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I went to Poland to research my familys history. I found a new generation to tell it to. – Forward

Posted By on February 28, 2020

The house at No. 3 ul Azsa in the Polish city of Siedlce is mustard-and-peach stucco with a flower-lined balcony and the date 1811 marked under the roof. A nail salon fills the first floor; when my cousins lived there, before the Nazis occupied this city about a two-hour drive from Warsaw, it was their grocery store. Azsa is Polish for Ash the street was named for Sholem Ash, the 19th century Yiddish writer, back when half of Siedlce was Jewish. There are no Jews in the city today.

On the day we visited 17 far-flung relatives on a heritage tour and a dozen local teenagers who had studied Siedlces all-but-erased Jewish history a woman opened a second-floor window of my cousins house and waved.

Judith Greenberg

My grandfathers first cousin Cypora Jablon lived in this house with her brother and parents. Cypora attended Siedlces Queen Jadwiga school, the very school our teenage guides go to now. Cyporas daughter, Rachel, was born into the war and spent years four hidden by two of Cyporas Catholic friends from Queen Jadwiga.

Rachels 55-year-old son, Gal, who had left his pregnant wife in California to join our trip, waved back to the woman on the second floor.

I had organized the four-day tour with Zuzanna Rudzinska-Bluszcz, a human-rights lawyer from Warsaw, whose grandmother, Zofia, was one of the two women who saved Rachel. Zuzanna and I met more than a decade ago, when I first came to Poland to research my familys story, which turned out to be her familys story as well.

Judith Greenberg

I am an adjunct professor at New York University writing a book about the intergenerational transmission of trauma. After cousin Rachel died of cancer in 2003, my mother gave me a copy of the diary Cypora wrote in 1942 from within the Siedlce ghetto, and my investigation of the story began. Zuzanna and I became friends and, during a summer vacation with our families, began to plan the trip to Siedlce.

Relatives around the world signed on to join the trip via a Facebook group: A third cousin from the Bay Area who pulled her daughter out of college and insisted her race-car driving son come along as well; a retired couple from Rome; my 83-year-old mother in Boston; Aharon, the son of Cyporas brother, Shimon, who lives in Bogota; and Sala, an 88-year old chemist who was born in Siedlce, survived the war in Siberia, and lives now in Israel.

Judith Greenberg

We worked with the Forum for Dialogue, a Polish organization that has run programs about local Jewish history in some 200 towns. The forum recruited students from Queen Jadwiga to explore their towns Jewish past, a topic not covered in the national curriculum.

The students had read Cyporas diary, and now they were meeting her grandson, nephew, and cousins. Its nice when a story is so personal, when we can focus on a specific person, and learn about things through their story said Ula, a high-school senior. Its easier to identify with them than with a whole group of people.

A survivor returns to Siedlce

It was particularly poignant to watch Sala, who grew up in Siedlice, interact with these young people, who have been nominated for an award the Forum will present March 10. She found her old home on a town map, and when one of the students pointed to the park she goes to with her friends after school, Sala, who now needs a walker to get around, remembered playing there as a child.

Judith Greenberg

Sala, her sister and their parents were among about 100 of Siedlces Jews who survived the war. But when they returned from Siberia, their home had been claimed by non-Jews, so the family moved to Wroclaw, more than 200 miles away. They left for Israel five years later after Salas mother was killed by a burglar. Many of the others emigrated in 1968, when Polands anti-Zionist campaign deprived Jews of work and citizenship.

While Krakow and Warsaw have experienced revitalized Jewish communities over the past two decades, no Jewish culture remains in Siedlce; the last Jewish resident, Maria Halber, died in 2017. My mother and I had tea with Maria in 2007 in her apartment, where she and her husband who survived the war in an attic room behind double walls with five other men chose to remain as representatives for those who perished.

Todays students at Queen Jadwiga, then, have no Jewish neighbors. The ones who served as our guides are like seedlings popping through tough soil. In a country whose government censors those who diverge from the war narrative of complete national victimization, these students are confronting the past in all of its complexity.

We are going to receive crocuses from the Galicja Jewish Museum in Krakow soon, one girl named Olga emailed me after the trip. The crocuses symbolise Jewish children who died during the Holocaust. We would really love to commemorate Rachel in particular, so we are preparing a plaque to put it next to the crocuses once we plant them.

Rachel, we knew from Cyporas diary, had survived because her mother had Catholic friends with whom she had played sports, attended university and pursued social justice.

Judith Greenberg

Walking an invisible history

Seeing the Jewish history of Siedlce is not easy, because most of the sites where our ancestors slept and ate and prayed and worked were either burned and razed under German occupation, or transformed in the Soviet era without any attempt to memorialize the sites. At the umschlagplatz, where more than 10,000 people boarded trains to their deaths in Treblinka, there is a dance club.

Jews lived in Siedlce from the 16th century, and made up more than 70% of its population in the 19th. After an east-west thoroughfare brought travelers and trade to the town, Jews worked as innkeepers, craftspeople, and merchants. My grandfather was born in the town in 1894 and lived through a deadly pogrom in 1906 before leaving for the United States in 1912, at age 17.

That year, Siedlce had two synagogues and at least 20 Hasidic prayer rooms, Zionist and other social clubs. Even as Jews left for Palestine and America, by the time World War II began, almost 40% of the towns 30,000 people were Jewish. Almost all were killed.

The Queen Jadwiga students were excellent guides through this invisible landscape. Through the Forum for Dialogue, they had four full-day workshops, explored archives, created short documentary videos and interviewed their own family members about the past. On market days, they quizzed shoppers on Judaism and offered them lessons in history and religion. They made a digital map that lets viewers click on places from Siedlces Jewish quarter and read about their history.

We began our walk at the school and headed to the 18th century Oginski palace, a visual standout in an otherwise architecturally unremarkable city. The places we were looking for were harder to spot. A block-long two-story building, recently repaved in smooth gray concrete, had been a private house where 40 Jews met for daily prayers.

Traces of mezuzahs can be seen on the former Jewish residences. The Judaica company Mi Polin has used those traces, from Siedlce and 67 other cities, to create new mezuzahs for sale on its Website

The students led us down an alley where, tucked between a brutalist apartment building and modest rowhouses, there is a plaque. Two of the Queen Jadwiga girls read aloud about mass deportations to the Treblinka death camp, and one of the boys lit a hurricane lantern and placed it by the plaque.

