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Sunday, September 26, 2021

Where are the rabbis who will courageously address the problems of aguna, mamzer, child molestation and battered women? And solve the conversion crisis?. “You throw a stick in Israel and you’ll hit either a dog or a rabbi” – these folks are incredibly conspicuous by their absence.

Are rabbis no longer influential Jews? 

 

What is missing is a cadre of rabbinic leaders with universal vision, towering souls whose very presence inspires and motivates us to better ourselves.

WHERE ARE the rabbis – the Rav Kooks (pictured), the Aryeh Levines? (photo credit: Wikimedia Commons)
WHERE ARE the rabbis – the Rav Kooks (pictured), the Aryeh Levines?

Well, the (Jewish) New Year has come and gone, and with it all kinds of quaint customs (most of them of the culinary type).
 
The most famous of these, of course, is the tradition of New Year’s resolutions – what I promise to do, what I promise not to do.
 
Must confess, I’m not a big fan. In fact, the only New Year’s resolution I make, year in and year out, is not to make any New Year’s resolutions. Because, let’s face it, you soon won’t remember them, and even if you do, they’re bound to be broken. I prefer the rabbinic advice to avoid vows, pledges, promises and promissory notes.
 
And then there are the lists: Your Top 10 favorite movies of the year, your most (or least) memorable dates (yes, happily married people also can go out on dates!) and, sad to say, the list of old friends, celebrities or athletes who have died since last Rosh Hashanah.
 
The Jerusalem Post has its annual list, too, the “50 Most Influential Jews,” subtitled “our brightest stars.” This year’s selection included a slew of politicians, medical personnel (thanks, COVID!), various and sundry mega-business leaders both male and female, army higher-ups, a judge, an oligarch, organization heads and major philanthropists, a couple of TV stars and Israel’s two Olympic gold-medal winners.
 
 
Rabbi Chaim Kanievsky, one of the most senior ultra-Orthodox rabbis in the country on Tisha Be'Av. (credit: SHUKI LERRER) 
Rabbi Chaim Kanievsky, one of the most senior ultra-Orthodox rabbis in the country
 
 
All deserving, I’m sure. But what’s glaringly missing from this august collection of movers and shakers? The rabbis! Only one clergy-person, a female Reform rabbi from France, made the grade – and she just barely, in the very last spot on the list. In a Jewish world and a Jewish country teeming with rabbi-types – as the old saying goes, “you throw a stick in Israel and you’ll hit either a dog or a rabbi” – these folks are incredibly conspicuous by their absence. In this glossy book of “brightest stars,” they barely produce a twinkle.
 
 

 
It’s perplexing: we have yeshiva heads by the hundreds, synagogue rabbis on almost every corner, kashrut specialists, ritual circumcisers – they really don’t appreciate not making the cut! – chief rabbis, municipal rabbis, rabbi educators galore, rebbetzins and more, but they couldn’t crack the top 50. 
 
What’s wrong with this picture?!
 
Now, your first reaction may be to blame the Post; maybe it has something against rabbis, so it just plain left them out. After all, rabbis have gotten a ton of bad publicity this year, what with them screaming like banshees at the Knesset, waffling on COVID regulations and running off to Uman while so many thoughtful others stayed safely at home. But the folks here at the paper don’t seem to be biased against the order of the ordained; they even let a mild-mannered rabbi write in the Magazine on a regular basis.
 
Could it be that there are no deserving rabbis out there? Not a chance. There are legions of talented, caring, erudite, charismatic rabbis throughout the Jewish world. We read their books and divrei Torah, we enjoy – generally – their sermons, we eat confidently from their food supervision and we call them with any and every halachic question. So why in God’s name (pun intended) aren’t they on the list?
 
I WANT to humbly suggest that maybe, just maybe, it is time to put our pride on hold for a moment, stifle our egos, contain our tempers and take a long, hard look at what we rabbis are accomplishing on a grand scale.
 
Yes, we are doing commendable work, God’s work, and, by and large, have strong moral values – midot, we call them – and a commendable commitment to our communities.
 
 But – are we changing the world? After all, we are meant to be spiritual leaders who inspire, guide, motivate and direct the Jewish people to a place of glory, beacons of light that illuminate a dark planet and move all humanity closer to the Creator.
 
Where are the rabbis who will courageously address the problems of aguna, mamzer, child molestation and battered women? And solve the conversion crisis?
 
Where are the rabbis who will stand up and tell world Jewry, in no uncertain terms, that its place is here – and only here – in the Holy Land of Israel? Who will unabashedly proclaim that millions of our coreligionists are squandering the momentous opportunity with which we have been Divinely blessed, that they are spurning the blessing we pleaded and prayed for throughout the millennia?
 
Where are the rabbis – the Rav Kooks, the Heschels, the Aryeh Levines, the Jonathan Sackses – who were selfless role models, in word and deed, for anyone and everyone, not just their partisan followers? 
 
What is missing is a cadre of rabbinic leaders with universal vision, towering souls whose very presence inspires and motivates us to better ourselves. Rabbis who are not interested in their own self-aggrandizement; who don’t use the words “I” and “me” profusely, shamelessly tooting their own shofar and their supposed accomplishments rather than looking to heighten the holiness of the others around them. The talent is there, the brains and training are there, but their dominating presence on the world stage is not.
 
Maybe, after all, they’re not the only ones who need musar, chastisement. Maybe we, too, have to look inward and share part of the blame. If, as they say, society gets the leaders they deserve, then we need to step up, too. We need to be more demanding about the scholars and theologians we put up on the pedestal, refusing to settle for just anyone or anything but the very best.
 
It’s a tall order, but as the world becomes more complex, more dangerous, more demanding, more difficult, those who strive to be closest to God need to take their game to a new level. They need to raise people up while simultaneously bringing the Almighty down to meet them.
 
