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The top 10 Senate races Jewish voters should be eying

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The top 10 Senate races Jewish voters should be eying

With the Middle East at the forefront of foreign-policy concerns, the pro-Israel community needs to take a good hard look at the issues that matter.

 

 While not officially on the ballot in November, the upcoming midterm elections in the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives are widely seen as a referendum on U.S. President Donald Trump. Among the many issues that Trump has engaged in during his first two years in office has been the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Supporters of the president have praised him for taking bold steps in support of Israel, such as moving the U.S. embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, ending involvement in the 2015 Iran nuclear deal, cutting aid to UNRWA and the Palestinians, and standing up for Israel at the United Nations in the form of U.S. Ambassador Nikki Haley, who recently announced her decision to leave the post at year’s end.

Yet detractors have argued that the pendulum has swung too much in Israel’s direction, which they say damages America’s credibility and puts prospects for Israeli-Palestinian peace further away.

Considering that the Israel—and increasingly, the rest of the Middle East—has become an increasingly partisan issue, GOP control of the Senate could prove to be crucial for Trump to continue his policies in favor of Israel, at the same time as some in the Democratic Party have been leaning away from traditional support of the Jewish state.

Below are the top 10 Senate races to watch for the Jewish and pro-Israel community.

Note: Jewish population figures are from 2012, and according to the North American Jewish Data Bank by the Jewish Federations of North America.

ARIZONA

Jewish Population: 106,300 (1.6 percent of state population)

Summary: In a race to replace the retiring Jeff Flake, a Trump critic, Republican Rep. Martha McSally, leads Democratic Rep. Krysten Sinema by 0.3 percentage points in the RealClear Politics average.

McSally applauded the president’s decision to recognize Jerusalem as the capital of Israel, as well as to move the U.S. embassy there from Tel Aviv. She also supported the president’s decision to nix American participation in the 2015 Iran nuclear deal.

Arizona Republican congresswoman Martha McSally, who is running for her state’s senate seat. Credit: Wikimedia Commons.

Meanwhile, Sinema, an Iron Dome missile-defense supporter, was one of 25 Democrats to oppose the Iran deal. But she flipped and opposedTrump’s decision to withdraw the United States from it.

Additionally, Sinema advocated for radical causes such as a Department of Peace, “an effort championed on the federal level for many years by radical, anti-Israel politicians such as Dennis Kucinich, a former Ohio congressman known for outlandish proposals rejected by the plurality of federal lawmakers,” according to The Washington Free Beacon.

Sinema’s past anti-Israel activism consisted of railing against what she called the “Israeli occupation” as a member of numerous anti-Israel groups like the Arizona Alliance for Peace and Justice, which decried Israel’s “disproportionate” use of “violence and oppression.”

Funding: Sinema has received $5,400 from Jewish philanthropist, political activist and Democratic Party mega-donor George Soros and $19,250 from NORPAC.

Although McSally has yet to collect directly from Jewish philanthropist, political activist and Republican Party mega-donor Sheldon Adelson, she has reportedly been a recipient of funds from the National Republican Senatorial Committee and the Senate Leadership Fund, of which Adelson has contributed $25 million. It has launched adssupporting McSally, including one where McSally—the first American female combat pilot—said “while we were in harm’s way in uniform, Kyrsten Sinema was protesting us in a pink tutu and denigrating our service.”

FLORIDA

Jewish Population: 638,985 (3.4 percent of state population)

Summary: Incumbent Democrat Bill Nelson is facing a tight general re-election battle against Gov. Rick Scott, who is trailing his opponent by just 2.4 percentage points in the RealClear Politics average.

Prime Minsiter Benjamin Netanyahu meets with Governor of Florida, Rick Scott at the Prime Minister’s office on May 14, 2018. Photo by Amos Ben Gershom/GPO

As governor, Scott signed an anti-BDS bill into law in 2016, which prohibits the state from investing in or doing business with companies that boycott Israel.

Meanwhile, Nelson supported the Iran deal and slammed Trump for the U.S. withdrawal in May—a decision that Scott supported—and said “pulling out of this deal now is a tragic mistake. It will divide us from our European allies, and it will allow Iran to build a nuclear bomb within a year, instead of preventing it for at least seven to 12 years.”

However, Nelson was one of five Democrats running in states that Trump won in 2016 to vote for Iran hawk Mike Pompeo’s confirmation as Secretary of State. He also co-sponsored the Anti-Terrorism Clarification Act, which Trump signed into law last week.

Funding: Although Scott shied away from answering in June whether his campaign has accepted contributions from Adelson, his campaign has received at least $2,700 from the casino magnate, in addition to $5,000 from the RJC.

Meanwhile, Nelson has received at least $5,400 from Soros and $19,564 from NORPAC.

INDIANA

Jewish Population: 17,470 (0.3 percent of state population)

Summary: Incumbent Democrat Joe Donnelly leads Republican businessman Mike Braun by only four points in the RealClear Politics average. Along with Sen. Deb Fischer (R-Neb.), Donnelly inserted a provision into a defense bill last year that required increased U.S. oversight of the Arrow 3 antimissile system to Israel. The provision was removed.

