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Will Israel’s politicized Supreme Court stick to law on Palestinian Sheikh Jarrah squatters?

According to legal experts, the court has allowed outside pressure
to influence its decision. What should be a strictly legal decision
seems to have become emotional—a consideration that is supposed
to remain outside the purview of the court.

In what can be seen as an eyebrow-raising moment, Israel’s Supreme Court on Monday noted that the Jewish owners of properties under dispute in the Shimon HaTzadik neighborhood of Jerusalem, which is often erroneously mixed up with the adjacent Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood, are within their legal rights to evict the illegal Palestinian squatters, but is pushing to find a solution that allows them to remain in the homes.

According to legal experts, Israel’s Supreme Court has allowed outside pressure to influence its decision. What should be a strictly legal decision seems to have become emotional—a consideration that is supposed to remain outside the purview of the court.

Eugene Kontorovich, a scholar at the Kohelet Forum think tank in Israel and professor at George Mason University, told JNS that “it is very important that the comments made by the judges at the hearing show that they have no question that the Jewish property owners have the complete lawful title.”

“There is no legal question that they are the property owners,” he said.

However, there is no legal basis for this, and it remains clear the properties belong to the rightful Jewish owners.

As international lawyer Arsen Ostrovsky has documented, “the land in question was purchased by the local Ashkenazi and Sephardi communities from its Arab owners in 1875.”

“In 1982, the Jewish owners [Sephardic Community Committee and the Knesset Israel Committee] sued the Palestinian families residing in Sheikh Jarrah and demanded their eviction on the basis that they were squatters on the property. The Magistrate Court determined that the Palestinian families could not demonstrate their ownership of the property, but that they enjoyed Protected Tenant Status.”

“As protected tenants, they would be able to continue living on the property as long as they paid rent and maintained the property. … Beginning in 1993, the trusts began proceedings against the residents based on their non-payment of rent and of illegal changes to the property.”

Kontorovich lamented what he said is the court’s effort to “reduce the property owner’s rights simply because they are Jews,” and he decried the judges’ seeming left-leaning bias when ruling on sensitive political issues.

Protesters demonstrate against Israel’s plan to demolish some houses of Palestinians in the eastern Jerusalem neighborhood of Sheikh Jarrah on July 30, 2021. Photo by Olivier Fitoussi / Flash90.

He said it is “distressing” to see that the court’s judges appear to be influenced by diplomatic pressure and the fear of further attacks by Hamas in the Gaza Strip, similar to the kindling that lit the 11-day conflict in May that saw more than 4,000 rockets launched into Israeli population centers.

“They are not supposed to take into account anything outside the courtroom, but they obviously feel the pressure,” he noted.

The judges’ unwillingness to outright evict the squatters “shows they are very ‘brave’ in taking decisions based on what they call purely the law that will upset much of the Israeli public, but when it comes to upsetting the international community or Hamas, they lack that courage,” said Kontorovich.

‘The court’s job is very simple’

Avi Bell, a professor at the University of San Diego School of Law and at Bar-Ilan University’s Faculty of Law, slammed critics who “claim that the Israeli government should (or even that international law requires it to) deny the owners their property rights, but these claims are not based on any credible legal argument.”

“They focus on the fact that the owners in the disputed cases are Jews, while the squatters and overstaying tenants are Arabs. The critics demand that Israel discriminate against and disregard the property owners’ lawful property rights due to their Jewish ethnicity.”

“There is no doubt of Jewish property ownership,” Kontorovich again emphasized. “What the judges are trying to do is to convince or pressure the Jewish property owners to accept less than normal property rights, not being able to decide who lives in the building.”

“If they do this, it means Hamas won the war, big time,” he added.

According to Kontorovich, the Supreme Court is essentially allowing Hamas to fire rockets indiscriminately and exert pressure on Israel’s leadership, and ultimately, change property laws in Jerusalem.

“But the court’s job is very simple,” he explained, and that is “to determine whether the Jewish plaintiffs own this property, and if so, there are rules about what you can do with your property.”

Moving forward, Kontorovich said he believes that the court will “put forward some kind of proposal to say it is upholding the law, but get the Jews to accept less than the law will give them.”

