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June 11, 2024

UCLA Chabad Rabbi Assaulted by Pro-Palestinian Protesters

UCLA Chabad Rabbi Dovid Gurevich was assaulted by pro-Palestinian protesters on UCLA’s campus on the evening of June 10.

Gurevich told The Journal in a phone interview that he came to “support our students” after hearing that pro-Palestinian protesters were attempting to establish another encampment on campus and “wrapped tefillin with a couple of guys.” He later started filming “to capture the atmosphere” and went on Instagram Live. Gurevich said that an agitator “approached me from the side and violently slapped the phone out of my hand, and was just very aggressive and vulgar, verbally assaulting and getting in my face.” The protester was doing the same to some students too, the Chabad rabbi claimed. The situation then “escalated with some death threats at the end,” Gurevich said.

According to The Jerusalem Post, footage posted to social media shows a masked individual hitting Gurevich’s phone out of his hand. Gurevich was subsequently called a “pedophile rabbi.” “Masked activists threatened to beat the rabbi unconscious, and when Gurevich asked one why he concealed his face, the activist responded, ‘If I show my face, I’ll have to f—king kill you,’” the Post reported. The protesters also accused Zionists of being “fake Jews,” prompting Gurevich to retort: “You’re telling the rabbi who the real Jews are… stop gaslighting,” per the Post. He also told the protesters to leave the “students alone.”

Gurevich said that he told police nearby about what happened; he claimed that Culver City police told him he needed to talk to university police, and university police told him that “they were only there to deescalate” and that he needed to file a report at the police station. “I’m considering to possibly do it Friday I suppose, which is very difficult timing because we have finals and graduation here on campus, and probably more disruptions.”

The pro-Palestinian protest on campus started in the afternoon, as more than 100 protesters attempted to re-establish an encampment on campus for a third time, according to The Daily Bruin. The protesters marched on campus while holding faux bloody body parts and “a coffin-shaped object” to honor their “martyrs,” per the Bruin.

The Times of Israel (TOI) reported that, according to university police, 25 protesters were arrested “for willful disruption of university operations and one for interfering with an officer” and that the arrested individuals have been ordered to stay away from campus for 14 days. “The demonstrators repeatedly tried to set up tents, canopies and barriers as they moved to various locations, disrupting nearby final exams,” reported TOI. “The group also damaged a fountain, spray-painted brick walkways, tampered with fire safety equipment, damaged patio furniture, stripped wire from electrical fixtures and vandalized vehicles, the statement says.”

Gurevich said Jewish students are “exhausted from all this.” “It’s been a very long year, a very tough year for many of them and they just want it to be over with, this is the finals week and yet they’re still experiencing so many hateful disruptions and these kinds of vitriol directed basically against them because they feel very much personally targeted,” he said. “These people decided that there’s some ‘good Jews’ who support their cause and everyone else is ‘bad Jews’ and ‘Zionists.’ So the feeling that they have is being in a very toxic environment on campus and less safe.”

Gurevich added that he’s staying “focused on trying to do good and bringing light to dispel this darkness.”

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Seinfeld is Crying

Jerry Seinfeld is not known for showing his feelings. The man doesn’t do schmalz. He’d rather make you laugh. He’s a joke machine. Put a quarter in and he’ll tell you something funny. That’s what I’ve always thought about him. I wasn’t judging him. He was telling us this about himself. What he cares about and truly loves are jokes. 

But then, later in his life he got married and had kids. We began to see a slight shift in his comedy going from perfectly crafted bits about the yo-yo, to equally stellar routines about being married. Wait, he’s human? Apparently. Ever since he got married, both the comedian and the person began showing signs of maturity and genuine humanity. (Amazing what a woman can do!) But any time I’d ever see him on TV or in person, like when he popped into the Comedy Cellar, he was still just talking shop. He and Chris Rock are my two favorite comedy gurus to talk all things comedy. Every conversation, a master class. Still just about jokes, though. When I’m with Jerry, he doesn’t tell jokes, he just analyzes the craft of comedy like a physicist analyzing quantum mechanics.

When I’m with Jerry, he doesn’t tell jokes, he just analyzes the craft of comedy like a physicist analyzing quantum mechanics.

Then I watched my friend Bari Weiss interview him on her Free Press podcast, “Honestly” and I saw something I never thought I’d see: Jerry showing emotion. Jerry getting choked up when talking about his trip to Israel post Oct. 7. Jerry Seinfeld? Crying?

The man who spent much of his life refining bits about Pop-Tarts and then spending the past two years writing and directing a movie about the famed breakfast treat. The guy who, with his writing partner on Seinfeld, Larry David insisted that all episodes must abide by “No hugging. No learning.” They didn’t want their perfect comedy show to elicit feelings or any kind of teachable moments. Just laughs. Laughs are what matters to them. 

However, we are living in a different world now. Jerry has shown us his human side and his Jewish side. (His Judaism was another aspect of his life he barely even referenced on stage or in his sitcom). If getting married to Jessica and having three kids made him more human, then going to Israel with them and boldly speaking out about it made him a proud Jew.