Moreover, Donnelly supported the Iran deal, and said he was “concerned” about the U.S. withdrawal from it. Braun has criticizedDonnelly’s stance.

Funding: Donnelly has received at least $2,500 from Soros.

MISSOURI

Jewish Population: 59,175 (1 percent of state population)

Summary: Republican Attorney General Josh Hawley is up by just 0.5 percentage points over incumbent Democrat Claire McCaskill in the RealClear Politics average.

Democratic Missouri Senator Claire McCaskill Addresses Washington University in 2015. Credit: Claire McCaskill’s office via Flickr.

McCaskill supported the Iran deal and opposedthe U.S. withdrawal from it. Hawley slammedMcCaskill and accused her of “standing with the mullahs,” according to an email blast from his campaign.

She has also withheld her support for the Combating BDS Act of 2017, which “contains problematic language that conflates Israel and the territories under its control,” according to J Street PAC, which endorsed her.

Meanwhile, Hawley applauded the president for relocating the U.S. embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.

Funding: Hawley received $5,000 from the Republican Jewish Coalition. McCaskill has received at least $24,300 from Soros and $98,700 from NORPAC.

NEVADA

Jewish Population: 76,300 (2.8 percent of state population)

Summary: Dean Heller, the Republican incumbent, is facing a tough fight as the only Republican up for re-election in a state Hillary Clinton won in 2016. He is leading Rep. Jacky Rosen by 1.7 percentage points in the RealClear Politics average.

Since elected in 2016, Rosen has touted her record on Israel as having sponsored the Defend Israel Act and the Israel Anti-Boycott Act.

However, she criticized the U.S. leaving the Iran deal: “After the JCPOA was agreed to, it should have been robustly enforced—not used as a political football. … Unfortunately, backing out of this agreement means undermining our international alliances, jeopardizing our national security, and re-opening Iran’s path to developing a nuclear weapon.”

Heller, on the other hand, said the nuclear accord was “never good for America or our friends in the Middle East.”

“This agreement has done nothing to stop Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon or promote peace; in fact, it has done just the opposite,” said Heller in a statement. “Iran has been emboldened since President Barack Obama signed the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action three years ago.”

“The agreement, which handed Tehran billions of dollars to help bolster its military and spread terror around the world, represented a volcano waiting to erupt,” he added.

Funding: Soros has given Rosen at least $5,400 this cycle, while Adelson has contributed an identical amount to Heller. Heller has also received$5,000 from RJC. 

NEW JERSEY

Jewish Population: 504,450 (5.7 percent of state population)

Summary: What should be an easy re-election campaign for one of the most pro-Israel Democratic senators has been anything but, due to being tried on federal corruption charges (where there was a mistrial, and the DOJ declined to refile the charges). He leads Republican nominee Bob Hugin by just 7.2 percentage points in the RealClear Politics average.

Menendez was one of the most outspoken Democratic senators against the Iran deal, although he supported the embassy move, which was also applauded by Hugin.

Republican candidate for the U.S. Senate from New Jersey Bob Hugin speaks alongside his wife and daughter. Credit: Bob Hugin for Senate Facebook page.

However, in order to mollify the left amid the re-election cycle, Menendez opposed Trump’s decision to withdraw America from the deal.

Funding: Menendez has received more than $500,000 from NORPAC. Hugin has received $5,000 from the RJC, spokesperson Neil Strauss confirmed to JNS.

Quote: “This race is more competitive than it should be because of Menendez’s ethics problems and the amount of money Hugin has been willing to put into the race,” Cook Political Report senior editor Jennifer Duffy told JNS. “But Hugin is likely to fall short. The state is too Democratic.” 

PENNSYLVANIA

Jewish Population: 294,925 (2.3 percent of state population)

Summary: Daylight has been created between incumbent Democrat Bob Casey and Republican congressman Lou Barletta, as the former leads the latter by 16 percentage points in the RealClear Politics average.

While Casey has backed the Iran deal and condemned U.S. withdrawal from it, he favored moving the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem. He has also introduced legislation requiring the Department of Education to expand its definition of anti-Semitism to include support for the BDS movement and criticism of Israel that “demonizes,” “delegitimizes” or measures it through a “double standard.”

Despite controversial ties to white nationalism, Barletta has fully supported Trump’s pro-Israel agenda, even being one of dozens of members of Congress to call on the State Department to allow “Jerusalem, Israel” to appear on U.S. passports.

“It is indisputable that Jerusalem is the capital of Israel,” said Barletta. “I am proud to stand with President Trump in recognizing this truth and applaud his decision to move the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem earlier this year after decades of broken promises by other presidents. However, I am disappointed that the State Department has yet to follow through on its end and fully recognize Jerusalem as Israel’s capital.”

Funding: NORPAC has contributed $51,640 to Casey, who has also received $10,800 from Soros. Barletta has gotten just $250 from RJC.

Quote: “Congressman Barletta has struggled to put together the same coalition that help deliver Pennsylvania for President Trump, in part because Lou Barletta isn’t Donald Trump,” Inside Elections editor and publisher Nathan Gonzales told JNS. “And Sen. Casey has a better connection to the state than Hillary Clinton. Pennsylvania is a good example of how President’s Trump’s coalition isn’t easily transferable to another candidate.”