He predicted that the court’s proposal would be “rejected” by the Jewish property owners.

‘A capitulation of the legal system in Israel’

Chaim Silberstein, head of Keep Jerusalem, a nonprofit organization that works to highlight the importance of a united Jerusalem under Israeli sovereignty, told JNS, “The compromise that was suggested at the Supreme Court hearing is not really a compromise. It is a capitulation of the respected legal system in Israel, at the highest level to political and ideological pressure from the extreme left.”

Like Kontorovich, Silberstein also expressed his disappointment in the judges’ left-leaning bias, and who, in his opinion, “trample” on the rule of law, which is “judiciously applied against Jews when their eviction is required by the liberal elites.”

Silberstein slammed the Palestinian squatters, who he said “defiantly refuse to pay rent despite generous offers of compromise from the legal Jewish owners.”

In his view, “the just and correct result of this court case should be the immediate eviction of illegal squatters from properties they have withheld from their rightful owners for decades.”

“The court now has the chance to prove that it rules purely according to the law and that justice is blind,” stated Kontorovich. “The question is: Will it rise to the challenge?”

(JNS).

Israel is ready to strike Iran to stop its aggression, nuclear program – Gantz

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“When a Palestinian Islamic Jihad operative in Gaza fires at Israel,
he does it with the support of Iran. We know this,” said Gantz.

Israel is ready to strike Iran, Defense Minister Benny Gantz said on Thursday, as tensions between the two countries continue to mount following a deadly drone attack eight days ago against a civilian commercial ship in the Persian Gulf.

Speaking to Ynet, Gantz was asked by Attila Somfalvi if Jerusalem was ready to strike Tehran, to which he answered yes, saying that the Islamic Republic was a threat to the country, Middle East and the entire world.

Israel considers Iran’s nuclear program as the No. 1 concern, and although Tehran has always denied seeking nuclear weapons, it is known that they are continuing to develop the capabilities to produce a nuclear weapons arsenal, as well as ballistic missiles capable of carrying nuclear warheads.

“Iran is an international and regional problem,” Gantz said. “The world witnessed one example on Friday,” the deadly attack against the Mercer Street tanker, which was carried out by a suicide drone. “This could happen to anyone.”

Gantz said that new Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi, who took over from moderate Hassan Rouhani on Thursday, could lead Iran to even more extreme regional and security policies.
“I’m telling the world, pay attention,” said the defense minister. “It’s coming.”

In response to Gantz’s comment on striking Iran, the United Nations called on all parties to de-escalate the situation.

“What is important is for all of the parties who are involved to avoid any escalatory action or rhetoric that could make the tense situation worse,” said Stephane Dujarric, spokesmen for UN Sec.-Gen. Antonio Guterres, in New York on Thursday.

Diplomatic action, however, has been stymied.

Israel wants the 15-member UNSC to hold a meeting on what it has referred to as Iranian maritime “terrorism,” and to condemn such attacks on intentional trade.

At issue in particular is the July 29 drone attack on the Mercer Street ship, a Liberian-flagged, Japanese-owned petroleum product tanker managed by Israeli-owned Zodiac Maritime. Two crewmen, a British and Romanian national, were killed in the attack.

The United States and United Kingdom, which believe that Iran was behind the drone attack, also want to see the UNSC convene.

Britain plans to raise the issue of Iranian maritime attacks at Friday’s closed door UNSC meeting. Other member states are also expected to speak out.

At present, no action can be taken because of expected opposition from Russia and China.
“There’s a lot of conflicting information,” deputy Russian UN Ambassador Dmitry Polyanskiy told reporters on Wednesday. “A ‘highly likely’ analysis, which we totally reject. We need to establish facts … we don’t need to rush to any conclusions or actions without having proof of what has happened.”

As an example of the complex relationship many in the international community have with Iran, Dujarric welcomed the entry into office of Iran’s hard-line new president, Ebrahim Raisi, whose swearing-in ceremony was held earlier in the day.

“We look forward to working with the new president of Iran on a host of issues that are of interest to the UN and Iran,” Dujarric said.