If getting married to Jessica and having three kids made him a human, then going to Israel with them and boldly speaking out about it made him a proud Jew. 

Jerry’s personal growth, along with our new awful reality has made our greatest clown sob. That is how bizarre our society is right now. That even the guy who never showed us his tears or his Jewish pride have them both now on full display. 

Everything is now upside down right. Evil is good. Rape is resistance. Lies and false narratives are “my truth.” Israel is the bad guy and Iran are the good guys. Hamas and even bin Laden are modern-day heroes. Gen Z (the Z stands for Ztupid!) thinks it’s cool to side with barbaric terrorists and scream about a fabricated, blood libelous genocide while calling for an actual one.

Society is not doing well right now. And if the King of comedy is crying, we should all be bawling our eyes out.


Elon Gold is a comedian and actor.

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A Few Words With Yitzi Hurwitz

When I visited him on Monday, it took Chabad Rabbi Yitzi Hurwitz at least a minute to get these words out: “I’m honored to see you.”

Eight years ago, when I met him for the first time, he was doing better. A few years earlier, he had undergone a tracheostomy, a surgical procedure that creates an airway allowing him to breathe.

At the time, he had been using a machine called a BiPAP to help him breathe, but he seemed to be fading. His wife and devoted partner, Dina, took him to the hospital where he was diagnosed with pneumonia and an oxygen level that was dangerously low.

The tracheostomy kept him alive.

But ALS, also known as Lou Gehrig’s disease, is a degenerative disease that gets more debilitating with time. The miracle of Yitzi Hurwitz is that ever since he was diagnosed with the disease in 2013, he has squeezed every little ounce of life that has been afforded to him.

He couldn’t move his body when I met him eight years ago, but he was well enough that he could point his eyes at individual letters on a specially designed computer screen with eye-tracking software. That allowed him to write weekly Torah commentaries and share his blog with readers from around the world.

As painstaking as that was, it’s even harder today to eke out the letters, but he still manages with the assistance of a person holding a special board of letters.

As long as there’s life, Yitzi is all in.

He can hear perfectly. This helps him hear the words of his wife, children, friends, visitors and the Yeshiva students of his La Brea neighborhood who read him words of Torah throughout the day. He can hear music, he can see videos of himself dancing when he was a Chabad emissary in Temecula, he can see faces.

His eyes didn’t have the sparkle they had eight years ago, so I made an extra effort to connect with him.

First, I reminded him that when we first met, I told him I needed his help. I was scheduled to give a talk on the weekly Torah portion, Tazria and Metzorah, so I asked him if he could share something with me.

I read to him an excerpt from his commentary which I used in my talk:

“The real question is, what do you see when you meet a Metzorah? Do you focus on the ailment (a biblical-era type of leprosy), or on the possibility to reenter? How does the Metzorah view himself? Does he see himself as an outcast?  Or as a person who was granted the opportunity and the time to search his ways and refine himself to have a more meaningful existence upon reentry?”

I could feel that he heard and recognized every word. Maybe it was my imagination, but I saw a hint of a sparkle in his eyes.

Later, I shared a Hanukkah story about lighting the first candle of the holiday at Ben Gurion Airport, thanks to a Chabad emissary. The best part of the story, I told him, was that as happy as I was, the emissary seemed even happier for helping another Jew do a mitzvah.

During my visit, I discussed with other visitors the idea of choosing words carefully. I asked Yitzi if his verbal limitations forced him to look for deeper, essential insights in the Torah. His nurse, who knows him well, held up the letter board and immediately answered “yes.”

I also mentioned that in recent years, a movement has started around the notion of five words—five words to tell a story, five words to review a book, and so on.

While my friend Dina Leeds read aloud a transcript of a film about Yitzi’s journey, I couldn’t help think of what five words I would use to describe that journey. What especially moved me was that ten years ago, he had a choice. He knew his body would never move again. He knew how limited he would be.

As Dina quoted Yitzi in the story:

“At this point, I was given the choice to have the tracheostomy, effectively saving my life, or choose against it, putting an end to the suffering and difficulties. Legally and halachically (according to Jewish law), it was my choice, and with Dina’s unwavering support, I chose to live.”

The five words wrote themselves:

They asked. I chose life.

Before leaving, I felt a need to do something special, like share something personal. Knowing his love of Torah and with Shavuot– the holiday of receiving the Torah– only a day away, I shared that I was born in a little village just outside of Casablanca on the first morning of Shavuot. And as my mother has never stopped reminding me, I came out that morning right around when the actual Torah came out. (Maybe the holiest thing I’ve ever done.)

I wanted Yitzi to feel the blessings of our Torah holiday through my little Shavuot story, to feel that this was not just another greeting of “chag sameach.”

The delicate tears in his eyes were worth a thousand words.

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5x Southern California Journalism Awards Finalist!