TENNESSEE

Jewish Population: 19,575 (0.3 percent of state population)

Summary: In a race to replace the retiring Trump critic Bob Corker, who exerted influence on issues like Iran as chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee, Rep. Marsha Blackburn has just a 6.5 percentage lead over former Democratic Gov. Phil Bredesen in the RealClear Politics average.

Blackburn strongly supported Trump’s decision to withdraw America from the Iran deal, while Bredesen has yet to issue any statement on the matter.

“Iran is a terrorist state. Their goal is to destroy Israel,” said Blackburn in a 13-second video. “Their goal is to undermine the United States. They cannot be trusted. I applaud the president on his actions.”

Funding: Bredesen has received at least $5,400 from Soros, while Blackburn has gotten that same amount from Adelson, plus $5,000 from the RJC. 

TEXAS

Jewish Population: 139,505 (0.5 percent of state population).

Summary: Surprisingly, what should be smooth sailing for incumbent Republican Ted Cruz—one of the most outspoken pro-Israel members of Congress, opposing the 2015 Iran nuclear deal and vouching for the now-enacted Taylor Force Act to eliminate most U.S. assistance to the Palestinian Authority—has been anything but, due to recent polling. Cruz is ahead by just 7 percentage points, according to the RealClear Politics average.

Additionally, the Senate passed a bipartisan bill last week co-sponsored by Cruz that would sanction members of terrorist groups like Hamas who use civilians as human shields.

In a recent debate, Sen. Cruz accused O’Rourke of siding with J Street, labeling the group “rabidly anti-Israel.”

J Street took it as “a badge of honor.”

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (center) with a delegation of Republican U.S. senators in for the embassy opening. From left: Sen. Lindsey Graham R-S.C.), Sen. Ted. Cruz (R-Texas), Sen. Dean Heller (R-Nev.) and Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah). Credit: Amos Ben-Gershom/GPO.

“What we care about is that extremists like him—elected officials who undermined the Iran deal, demonize Palestinians to score political points and believe the only way to be ‘pro-Israel’ is to support every policy of the [Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin] Netanyahu government—hold power in Washington right now,” stated J Street in a fundraising email.

Funding: As of 2017, Cruz has received at least $2,700—the maximum contribution that a donor can give at a time—from Adelson. He has also received $5,000 from the RJC. He received $64,050 from the nonpartisan pro-Israel organization NORPAC.

O’Rourke has received $2,700 from Soros, who has surprisingly also gave $2,500 to Cruz this election cycle.

More importantly, O’Rourke has received $139,734 from J Street’s political-action committee, which has also endorsed him.

Quote: “O’Rourke was one of only a handful of Democratic members of the House to oppose Iron Dome, and he has been a staunch supporter of the disastrous Iran Deal,” veteran Texas-based Republican strategist Matt Mackowiak told JNS.

[Although O’Rourke voted against Iran Dome funding initially, he supported it in later votes.]

“There may be no more anti-Israel Democrat running for Senate than Beto O’Rourke,” said Mackowiak.

“Contrast that with Senator Ted Cruz, who has been widely seen as the strongest pro-Israel leader in the Senate,” added Mackowiak.

WEST VIRGINIA

Jewish Population: 2,335 (0.1 percent of state population).

Summary: Despite a small Jewish population, the state features Republican Attorney General Patrick Morrisey against incumbent Democrat Joe Manchin, who has repeatedly been unafraid to break with his party, such as being against the Iran deal, though he announced his stance when there was already enough party support. He also supportedU.S. withdrawal from the agreement.

Additionally, he was one of only two Democrats to vote in favor of David Friedman’s confirmation as U.S. Ambassador to Israel.

He leads Morrissey by 9.4 percentage points in the RealClear Politics average.

Funding: Morrisey has received $5,000 from the RJC. NORPAC has contributed $42,050 to Manchin, who has also gotten at least $2,500 from Soros.

High Court Overrules State, Allows ‘BDS Activist’ Lara Alqasem To Enter Israel

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High Court Overrules State, Allows ‘BDS Activist’ Lara Alqasem To Enter Israel

By TPS • 18 October, 2018

 

 

Lara Alqasem, the American graduate student who was been denied entry to Israel due to alleged BDS activities will be allowed to enter the country, the High Court of Justice ruled Thursday.

Alqasem, 22, enrolled for a Masters degree in human rights at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem and was granted a student visa, however when she arrived at Ben Gurion Airport on October 2nd, she was barred from entering the country under Israel’s anti-BDS laws as she had served as president of the University of Florida local chapter of Student for Justice for Palestine, a group that advocates BDS.

Alqasem appealed to the court against the deportation order, saying that she was no longer active in the group, no longer supported a boycott of Israel and had chosen to study at an Israeli university to gain a greater understanding of the Israeli Palestinian conflict.

A lower court upheld the deportation, however Alqasem appealed to the High Court which ruled that there were insufficient grounds to prevent her entry to Israel and said that “the inevitable impression is that the denial of her visa was down to her political opinions.”