Then we walked to a government office on the site of a former synagogue, where a pole displays photos of the synagogue and a map of the route to Treblinka. My mother leaned against the pole as one of the students described how the Germans burned the synagogue down on Christmas Eve, 1939.

Judith Greenberg

May my words be a living witness

Beginning in 1940, Cypora and her husband, Jakob, and their families were confined to a ghetto that consisted of the very streets we walked. Conditions were miserable, food was scarce, and there was a deadly outbreak of typhus in early 1941.That October 1, the day Cypora gave birth to Rachel, 12,000 Jews were corralled into a smaller area surrounded by barbed wire. Crossing in or out was punishable by death.

It was only because Jakob was in the Jewish police that Cypora and Rachel were able to survive a five-day purge in August, 1942, when 10,000 were shipped to Treblinka. Cypora then snuck Rachel to her Catholic friends, who lived near the ghetto wall; she looked too Semitic to try and pass as Catholic herself, so returned to the ghetto.

On Nov. 27, 1942, according to Cyporas diary, all 500 remaining Jews including those in the police were rounded up. Cypora gave the dairy to a friend who planned to escape, then took deadly poison. She was 25 years old.

Thirty nine of Cyporas handwritten pages survived the war. The original diary is at the United States Holocuast Memorial Museum, and an English translation can be found online.

When people who have not been through this, hear about these things will they ever be able to believe them? Will they believe that all I am writing is the absolute truth? she worried in the diary. May my words be a living witness to those who went through these terrible things, these terrible tragedies!

These words had inspired me to write Cyporas story. Our student guides had written poems and made drawings responding to them.

Judith Greenberg

A cemetery with no map of the graves

Our last stop was the Jewish cemetery on Szkolna Street, an apt metaphor for Siedlces Jewish history. So many of the stories of Siedlces victims remain untold; in our own extended family tree, there are blank spaces we may never be able to fill.

The cemetery, established in 1807, is now an empty field with jagged tombstones poking out through wild grasses. These are the tombstones that remain; the Nazis used others to make paved roads.

In 2009, the Foundation for the Preservation of Jewish Heritage in Poland and the Jewish Community of Warsaw installed a commemorative plaque at the gate and student groups, both Jewish and Polish, occasionally come to pay their respects and clean up. One from a Beersheva high school left behind a giant blue and white flag with a Star of David and their school information.

Zuzanna had invited Grzegorz Suchodolski, a Catholic priest from Siedlce, and Rabbi Stas Wojciechowich, from a Reform synagogue in Warsaw, to lead us in ecumenical prayers at the cemetery..The Queen Jadwiga boys put on crocheted blue and white yarmulkes before entering, out of respect.

At the nearby Catholic cemetery, tombstones crowd together as if among friends, and are lovingly covered with flowers and candles that visitors can purchase from a vending truck parked outside.

There is no such truck outside the Jewish cemetery; Jews dont put flowers and candles on graves anyhow, only stones. Some of our group started wandering through the field in search of stones.

I began picking up candy wrappers and cigarette butts, and found myself by a wall where an empty bottle lay on the ground. Was this the wall where, as I had read in Edward Kopowkas history of Siedlces Jews, there were mass executions in August, 1942?

Jewish women brought to the Jewish cemetery were shot against the cemetery wall, an eyewitness had testified in the book. The women, in contrast to the men, had shouted, cried, and even tried to resist.

I imagined the group of Jews who were made to stand in three lines, in such a manner that the first row stood by the wall, the second kneeled, and the third half lay, half sat, as the witness described. It gave the impression that the group had been placed for a photograph.

Judith Greenberg

May their souls be granted proper rest

It started to rain, and our group huddled closer together. The rabbi chanted the haunting El Maleh Rahamim prayer said at Jewish burials, pleading that the souls of the departed be granted proper rest. The priest recited hymns in Polish.

Photographs show the muted palette of our dark jackets, the grey skies, sand- and moss-colored ground, and slate stones, interrupted by the bright patches of red, turquoise and royal blue of the umbrellas. As opposed to the litter that depressed me with its disrespect, these bits of color asserted the presence of people creating shelter and asking for mercy.

One of the hands holding those umbrellas belonged to Sala, the only remaining member of our family who was born in Siedlce. The rest were all hands honoring people they never met. One student in our group later said in a video made by the dialog group: Theres some kind of bond, I cant quite explain its a bond between all of us.

A month after our trip, in Polands national elections, Siedlce voted 62% for the populist right-wing Law and Justice Party (PiS). Closely allied to the Polish Catholic Church and vehemently anti-LGBTQ, the party preserves the myth of complete Polish innocence in the war. Weeks later, tens of thousands of PiS supporters marched in Warsaw for Independence Day and denounced the Jewish community for demanding reparations.

When I read about the rise of far-right nationalism, and when I see reports of anti-Semitism in Poland, I think about the students we met from Siedlce. I feel the hugs that we exchanged when we left the cemetery. Not a face was dry and that had nothing to do with the rain.

Judith Greenberg is an adjunct professor at New York Universitys Gallatin School of Individualized Study. Her forthcoming book about her family history in Siedlce, Poland is called Cipas Echo: Mothers, Daughters, and a Holocaust Legacy.

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I went to Poland to research my familys history. I found a new generation to tell it to. - Forward

More than 225 People Join NCSY West Coast in Celebrating 50 Years of Inspiring Teenagers at Legacy Gala – Orthodox Union

Posted By on February 28, 2020

Evening Focused on Saluting the Past, Supporting the Future of Jewish Youth

LOS ANGELES More than 225 people attended NCSY West Coasts 50th anniversary celebration on Wednesday evening, February 26 at THE MARK for EVENTS in Los Angeles. The evening centered around Saluting the Past, Supporting the Future and focused on the organizations work over the last five decades inspiring Jewish teens on the West Coast.

The evening paid tribute to Steve and Eytan Darrison of the LA Valley and Daphne & Jesse Orenshein of Los Angeles, two parent and child pairs who are involved in various aspects of NCSY and continue to care greatly about impacting the Jewish communities around them. Famed comedian and actor Elon Gold hosted an NCSY family gameshow during the festivities.

