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A Chicago Teacher Showed Her Grandfather Was A Nazi Collaborator. Now Lithuania Is Paying Attention

A Chicago Teacher Showed Her Grandfather Was A Nazi Collaborator. Now Lithuania Is Paying Attention

 

Vilnius, Lithuania – Barring unexpected delays, Silvia Foti is months away from fulfilling an old promise that’s become her life’s work: to write a biography of her late grandfather, who is a national hero in his native Lithuania.

Foti, a 60-year-old high school teacher from Chicago, made the pledge to her dying mother 18 years ago. She has spent a long time studying the life of her grandfather, Jonas Noreika, as well as acquiring the writing skills necessary for chronicling it and finding a publisher.

But rather than celebrating Noreika’s legacy as her mother requested, the biography that Foti wrote confirms and amplifies the findings of Holocaust scholars who for years have called for stripping Noreika of his honors.

The national hero, she and they insist, was a Nazi collaborator who helped murder thousands of Jews and steal their property.

The unpublished biography, which Foti summarized in a bombshell Salon article 

in July, split her own family. She said her father and his second wife asked Foti not to publish the book because it would “make Lithuania look bad.” And it would have distressed her mother if she were still alive — the author said this causes her “great pain.”

But the main significance of the book is the unprecedented attention it is bringing to Noreika’s alleged crimes in Lithuania, where a school has been named for him. Noreika died in 1947 while in the hands of the KGB. In 2000, former president Vytautas Landsbergis, the first head of state of independent Lithuania, attended the funeral of Noreika’s wife in Vilnius.

Last week, Foreign Minister Linas Linkevicius urged authorities to remove a memorial plaque to Noreika from the wall of the Lithuanian Academy of Sciences in central Vilnius – the first such call by a senior Lithuanian official on any of the country’s numerous monuments celebrating killers of Jews.

Following the Salon article and coverage of it in The New York Times, Vilnius Mayor Remigijus Simasius, who for years has ignored calls by Jewish groups to remove the plaque, asked the state-funded and -operated Genocide and Resistance Research Center to review Noreika’s status as a national hero.

In her book, Foti explores how her grandfather issued orders to round up and kill the Jews after his appointment in 1941 as head of Siauliai County under the German Nazi occupation. And she presents evidence that he personally moved into the home of a Jewish family after its members had been killed, presumably at his order.

Foti recalled being shocked when she first learned of these allegations in 2013 while visiting the school in Sukioni? named for her grandfather. The principal told her that “he got a lot of grief from the Jews” over the name, but assured her it “was all Soviet lies.”

That remark put her on a path to unravel the history of Lithuanian Jewry’s murder and her grandfather’s complicity in it. At first she had “hoped to exonerate him,” Foti said. Yet a wealth of evidence convinced her that her grandfather was complicit and actually “taught his Lithuanian soldiers how to exterminate Jews efficiently: how to sequester them, march them into the woods, force them to dig their own graves and shove them into pits after shooting them,” as she wrote in the Salon article.

It was a devastating discovery for a woman who said she grew up “adoring” her late grandfather. At Christmas dinners, her tight-knit family would leave an empty chair and glass of wine for him to acknowledge the absence of the handsome man in framed portraits who probably was tortured to death by the KGB at the age of 37.

Foti said she hopes the book helps “Lithuania finally take a good look at its own role in the Holocaust and stop blaming the Germans for everything.”

She has had to pray and seek guidance from God throughout her work on the book, she said.

The debate about Noreika and other collaborators who sided with the Nazis when they were fighting Russia during World War II goes to the heart of Lithuania’s national narrative that it was and is a victim of Russia. Seen through that prism, collaborators like Noreika or Juozas Ambrazevicius, the leader of a local pro-Nazi government, sided with Germany only to achieve independence for Lithuania.

But that narrative ignores the level of complicity by ordinary Lithuanians — many of whom viewed Jews as agents of communism — in the near total annihilation of the approximately 220,000 Jews who lived in Lithuania before the Holocaust, according to Efraim Zuroff, the Eastern Europe director of the Simon Wiesenthal Center.

Zuroff believes that the veneration of people like Noreika in some ways is rooted in a collective desire to whitewash Lithuanian complicity.

“You see this tendency across Eastern Europe,” he said, “but it’s strongest specifically in the countries with the highest amounts of genocide complicity.”

Lithuania is the only Nazi-occupied country noted by Israel’s Yad Vashem museum for its people’s “enthusiasm” for collaboration with Germany. And even when this enthusiasm “subsided … hostility towards Jews and denunciation persisted,” the museum says.

