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Michigan professor faces disciplinary action for denying student letter

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Michigan professor faces disciplinary action for denying student letter

The development comes amid two anti-Israel controversies at the university, including another professor denying a letter of recommendation to study in Israel and a photo used during a lecture comparing Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to Adolf Hitler.

 

 

 A University of Michigan professor, citing his support for the BDS movement in denying a student’s request in August for a letter of recommendation for a semester-long study-abroad program at Tel Aviv University, was sanctioned on Tuesday by the university.

“As you may know, many university departments have pledged an academic boycott against Israel in support of Palestinians living in Palestine,” John Cheney-Lippold, a professor American Culture department, wrote to Michigan student Abigail Ingber in an email in August. “This boycott includes writing letters of recommendation for students planning to study there. … For reasons of these politics, I must rescind my offer to write your letter.”

Cheney-Lippold met with Elizabeth Cole, interim dean of the College of Literature, Science and the Arts, on Sept. 20, where he acknowledged he was wrong regarding university policies on the BDS movement and instead inserted “a personal stance,” according to a letter from Cole to the professor, which is part of the FOIA file.

The professor acknowledged that he previously wrote a few letters for students wanting to study in Israel because he “did not have tenure.”

“Supporting the academic aspirations of your students is fundamental to your responsibilities as a faculty member. You have an obligation to support your students’ academic growth,” said Cole. “Rather than fulfill this obligation, you used the student’s request as a platform to express your own personal views.”

“Nothing in this letter is intended to discourage you from speaking on or advocating for matters that are of concern to you, which you are free to do,” added Cole. “But interfering with a student’s academic aspirations, as you have done here, is not acceptable.”

Despite a BDS resolution passed last year by the university’s student government, the school itself prohibits its departments or any part of the university to boycott or divest from Israel.

This development comes amid two anti-Israel controversies at the university late last week: a guest lecture comparing Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to Adolf Hitler and a graduate instructor denying a similar request from a student, citing the same reason as Cheney-Lippold.

 

 

Bucharest, Romania – Elie Wiesel Bust Unveiled In Romania To Mark Holocaust Day

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Bucharest, Romania – Elie Wiesel Bust Unveiled In Romania To Mark Holocaust Day

 

Bucharest, Romania – A bust of Romania-born writer and Nobel laureate Elie Wiesel was unveiled Tuesday in Bucharest on the country’s national Holocaust remembrance day.

The director of Romania’s National Institute for the Study of the Holocaust joined Bucharest’s mayor and the U.S. and Israeli ambassadors for the event, held in a small square named for Wiesel.

Wiesel won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1986 and died in 2016. He and his family were among an estimated 14,000 Jews who were deported to the Auschwitz death camp from a town in northwest Romania in May 1944. His mother and younger sister died there.

Romania deported 150,000 Jews and 25,000 Roma to Nazi concentration camps in a part of the Soviet Union that was controlled by the Axis powers from 1942 to 1944, when the country was run by pro-Nazi dictator Ion Antonescu. In 1941, he ordered a pogrom where more than 13,000 Jews were slain in the northeast city of Iasi.

Wiesel’s son Elisha said in a statement that his father didn’t “believe in guilt being passed down the generations,” but he added that Romanians had “a responsibility for what happens now, and for how you raise your children.”

In August, anti-Semitic graffiti appeared outside the house in the town of Sighetu Marmatiei where Wiesel was born. One stated Wiesel was “in hell with Hitler.”

Romania’s population of some 19.5 million includes about 6,000 Jews.

 

Source: VosIzNeias

Israel Thanks “Great Friend” Nikki Haley After Surprise Resignation

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Israel Thanks “Great Friend” Nikki Haley After Surprise Resignation

By TPS • 10 October, 2018

Israeli leaders, lawmakers and diplomats lined up Tuesday to praise the United Nations ambassador to the United Nations, Nikki Haley, after she made a surprise announcement that she would step down from the post by the end of the year.

The 46-year-old former South Carolina governor has been a staunch supporter of Israel at the UN, constantly berating the global body for its anti-Israel bias.

“I thank Ambassador Nikki Haley for leading an uncompromising struggle against the hypocrisy at the UN and on behalf of the truth and justice of our country,” said Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu.

President Reuven Rivlin called an “uncompromising advocate of American policy towards the Middle East and Israel” and said she “tore away the cynical smokescreen that was masking what the United Nations and international organizations were really doing.”

“I thank Ambassador Haley for her courage and for a term of office that will be remembered as a turning point in the relations between the US and international organizations, and the discriminatory stance that these organizations have taken Israel on more than one occasion,” Rivlin said.