Israel’s Ambassador to the UN and the US Gilad Erdan tweeted about Raisi, calling him “the Butcher of Tehran” who was responsible for the “executions of as many as 30k political prisoners in 1988 – & he is PROUD of it. This man with blood on his hands will only create more violence & instability.”

Erdan also tweeted a photo from the ceremony of a European Union official sitting together with Hamas and Hezbollah officials.

“Hezbollah, Hamas & the EU in one photo at the inauguration of the Butcher of Tehran,” Erdan stated. “How can they preach about human rights while sitting with representatives of terrorist orgs days after Iran’s murderous attack on a civilian ship & right before the UNSC discusses the issue?,” he tweeted.

Gantz also warned that Israel has to continue to develop its abilities to cope with multiple fronts “for this is the future. Iran seeks to pose a multi-front challenge to Israel, and as such is building up its forces in Lebanon and Gaza, deploying militias in Syria and Iraq, and maintaining its supporters in Yemen. Iran is a global and regional problem and an Israeli challenge.”

Israel is dealing with the Iranian threat in an active manner against its proxies in Syria, Lebanon and Gaza.

“At the end of the day when a Palestinian Islamic Jihad operative in Gaza fires on Israel, he does that with the support of Iran,” said the defense minister. “We know this and are dealing with that on a number of levels, in various means, and in several different places,” he said, adding that Israel will continue to act.

Speaking to a group of diplomats on Wednesday from states in the UN Security Council, Gantz warned that Iran had “violated all JCPOA [Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action] guidelines, and is only around 10 weeks from acquiring weapons-grade materials necessary for a nuclear weapon.

“Now is the time for deeds – words are not enough,” he warned. “It is time for diplomatic, economic, and even military action – otherwise the attacks will continue.

(JPost).

California’s largest wildfire explodes as hot weather threatens new blazes

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Tuesday’s strong winds stoked Dixie fire, which grew to over 395 sq miles across Plumas and Butte counties

 

California’s largest wildfire exploded again after burning for nearly three weeks in remote mountains, with officials warning that hot, dry weather threatened to further stoke the flames.

Officials warned that the high temperatures increase the risk of new fires across much of the state. “I think we definitely have a few hard days ahead of us,” said Shannon Prather with the US Forest Service.

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Strong winds on Tuesday stoked the Dixie fire, which grew to over 395 sq miles (1,024 sq km) across Plumas and Butte counties. The blaze jumped perimeter lines in a few spots, prompting additional evacuation orders for about 15,000 people, fire officials said.

Heat from the flames also created a pyrocumulus cloud, a massive column of smoke that rose 30,000ft (10,000 yards) in the air, Mike Wink, a state fire operations section chief said.

Firefighters had been able to save homes and hold large stretches of the blaze in recent days, but a red flag warning was scheduled for Wednesday afternoon through Thursday because of hot, bone-dry conditions with winds up to 40 mph. That could drive flames through timber, brush and grass, especially along the northern and north-eastern sides of the vast wildfire.

Similar risky weather is expected across southern California, with heat advisories and warnings issued for interior valleys, mountains and deserts for much of the week.

The Dixie fire has threatened thousands of homes and destroyed 67 houses and other buildings since breaking out 14 July. It was 35% contained.

About 150 miles (240km) west of the Dixie fire, the lightning-sparked McFarland fire threatened remote homes along the Trinity River in the Shasta-Trinity national forest. That fire was only 5% contained, and is was burning fiercely through drought-stricken vegetation and had doubled in size every day, fire officials warned.

Heat waves and historic drought tied to climate change have made wildfires harder to fight in the American west. Scientists say climate change has made the region much warmer and drier in the past 30 years and will continue to make weather more extreme and wildfires more frequent and destructive.

Nearly a hundred large, active wildfires are burning across 13 US states, engaging more than 20,000 firefighters and support personnel.

California is battling 11 large active blazes. Montana has 25 and Idaho 21.

In southern Oregon, lightning struck parched forests hundreds of times in a 24-hour period, igniting 50 new wildfires. But firefighters and aircraft attacked the flames before they spread out of control and no homes were immediately threatened.

The state’s Bootleg fire, the nation’s largest at 647 sq miles (1,676 sq km), was 84% contained and firefighters were busy mopping up hotspots and strengthening fire lines.