At the very least, let’s try to break into the Top 10 of next year’s list. 

https://www.jpost.com/opinion/are-rabbis-no-longer-influential-jews-opinion-680033?fbclid=IwAR3VsbuPyIIQOQydhNmIQh0SCVJq7jhIlG9ft_GESjOK5VnXvZNN_HUu12Y

Friday, September 24, 2021

The country missed its chance to stomp out the virus early this year by failing to get vaccinated in high enough numbers, letting Delta run rampant.

 

COVID’S KNOWN UNKNOWNS — Covid will always be with us. And one day, it will become an endemic disease — one that is more predictable and less lethal. But that day won’t come for Americans this fall or winter. We’re still in a pandemic.

Covid, on this first day of autumn, is unpredictable and deadly. That’s likely to be the case for months to come.

“We are still in the acute phases,” Syra Madad, an infectious disease epidemiologist at Harvard and New York City’s public health system, said. “The only constant variable is change.”

But can things get worse? And if so, just how much worse? Even with 55 percent of the U.S. population fully vaccinated, daily Covid caseloads in the U.S. are at their highest levels since last winter.

The current surge started rippling across the Southwest and then the Southeast. Now as cases are declining in the South, they are rising in Alaska and the Northeast. The virus is still claiming 2,000 American lives every day — almost exclusively people who didn’t get vaccinated.

“It’s migrating like viral lava,” said Michael Osterholm, director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota.

People walk through ‘In America: Remember,’ a public art installation commemorating all the Americans who have died due to Covid-19, on the National Mall Sept. 21, 2021 in Washington, D.C.

People walk through ‘In America: Remember,’ a public art installation commemorating all the Americans who have died due to Covid-19, on the National Mall in Washington, D.C. | Drew Angerer/Getty Images

One of the biggest sources of uncertainty is whether winter — with its holiday parties and travel and, in cooler climates, indoor gatherings — will accelerate the current Covid surge.

Osterholm predicts that about 50 to 70 million Americans lack Covid immunity from either natural infection or vaccination. That’s plenty of fuel, as he puts it, to keep the fires burning.

Then there is the uncertainty of the dance between the vaccine and the virus, including new variants that arise from the vast unvaccinated parts of the globe.

Vaccines still seem effective at preventing severe Covid cases. The unsettled debate over boosters is really an unsettled debate about how long that vaccine protection lasts.

We know how Covid is transmitted, but we still don’t understand the pattern of cases, Osterholm said. It’s not seasonal like the flu. It’s unclear why West Virginia’s cases are surging now, weeks after cases peaked in the Southeast.

Alessandro Sette, an infectious disease expert at the La Jolla Institute for Immunology, told Nightly that he thinks it’s unlikely Covid will evolve to evade vaccine defenses — that would require a lot of mutations and it’s not to the evolutionary advantage of the virus to become more lethal. It is, however, to the virus’s advantage to become more transmissible.

Still, vaccinated people have less reason to worry about a breakthrough Covid case becoming fatal.

Finally, humans are even more unpredictable than the virus. A winter Covid surge is entirely preventable, said Gigi Gronvall, an immunologist at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security.

But it’s hard to believe that Americans who sat out the 2020 holiday season will turn down the invitations for Thanksgiving turkey and Christmas eggnog and New Year’s champagne this year. Travel has already bounced back.

Nor has the United States adopted frequent, rapid testing, which could stem some spread.

The country missed its chance to stomp out the virus early this year by failing to get vaccinated in high enough numbers, letting Delta run rampant. Experts hope that case surges, vaccine mandates and the authorization of a Covid shot for kids will lift the country’s vaccination rate.

But it’s clear that vaccine resistance is entrenched in certain segments of the population. About a quarter of Texans said they likely won’t get vaccinated according to a recent poll from The Dallas Morning News and The University of Texas at Tyler.

Things could have been different. Last year it seemed like we would be in a better place than we are now, with a disease that is manageable, like the flu.

“This winter might mark a different turning point,” said Saskia Popescu, an epidemiologist and biostatician at George Mason University and the University of Arizona.

Instead of the end of the pandemic and the start of an endemic, this winter might introduce us to a different, and unsettling, stage. One where we are no longer in lockdown but learning to treat a deadly virus as a normal part of our lives. One, where with any luck, the virus finally runs out of people to infect.

Thursday, September 23, 2021

What Keeps These Upstanding Knesset Members Up At Night?

“Bennett cannot act differently than Ben-Gurion because it would weaken Judaism, violate the holiday and desecrate God’s name,”  Meyer Porush said.
 

Shas MK Moshe Abutbul: Change your itinerary or face the wrath of God.











Naftali Bennett blasted for flying on holiday for US Jews (Not a holiday for Israeli permanent residents)

 

Shas MK Moshe Abutbul: Change your itinerary or face the wrath of God. (His Name Is Moshe, He Must Know What God is Going To Do)

Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett attends a memorial ceremony for the fallen Israeli soldiers of the 1973 Yom Kippur war, at the National Hall of Remembrance, Mount Herzl, Jerusalem, September 19, 2021.  (photo credit: OHAD ZWIGENBERG)
Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett
 

Prime Minister Naftali Bennett faced criticism from haredi (ultra-Orthodox) opposition MKs for scheduling his flight home from New York after the UN General Assembly on a day when the holiday of Simhat Torah is over in Israel but continues for American Jews.
 
The first religiously observant prime minister, Bennett also caused an uproar two weeks ago when he traveled on Shabbat to police headquarters to oversee efforts to find the six terrorists who had escaped from prison. As he did when he was defense minister, Bennett uses a special dispensation of pikuah nefesh (saving lives) to work on Shabbat and Jewish holidays.
 
United Torah Judaism MK Meir Porush said that when Israel’s first prime minister, David Ben-Gurion, was abroad dealing with matters of state, he would always make a point of walking instead of driving on Shabbat and holidays.
 