Stephen Darrison became involved with NCSY while growing up in San Jose, CA. He first connected with NCSY as a teenager growing up in a public-school environment. He moved to Los Angeles to finish high school, eventually attending Valley Torah High School, Chofetz Chaim Yeshiva in Israel and later on, Yeshiva University in NY. At one point, he started a Sephardic chapter of NCSY in the Valley. His son Eytan follows closely in his fathers footsteps and has served as a West Coast NCSY advisor for Shabbatonim and regional events.

As a teen, Daphne Orenshein was introduced to all kinds of Jews through NCSY programs and Shabbatons, laying the foundation for her open and giving home. Her son Jesse follows closely in his mothers footsteps and has been involved with NCSY in a variety of capacities, including: president of the West Coast NCSYs City chapter and as a participant of BILT Summer Program. As a recent contestant on NBCs American Ninja Warrior, Jesse furthered this inspiration worldwide.

The West Coast is the largest NCSY region in the United States and is the founding chapter of the first Jewish Student Union Club (JSU) for Jewish teens on public school campuses. Since its successful launch on the West Coast, NCSY has launched 200 clubs on public high school campuses around the country.

NCSYs West Coast region has been a leader in educating Jewish teens and enhancing the spirituality and growth of thousands of our young people through innovative programs and services. We are so proud of their efforts as we celebrate this important milestone, said Orthodox Union President Moishe Bane.

NCSY West Coast has reached and enriched the lives of tens of thousands of teens over the last five decades. This is a tremendous accomplishment that has had an enormous impact on our community, said Orthodox Union Executive Vice President Allen Fagin.

Thousands of students now have a deeper sense of Jewish connection, pride and education, all served on the bedrock of an authentic commitment to living an inspired Jewish life, said NCSY West Coast Regional Director Rabbi Derek Gormin. We are looking forward to continuing the legacy of NCSY and building upon this strong foundation for our future.

Founded in 1898, the Orthodox Union, (OU), serves as the voice of American Orthodox Jewry, with over 400 congregations in its synagogue network. As the umbrella organization for American Orthodox Jewry, the OU is at the forefront of advocacy work on both state and federal levels, outreach to Jewish teens and young professionals through NCSY, Israel Free Spirit Birthright, Yachad and OU Press, among many other divisions and programs.

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More than 225 People Join NCSY West Coast in Celebrating 50 Years of Inspiring Teenagers at Legacy Gala - Orthodox Union

How do you make 10000 peanut butter and jelly sandwiches in an hour? With loveand hundreds of volunteers – WATN – Local 24

Posted By on February 28, 2020

How do you make 10,000 peanut butter and jelly sandwiches in an hour? With loveand hundreds of volunteers.

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (localmemphis.com) How do you make 10,000 peanut butter and jelly sandwiches in an hour? With loveand hundreds of volunteers.

The 4th Annual Great Big Sandwich Make Wednesday night at Baron Hirsch Congregation in East Memphis drew volunteers from many Memphis-area Jewish organizations and synagogues. The event was held in the spirit of Purim to help feed the hungry in Memphis.

According to Rabbi Binyamin Lehrfield, Senior Rabbi at Baron Hirsch, the event was co-sponsored by every Jewish organization and synagogue in Memphis. The made 2,000 sandwiches the first time the event was held. Now in its 4th year, 10,000 sandwiches were made. The sandwiches will be donated to St. Marys Food Bank.

According to Baron Hirsch, The Purim holiday is a time in which we are challenged to think of the needs of others. Within our community we send Mishloach Manot food baskets, and give Matanot LaEvyonim, money to the poor.

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How do you make 10000 peanut butter and jelly sandwiches in an hour? With loveand hundreds of volunteers - WATN - Local 24

‘We will always shpiel together’ – The Jewish Standard

Posted By on February 28, 2020

You didnt know that Queen Esther chewed gum? Or that her accent was less Shushan than Brooklyn?

Or that Haman was a woman with a green face, a nasty cackle, and very bad hair?

Thats because you werent at the Purim shpiels at Temple Beth Sholom in New City over the last five years. You missed the Purim versions of Grease and The Wizard of Oz.

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Theres still hope for you. You can go this year to see The Little Mermaideleh, self-evidently the intersection of Megillat Esther and the Disney film about Ariel finding her power. (See box.)

These productions are the creations of two good friends, Dawn Bernstein of Suffern and Caryn Friedland of New City, who have written and directed Beth Sholoms Purimshpiels for the last five years.

It was a sort of logical job for the two to undertake, but it also was a bit of a stretch. Neither had any background in theater; they love to sing but not in front of audiences, they said. Neither thought of herself as a performer, or as a writer or director. Dawn is an HR consultant during the year and takes some time off to be the lakeside director at Camp Woodmount in New City in the summertime; Caryn is a school psychologist.

But their backgrounds give them both organizational skills and a strong background in working with people, and that was a big help, they said. They had been lay leaders at the synagogue together; theyd chaired its Young Members Club, which meant that theyd worked together on the kinds of programs and parties designed specifically to bring people together and allow them to find friends and connect to the shul. So they knew and loved their community and the importance of supporting it.

And they knew that whatever they could do separately, they could do better together. Theyd known each other vaguely since they were teenagers, a grade apart at Clarkstown North High School; they met again when they both had young children Caryn has two kids, Dawn has three, and theyre both planning bar mitzvah celebrations right now and theyve been inseparable ever since.

So when they realized that theyd done as much as they could with the Young Members Club, and that it was time to hand it over to new leaders and move on, the synagogues rabbi, Brian Leiken, and its cantor, Anna Zhar, approached them with a formidable-sounding request. Hey kids, why dont you put on a show?

Why them? Because theyre fun-loving, they were told, and the work theyd done had made people happy. If you come up with a Purim shpiel, it will be successful, Dawn remembers Cantor Zhar telling them. Thats not a pitch they could refuse, Caryn added. Also, we both have long histories with day camps and summer camps. We are used to writing cheers and color war songs. That, as it turned out who knew? is a transferable skill.

Purimshpiels have a long history; they can be traced back to mid-16th century Europe. Theyve always allowed for raucous creativity, pointed satire, and transgressive humor (along with occasionally weak jokes and wince-producing failed ones); now, Dawn said, it gives us the opportunity to take a pause from our crazy and hectic world and laugh with a group of people we care about.