Strategic Affairs Minister Gilad Erdan, whose ministry coordinates anti-BDS activities,  slammed the court’s decision,which he said harmed the state’s ability to fight the boycott movement.

“Once again the High Court has emptied of content Knesset legislation and misused the powers granted it by the executive,” Erdan said. “The court underestimated the extreme and anti-Semitic nature of the organization in which Alqasem played a senior role and ignored the fact that she had deleted and obfuscated her social media activities prior to arriving in Israel, opening the door for other BDS activists to claim in order to gain entry that ‘at the moment’ they do not support the boycott,” Erdan added.

Alqasem’s attorney, Yotam Ben Hillel, told the court that the law applied to persons “currently” involved in BDS activity and that as his client had not been a member of SJP for over a year-and-a-half, there was no justification to deny her entry to the country.

The state however countered that Alqasem was active in BDS circles as late as 2018, presenting her ‘attending’ BDS oriented events on her Facebook profile as evidence,

Rabbi Lord Jonathan Sacks – Four Dimensions of the Journey

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Within the first words that God addresses to the bearer of a new covenant, there are already hints as to the nature of the heroism he would come to embody. The multi-layered command “Lech lecha – go forth” contains the seeds of Abraham’s ultimate vocation.

Rashi, following an ancient exegetic tradition, translates the phrase as “Journey for yourself.”[1] According to him, God is saying “Travel for your own benefit and good. There I will make you into a great nation; here you will not have the merit of having children.” Sometimes we have to give up our past in order to acquire a future. In his first words to Abraham, God was already intimating that what seems like a sacrifice is, in the long run, not so. Abraham was about to say goodbye to the things that mean most to us – land, birthplace and parental home, the places where we belong. He was about to make a journey from the familiar to the unfamiliar, a leap into the unknown. To be able to make that leap involves trust – in Abraham’s case, trust not in visible power but in the voice of the invisible God. At the end of it, however, Abraham would discover that he had achieved something he could not have done otherwise. He would give birth to a new nation whose greatness consisted precisely in the ability to live by that voice and create something new in the history of mankind. “Go for yourself ” – believe in what you can become.

Another interpretation, more midrashic, takes the phrase to mean “Go withyourself ” – meaning, by travelling from place to place you will extend your influence not over one land but many:

When the Holy One said to Abraham, “Leave your land, your birthplace and your father’s house…” what did Abraham resemble? A jar of scent with a tight-fitting lid put away in a corner so that its fragrance could not go forth. As soon as it was moved from that place and opened, its fragrance began to spread. So the Holy One said to Abraham, “Abraham, many good deeds are in you. Travel about from place to place, so that the greatness of your name will go forth in My world.”[2]

Abraham was commanded to leave his place in order to testify to the existence of a God not bounded by place – Creator and Sovereign of the entire universe. Abraham and Sarah were to be like perfume, leaving a trace of their presence wherever they went. Implicit in this midrash is the idea that the fate of the first Jews already prefigured that of their descendants[3] who would be scattered throughout the world in order to spread knowledge of God throughout the world. Unusually, exile is seen here not as punishment but as a necessary corollary of a faith that sees God everywhere. Lech lecha means “Go with yourself” – your beliefs, your way of life, your faith.

A third interpretation, this time more mystical, takes the phrase to mean, “Goto yourself.” The Jewish journey, said R. David of Lelov, is a journey to the root of the soul.[4] In the words of R. Zushya of Hanipol, “When I get to heaven, they will not ask me, why were you not Moses? They will ask me, Zushya, why were you not Zushya?”[5] Abraham was being asked to leave behind all the things that make us someone else – for it is only by taking a long and lonely journey that we discover who we truly are. “Go to yourself.”

There is, however, a fourth interpretation: “Go by yourself.” Only a person willing to stand alone, singular and unique, can worship the God who is alone, singular and unique. Only one able to leave behind the natural sources of identity – home, family, culture and society – can encounter God who stands above and beyond nature. A journey into the unknown is one of the greatest possible expressions of freedom. God wanted Abraham and his children to be a living example of what it is to serve the God of freedom, in freedom, for the sake of freedom.

Lech Lecha means: Leave behind you all that makes human beings predictable, unfree, delimited. Leave behind the social forces, the familial pressures, the circumstances of your birth. Abraham’s children were summoned to be the people that defied the laws of nature because they refused to define themselves as the products of nature. That is not to say that economic or biological or psychological forces have no part to play in human behaviour. They do. But with sufficient imagination, determination, discipline and courage we can rise above them. Abraham did. So, at most times, did his children.

Those who live within the laws of history are subject to the laws of history. Whatever is natural, said Maimonides, is subject to disintegration and decline. That is what has happened to virtually every civilisation that has appeared on the world’s stage. Abraham, however, was to become the father of an am olam, an eternal people, that would neither decay nor decline, a people willing to stand outside the laws of nature. What for other nations are innate – land, home, family – in Judaism are subjects of religious command. They have to be striven for. They involve a journey. They are not given at the outset, nor can they be taken for granted. Abraham was to leave behind the things that make most people and peoples what they are, and lay the foundations for a land, a Jewish home and a family structure, responsive not to economic forces, biological drives and psychological conflicts but to the word and will of God.

