Monday, April 01, 2019
The (Pre) Easter Post!
A man and his ever-nagging wife went on vacation in Jerusalem . While they were there, the wife passed away. The undertaker told the husband, "You can have her buried here in the Holy Land for $150 or we can have her shipped back home for $5000.
The husband thought about it and told the undertaker he would have her shipped back home. The undertaker asked him, "why would you spend $5000 to have her shipped home when you could have a beautiful burial here, and it would only cost $150???"
The husband replied, "Long ago, a man died here, was buried here, and three days later, rose from the dead.
I just can’t take that chance!"
It's Those Self-Hating Jews Again at The New York Times...What Can They Possibly Know Without Torah?
An Outbreak Spreads Fear: Of Measles, of Ultra-Orthodox Jews, of Anti-Semitism
A
measles outbreak in a New York suburb has sickened scores of people and
stoked long-smoldering tensions between the ultra-Orthodox Jewish
community and the secular world at large.
In Rockland County, children under 18 who have not been vaccinated against measles are barred from public places
In Rockland County, children under 18 who have not been vaccinated against measles are barred from public places |
SPRING
VALLEY, N.Y. — Erica Wingate was working at a clothing store in town
this week when a male customer, with the black hat and sidelocks
typically worn by ultra-Orthodox Jews, started coughing.
Another
shopper standing next to him suddenly dropped the item she had been
holding and clutched her child. “She was buying something, and she just
threw it down,” Ms. Wingate recalled. “She said, ‘Let’s go, let’s go!
Jews don’t have shots!’”
A measles
outbreak in this suburban New York county has sickened scores of people
and alarmed public health experts who fear it may be a harbinger of the
growing influence of the anti-vaccine movement. But it has also
intensified long-smoldering tensions between the rapidly expanding and
insular ultra-Orthodox Jewish community and secular society.
The
authorities here in Rockland County have traced the spread of measles
to ultra-Orthodox families whose children have not been vaccinated.
And
so some residents say they now wipe public bus seats and cross the
street when they see ultra-Orthodox Jews. Hasidic leaders said they
feared not only a rise in anti-Semitism but an invasion of their cloistered community by the authorities under the guise of public health.
On Tuesday, county officials took the extraordinary step of announcing a state of emergency,
barring unvaccinated children under 18 from public places, including
restaurants, shopping centers, houses of worship and schools.
“They
did it to themselves,” Ms. Wingate said, referring to the Hasidic
people who have refused to vaccinate. “But I feel terrible for
everyone.”
The
emergency order has emerged as a flash point in a continuing clash in
Rockland County, a collection of five towns just northwest of New York
City with a combined population of more than 300,000 people.
About
31 percent of the population is Jewish, according to the state, and
includes one of the largest concentrations of ultra-Orthodox Jews in the
country. The surge in the ultra-Orthodox population has been driven in
part by Hasidic families from Queens and Brooklyn, where there has also
been an outbreak.
Some suburbanites are concerned about the changes to their neighborhoods caused by new enclaves
of high density developments intended to accommodate the often large
size of Hasidic families. In some places, the influx has upended the housing market,
causing some non-Orthodox buyers to seek homes elsewhere. Parents have
also clashed over whether the Orthodox community has exerted
disproportionate influence on public schools and siphoned funding to its yeshivas.
But while those tensions were once buffered by yeshiva walls and eruvim,
the symbolic perimeters around Hasidic enclaves, the outbreak of
measles, which is highly contagious, cannot be kept to such boundaries.
“I
think that for the most part people have been just annoyed — in certain
parts of the county you can’t buy a house or can’t sell your house,”
said Jessica Finnegan, 32, who was pushing her eight-month-old son,
Kieran, in his stroller through a Target store in Spring Valley. The
store had been previously identified by officials as one place where
people may have been exposed to measles. The outbreak of the disease
began in October.
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