When they first agreed to put together a Purim-shpiel, Caryn said, we took the creative freedom to do what we wanted to do. You have to find a story that can work with the Purim story. So we took Grease and totally manipulated the story to make it into something that works.

They presented Grease two years in a row it worked so well and was so popular that they decided to reprise it and since then theyve taken on both The Wizard of Oz and Beauty and the Beast.

We try to stick to the story as much as we can, Dawn said. In some cases its easier than in others. They use the music as its written and set their own words to it, using the original rhyme scheme when they can. They take the characters and then use as much of the plot as they can.

Esther was Sandy in Grease, Danny was the king, and Mordechai was the coach, Caryn said. Haman we just made up. We always have a Vashti in the play, and she was just Vashti in Grease, but the Pink Ladies were the other girls who tried out to be with the king, and the T-Birds were the kings boys.

It was a stretch but it worked. It was pretty cute.

They also work closely with Cantor Zhar, who is tasked with making the music work; figuring out how to cut songs, how to arrange them, how to adjust them to the singers ranges. At the spiel, Cantor Zhar plays piano, and a band made up of synagogue members provides the rest of the music.

Both women always are in the shpiel. Dawn is always Esther, Caryn said. And its funny. I wasnt anybody in the shpiel in Grease. I was just Frenchie. But last year our friend who always had been Haman couldnt be in it. It was The Wizard of Oz, and Haman was a woman. The Wicked Witch. That was me. And that went over so well that this year there will be another woman Haman, in The Little Mermaid, and that will be me. I am Ursula as Haman.

The core cast has been together throughout all five shpiels; new cast members always are welcome, the two women said, and children always are included. Do they need auditions? Dawn and Caryn laughed. They should be so lucky. No one is turned away.

There is one woman who says that she cant sing at all, but shes been involved in every spiel. She holds the go and stop sign that tells audiences when to boo Haman and when to stop so the show can go on. She loves it, they love it, and it works.

The first shpiel started a tradition that theyve maintained ever since, Caryn and Dawn said. The last song in Grease is We Go Together if youre trying to remember the next words, theyre Like rama lama lama ka dinga da dinga dong we went down the aisle of the sanctuary, singing and dancing to that, and now we do it every year. We sing We will always, Spiel together.

We want to get people excited, they said.

Who: Actors, singers, and musicians from Temple Beth Sholom

What: Put on this years Purimshpiel, The Little Mermaideleh

When: On Sunday, March 8, at 11 a.m.

Where: At the synagogue, 228 New Hempstead Road, New City

For more information: Call (845) 638-0770

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'We will always shpiel together' - The Jewish Standard

Condition of New York Chanukah Stabbing Victim Improves – The Jewish Voice

Posted By on February 28, 2020

The 72-year-old has opened his eyes and is breathing on his own.

By: Aaron Sull

The condition of a victim in the New York stabbing attack last Chanukah is improving, reported Yeshiva World News on Tuesday.

According to the report, Josef Neumann has opened his eyes and is breathing on his own.

Doctors are not optimistic about his chances to regain consciousness, and if our father does miraculously recover partially, doctors expect that he will have permanent damage to the brain; leaving him partially paralyzed and speech-impaired for the rest of his life, his family said in a statement.

On Dec. 28, 2019, Grafton Thomas stormed into the home of Rabbi Chaim Rottenberg in Monsey, NY and hacked the 72-year-old and four other Orthodox Jews with a machete during a Chanukah party.

Neumann sustained serious injuries to his brain, neck, and right arm.

On Jan. 3, Thomas was indicted on six counts of attempted murder and a federal hate crimes charge. The charges carry a maximum of 25 years in state prison.

However, a forensic psychiatrists evaluation earlier this month says Thomas is unfit to stand trial because he suffers from schizophrenia, experiences hallucinations, and hears voices, reports lohud.com an affiliate of The USA Today Network.

The report also notes that even if the court rules that Thomas is competent to stand trial, his defense team could argue that hes not guilty by virtue of mental illness at the time of the attack.

If the court finds Thomas unfit to stand trial, he would be sent to a psychiatric facility until hes found able to understand the charges against him.

According to local police, a man (Grafton Thomas) entered the Rabbis home in Monsey, pulled out a machete and began to stab people. Five victims were hospitalized, two in critical condition.

The victims of the attack were Hassidic Jews who were reportedly gathered at the synagogue, known as Rabbi Rottenburgs Shul, for a Chanukah party. The synagogue is located in Rockland County, approximately an hour from New York City.

Multiple reports identified the perpetrator as a black man with a scarf on his face, and a description of the vehicle he used to get away was given to local law enforcement, which later arrested a suspect matching the description.

Israeli President Reuven Rivlin tweeted at the time that he was shocked and dismayed by the terrible terror attack in New York.

Our prayers for a speedy recovery go out to the victims. The rising anti-Semitism is not only a problem for Jews and certainly not for Israel alone. We must work together to confront this evil which is, again and again, raising its head and represents a real danger to the entire world, he wrote.

Yisrael Beytenu leader, Member of Knesset (MK) Avigdor Liberman, also wished the victims of the Monsey stabbing a quick recovery and added that the solution to anti-Semitism is for them to immigrate to Israel.

Again and again, we witness to the horrific consequences of anti-Semitism, this time in Monsey, New York. Alongside the deep sorrow and wishes for a speedy recovery to those wounded in the attack, it is important to know that the primary solution to this phenomenon is immigration to Israel, he tweeted. (World Israel News)

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Condition of New York Chanukah Stabbing Victim Improves - The Jewish Voice

The Orthodox Jew and the Atheist – Tablet Magazine

Posted By on February 28, 2020

My friend Jeremy was driving me from St. Marys City, Maryland, to Baltimore one Saturday morning, 25 years ago. Wed passed through the picturesque rural scenery and had hit suburban sprawl. It was March, and although we were on spring break, spring hadnt really hit. Around bland single-family homes, skeletal trees jabbed branches at the overcast sky and patches of grass still looked scruffy. Strip-mall parking lots had begun to fill with shoppers.

Do you honestly believe only people who believe in God can be upstanding citizens? Jere asked.