“Crews are working tirelessly to ensure we are as prepared as we can be for the extreme fire weather forecast for the next couple days,“ a US Forest Service update said.

In Hawaii, firefighters on the Big Island in recent days gained control over the biggest brush fire that island has ever recordedThe Nation fire torched more than 62 sq miles (160 sq km), forcing thousands of people to evacuate and destroying two homes.

Mike Walker, the state fire protection forester for the department of land and natural resources, said the total area burned could end up being the most the state has ever seen.

“It is pretty significant,” he said, adding that sustained 30mph winds with gusts of up to 50mph drove the fire roughly 100 acres an hour through Saturday and Sunday.

 

Source: The Guardian

BREAKING: Three rockets launched toward Israel from Lebanon, IDF retaliates

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Three rockets launched toward Israeli territory from Lebanon * IDF responds by attacking targets in Lebanon

Rocket sirens went off in Kiryat Shemona and in the towns of Kfar Giladi and Tel Hai in northern Israel on Wednesday, as a loud explosion was heard in the area and smoke was seen by residents.

The IDF Spokesperson’s Unit initially noted that IDF troops were scanning the area and investigating the incident.

A few minutes later, the IDF confirmed that three rockets were launched toward Israeli territory from Lebanon, with two landing in open fields near Kiryat Shemona and one causing a fire.

 

One of the rockets failed to reach Israel and landed in Lebanese territory.

An initial statement by Magen David Adom (MDA) stated that no injuries were reported, however, MDA later reported that paramedics were treating four Israelis who suffered shock.

Volunteers from United Hatzalah’s Psychotrauma and Crisis Response Unit joined the efforts to treat people who experienced emotional shock.

“We are working together with local services to locate and identify people suffering from shock and we are sending volunteers to provide psychological and emotional stabilization to anyone who is suffering,” said head of Emek HaHula region of United Hatzalah Vicki Tiferet. ” If you, or someone you know is in need of assistance please contact us via our hotline 1221.”

 

The IDF responded shortly after by attacking the sites where the rockets were launched from in Lebanon with artillery fire and continued to target sites associated with terrorist activity near the border throughout the day.

Defense Minister Benny Gantz and IDF Chief of Staff held a briefing following the incident, attended by head of the Military Intelligence Directorate Maj.-Gen. Tamir Hayman. Ynet reported that Gantz had sent a “harsh message to UNIFIL,” the UN’s interim force in Lebanon following the incident.

When asked by Walla whether the situation was under control, Prime Minister Naftali Bennett guaranteed that “everything is okay” and that the situation is being dealt with.

“The landing of a rocket in the Galilee is another reminder of the situation developing on our northern border,” Blue and White MK Yael Ron Ben Moshe said in a statement. “I trust the defense establishment and Defense Minister Benny Gantz to take the necessary actions in order to resume peace and quiet to Israel’s northern population,” she added.

Residents of Kiryat Shemona and Metula were initially directed to remain in shelters until further notice, but were told they could resume normal activity about an hour later.

(World Israel News).

Pro-Israel candidate beats Squad-backed rival in Ohio Democratic primary

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In a microcosm of the battle between the progressive and moderate wings of the Democratic party, a pro-Israel centrist won her party’s primary for a Congressional seat over a far-left rival in a come-from-behind victory Tuesday in Cleveland, Ohio.

Shontel Brown, an African-American who headed the Democratic party in the state’s second-most populous county, campaigned as a supporter of President Joe Biden as well as Israel in her heavily-Jewish 11th district.

As the district is overwhelmingly Democratic, she is now all but assured a win in the special election that had been called when her mentor, Rep. Marcia Fudge, left her seat open to become Secretary of Housing and Urban Development in the new administration.

Fudge backed Brown, as did House Majority Whip James Clyburn, former secretary of state Hillary Clinton, and the non-partisan Congressional Black Caucus. Several pro-Israel and centrist Jewish PACs also raised money and aggressively pushed for Brown, including the Jewish Democratic Council of America (JDCA), the Democratic Majority for Israel (DMFI), and Pro-Israel America.

