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Harvard Stalls, As Penn Preps To Hand Jew-Hatred Documents Over To House

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As the University of Pennsylvania readies to turn documents over to the House Education and the Workforce Committee, as part of the latter’s investigation into Jew-hatred on campus, Harvard University is drawing the ire of the committee for dragging its feet.

Both Penn and Harvard University have interim presidents following the resignation of their former presidents, who testified before the House committee late last year that it wouldn’t necessarily violate their schools’ policies to call for genocide against all Jews. (Claudine Gay, the former Harvard president, was also accused of academic plagiarism.)

Rep. Virginia Foxx (R-N.C.), who chairs the House committee, wrote to the Ivy League school in Cambridge, Mass., notifying Harvard that it has until 5 p.m. on Feb. 14 to submit the requested documents.

“The committee has sought to obtain information regarding Harvard’s response to the numerous incidents of antisemitism on its campus and steps taken to protect Jewish students, faculty and staff,” Foxx stated.

“Harvard’s responses have been grossly insufficient, and the limited and dilatory nature of its productions is obstructing the committee’s efforts,” she added. “If Harvard continues to fail to comply with the committee’s requests in a timely manner, the committee will proceed with compulsory process.”

Foxx noted that Harvard provided no minutes or summaries of meetings of its Board of Overseers and Harvard Management Company that relate to Jew-hatred or the war in Israel or Gaza, claiming that after a “reasonable search and review,” no such information exists.

“Given the publicly documented antisemitism on Harvard’s campus, especially since the Oct. 7 attacks, it would be shocking if the Board of Overseers and Harvard Management Company thought protecting Harvard’s Jewish students was so insignificant that the topic was not worthy of discussion at a single meeting,” Foxx said.

Penn has said it will turn documents over as a “rolling production,” but the Philadelphia Ivy League school “is signaling it won’t necessarily turn over all of the many documents the House Education Committee has requested by the Wednesday deadline,” ABC reported. JNS

Source: Matzav

Rabbi Lord Jonathan Sacks zt”l -God’s Nudge – MISHPATIM • 5771 5777 5784

First in Yitro there were the Aseret Hadibrot, the “Ten Utterances”, the Ten Commandments, expressed as general principles. Now in Mishpatim come the details. Here is how they begin:

If you buy a Hebrew servant, he is to serve you for six years. But in the seventh year, he shall go free, without paying anything . . . But if the servant declares, ‘I love my master and my wife and children and do not want to go free,’ then his master must take him before the judges. He shall take him to the door or the doorpost and pierce his ear with an awl. Then he will be his servant for life.

Ex. 21:2-6

There is an obvious question. Why begin here, with this law? There are 613 commandments. Why does Mishpatim – the first full law code in the Torah – begin where it does?

The answer is equally obvious. The Israelites have just endured slavery in Egypt. There must be a reason why this happened, for God knew it was going to happen. Evidently He intended it to happen. Centuries before, He had already told Abraham it would happen:

As the sun was setting, Abram fell into a deep sleep, and a thick and dreadful darkness came over him. Then the Lord said to him, “Know for certain that for four hundred years your descendants will be strangers in a country that is not their own, and that they will be enslaved and mistreated there.

Gen. 15:12-13

It seems that this was the necessary first experience of the Israelites as a nation. From the very start of the human story, the God of freedom sought the free worship of free human beings. But one after the other, people abused that freedom: first Adam and Eve, then Cain, then the generation of the Flood, then the builders of Babel.

God began again, this time not with all humanity, but with one man, one woman, one family who would become pioneers of freedom. Still, freedom is difficult. We each seek it for ourselves, but we deny it to others when their freedom conflicts with ours. So deeply is this true that within three generations of Abraham’s children, Joseph’s brothers were willing to sell him into slavery: a tragedy that did not end until Judah was prepared to forfeit his own freedom so that his brother Benjamin could go free.

It took the collective experience of the Israelites, their deep, intimate, personal, backbreaking, bitter experience of slavery – a memory they were commanded never to forget – to turn them into a people who would no longer turn their brothers and sisters into slaves, a people capable of constructing a free society, the hardest of all achievements in the human realm.

