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FDA Revives Effort To Ban Menthol Cigarettes And Flavored Cigars

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The U.S. Food and Drug Administration on Thursday announced it will once again try to ban menthol cigarettes, as well as all flavored cigars — adding that it aims to introduce the regulations in the coming year.

The FDA has attempted several times to get rid of menthol but faced pushback from the tobacco industry, members of Congress and competing political interests in both the Obama and Trump administrations. Any menthol ban would take years to implement and will likely face legal challenges from tobacco companies.

“Banning menthol—the last allowable flavor—in cigarettes and banning all flavors in cigars will help save lives, particularly among those disproportionately affected by these deadly products,” acting FDA Commissioner Janet Woodcock, M.D., said in a statement.

“With these actions, the FDA will help significantly reduce youth initiation, increase the chances of smoking cessation among current smokers, and address health disparities experienced by communities of color, low-income populations, and LGBTQ+ individuals, all of whom are far more likely to use these tobacco products,” Woodcock added.

Read more at Fox29.

{Matzav.com}

Danny Danon: Israel must not stand idly by

If Washington returns to the Iran nuclear deal, we must again stand up and warn that it is a threat not only to Israel but to the entire world.

The nuclear talks in Vienna feel like a flashback, a deja-vu. The U.S. administration is yet again eager to join the dangerous Iranian nuclear deal, and Israel is left to wage a rear-guard battle alone.

It seems that Washington will rejoin the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, or JCPOA, in its original form, without any changes or additions, to the way it was worded in 2015 during the Obama administration.

Iran is playing a sophisticated game and is winning. Since the 2015 deal was concluded, not only has the Islamist regime enriched uranium to a mind-boggling 60 percent purity level, but it is also threatening to go up to 90 percent unless the United States returns to the agreement as is.

And instead of acting to preventing the Islamist regime from creating a nuclear bomb in
the upcoming decades, instead of setting up proper supervision of Iran’s nuclear sites and forcing Tehran to cease its support of terrorism in the Middle East, the United States is giving in.

There is no doubt that attempting to resolve the Iranian issue via diplomatic means is a legitimate approach. However, such negotiations must be conducted from a position of strength. not of weakness, not with juvenile eagerness to strike a deal at all costs.

The Trump administration increased pressure on Tehran and applied sanctions on its economy. The United States is the great superpower of the world. It should be the dominant party in negotiations. Instead, it is being lead around by Iran on a leash.

Israel is in contact with Washington, trying to make a case against the U.S. reentry into the nuclear deal. However, it seems that Americans are intent on rejoining it no matter what. That is my impression after talking to diplomats in the United States and Europe.

Meanwhile, Israel is using other means to prevent Iran from developing nuclear weapons. This is something Israel does continually and will continue to do as long as the Iranian nuclear threat persists.

If the United States does rejoin the nuclear deal, we cannot let it deter us. When the world embraced Iran in 2015, Israel stood its ground and warned of the impending danger and that the Tehran government was a wolf in sheep’s clothing.

Just like we did then, we must also now assume the duty of standing up for the truth. We shall not hesitate to tell the world that the Iranian nuclear agreement is a threat not only to Israel but to the entire world.

However, telling the world the Iran deal is wrong and dangerous is not enough and won’t help Israel in its quest for peace, safety and survival.

Therefore the Jewish state, in turn, will do what is needed to protect its citizens.

Ambassador Danny Danon served as Israel’s 17th Permanent Representative to the United Nations, Minister of Science and Technology and Deputy Minister of Defense. He is currently chairman of the World Likud.

(JNS).

Yeshiva University students sue to start LGBTQ club

A group of Yeshiva University students are suing to force the college to recognize their LGBTQ club — claiming the group has been repeatedly blocked.

Two former and two current students filed the Manhattan Supreme Court lawsuit Tuesday alleging the university has denied their requests to officially register a gay-rights group as a student club three times in just 2019 and 2020.

The students argued that not allowing such a group to be officially recognized alongside the 116 other student clubs is discriminatory and violates New York’s human rights law.

In February 2019, the school took the unusual step of overruling the group’s formation despite the student council approving it, the suit claims.

YU said it wouldn’t allow a group to form that has the terms “gay” or “LGBT” in their its title — noting that this type of club “would ‘cloud’ the university’s ‘nuanced’ position on the treatment of LGBTQ students,” the suit charges.