“Bennett cannot act differently than Ben-Gurion because it would weaken Judaism, violate the holiday and desecrate God’s name,” Porush said.
 
Shas MK Moshe Abutbul, who heads the Knesset caucus on keeping the Shabbat, called upon Bennett to change the itinerary of his trip or risk the wrath of God.
 
“It is shameful and embarrassing that Bennett, who wears a kippah, does not respect the Sabbath and holidays, as he is expected to do as a symbol of the government in a Jewish state,” Abutbul said. “It would not harm anyone if he would wait to leave, instead of forcing the Jews working for Israel in New York to violate the holiday. His obsession with scoring diplomatic points at the expense of maintaining our tradition that was strictly maintained by his predecessors who did not wear kippot will explode in his face, because those who do not respect Shabbat and holidays do not merit the help of God, and their work is not blessed with success.”
 
Bennett was defended by veteran Jerusalem Post columnist Stewart Weiss, an Orthodox rabbi and neighbor of the prime minister in Ra’anana, who has been in touch with him in the past but did not speak to him about this issue.
 
“Technically, once the holiday is over for him, he can travel,” Weiss said. “There is the consideration that a resident of the Land of Israel should keep actions that are prohibited to the local Jewish community out of the public view, so as not to confuse people as to when the holiday ends.
 
“But in my opinion, the fact that the prime minister must return to Israel to manage the country – and all the life-affecting decisions that entails – is an extenuating circumstance that allows him to come home as quickly as possible once the holiday ends for him. At the same time, efforts must be made to limit any desecration of the holiday by local Jews who do not have this same dispensation.”
 
Bennett’s spokesman said the criticism was nonsense.
 
“That is only for the Americans,” he said. “We are not American.”
 
 
בני ארץ ישראל שבאו לחוצה לארץ אסורים לעשות מלאכה ביו"ט שני ביישוב אפילו דעתו לחזור וכל זמן שלא הגיעו ליישוב אפילו אין דעתו לחזור מותר לפי שעדיין לא הוקבע להיות כמותן אבל אם הגיע ליישוב ואין דעתו לחזור נעשה כמותן ואסור בין במדבר בין ביישוב וכל חוץ לתחום אין נותנין עליו חומרי מקום שהלכו לשם:
 
 

Monday, September 20, 2021

COVID-19 is a war!

 

Naftali Bennett’s 5 reasons for giving a third COVID-19 shot in Israel

 

PM Naftali Bennett went against the WHO's recommendation by approving the booster shot for the COVID-19 vaccine.

PM NAFTALI BENNETT accompanied his mother Mirna to get a third COVID-19 booster shot, August 3, 2021  (photo credit: KOBI GIDEON/GPO)
PM NAFTALI BENNETT accompanied his mother Mirna to get a third COVID-19 booster shot, August 3, 2021 

Prime Minister Naftali Bennett laid out five reasons why his government decided to approve COVID-19 booster shots for all Israelis over the age of 12 in an opinion piece that was published over the weekend in The Economist.
 
In the 1,400-word column, the prime minister attempted to justify Israel’s decision to go against a request by the World Health Organization to refrain from handing out boosters until more of the middle- and low-income world was vaccinated, and to do so ahead of any regulatory approval.
His column was published on the same day that a top advisory team to the US Food and Drug Administration ruled there was not enough evidence to give boosters to everyone, and rather approved only giving the shots to people over the age of 65 or those who are at highest risk for infection.
 
What were Bennett’s five reasons?
 
1) COVID-19 is a war
 
“Fighting a pandemic is like fighting a war, where the strategic decisions must not be made by the experts, the generals, but by the elected government, taking into account a broader picture,” Bennett wrote. He said that the coronavirus pandemic impacts nearly all areas of people’s lives, from the economy to education, from supply chains to mental health and therefore needs to be looked at from a holistic perspective. And whereas public health experts “tend to be conservative and risk-averse,” COVID-19 requires “quick decisions” and “decisive action. “Sometimes, not making risky decisions can be more damaging than taking a calculated risk,” the prime minister wrote.
 
2) The vaccines were not working anymore
 
In February, Israelis started to believe the country had beaten the pandemic. The economy opened up, weddings and cultural events resumed and people removed their masks. But only a couple of months later, cases began to rise – including among those who had been fully vaccinated.
 
According to Bennett, there were two reasons for this: First, the Delta variant was so virulent that it was capable of overcoming the vaccine’s defenses; second, the effect of the vaccine, which began being administered in Israel on December 20, 2020, had started to wane among people who received it more than five months prior. Moreover, those who got vaccinated would likely be at increased risk.
 
“People with two doses can be at increased risk because they think and act as if they’re fully protected, even when that protection may be waning,” Bennett said.
 
 
President Isaac Herzog and Prime Minister Naftali Bennett are seen kicking off Israel's third booster shot vaccinations at Sheba Medical Center, on July 30, 2021. (credit: HAIM ZACH/GPO) 
President Isaac Herzog and Prime Minister Naftali Bennett are seen kicking off Israel's third booster shot vaccinations at Sheba Medical Center, on July 30, 2021
 
 
3) The vaccines are safe
 
Israel had a lot of information about the side-effects of the Pfizer vaccine, which at this stage has already been administered in some capacity to more than six million Israelis, according to Bennett.
“We knew the vaccines worked and their side-effects were minor,” said the prime minister.
A study of more than 9,000 Israelis published last week by Maccabi Healthcare Services found that 87% of people experienced at least one side-effect, most often pain at the injection site. However, none of the side-effects were life-threatening and they usually went away within one to three days.
Half the people said the side effects were worse for the third shot than the second, and half said they were the same or not as bad. The second-most reported side-effect (57%) was weakness and fatigue.
Previous studies of the first and second doses conducted in Israel and abroad also found minimal side-effects among the majority of recipients.
 