One example of this genocidal zeal occurred in Kaunas, Lithuania’s second city. At the Lietukis Garage, pro-German Lithuanian nationalists killed more than 50 Jewish men in 1941 by beating, hosing and then murdering them with iron bars, according to the U.S.  Holocaust Memorial Museum. Some of the perpetrators then posed for pictures with the victims’ tortured bodies, providing some of the most memorable images of Nazi collaboration anywhere.

Foti’s research turned the plaque for Noreika into a symbol for the fight for recognition of that complicity. But the plaque is just one of numerous expressions of veneration for perpetrators.

Juozas Krikstaponis, a member of a death squad who killed thousands of Jews in Lithuania and Belarus, has a monument for him in the city of Ukmerg?, 30 miles north of Vilnius.

The Nazi collaborator Kazys Skirpa, who represented his nation in Berlin during World War II, has a main street named after him in Kaunas, and his image features regularly in nationalist marches. An outspoken anti-Semite,  Skirpa “proposed to solve ‘the Jewish problem’ not by genocide but by the method of expulsion from Lithuania,” the Genocide and Resistance Research Center of Lithuania asserted in 2015.

Against this background, the developments around Foti’s article have surprised veteran campaigners for Holocaust recognition in Lithuania.

Zuroff acknowledged that Jewish Holocaust scholars like himself are “easy to dismiss” in Lithuania as Russian agents or disgruntled enemies of the Lithuanian nation. Even ethnic Lithuanians who try to confront complicity quickly get labeled as traitors.

In 2015, Zuroff co-authored a landmark book with Ruta Vanagaite, a successful writer who is not Jewish, that chronicles their joint travels across many of the killing sites of Jews that dot Lithuania and their history. “Our People” also features Vanagaite’s discovery that two of her close relatives, her grandfather and uncle, were active in the persecution of Jews.

But Vanagaite’s publishing house last year dropped her as the mainstream media attempted to discredit her. Landsbergis, who was Lithuania’s first leader after communism, published an op-ed on the Delfi news site calling Vanagaite a “moral scumbag” and “Mrs. Dushanski” – a reference to the Jewish KGB officer Nachman Dushanski.

Vanagaite’s publishing house also recalled all of her books, only one of which was about the Holocaust. And the governing coalition in April introduced a bill banning the sale of books that “distort historical facts” in what was seen as direct reaction to some of her claims about World War II.

Whereas Vanagaite’s ties to Zuroff and liberal credentials made her vulnerable to smear campaigns, Foti “totally blindsided the Lithuanian government,” according to Grant Gochin, a Los Angeles-based financial adviser of Lithuanian-Jewish descent. Gochin is behind multiple lawsuits over his ancestral homeland’s veneration of war criminals, including Noreika.

“They can’t call Noreika’s daughter a Soviet agent, they can’t defend against her,” he said.

In this respect Foti, who also favors the removal of the plaque honoring her grandfather and other honors, landed a rare victory for Zuroff, Vanagaite and Gochin’s side. She also highlighted their fight to the outside world.

But the officials who said they favored steps to remove Noreika as a national hero were “clearly paying lip service,” Gochin said, “or it would’ve happened long ago.”

As long as Lithuanians are taught to revere people like Noreika, Gochin said, “the fight for historical accuracy is being lost.”

“Genocide,” he said, “needs to be acknowledged where it happened.”

 

 

Source: VosIzNeias

JFK Airport Will Get Two New Terminals in $13B Transformation

JFK Airport Will Get Two New Terminals in $13B Transformation

 

New York (AP) – New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo says John F. Kennedy International Airport will go from an aging facility into a world-class air travel hub in a seven-year, $13 billion transformation.

He unveiled details on Thursday during a Manhattan gathering of the Association for a Better New York.

Expanding on an announcement he made in January 2017, Cuomo says the rebuilt JFK Airport will feature two new international terminals, centralized ground transportation and better roadways.

He says the improvements will increase the airport’s capacity by at least 15 million passengers a year. It currently handles about 60 million annually.

Construction is expected to begin in 2020. The first new gates are scheduled to open three years later, with most of the project completed in 2025.

Merkel: ‘All Iranian forces must leave Syria’

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Merkel: ‘All Iranian forces must leave Syria’

By Yona Schnitzer/TPS • 4 October, 2018

 

All Iranian forces must leave Syria, German Chancellor Angela Merkel said Thursday, during a joint joint press conference with Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu in Jerusalem.