So it is no surprise that the first laws they were commanded after Sinai related to slavery. It would have been a surprise had they been about anything else. But now comes the real question. If God does not want slavery, if He regards it as an affront to the human condition, why did He not abolish it immediately? Why did He allow it to continue, albeit in a restricted and regulated way, as described in this week’s parsha? Is it conceivable that God, who can produce water from a rock, manna from heaven, and turn sea into dry land, cannot call for this change to human behaviour? Are there areas where the All-Powerful is, so to speak, powerless?

In 2008 economist Richard Thaler and law professor Cass Sunstein published a fascinating book called Nudge.[1] In it they addressed a fundamental problem in the logic of freedom. On the one hand freedom depends on not over-legislating. It means creating space within which people have the right to choose for themselves.

On the other hand, we know that people will not always make the right choices. The old model on which classical economics was based, that left to themselves people will make rational choices, turns out not to be true. We are deeply irrational, a discovery to which several Jewish academics made major contributions. The psychologists Solomon Asch and Stanley Milgram showed how much we are influenced by the desire to conform, even when we know that other people have got it wrong. The Israeli economists, Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky, showed how even when making economic decisions we frequently miscalculate their effects and fail to recognise our motivations, a finding for which Kahneman won the Nobel Prize.

How then do you stop people doing harmful things without taking away their freedom? Thaler and Sunstein’s answer is that there are oblique ways in which you can influence people. In a cafeteria, for example, you can put healthy food at eye level and junk food in a more inaccessible and less noticeable place. You can subtly adjust what they call people’s “choice architecture.”

That is exactly what God does in the case of slavery. He does not abolish it, but He so circumscribes it that He sets in motion a process that will foreseeably lead people to abandon it of their own accord, although it may take many centuries.

A Hebrew slave is to go free after six years. If the slave has grown so used to his condition that he wishes not to go free, then he is required to undergo a stigmatising ceremony, having his ear pierced, which thereafter remains as a visible sign of shame. Every Shabbat, slaves cannot be forced to work. All these stipulations have the effect of turning slavery from a lifelong fate into a temporary condition, and one that is perceived to be a humiliation rather than something written indelibly into the human script.

Why choose this way of doing things? Because people must freely choose to abolish slavery if they are to be free at all. It took the reign of terror after the French Revolution to show how wrong Rousseau was when he wrote in The Social Contract that, if necessary, people have to be forced to be free. That is a contradiction in terms, and it led, in the title of J. L. Talmon’s great book on the thinking behind the French Revolution, to totalitarian democracy.

God can change nature, said Maimonides, but He cannot, or chooses not to, change human nature, precisely because Judaism is built on the principle of human freedom. So He could not abolish slavery overnight, but He could change our choice architecture, or in plain words, give us a nudge, signalling that slavery is wrong but that we must be the ones to abolish it, in our own time, through our own understanding. It took a very long time indeed, and in America, not without a civil war. But it happened.

There are some issues on which God gives us a nudge. The rest is up to us.


[1] Richard H. Thaler and Cass R Sunstein, Nudge: Improving Decisions About Health, Wealth, and Happiness, Penguin Books, 2008.

France Denounces ‘Largest Antisemitic Massacre Of Our Century’ In Tribute To Victims Of Hamas Attack

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French President Emmanuel Macron paid tribute Wednesday to victims of Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack in Israel in a national ceremony and denounced what he described as the “largest antisemitic massacre of our century.”

Forty-two French citizens died in the attack, and three hostages are still believed to be held by Hamas and other militants in Gaza. Three empty chairs symbolized their absence.

The ceremony comes after new Foreign Minister Stéphane Séjourné made his first trip to the Middle East, including Israel and the Palestinian territories, where he pushed for the release of the hostages.

Four other French hostages have been released. A total of about 250 people were abducted in the Hamas attack and about 1,200 people, mostly civilians, were killed.

Honor guards held photographs of each victim in front of a giant screen showing their first name in the Invalides’ monumental courtyard in Paris.

Many of those killed “will never turn 30,” Macron said. “Their voices still resonate in Hebrew and French.”

The French president strongly denounced barbarity “which feeds on antisemitism and propagates it.” He said “nothing can justify or excuse this terrorism. Nothing.”

