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July 15, 2022

Biden Admin to Provide $316 Million to the Palestinians

The Biden administration announced on July 15 that they will be providing $316 million in aid to the Palestinians.

According to a fact sheet from the White House, the United States will be providing $100 million to Palestinian hospitals in East Jerusalem incrementally over the course of several years; the $100 million, provided by the U.S. Agency for International Development, will be subject to congressional approval. Additionally, $201 million will be provided to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestinian Refugees (UNRWA) and $15 million in humanitarian aid through the U.N.’s World Food Program and two unspecified NGOs. The administration is also committing to providing 4G to the Palestinians in both the West Bank and Gaza Strip.

Former Israeli Ambassador to the U.N. Danny Danon criticized the UNRWA funding, telling Jewish Insider: “It is well established that schools run by UNRWA preach hate and murder of Jews” and “that some UNRWA teachers and staff have close ties to terror organizations such as Hamas.” UN Watch Executive Director Hillel Neuer tweeted that the administration’s “money will directly fund UNRWA teachers and staff who call to murder Jews,” as UN Watch has “easily identified 120 UNRWA teachers, school principals and other employees who praise Hitler, glorify terrorist attacks and spread antisemitism.” “UNRWA has never fired any,” Neuer added. “On the contrary: They attack & defame us for exposing their antisemitic hate.”

The Times of Israel (TOI) reported that the Palestinian Authority (PA) views the Biden administration’s aid as “little more than a fig leaf without diplomatic progress toward a two-state solution.”

President Joe Biden held a joint press conference with PA President Mahmoud Abbas and called for “two states along the 1967 lines, with mutually agreed-to swaps, remain the best way to achieve an equal measure of security, prosperity, freedom and democracy for the Palestinians as well as Israelis” but acknowledged that “the ground is not ripe at this moment to restart negotiations.” Biden’s suggestion that this is not the time to begin negotiations again irked the PA, per TOI.

Though Biden did not explicitly endorse Abbas’ desire for East Jerusalem to be the capital of a future Palestinian state, pre-1967 borders would essentially put East Jerusalem under PA control. The Jerusalem Post also reported that Biden’s motorcade removed their Israeli flags while they were visiting PA institutions in East Jerusalem; some viewed it as an implicit statement that Israel doesn’t have sovereignty over that area. Israel views all of Jerusalem as its capital.

Simon Wiesenthal Center Founder and Dean Rabbi Marvin Hier and Associate Dean and Director of Global Social Action Agenda Rabbi Abraham Cooper said in a statement that anything short of Jerusalem as Israel’s undivided capital is a “nonstarter.” “Jerusalem is the eternal capital of the Jewish people and has been for over 3,000 years,” they said. “There is only one Jewish state and there are 22 Arab states with capitals of their own. We believe in the potential of a two-state solution that can only be done if Palestinian leaders, UNWRA school books, and Palestinian civil society recognizes the legitimacy of their Jewish neighbors which includes the continuous presence of the Jewish people in their homeland. Jerusalem is non-negotiable. Palestinians can have their own capital, in Ramallah, and must not feed the delusions that Israel will ever cede their sovereignty. No other country must face such a demand, and neither should Israel.”

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The Ultimate Question of Jewish History

It is a verse that directly challenges the contemporary Jew. At the outset of Bilaam’s prophecy, he declares: “Behold, a people that dwells alone, and is not counted among the nations.” To medieval commentaries, the verse was a roadmap; the Jews are meant to live separate lives, and because of this they will not assimilate. Even in the modern era, many turned to this verse for inspiration. In his commentary to the Torah, Rabbi Naftali Tzi Berlin, the Netziv, argues for the importance of Jews remaining apart from non-Jewish society, because separation diminishes antisemitism. He writes that: “It is a people that dwells alone; not like all other nations and cultures, that when they go into exile and mingle within their new countries, they win even more love and respect, because they are no longer separated (by national distinctions) … Israel is not like that; when they are alone and don’t assimilate, they can dwell in tranquility and honor … but when they try to mix, they are not reckoned among the nations and are not even considered to be humans.” In middle of the 19th century, the Netziv makes the assertion that assimilation provokes antisemitism; and this describes a developing trend in his own time, of ugly, antisemitic reactions to assimilated Jews entering mainstream society.

