florida School Board Reinstates Principal Who Said He Had to be Neutral on the Holocaust

The Palm Beach County School Board in Florida voted on October 7 to reinstate William Latson, who was fired from his position in 2019 after he said he had to be neutral on the Holocaust.

Latson, the former principal of Spanish River Community High School in Boca Raton, came under fire after the Palm Beach Post unearthed a 2018 email exchange between Latson and a student’s mother where Latson said, “I can’t say the Holocaust is a factual, historical event because I am not in a position to do so as a school district employee.” Latson was suspended for four months and was subsequently fired, in part because he didn’t respond to his supervisors when the controversy broke out.

According to the local NBC affiliate WPTV, the school board voted 4-3 to rehire Latson; he will be placed at an unspecified position in the district and will be paid more than $150,000 in wages from when he was suspended.

Karen Brill, one of the members of the school board, told Latson during the meeting, “You have already been tried and convicted in the eyes of the public, and that is something you will carry with you for the remainder of your career. I hope you understand, Mr. Latson, that this is on you and that you finally take accountability for your words and your actions.”

The board was criticized for its vote.

“Shame on @pbcgov for reinstating William Latson. Refusing to state that the Holocaust happened does not make you ‘politically neutral,’ as Latson claimed,” the American Jewish Committee tweeted. “It makes you a Holocaust denier. How can this man be expected to be a role model for students?”

 

Rep. Vern Buchanan (R-Fl.) similarly tweeted that the vote was “outrageous,” adding in a subsequent tweet, “Six million Jews were systematically murdered by Hitler during World War II. Do we really want a Holocaust denier educating our youngsters?”

 

Latson has claimed that the Palm Beach Post’s original reporting on his email exchange with the student’s mother was inaccurate; in August, Judge Robert Cohen of the Division of Administrative Hearings in Tallahasee determined that the Palm Beach County School Board didn’t have the proper grounds to fire Latson. Cohen acknowledged that while Latson chose his words poorly in the 2018 email exchange and should have kept in better contact with his supervisors, his conduct didn’t amount to gross insubordination, therefore he should have been disciplined or reassigned instead of fired.

Florida School Board Reinstates Principal Who Said He Had to be Neutral on the Holocaust Read More »

Everything ‘Potentially up for Grabs’: What Jewish Groups are Watching for in This Unusual Supreme Court Session

WASHINGTON (JTA) — The uncertainty surrounding the makeup of the Supreme Court led to a quieter-than-normal kickoff for the court’s 2021 decision-making season. But even with the little known about what the country’s highest court will consider, it’s clear that multiple issues of interest to Jewish advocates will be on the docket.

A challenge to a 1990 ruling that has galvanized religious freedom advocates for years is before the court, as is a voting rights case. And if Amy Coney Barrett, President Donald Trump’s nominee to replace Ruth Bader Ginsberg, is confirmed, the list could quickly grow. The same could happen if Trump is elected to a second term next month.

For one thing, cases that draw a 4-4 tie automatically revert to the lower court’s ruling, making them a waste of the court’s time. The court is currently configured five conservatives to three liberals, but Chief Justice John Roberts, a conservative, occasionally swings to join the liberals.

“At this point, anything they haven’t taken could mean the court is not sure that they’re going to be able to get a majority until the ninth justice is confirmed,” said Marc Stern, the American Jewish Committee’s legal counsel and a veteran court watcher.

Because four justices must agree to hear a case, Barrett’s confirmation would also make it easier for some kinds of cases to be taken up.

“We know it only takes four justices to say, ‘Yea’ to take a case, and we know from Judge Amy Coney Barrett’s background that she’s hostile to the Affordable Care Act, certainly, and to Roe v. Wade, and precedent is definitely, she has stated, not a priority for her and so everything that we care about is potentially up for grabs,” said Jody Rabhan, the policy chief for the National Council of Jewish Women.

Here’s a glance at what Jewish groups are watching out for this coming session.

Adoption agencies and prospective foster parents face off in Philly

The rights of agencies that foster children versus the rights of their would-be parents also pits the American Jewish community’s Orthodox bodies against its civil rights groups.

In Fulton v. the City of Philadelphia, an adoption agency is challenging the city for cutting off funding because the agency would not place foster children with same-sex parents. The court will hear oral arguments on Nov. 4, the day after the election.

