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October 30, 2023

Hollywood Veteran Jim Berk to Replace Rabbi Marvin Hier as Head of Simon Wiesenthal Center

Veteran Hollywood producer Jim Berk will succeed Rabbi Marvin Hier as CEO of the Simon Wiesenthal Center (SWC) beginning January 1, 2024.

“Selecting an individual to follow a leader of international stature who has shepherded the Simon Wiesenthal Center’s mission for nearly half a century has been an extraordinarily challenging task, one we have embraced with care and thoughtful deliberation,” Dawn Arnall Aaron, Chair of SWC’s Board of Trustees, said in a statement. “After a nearly yearlong global search, we are privileged and delighted to welcome Jim Berk to follow in the footsteps of Rabbi Marvin Hier, leading the Simon Wiesenthal Center into the next generation of its service.”

Berk’s career began in education, with a pivot to entertainment and charity over the years. Berk started as a music teacher at Carson High School. He founded the Hamilton High School Academy of Music in 1986 and became principal in 1989.

Berk was the founding executive director of the National Academy of Recording Arts & Sciences Foundation and a former CEO and President of Hard Rock Cafe International. Berk was the CEO of Participant Media from 2006-2015, which during that time span produced acclaimed films “An Inconvenient Truth,” “Charlie Wilson’s War,” “The Help” and “Spotlight.” Berk also was CEO of PodcastOne/Courtside entertainment from 2016-2018, the production distributor behind some of the most downloaded podcasts.

Part of leading the SWC will entail leading Moriah Films, the two-time Academy Award-winning film arm of the SWC—they won Best Documentary for “Genocide” in 1981 and “The Long Way Home” in 1997.

In addition, as CEO of the SWC, Berk will oversee The Museum of Tolerance Los Angeles, which is the educational arm of the SWC, as well as the continued development of the The Museum of Tolerance in Jerusalem.

SWC reaffirmed that Berk will continue the organization’s mission of confronting anti-Semitism, hate and terrorism, while standing with Israel and teaching the lessons of the Holocaust for future generations. Berk’s responsibilities will also encompass Canada’s Friends of Simon Wiesenthal Center for Holocaust Studies, and SWC offices worldwide, from New York to Chicago, to Buenos Aires.

Hier spoke with the Journal earlier this year about handing the SWC reigns to a successor.

“I will train the person —whoever succeeds me, I’ll give them advice on what the history of our institution is about,” Hier told the Journal. “With my experience in this field, I would tell them the best thing is you have to speak to everybody.”

This transition comes at a perilous time for the Jewish community in the wake of the Hamas attacks of October 7 and the sharp rise in antisemitism.

 

This is a developing story.

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Antisemitic Mob Storming Airport in Dagestan Called a Modern Pogrom

When Russian regional airline Red Wings Airlines Flight 4728 left Israel’s Ben-Gurion International Airport at 3:17 pm on Sunday, there was no way for the passengers to know what hell awaited them on the tarmac at Makhachkala Uytash Airport in Dagestan.

Makhachkala is the capital and largest city of Dagestan, a small Russian republic with a Muslim-majority population in the Caucasus bordering Russia, Georgia, and Azerbaijan. Red Wings Airlines regularly flies from Israel to Makhachkala, a flight that takes about three hours and 15 minutes, as a layover on its Tel Aviv-Moscow route.

But this time was different. Numerous videos surfaced on social media sites, in near real time, showing Muslim men searching Uytash airport for Jews and interrogating people they suspected of being Jewish. In one video, a frenzied crowd of Muslim men bursts through large glass doors to push their way into the airport, yelling “Allahu akbar.”

Dagestan once had a Jewish population, comprised largely of Persian Jews who arrived there an estimated 1,200 years ago. Often referred to as Mountain Jews or Caucasus Jews, most of them now live in Israel. Dagestanis, much like the ones at the airport, made it impossible for them to stay in the Caucasus.

The mob had heard that a plane was en route from Israel and went to the airport to hunt Jews. When the flight landed in Makhachkala at 7:18 pm local time, it arrived at what Aviva Klompas, co-founder of the anti-Jew-hatred organization Boundless Israel, said “can only be described as a modern-day pogrom.”

An estimated crowd of 500 Muslim men, many carrying Palestinian flags, surrounded the airplane and demanded to know if any Jews were on board, in between shouts of “Allahu akbar.”