The reason for their hard work was the support being given to Brown’s opponent and former state senator, Nina Turner, by members of the progressive wing of the party, who are considered anti-Biden as well as anti-Israel.

Turner, also an African American, had been the co-chair of Vermont Independent Bernie Sanders’ 2020 presidential campaign. She had spoken vociferously against Biden during Sanders’ unsuccessful run for the nomination, and the senator campaigned heavily for him across the district.

She was also backed by the so-called Squad, the most radical members of the Democratic party in the House of Representatives, who are trying to push the party leftward both socially and politically. In her concession speech, Turner specifically thanked the Squad’s leader, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY), “whom I have worked with for years,” for her endorsement.

In a possibly anti-Semitic crack regarding the kind of support Brown had received, Turner also said, “We didn’t lose this race. Evil money manipulated and maligned in this election.”

In contrast, Brown is a firm supporter of the president, has good ties with the local Jewish community and is pro-Israel, which she even mentioned in her victory speech.

“When you walk within a few feet of a bomb shelter, you can appreciate the vulnerability of a state, and that has given me the understanding of the U.S.-Israel relationship and I thank my Jewish brethren,” she said in a short clip posted to Twitter by Jewish Insider.

JDCA head Halie Soifer took credit for the impressive support Brown received from the Jewish community to overturn the heavy lead Turner had enjoyed throughout most of the campaign.

In her congratulatory statement to the candidate, she said, that “JDCA reached 22,000 Jewish voters in the district over 100 times each” through phone, email and text messages. The result was that “Voter turnout in areas with large Jewish populations was – on average – double the overall turnout in the district. Specifically, OH-11 turnout was 16.8%, and turnout in heavily Jewish areas of the district was 25-31%.”

(World Israel News).

EU court rejects appeal to keep two-year old Alta Fixsler on life support

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Parents of Jewish girl on life support have been in legal fight to transport their daughter to Israel or the US for further treatment.

An appeal to the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) by the parents of a brain damaged two-year old Jewish girl to keep her on life support has been rejected, reported BBC News.

Alta Fixsler’s parents have been in a legal battle with Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust to receive permission to take their daughter to Israel for further treatment or to the United States, where she had been given a visa due to her father’s American citizenship.

The ECHR ruled that it would not intervene in the case after a British high court ruled that it was in the toddler’s best interest to withdraw her life saving treatment.

The child’s parents called the ruling extremely disappointing, and said they hoped they could still reach an agreement to save their daughter’s life, their lawyer David Foster told BBC Radio 4’s Today show.

“It is a position no parent would like to find themselves in,” he said.

Alta Fixsler’s parents had argued before the European court that as Hasidic Jews the hospital’s plan to remove their daughter’s life support was against their religious beliefs and violated their rights as parents.

But, according to the BBC, the ECHR rejected their appeal and agreed with the previous decision by the UK court to place their daughter in end-of-life care.

Foster described the ruling as a troubling precedent that meant foreign nations were not able to pursue overseas care when given the opportunity.

He said the family is considering their options, adding that “the legal route has ended but it is still the case that an agreement could be reached.”

(Arutz 7).

 

Well known UK art gallery accused of holding ‘hate-filled’ anti-Israel show

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The show featuring opening statement about “standing with Palestine” is accused of inflammatory language and representations of Israel.

A well known British art gallery has been accused of curating a hate filled anti-Israel art exhibit.

The Whitworth Art Gallery, part of the University of Manchester and with a collection of approximately 55,000 items, held an art show called “Cloud Studies” by Forensic Architecture, a researched agency the bills itself as “investigating human rights violations including violence committed by states, police forces, militaries, and corporations.”

The show claimed to explore the environmental impact of Israel’s military on Gaza and Judea and Samaria, as well as examining “toxic clouds” in countries such as Lebanon, Turkey, Argentina, Hong Kong, the UK, the US and Mexico, reported the Jewish Chronicle.

Visitors to the exhibit saw an opening statement that said “Forensic Architecture stands with Palestine” and were shown films and displays that examined how “tear gas, bomb clouds, chemical weapons… suffocate entire neighborhoods; and air pollution targets the marginalized.”

Anti-Israel statements such as “struggle against apartheid” and “settler colonial violence” featured prominently in the display.