Speaking about the Iranian nuclear threat, Netanyahu told Merkel that it is the “billions of dollars” transferred from Europe following the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, which allow Iran to continue its nuclear aspirations.

“[Those] funds didn’t go to benefit Iranian citizens, but to Iran’s war machine, which is bent on conquering the entire Middle East,” Netanyahu asserted.

The Israeli premiere thanked his German counterpart for her strong stance against anti-semitism, as well as her standing up for Israel’s security.

“Anti-Semitism throughout the ages has always been preceded by slander, [but] what has happened now is that the slanders that were directed against the Jewish people are now directed against the Jewish state,” said Netanyahu, adding a call to combat anti semitism “not only when it’s directed at individuals, but also when it is directed at the Jewish State.”

Speaking about the security situation on the Gaza Strip, Netanyahu blamed Palestinian Authority Chairman Mahmoud Abbas (Abu Mazen) of attempting to drag both sides in Gaza into war by perpetuating the humanitarian crisis in the Strip. According to Netanyahu, Abbas purposely delayed the transfer of funds from the PA to Gaza in order to put pressure on Hamas. “As a result, pressure is put on Hamas, and Hamas attacks Israel,” said Netanyahu, also adding a message to Hamas by which, if they think they can attack Israel as a result of a crisis, “They are making a very big mistake, and will be dealt a very severe blow.”

Merkel also addressed the situation between Israel and the Palestinians, telling Netanyahu that Germany “prefers the two-state solution,” over any other possible solutions.

Earlier, Netanyahu and Merkel attended a roundtable meeting with Israeli and German business people, where the sides discussed the potential for bilateral cooperation in innovation by creating joint platforms for the development of technologies in the fields of – inter alia – water, green energy and agriculture.

The meeting was attended by Economy and Industry Minister Eli Cohen, German Federal Minister for Economic Affairs and Energy Peter Altmaier and Israeli and German businesspeople in the fields of – inter alia – agriculture, communications, cyber, automotive technology, medical instruments and pharmaceuticals.

“This is a wonderful opportunity to have a meeting between Israeli and German innovators. The last meeting that Chancellor Merkel and I had we decided to have this roundtable and have this delegation meet with Israeli counterparts. I think, just from a few examples that we saw here, I think there are tremendous opportunities,” Netanyahu said at the meeting, adding that “Germany is one of the world’s great economies. It has great science, great innovation, great industry and a wealth of experience.”

Dr. Mindy Boxer – 7 Ways To Communicate Healthy Habits To Your Kids

As the school year kicks back into gear so should the healthy habits that you and your children have before practiced. Notice how I said “practiced,” because we all know during the summer-vacation months we tend to indulge a little.

Maybe you have had one too many backyard barbecues, or three too many trips to the favorite ice cream shop down the street. Whatever your summer vice may be don’t worry about it, you can regain those healthy habits from before and introduce them into your children’s lives!

1. Exercise. Exercise. Exercise.

Get everyone in the family moving, don’t just emphasize the idea of being active to your children without participating in the activities. In addition to making it fun for the whole family, exercising as a unit will allow you to interact with your child and help them stay healthy and active.

2. Eat A Variety Of Foods.

Don’t just stick to the same food regimen. Make sure you try a vast array of different Nutrient-rich foods to boost the health of yourself and your children. There are many different Vitamins and Minerals out there, and if you just stick to the same old mac n’ cheese menu with the occasional lasagna, you are missing out on an abundance of healthy nutrients for your children!  Think Fruit & Vegetable Smoothies, nourishing Soups, Banana-Sweetened Oatmeal Cookies, etc……

3. Limit The Screen Time.

It is no stranger that we live in a world constantly absorbed by some type of technology. From work to leisure time, technology is present in our life in one shape or another almost 24/7. But, it is best to try and limit these habits. They promote a lifestyle with less movement and activity, it has been shown to lead to increased Obesity and Cardiovascular disease. So try and limit your child’s time behind the screen and get them moving.

4. The Most Important Meal Of The Day: Breakfast.

Fuel up! Before you send the kiddos off to school and bring yourself into your favorite place aka work, make sure to create a nutritious breakfast. A breakfast loaded with Organic Eggs, Almond milk, Whole Grain cereal, and fruits is a great way to regain all the energy lost from the previous day.