Israel’s ambassador to the United Nations, Danny Danon thanked Haley for “standing with the truth without fear” and for “representing the values common to Israel and the United States.”

“Thank you for your support for the State of Israel, which helped lead to a change in Israel’s status in the UN,” Danon said.

Yesh Atid leader Yair Lapid Former Israeli Ambassador to the US Michael Oren wrote: “It is with great regret that I heard about the resignation of Ambassador Nikki Haley, who worked for the United States, Israel and the enlightened world against the dark forces of the United Nations. The people of Israel will always appreciate her and wish her success in the future.”

Yesh Atid faction leader Yair Lapid said Haley was a great friend of Israel who “took on the hypocrisy and bias at the UN with conviction and clarity.”

Former Israeli Ambassador to Washington MK Michael Oren said Haley “worked for the United States, Israel and the enlightened world against the dark forces of the United Nations”

Hillel Neuer, executive director of the Geneva-based watchdog UN Watch said “history will record that Ambassador Nikki Haley stood up for truth, fairness and human rights, and that she did so with extraordinary courage, eloquence and grace” and that she had called out “the obsessive singling-out of the Jewish state by the UN’s Human Rights Council and other bodies that have become hijacked by tyrannies.”

Three Israeli Firms Among TIME Magazine’s 50 ‘Genius Companies’ For 2018

Three Israeli Firms Among TIME Magazine’s 50 ‘Genius Companies’ For 2018

 

    

This article was re-published with permission from NoCamels.com – Israeli Innovation News.

 

Three Israeli companies were among 50 ventures selected by TIME Magazine for its list of 50 “genius companies” for 2018 published late last week and available in newsstands.

It is the first annual “genius companies” list by the esteemed American magazine, known for its hard-hitting cover photos. The publication said it asked its vast network of editors and correspondents “to nominate businesses that are inventing the future,” and evaluated candidates “based on key factors, including originality, influence, success, and ambition.”

Companies that made TIME’s list include industry giants like Apple, Amazon, Airbnb, Disney, GoFundMe, Nike, and Lockheed Martin. Recent ventures include Bird, the electric scooters sharing company that in launched in Tel Aviv and Paris this summer, Rihanna’s Fenty Beauty cosmetics line, and the genetics testing company 23andMe.

The three Israeli companies on TIME’s round-up are:

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

The Shocking Moment a Piece of Art Self-Destructed After $1.4M Sale at Auction

The Shocking Moment a Piece of Art Self-Destructed After $1.4M Sale at Auction

 

Art prankster Banksy has struck again.

A work by the elusive street artist self-destructed in front of startled auction-goers on Friday, moments after being sold for 1.04 million pounds ($1.4 million). In an Instagram post Saturday, Banksy claimed the dramatic artistic payoff had been years in the making.

The spray-painted canvas “Girl With Balloon” went under the hammer at Sotheby’s in London, fetching more than three times its pre-sale estimate and equaling a record price for the artist.

Then, as an alarm sounded, it ran through a shredder embedded in the frame, leaving half the canvas hanging from the bottom in strips.

A post on Banksy’s official Instagram account showed the moment – and the shocked reaction of those in the room – with the words “Going, going, gone…”

A video was later posted on the account, stating: “A few years ago I secretly built a shredder into a painting in case it was ever put up for auction.” The video showed images of a shredder being implanted into a picture frame along with footage of Friday’s auction finale.

Banksy’s spokeswoman, Jo Brooks, confirmed that the post was genuine.

Sotheby’s – which had noted before the sale that the work’s ornate gilded frame was “an integral element of the artwork chosen by Banksy himself” – appeared as shocked as anyone else.

“It appears we just got Banksy-ed,” said Alex Branczik, head of contemporary European art at the auction house.

 

Dutch diplomat was punished for saving Jews in the Holocaust, new book reveals

Dutch diplomat was punished for saving Jews in the Holocaust, new book reveals

AMSTERDAM (JTA) — The Dutch Foreign Ministry reprimanded a diplomat who overstepped his authority to save thousands of Jews from the Holocaust and deprived him of royal honors, new research shows.

The research into the treatment of Jan Zwartendijk, who was honorary consul of the Netherlands in what today is Lithuania, is part of a Dutch-language book published this month on his actions titled “The Righteous” by biographer Jan Brokken.

Zwartendijk served in Kaunas as consul at the same time that Chiune Sugihara was there to represent Imperial Japan.