Advocacy group UK Lawyers for Israel sent a letter to the vice-chancellor of Manchester University, reported the Chronicle. They expressed concern noting to the vice-chancellor that the gallery is “legally bound by the Public Sector Equality Duty.”

They were especially troubled by “the impact of the inflammatory language and representations contained in the exhibition on the Jewish people in Manchester.”

The director of Forensic Architecture (FA) Eyal Weizman, who was born in Israel, defended the exhibit against the criticism it had received.

Weizman told the Chronicle that he disagreed with those who said the exhibit’s inflammatory content could endanger the Manchester Jewish community.

“I disagree with those that say so: like anti-Palestinian racism, we oppose and condemn anti-Semitism, and wrote so in our statement,” he said.

He added that the presentation did “more to dispel prejudice and hatred, including that against Jews, than an unqualified support of apartheid in Palestine.”

A visitor to the art gallery was quoted telling the Chronicle that they didn’t “remember experiencing anything so hate-filled in an art gallery. The information is totally decontextualized and there is no mention of Hamas or the reasons for the conflicts.”

(Arutz 7).

Elon Gold dishes on Jackie Mason, COVID-19 and why Jews are so nervous

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“Jackie Mason was in a league of his own,” said the 50-year-old comedian. “I don’t care how decent some other guys are today, there will never be anyone like him.”

 

 Elon Gold, known as one of the best living Jewish comedians, spoke with great reverence of a Jewish comedy legend who died on July 24 at the age of 93.

Jackie Mason was the Sinatra of comedy,” Gold told JNS by phone. “There will never be another. He was a trailblazer. He was not afraid of his Judaism. I heard he was once told, ‘You’ll be a big movie star if you tone it down.’ He’s the opposite of that yenta [Julia Haart] on ‘My Unorthodox Life.’ He stayed true to himself. To me, he’s the greatest Jewish comedian who ever lived and in the top five of comedians ever, up there with [George] Carlin and [Richard] Pryor.”

Only a few days before Mason passed, Gold said he was talking to fellow Jewish comedian Gary Gulman about how Mason’s special “The World According to Me” was one of the three best in terms of the top hours of comedy.

Gold, 50, said there was one big way Mason stood out besides his singular accent.

“You know, Larry David is a mensch and obviously hilarious,” said Gold. “Off-camera, he’s calm. Robin Williams, I’ve sat with him. Loads of energy. When you sat next to him with no cameras, he was calm. Jackie Mason, the only person I can think of that is like him, is my friend Modi [Rosenfeld] in that he’s always schpritzing. He’s always firing away. He’s always making you laugh with his observations. Jackie was just always on. There was no ‘off’ button when he would not be funny. It came natural to him.”

Those who want to check out Gold with Rosenfeld can see HBO’s “Crashing” in an episode called “The Temple Gig,” where both comedians are hilarious.

As for the infamous scandal when Mason supposedly gave the middle finger to Ed Sullivan and was banned for 20 years from the show, many I’ve asked said they weren’t sure if Mason really gave the middle finger to the host, who motioned that Mason only had two minutes left for his act.

“I think he did,” Gold said of the middle finger. “He didn’t take ‘you know what’ from anyone, and he was fearless. He just did what he felt and didn’t care. If he was angry, he was angry.”

Jackie Mason. Credit: Courtesy.

Gold suddenly broke into such a perfect Jackie Mason imitation that were he to do this on Joe Rogan’s podcast, there would be conspiracy theorists who’d say that Mason is still alive. Many comedians bemoan that audiences are becoming too politically correct. Some of Mason’s material would now be considered problematic. Gold said some got the wrong impression of him.

“I took my friend [and fellow comedian] Jay Mohr to see Jackie once, and he turned to me and he said, ‘Oh, my God, Jackie’s racist!’ I said, ‘No, he’s not. He jokes about everyone, and he doesn’t hate anyone.’ ”

Gold said he only had one criticism of Mason. He said he went to see Dave Chapelle at Radio City Music Hall and saw Jon Stewart open, and do seder-plate jokes for a mainly black crowd. He noted that Italian comedian Sebastian Maniscalco, who is married to a Jewish woman, also has a great bit where he mocks the Passover seder plate and says Italians should cater the seder.