The Anti-Defamation League filed a friend of the court brief arguing that requiring Philadelphia to exempt religious agencies would roll back hard-fought discrimination protections.

“Requiring such an exception for Petitioners in this case would cause a flood of demands for similar exemptions, undermining the efficacy of those laws in safeguarding vulnerable members of the population, including religious minorities and members of other marginalized communities,” said the amicus brief, which cited cases in which Jewish parents have been denied the opportunity to foster children.

Joining the ADL on the amicus brief are an array of groups favoring church-state separations, including a who’s who of the liberal Jewish establishment: Bend the Arc, Jewish Women International, Keshet, the National Council of Jewish Women and T’ruah.

Steve Freeman, the ADL’s vice president of civil rights, said the adoption agency in the case was using religious freedom as a “sword and not a shield” to blunt the freedoms of others.

“‘Because we have our religious views, we can use taxpayer dollars to refuse to allow gay couples to adopt a foster child’ to me should be a non-starter,” he said.

Jewish groups lined up on the other side include the Orthodox Union and Agudath Israel of America. Both groups have signed onto amicus briefs on the side of the adoption agency, but not necessarily because they oppose placing foster children with same-sex couples.

“It’s not about what is the right or wrong approach for foster care and adoption in particular, it’s more about defending the longstanding principle that in American society and under the First Amendment, we should find ways to accommodate different religious groups and religious minorities and religious practices,” said Nathan Diament, the Orthodox Union’s Washington director.

Instead, an array of conservative religious groups see the Philadelphia case as a way into overturning a decision they have despised since it was made in 1990, Employment Division v. Smith, that upheld a drug rehabilitation clinic’s right to fire two Native American employees who smoked peyote as part of a religious ritual.

“As everybody said back in the early 90s, this was the Dred Scott case of religious freedom and it continues to be,” Rabbi Abba Cohen, Agudath Israel’s Washington director, referring to the notorious 19th-century decision that upheld slavery.

Smith, as it is commonly known, gave states wide — some would say total — latitude to reject religious exemptions to laws. The decision spurred the passage in 1993 of the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, but the Supreme Court subsequently ruled the law held only for the federal government and was unconstitutional when other entities were accused of not granting exemptions for religious beliefs.

Rabhan of NCJW said the particulars of the Philadelphia case were germane to why Jewish groups should uphold the city’s right to defund the adoption agency.

“Placing children in foster homes and using religion as a way in which to accept or reject otherwise qualified placements, based on religious beliefs, is core to who we are as an organization,” she said.

Cases about days off work for religious reasons could make the cut

Orthodox Jewish and other religiously conservative groups would like to see discarded a 1977 decision that upheld the right of the now defunct Trans World Airlines to fire a man whose Christian sect forbade work on Saturday.

There are an array of cases in the lower courts that they hope the court will seize upon to overturn TWA v. Hardison, a decision written so broadly that Cohen says he advises people not to file lawsuits challenging employers who will not allow time off for the Jewish Sabbath or holy days.

“I tell people, your rights have been violated and you have a case but, you know, the law is so weak that to invest all that time and resources aggravation on a case that you don’t have much of a chance to win, I just can’t advise you with a clear conscience,” he said.

Considered most likely to rise to the Supremes’ docket is Dalberiste V. GLE Associates, the case of a Seventh Day Adventist who sought sabbaths off from his power plant employer.

Growing attention to voting rights

Jewish civil liberties groups are pouring energy into voting access this year. They are also closely watching an Arizona voting rights case the court will consider this session in which the state has restricted what Trump and Republicans call “ballot harvesting,” collecting early ballots from voters.

Another voting rights case the court may take up is a law passed by Florida’s Republican-led legislature and enacted by its Republican governor that guts a 2018 ballot measure that allowed most former felons to vote. The law requires the former felons to pay outstanding fines and court fees, and critics have argued it amounts to an unconstitutional poll tax.

Religious liberty issues could get a hearing

The court this week heard oral arguments in Tanzin v. Tanvir, the case of three Muslim men who would not act as federal informants in their own community. The federal government, they allege, retaliated by placing them on no-fly lists. They are suing for damages under the Religious Freedom Restoration Act. Orthodox Jewish groups are paying attention to the case to see whether the beleaguered law they once hoped would ensure their freedoms will take another beating.