So the YU Pride Alliance — also a plaintiff in the suit — was formed unofficially in September 2019 at a protest march supporting LGBTQ students, the court papers say.

And under the new name, which met the school’s criteria, the group applied again in January 2020 — but the request was denied in the spring 2020 semester and again in the fall 2020 semester, the court filing claims.

Even before their bids to form the club, the university has a long-running history of denying other students’ requests to form an LGBTQ club — going back to 2009 with the Tolerance Club, the court papers allege.

The suit says the denial is unfair because it “deprives” students and members of “the important benefits enjoyed by YU’s 116 other recognized student organizations” — including funding for club activities, use of facilities for club meetings, ads for club events in school emails and on bulletin boards, and inclusion in the club fairs for recruiting incoming students, the court documents say.

“Beyond depriving students of access to these tangible benefits of student clubs, YU’s refusal to recognize the YU Pride Alliance sends a stark and painful message of rejection and non-belonging to its LGBTQ students and their allies,” the suit charges.

Students could end up feeling isolated and unwelcome because of the lack of resources and camaraderie, the court papers say.

“YU has inflicted and is continuing to inflict grave dignitary, emotional, and psychological harms on these college students, and indeed on all its students, who need belonging, safety, community, and support,” the court documents allege.

The students are asking a judge to intervene and to force the school to recognize the YU Pride Alliance.

Plaintiff Tai Miller, a former student from the class of 2020 and current Harvard Medical school student said in a statement, “The administration’s persistent rejection of the LGBTQ club made me feel ostracized and unwanted by both my undergraduate community and, more broadly, from my faith community.”

“New York City law is open-and-shut in this case, and Yeshiva University knows it,” plaintiff lawyer Katherine Rosenfeld said in a statement. “YU may not discriminate against students because of their sexual orientation or gender.”

The university said in a statement: “Our policies on harassment and discrimination against students on the basis of protected classifications including LGBTQ+ are strong and vigorously enforced.”

“Our Torah-guided decision about this club in no way minimizes the care and sensitivity that we have for each of our students, nor the numerous steps the university has already taken,” the statement continued.

“We are actively engaged with our students, faculty and rabbinic leaders to facilitate productive discussions with an eye toward understanding and embracing diverse perspectives.”

(NY Post).

Efrat Community Appoints Israel’s 1st Female Orthodox Spiritual Leader

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The Shirat Tamar community in the town of Efrat south of Jerusalem has made history by appointing a woman to head the community, without a rabbinical figure at her side.

Shira Merili Mirvis (40), an alumnus of the Ohr Torah Stone’s Susi Bradfield Women’s Institute of Halakhic Leadership, was appointed as “halachic and spiritual leader” for the community after a majority of 83% voted for her.

While studying in the Ohr Torah halachic program for the last 5 years, Mirvis served as a halachic advisor, answering halachic questions under the auspices of the Beit Hillel rabbinic organization.

She also volunteers in the community as a Mikve attendant and in the Chevra Kadisha
and supervises together with her Chavrusa a special blog for women, Daf Mishelahen, explaining halachic and Talmudic concepts.

Mirvis said after the appointment that “I am grateful to my friends in Shirat Tamar for the opportunity they have given me to lead and maintain this wonderful community. The official appointment is a natural continuation of my communal work. I pray that Hashem will light our way and we will continue to grow together in our Torah observance.”

Community leaders congratulated Mirvis on the appointment stating that it was “official recognition of her broad activities for building Torah and for her contribution to the community.”

Rebbetzin Devorah Evron, the director of the Women’s Institute of Halakhic Leadership, welcomed the appointment and said that “Shira will know how to serve the community with wisdom and warmth. Her good traits, patience, generosity and wisdom will contribute greatly to the community. This is a significant step for Rebbetzin Shira in particular and for women’s leadership in general.”

Rabbi Dr. Katriel Brander, director of the Ohr Torah institutions, said that this is a pivotal moment for Judaism as we recognize that female halachic and spiritual leadership can go hand in hand with halacha and our tradition.

“There is no doubt that Rebbetzin Shira has deep Torah knowledge, commitment to tradition and immeasurable compassion and will be a tremendous asset both for the local community and for the entire Jewish world. I believe we will look back at this moment as a halachic breakthrough allowing women to take their proper place as spiritual leaders in an orthodox community.”

(Vosizneias).

Report: President Trump Planning To Bring Back MAGA Rallies

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President Trump is gearing up to possibly restart his Make America Great Again rallies as early as May.