4) To avoid another lockdown
 
When cases began rising, the prime minister was being pressured by some health and political leaders to consider a fourth lockdown. Even as Israel inched closer to the High Holy Days, it seemed shutting down was still on the table. But Bennett said he knew another lockdown would “further harm our economy and society,” he wrote in The Economist. So, instead, he decided to “double down on vaccines as the central strategy, together with less restrictive measures such as a face-mask mandate in closed spaces and the ‘Green Pass’ scheme that requires people to carry proof of being vaccinated or negative test results in order to participate in various activities.”
 
5) Not moving forward would erode public trust and feed the anti-vaxxers
 
“When twice-dosed people are infected and fall ill, it erodes the public’s trust in the vaccines and discourages others from getting vaccinated,” Bennett said. He said that allowing the vaccines to wane is not only dangerous but provides “fodder for the anti-vaxxers and conspiracy theorists.”
 

Friday, September 17, 2021

To the So-Called Self-Described "Leaders" - Moral Midgets - De Facto Criminals of Every Faith Denomination, Jewish, Secular and Otherwise ----- “The scars of this horrific abuse continue to live with all of us, and I also blame an entire system that enabled and perpetrated his abuse,” Simone Biles testified to Congress.

"All we needed was one adult to do the right thing," Aly Raisman tells Senate..."It has affected my health. In the last couple of years, I've had to be taken in an ambulance because I passed out. I'm so sick from just the trauma. It might not even be after a hearing like this. It just hits me out of the blue. So I think it's important for people to understand how much, you know, even if we're not crying, how much we are all struggling and how much survivors are suffering, because people often say, well, why did you just come forward now? Because it's terrifying to come forward, the fear of not being believed, but also because it affects us so much. Sometimes it's impossible just to say the words out loud," Raisman said. 

 
"I personally don't think that people realize how much experiencing this type of abuse is not something one just suffers in the moment. It carries on with them sometimes for the rest of their lives. For example, being here today is taking everything I have. My main concern is, I hope I have the energy even to just walk out of here. I don't think you realize how much it affects us, how much the PTSD, how much the trauma impacts us. For every survivor it's different," she said.

WASHINGTON — Simone Biles, the most accomplished gymnast in history, did not want to be in Congress on Wednesday, testifying to a Senate committee about the F.B.I.’s mishandling of one of the biggest sexual abuse cases in United States history.

Sitting at the witness table alongside three of her former teammates on the United States national team, Biles said she couldn’t imagine being less comfortable. But she chose to publicly address lawmakers for herself, as a survivor of that abuse, but also for other athletes, especially children, whom she feels compelled to protect.

Biles, 24, broke down in tears when explaining that she does not want any more young people to endure the suffering that she has at the hands of a pedophile. She and hundreds of other girls and women were molested by Lawrence G. Nassar, the former national team doctor. He is now serving what amounts to life in prison for multiple sex crimes. NYT

US Olympic gymnasts (L-R) Simone Biles, McKayla Maroney, Aly Raisman and Maggie Nichols testify during a Senate Judiciary hearing about the Inspector General's report on the FBI handling of the Larry Nassar investigation of sexual abuse of Olympic gymnasts on September 15, 2021 in Washington, DC.

Gymnasts Slam FBI for Failing to Protect Them From Sexual Abuse

 

Four of the top gymnasts in the United States told Congress that the FBI, USA Gymnastics, and the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee had failed them, for years, in a Senate hearing Wednesday—and they want answers and accountability.

The Senate Judiciary Committee hearing centered on a Justice Department report, released this summer, that found the FBI had botched its investigation into Larry Nassar, a once-celebrated doctor who has since been jailed and accused of abusing hundreds of gymnasts while pretending he was providing medical treatment. The four gymnasts who testified Wednesday—Simone Biles, McKayla Maroney, Maggie Nichols, and Aly Raisman—have all said that they were abused by Nassar.

“They had legal, legitimate evidence of child abuse and did nothing,” Maroney, an Olympic gold medalist, told the senators of the FBI. “If they’re not going to protect me, I want to know: Who are they trying to protect?”

Maroney, who is not named in the report, spoke with a FBI agent about her experience with Nassar, but that agent didn’t properly follow up, according to the report. More than a year after speaking with Maroney, the agent drafted a summary of her interview that included statements she did not make, per the report. 

The FBI’s inaction, Maroney said, was beyond devastating. She recalled sitting on her bedroom floor and spending nearly three hours telling the agent about the abuse she endured. After recounting one particularly horrific memory, she began to cry; the agent, she said, only asked her, “Is that all?”

“By not taking immediate action from my report, they allowed a child molester to go free for more than a year and this inaction directly allowed Nassar’s abuse to continue,” Maroney said. “I am tired of waiting for people to do the right thing, because my abuse was enough.”

“Despite the extraordinarily serious nature of the allegations and the possibility that Nassar’s conduct could be continuing,” the Justice Department report concluded, “senior officials in the FBI Indianapolis Field Office failed to respond to the Nassar allegations with the utmost seriousness and urgency that they deserved and required, made numerous and fundamental errors when they did respond to them, and violated multiple FBI policies.” 

The report also found that the special agent who led the Indianapolis field office had lied to the Justice Department inspector general’s office, “in an effort to minimize or excuse his errors.”

However, the inspector general’s office declined to prosecute anyone in the FBI over the handling of the Nassar case—a decision that came under fire in the Wednesday hearing. Connecticut Sen. Richard Blumenthal, a Democrat, called on the Justice Department to pursue “criminal prosecution where appropriate.”

Michael Horowitz, the Justice Department’s inspector general, and Christoper Wray, the FBI’s director, are also expected to testify Wednesday in a panel after the gymnasts.