A sharp rise in antisemitic acts in France has been reported in the wake of the Oct. 7 attack. Data from the Interior Ministry and the Jewish Community Protection Service watchdog showed that 1,676 antisemitic acts were reported in 2023, compared to 436 the previous year.

The Republican Guard’s orchestra played “Kaddish” by French composer Maurice Ravel, written in 1914 based on a traditional Hebrew melody.

Yashay Dan, a relative of French Israeli hostage Ofer Kalderon, said ahead of the ceremony that he hoped it “can resonate all around the world, not only in France.”

Ayla Yahalomi Luzon, sister of French Israeli hostage Ohad Yahalomi, said: “We don’t need people to hope for us. I have hope. We need help. Ohad is a French citizen, and I ask France to make all efforts to release him and everyone.”

The families of Israeli hostages have worked for months to keep the captives’ plight in the global spotlight.

Macron said France will keep “working tirelessly to meet the aspirations for peace and security of all in the Middle East” and stressed that Israeli lives “are not the only ones that continue to be torn apart.”

France is pressing for an immediate cease-fire and a massive influx of humanitarian aid in Gaza. Séjourné described the death and destruction in the Palestinian territory as a “tragedy.”

A French team of health workers who spent two weeks in Gaza in coordination with the PalMed group returned to Paris on Tuesday after working at the European Hospital in Khan Younis, the territory’s second largest city.

“Bombing is constant, and in the past days it was getting closer to the hospital,” emergency doctor Raphael Pitti told the The Associated Press. “Shrapnel touched the hospital.”

Pitti said the situation on the ground appeared “totally hopeless,” with some patients returning weeks later with infected wounds as medical supplies run short.

(AP)

French President Emmanuel Macron paid tribute Wednesday to victims of Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack in Israel in a national ceremony and denounced what he described as the “largest antisemitic massacre of our century.”

Forty-two French citizens died in the attack, and three hostages are still believed to be held by Hamas and other militants in Gaza. Three empty chairs symbolized their absence.

The ceremony comes after new Foreign Minister Stéphane Séjourné made his first trip to the Middle East, including Israel and the Palestinian territories, where he pushed for the release of the hostages.

Four other French hostages have been released. A total of about 250 people were abducted in the Hamas attack and about 1,200 people, mostly civilians, were killed.

Honor guards held photographs of each victim in front of a giant screen showing their first name in the Invalides’ monumental courtyard in Paris.

Many of those killed “will never turn 30,” Macron said. “Their voices still resonate in Hebrew and French.”

The French president strongly denounced barbarity “which feeds on antisemitism and propagates it.” He said “nothing can justify or excuse this terrorism. Nothing.”

A sharp rise in antisemitic acts in France has been reported in the wake of the Oct. 7 attack. Data from the Interior Ministry and the Jewish Community Protection Service watchdog showed that 1,676 antisemitic acts were reported in 2023, compared to 436 the previous year.

The Republican Guard’s orchestra played “Kaddish” by French composer Maurice Ravel, written in 1914 based on a traditional Hebrew melody.

Yashay Dan, a relative of French Israeli hostage Ofer Kalderon, said ahead of the ceremony that he hoped it “can resonate all around the world, not only in France.”

Ayla Yahalomi Luzon, sister of French Israeli hostage Ohad Yahalomi, said: “We don’t need people to hope for us. I have hope. We need help. Ohad is a French citizen, and I ask France to make all efforts to release him and everyone.”

The families of Israeli hostages have worked for months to keep the captives’ plight in the global spotlight.

Macron said France will keep “working tirelessly to meet the aspirations for peace and security of all in the Middle East” and stressed that Israeli lives “are not the only ones that continue to be torn apart.”

France is pressing for an immediate cease-fire and a massive influx of humanitarian aid in Gaza. Séjourné described the death and destruction in the Palestinian territory as a “tragedy.”

A French team of health workers who spent two weeks in Gaza in coordination with the PalMed group returned to Paris on Tuesday after working at the European Hospital in Khan Younis, the territory’s second largest city.

“Bombing is constant, and in the past days it was getting closer to the hospital,” emergency doctor Raphael Pitti told the The Associated Press. “Shrapnel touched the hospital.”