Once the ghetto walls came down, Jewish separation became a matter of choice. The question arose whether Jews should still follow the directive to “not be counted among the nations.” Many felt continued separation would be a mistake, and instead embraced emancipation as an opportunity to transform the Jewish community. Dwelling alone was not meant to be the eternal reality of the Jewish people, and now Jews had an opportunity to pursue normalcy. They desired to be a people and a nation like any other and fit in everywhere. They would dress like everyone else, pray in the same language as everyone else, and go to school with everyone else; they would be a Jew at home, and a citizen in the street. The hope was that this verse would disappear, a relic of a past era of exclusion and discrimination.

Within the Orthodox community, many saw abandoning the mindset of “a people that dwells alone” as a mistake, and a roadmap for assimilation. One of the most prominent exponents of this view was Yaakov Herzog. The son of the second Chief Rabbi of Israel, Yaakov Herzog was brilliant and eloquent, an accomplished rabbinic scholar as well as a distinguished intellectual and diplomat; among other accomplishments, he initiated Israel’s dialogue with Jordan’s King Hussein. In 1965, Herzog was offered the posts of Chief Rabbi of England and the director of the Prime Minister’s office at around the same time. After he tragically passed away at age 50, a collection of his speeches was published under the title of “A People that Dwells Alone”; and it was this verse to which Herzog returned repeatedly, which he saw as central to understanding Jewish identity. In one speech from 1967, Herzog relates how he hosted in Israel 15 heads of theological graduate schools from the United States. He asked them to respond to this verse: “has this prophecy remained true to the present day? Has it been fulfilled in the realities of our history?” He explains that even these Christian clergymen admitted that “a people that dwells alone” was an eternal reality. In multiple lectures Herzog argued that Jews will never be able to fully integrate into the diaspora; and more importantly, Jews must follow their unique destiny, one that sets them apart from the rest of the world.

A very different response to this question was offered by Rabbi Jonathan Sacks. He tells of a Shavuot lunch in 2001 that he shared with Irwin Cotler, a member of the Canadian Parliament and a professor of international law at McGill University, along with a senior Israeli diplomat. Cotler with sounding the alarm on the upcoming United Nations conference in Durban, which he was concerned would become a platform for anti-Israel and antisemitic propaganda. (Unfortunately, Cotler’s worst nightmares came true.) As the discussion was proceeding, the Israeli diplomat interrupted to explain that one shouldn’t be too shocked about antisemitism, because “It was ever thus,” for the Torah says the Jews are a people that dwells alone. Rabbi Sacks responded sharply to the diplomat’s suggestion: “What makes you so sure that Baalam meant those words as a blessing? Might it have not been that he intended them as a curse?” Sacks explains that the Hebrew word used for alone, “baddad,” is often used to portray unhappy loneliness. He argues that the Jewish self-image of standing alone is actually what causes our alienation from others. Sacks concludes by saying “Jews have enemies … But we also have friends. And if we worked harder at it, we would have more.”

At first glance, Herzog and Sacks have dramatically different viewpoints. But both recognize that the alternative to being a people that dwells alone is not unqualified universalism. Sacks lists several ways in which the dream of universalism failed the Jews. He writes that in the 19th century, after Jewish emancipation, too many assumed that the new political age represented the fulfillment of the Messianic redemption. He quotes a German newspaper, which in 1843 reported that the local Reform Jews believed “that the Messiah had come in the form of the German fatherland.” Similarly, the 1885 Pittsburgh Platform of American Reform Movement declared that the modern era represented “The approaching of the realization of Israel’s great Messianic hope for the establishment of the kingdom of truth, Justice, and peace among all men. We consider ourselves no longer a nation but a religious community.” Then came the 20th century, and these dreams proved to be a mirage. Jews who were intoxicated with the delusions of universalism were unprepared for the disaster that would ensue.