“Pogrom” is a Russian word referring to organized violence and massacres against a particular ethnic or religious group, especially against Jews by Russians and other Eastern Europeans in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. While the definition of what constitutes a pogrom can vary, Klompas was far from the only person to refer to what happened as such.

“Open season on Jews. Putin just sending a message,” the Simon Wiesenthal Center’s official X account posted shortly after the attack.

Russia’s former Foreign Minister Andrei Kozyrev posted on X to explain what he saw as the roots of pogroms like these: using antisemitism for power and control.

“Anti-Jewish pogroms, known in Russia for more than a century, have never been spontaneous. Like external aggression, they constitute a form of internal violence used to justify the iron fist of tyranny,” he wrote.

Biden Administration officials were quick to weigh in as well.

“We condemn the violent protests that have been reported in Russia threatening Israelis and Jews. We call on Russian authorities to ensure their safety. The US stands with Israel and the entire Jewish community as we see a surge in antisemitism throughout the world. There is no excuse for targeting Jews or engaging in antisemitic incitement anywhere,” Deborah Lipstadt, the US special envoy for monitoring and combating antisemitism, said in a statement released on her office’s official X account.

It took several hours for local police to gain control of the situation. Dagestan’s Health Ministry said that 20 people were injured at the airport, but it was unclear at the time of publication if any of the injured were Jewish or Israeli.

This was at least the second incident related to the current Israel-Hamas war to disrupt mass transit in the past week. Two days earlier, the far-left US Jewish advocacy group Jewish Voice for Peace disrupted train travel in New York City by occupying Grand Central Terminal in support of Palestinians and staging a nonviolent sit-in. Two hundred protesters were arrested.

To read more articles from the Media Line, click here.

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Speech That Endangers Jewish Lives is Sweeping America

Hamas chopped the heads off 40 Jewish babies, burned families alive, gang raped teenage girls, and decapitated an elderly man. Oh, and they kidnapped a six-month-old baby, young children, and female Holocaust survivors.

Let that settle in for a moment. Moral revulsion is imminent. Assigning blame a no-brainer, right?

Apparently not for the multitudes that praise Hamas as “resistance fighters.”

It’s a vulgar display of moral corruption, the legerdemain of situational ethics. Offset the barbarism with a litany of Palestinian grievances. There’s unrest at colleges across America, schools that offer all kinds of electives, but nothing mandatory when it comes to moral reasoning. Street protests, the world over, are even worse.

Even the Secretary General of the United Nations trivialized the terrorism of October 7. Damage control for Hamas is, apparently, the diplomatic thing to do.

What makes it all so much worse is that the bandwagon for Hamas isn’t stopping with 10/7. We’ve reached the phase of active abetting—both endorsing Hamas, and doing its bidding.

Hamas leaders have issued “calls to action.” Followers, or mere Jew-haters, are being asked to bring the fight to global Jewry with Days of Rage and National Days of Resistance. Harassment has hit the classroom; incitement is spilling out onto the streets. So far, there are no copycat crimes (at least not yet), just organized assemblies, walkouts, and die-ins—with the add-on of threatening behavior toward Jewish students.

Students at Columbia and Tulane have been physically attacked. A dorm room was set on fire at Drexel. Cornell was forced to lockdown its kosher kitchen. A pro-Hamas mob at Cooper Union chased Jewish students into the library. With the doors locked, they banged on the windows, and not because they had overdue books. A library employee suggested that the Jewish students “hide in the attic.”

What, it’s also: Re-enact Anne Frank Day?

The assemblies featured colorful language—on posters, and shouted by protestors, running the gamut: “From the River to the Sea”; “I Support Hamas!”; “Globalize the Intifada from New York to Gaza”; “Jihad!”; “Israel is worse than Nazis”; “By any means necessary”; “Stop Zionist Genocide,”; and “Stop Zionist Apartheid.” Some chanted, or posted on social media: “Hitler was right”; “Gas the Jews”; “Shoot all pig Jews”; and, that golden oldie, “Death to Israel!”

Scrawled antisemitic graffiti is everywhere. Hamas wannabees have their very own swastika: the graphic image of paragliding terrorists. And let’s not forget the most favored battle cry of all: “Intifada!”

One need not major in Middle East Studies to know that the Hamas Charter calls for the annihilation of all Jews. That means if you’re chanting “Hamas,” you’ve pledged your support for genocide. Of course, these protestors flip the script and denounce Israel as the ethnic cleanser.