Pitti said the situation on the ground appeared “totally hopeless,” with some patients returning weeks later with infected wounds as medical supplies run short.

(AP)

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IDF soldiers uncover prison cells in tunnels used to keep hostages

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Several rooms were found in the tunnels, some rooms were used as a bathroom, cell, and safe room for Hamas officials.

Source: World Israel News

El Al Teams Up With YU Torah To Provide Jewish Content For Passengers

JERUSALEM (VINnews) — In a bid to cater to its large orthodox Jewish clientele, El Al has begun to offer Torah, Talmud and Jewish law lessons on its long-haul flights, via a platform specially prepared for it by Yeshiva University, according to a Ynet report.

El Al approached the university about a year ago with a request to prepare the content for it in the style of the online platform that it launched in 2003 – YUTorah. The deal did not cost El Al a penny because YU was happy to expose passengers  to shiurim and other content from prominent Torah scholars and rabbis.

“This is a great opportunity to broaden YU’s reach, and spread our values across the globe,” said Rabbi Ari Rockoff, Yeshiva University’s David Mitzner Community Dean for Values and Leadership, who co-founded the YUTorah website in 2003. “With our EL AL partnership, we are perpetuating and fulfilling the mission of YU Torah and Yeshiva University, connecting people with Torah.”

YU proudly points out that, since the beginning of the war on October 7, El Al flights to and from Israel are carrying passengers with a great sense of purpose and mission – including reservists flying home for active duty – and the “high-level content will enrich the travel experience for EL AL’s passengers.”

The platform has been launched on all El Al’s Boeing 787 aircraft, including the flight routes to the United States. Every three months about 40 new lessons will be uploaded, each averaging about 45 minutes, which is “more than enough to cover a round trip from the U.S. to Israel,” Rockoff said.

The content includes discussions of Jewish law, Jewish history, Jewish prayer, dating and marriage, parenting and the weekly Torah portion. One program will allow passengers to keep up with their Daf Yomi Talmud study.

This is not the first time El Al has tried to introduce Jewish content on its flights. In 2022, two years after ultra-Orthodox Israeli American businessmen Eli Rozenberg and his father, Kenny, purchased the majority of the company’s shares, El Al launched a pilot on the New York-Tel Aviv line in which it distributed to passengers 10 iPads with access to the full digital library of ArtScroll. The application includes the complete Babylonian Talmud, the five books of the Torah, the six books of the Mishnah and dozens of other Jewish books and writings.

According to the app’s founder, Rabbi Gedaliah Zlotowitz, the idea to put the app on El Al planes came when his friend returned from a trip to Israel and noticed “that many of the passengers on the flight looked bored, and that even people who don’t usually watch movies do so just to pass the time.”

Rabbi Zlotowitz then suggested ArtScroll’s iPads as an alternative to provide passengers with a “more meaningful and productive in-flight experience,” and gave one to a friend to pass it on to Rozenberg.

“Kenny loved it,” Rabbi Zlotovitz said at the time, “and I told him that if they wanted to put them on planes, we would load the content onto their iPads for free. People will be able to learn Torah wherever they go, and that is what is most important to us.”
Rozenberg himself is a graduate of Yeshiva University.

El Al told Ynet that the company “offers its customers a rich entertainment system with a variety of content adapted to all populations according to the customers’ preference and their choice. Among other things, in the in-flight content library you can find movies, series, children’s content, Israeli content, Jewish content and more, which is available to all our customers. We will continue to update all the content frequently in order to renew and diversify the offerings.”

Source: VosIzNeias

Israel Seizes Cash and Documents Linking Iran and Hamas

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By Pesach Benson • 7 February, 2024

Jerusalem, 7 February, 2024 (TPS) — Israeli forces seized cash and financial documents showing direct Iranian financial support for Hamas from an underground compound in Khan Yunis, the Israel Defense Forces disclosed on Tuesday night.

“We found official Hamas documents from 2020 detailing the funds transferred by Iran between the years 2014 and 2020 to Hamas and to Sinwar. More than one hundred and fifty million dollars were transferred from Iran to Hamas,” said IDF Spokesperson Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari.

He said the intelligence indicated a “direct connection from Iran to Hamas — and more so to Yahya Sinwar.”