“The scars of this horrific abuse continue to live with all of us,” said Biles, who suggested that her experience with Nassar, USA Gymnastics, and the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee had contributed to her mental health at the Tokyo Olympics, where she largely stepped back from competing.

At one point, Biles was clearly holding back tears.

“I blame Larry Nassar and I also blame an entire system that enabled and perpetrated his abuse,” she said. “USA Gymnastics and the United States Olympic and Paralympic Committee knew that I was abused by the Olympic team doctor long before I was ever made aware of their knowledge.”

Nassar was sentenced in 2018 after pleading guilty to seven counts of criminal sexual conduct. More than 150 young women spoke at his sentencing hearing, delivering wrenching testimony about the lingering effects of Nassar’s abuse and the mass failure to act to stop him.

https://www.vice.com/en/article/93y4d7/gymnastics-simone-biles-larry-nassar-fbi-congress?utm_source=email&utm_medium=editorial&utm_content=news&utm_campaign=210915

Tuesday, September 14, 2021

"Ultra-Orthodox" Fressers & Their Fresserai - What Worries Them During The Covid Pandemic!

 


Kosher restaurants fear losing customers over NYC vaccine mandate

 

(New York Jewish Week via JTA) — New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio announced last month that beginning Sept. 13, restaurants would have to ask customers for proof that they received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine in order for them to dine indoors or else be fined.

As the deadline approached, some kosher restaurants in New York City were still debating the consequences of complying — or not.

“I don’t know what I’m going to do,” Miriam Lebovitz, the manager of Milk N Honey in Borough Park, Brooklyn, said last week. “I think it’s going to hurt us very bad.”

For kosher restaurants in Borough Park, where many Orthodox Jewish residents have taken to the streets to burn masks and protest COVID restrictions, deciding whether to follow the city’s mandate means weighing the cost of fines against the cost of losing unvaccinated customers.

“I don’t know what customers will do,” Lebovitz said.

A kosher pizzeria owner in Brooklyn is more confident. The New Yorker, who wished to remain anonymous for fear of inviting government inspectors to his neighborhood, said he’ll “100%” lose customers if his restaurant starts asking for proof of vaccination, even though the new policy allows unvaccinated customers to still dine outdoors or get delivery.

“If we open up the store and put up the sign, nobody’s going to walk in,” he added, referring to the signs that some restaurants have put up saying masks are required for entry.

Joe Klein, manager of Cafe Paris in Borough Park, said that while he supports vaccination because he’s seen the number of deaths caused by the coronavirus, he’s worried about losing unvaccinated customers. 

While de Blasio hopes the mandate will push those on the fence to be vaccinated, Klein said that based on his conversations with customers, this will “definitely not” happen. 

In the Zip code for heavily Orthodox Borough Park, only 44.65% of residents have received at least one dose of the vaccine, according to city Health Department data. This is lower than the first-dose rate for the city overall, 66.8%. On Sept. 7, the most recent day for which the data was available, there was a seven-day rolling average of 1,446 daily COVID cases among city residents.

“There are people who’ve, God forbid, boycotted restaurants who are following the law,” said Elan Kornblum, who runs a Facebook group where “kosher foodies” have debated the city’s new policy. “That, I think, is disgusting.”

Rivky Amsel, a mother of five in Brooklyn, says she doesn’t support a boycott, but she also doesn’t want to go anywhere where she will be asked for vaccine proof.

“I feel bad for [the restaurants]. I do,” the Midwood resident said. “And I also really appreciate the establishments who stand up and say ‘This is not OK.’ You can’t ask people to say that. It’s not your business.”

“Being from a family of Holocaust survivors, I know that it’s terrible,” Amsel said. “People don’t see it that way — they see the equating of the asking for vaccine cards to anything related to the Holocaust as very, very extreme and negative. But me, I just can’t help it. I come from a family where, if my husband wore a yellow tie, my great aunt would say ‘We don’t wear yellow ties because it’s too similar to a yellow star.’

“I don’t think I’m alone in that feeling,” she added.

The mandate comes at a time when many restaurants, despite receiving government aid during the pandemic, have already been suffering financially. Their workers have faced harassment, too. 

“It’s very, very rough, very hard to get money, even if we don’t put up the sign” requiring masks, the pizzeria owner said.

If he decides not to ask for vaccine proof, he risks incurring fines of $1,000 after an initial warning, $2,000 for a third offense and $5,000 for any subsequent violations of the policy. Starting Monday, inspectors will be hitting neighborhoods in all five boroughs, de Blasio said Thursday.

But lingering questions remain.

“What happens if someone brings in a fake document?” Kornblum asks. 

“Or what happens if someone comes in and gives them a problem and starts arguing with them? And we’re also wondering, how is the government going to enforce? Are these inspectors coming every day? Are they going to be walking up to restaurant customers and saying, ‘Can I see your passport?’” 

Restaurant workers “have enough to deal with with reservations and no-shows and cancellations and a shortage of staff and rising costs of food and the entire gamut of what it takes to run a restaurant for decades, let alone the last couple of years,” Kornblum added.

Melissa Fleischut, CEO of the New York State Restaurant Association, said it’s not just kosher restaurants that are worried about the new policy.

“The concern is that they’re being put in a position where they have to police this, and some customers are very upset about the mandate and are pushing back on the staff,” Fleischut said.

In a survey conducted last fall by One Fair Wage, more than three quarters of restaurant workers surveyed said they experienced or witnessed hostile behavior, including sexual harassment, from customers when a worker tried to enforce COVID-19 safety protocols. Restaurant workers also reported a decline in tips.