Largely eclipsed by Sugihara, Zwartendijk was the initiator and chief facilitator of the rescue of more than 2,000 Jews by the two diplomats. Sugihara gave the refugees, who were fleeing German occupation, transit visas that enabled them to enter the Soviet Union. But they would have been unusable had Zwartendijk not given them destination visas to Curacao, then a Caribbean island colony of the Netherlands. Some of those rescued by Zwartendijk nicknamed him “the angel of Curacao.”

Both men acted without approval from their superiors. Unlike Sugihara, Zwartendijk risked his own life, as well as those of his wife and their three small children, who were all living under Nazi occupation.

Yet Zwartendijk, who died in 1976, was “given a dressing down” after his actions became known by a top Foreign Ministry official, Joseph Luns, who later became the head of NATO, the book revealed based on interviews with people who were told about it by Zwartendijk and other materials. Zwartendijk’s children said their father was deeply offended by how he had been treated.

Sjoerd Sjoerdsma, a Dutch lawmaker, said in a statement that the Foreign Ministry should apologize for how it had treated Zwartendijk, whom Israel in 1997 recognized as a Righteous Among the Nations – a non-Jew who risked his life to save Jews from the Holocaust.

“Jan Zwartendijk deserved a statue, not a reprimand,” the ANP news agency quoted Sjoerdsma as saying last week. “High time for an exoneration and apology to his descendants. I hope Foreign Minister Stef Blok does it.”

The ministry declined to comment on whether it is considering an apology. A spokesperson told the news agency that Zwartendijk’s actions “are without blemish” and added that the Dutch state co-funded a monument celebrating his actions in Lithuania.

The book also suggests that an unnamed ministry official intervened with the Dutch royal house to prevent Zwartendijk from being knighted for reasons unrelated to the war — he was a senior executive at the Dutch Philips electronics firm — for his stepping out of line during World War II.

 

Source: JTA

Earliest known stone carving of Hebrew word ‘Jerusalem’ found near city entrance

‘EVERY CHILD WHO KNOWS A FEW LETTERS OF HEBREW CAN READ IT’

Earliest known stone carving of Hebrew word ‘Jerusalem’ found near city entrance

Unearthed in what was an artisan’s village 2.5 km from ancient Temple, inscribed column from 100 BCE features Aramaic, Hebrew, two of the languages used by Jerusalemites of the era

Main image by Danit Levi, Israel Antiquities Authority

The earliest stone inscription bearing the full spelling of the modern Hebrew word for Jerusalem was unveiled on Tuesday at the Israel Museum, in the capital.

While any inscription dating from the Second Temple period is of note, the 2,000-year-old three-line inscription on a waist-high column — reading “Hananiah son of Dodalos of Jerusalem” — is exceptional, as it is the first known stone carving of the word “Yerushalayim,” which is how the Israeli capital’s name is pronounced in Hebrew today.

“A worker came to me in the office towards the end of the day and excitedly told me to grab my camera and writing materials because he’d found something written,’” Levi told The Times of Israel, ahead of the column’s unveiling Tuesday.

‘My heart started to pound and I was sure everyone could hear it. My hands were trembling so badly I couldn’t properly take a picture’ — archaeologist Danit Levi

At first, the excited worker could not clearly explain what he had found, and Levi thought it was graffiti.

“I was picturing red spray paint in my mind and couldn’t understand how that happened because the latest dating could only be 2,000 years ago or earlier,” said Levi.

Danit Levi, director of the excavations on behalf of the Israel Antiquities Authority near the Jerusalem International Convention Center, at the Israel Museum on October 9, 2018, for the unveiling of an unusual stone inscription. (Amanda Borschel-Dan/Times of Israel)

But when she saw the professionally chiseled Hebrew lettering inscribed into the stone column, she realized it was something unusual. Brushing off the dirt, she began to read what was written.

“My heart started to pound and I was sure everyone could hear it. My hands were trembling so badly I couldn’t properly take a picture,” said Levi, who dates the column and its inscription to 100 BCE.

The 80 cm. high column has a diameter of 47.5 cm, said Levi, and would have originally been used in a Jewish craftsman’s building. It presumably belonged to or was built with money from Hananiah son of Dodalos.

While inscribed in a Jewish village — Levi said there is evidence of ritual baths as well as other finds bearing Hebrew lettering at the site — the column was eventually reused in a plastered wall, found in a ceramic construction workshop in use by the Tenth Roman Legion, that would eventually destroy Jerusalem in 70 CE.

Hananiah may have been one of the several potters of the village located a mere 2.5 kilometers (about 1.5 miles) outside of ancient Jerusalem, who created vessels used by Jerusalemites and pilgrims for everyday cooking and Temple offerings. Industrial areas such as this one, said Levi, are always found outside of urban areas to avoid the city’s pollution.