“My one disappointment is he never went deep into our rituals and observances,” said Gold, adding that he would have liked to hear a joke from Mason about a seder plate or tefillin or the holiday of Shavuot.

Gold said he has two acts—one that he has in his Amazon Prime special “Chosen & Taken,” and a more intricately Jewish one that he does for Chabad and other religious organizations.

“I have detailed jokes about sechach [the bamboo that is the roof of the sukkah], and I do a bit on benching gomel [the prayer made when someone survives a dangerous experience or recovers from an illness] and most Jews don’t even know what benching gomel is.”

‘Maybe COVID would never be gone … ’

Gold said it was shell-shocking not to perform when comedy clubs were closed down due to coronavirus restrictions after his routine of performing so much for so many years.

“I thought I was going to have to sell my house,” said Gold, clarifying that he was not kidding. “I was getting tons of calls for gigs every day. Suddenly, I wasn’t getting calls, and they were saying there might not be comedy for one year, two years—maybe COVID would never be gone. There was a lot of uncertainty. Then I started doing Zoom shows, and at first, I didn’t like it, but then I got used to it, and I was doing a lot of them.”

Gold recently performed sold-out shows at Stand Up NY on West 78th Street, and said that he and Rosenfeld were the only comedians to do so there since the lifting of the pandemic restrictions that allowed comedy clubs to open again. Gold said it was great to see his fans come out and give him such a strong welcome.

Dani Zoldan, co-owner of Stand UP NY, noted that Gold sold out at full capacity. He said he had no doubt that Modi would have done the same if they permitted to seat the full room at the time of his show.

“It’s sort of bittersweet,” Zoldan said told JNS. “It’s amazing to see people want to come out and laugh and support a small business. Elon and Modi are the best, and everyone’s laughing when they’re on stage. At the same time, you’re worried about variants and there is a good chance we will go back to indoor masking and soon people will have to show proof of vaccine to enter the show.”

Zoldan had gone on numerous TV news shows, saying there was a $16 billion allocated under the Small Business Administration grant, but he was among about 14,000 small-business owners who had submitted applications to receive financial support from the government and most had not heard back. He said there were problems with the application process Fox News Channel’s Neil Cavuto on air said comedy was needed, and he hoped Zoldan would get funds he sought. Zoldan said he finally was awarded the grant two weeks ago.

“There were seven months of delays, but eventually, they did come through,” he said. “The grant will help big time. We were closed for 13 months. These funds will help keep us going. We got the money, but these were the hardest months of my life waiting for it. The program was rolled out in a horrible way. It was stressful for all small-business owners in America, and of course, I feel for those owners who haven’t gotten the grants yet.”

The club is open four to five days a week, and Zoldan said the funds “put me in a much better situation.”

Gold, who lives in Los Angeles, is currently in New York performing; among other gigs, he is doing select shows at the Comedy Cellar on MacDougal Street through Aug. 18. On Aug. 2, he will interview Rabbi Mark Wildes about the rabbi’s new bookThe 40 Day Challenge: Daily Jewish Insights to Prepare for the High Holidays at Manhattan Jewish Experience on the Upper West Side.

Jackie Mason. Source: Twitter.

The comedian and actor, who has worked with numerous Jewish groups and spoken out against anti-Semitism online, including criticizing Bella Hadid on Twitter, said he wants to see peaceful times and people relaxing.

He said it’s also clear that Jews are very nervous these days.

“There’s been violent anti-Semitism,” he said. “Then somehow the news shifted to people being upset about ‘My Unorthodox Life’ and then the [boycott] scandal with Ben & Jerry’s. Anyone has a right to be upset about whatever they want, and now there’s talk of variants. It’s normal to be nervous and worried, but I think people getting bludgeoned and almost killed on the street for being Jewish is probably the most upsetting thing.”

Gold said he recently ate at the fine-dining kosher restaurant Reserve Cut on Broad Street in Manhattan and could barely get to his table, as many fans stopped to him to say hello. He said if he went into a regular restaurant that wouldn’t happen—a sign that he is “Jew-famous” but not “Regular Famous.”