THANK YOU! I am honored to be a FIVE TIME finalist for the 2024 66th annual Southern California Journalism Awards. I am a finalist for Online Journalist of the Year, Podcast Host and for three of my podcast interviews with Andrew McCarthy, Samantha Brown and Christie Tate. The Los Angeles Press Club stated that “The work of these journalists represents the best reporting in the region out of more than 2,300 entries submitted this year. The winners will be announced at an awards dinner gala at the Millennium Biltmore Hotel in downtown Los Angeles on Sunday, June 23, 2024.”
A5B. ONLINE JOURNALIST, independent
  • Lisa Niver, Jewish Journal
  • Meghann Cuniff, LegalAffairsandTrials.com
  • Daniel Guss, Substack
  • Nico Lang, Freelance
  • Aitana Vargas, palabra and La Opinión
K1. ANCHOR/HOST
  • Lisa Niver, Make Your Own Map Podcast
  • Ana Garcia, True Crime Daily The Podcast
  • Lyndsey Parker, Totally ‘80s Podcast
  • Michael Schneider, Clayton Davis, Jazz Tangcay, Jenelle Riley, Emily Longeretta, Variety
  • Susan Valot, Quanta Magazine Science Podcast
K4. LIFESTYLE FEATURE
  • Lisa Niver, Make Your Own Map, “How To Be Your Own B.F.F with Christie Tate
  • Robin Estrin, KCRW, “A Hanukkah miracle at Fairfax District’s Diamond Bakery”
  • Caroline Feraday, KCLU Radio, “Rare chance to fly in an historic aircraft which played a critical role in World War 2”
  • Giuliana Mayo, KCRW, “Minerva Hamilton Hoyt — tireless defender of the desert — saved Joshua Tree”
  • Giuliana Mayo, KCRW, “This fish traveled over 5000 miles to be on LA plates”
K5. PERSONALITY PROFILE/INTERVIEW, Entertainment Personalities (Over 10 Minutes)
  • Lisa Niver, Make Your Own Map,Walking with Andrew McCarthy
  • Seth Abramovitch, The Hollywood Reporter, “It Happened in Hollywood: Penelope Spheeris – ‘Wayne’s World’”
  • Scott Feinberg, The Hollywood Reporter, “‘Awards Chatter’ Podcast — ‘The Three Amigos’: Alfonso Cuarón (‘Le Pupille’), Guillermo del Toro (‘Pinocchio’) and Alejandro González Iñárritu (‘Bardo’)”
  • Angelique Jackson, Variety, “Alex Borstein on the Legacy of ‘The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel’ as It Ends: ‘We Launched in Such a Perfect Moment’”
  • Lyndsey Parker, Totally ’80s, “Rebel Soul: An ‘80s Conversation with Bebe Buell”
Lisa Niver and Andrew McCarthy
K6. PERSONALITY PROFILE/INTERVIEW, Non-Entertainment Personalities (Over 10 Minutes)
  • Lisa Niver, We Said Go Travel,Journey into the World of Wanderlust: Samantha Brown, Travel Goddess
  • Alex Cohen, Sara Sadhwani, Crystal Goss, Yazmin Cruz, Nathaniel Leathers, Spectrum News 1, “Inside the Issues: The Podcast ‘Marqueece Harris-Dawson’”
  • Debra Eckerling, Jewish Journal, “Chef Susan Feniger and Liz Lachman: ‘Forked,’ Food and Spiced Millet Puffs”
  • Esther D. Kustanowitz and Erin Benmoche, TheBagelReport, “Unapologetic Bagels feat. Dr. Samantha Pickette”
  • Robert Scheer, ScheerPost, “Nuclear War Imminent?”
Thank you to the Jewish Journal for 13 years of support for my writing. Congrats to all of the Jewish Journal finalists in the SoCal Journalism Awards. See them all in this article: “Jewish Journal Nominated for 11 SoCal Journalism Awards by LA Press Club
Lisa Niver has won many awards! From 2017 to 2024, in the Southern California Journalism Awards and National Arts and Entertainment Journalism Awards, she has won six times and been a finalist thirty times for a variety of broadcast, print, podcast and digital categories.
  • 2024 5x Finalist: Southern California Journalism Awards for Online Journalist of the Year, Podcast Host and for my podcast interviews with Andrew McCarthy, Samantha Brown and Christie Tate
  • 2023 Winner: National Arts and Entertainment Journalism Awards Diversity in Entertainment
  • 2023 3x Finalist: National Arts and Entertainment Journalism Awards
  • 2023 2x Finalist: Southern California Journalism Awards for Travel Reporting and Podcast Interview
  • 2022 Finalist: Southern California Journalism Awards for BOOK CRITICISM
  • 2021 Finalist: National Arts and Entertainment Journalism Awards for Commentary Diversity/Gender and Commentary Analysis/Trend — Film
  • 2021 WinnerSouthern California Journalism Awards for TECHNOLOGY REPORTING
  • 2021 Finalist: Southern California Journalism Awards for BOOK CRITICISM
  • 2020 Winner: National Arts and Entertainment Journalism Awards for Book Critic. See all of Lisa’s book reviews here.
  • 2020 Finalist: National Arts and Entertainment Journalism Awards for Book Critic
  • 2020 Winner: Southern California Journalism Awards for print magazine article: Hemispheres Magazine for United Airlines
  • 2020 Five Time Finalist: Southern California Journalism awards
More about Lisa Niver: https://lisaniver.com/awards/
 

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