The IDF released photos of envelopes of cash intended for Sinwar, Hamas’s strongman in Gaza who masterminded the October 7 attack on Israeli communities adjacent to the Strip.

The money was US dollars, Israeli shekels and Jordanian dinars.

“In the same subterranean space, we also found a safe with banknotes and bags containing more than twenty million shekels in cash, as you can see in the blue and black bags addressed to a clear location. These amounts join tens of millions of shekels we located during the war in Hamas tunnels in cases filled with millions of dollars,” Hagari said.

“This is a recurring phenomenon – large sums of cash, kept in organized compounds underground for the personal use of senior Hamas officials. Hamas leaders invested the money in their personal survival and that of their families underground,” he added. “This is another example of how Iran exports terror across the Middle East. The terror that Iran exports and produces is a global problem.”

Hagari added that the intelligence would be shared with international partners.

The announcement follows Israel’s seizure of three million shekels confiscated from Hamas-affiliated money changers in Khan Yunis on Sunday.

Cash confiscated from Gaza terror groups such as Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad, are transferred to the Ministry of Defense’s finance division, where it is counted and then deposited in Israeli state coffers.

At least 1,200 people were killed and 240 Israelis and foreigners were taken hostage in Hamas’s attacks on Israeli communities near the Gaza border on October 7. Of the remaining 136 hostages, Israel recently declared 31 of them dead.

Couple sent by Iran as sleeper agents to murder Jews in Sweden

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Couple sent to Sweden by IRGC lived in country for 5 years under fake names before being activated in plot to murder 3 Jewish citizens of Sweden, including community leader and dual US citizen.

A couple was sent by the Iranian government to Sweden as undercover agents with the goal of murdering Jewish citizens, Radio Sweden reported.

According to the investigation, the man and woman, who have been identified as Mahdi Ramezani and Fereshteh Sanaeifarid, were dispatched by Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC). They were tasked with murdering three Jews in Sweden, including Aron Verständig, Chair of the Official Council of Swedish Jewish communities. Another target for murder was a dual Swedish-American citizen.

The couple were arrested in 2021 after the assassination plot was uncovered. They had been living in Sweden for five years under fake identities as a sleeper cell before being activated to carry out the murders.

Verständig told Radio Sweden that he was reluctant to speak out on the Iranian plot to assassinate him, but decided to do so because he has “a very strong conviction that one cannot hide. I was born a Jew I will remain a Jew for the rest of my life and I can choose to sort of hide under a rock or I can choose to be the person who I am and that’s what I’ve chosen.”

“I think that what Iran wants to do is to harm Israel and I think it’s very difficult for them to do these kind of things in Israel. So instead they are I mean randomly choosing people who have some kind of official position in the Jewish diaspora and trying to create fear,” he said.

In 2022, an attempted assassination of an Israeli businessman in the Republic of Georgia by an Iranian-backed terrorist cell was uncovered. Iran was also behind an attempt to target Israeli tourists in Istanbul in the summer of 2022 and an attempt to target Israeli businessmen in Cyprus in October 2021.

In February 2023, British Security Minister Tom Tugendhat confirmed that Iran had been “mapping” Jewish diaspora communities to be attacked by kill squads, stating that the Iranian regime has gathered intelligence on British Jews and targeted them for assassination.

Source: Arutz 7

Historic Storm Sends Debris Through LA’s Hollywood Hills and Leaves 1.1 Million Without Power

LOS ANGELES (AP) — A storm of historic proportions dumped a record amount of rain over parts of Los Angeles on Monday, sending mud and boulders down hillsides dotted with multimillion-dollar homes while people living in homeless encampments in many parts of the city scrambled for safety.

More than one million people statewide were without power.

The storm was the second one fueled by an atmospheric river to hit the state over the span of days.

About 2.5 million people in the Los Angeles area, including the Hollywood Hills and Beverly Hills, were under a flash flood warning. Up to 9 inches (23 centimeters) of rain had already fallen in the area, with more expected, according to the National Weather Service, which called the flash flooding and threat of mudslides “a particularly dangerous situation.”

Already crews were rescuing people from swift-moving water in various parts of Southern California, including two homeless people who were evacuated Monday from a small island in the Santa Ana River in San Bernardino, about 55 miles (88.51 kilometers) east of Los Angeles, authorities said.