It was one of the last times I rode in a car on Shabbat. Id tried to find someone to drive me to my great-aunts on Sunday, but this was the latest ride I could find. While not fully observant for another three or four years, I had begun to curtail activities prohibited on the Sabbath because of my increasing conviction that the Torah was given to the Jewish people by God.

I dont believe in God, Jere added after a moment.

I was surprised, because Jere was notable among our friends for chassadimlittle acts of kindness, like this rideand for yashrut, behavior on the straight and narrow. Over the preceding several years, Id come to view atheists as self-absorbed, intellectually dishonest, and/or blind to the providence I saw around me. I believed they bent rules when they interfered with their convenience or hedonistic appetites, and were primarily occupied with themselves, not others. But Jere didnt fit that description.

I explained, Most of the people I know who claim they dont believe in God are actually angry with God over something awful that happened to them. Or they have invented their own godwhatever they want to do right now.

Jere said, Is the only way to decide something is right whether God approves? Because there are an awful lot of religions out there, and they dont seem to agree on what He said.

I had to concede the point. So, how do you make decisions? Real moral choices, I mean.

First of all, he said, I have a limited time on earth. And I have no idea when my time is up. Whatever I do now counts. Theres no redo. Second, my only posterity is what I leave behind for other people. I dont know if Ill have kids, but someone will. What kind of world will I leave behind for them? Third, if everyone were just out for themselves, what kind of world would we be left with? Life is just more enjoyable, smoother, if we try to get along, do whats right, help each other out. And finally, if theres no God, no one is going to bail anyone out of trouble but other people. You cant just pray and wait for God to take care of it. Youve got to do something.

Jeres points were highly persuasive. As I became more religious, they stuck with me. While I continued to build my morality on a foundation of Torah, and to believe that it represented Gods will, I learned not to assume that the Orthodox way was the only way to construct a just, kind world.

*

Jewish sources look upon atheists with suspicion. It doesnt help that the Jewish religion is defined by its ethical monotheism: There is one God, He gave us laws on Mt. Sinai. At the end of our lives, we will receive appropriate consequences for our actions, good and bad.

Some might protest that these are only the beliefs of the Orthodoxa minority of Jews. However, most Reform services include the declaration of faithHear, O Israel, the Lord our God is the only One. And most Conservative synagogues close with one of two liturgical poemsAdon Olam or Yigdalboth of which proclaim Gods Oneness, His creation of the universe, His omniscience and omnipresence.

When the Rambam lists seven Noahide laws that apply to non-Jews, he includes belief in God as essential for entrance into the World to Come.

As I began to read more classic books of Jewish literature, I learned that belief in God should lead a person to fear of heaven, a state in which a persons consciousness of Gods constant supervision of their deeds prevented them from sinning, and to love of God, which should imbue a person with a strong desire to fulfill the commandments in order to demonstrate their affection for God. Moreover, knowing that God created every human being and loved them all should remind believers of the innate respect other people deserve.

My reading was reinforced by observations I made in college: Many students declared that there was no objective morality, and then used the absence of any rule to justify an assortment of behaviors that served nothing but their own egos. Jew or non-Jew, if you lacked a belief in God, how would you choose right, know whats right, and feel everyone deserved to be treated right? As I understood it then, morality didnt end with a belief in Godbut it did begin with it.

Today, however, as an Orthodox Jew living among mostly other Orthodox Jews, I find myself regularly defending atheists, like Jere. In fact, even without having any faith in God of their own, they have the power to shore up mine when it flounders.

*

As I grew in my religious practice in the past 25 years, I witnessed outstanding acts of chessed and yashrut among other Orthodox Jews: Men noticed they were undercharged and returned to the store to pay the additional amount. Women drove to their housekeepers homes to pay them on time because they hadnt been home when the housekeeper left (since unless there is a contract stating otherwise, the Torah requires workers to be paid the same day). People lent money without interest (to comply with Jewish law). Tables full of Shabbat guests discussed ideas rather than gossip.

Orthodox Jews donated hygiene kits to the homeless, fed new mothers, and visited the sick. There were donors who paid for a poor couples wedding each time they married off one of their own kids. Still others covered rent for elderly or ill neighbors. Signs attempting to return lost objects popped up constantly around the neighborhood, on social media, and in Jewish newspapers.

These acts were motivated by a belief in God, and they uplifted quotidian life into something spiritual. Moreover, when Jews behave well, they make God look good, a concept called kiddush Hashem. Yes, there were non-Orthodox, non-Jewish, and even nonbelieving people who did these thingsand I admired them for it. Yet, the refinement and charity in the Orthodox world seemed unparalleled to me.

*

Oct. 15, 2014, was Hoshanah Rabbah, the final day of Sukkot, a time when the Jewish people are meant to experience joy. I was waiting for my husband to return from synagogue with willow branches for me to beat, part of an ancient custom that symbolizes the defeat of the evil inclination.

I checked the news and learned that Barry Freundel, the rabbi of Kesher Israel, an Orthodox synagogue in Washington, D.C., had been arrested the previous day on suspicion of voyeurism. Stunned, I sagged against my chair, speechless till my husband arrived. Even then, I couldnt bring myself to tell him what Id learned, hoping that maybe it would turn out to be a giant mistake. Kesher Israel was my first synagogue, and Freundel was the first rabbi Id selected for myself. He was someone Id respected and learned from, the first rabbi Id asked a religious ruling from. Id worked as his secretary for a year. Id babysat his kids!

In just two days, we would celebrate Simchat Torah, the day we complete our yearly reading of the Torah. I had fond memories of Simchat Torah in Georgetown, of getting permits for a street closure, of separate circles for the men and the women, dancing right on N Street for everyone to see our jubilation. How was I going to celebrate this Simchat Torah?

I wont tell my husband, I told myself. Ill wait till after Simchat Torah. Maybe Rabbi Freundel will be cleared. Maybe there is some kind of misunderstanding.

But after Simchat Torah, I checked the news and more of the story had come out. The accusations were dreadful: spying on women in the mikvah, the ritual bath, and abuse of women approaching him for conversion.

I felt betrayed, misled, nave. I had been taught Torah by someone who violated it. The very person I had relied on for guidance had broken the communitys trustand mine. Moreover, he had relied on his holy exterior to access victims, make them comfortable, and groom them for abuse.