5. Pick Rewarding Rewards For Your Kids.

Sometimes parents tend to reward a job well done or the completion of chores with a trip to the ice cream shop, some candy or a new video game (if you’re feeling really generous). Change the types of rewards and incentives you present to your children. Maybe take them on an excursion to their favorite park, or another outdoor adventure, whatever you decide make sure it is creative and helps to influence healthy habits in your children.

6. Eat Fruits And Vegetables With Every Meal!

We have already emphasized the importance of eating healthy, but there should also be a frame of reference for what this means. One way to encourage healthy eating is to increase the intake of fruits and vegetables into your child’s diet. A neat way to do this is to have fruits and vegetables as a snack during every meal period.

7. Be The Best Role Model.

Your children tend to emulate and copy they way you behave, so why not exhibit healthy habits that they can catch on to and then practice themselves. Be the best role model possible for your children and work together as the both of you craft and practice healthy habits for the new school year and beyond.

This article was posted in Diet, Health, Wellness.

Israeli named as chief conductor of the BBC Philharmonic

Israeli named as chief conductor of the BBC Philharmonic

Omer Meir Wellber will make his debut appearance with the prestigious orchestra at the start of the 2019 season

Israeli Omer Meir Wellber has been made chief conductor of the BBC Philharmonic orchestra.

Hailed by the BBC as “one of the most sought after young conductors of his generation”, he will debut in his new role at the BBC Proms in London in September next year.

 

He succeeds Spanish maestro Juanjo Mena, who led the BBC Philharmonic from 2011 until August this year.

His role will focus on crafting the programme at Bridgewater Hall in Manchester, where all concerts will be recorded and broadcast on BBC Radio 3.

Wellber began his musical training at the age of five, playing the accordion and piano before developing an interest in composition.

After graduating from the Be’er Sheva conservatoire in Israel he was awarded a scholarship from the American-Israel Cultural Foundation to study from 2000 to 2008 under Eugene Zirlin at the Jerusalem Music Academy and in the Mendi Rodan Programme.

Simon Webb, the orchestra’s general manager, described Wellber’s “brilliance”, adding that he was “delighted” to have secured him as chief conductor.

He said: “Having seen Omer conducting a number of orchestras over the last year I have been fortunate to have experienced his brilliance first hand in a wide range of repertoire.

“His immediate connection with the BBC Philharmonic was evident in his first concert and we are now delighted to have secured one of the most sought after young conductors of his generation.”

Wellber said: “I first worked with the BBC Philharmonic in March and knew straight away that they were a very special group of people and exceptional musicians.

“Manchester and the whole region is an incredibly rich area culturally, so I can hardly wait to start planning seasons to come.”

Source: Jewish News

Jamie Oliver Gets Schooled By a Jewish Italian Bubbe

Jamie Oliver Gets Schooled By a Jewish Italian Bubbe

One of the last Jewish nonnas gives the famous chef a lesson in artichokes.

 

If you haven’t been watching Jamie Oliver’s current television show, Jamie Cooks Italy, or at least read the accompanying cookbook Jamie Cooks Italy — From the Heart of the Italian Kitchen, do so immediately. The Naked Chef has, happily, given all the healthy eating/culinary cultural appropriation stuff a rest and returned to promoting wholesome comfort food, with the help of adorable Italian grandmothers who constantly critique his technique while pinching his cheeks affectionately.

In the “Tuscany” episode, Jamie visited Pitagliano — a walled, hilltop town coined “Little Jerusalem” due to its once-flourishing Jewish community and the old city-esque cobbled, narrow streets of its ancient Jewish quarter. Pitagliano’s Jewish population peaked in the early 19th century, when it accounted for around 20 percent of the town’s inhabitants but after the unification of Italy in 1861, Pitagliano Jews began emigrating to larger cities with greater economic promise. The town’s dwindling community decreased further after Italy’s Racial Laws were implemented in 1938, which restricted Jewish civil rights and prohibited Jews from education and public office. Those who remained were forced to hide — often in the surrounding farmland, aided by the local population. After the war, only 30 Jews returned to Pitagliano, and these days, there’s less than a handful left. The Jewish quarter is now a museum, meticulously restored so that those visiting the synagogue, communal kosher oven, and mikveh can imagine Jewish life during Little Jerusalem’s heyday.