“Don’t say ‘I’m not going to help the restaurant’ because you can still take out, you can still get delivery,” Kornblum said. “I encourage people to keep supporting restaurants and doing what you can, and just being respectful to others as well.”

https://www.jta.org/2021/09/13/ny/kosher-restaurants-fear-losing-customers-over-nyc-vaccine-mandate?utm_source=JTA_Maropost&utm_campaign=JTA_DB&utm_medium=email&mpweb=1161-34452-462090


Monday, September 13, 2021

Hai Shaulian, one of the foremost anti-vaccine activists in Israel, died Monday morning of coronavirus.

 Fool anti-vaxxer dies of coronavirus

 

Hai Shaulian, an Israeli anti-vaxxer prominent on social media, dies of coronavirus after his condition deteriorated quickly.

Tags: Coronavirus


Hai Shaulian
Hai Shaulian

Hai Shaulian, one of the foremost anti-vaccine activists in Israel, died Monday morning of coronavirus.

Shaulian was hospitalized approximately one week ago in Holon's Wolfson Medical Center, after being diagnosed with coronavirus. His condition quickly deteriorated.

Two days ago, Shaulian published his last video clip on Facebook, but did not backtrack on his anti-vaccine beliefs.

"Dear friends, my condition is extremely critical," he said in the Facebook video. "I am in very serious condition, I'm not able to speak or respond to people. I have no oxygen and I'm not managing to stabilize. This morning I woke up, I was soaking wet as if with several buckets of water, with no oxygen. It took me about an hour to understand who I am, where I am, and what I'm doing here. A lack of oxygen is a horrible and terrible thing."

"I thank all those who are worried about me and supporting me. You can pray, that helps. I believe that I will make it through this, with G-d's help. In my estimation it will take another two weeks, maybe three. Keep fighting. The State is acting with criminal and self-interested coercion towards us. Don't give up. The Green Pass will not be implemented in Israel, it has no connection to coronavirus. It has no connection to vaccines. It has a connection to coercion."

Prior to contracting coronavirus, Shaulian organized demonstrations and protests against the coronavirus rules, including in protest of the Green Pass and the requirement to wear masks in open and enclosed spaces.

https://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/313394

Friday, September 10, 2021

“How to Die Like a Medieval Peasant In Spite of Modern Medicine.”

Did Neil DeGrasse Tyson Tweet This About Unvaccinated Republicans?

 

The famous astrophysicist deleted the tweet, saying it was causing unintended "Twitter fights." 

 

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Astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson tweeted that unvaccinated Republicans are dying from COVID-19 at five times the rate of Democrats.

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Snopes is still fighting an “infodemic” of rumors and misinformation surrounding the COVID-19 pandemic, and you can help. Find out what we’ve learned and how to inoculate yourself against COVID-19 misinformation. Read the latest fact checks about the vaccines. Submit any questionable rumors and “advice” you encounter. Become a Founding Member to help us hire more fact-checkers. And, please, follow the CDC or WHO for guidance on protecting your community from the disease.

Astrophysicist, director of the Hayden Planetarium in New York, “Startalk” podcast host and occasional Twitter “intergalactic troll” Neil deGrasse Tyson on Aug. 31, 2021, penned a tweet he later deleted because he said it was “causing too many unintended Twitter fights.”

The deleted tweet compared the rate of COVID-19 deaths among “(unvaccinated) Republican voters” to Democrats.

“Right now in the USA, every ten days, more than 8,000 (unvaccinated) Republican voters are dying of COVID-19. That’s 5X the rate for Democrats,” the tweet read. The post also contained a drawing of a book titled, “How to Die Like a Medieval Peasant In Spite of Modern Medicine.”

Here is an image of the now-deleted tweet, which was archived by the Internet Archive (the same post is still on Tyson’s Facebook page):

 


 

Tyson either didn’t provide a source for that information, or if he did, it was lost when he deleted the tweet. There was no source provided in the corresponding Facebook post.

The Brookings Institute, citing Kaiser Family Foundation polling data, has reported that anti-vaccine, anti-mask, and anti-social-distancing campaigns taken up by right-leaning political figures and media have had an effect on a segment of Republican voters, to the extent that Republicans are among the groups most likely to state they will “definitely” not get vaccinated.


Sources:

Alba, Davey. “Virus Misinformation Spikes as Delta Cases Surge.” The New York Times, 10 Aug. 2021. NYTimes.com, https://www.nytimes.com/2021/08/10/technology/covid-delta-misinformation-surge.html.

Kamarck, Elaine. “COVID-19 Is Crushing Red States. Why Isn’t Trump Turning His Rallies into Mass Vaccination Sites?” Brookings, 29 July 2021, https://www.brookings.edu/blog/fixgov/2021/07/29/covid-19-is-crushing-red-states-why-isnt-trump-turning-his-rallies-into-mass-vaccination-sites/.

“COVID-19 Vaccine Monitor Dashboard.” Kaiser Family Foundation, 24 Aug. 2021, https://www.kff.org/coronavirus-covid-19/dashboard/kff-covid-19-vaccine-monitor-dashboard/.

 

Thursday, September 09, 2021

30,000 Jewish Idiots at a Grave, 30,000 Idiots, If One Of Those Idiots Should Happen To Die, 29,999 Idiots at a Grave!

 



COVID testing in Uman collapses into chaos

 

No one can return home without a test result, but many tests taken on Monday still weren't ready three days later.


Entrance to Rebbe Nachman's tomb in Uman
Entrance to Rebbe Nachman's tomb in Uman

MDA flew 70 paramedics and other staff out to Uman to conduct coronavirus testing, and the government’s coronavirus project manager, Prof. Salman Zarka, even traveled out himself to oversee the testing of tens of thousands of Israelis prior to their flights back home.

Despite all the preparations, however, the system seems to have collapsed into chaos and the question is why.

At least thirty thousand Jews from Israel (and many more from other countries) traveled to Ukraine to spend Rosh Hashanah at the gravesite of Rebbe Nachman of Breslov, who is buried in Uman. Some ten thousand were already in Uman over a week before Rosh Hashanah began, and the government was prepared for another twenty thousand or more to join them in the last few days before the Jewish New Year.