Lech Lecha in this sense means being prepared to take an often lonely journey: “Go by yourself.” To be a child of Abraham is to have the courage to be different, to challenge the idols of the age, whatever the idols and whichever the age. In an era of polytheism, it meant seeing the universe as the product of a single creative will – and therefore not meaningless but coherent and meaningful. In an era of slavery it meant refusing to accept the status quo in the name of God, but instead challenging it in the name of God. When power was worshipped, it meant constructing a society that cared for the powerless, the widow, orphan and stranger. During centuries in which the mass of mankind was sunk in ignorance, it meant honouring education as the key to human dignity and creating schools to provide universal literacy. When war was the test of manhood, it meant striving for peace. In ages of radical individualism like today, it means knowing that we are not what we own but what we share; not what we buy but what we give; that there is something higher than appetite and desire – namely the call that comes to us, as it came to Abraham, from outside ourselves, summoning us to make a contribution to the world.

“Jews,” wrote Andrew Marr, “really have been different; they have enriched the world and challenged it.”[6] It is that courage to travel alone if necessary, to be different, to swim against the tide, to speak in an age of relativism of the absolutes of human dignity under the sovereignty of God, that was born in the words Lech Lecha. To be a Jew is to be willing to hear the still, small voice of eternity urging us to travel, move, go on ahead, continuing Abraham’s journey toward that unknown destination at the far horizon of hope.

Shabbat Shalom

 

 

 

 

[1] Rashi, 12:1.

[2] Bereishit Rabbah 39:2.

[3] On the principle, “What happened to the fathers is a portent of what would happen to the children,” see for example, Nahmanides, commentary to Genesis 12:6. On Nahmanides’ use of this principle throughout his commentary, see Ezra-Tzion Melamed, Mefarshei Hamikra (Jerusalem: Magnes Press, 1975), vol. 2, 950–53.

[4] R. David of Lelov, Pninei Ha-Hassidut (Jerusalem, 1987), vol. 1, p88.

[5] R. Ephraim Lundschitz, Kli Yakar to Bereshit, 12:1.

[6] Andrew Marr, The Observer, 14 May 2000.

An international religious leader, philosopher, award-winning author and respected moral voice, Rabbi Lord Jonathan Sacks was awarded the 2016 Templeton Prize in recognition of his “exceptional contributions to affirming life’s spiritual dimension.” Described by H.R.H. The Prince of Wales as “a light unto this nation” and by former British Prime Minister Tony Blair as “an intellectual giant”, Rabbi Sacks is a frequent and sought-after contributor to radio, television and the press both in Britain and around the world.
Since stepping down as the Chief Rabbi of the United Hebrew Congregations of the Commonwealth – a position he served for 22 years between 1991 and 2013 – Rabbi Sacks has held a number of professorships at several academic institutions including Yeshiva University and King’s College London. In addition to his writing and lecturing, he currently serves as the Ingeborg and Ira Rennert Global Distinguished Professor at New York University. Rabbi Sacks has been awarded 17 honorary doctorates including a Doctor of Divinity conferred to mark his first ten years in office as Chief Rabbi, by the then Archbishop of Canterbury, Lord Carey.
Rabbi Sacks is the author of over 30 books. Among them, Rabbi Sacks has published a new English translation and commentary for the Koren Sacks Siddur, the first new Orthodox siddur in a generation, as well as powerful commentaries for the Rosh HaShana, Yom Kippur, Pesach, Shavuot and Sukkot Machzorim. His most recent work, Not in God’s Name: Confronting Religious Violence was awarded a 2015 National Jewish Book Award in America and was a top ten Sunday Times bestseller in the UK. Past works include: The Great Partnership: God, Science and the Search for Meaning; The Dignity of Difference: How to Avoid the Clash of Civilizations, winner of the Grawemeyer Prize for Religion in 2004 for its success in defining a framework for interfaith dialogue between people of all faith and of none; To Heal a Fractured World: The Ethics of Responsibility; and A Letter in the Scroll: On Being Jewish, winner of a National Jewish Book Awards in 2000. His Covenant & Conversationcommentaries on the weekly Torah portion are read in Jewish communities around the world.
In recognition of his work, Rabbi Sacks has received, among others, the Jerusalem Prize in 1995 for his contribution to diaspora Jewish life, The Ladislaus Laszt Ecumenical and Social Concern Award from Ben Gurion University in Israel in 2011, The Guardian of Zion Award from the Ingeborg Rennert Center for Jerusalem Studies at Bar-Ilan University in 2014, and The Katz Award in recognition of his contribution to the practical analysis and application of Halakha in modern life in Israel in 2014. He was named as The Becket Fund’s 2014 Canterbury Medalist for his role in the defence of religious liberty in the public square; won a Bradley Prize in 2016 in recognition of being “a leading moral voice in today’s world”; and in 2017, he was awarded the Irving Kristol Award from the American Enterprise Institute for his “remarkable contributions to philosophy, religion, and interfaith discourse… as one of the world’s greatest living public intellectuals.” In 2018, he was given the Lifetime Achievement Award by The London Jewish News in recognition of his services to the Jewish world and wider society.
Rabbi Sacks was knighted by Her Majesty The Queen in 2005 and made a Life Peer, taking his seat in the House of Lords in October 2009. Born in 1948 in London, he has been married to Elaine since 1970. They have three children and several grandchildren.