How am I to trust a rabbi again? I asked myself.

*

Over the years, there would be more horrors of this kind: a Hasidic rabbi who was convicted of multiple rapes, then welcomed back by a significant percentage of his followers; the principal of a girls school who abused children, fled to Israel, and now fights extradition; and teachers who seduced and molested their students. This list doesnt include a host of less violent but still disturbing offenses, like welfare fraud, racism, sexism.

Some Orthodox Jews will ignore these infractions or say they are unfortunate but rare. They may call for others to forgive offenders who havent done teshuvah or may actively cover up crimes.

Others say, Dont judge Judaism by the Jews. But how else are we supposed to judge it? If we tell the world, This is the one truth, the only set of rules, the best there is, and members of the Orthodox community behave no betterand sometimes worsethan those outside of it, what does that say about the community, its leaders, its foundation?

*

I spoke with Jere recently about that conversation we had 25 years ago and how demoralized I feel when supposedly pious people fail so spectacularly. He said, Honestly, thats the stuff that convinces me a lot of religious people are pretty sh*tty. What does that say about the God they want me to believe in?

The reverse of kiddush Hashem is chillul Hashemwhen believers act immorally, they not only sully their own reputations, but those of the Jewish community as a whole and God Himself. Chillul relates to the word for hollow. By acting immorally, the sinner sucks some of the Godliness out of the world.

How do we inject the Godliness back in?

According to Rabbi Moshe Chaim Luzatto, in The Way of God, goodness and Godliness are the same thing. He wrote: True good exists only in God. By clinging to the elements of perfection, this unique creature (humankind) would make itself resemble its Creator, at least to the degree possible to it. As a consequence, it becomes worthy of being drawn close to God

When a person acts like God, they channel His goodness into the world, and develop a relationship with Him. Believing in God doesnt do itonly acting like Him: offering hospitality, feeding the hungry, comforting mourners, being faithful and reliable.

Although believing in God isnt enough to guarantee sound moral choices, it can lead some people to them. Every day, I see Jews who aspire to be better human beings and who use the teachings of the Torah to realize this goal. I see that Im a better person since I began to study Torah and implement Jewish tools for living into my life.

But I also see people like Jere. He doesnt just do people favors when its convenient; he actively seeks it out, a quality called ahavat chesed. He is not alone. My friend Sara, another atheist, took care of her ex-brother-in-law in his final months of life, advocates for immigrant rights, and supports women whove suffered abuse when they appear in court to obtain restraining orders.

I have learned not to look at a persons exterior appearance or religiosity as an indicator of their trustworthiness or righteousness, but to observe their behavior instead.

Maybe atheists dont believe in God or feel His closeness. But when they behave in a Godly manner, they fill the hollow spaces of our world with goodness. They become the agents of God, transmitting His essence to all of us and that makes me feel closer to Him. When the world God created is filled with kindness, safety, and love, it is easier to believe He is there, watching over me and providing for me.

Id like to think that at the end of their days, God will give atheists credit for thatand we should, too.

***

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Rebecca Klempner is a wife, mother, and writer in Los Angeles.

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The Orthodox Jew and the Atheist - Tablet Magazine

Torah to be dedicated in memory of Kazens – Cleveland Jewish News

Posted By on February 28, 2020

Rabbi Zalman and Rebbetzin Shula Kazen, who established Clevelands first Chabad House and the Cleveland Kosher Food Pantry, will be remembered with a Torah scroll dedication by Congregation Zemach Zedek in Cleveland Heights.

For close to 60 years, the Kazens were leaders in the Jewish community.

The Kazens were born in Russia and were married for 71 years.

Their legacy in Cleveland includes descendants who have helped energize and lead the burgeoning Chabad movement in Greater Cleveland and across the world.

Rabbi Kazen was a teacher in the underground yeshiva movement of the Lubavitcher Rebbe. He and his wife fled Russia at the end of World War II and spent several years living in Poland, Germany, Czechoslovakia and France. The family spent five years in a Paris chateau turned refugee center. In 1950, the family of eight immigrated to the United States with the help of the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society in 1953.

In New York, they met Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, chief rabbi of the Chabad movement.

He welcomed us and he took us in for a private audience, their daughter, Devorah Alevsky, recalled.

He encouraged the family to accept a placement in Cleveland.

Wherever you go, you are a lamplighter, Schneerson told the family, Alevsky said. Help one another.

After arriving in the United Sttates, the Kazens started helping other Holocaust survivors and fundraising for the Land of Israel.

Rabbi Kazen was first hired as a chazan on High Holy Days and as the rabbi of Zemach Zedek,where he became the spiritual leader for more than 50 years. He also worked as a schocket at Coventry Poultry in Cleveland Heights. Rebbetzin Shula Kazen dove into Jewish life, reaching out to countless refugees as they arrived in Cleveland.

In 1972, the couple established Chabad House in Cleveland to help college students and the Jewish community.

Today, Chabad has 18 emissaries serving Northeast Ohio.

In the 1980s, they formed the Russian Immigrant Aid Society to welcome immigrants from the Soviet Union with free food and furniture, apartments and jobs, English language and Jewish heritage classes.

Now known as the Cleveland Kosher Food Pantry, it serves Jews and non-Jews, offering nonperishable goods, dairy, produce and ceremonial foods for Jewish holidays.

They also arranged festive holiday celebrations and lifecycle events for hundreds, including brit mila, bar and bat mitzvahs, weddings and funerals.

In addition, the couple enrolled immigrants children in the Hebrew Academy of Cleveland.

Simultaneous to a program honoring the Kazens at Hebrew Academy of Cleveland in Cleveland Heights, a Russian language program led by Mark Kagarlitskiy will take place at 2:30 p.m. March 1 at Zemach Zedek to honor the Kazens. Afterward, all will be invited to dance with the Torahs in the synagogue following the processional.

Michael Hoen, who is president of Zemach Zedek, with his wife, Lois, coordinated the purchase of the Torah and the celebration.

Link:

Torah to be dedicated in memory of Kazens - Cleveland Jewish News

Louis Farrakhan: ‘America is No. 1 on the Mahdi’s list to be destroyed’ – JNS.org

Posted By on February 28, 2020

(February 26, 2020 / MEMRI) Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan on Sunday castigated U.S. President Donald Trump for murdering his brother from Iran Quds Force commander Gen. Qassem Soleimani in Iraq last month. Farrakhan added that he had not supported Hillary Clintons presidential bid because she had killed his brother Libyan leader Moammar Gaddafi.