Herzog quotes a similar story about Leon Trotsky. In 1917, after he was named the Bolshevik Minister of Defense, an old rabbi came to see Trotsky. He had once taught a young boy named Leibele Bronstein, and heard that now Leibele was a leader of the Communist movement, which was shuttering Jewish schools and synagogues. The Rabbi approached his former pupil, wondering how it was possible that his beloved Leibele was the one leading the charge to destroy Judaism. Trosky explained to his rabbi that actually he was attempting to bring about the realization of the greatest hopes of the Jews: the coming of the Messiah. But instead of the Messiah only helping the Jews, through Communism one could support “a universal development that would flood the entire world … The time had come for Judaism to merge into this universal movement for the redemption of humanity.” Ultimately, Trotsky’s dream was a catastrophic failure, both for the Soviet Union and himself. Both Sacks and Herzog point out how universalism has failed the Jews in the past, and even Sacks agrees they cannot just be another nation among the nations.

It is often universalism that presents the greatest challenge to Jewish identity, especially on college campuses. In a speech from 1970, Herzog refers to young Jewish intellectuals on campuses who repudiate any idea such as “a people that dwells alone” as being egocentric, a rejection of progress, an abnormality, a self-imposed ghetto—in short, something that 20th-century civilization cannot tolerate. This hostility is even more present today. Instead of Israel being the 3,300 year old homeland of the Jews, it is viewed as colonialism’s original sin, one that intersects every form of racism and chauvinism. Antisemitism, the world’s oldest hatred, is belittled as an “eternal victim narrative,” just another piece of Zionist propaganda. And the Holocaust? It is seen as ancient history, which contributes primarily to Jewish paranoia. The only way for young Jews to redeem themselves from the curse of Judaism is to renounce the Zionist heresy, the ultimate crime against universalism. Yes, these critics do allow that a Jew should be proud of their Jewishness, provided that it is innocuous. It is permissible to enjoy Yiddish culture and a good bagel, provided a Jew is first and foremost a citizen of the world, an activist interested in every cause except their own. Ironically, the intense insistence on the importance of universalism actually distinguishes these Jews. As Cynthia Ozick put it in an oft quoted essay from 1974, “Only Jews carry on this way. Universalism is the ultimate Jewish parochialism.” Perhaps being a people that dwells alone is a curse; but universalism has become a serious threat to Jewish identity.

On the other hand, it is important to recognize that universalism has been very much a part of Judaism from the very beginning. Abraham was told that his mission was to be a blessing for all the nations of the earth; and Isaiah calls the Jews a light unto the nations, meant to bring goodness to the entire world. But it is here that the struggle begins; how can a people that dwells alone also be a light unto the nations? In isolation there is no influence.

On the other hand, it is important to recognize that universalism has been very much a part of Judaism from the very beginning.

The outline of a resolution can be found in fascinating Jewish law. The very same mitzvah that emphasizes how Jews must dwell alone is also the foundation of Jewish universalism. The commandment of Kiddush Hashem, to sanctify God’s name, carries two very different obligations. The first is yehareg v’al yaavor, to give up one’s life rather than violate the sin of idolatry. Jews through the ages accepted martyrdom rather than betray their religious beliefs; and in medieval Europe, Jews refused to become Christians, even when a sword was held to their neck. This aspect of Kiddush Hashem is the ultimate expression of a people that dwells alone; Jews would rather give up their lives than accept the religion of their neighbors.