 

 

 

From NASA To Jerusalem: Israeli Scientist Develops Handheld Monitor To Detect Early Breast Cancer

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From NASA To Jerusalem: Israeli Scientist Develops Handheld Monitor To Detect Early Breast Cancer

      

 

Breast cancer is the most commonly diagnosed cancer in women and represents about 12 percent of all new cancer cases worldwide, according to the Breast Cancer Research Foundation. In a report this year by the World Cancer Research Fund, there have been two million cases of breast cancer worldwide so far in 2018.

Early detection of breast cancer greatly increases the chances of successful treatment, and offers the best shot for recovery and survival, according to medical authorities. Regular screenings are an important component of early diagnosis, but screening tools such as mammograms – x-rays of the breast – can be painful, may produce false positive or false negative results, may fail to pick up small tumors in dense breast tissue, and are only recommended annually or biannually to women over 40 years of age.

Mammography screenings, according to the American Cancer Society, do not detect about one in five breast cancers, and other methods can be too invasive, dangerous, or expensive.

Dr. Yehudit Abrams, a former scientist at NASA now living in Jerusalem, came up with an idea for a revolutionary new device that will allow women to test for tumors and other changes in their breast in the comfort of their own homes.

The handheld device, called MonitHer, is set to bring new hope to cancer monitoring and takes the guesswork and uncertainty out of manual self-examinations that check for abnormalities and changes in the breast. It may well put women and men on a path toward regular, safe, reliable tracking of their breast health.

To continue reading this article on NoCamels.com, click here.” 

 

Suspected hate crime in Sweden

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Suspected hate crime in Sweden

After being called a ‘dirty Jewish cow’, home of Swedish-Jewish politician is set ablaze; Leaders of Jewish community in country call upon the authorities to take firm steps against the rising anti-Semitism; ‘Not sure Jews have a future here,’ Jewish community heads add.

After receiving anti-Semitic threats—such as “we are following you”, “you dirty Jewish cow’— the home of a Jewish politician was set on fire Tuesday in southern Sweden, prompting the Swedish-Jewish community to fear for their future.

This is the second such event in Lund—a famous university city located 20 kilometers away from Malmö, Sweden’s third largest city, which has the highest rate of anti-Semitic incidents.

The arson attack happened between Monday and Tuesday. Around 2am, unknown assailants threw flammable material into the politician’s home, which consequently burned down entirely.

The woman is a known politician in the region, but chose to remain anonymous. Luckily, she was abroad at the time and no injuries were reported. Firefighters prevented the fire from spreading to several adjacent homes.

In the months prior to the attack, the politician received anti-Semitic threats, and filed a police complaint. Among other things, she received hate mail, calling her “a dirty Jewish cow” and threatening to “get” her.

Anti-Semitic graffiti sprayed in Stockholm, 2014 (Photo: Twitter)
Anti-Semitic graffiti sprayed in Stockholm, 2014 (Photo: Twitter)

 

Earlier this year, another Jewish political activist in Lund suffered from harassments as feces was thrown on his home, garbage was scattered on his doorstep, and his house was partially burned by another arson attack.

Swedish police are investigating these two cases as hate crimes, under the assumption that the crimes were probably committed by far-right individuals or neo-Nazis. The police are not ruling out the possibility of Islamists being behind the attack.

The local Jewish community believes the incidents are connected and that both cases should be dealt as anti-Semitic hate crime.

According to Aron Verstandig—chairman of The Official Council of Swedish Jewish Communities— and Fredrik Sieradzki— spokesperson for the Jewish Community of Malmö—it was an attack on Swedish democracy. “The police did not arrest a suspect. This is not the first arson attack against a Jew in the city of Lund, and the two people who were attacked are known as Jewish political activists,” they said.

A source in the Jewish community said that, “it doesn’t matter who is behind the attack—we fear that the victims were targeted because they are Jewish. The second attack had another agenda—to silence the politician.”

The leaders of the Jewish communities in Sweden called upon the authorities to take firm steps against the rising anti-Semitism in the country, and said that the communities are assisting the woman who lost her home.

“Today many Jews are already wondering if they have a future in Sweden,” said Verstandig.

“I want to be frank. We are always on high alert that something might happen in Europe, and we have seen a rise of anti-Semitic incidents in Sweden in the past decade. Burning the homes of Jews is something new that we haven’t seen here before, and we are very concerned, it definitely causes a stir in the Jewish community,” Sieradzki added.

 

The Gothenburg Synagogue in Sweden, attacked last year with Molotov cocktails. (photo: AP)
The Gothenburg Synagogue in Sweden, attacked last year with Molotov cocktails.(photo: AP)

“We have very good security measures and we are prepared for the possibility that events like these can recur.”

Robert Singer, Chief Executive Officer and Executive Vice-President of the World Jewish Congress, condemned the arson and said that, “this is a very serious event which should not go unanswered”.