During a three-and-a-half-hour keynote address at the Saviors Day conference in Detroit, Michigan, Farrakhan said that while Trump had justified the killing of Soleimani by saying he was a bad man who had killed many Americans, Soleimani was no terrorist and had only been helping the people of Iraq rid themselves of an occupying army.

Where was a man that he killed? Did he kill him in New York? Did he kill him in Philly? Did he kill him in Colorado, or California, or Florida? Where did he kill them!? He killed them in Iraq! What the hell were you doing in Iraq? he said.

Farrakhan recounted that during a meeting with Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, he had told Khamenei that he represents the Mahdi, the eschatological redeemer of Islam, and that the U.S. was No. 1 on the Mahdis list to be destroyed. America, said Farrakhan, can be destroyed within 12 hours.

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In a message for the Jewish people, Farrakhan said he is not a hater and has never given an order to hurt a Jewish person, but that he was going to put a little truth on you, today.

The Nation of Islam leader went on to say that America is falling because it has become the habitation of devils, the hole for every foul person, a cage for every hateful bird.

He asked: Have you become a nation of devils?

Farrakhan shouted at President Trump, quoting from the Ten Commandments: You shall not commit murder, referring to the killing of Soleimani. He added, Murder is your modus operandi you want me dead and after today you might want to speed it up.

Several mayors of Michigan towns attended the event, as did the chief of staff of Detroit City Council President Brenda Jones, who read a message of support to the Nation of Islam on stage.

The Nation of Islams new mosque is a former Jewish synagogue that was called Congregation Beth Moses. Farrakhan said in a June 23, 2019 speech that the property was purchased by a supporter of the Nation of Islam who loved the teachings so much that he put up $300,000 of his money so that we could purchase this former Jewish synagogue.

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Louis Farrakhan: 'America is No. 1 on the Mahdi's list to be destroyed' - JNS.org

2 For Seder Puts Power in Hands of Individuals to Fight Anti-Semitism – Yahoo Finance

Posted By on February 27, 2020

Fast-Growing, Grassroots Initiative Born of Tragedy and Tikkun Olam Launches 2020 Expansion for More Homes and Communities

WASHINGTON, Feb. 26, 2020 /PRNewswire/ --2 For Seder today launched the expansion of its highly successful first-year campaign to combat anti-Semitism, including increasing participation by 150 percent and introducing a new community Seder program.

With a growing number of organizations being established to fight anti-Semitism, 2 for Seder stands out as one that empowers individuals to take direct, positive action against hate.The organization encourages North American Jews to invite two people of another faith to their first Seder, either at home or in the community, giving guests an authentic Jewish experience from which to learn and build bridges. More than 200 partners, including the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), the American Jewish Committee (AJC), 25+ Jewish Federations and more than 40 Jewish Community Centers (JCCs) recommend 2 for Seder and help spread the organization's message.

2 for Seder was created in memory of Joyce Fienberg, one of 11 murdered while praying at the Tree of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh, by her daughter-in-law Marnie Fienberg.The program was inspired by the Jewish tradition of Tikkun Olam (repair the world), encouraging individuals to take direct action in their own community. Last year, its first year of operation, almost 1,000 participating Seders across 45 states and five Canadian provinces, were held.

Passover begins at sundown on April 8. 2 for Seder participants are signing up now; with 1,120 Seders already planned to date (see interactive map).

"I know what it's like to feel powerless in the face of anti-Semitism, but Americans are stronger than hate when we learn from each other," explains Marnie Fienberg, 2 for Seder founder. "Either at home or at public Seders in the Community, every Passover each of us has an opportunity to open doors and build bridges in our own neighborhood. This positive, unique first authentic Jewish experience provides individuals of other faiths and heritages with the facts to make their own decisions against stereotypes and tropes. We are truly stronger together."

When Participants sign up at 2forseder.org they receive a free 2 for Seder Kit, which provides educational materials that help identify commonalities between religions and cultures. A fact sheet is also available.

2 For Seder is an initiative of Pittsburgh Interfaith Evolution (PIE), a non-profit based on the idea that every American and Canadian Jew can and should be involved in combatting anti-Semitism.

View original content to download multimedia:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/2-for-seder-puts-power-in-hands-of-individuals-to-fight-anti-semitism-301011300.html

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2 For Seder Puts Power in Hands of Individuals to Fight Anti-Semitism - Yahoo Finance

White supremacist propaganda more than quadrupled in Mass. in 2019 – Daily Free Press

Posted By on February 27, 2020

Last year saw the highest activity on record for white supremacist propaganda in the U.S., with Massachusetts among the states that recorded the most cases.

Propaganda distribution in the country spiked in 2019, more than doubling from the previous year, according to a report released earlier this month by the Anti-Defamation League.

The international non-governmental organization found 2,713 reported cases of literature distribution nationwide. Massachusetts made up 148 of those cases, with 30 occurring on college campuses, compared to a total of 35 incidents in 2018.

ADL Interim Deputy Regional Director Peggy Shukur said white supremacists tend to target urban hubs and young communities. Boston, a densely populated city with dozens of colleges, is a perfect bullseye.

Weve seen many, many situations on campuses in the Boston area, Boston University being just one of many, Shukur said. So we see that either in the public square and public places or very often at college campuses.

But the Commonwealth is not a maverick among traditionally progressive states. Every New England state, according to the ADL, reported at least a doubling of white supremacist propaganda from 2018 to 2019.

None, however, surpassed Massachusetts, whose number of cases more than quadrupled.

The kinds of literature white supremacy groups distribute, Shukur said, come in the form of flyers, stickers, banners and posters, among other mediums.

Were seeing that a lot of these groups use leafleting, which is sort of an anonymous way for them to spread their hateful information, Shukur said. They do this often and under the cloak of anonymity in the middle of the night.

One series of incidents occurred at Syracuse University in New York through November of last year, when racist graffiti and hate speech against Black and Asian students swept the campus.

Shukur said white supremacists do not solely target racial minorities: they also tend to take anti-LGBTQ and anti-Semitic action.