In Europe, some protestors are arrested for violating hate speech laws. But not in America. Since the 1960s, the United States boasts having the most robust free speech protections on the planet. Neo-Nazis once obtained a permit to march on a community of Holocaust survivors. Cross-burnings on the lawns of African-Americans have long been established as protected First Amendment speech.

That’s one of the reasons why university presidents and city officials have not taken measures against those threatening Jews both on- and off-campus. They view antisemitism, whether expressed through violence or the denial of dignity, as protected speech.

I wrote a book on this topic, having long felt that construing the First Amendment in this way must be at odds with the Founders of this nation. These were learned men who believed in vigorous debate on the important issues of the day. They envisioned a marketplace of ideas, not a staging ground for inciting riots.

Provocative words like “genocide” and “apartheid,” when neither, in any legal or moral sense, describes Israel’s dealings with Arabs and Palestinians, is nothing less than the sanctioning of violence toward Jews. Look what happened when the bombing of a hospital in Gaza was falsely reported. Bedlam everywhere. Falsehoods on a poster are not ideas, and shouting “Intifada!” is not an invitation to debate.

If pro-Hamas sympathizers have ideas they wish to impart, then find a far less threatening manner in which to express them. Otherwise, you are engaging in incitement, enflaming a mob predisposed to harming Jews.

And as a society, we are perversely elevating hate speech to the rank of political speech. We know that free speech is not without limits. Shouting “Fire!” in a crowded theater is not permissible. When a rage-filled mob is screaming “Intifada!” with Jews in the vicinity, the same prohibition should apply.

“Intifada!” might be a license for Muslims to kill Jews in the Middle East. In the United States, we don’t take to the streets and shout, “Death to Iran!” No reason to adopt the consequences of “Intifada!”, either.

It’s not just the absence of First Amendment protection. Title VI of the Civil Rights Act obligates institutions that receive federal funding to safeguard students from harassment based on race, sex, religion, and nationality. Jewish students are fearful on campus. These protests are interfering with their enjoyment of university life.

Courts have always recognized the sanctity of learning environments. Students are not permitted to stand up in class and make speeches that are disruptive—even if they have something serious to say. Nor are they allowed to bring a Confederate or Nazi flag to class if its purpose is to stir ethnic and racial tensions.

Those shouting, “We are all Hamas!”, knowing the business of Hamas, must be treated like budding terrorists rather than aspiring grad students. Federal anti-terrorism laws criminalize providing material support to a foreign terrorist organization. Hamas has called its followers to action. Anyone acting under those directions is, legally, a co-conspirator.

Sure, punishments are being imposed elsewhere. Job offers are being rescinded for participation in antisemitic melees. Wealthy donors are starting to withhold funding to the Ivy League, where moral judgment has been especially lacking. Maintaining a school environment that repeatedly and negligently gets it facts wrong, fomenting one group of students and thereby endangering the lives of another, ought to carry some risk.

These are the tragic consequences when political agendas subvert moral decency and objective truth. Universities have abdicated their custodial duties, not unlike mayors in major cities. Now is the time to get back to first principles: Hold people accountable for what they say and do. If it really causes you no distress when heads roll, then get in line: You’re next.


Thane Rosenbaum is a novelist, essayist, law professor and Distinguished University Professor at Touro University, where he directs the Forum on Life, Culture & Society. He is the legal analyst for CBS News Radio. His most recent book is titled “Saving Free Speech … From Itself.” 

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A Jewish Father Takes the Gloves Off to Protect Safety of Jewish College Students

By now, we’ve all heard about the frightening wave of Jew-hatred spreading across many U.S. college campuses in the wake of the Hamas massacres of October 7. Mega donors have responded forcefully to compel universities to offer more protection for Jewish students. Activist groups have filed grievances. Parents and students have weighed in.

In all this activism, I came across a letter this morning from a Jewish parent of a freshman at Cornell that really stood out as a model for other parents. It captures many of the issues Jewish students are facing at other colleges. And it shows a parent who won’t settle for just complaining and is taking the gloves off to get results.