Stern said to also watch out for challenges to state orders enforcing coronavirus pandemic restrictions on houses of worship. The court has before this session twice rejected appeals from churches against the restrictions, but Justice Brett Kavanaugh’s forceful dissent in a Nevada case suggests that the court’s conservatives are itching to again take on the pandemic restrictions.

The potential for precedent-overturning cases is high

Perhaps the most prominent case that could be overturned if Barrett is confirmed is Roe. V. Wade, the 1973 decision that enshrined the right to abortion. Rabhan said there were at least 17 challenges to Roe v. Wade in lower courts that the Supreme Court could consider, and both she and the AJC’s Stern said they were certain that abortion would come up this session, and in a way that could once and for all overturn Roe v. Wade.

Already, the court has indicated an interest in revisiting the issue of marriage equality, enshrined only in 2015 by Obergefell v. Hodges and another case that upheld the right to same-sex marriage.

The justices this week allowed to proceed a lawsuit two gay couples brought against Kim Davis, a Kentucky clerk who refused to grant them marriage licenses. Davis wanted the lawsuit quashed. However, two of the court’s most conservative justices, Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito, suggested that the court could soon consider a more appropriate case that would overturn Obergefell v. Hodges.

“This petition provides a stark reminder of the consequences of Oberfegell,” Thomas wrote. “By choosing to privilege a novel constitutional right over the religious liberty interests explicitly protected in the First Amendment, and by doing so undemocratically, the Court has created a problem that only it can fix.”

Rabhan said she heard a warning in Thomas’s statement.

“It was almost as if it was a dog whistle, to the Senate and certainly to Judge Barrett, that they too don’t prioritize precedent, and it’s frightening to think about rights that we have being taken away and it’s as easy as filling one seat to make that happen,” Rabhan said.

Everything ‘Potentially up for Grabs’: What Jewish Groups are Watching for in This Unusual Supreme Court Session Read More »

Lili Markowitz, Factor’s Famous Deli Owner, 94

Lili Markowitz, the matriarch of Factor’s Famous Deli, died Sept. 26. She was 94.

Her death was announced on the Facebook page of the popular Pico Boulevard restaurant: “Today we lost the Queen of our family,” the post stated, adding she died surrounded by her family.

Born Lili Katz on Feb. 11, 1926, she met Herman Markowitz at the end of World War II in a Romanian displaced persons camp. They immigrated to the United States in 1947, originally settling in Cleveland before moving to Los Angeles in 1963.

Herman “thought there was more opportunity in California for his five children,” their daughter Suzee told the Journal in 2018, during Factor’s 70th anniversary.

Herman, who had run a restaurant in Prague before the war, started working at Nate ’n Al’s in Beverly Hills. He bought Factor’s from the original owners, Abe and Esther Factor, in 1969, and under the Markowitzes’ management the restaurant became a regular stop for residents of its West Los Angeles neighborhood and movie stars who worked at the nearby 20th Century Fox lot.

Markowitz’s regular presence was a big part of Factor’s appeal. “She lit up the room and was always so kind and wonderful to us all,” Nicole Leibovitz Lange wrote on the deli’s Facebook page. Markowitz remained active in the business, arriving at the restaurant daily at 2 p.m. for lunch. “She’s like our salt-control person. She’ll yell at the chef if she tastes too much salt in the soup,” her daughter Debbie Ullman told Food and Wine magazine in 2018.

Markowitz is survived by her five children, Marvin, Suzee, Fred, Debbie and Edie, seven grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren.

On Sept. 27, the hearse carrying Markowitz’s body drove past Factor’s where, according to KCBS-TV, dozens of customers stood outside the delicatessen to pay their respects.

Lili Markowitz, Factor’s Famous Deli Owner, 94 Read More »

De Blasio Warns of ‘Consequences’ After NYC Chasidic Community Protests Lockdowns

New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio warned that there would be “consequences” after the Orthodox-Jewish community’s protests against lockdowns in their respective neighborhoods.

The latest measures from New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) closed schools and restricted the number of people gathering in houses of worship. Cuomo’s restrictions, which he applied to which he applied to nine ZIP codes that have seen recent spikes in COVID-19 cases, are primarily Chasidic areas. In his presentation explaining the restrictions, Cuomo featured a photo of a mass gathering of Chasidic Jews from 2006; his senior adviser Rich Azzopardi tweeted that the photo was a “staff error.”