But we use that term of white supremacy to characterize various belief systems that generally have base tenets that whites should have dominance over people of other backgrounds, especially where they coexist, Sukur said. That whites should live by themselves in a white-only society, that white people have their own culture thats superior to other cultures, that white people are genetically superior to other people.

While the term white supremacist connotes a focus solely on race, many of these groups express equally hostile sentiments toward queer and Jewish communities. Those attitudes are highly common in the propaganda spread in Massachusetts.

Kurtlan Massarsky is the director of development and marketing for the The Boston Alliance of Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender Youth, dubbed BAGLY. He said the reports findings do not necessarily convey new revelations.

It doesnt surprise me at all, Massarsky said. College and university campuses have kind of become a battleground on the ideological, free speech versus hate speech kind of deal around targeting minority populations of people.

This sort of ideological clash erupted last semester at BU when conservative pundit Ben Shapiro agreed to speak at the university. Student groups rallied against each other in a battle around whether widely perceived hate speech should be permissible as free speech.

Yet the kind of discriminatory action Massarsky notices most often is not exactly anonymous, he said.

The Straight Pride Parade in Boston last August drew several hundred supporters, and members of its organizing group took to the Boston Police Headquarters this past Saturday to support local officers efforts to protect the marchers at Augusts parade.

In terms of more incognito propaganda, Massarsky said BAGLY receives anti-LGBTQ mail with some frequency throughout the year, especially near the holiday season.

Its not every day, but I know that we receive largely religious propaganda, little pamphlets or whatever, Massarsky said. Tends to usually be around, I would say, Christian ideology. I havent seen it being from any other organized religion, but they might be out there.

Laura Farnsworth, program manager of local human services agency Open Sky Community Services, has worked with LGBTQ communities for years. She said that recently, gender-variant individuals have been taking the brunt of the discrimination.

The trend is more and more youth identifying as gender-queer or transgender and heightened levels of discrimination and bias based on their identities, Farnsworth said, like being purposefully misgendered, being called out for using the restroom they belong in and being purposefully outed even in their schools.

Although propaganda plays a part in the dissemination of anti-LGBTQ messages, Farnsworth said that more often and on a more personal level, queer youth still experience bullying at school as well as retribution at home for coming out.

Over the last couple of years since the last election, a lot of our youth report blatant harassment bias, Farnsworth said. Its always a two steps forward, two steps back kind of thing. Because every time we start to make strides, based on the politics of the country, we always take a step backward.

Meanwhile, the Jewish community in Boston has observed hateful propaganda in the form of anti-Semitic writing or swastika symbols plastered on bathroom stalls and synagogue walls.

Michael Weingarten, treasurer of the Boston Synagogue, said these non-confrontational occurrences are among the more common discriminatory acts toward the Jewish community. However, Weingarten said, its the rarer instances of overt anti-Semitic action that are the most dangerous.

So you get people who were the neo-Nazis marching against Blacks and Jews in Charlottesville a couple years ago, Weingarten said. It wasnt that long afterwards that we had a fatal shooting at a synagogue in Pittsburgh.

While the Boston Synagogue has not experienced any recent anti-Semitic issues, Weingarten said the countrys current political atmosphere has fostered a more accepting environment for acts of aggression.

As a synagogue, we have had to deal with the consequences of seeing fatal shootings in other synagogues, and weve had to learn lessons from that, Weingarten said. Weve observed that we have to keep the doors locked and we have to screen who we let into our buildings on the Sabbath as well as the rest of the week.

Previously, many synagogues would keep their doors open during Shabbat services to welcome in attendees. Thats no longer the norm.

Central Reform Temple in Boston is also aware of this development, according to founding Rabbi Howard Berman, but remains among the few synagogues that have not moved toward heightened security measures.

While were very conscious of security issues, we have never had any incidents and our services are open, Berman said. Anybody comes in, we dont have any kind of security screening unlike, unfortunately, is the case in many communities where you have to go through metal detectors or there are security guards.

Seated in the heart of Back Bay, CRT also displays highly visible signs and banners. Yet the small congregation saves its heavy security for major holy days when the public is aware that a significant number of people will gather at a certain place and time.

Berman said aside from those major incidents that garner media attention, Jews in America do not usually undergo any significant confrontation with anti-Semitism anymore.

Systemic discrimination that intrudes on peoples personal lives or financial lives or social lives is really not a major issue at this point, Berman said. And I dont think any of the current iterations of anti-Semitism have included that, other than the very complex debates and unfortunate tensions that tend to exist on college campuses.

While CRT feels its members have overwhelmingly encountered more loving support than hate, Berman said its important to remember that perceptions and experiences differ across the Jewish community. He said many Jews in the country do not feel beleaguered or threatened today, but remain aware of how easily situations can turn.

I think most of us feel a solidarity with, whether it be the African American community or the LGBTQ community or the Asian American community where there is discrimination and there is increasing bigotry, and were all in this together, Berman said. I dont think we feel singled out.

Some Massachusetts residents said they have not personally come across blatant propaganda in the state, but are unsurprised by the ADL statistics.

72-year-old Dennis Grimes of South End said white supremacist ideology has always been nascent across the country and, until recently, was merely suppressed.

Always remember one thing: what is in your heart is what comes out. [President Donald] Trump is now their leader, and he brought it out, Grimes said. But he does things in codes. Make America Great Again was a code for the white supremacists that says, We now have our leader, we now can come out and say and do what we want and theres no repercussion for it.

Darby Patterson, 22, of Cambridge said while New England carries the connotation of being more socially liberal and accepting, location does not necessarily define views within a community.

A lot of people refuse to accept that there are white supremacists and that there is racism in the Northeast, Patterson said. You still have to combat these hateful ideas wherever you are with kindness. And as a person who was born and raised in the Northeast Im disappointed, but we need to acknowledge that there are these hateful attitudes.

One Dorchester resident offered an opposing viewpoint. 80-year-old Joe McDonald said he does not think white supremacist activity is a severe problem today, and that the media should turn to other angles.

There are other things they should be reporting, too. A lot of times, Black-on-white crime, McDonald said. Its out there, things like that. I just dont see it get the same attention as a racist white person.

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White supremacist propaganda more than quadrupled in Mass. in 2019 - Daily Free Press


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