The comedian famously starred in the show “Stacked” opposite Pamela Anderson in 2006. (As someone who has seen Gold and Rosenfeld perform more than 10 times live, in addition to a few shows together, I can assure you it is a shanda that they are not “Regular Famous,” but it may still happen for both.)

As for Mason, who will forever sit on the Mount Rushmore of comedians, Gold said it was a pleasure to meet and eat with him on different occasions. He said he would have loved to hear Mason dis Ben & Jerry’s. Gold said Mason never gave him advice and set a standard that was impossible to reach.

“There are still guys like [Bill] Burr and Chappelle who will say whatever they want, and they don’t care,” Gold said. “But with Jackie, it was like when you go watch Chapelle or Chris Rock. When I watch those guys, I think to myself, ‘I shouldn’t be in this business. I’ll never be that good; they’re in another league.’”

Gold said Mason will always be a legend.

“Jackie Mason was in a league of his own. Jackie is a once-in-a-lifetime performer,” declared Gold. “I don’t care how decent some other guys are today, there will never be anyone like him.”

Chief Rabbinate Declares Opposition to Coalition Kashrus Reforms

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YERUSHALAYIM The Bennett-Lapid government ran into a major obstacle to its proposals for kashrus reform on Tuesday as the Chief Rabbinate it will not cooperate with the plan, which it condemned as a danger to kashrus and Judaism in Israel in general.Religious Services Minister Matan Kahana (Yamina) announced last month a set of reforms which would allow independent kashrut authorities to operate under the overall supervision of the Chief Rabbinate.

Kahana introduced his proposals without consulting with the chief rabbis or those officials currently responsible for maintaining kashrus standards in the country, though he has obtained the backing of coalition members, including Finance Minister Avigdor Liberman, a leading foe of the religious establishment.

But with the Rabbinate, which appears to be integral to the plan, now officially opposing it, implementation might not be possible unless Kahana revises the structure.

“The Council of the Chief Rabbinate declares that according to Jewish law it is forbidden for a rabbi to give kashrus [certification] or deal with kashrus issues outside of his [municipal] boundaries in a place where another rabbi is serving,” The Jerusalem Post quoted the council in its decision on Monday, referring to key provision of the plan, which does not require locally-based supervision.

“The Council of the Chief Rabbinate was established (by law) in order to give instructions in Jewish law to the people, and will not cooperate with the decision to turn it [the Chief Rabbinate] into a council which accepts dictates in order to implement political policies which contravene Jewish law. Principles of Jewish law are not up for negotiation, the Torah of Israel cannot be changed.”

Chief Ashkenazi Rabbi David Lau said voiced support the for the council decision, saying in a letter to Chief Sephardi Rabbi Yitzchak Yosef that religiously traditional Israelis (“masorati”) and tourists would be harmed by the reforms, since they would not know how to discern between reliable and unreliable kashrus certifiers.

He criticized Kahana’s mode of operation, not consulting with a committee of the Chief Rabbinate which had been established to examine options to improve the quality of kashrus supervision in the country.

Furthermore, Rabbi Lau noted, those who are welcoming the proposals are among those who “harm the Jewish character of the State of Israel,” saying that this fact “proves the proposals are not designed to help Judaism.”

Source: Hamodia

Air Travel Hits Another Pandemic High, Flight Delays Grow

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Air travel in the U.S. is hitting new pandemic-era highs, and airlines are scrambling to keep up with the summer-vacation crowds.

Despite rising numbers of coronavirus infections fueled by the delta variant, the U.S. set another recent high mark for air travel Sunday, with more than 2.2 million people going through airport checkpoints, according to the Transportation Security Administration.

That is nearly 11,000 more people screened than July 18, and the highest number since Feb. 28, 2020, before the U.S. felt the full brunt of the pandemic. However, air travel was still down 17% Sunday from the same Sunday in 2019.

The resurgence of leisure travel, coupled with some bad weather, has led to delays and flight cancellations at airlines struggling to ramp up after being crushed by the pandemic. At times, airlines have been caught short-staffed even though they received $54 billion in taxpayer money to keep employees on the payroll.

Read more at NEWSMAX.

{Matzav.com}

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