Regulations enacted in the last few weeks by the government sought to ensure that those tens of thousands did not contract Covid-19 in large numbers abroad and bring it back to Israel with them. All those traveling out to Ukraine (and only to Ukraine) were required to test for the presence of coronavirus before boarding a flight out, and only those who tested negative were allowed to depart. 

They were tested again when they arrived in Ukraine – either at the airport in Kiev or in Uman, a four-hour drive away. Then, up to 72 hours before flying back, they were required to test a third time. At this point, the system collapsed, with huge lines at each of the testing stations and people waiting for hours.

Many who had anticipated just such a turn of events, as well as those who were flying back immediately after the end of the festival and needed a test result ready, took their tests before Rosh Hashanah began, on Monday. On Wednesday evening, however, as they were packing up and getting ready to head back home, their test results still had not come in.

According to MDA, the MDA tests were immediate, and these cases of late results were in cases of local tests and external organizations who offered tests to the masses.

Anecdotal reports suggest that rather than missing their flights home, some decided to pay for forged test results, after waiting long hours for the results of a test that had already cost them $20. Given that flights from Ukraine to Israel around Rosh Hashanah cost around four times the usual price as airline companies exploit the demand, missing a flight was clearly not the desired option.

“Why weren’t they prepared in advance? Didn’t anyone know how many Jews were in Uman?” one frustrated Israeli said in conversation with Arutz Sheva. “They really didn’t know how many testing stations they needed? Or do they simply not care – because at the end of the day, they can just blame whatever happens on those who came to Uman ‘and brought coronavirus back with them.’”

Ukraine: Israeli man seriously hurt 

 

https://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/313210

Sunday, September 05, 2021

Rabbi Mirvis Is Not Giving The Usual Mushy Rosh Hashanah Message.... Ephraim Mirvis says failure to protect children must not be tolerated in wake of report into abuse of children in religious settings.

 

Chief Rabbi of The UK: Child sexual abuse report is ‘urgent wake-up call’


Ephraim Mirvis says failure to protect children must not be tolerated in wake of report into abuse of children in religious settings.


Chief Rabbi Ephraim Mirvis
 

 

A devastating report into child abuse in religious organisations is an “urgent wake-up” call, the Chief Rabbi has said. 

Yesterday’s report from the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse (IICSA) found “shocking failures” in many religious settings to protect children, including in Jewish organisations.

Some major Jewish organisations did not even have a child protection policy, it found, while concerns were heard about potential for child abuse in unregulated yeshivas. (READ - HAREDI and HASIDIC YESHIVAS)

Chief Rabbi Ephraim Mirvis, who was praised for his “clear communication” of the “abhorrence of child protection failures”, said everyone must take greater responsibility to protect children.

“The report confirms beyond any doubt that perpetrators of abuse find it all too easy to hide in an environment where religious institutions command a great deal of respect and where a hierarchy of religious leadership is in place,” he said.

“These, together with a variety of other cultural factors, including a power imbalance and fear of reputational damage, have made our children more vulnerable to the scourge of abuse.

“This cannot be allowed to continue any longer.”

He added: “The failure to protect our children, and to report abuse where it occurs, is a complete abrogation of our responsibility to God and to one another. It cannot and must not be tolerated.”

The report recommended that all religious organisations should have a child protection policy, and that the Government should legislate to amend the definition of full-time education.

Among the shocking examples child abusers attempting to hide from justice was the case of paedophile Todros Grynhaus, a prominent member of the Manchester Charedi community.

Grynhaus was convicted to 13 years and two months in prison in 2013, with a judge finding he had “felt able to rely on a prevailing attitude of insularity” in the community to avoid being held to account for his crimes.

Some Jewish organisations, including the United Synagogue, were praised for being a “rare example” of an umbrella body which provides support for safer recruitment.

The United Synagogue’s chief executive, Steven Wilson, welcomed the report, saying the movement would support “more formal and proportionate regulation of child protection within religious organisations and would be pleased to work with the Inquiry on this important piece of work.”

Other Jewish bodies were criticised, however, including the strictly-Orthodox Union of Orthodox Hebrew Congregations (UOHC).

The inquiry said that there was “a mismatch between the organisation’s stated position and its actual practice in responding to allegations of child sexual abuse.”

The organisation’s Rabbi Jehudah Baumgarten had told the inquiry that the rabbinate was clear child sexual abuse must be reported to the relevant authorities.

 

https://jewishnews.timesofisrael.com/chief-rabbi-child-sexual-abuse-report-is-urgent-wake-up-call/

Friday, September 03, 2021

Child Sexual Abuse is Not a Recent Phenomena!

 

Does Ishmael Molest Isaac?

 


In Genesis 21:9, Sarah sees Ishmael מְצַחֵק metzacheq and tells Abraham to banish the boy. The verb has long been interpreted innocently, as laughing or playing, yet this may not be what it means.