Yet there is a second aspect to Kiddush Hashem: acting in a manner that brings honor to God and the Torah. The classic example of this is a passage in the Talmud Yerushalmi, which tells the story of Rabbi Shimon ben Shetach, who had bought a donkey from a non-Jew. Upon examination, he found a diamond attached to its saddle that its owner had forgotten and abandoned. Shimon Ben Shetach insisted on returning the diamond. When his students asked him why he was returning a valuable, abandoned object, he replied: “What do you think, that Shimon ben Shetach is a barbarian? Shimon ben Shetach would rather hear [the owner exclaim] ‘blessed is the God of the Jews’ than receive all of the rewards possible in this world.” Maimonides sees this story as an example of true Kiddush Hashem; and one sanctifies God’s name by acting according to the highest ethical standards and spreading the light of the Torah through the world.

These two definitions of Kiddush Hashem sit side by side. Both fierce loyalty to Judaism and authentic devotion to all of humanity are demanded of every Jew. But this confrontation with competing obligations has proved difficult in practice. Some take comfort by retreating into a ghetto, forgetting 99.8% of humanity. And all too often, the response is to go in the other direction, transforming universalism into the only meaningful mitzvah of Judaism.

Neither alternative is acceptable. And this is the ultimate challenge for 21st-century Jews: Can we faithfully embrace Judaism and love humanity at the very same time? Yaakov Herzog put it this way: “three thousand years ago, Balaam the prophet described the children of Israel as a people that dwells alone … The problem is whether this concept denotes a privilege, (not an escape from society, but a unique role within it), or whether it is an anomaly which must be denied and discarded. This is the question of Jewish history.”


Rabbi Chaim Steinmetz is the Senior Rabbi of Congregation Kehilath Jeshurun in New York.

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“My Name Is Sara” Depicts Jewish WWII Refugee in Ukraine

Three dead people hang from a tree with a sign that reads “We hid Jews.” It’s a scene that encapsulates the fear tactics the Nazis used to deter anyone from assisting the Jewish people during World War II. 

The film “My Name Is Sara” tells the true and arduous story of a Jewish girl who survived by pretending not to be Jewish. It shows how Sara Góralniak (Zuzanna Surowy), a 12-year-old living in Poland, took refuge on a farm in Ukraine for two years while hiding every aspect of her Jewish identity. Every second that she was there she knew that if she were found, she and the family that protected her would be murdered. 

“She was constantly living on eggshells that entire time, which is an obviously awful environment to have to live under,” said director Steven Oritt.  

“She was constantly living on eggshells that entire time, which is an obviously awful environment to have to live under.” – Steven Oritt 

Throughout the film, Sara endears herself to the family who allows her to work on their farm: Pavlo (Eryk Lubos), his wife Nadya (Michalina Olszańska) and their two young sons. Sara proves herself to be a capable farmhand and a non-Jew by reciting the Lord’s Prayer, eating pork, saying she’s 14 and even assuming a new name. She endures skepticism from the family that has taken her in, while also slowly proving herself useful and not threatening their safety. 

There are scenes of animals being slaughtered, as is normal on any farm. But there’s humanity in those moments, which is in contrast to the graphic and sadistic threats and murders of the townspeople at the hands of the Nazis. 

The ensemble is strong, making every peril Sara and the family confront vivid and poignant, their eyes and body language expressing the characters’ fear and determination. No moment illustrates this better than Sara, riding a horse drawn buggy into town with Pavlo and Nadya’s family, sees three townspeople hanging from a tree for hiding Jews. Both Nadya and Sara cover the two little boys’ eyes. Sara’s dreams of reuniting with her family turn to nightmares when their reunion is discovered by Nazis. 

Surprisingly, the starring role of Sara was Surowy’s first time acting. Thrust into a movie set and working in English, which is not her first language, Surowy’s experience mirrors Sara’s. There’s a fear, a wariness, to her performance, that’s most effective when Sara, who had never worked on a farm or been away from her family, is forced to adapt to her new world.     

“We weren’t going to make the film if we didn’t find somebody that we felt as though could pull it off,” said Oritt. 