Strategically located near clay, water, and fuel for their kilns, the village was also on a main artery leading to the Temple — which is used until today, noted the IAA’s Jerusalem Regional Archaeologist Dr. Yuval Baruch at the unveiling.

Jerusalem during the Second Temple, said Baruch, was one of the largest cities in the east, with a population of at least 50,000 residents, which swelled by as many as hundreds of thousands, during the three annual pilgrimage festivals. The excavated artisans’ site is approximately 200 dunams, “larger than a small village,” which would have been necessary to cater to the needs of the pilgrims ascending Temple Mount.

The inscription as it was found in the excavation near the Jerusalem International Convention Center, winter 2018. (Danit Levy, Israel Antiquities Authority)

The stone inscription is now on display at the Israel Museum in a room of the archaeology wing that is dedicated to Second Temple period artifacts discovered in Jerusalem, including a new piece which the inscription, “Ben HaCohen HaGadol,” or son of the High Priest. On a platform upon which the Jerusalem column stands are stone vessels and pottery, perhaps even created by Hananiah himself.

The inscription, labeled as Aramaic at the Israel Museum, gives some insight into Hananiah. Written in Hebrew letters, he is called “Hananiah bar Dodalos,” the Aramaic word “bar” used to denote “son of.” The name of his father, “Dodalos,” said the archaeologists, is a nickname for artists of the time, based on Greek mythology’s Daedalus.

New director of the Israel Museum Prof. Ido Bruno said he was pleased to continue a fruitful collaboration between his institution and the IAA. He noted that the short inscription, found only a seven-minute walk away, is evidence of a long history of ceramic craft and industry.

Bruno added that, as a Jerusalemite himself, he was excited to see the word “Yerushalayim.”

“Every child who knows a few letters of Hebrew can read it,” said Bruno, “and understand that 2000 years ago, Jerusalem was written and spelled like today.”

Is the inscription in Hebrew or Aramaic?

The unique inscription from Jerusalem, as displayed at the Israel Museum, October 2018. (Laura Lachman, Courtesy of the Israel Museum)

According to the Israel Museum’s new display text accompanying the inscription, it is written in Aramaic. According to scholars at the Academy of the Hebrew Language, however, the crown jewel of the inscription, the word “Yerushalayim,” clearly indicates the use of Hebrew, not Aramaic.

In Aramaic, the word would have been spelled “Yerushalem,” said Dr. Alexey (Eliyahu) Yuditsky, who works as a researcher for the academy’s Historical Dictionary Project.

“The spelling with the letter ‘yud’ points to the Hebrew pronunciation,” said Yuditsky from his Givat Ram office.

The more difficult question, said Yuditsky, is what is Aramaic and what is Hebrew during this era? They are sister languages and many Jerusalemites would have spoken both fluently, and even used them interchangeably.

Opening a book by epigraphist Ada Yardeni on Bar Kochba’s Cave of Letters, a trove of administrative documents dating to circa 131-136 CE, Yuditsky randomly pointed out a Hebrew contract in which Jews signed names both using the Hebrew “ben” for “son of” and the Aramaic “bar,” illustrating its undifferentiated nature during this era.

The use of “bar” in the new Jerusalem inscription, Yuditsky said, does not at all necessarily mean it was written in Aramaic.

Artifacts taken from a Roman Legion ceramic building materials workshop from an excavation near the Jerusalem International Convention Center, now displayed at the Israel Museum, October 2018. (Amanda Borschel-Dan/Times of Israel)

The spelling of the name Hananiah son of Dodalos could have been “international,” said Yuditsky, and he would have spelled it this way, whether in Hebrew, Aramaic, Greek, or Latin.

While, according to archaeologists, this inscription is the first of its kind uncovered in stone, the fact of finding a full spelling of Jerusalem is not such a rare occurrence for the time period, Yuditsky said.

The Dead Sea Scrolls, which may have been written as early as 400 BCE, but are definitely at least contemporary or earlier than the stone inscription, offer dozens of physical examples of the full spelling of “Yerushalayim.” Written in the same Hebrew font, a random example Yuditsky found in the IAA’s digital scan of the War Scroll jumped off the page in clear, modern-appearing script.

“You can find it [the spelling] in the Dead Sea Scrolls without end,” said Yuditsky.

Dr. Yuval Baruch, Jerusalem Regional Archaeologist of the Israel Antiquities Authority, at the unveiling of an unusual stone inscription now on display at the Israel Museum, October 9, 2018. (Amanda Borschel-Dan/ Times of Israel)

But for this writer, it is something quite different to look at a computer screen at the digitalized Dead Sea Scrolls and to see a waist-high column inscribed with the name of the State of Israel’s capital.