The letter is addressed to the Provost. Here it is in full:

Dear Dr. Kotlikoff:

“I am writing to you as both the father of a freshman at Cornell as well as the President of the Jewish Federation of Northern New Jersey, which is one of the largest Jewish organizations in the Northeast involved in fighting antisemitism. I attended the meeting this morning at Hillel where you addressed several hundred parents of Jewish students. I commend you for attending, speaking and listening, and for handling questions and comments from a group of scared and angry parents.

“However, I must also condemn your lack of leadership and that of the entire administration as it relates to the safety and security of the Jewish students on campus. You have tried to remain neutral to a situation where 1400 civilians were brutally butchered, beheaded, raped and burned by an organization that is considered a terrorist group by the United States. You have failed to understand the nuance between condemning Hamas (which is an undeniable evil every bit as brutal, just not as powerful, as the Nazis) and supporting rights for the Palestinian people. The Administration has allowed actions to occur on campus which support Hamas that have come very close to and may have in some cases even rose to the level of the Federal crime of assisting the work of a terrorist group. And even with that, Cornell has avoided commenting and acting to prevent harassment and intimidation on campus detailed below by falsely claiming that Cornell is not a political institution when you have commented and shown leadership when hate crimes were directed at other groups.

“In your remarks, you falsely tried to equivocate the minimal (though still inappropriate) hate directed against Muslim students with the torrent of constant and vicious hate directed at Jewish students. The cowardice on the part of the Administration to the ever-increasing antisemitism on campus has not quelled the discord as you had hoped but, instead due to the vacuum of moral clarity has empowered those who no longer feared the consequences which has caused it to expand and worsen. After your meeting today, the vicious, threatening antisemitic posts, exploded on the Cornell section of the Greek online community with calls for ‘Jewish people to be killed;’ ‘bombing of Jewish home;’ calls to ‘gang rape’ Zionist females; and ‘shoot up 104 West’ (the kosher dining hall).

“Some of these Administration actions include (i) failing to act to and staying silent when faced with criminal action to school property aimed at silencing and terrorism against Jewish students; (ii) allowing harassments on the campus by other groups who are failing to act civilly in their own protests (iii) hiding behind the false narrative of equivocation by not stopping the intimidation of Jewish students walking on campus and also when trying to exercise their right to free speech; (iv) falsely claiming the words or lack of words by professors against the recent genocide to Israeli civilians is a case of academic freedom and (v) permitting outright antagonism to Israel specifically and Jewish students generally in Cornell’s sanctioned groups, on campus related social media (including accounts by many professors whose job it is to educate not to advocate and most certainly not to post false information which they are doing); and refusing to do what is necessary to support the students and address the issues raised to keep them safe, both physically and emotionally.

“As a result of the Administration’s failure and lack of leadership, students are afraid to leave their dorms at times; have removed Mezuzahs from their doors; are not comfortable wearing kippot around campus; are afraid to attend Jewish events; have changed their names on social media and apps; and are generally suffering from fear and anxiety that is detracting from their academic pursuits.

“I am letting you know that the Jewish parents at Cornell and the Jewish people all around are not going to be placated by lack of moral clarity and let this continue. The mantra of ‘Never Again’ is real and is going to guide us. As such, we will now be taking this beyond the Cornell campus to the NYS Governor, Senate and Assembly who have jurisdiction over the State Schools; the NY Attorney General to investigate the criminal activity going on and being allowed at Cornell; the local Representatives and NY Senators who oversee federal educational funding as well as terrorist activities in the US; the courts to adjudicate violations of rights of Jewish students; Jewish organizations to alert their donors and stakeholders; to social media and the press to publicize what is being allowed to go on at Cornell; and the major funders (Jewish and otherwise) so that they can make decisions on their valuable philanthropic dollars based on the values they want to support.

“I urge you and the Administration to reverse course immediately and be guided by the principles of Ezra Cornell and which you claim to espouse. Having a zero-tolerance policy for hate includes Jewish students as well. And, when they are treated differently, and not protected as others, that is clearly evidence of the inability to recognize and prevent antisemitism. Enforcing appropriate modes of behavior, and respect for all views, is not a political position or taking sides. It is the right thing and moral thing to do. And, before things get worse as they will if students don’t face consequences for their behavior, I strongly advise the Administration to show leadership and recalibrate the moral compass and campus at Cornell.”

Very truly yours,

Dan

Daniel M. Shlufman

Recalibrating the moral compass is indeed the crying need of the day. Heads of universities who are failing to protect Jewish students must know that Jewish parents and others who stand for sanity will not stand idly by.

 

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