While the two previous films he directed were documentaries, this is the first scripted film Oritt’s directed. “When I first interviewed [the real] Sara, the first question I asked was ‘How does a child, a 12-year old, survive such a thing?’ Because it was an unimaginable event. How could she do this constantly, making the right choice happen? And she said immediately, ‘by listening and not talking.’”

The film is executive produced by Mickey Shapiro  — the son of Sara Góralniak and Asa Shapiro — who was born in a displaced person’s camp. Sara survived, and her story was recorded for the archives of the USC Shoah Foundation before her passing in 2018. According to the USC Shoah Foundation, Mickey is involved in multiple charities and organizations dedicated to preserving the memory of the Holocaust. 

Though it was screened at film festivals in 2019, “My Name Is Sara” is making its way across the country, playing in Los Angeles July 19 at the Museum of Tolerance at 7:30 p.m. There will be a question and answer session with director Steven Oritt and lead actress Zuzanna Surowy after the screening. Tickets can be purchased through the Museum of Tolerance: https://www.museumoftolerance.com/events/mynameissara.html. 

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Yeshiva University Gains Access to Shoah Foundation Archive

Yeshiva University (YU) in New York has become the latest institution to acquire the unabridged version of the Shoah Foundation Visual History Archive, featuring 55,000 video testimonies on the Holocaust and other genocides.

Director Steven Spielberg established the archive nearly 30 years ago as part of an effort to videotape and preserve interviews with Holocaust survivors and eyewitnesses. 

In acquiring the Visual History Archive, YU joins Columbia, NYU, Yale, Rutgers and Princeton as one of a handful of universities in the New York-metro area with access to the archive. It will be accessible to all current YU students as well as to all faculty and staff on campus and by authentication off campus. 

The archive’s powerful and patented built-in search engine allows the user to home in on certain localities, events and people and to study the history of the Holocaust on the local level – to the Jews of a given town, community and family, all the way to a single Holocaust survivor. 

Every testimony is fully searchable to the minute via careful indexing. 

“I am thrilled that we’re able to provide a resource that faculty and students have been requesting since my association with the University Libraries began in 2015,” Paul Glassman, director of scholarly and cultural resources at YU, said in a statement. “Yeshiva University researchers will benefit from the robust search function the Archive provides for its 114,000 hours of testimony. Equally impressive is the universal approach the Archive takes to helping us understand the persistent threat of genocide around the world.”

“Equally impressive is the universal approach the Archive takes to helping us understand the persistent threat of genocide around the world.” – Paul Glassman

Along with the Holocaust, the archive contains testimonies from the 1937 Nanjing massacre in China; the 1994 genocide against the Tutsi in Rwanda; the Armenian genocide that coincided with World War I; the Guatemalan genocide of 1978-1983; and the Cambodian genocide of 1975-1979. 

Reflecting the ambitiousness of the testimony-gathering effort, the interviews in the archive have been conducted in 65 countries and 43 languages. Users can search through testimony using more than 66,000 keywords that have been assigned to digital time codes. 

The archive, the largest digital collection of its kind in the world, contains more than 720,000 photographs and images, along with nearly two million personal names.

YU’s Shay Pilnik is the grandson of Holocaust survivors. Using the archive, the director of the university’s Emil and Jenny A. Fish Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies was able to read the testimony of his late great uncle, who survived the Holocaust as a partisan in Belarus.   

“Acquiring the Shoah Foundation archives will help the Fish Center at Yeshiva to train the next generation of leaders in the field, at a time when survivors are rapidly leaving us,” Pilnik said. “We simply cannot fulfill our ambitious mission without this incredible repository of over 50,000 survivor testimonies. And while the purpose of adding this database is mainly academic, you do not need to be a Holocaust studies scholar in order to realize how powerful this multi-lingual, international treasure trove of survivor testimonies is.”

According to YU, a unique collaboration between the university’s libraries, the Fish Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies and the Dr. Lillian and Dr. Rebecca Chutick Law Library of the Cordozo School of Law made the recent acquisition possible. 