Molesting Isaac

The sexual connotation of the verb צ.ח.ק in piʿel was noted by the 2nd century C.E. sage, Rabbi Akiva, who makes use of it in interpretation Ishmael’s metzacheq-ing (Genesis Rabbah §53, Theodor-Albeck ed.):

אמר ר' שמעון ר' עקיבה היה אומר בו דבר לגניי,
R. Simon said: R. Akiva would read this term as something negative.
דרש ר' עקיבא... אין מצחק אלא גילוי עריות. היך דאת אמר לצחק בי
R. Akiva taught: “…Metzacheq means sexual transgression, as it says [in the Joseph story, when Potiphar’s wife addressed her husband]: ‘to tzacheq with me.’
מלמד שהיתה שרה רואה את ישמעאל מכבש גנות וצד נשי אנשים ומענה אותן,
This teaches that Sarah would see Ishmael forcing his way into gardens, grabbing hold of other men’s wives, and raping them.”[18]

While sexual violence is a good translation of the verb here, R. Akiva’s imagery of Ishmael crashing through people’s yards as a serial rapist goes beyond the text. If we take R. Akiva’s insight, however, and apply it to the LXX’s text which includes the words “with her son Isaac,” I believe the meaning becomes clear. The LXX text offers an exact grammatical parallel to the Isaac and Rebecca story:

וַיַּרְא וְהִנֵּה יִצְחָק מְצַחֵק אֵת רִבְקָה אִשְׁתּוֹ

*וַתֵּרֶא שָׂרָה אֶת־בֶּן־הָגָר הַמִּצְרִית... מְצַחֵק אֵת יִצְחָק בְּנָה[19]

And (Abimelech) looked, and he saw Isaac metzacheq-ing his wife Rebecca.

And Sarah saw the son of Hagar the Egyptian… metzacheq-ing her son Isaac.

In other words, Sarah witnessed Ishmael molesting her son. We can better understand Sarah’s anger, and her need to send Ishmael away. His indecent and abhorrent behavior alone warrants disinheriting him, but more importantly, he should not be allowed to remain in the house to continue to abuse her son.

According to this reading, Sarah is not simply taking the main wife’s prerogative by banishing the son of the concubine as a possible future competitor with Isaac; she is protecting her son from the sexual predator in their midst.

 

READ THE ENTIRE ESSAY:

https://www.thetorah.com/article/does-ishmael-molest-isaac

Thursday, September 02, 2021

Rabbi Chaim Kanievsky, the leading rabbi of the Ashkenazi non-hassidic ultra-Orthodox community, has stated that complaints over sexual abuse should be made to the police, in comments which have been released to the public by the rabbi’s advisors.

 

Kanievsky says go to police over sexual abuse incidents - בוקר טוב

 

(I Urged All 15 Years ago)


Listen:

https://www.sfjny.org/images/stories/mp3s/5-UOJ%20English.mp3

https://www.sfjny.org/images/stories/mp3s/14-UOJ%20Yiddish.mp3

https://www.sfjny.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=7&Itemid=67

 

Comments made in video with head of victims support organization are the first such public ruling by the senior haredi leader

Rabbi Chaim Kanievsky seen at his home in the city of Bnei Brak, on March 17, 2021.  (photo credit: DAVID COHEN/FLASH 90)
Rabbi Chaim Kanievsky seen at his home in the city of Bnei Brak, on March 17, 2021.
 
 
Rabbi Chaim Kanievsky, the leading rabbi of the Ashkenazi non-hassidic ultra-Orthodox community, has stated that complaints over sexual abuse should be made to the police, in comments which have been released to the public by the rabbi’s advisors.
 
The comments were made three years ago but have only now been publicly disclosed in a video seen by The Jerusalem Post of the meeting in which the rabbi stated his position. Kanievsky previously stated in 2015 regarding a specific case that a victim could report his abuse to the police, but the new comments refer in general to all incidents of sexual abuse and the video of his ruling was officially approved for release by the rabbi’s advisers.
 
Kanievsky made his remarks in a meeting with Rabbi Asher Melamed, director of the Israeli Protection Center, which works to prevent sexual abuse in the haredi community and assist the victims of such abuse.
 
In the video, Kanievsky’s grandson Aryeh Kanievsky asks the rabbi, in the presence of Melamed, whether someone should file a police complaint against a suspected sex abuser.
 
“Go to the police quietly,” Kanievsky said.
 
Asked if it was possible to ignore legal obligations to report criminal sexual abuse, the rabbi said, “No.”
 
Israeli law requires that criminal sexual abuse by people in various positions of authority, such as teachers, doctors and nurses, must be reported.
 
When Kanievsky said “quietly,” Melamed told the Post, he meant the identities of those involved should be protected and all due caution taken to the extreme sensitivities of such issues in the haredi community.
 
“This is a dramatic development,” Melamed said. “Rabbi Kanievsky, the great Torah scholar of his generation,” is saying clearly and sharply that one must report sex abusers to the police and that sexual abuse is akin to murder of the soul.”
 
Due to societal sensitivities in the haredi community, there are many obstacles to people reporting sexual abuse, he said.
 
Prohibitions against using non-religious judicial systems, against speaking badly of others and against desecrating God’s name are all severe impediments within the community to reporting that someone has been sexually abused, Melamed said.
 
“Here, the great Torah scholar of the generation is saying, ‘There is no moiser [being an informer] when it comes to sexual abuse; go and report it to the police,’” he said. “And, furthermore, he says one cannot ignore the obligation to report sexual abuse. So this is a dramatic step.”
 
Problems of sexual abuse in the haredi community have become so severe, including extremely high-profile cases with multiple victims such as that of Zaka founder and head Yehuda Meshi-Zahav, that the time was ripe for such comments by the rabbi to be made public, Melamed said.
 
There is very little dialogue about the issue of sexual abuse in the haredi community due to its highly conservative character. But it appears that Kanievsky and his associates now feel comfortable addressing the problem publicly.
 
 
A haredi family walks down the street in the Makor Baruch neighborhood of Jerusalem (credit: MARC ISRAEL SELLEM) 
A haredi family walks down the street in the Makor Baruch neighborhood of Jerusalem 
 
 
Shana Aaronson, director of the Magen organization which combats sexual abuse in Israel, said that increasing numbers of ultra-Orthodox rabbis do now recommend that complaints be filed to the police about sex abuse. 
 
But she added that there is still too much trust placed in alleged sex abusers, who often themselves approach authoritative rabbis and claim that false accusations have been made against them. 
 
The rabbis, who do not have the capability to properly investigate the claims, often believe the first person who approaches them, often creating problems for victims, Aaronson said.