“The World Jewish Congress calls upon the Swedish authorities to quickly investigate and bring the perpetrators to justice,” he said. “These attacks are heinous and deserve a firm condemnation. Relentless efforts must be made in order to stop these incidents from recurring,” Singer added.

According to Singer, the World Jewish Congress has accepted the community’s request and decided to assist the politician with renting an apartment and funding her psychological treatment.

“The World Jewish Congress is supporting the victim and will continue to work closely with the Jewish community, in order to build strong community ties and protect their safety,” Singer claimed.

“In the past year I have met with state and police officials to discuss this matter. We hope that the new government will protect the Jewish community,” he concluded.

Last December, two Palestinians and a Syrian man threw Molotov cocktails at a Jewish synagogue in Gothenburg, Sweden, in protest of US President Trump’s decision to recognize Jerusalem as the capital of Israel. The fire was put out and a minor damage was caused.

The three were convicted and sent to prison: two of them received a two-year prison sentence and the third was sentenced to 15 months.

One of the Palestinians, age 22, was supposed to be deported after he completed his sentence, but the Court overruled this decision, saying that Israel would take vengeance on him and that his basic human rights will be hurt.

Israeli officials were outraged by the decision, and the Swedish Attorney General transferred the case to the Swedish Supreme Court.

Source: YNET

 

 

Twitter says no plans to ban Farrakhan after comparison of Jews to termites

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Twitter says no plans to ban Farrakhan after comparison of Jews to termites

ADL urges removal of Nation of Islam leader after he thanks Jewish ‘deceivers’ for ‘putting my name all over the planet because of your fear of what we represent’

Today, 10:29 am 

 

The Anti-Defamation League on Thursday called on Twitter to remove Louis Farrakhan, the anti-Semitic Nation of Islam leader, from the social network after he posted a video in which he appeared to compare Jews to termites.

But when the Buzzfeed news site asked Twitter whether Farrakhan’s latest post violated its newly announced policy against “dehumanizing language,” it was told the religious leader was not in violation of any rules as the new policy had not yet gone into effect.

“The spokesperson did not give a date for when the new rule would go into effect, or if it would at all. He did not address whether Farrakhan’s tweet would be in violation were the policy in effect,” Buzzfeed said.

In a two-minute video posted Wednesday drawn from an October 14 speech in Michigan commemorating the 23rd anniversary of the Million Man March in Washington, Farrakhan addressed “members of the Jewish community that don’t like me.” Calling them “our deceivers,” he thanks them for “putting my name all over the planet because of your fear of what we represent…. I can go anywhere in the world and they’ve heard of Farrakhan. Thank you very much.”

In the tweet that contains the video, Farrakhan wrote, “I’m not an anti-Semite. I’m anti-Termite.”

A notorious anti-Semite, Farrakhan remains active on Twitter despite losing his “verified” status after posting a clip in June of a speech about “the Satanic Jew.”

The blue “verified” badge with a check mark tells visitors that the page of a prominent person is authentic.

Farrakhan’s offending tweet, which is still on the social network, says he is “thoroughly and completely unmasking the Satanic Jew and the Synagogue of Satan.” It links to a video of Farrakhan speaking on May 27 at the Nation of Islam’s international headquarters at Mosque Maryam in Chicago.

In the sermon, Farrakhan warns his listeners about “Satanic Jews who have infected the whole world with poison and deceit.”

He also claimed that contemporary Jews are responsible for promoting child molestation, misogyny, police brutality and sexual assault, among other social ills. In addition, Farrakhan asserted that contemporary Judaism is nothing but a “system of tricks and lies” that Jews study in order to learn how to “dominate” non-Jews.

In the latest video, he seems to argue that he doesn’t hate Jews for being Jews, but for their purported “termite” characteristics. After explaining that he’s “anti-termite,” he protests, “I don’t know nothing about hating somebody because of their religious preference.”

In a statement to the California-based Jewish Journal, ADL chief Jonathan Greenblatt said, “Louis Farrakhan has a long history of vile, anti-Semitic and anti-LGBTQ rhetoric. His latest remarks dehumanizing Jews by calling us termites are despicable. We call on Twitter to remove Farrakhan’s hateful content from the platform to prevent him from spreading and normalizing such hateful messages. This content is exactly the kind of thing the new Twitter policy the company outlined just a few weeks ago is meant to stop.”

It is relatively easier to have a user’s check mark removed. According to Twitter’s terms of service, it may remove verified status at any time, for reasons that include promoting hate and/or violence against, or directly attacking or threatening, other people on the basis of race, ethnicity, national origin, sexual orientation, gender, gender identity, religious affiliation, age, disability, or disease; inciting or engaging in harassment of others; and directly or indirectly threatening or encouraging any form of physical violence against an individual or any group of people, including threatening or promoting terrorism.

In November 2017, Twitter revoked several verification checks from far-right and white nationalist accounts. They included Richard Spencer, Laura Loomer and Tim Gionet, as well as Jason Kessler, who organized the deadly far-right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, in August 2018.

But critics have challenged Twitter to explain why it believes removing the verification check, which merely attests that the individual is who they claim to be, is a relevant response to hate speech.