Jocelyn Getgen Kestenbaum, associate professor of clinical law at YU’s Cardozo School of Law, said acquiring the archive offers significant learning opportunities for YU students and staff alike. “It is important when we come together to remember the Holocaust, [and] that we [emphasize] survivors’ voices and keep alive their narratives,” she said. “The Shoah Foundation Visual History Archive is a crucial resource so that the world can never forget, and so that we might begin to build a world where ‘Never Again!’ rings true.”

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Cosmetics Entrepreneur’s Success Raising Eyebrows Across U.S.

When Ravit Darougar arrived in America in 2009, she was shy and uncertain about her future. “I had high self-esteem in Israel, but it was exactly the opposite when I came here,” said Darougar. “[I was in a] new country [with a] new language.” 

Darougar’s first job was with a construction company, and her reaction could be a blueprint for all immigrants. “I needed to answer the phone in English,” she said. “I was like, OMG. How am I going to do that?” Darougar figured it out fast. 

“I had to build my self-confidence,” she said. “Slowly, slowly, they gave me jobs, the freedom to manage the office, even to do the union payroll. They did not teach me. I was self-taught. They were not in the office. They just threw me into the pool, the deep water. I started swimming.”

Darougar was always a hard worker as well as an entrepreneur. As a high schooler in Haifa, she and a friend planned a business. “We decided to sell toilet paper to restaurants since everyone uses it, and it is basic,” she said. “We made a list of restaurants, and we began calling them. But many of them did not understand what these 16-year-olds wanted from their lives, so it did not work out.”

“Once I had the experience and knowledge, I decided to create a makeup brand that customers could use as eyebrow kits that boost self-confidence.” – Ravit Darougar

When she came to the U.S., Darougar decided to follow her calling: cosmetics. “I always felt that beauty and makeup boost self-confidence,” she said. “I wanted to do something that would make people feel better about themselves.” When she wasn’t at her construction company job, she’d spend long hours in her garage working on her new business.  “I came up with a small idea,” she said. “Eventually it became sensational on social media and on television shopping channels like QVC.”

4Ever Magic Cosmetics, launched in May 2018, boasts 150,000 followers on its Facebook page. Its signature product, a two-toned eyebrow gel and brush, is available in more than 300 stores across the U.S. and online. The gel formula helps fill in bald spots and makes eyebrows look thicker and well defined. “Once I had the experience and knowledge, I decided to create a makeup brand that customers could use as eyebrow kits that boost self-confidence,” said Darougar.

When coming up with her product, she consulted with her community, friends, mom and mother-in-law. They are not business people, but they were struggling with their eyebrows. “[They were] perfect targets for this product I created,” she said. “I figured out there are a lot of benefits given the lack of eyebrow products on the market. Most products out there smudge. I wanted something smudge-proof.” After doing research, Darougar created a two-in-one gel that was unique to the market. However, she faced problems with manufacturing. “Usually when you get an eyebrow product, it is one color,” she said. “I had to put two colors in one glass jar. I thought this was possible, but apparently there is no such machine. The first lab quit on me. I had to create a machine and come up with a formulation, all while continuing with my business.”

Darougar has always been confident of her abilities. But she never thought about creating machinery. Now, suddenly, it was necessary. Where did that knowledge come from? “Part of it is being Israeli,” she said. “It’s all about innovation and not giving up.”

Darougar’s parents were educators; her father was in administration and her mother was a teacher. “My mom is very motivated,” she said. “She always pushed to take the money she made and invest it. Always pushing forward, creating something from nothing. She especially enjoyed investing in real estate. She has amazing skills as a businesswoman, even though she never had a business. I got this from her.”

In her work, Darougar ranks consistency as her most valued talent. “I am a big believer in my ideas,” she said. “And my passion. When I talk about my product, my brand, my story, people feel it. Before they try the product, they already are excited, because I have so much passion.”

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