According to a source close to President Trump Wednesday, the event setup may be different but the same vendors will be used.

The idea for a MAGA rally reboot gained traction after Trump vowed to travel to Alaska to campaign against Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska). Reports also said the 45th President may want to use the rallies to communicate with supporters after he was kicked off social media platforms by Big Tech giants like Twitter.

President Trump also hinted at doing another rally in an interview with Dan Bongino on Wednesday.

“I never tell you this in person, but we need a Trump rally. Can you throw one soon, just for fun?” questioned Bongino.

“We’ll do one soon,” President Trump answered. “They love the rallies. We did 56 rallies and we never had an empty slot or seat.”

Anticipation has been mounting as supporters await a possible announcement on whether he will run for president again in 2024.

However, President Trump’s office has not responded to the MAGA rally rumors.

(OANN).

Jewish Youth Lynched in Jerusalem

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Arab gang brutally beats young Jewish man in the Shimon Hatzadik neighborhood. Victim hospitalized with numerous injuries.

A young Jew was brutally attacked in the Shimon Hatzadik (Sheik Jarrah) neighborhood of Jerusalem. The rioters beat him severely all over his body and even used batons. Only after the police arrived did the young man manage to escape from his attackers and was taken to the hospital, with injuries to his back and upper body.

The lynching occurred earlier this week, when the young man was returning home from the tomb of Shimon Hatzadik with his dog. Dozens of rioters who spotted him near Highway 1 shouted at him ‘Yehud’ (Jew) and began attacking him.

According to a letter sent by attorney. Haim Bleicher of the Honenu organization to the police, “the terrorists beat him with the actual intention of murder, over all parts of his body, with their hands, feet and with large batons in which they struck with great force.”

The lynching lasted for long minutes, with the participants constantly photographing the event without fear, and the documentation was even published on the social network ‘TikTok’.

Jewish eyewitnesses called the police, and only after they arrived at the scene did the young man manage to escape from his attackers and flee for his life. He was taken to Hadassah Hospital on Mount Scopus with bruises and wounds all over his body.

The young man described that he “generally does not feel well, I have pain all over my body and three broken vertebrae. I no longer have feeling, my body is broken. It was a lynching in every way.”

At the hospital, police investigators came to collect his testimony, and he was informed that a number of suspects had been arrested in the lynching.

Attorney Bleicher appealed to the police to bring the suspects to justice. “Such a horrific incident should be fully investigated. The Israeli police are expected to make every effort and locate each of the many rioters who were at the scene, and to prosecute them to the fullest extent of the law.”

“In recent weeks, we have witnessed a series of severe anti-Semitic attacks on Jews just because they are Jews, just like World War II, here in central Jerusalem, the capital of Israel. Many of these Arabs are backed by Arab MKs who brutally beat a Jew like this, nearly killing him.”

“We must all awaken to the understanding that we are in a state of national emergency. We call on the police and state systems to fight with all their might against the enemy who has risen up against us within our city. Whoever took part in or encouraged such acts must not continue to walk freely among us.”

(Arutz 7).

 

Rabbi Lord Jonathan Sacks zt”l – On Not Being Afraid of Greatness (Emor 5781)

Rabbi Sacks zt’’l had prepared a full year of Covenant & Conversation for 5781, based on his book Lessons in Leadership. The Rabbi Sacks Legacy Trust will continue to distribute these weekly essays, so that people all around the world can keep on learning and finding inspiration in his Torah.

Embedded in this week’s parsha are two of the most fundamental commands of Judaism – commands that touch on the very nature of Jewish identity.

Do not desecrate My holy name. I must be sanctified among the Israelites. I am the Lord, who made you holy and who brought you out of Egypt to be your God. I am the Lord.’ (Leviticus 22:32)

The two commands are respectively the prohibition against desecrating God’s name, Chillul Hashem, and the positive corollary, Kiddush Hashem, that we are commanded to sanctify God’s name. But in what sense can we sanctify or desecrate God’s name?

First we have to understand the concept of “name” as it applies to God. A name is how we are known to others. God’s “name” is therefore His standing in the world. Do people acknowledge Him, respect Him, honour Him?

The commands of Kiddush Hashem and Chillul Hashem locate that responsibility in the conduct and fate of the Jewish people. This is what Isaiah meant when he said: “You are My witnesses, says God, that I am God” (Isaiah 43:10).