In September the site permanently banned American right-wing conspiracy theorist Alex Jones and his “Infowars” show for abusive behavior.

 

 

Ted Cruz slams ‘rabidly anti-Israel’ J Street in debate with Beto O’Rourke

Ted Cruz slams ‘rabidly anti-Israel’ J Street in debate with Beto O’Rourke

 

WASHINGTON (JTA) — Sen. Ted Cruz called J Street, the liberal Jewish Middle East policy group, “rabidly anti-Israel” in the Texas Republican’s debate with his Democratic opponent, U.S. Rep. Beto O’Rourke.

“Congressman O’Rourke is fond of saying he doesn’t take PAC money, but the truth is different,” Cruz said Tuesday after O’Rourke accused the incumbent of accepting big money from political action committees. “For example, the J Street PAC, which is a rabidly anti-Israel PAC, has raised over $160,000 for Congressman O’Rourke because of his many votes against the nation of Israel.”

O’Rourke has said and J Street has confirmed that O’Rourke accepts money from individual donors who route it through the J Street PAC, but does not accept money from the PAC itself. Donors sometimes route individual donations through PACs in order to emphasize to the candidate the issue that they favor.

J Street immediately seized upon Cruz’s jibe in a fundraising email.

“You know what? We honestly don’t care if Ted Cruz wants to insult us. If anything, being attacked by Ted Cruz is a badge of honor,” the group said in an appeal Wednesday with the subject line “Ted Cruz Attacks J Street.”

“What we care about is that extremists like him — elected officials who undermined the Iran deal, demonize Palestinians to score political points and believe the only way to be ‘pro-Israel’ is to support every policy of the Netanyahu government — hold power in Washington right now,” the appeal said.

Each candidate has raised huge amounts, in the tens of millions of dollars, for the November election.

Cruz’s reference to O’Rourke’s “many votes against the nation of Israel” appears to refer to O’Rourke’s vote in 2014 during that year’s Gaza war against emergency funding for Iron Dome, Israel’s anti-missile system. Cruz has previously mentioned O’Rourke’s vote.

O’Rourke has said that he objected to how the funding was rushed through, but he took a great deal of flak from the pro-Israel community for the vote.

This month, O’Rourke released a statement saying that he backs defense assistance for Israel because he “believes Israel is critically important to the United States because it is the home of the Jewish people, because it is an exemplary democracy that shares our values, and because it is a crucial contributor to our national security objectives in the region.”

 

Source: JTA

Security Cabinet Instructs IDF To Step Up Response To Gaza Attacks

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Security Cabinet Instructs IDF To Step Up Response To Gaza Attacks

By Ilanit Chernick • 18 October, 2018

 

 

 

The Security Cabinet has instructed the IDF to escalate its response to attacks from Gaza following an incident in the early hours of Wednesday morning in which two rockets were fired at Israel, one scoring a direct hit on a house in Beer Sheva and the other landing off the coast in the central region.

While the Cabinet did not issue a statement after a marathon overnight session into the early hours of Thursday morning, Housing Minister Yoav Galant warned that the rules of engagement with Hamas and Gazan terrorism are about to change. The former head of IDF Southern Command, who sits on the Security Cabinet, told Channel Two that although he could not speak about “the content of the cabinet discussions… I can say one thing very explicitly – the rules of the game are about to change.

“We will no longer accept the arson terror and the border terror,” he warned.

According to various reports, the Security Cabinet instructed the IDF to gradually implement a zero tolerance policy, beginning with Friday’s expected weekly mass demonstration on the border.

The IDF was reported to have presented two different operational plans for the escalation in the south – one, a wave of aerial strikes and the other a policy of containment with a gradual escalation of its response in line with developments on the ground.

Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman was said to have demanded a more aggressive response. Liberman said earlier this week that Israel had exhausted its options in trying to reach a long-term understanding with Hamas and that the time has come “to take off the kid gloves” and launch a major military operation against the terrorist group to put a stop to months of violence.

Meanwhile, reactions to the Security Cabinet’s failure to take decisive action Wednesday’s rocket attacks, have been mixed.

Speaking to Channel Ten TV, Eshkol Regional Council head Gadi Yarkoni expressed his “disappointment” that major action against Hamas was no longer on the agenda right now.

“We should have used the rocket attack in Beersheba to launch an attack and restore the balance of fear in Gaza, and unfortunately this did not happen,” he said. “We don’t need a ground invasion of Gaza, but we do need to make their leaders afraid to walk outside. They must be the ones who are afraid.

“We met with the prime minister yesterday and he sounded determined to act, but this morning we were surprised to learn that things were returning to normal,” he said.

Likud MK David Bitan said told Army Radio that “the time has come to carry out a ground operation in Gaza.”

The former coalition chairman said had been no cease in attacks or calming of the situation. “Enough already with this foot-dragging.”

However, Likud MK Yoav Kish explained that Israel is giving Gaza another opportunity to de-escalate the situation.

“We were very close to making a decision to significantly escalate the situation in Gaza,” he said. “I assume that this is one of the last attempts at an agreement.”

“The blow to Hamas will come. It’s just a question of when – and it’s not worthwhile to fall into [the trap of going according to] their timetable.”

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