Gushing rivers carried mud, rocks and household objects downhill as floodwaters coursed through Studio City, an area on the backside of the Hollywood Hills.

Sixteen Studio City residents were evacuated and two homes were damaged, city officials said.

“It looks like a river that’s been here for years,” said Keki Mingus, whose neighbors’ homes were damaged. “I’ve never seen anything like it.”

The Los Angeles Fire Department said 1,000 firefighters were contending with 49 debris flows, 130 reports of flooding, half a dozen structure fires and several rescues of motorists stranded in vehicles.

Drake Livingston who lives in the Beverly Crest neighborhood, was watching a movie around midnight when a friend alerted him to flooding.

“We looked outside and there’s a foot-and-a-half of running water, and it starts seeping through the doors,” Livingston said.

Livingston scrambled to save some possessions but eventually had to retreat to a neighbor’s house. In the morning, Livingston’s car was submerged in several feet of mud.

Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass urged residents to avoid driving, warning of fallen trees and electrical lines on flooded roadways.

Over 10 inches (25.4 centimeters) of rain has fallen in the Santa Monica Mountains. Los Angeles Fire Chief Kristin Crowley said hazards will continue to be a threat in areas around recent wildfire burn scars, noting that rain is forecast to continue into Tuesday.

A record 4.1 inches (10.41 centimeters) of rain fell Sunday in downtown Los Angeles, making it the 10th wettest day on record, the National Weather Service said. That’s more rain than the area typically gets for the entire month.

That didn’t stop the Grammy Awards on Sunday night from continuing as planned at downtown’s Crypto.com Arena.

The weather service forecast up to 8 inches (20 centimeters) of rainfall across Southern California’s coastal and valley areas, with 14 inches (35 centimeters) possible in the foothills and mountains over the next two days.

Commuters stepped through several inches of floodwater on Monday morning as they rushed to catch trains at Union Station in downtown Los Angeles.

The storm over the weekend inundated streets and brought down trees and electrical lines throughout the San Francisco Bay Area, while the weather service issued a rare “hurricane force wind warning” for the Central Coast. Several people had to be rescued from rising floodwaters, including those in cars and others living in a homeless encampments.

In Yuba City, about 100 miles (160 kilometers) northeast of San Francisco, police said they were investigating the death of a man found under a big redwood tree in his backyard Sunday evening. A neighbor heard the tree fall, and it was possible the man was using a ladder to try and clear the redwood when he was killed, police said on Facebook.

In Southern California, off the coast of Long Beach, 19 people were rescued Sunday after the 40-foot sailboat they were traveling in lost its mast, said Brian Fisk, a firefighter and paramedic for the Long Beach Fire Department.

Another vessel heard the distress call on the marine radio and helped rescue eight people while 11 were able to get onto the rocky breakwater by Alamitos Bay where they were rescued by lifeguards, he said. One person was treated for injuries.

“They went out sailing in gale-force winds and stormy weather,” Fisk said. “They’re very, very lucky.”

Gov. Gavin Newsom declared a state of emergency for most counties in coastal Southern California and said emergency resources were ready, while emergency shelters were opened.

Most public schools in Los Angeles were open, though other districts called off classes.

Heavy snow was falling throughout the Sierra Nevada and motorists were urged to avoid mountain roads.

Much of the state was still drying out from the initial atmospheric river-powered storm that blew in last week. Atmospheric rivers are relatively narrow plumes of moisture that form over an ocean and can produce torrential amounts of rain as they move over land.

Both atmospheric rivers were called a “Pineapple Express” because they originated near Hawaii.

Since last winter, 46 atmospheric rivers have made landfall on the U.S. West Coast, pulling the state out of a yearslong drought, according to the Scripps Institution of Oceanography’s Center for Western Weather and Water Extremes. Nine were categorized as strong, two were extreme and one was exceptional.

Source: VosIzNeias

Visiting UN official say she’s haunted by accounts of Hamas atrocities

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Pramila Patten can’t sleep after hearing and seeing the terrorists’ massacres and sexual violence on October 7.