Oliver does just that, exclaiming, “Oh, the stories these walls could tell” in his distinctive Essex twang as he walks to the synagogue to meet nonna Elana, one of Pitagliano’s remaining Jews. At 87, Elena is bright-eyed but frail after a recent fall so, instead of cooking her mother’s stuffed artichokes alongside Jamie, she explains the method over coffee and sends him away to have a go. Oliver dutifully stuffs the artichokes with ground beef seasoned with parsley, basil, and a pinch of dry chili, then breads and fries them before braising in a sweet tomato sauce. After a nap, Elena is ready to taste his efforts and nods approvingly. “You’re a very good chef,” she says, with a bubbe-like kvell.

What Jamie missed in his quest to discover “the spiritual home of Jewish-Italian cooking” is a Jewish delicacy unique to Pitigliano called sfratto — a cookie filled with honey and walnuts, shaped like a stick. The cookie’s shape and name — sfratto means “eviction” — recall the treatment of the Jews under Medici rule in the 1620s, when officers wielding sticks would evict families from their homes and move them to the Jewish ghetto. Years later, it became tradition to serve sfratti on Rosh Hashanah as a symbol to ward off any future evictions, which inspired Pitagliano’s Christian neighbors, who served the cookies at weddings to keep any marital conflict at bay.

The history of Pitagliano’s Jews exhibits the classic tropes of communities worldwide, alternating between being beloved and persecuted, and then often, departed. Their food, however, lives on, and while we don’t need Jamie Oliver’s encouragement to continue stuffing artichokes and rolling sfratto, it’s nice to know we have it.

 

Source: JTA

Israeli disaster aid team to head to quake-hit Indonesia

Israeli disaster aid team to head to quake-hit Indonesia

Non-governmental organization IsraAID says workers will provide mental health support, conduct needs assessment in country with world’s largest Muslim population

Today, 4:08 pm

A non-governmental Israeli aid group said Thursday it will send a team of disaster experts to Indonesia as the country recovers from a devastating earthquake and tsunami that killed more than 1,400 people and left hundreds of thousands in need of assistance.

Israeli humanitarian aid NGO IsraAID said in a statement it will deploy an emergency response team to the island of Sulawesi.

 

“The team will distribute vital relief items, provide mental health support to vulnerable groups and conduct an initial needs assessment to determine immediate and long-term needs, including medical care, psychological support and safe water provision,” the organization said.

On Friday, a 7.5-magnitude earthquake hit the island Sulawesi, in central Indonesia, and triggered a tsunami. Almost 200,000 people are in need of urgent help, according to the United Nations, among them tens of thousands of children.

“The communities affected by this disaster need immediate support, as the full scale of destruction is only now becoming clear, with thousands experiencing the trauma and uncertainty of displacement and the tragic loss of loved ones,” IsraAID’s directors said in a the statement.

IsraAID has sent similar teams in the past to other disaster areas including the Philippines, Nepal, and Japan which suffered an earthquake and tsunami in 2011.

Israel sent water purifiers to the disaster-hit areas in Indonesia through the Red Cross, Israel’s Kan public broadcaster said Wednesday in a report unconfirmed by the Foreign Ministry. Asked by The Times of Israel several times since Friday’s quake whether Israel was going to send aid to Indonesia, the ministry and the Prime Minister’s Office refused to comment. Subsequently asked why Israel was not sending aid, they again refused comment.

In the past, Israel has sent large delegations to disaster-stricken areas, and has offered to send help to countries with which it has no diplomatic relations.

Teams from the Israeli army provided rescue and medical services after an earthquake in Turkey in 1999, an earthquake in Haiti in 2010, a typhoon in the Philippines in 2013 and, most recently, an earthquake in Nepal in 2015.

Last year, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu offered aid to earthquake victims in Iran and Iraq, two countries with which Israel does not have diplomatic relations; those offers were rebuffed.

Raphael Ahren contributed to this report.

 

Source: The Times of Israel

 

 

Sweden to enact circumcision ban?

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Sweden to enact circumcision ban?

Swedish party submits motion calling for circumcision ban, calling circumcision ‘an infringement of the child’s integrity.’

 

A leader of the Sweden Democrats party submitted a draft motion calling for a ban on non-medical circumcision of boys, which the text claimed is “backward” child abuse.

Sweden Democrats Secretary Richard Jomshof on Wednesday submitted the draft for a nonbinding motion on circumcision to the Riksdag, the Swedish parliament, where his party is the third largest with 18 percent of the seats.

Titled “Prohibition of non-medical circumcision,” the proposed text, on which a vote has not yet been scheduled, states that “The Riksdag stands behind what is stated in the motion to introduce a ban on non-medical circumcision of children and announces this to the government.”