The God of Israel is the God of all humanity. He created the universe and life itself. He made all of us – Jew and non-Jew alike – in His image. He cares for all of us: “His tender mercies are on all his works” (Ps. 145:9). Yet the God of Israel is radically unlike the gods in which the ancients believed, and the reality in which today’s scientific atheists believe. He is not identical with nature. He created nature. He is not identical with the physical universe. He transcends the universe. We are not capable mapping or quantifying Him by science – through observation, measurement and calculation – for He is not that kind of thing at all. How then is He known?

The radical claim of the Torah is that He is known, not exclusively but primarily, through Jewish history and through the ways Jews live. As Moses says at the end of his life:

Ask now about the former days, long before your time, from the day God created human beings on the earth; ask from one end of the heavens to the other. Has anything so great as this ever happened, or has anything like it ever been heard of? Has any other people heard the Voice of God speaking out of fire, as you have, and lived? Has any god ever tried to take for himself one nation out of another nation, by testings, by signs and wonders, by war, by a mighty hand and an outstretched arm, or by great and awesome deeds, like all the things the Lord your God did for you in Egypt before your very eyes? (Deut. 4:32-34)

Thirty-three centuries ago, Moses already knew that Jewish history was and would continue to be unique. No other nation has survived such trials. The revelation of God to Israel was unique. No other religion is built on a direct revelation of God to an entire people as happened at Mount Sinai. Therefore God – the God of revelation and redemption – is known to the world through the people of Israel. In ourselves we are testimony to something beyond ourselves. We are God’s ambassadors to the world.

Therefore when we behave in such a way as to evoke admiration for Judaism as a faith and a way of life, that is a Kiddush Hashem, a sanctification of God’s name. When we do the opposite – when we betray that faith and way of life, causing people to have contempt for the God of Israel – that is a Chillul Hashem, a desecration of God’s name. That is what Amos meant when he said:

They trample on the heads of the poor as on the dust of the ground, and deny justice to the oppressed … so desecrate My holy name. (Amos 2:7)

When Jews behave badly, unethically, unjustly, they create a Chillul Hashem. They cause others to say: I cannot respect a religion, or a God, that inspire people to behave in such a way. The same applies on a larger, more international scale. The Prophet who never tired of pointing this out was Ezekiel, the man who went into exile to Babylon after the destruction of the First Temple. This is what he heard from God:

I dispersed them among the nations, and they were scattered through the countries; I judged them according to their conduct and their actions. And wherever they went among the nations they profaned My holy name, for it was said of them, “These are the Lord’s people, and yet they had to leave His land.” (Ezekiel 36:19)

When Jews are defeated and sent into exile, it is not only a tragedy for them. It is a tragedy for God. He feels like a parent would feel seeing their child disgraced and sent to prison. A parent often feels a sense of shame and, worse than that, of inexplicable failure. “How is it that, despite all I did for him, I could not save my child from himself?” When Jews are faithful to their mission, when they live and lead and inspire as Jews, then God’s name is exalted. That is what Isaiah meant when he said, in God’s name: “You are my servant, Israel, in whom I will be glorified” (Isaiah 49:3).

That is the logic of Kiddush Hashem and Chillul Hashem. The fate of God’s “name” in the world is dependent on us and how we behave. No nation has ever been given a greater or more fateful responsibility. And it means that we each have a share in this task.

When a Jew, especially a religious Jew, behaves badly – acts unethically in business, or is guilty of sexual abuse, or utters a racist remark, or acts with contempt for others – it reflects badly on all Jews and on Judaism itself. And when a Jew, especially a religious Jew, acts well – develops a reputation for acting honourably in business, or caring for victims of abuse, or showing conspicuous generosity of spirit – not only does it reflect well on Jews. It increases the respect people have for religion in general, and thus for God.

Maimonides adds, in the passage from his law code speaking of Kiddush Hashem:

If a person has been scrupulous in his conduct, gentle in his conversation, pleasant toward his fellow creatures, affable in manner when receiving, not retorting even when affronted, but showing courtesy to all, even to those who treat him with disdain, conducting his business affairs with integrity … And doing more than his duty in all things, while avoiding extremes and exaggerations – such a person has sanctified God.[1]

Rabbi Norman Lamm tells the amusing story of Mendel the waiter. When the news came through to a cruise liner about the daring Israeli raid on Entebbe in 1976, the passengers wanted to pay tribute, in some way, to Israel and the Jewish people. A search was undertaken to see if there were any Jewish members on board the ship. Only one Jew could be found: Mendel the waiter. So, at a solemn ceremony, the captain of the cruise liner, on behalf of all the passengers, offered his deep congratulations to Mendel, who suddenly found himself elected de facto as the ambassador of the Jewish people. We are all, like it or not, ambassadors of the Jewish people, and how we live, behave and treat others reflects not only on us as individuals but on Jewry as a whole, and thus on Judaism and the God of Israel.