Jerusalem archaeologist Baruch, well aware of the many travels and trials the Hebrew language passed through, traversing continents and historical time periods, in seeing this new inscription, he said he was moved that “some aspect of the Jews’ language was preserved the same way, from ancient times until today.”

 

 

Source:  The Times of Israel

Hurricane Michael Closes in on Florida: Damage, Flooding Reported Along Coast

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Hurricane Michael Closes in on Florida: Damage, Flooding Reported Along Coast as ‘Time to Evacuate Has Come and Gone’

  • As Hurricane Michael neared a Florida landfall, officials warned the time to evacuate had passed.
  • Flooding and damage was reported Wednesday morning as the storm’s impacts arrived.
  • More than 375,000 people along the Gulf Coast in 22 counties have been ordered or urged to evacuate.
  • Tens of thousands lost power along the Florida Panhandle prior to landfall.

As Hurricane Michael headed for a catastrophic and unprecedented Category 4 strike on the Florida Panhandle and Big Bend area Wednesday, Florida Gov. Rick Scott shared dire advice: “The time to evacuate has come and gone … SEEK REFUGE IMMEDIATELY.”

Hours before landfall, reports of damage and flooding were relayed from the coast. Residents who refused to evacuate were cut off when bridges were closed, including along St. George Island, where some called for help Wednesday morning but were told crews would not be able to reach them, a National Weather Service storm report said.

By 1 p.m. EDT, more than 100,000 homes and businesses were without power statewide, most of which were in the areas impacted by the storm, according to PowerOutage.us. This included more than 85 percent of customers in Franklin County.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

U.S. Ambassador to U.N. Nikki Haley to Leave at End of Year

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U.S. Ambassador to U.N. Nikki Haley to Leave at End of Year

 

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – President Donald Trump said Tuesday U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley is leaving the administration “at the end of the year.” Trump spoke as he and Haley met in the Oval Office, shortly after word came of her plans to resign.

He called Haley a “very special” person, adding that she told him six months ago that she might want to take some time off. Trump said that together, they had “solved a lot of problems.”

Trump said he hoped she could come back to the administration in another capacity.

Trump said that he will name Haley’s successor within the next two or three weeks.

It’s the latest shake-up in the turbulent Trump administration just weeks before the November midterm election.

No reason for the resignation was immediately provided.

Trump also said that his next meeting with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un is happening and officials are in the process of setting it up.

Trump said Secretary of State Mike Pompeo had a great meeting with Kim and that three or four locations were being considered for the two leaders’ next summit.

Haley, 46, was appointed to the U.N. post in November 2016 and last month coordinated Trump’s second trip to the United Nations, including his first time chairing the U.N. Security Council.

Before she was named by Trump to her U.N. post, Haley was governor of South Carolina, the first woman to hold the post. She was re-elected in 2014.

As governor, she developed a national reputation as a racial conciliator who led the charge to bring down the Confederate flag at the Statehouse and guided South Carolina through one of its darkest moments, the massacre at a black church.

 

Source: Hamodia

Netanyahu Meets with Russian Deputy PM Maxim Akimov

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Netanyahu Meets with Russian Deputy PM Maxim Akimov

By TPS • 9 October, 2018

 

Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, met Tuesday with Russian Deputy Prime Minister Maxim Akimov, who has arrived in Israel for the discussions of the mixed Israel-Russia economic committee.

A statement from the Prime Minister’s Office said Netanyahu had “emphasized the importance of the link between the two countries and of the continued dialogue regarding threats in the region based on common interests.”  According to the statement they also discussed continued advancement of cooperation in medicine, science, construction and agriculture.

The meeting was the first high level meeting between the prime minister and a senior Russian official since the September 17 incident in which a Russian intelligence plan with 15 military personnel was shot down by Syrian air defense batteries during an IDF strike on an Iranian military depot supplying advanced weapons to Hezbollah.

Earlier this week, Netanyahu said he had spoken with Russian President Vladimir Putin and that they would meet in the near future.

Speaking at the weekly Cabinet meeting, Netanyahu said that despite Russia’s delivery of advanced S-300 anti-aircraft missile batteries to Syria, Israel would continue to operate to prevent Iran from establishing a military presence in the country and to prevent it from transferring lethal weapons to Hezbollah in Lebanon.”

Following the delivery of the first S-300 systems to Syria last week, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Vershinin issued a veiled warning to Israel, saying he he hoped “Tel Aviv will exercise good judgment in the region.”

 

 

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