In Jomhof’s reasoning for the draft motion, he wrote that the practice, which Jews perform on 8-day-old babies and many Muslims have performed a bit later in childhood, “is a regular abuse of the individual child as well as an infringement of the child’s integrity and self-determination.”

The reasoning also explores how several medical associations and agencies in Sweden oppose non-medical circumcision of boys on these grounds, although it is not prohibited by law. The agencies mentioned include Sweden’s Nursing Council and the Swedish Children’s Association.

“It would be sad if Sweden internationally appeared as a backward nation instead of actively seeking to protect children’s rights,” Jomhof added.

Throughout Scandinavia, the non-medical circumcision of boys under 18 is the subject of a debate on children’s rights and religious freedoms. The children’s ombudsmen of all Nordic countries — Finland, Iceland, Denmark, Sweden and Norway — released a joint declaration in 2013 proposing a ban, though none of these countries has enacted one.

In the debate, circumcision is under attack from right-wing politicians who view it as a foreign import whose proliferation is often associated mostly with Muslim immigration. And it is also opposed by left-wing liberals and atheists who claim it to be primitive and child abuse.

The anti-Islam Sweden Democrats party dramatically increased their share of the vote in the general elections last month, clinching about 18 percent compared to 12.9 percent in the previous election.

Whereas it has maintained a favorable attitude toward the Jewish State — last month a party member submitted a draft motion calling for Sweden’s embassy in Israel to be moved to Jerusalem — the party has a long and problematic record vis-à-vis members’ attitudes to the Jewish people. Ahead of the elections, regional politicians from Sweden Democrats were caught making anti-Semitic statements online, including using a picture of Anne Frank to mock Holocaust victims.

 

Source: Israel National News

 

 

How Israeli Ingenuity Is Keeping Your Sweet Tooth Healthy

How Israeli Ingenuity Is Keeping Your Sweet Tooth Healthy

 

 

 

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

 

The detrimental effects of artificial sweeteners and sugar are again topping world nutrition headlines as the latest studies point to toxic effects on digestive gut microbes and deceptively high levels of sugar hidden in “healthy” foodstuffs. Sugar, and now artificial sweeteners, are “the” dietary gremlins, trumping fats, oils, and starches as most reviled additives.

“There’s no question that sugar is public enemy number one. Today, sugar kills more people than gunpowder. Sugar is slow suicide,” Dr. Ilan Samish, founder and CEO of Amai Proteins, tells NoCamels. His company is developing an innovative alternative to sugar and present-day artificial sweeteners.

Indeed, the World Health Organization, the United Nations, physicians and nutritionists the world over say that sweetened foods have caused a global health crisis. Moreover, the United Nations dedicated a high-level meeting at the sidelines of the General Assembly in late September to nutrition and, among other topics, pointed to sugar as a culprit in the rise in obesity, diabetes, heart disease and cancer, among other health-related issues.

The harmful effects of artificial sweeteners

In early October, an Israeli-Singaporean study shot to the top of health news everywhere with its data showing that six oft-used artificial sweeteners were found to be toxic to digestive gut bacteria.

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

Trump signs law expanding protections to religious institutions

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Trump signs law expanding protections to religious institutions

The bipartisan law expands hate crime protections to religious institutions.

 

US President Donald Trump enacted a law that expands hate crime protections to religious institutions.

The Protecting Religiously Affiliated Institutions Act, signed last Friday by Trump, was prompted in part by a series of bomb threats last year against Jewish institutions.

The American Jewish Committee on Wednesday praised the passage of the law, which had strong bipartisan backing.

“This important law, which provides for new and strengthened measures to deter, as well as punish, perpetrators of attacks on religious institutions, will provide a much-needed sense of comfort and security,” said Jason Isaacson, the AJC associate executive director for policy.

Hate crimes laws enable prosecutors and law enforcement to impose enhanced penalties for existing crimes if they can show that bias was a motive.

Joseph Schocken, a businessman in Mercer Island, Washington, contacted his congressman, Derek Wilmer, after a local Jewish community center got a threat.

Wilmer, a Democrat, joined David Kustoff, a Jewish Republican from Tennessee, to advance the bill, which was also advanced in the Senate by Orrin Hatch, a Republican from Utah, and Dianne Feinstein, a Jewish Democrat from California.

In June, a 19-year-old American-Israeli man, was convicted by an Israeli court of making hundreds of bomb threats to Jewish community centers and Jewish schools in the United States, as well as to airlines.

 

 

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