Some of the protesters burned masks and blocked a bus, according to Jewish Telegraphic Agency (JTA), and one Chasidic Jew was assaulted after he reportedly was accused of being a “snitch” for recording a video of the protest.

“The NYPD (New York Police Department) will not tolerate people doing harm to others,” de Blasio said during an Oct. 7 press briefing. “There will be no tolerance for setting fires. If anyone commits an act of assault, of course there will be consequences.”

The NYPD did not issue any arrests or summons for protests on Oct. 6, but on Oct. 5, the NYPD broke up a gathering of Jews celebrating Sukkot in the streets. A video of them doing so went viral on Twitter, prompting President Donald Trump to share a tweet from actor James Woods calling de Blasio “an anti-Semitic thug.”

“What does this grim picture remind you of?” Trump tweeted. “I am the only thing in the Radical Left’s way! VOTE.”

De Blasio Warns of ‘Consequences’ After NYC Chasidic Community Protests Lockdowns Read More »

Leila Khaled Says Jews ‘Are Now Playing the Same Role as Hitler’ in Webinar

On October 3, Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) member Leila Khaled said that Jews are currently “playing the same role as [Adolf] Hitler.”

The Anti-Defamation League (ADL) reported that Khaled was the keynote speaker on a webinar hosted by the International League for the Peoples’ Struggle’s (ILPS)the ADL described the ILPS as a “far-left ‘anti-imperialist’ group.” The ADL quoted Khaled as saying during the webinar, “The Jews were oppressed…in Europe, by the Nazis. Now they are playing the same role of Hitler. They are playing the role…a new copy of Nazis just to end us.”

Khaled also said that the Palestinians “are still determined to continue using all means of struggle, including armed struggle” and accused the Israeli police of teaching other countries “how to suppress the people.” She continued, “I’m very sure that all the documents that we have shows that this is one of the main tools that is done by the Israelis and the Zionists in the world.”

Khaled had been scheduled to speak at a San Francisco State University Arabs and Muslim Ethnicities Diaspora Studies department Zoom webinar on September 23; Zoom announced on September 22 that it was barring the webinar from its platform. The next day, Facebook removed the event page and the link to the webinar. YouTube allowed the webinar to stream for a little more than 20 minutes before cutting off the stream.

Khaled, now 76, was among the terrorists who hijacked commercial jetliners in 1969 and 1970. Her attempt to detonate grenades on the 1970 flight were thwarted, and no one was injured or killed in either incident.

“While properly protected by the First Amendment, hosting or venerating Khaled and others who advocate violence can serve to legitimize terrorism,” the ADL concluded in its post on Khaled’s October 3 webinar.

Leila Khaled Says Jews ‘Are Now Playing the Same Role as Hitler’ in Webinar Read More »

Chelsea Handler Returns to Standup Comedy in HBO Max Special

Chelsea Handler will return to her standup comedy roots for the first time in six years with “Chelsea Handler: Evolution,” premiering Oct. 22 on HBO Max.

In the special, Handler shares her experiences, thoughts and honest perspectives about family, friendships, therapy and her journey to self-awareness.

Coming on the heels of her bestselling memoir “Life Will Be the Death of Me,” the hour-long special was taped this summer in New Jersey in front of a live audience, with COVID social distancing and safety precautions in place.

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Israel and UAE Foreign Ministers Tour Berlin Holocaust Monument in Historic First Meeting

(JTA) — In a historic meeting, the foreign ministers of Israel and the United Arab Emirates met in Berlin and visited the city’s main Holocaust monument together on Tuesday.

Less than a month after signing a peace deal that normalized relations between the Middle Eastern neighbors, Israel’s Gabi Ashkenazi and the UAE’s Abdullah bin Zayed Al Nahyan walked through the large monument of concrete blocks symbolizing the Jews killed by the Nazis in a meeting that was both symbolic and productive — according to reports, the pair discussed trade and tourism issues.

The two diplomats toured the monument along with German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas, who said that the meeting and the peace deal shows “that peaceful coexistence in the Middle East is possible.” Israel also signed an agreement with the Arab nation Bahrain on the same day at the White House.

“I salute the souls of those who fell victim to the Holocaust,” Al Nahyan wrote in the monument’s guestbook. He also quoted from a Jewish prayer translated into Arabic: “May their souls be bound up in the binds of life.”

He also wrote “Never again” in English and in Arabic, according to The Times of Israel. Ashkenazi said the meeting “symbolizes the beginning of a new era. An era of peace between peoples.”