“Be not afraid of greatness. Some are born great, some achieve greatness, and others have greatness thrust upon ‘em,” wrote Shakespeare in Twelfth Night. Throughout history Jews have had greatness thrust upon them. As the late Milton Himmelfarb wrote: “The number of Jews in the world is smaller than a small statistical error in the Chinese census. Yet we remain bigger than our numbers. Big things seem to happen around us and to us.”[2]

God trusted us enough to make us His ambassadors to an often faithless, brutal world. The choice is ours. Will our lives be a Kiddush Hashem, or God forbid, the opposite? To have done something, even one act in a lifetime, to make someone grateful that there is a God in heaven who inspires people to do good on earth, is perhaps the greatest achievement to which anyone can aspire.

Shakespeare rightly defined the challenge: “Be not afraid of greatness.” A great leader has the responsibility both to be an ambassador and to inspire their people to be ambassadors as well.


[1] Maimonides, Hilchot Yesodei ha-Torah, 5:11.

[2] Milton Himmelfarb, Jews and Gentiles, Encounter Books, 2007, 141.

FAA Aims To Fine Disruptive Air Passengers Up To $31,750

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WASHINGTON (AP) — The Federal Aviation Administration said Tuesday that it is seeking fines of up to $31,750 for three more passengers who allegedly disrupted flights by disobeying or interfering with flight attendants.

They mark the latest in a series of civil penalties sought by FAA since the agency announced a “zero-tolerance” policy against disruptive air travelers.

Each of the latest incidents involved alcohol.

On a Jan. 4 JetBlue Airways flights from Haiti to Boston, a man drank alcohol that he had brought on board, then began yelling and grabbed the arms of two flight attendants. The crew moved nearby passengers to other seats and called police to meet the plane when it landed. The FAA proposed a $31,750 fine against the man.

The FAA is seeking a $16,750 penalty against another passenger on the same flight, saying he too was drinking alcohol he had brought on board, shouted obscenities, and “made motions to strike a flight attendant.” Police escorted him off the plane in Boston.

The agency is a $14,500 fine against a man on a Jan. 14 SkyWest flight from Yuma, Arizona, to Dallas-Fort Worth. The FAA said he drank “multiple” mini bottles of his own alcohol and bothered other passengers. Flight attendants moved him, but he left his seat, at one point starting toward the front of the plane.

Two off-duty law enforcement officers wrestled the man back into his seat, then sat in the row behind him, the FAA said. The captain asked police to meet the plane at the gate.

The passengers have 30 days to respond to FAA enforcement letters.

Germany returns medieval painting stolen by Nazis to Jewish heirs

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Painting depicting St. Florian had belonged to a famous Jewish owned gallery which lost most of its art in 1935.

Dan Verbin

Germany has returned a painting stolen by the Nazis to the heirs of a well known Jewish art dealer.

The Bavarian State Painting Collections, which is responsible for the management of art collections in museums in the state of Bavaria, has returned the 1480 wooden panel painting depicting St. Florian of Lorch to the heirs of two Jewish art dealers who partially owned the A.S. Drey art gallery which operated Munich, London and New York in the 19th and early 20th Centuries, according to the European Jewish Congress.

The anonymous painting is thought to have originated in a Bavarian workshop in the 15th Century. It was used as part of a medieval altarpiece that decorated the space above the altar in a church. Many of the period’s altar artworks were not signed, which explains the lack of a signature on the painting.

The painting of St. Florian was confiscated by the Nazis in 1935 after the Reich Chamber of Fine Arts told art dealers at the Munich National Art Gallery that the gallery would be closed. Dealers were forced to pay exorbitant taxes and had little choice but to sell off paintings and other artworks in their possession to raise the funds.

The A.S. Drey art gallery was owned by several Jews, including Siegfried Drey and Ludwig Stern, whose descendants the painting was returned to.

 

SOURCE: ARUTZ SHEVA

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