By Batya Jerenberg, World Israel News

After spending over a week hearing and seeing testimony of Hamas atrocities especially directed at women during its terrorists’ surprise invasion of Israel on October 7, a United Nations official said she now could not sleep at night, Ynet reported Monday.

Pramila Patten, special representative of the UN secretary-general on sexual violence in conflict, concluded her visit Monday, whose purpose was to “gather information on sexual violence, reportedly committed in the context of the attacks of Oct. 7 and its aftermath,” as a UN statement put it.

One of the first things she did was watch the 47-minute video compilation of the barbarities of the Hamas invaders made by the IDF shot by the terrorists themselves as well as CCTV footage at the murder sites.

“Only after I saw the video did I understand things that I didn’t understand before in terms of the magnitude of the disaster that happened,” she admitted, adding that she hadn’t slept since then.

Patten also visited the largest murder site, where more than 360 partygoers were murdered at a Nova dance rave, many of them having been brutally raped first. She toured Kibbutz Be’eri, one of the hardest-hit kibbutzim in the Gaza envelope, hearing the stories of a survivor of the slaughter and a first responder on the scene, and it shocked her.

“The world outside cannot understand the magnitude of the event,” she said. “I myself also internalized the magnitude of the event just by being here myself.”

Besides asking for witnesses and victims to come forward, she and her team of ten medical and legal experts spoke to doctors who are treating Hamas’ victims both physically and psychologically, those providing government support, and other relevant professionals.

Much of Patten’s team is staying for at least another week to continue their evidence-collection for a report she is expected to release on sexual violence in many countries, including Israel, later this month.

The Mauritanian lawyer had gained instant infamy in Israel after being confronted at a UN event on January 20 about the international body’s long silence over Hamas terrorists’ widespread, brutal rapes of women during their attack.

Lawyer and actress Linor Abargil, a rape victim herself, had expressed her disappointment over Patten “not condemning all the abuse that happened to our women,” and asked why she wasn’t taking immediate action. Patten responded, “Maybe you should have all the facts.”

She did not relate to the points that her condemnation had come a full two months after the atrocities had been committed, and that the UN had not acted in any way against the terror organization.

Perhaps to counteract the sense of betrayal that Israelis and their supporters around the world still feel over the world’s silence, Patten said in a meeting with President Isaac Herzog and his wife Michal last week, “I want to say that survivors and victims, we owe you all more than solidarity. We want to ensure that you have justice.”

Source: World Israel News

‘We Must Fight Lies and Hatred’: Israeli President Discusses Antisemitism With TikTok Executives

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By Pesach Benson • 6 February, 2024

 

Jerusalem, 6 February, 2024 (TPS) — Israeli President Isaac Herzog met with senior officials from TikTok’s global management on Tuesday amid a surge in antisemitism, fake news and hatred of Israel on the social media platform.

During the meeting, TikTok executives were presented with examples of conspiracies and false information that users have uploaded to the video platform since October 7. Examples included shocking and graphic content, distinctly antisemitic expressions and narratives, denial and disdain for the Holocaust, and more.

“We must fight lies and hatred in every arena and place, including on the streets and at the same time throughout social networks, in order to prevent manipulation and a negative impact on the public opinion of young people around the world,” Herzog said.

The Chinese-owned TikTok is one of the world’s most popular platforms for uploading and sharing short videos. It has more than 1.1 billion users and is available in 160 countries. A 2023 study by Common Sense Media found that teenagers spent an average of two hours a day on TikTok.

Herzog, who was joined by Tom Divon, a social media researcher from Hebrew University’s Department of Communication, noted that some of the videos shown to the executives had not been taken down by TikTok moderators, or had remained online for a long time before being removed.

The TikTok representatives told Herzog that the company has so far identified more than 160 million fictitious accounts posting antisemitic or anti-Israel videos.

The meeting also came shortly after Barak Herscowitz, TikTok’s top lobbyist in Israel, announced his resignation on January 29, accusing the social media giant of bias against Israel.

“I resigned from Tiktok,” Herscowitz wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter. “We live in a time when our very existence as Jews and Israelis is under attack and in danger. In such an unstable era, people’s priorities are sharpened.”

Herscowitz’s tweet ended with the words “Am Yisrael Chai,” a traditional Hebrew expression of solidarity that means “the nation of Israel lives.”

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