In another show of solidarity, the world’s tallest building, located in Dubai, the UAE capital, erected a sukkah this week, the Associated Press reported. Jews construct the hut structures as part of the Sukkot holiday, which continues through the end of this week.

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Jewish Journal to Expand Online Reach. Print to Resume After Synagogues Reopen.

Since this horrible pandemic started, I have recorded 93 episodes of my “Pandemic Times” podcast and written countless columns, all trying to help us make sense of a chaotic, tumultuous, bewildering and maddening year, when so many lives have been turned upside-down and so many of our physical spaces have been shut down.

For a paper like the Jewish Journal that depends on these physical spaces for distribution throughout our community, the lockdown presents an obvious challenge. As many of you know, we have a fast-growing and significant online presence at Jewishjournal.com, which has helped us compensate for the pandemic-era limitations of physical distribution.

Because the Journal is a nonprofit, we distribute the paper for free across the community. Readers can pick it up at various locations, especially synagogues. When those synagogues and other locations began closing in March as part of the national lockdown, we pushed our way through, found some new locations, and posted a PDF version of the paper online, always hoping that the lockdown would soon end and synagogues would reopen.

Obviously, that hasn’t happened. In light of this reality, we have decided it makes sense to take a hiatus from the print edition until our main distribution outlets — synagogues — reopen. After this week’s edition, we will provide our fresh content exclusively online.

Above all, we will expand our global reach and continue to look for diverse voices across the ideological spectrum to provide insightful commentary.

Much of my writing and podcasting this year has been about nurturing resiliency and looking for “silver linings.” Is there a silver lining to our print hiatus? Yes, there is.

Our new Jewishjournal.com website will be as nourishing as ever. You’ll get everything you love about the Journal and more. Our Morning Roundtable gives you three fresh takes on the hottest issues of the day. Among the new features, we’re launching a Jewish Streaming Guide that will curate the most interesting streaming events in the Jewish world.

For those who don’t use digital devices on Shabbat, we will provide “print-at-home” options for favorites such as our “Table for Five” Torah page.

Above all, we will expand our global reach and continue to look for diverse voices across the ideological spectrum to provide insightful commentary. As our partisan divisions become more and more pronounced, our mission remains to elevate, enrich and deepen the communal conversation. We don’t always succeed, but we always try.

In an odd way, this expansion of online makes me feel closer to the community, because this is precisely what so many Jewish organizations have been forced to do during this lockdown year. Just as our community has had to adapt and get creative, the Journal is doing the same.

If there’s one thing I’ve learned in 2020, it’s that we’ve all been humbled by this lethal microbe. We’ve all been wrenched out of our comfort zones. We’ve all been forced to ditch old habits and adopt new ones. The question is: Can we come out ahead?

To quote a line from Rabbi Steve Leder that I often repeat on my podcast, if we have to go through hell, at least let’s not come out “empty-handed.” By significantly upgrading our online presence, both for our readers and advertisers, we at the Journal are aiming to do just that — to come out ahead.

On a personal note, ever since the Journal invited me to write a career-altering column (“Live in the Hood”) in August 2006, I haven’t stopped sharing my thoughts in the paper with you, the readers, week after week. Those columns (which are gathered in large scrapbooks) are my concrete legacy to a community I love.

The miracle of digital will enable this relationship to continue. If anything, I plan to write more often and gather more thought-provoking and timely content from writers around the world. We still will be a gathering place for the local community, but through the power of technology.

The reality today is that most people get their news and information through digital devices. During this print hiatus, we will take full advantage of multiple digital platforms and social media, including our podcast network, to maximize the reach of our content.

next time you show up at your favorite synagogue on a Shabbat or holiday, expect to be greeted again by your favorite Jewish paper.

I’m full of gratitude to everyone who helps produce this amazing paper every week, and to all of our loyal readers and advertisers. As we approach Simchat Torah, which signifies both an end and a beginning, I can say that for me, this moment represents more of a beginning than an end.

I’m excited about the possibilities of online, but I haven’t forgotten the power of paper. There’s a role for both. That means that next time you show up at your favorite synagogue on a Shabbat or holiday, expect to be greeted again by your favorite Jewish paper.

In the meantime, we’ll see you all on Jewishjournal.com.

Jewish Journal to Expand Online Reach. Print to Resume After Synagogues Reopen. Read More »