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ADL condemns terror attack in Old City of Jerusalem – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on July 14, 2017

The Anti-Defamation League strongly condemned on Friday the deadly terror attack near the Temple Mount, which killed two Israeli police officers and left a third injured.

For decades, there has been unceasing incitement against Israel, rife with false allegations about policies and actions in Jerusalem and on the Temple Mount, from Palestinian and Israeli Arab religious and political leaders, ADL CEO Jonathan Greenblatt, and Director of ADLs Israel Office Carole Nuriel wrote in a joint statement.

They added that Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas condemnation of the attack in a phone call to Prime Minister Netanyahu was appropriate but not sufficient.

He and other Palestinian and Arab political and religious leaders must now take concrete action to curb anti-Israel incitement, they added.

We send our deepest condolences to the families of those killed, as well as to the entire Israeli National Police force community, and hope for the quick recovery of those injured.

Three terrorists opened fire on a group of policemen near Lions' Gate in Jerusalems Old City on Friday morning, killing twoIsraeli police officers and injuring two more before the attackers were killed by police.

The attackers were later identified by the Shin Bet as 29-year-old Muhammad Ahmad Mahmoud Jabarin, Muhammad Ahmed Fadel Jabarin 19, and Muhammad Hamed 'Abd al-Latif Jabarin, 19, from Umm el-Fahm in northern Israel. The assailants fled to the Temple Mount where they were killed by police officers. Israel Police spokeswoman Luba Samri said guns were found in their possession.

Jpost.com Staff contributed to this article.

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ADL condemns terror attack in Old City of Jerusalem - The Jerusalem Post

Mayim Bialik Calls Herself A Proud Zionist And A Proud Liberal – Huffington Post Canada

Posted By on July 13, 2017

"I wish no one cared what celebrities think about the situation in Israel," actress Mayim Bialik wrote in 2014.

Bialik, who plays Amy Farrah Fowler on the hit sitcom "The Big Bang Theory," may be out of luck. She's a big celebrity, and the Israel-Palestine issue is a contentious one.

And the self-proclaimed chatterbox, who actually can't speak right now a doctor-ordered voice break due to long-term strain on her vocal cords didn't hold back when HuffPost Canada asked her opinions via email.

The observant Jew calls herself both a proud Zionist, which means that she supports the continued existence of Israel as a Jewish state, and a proud liberal.

She told HuffPost Canada that her family lives in the Israeli settlements, which are civilian communities in the West Bank and East Jerusalem.

The United Nations Security Council has called the settlements illegal under the Fourth Geneva Convention, but Bialik tells HuffPost she'll leave the last word to the people who live there.

"I do not get to decide unless I choose to move to Israel where I think people should and shouldn't live," she said.

"I know there is complexity to the situation with settlements and I don't always understand or ever understand [Israeli Prime Minister] Netanyahu, but I respectfully insist that Israel has a right to exist and that peace and coexistence is a main goal of mine as a liberal Zionist Jew."

The mom of two spoke out a few months ago on her website, GrokNation, in response to an interview with Palestinian-American activist Linda Sarsour, in which Sarsour disagreed with the idea that Zionism and feminism could co-exist.

"You either stand up for the rights of all women, including Palestinians, or none," Sarsour said.

Bialik wrote that she was both a Zionist and a feminist, and that the former movement encompasses a wide variety of perspectives on both the Israeli occupation of the region and the settlements.

"Accusing Zionism of being incompatible with feminism is exceptionally short-sighted," she wrote. It smarts of a broad-stroke bias against the entire Jewish people for the violations that occur in a state that was founded on the principles of Zionism."

She also doesn't like the use of the word "occupation" to describe Israel's control over the territories, which include the West Bank, East Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip, calling it "inflammatory."

"[It] paints a not entirely accurate picture especially for people who don't know anything about Israel or the matzav [situation] much like calling Israel an apartheid state," she told HuffPost.

The UN Security Council, General Assembly and the International Court of Justice consider Israel to be the occupying power in the territories.

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The actor expressed her anger at queer Jewish women being asked to leave Chicago's dyke march last month because they were carrying Jewish Pride flags, telling HuffPost she thought it was "disgusting and absurd."

Bialik courted controversy in 2014 when she donated money to send bulletproof vests to Israel Defense Forces soldiers.

Before her imposed talking break, Bialik also recently filmed a funny commercial for Israeli company SodaStream.

The company was targeted by a boycott campaign because one of its factories was in a West Bank settlement. The factory has since been moved.

But while Bialik may seem an unabashed champion of Israel, she has reflected in the past on her own conclusions.

In the same 2014 piece for Kveller, she wrote that watching the Mel Gibson movie "Braveheart" led her to ask some pointed questions, including whether the people who hate her for being Jewish because she supports Israel's right to exist are anti-Semitic.

"Is the freedom that William Wallace fought and died for 1,000 years ago in Scotland the same freedom that the Palestinian people fight for?" she wrote. "And is that freedom the same as the freedom for Israeli citizens to live without rockets falling on you and without your neighbors rallying actively for you to be pushed into the sea simply because you exist as a Jew?"

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Mayim Bialik Calls Herself A Proud Zionist And A Proud Liberal - Huffington Post Canada

Learning with Lamdeinu – The Jewish Standard

Posted By on July 13, 2017

Here in northern New Jersey, we live in the cultural and religious shadow of New York City.

Sure, we have fine synagogues and top-notch day schools and even excellent kosher restaurants. But face it: You have to cross the Hudson River to find a rabbinical seminary or a national Jewish organization.

Which makes it noteworthy that a young Teaneck educational institution is bringing students to Jersey.

The institution is Lamdeinu thats Hebrew for teach us and it is a community beit midrash, a house of study for adults, offering classes in Talmud, Tanach, and other Jewish subjects. It holds its classes in Congregation Beth Aaron in Teaneck, but it aims to draw students from the entire community.

And as it has developed in the three years since it began in July 2014, the community includes both banks of the Hudson.

A large percentage of our students are from outside the Teaneck area, Rachel Friedman said. Ms. Friedman is dean of Lamdeinu. She is a former associate dean of Drisha, the Manhattan beit midrash that was one of the first Orthodox institutions to provide advanced Talmud training to women.

During the summer, Lamdeinu has an advanced Talmud class restricted to women many of whom work as teachers and have their summers free. During the year it has a women-only Talmud class for students with less Talmud experience. Most classes, however, are coed.

We teach at a very high level but we are not a graduate school, Ms. Friedman said. People come to Lamdeinu to enrich and enhance their religious lives through learning the richest part of our tradition.

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Learning with Lamdeinu - The Jewish Standard

Daf Yomi – The Jewish Press – JewishPress.com

Posted By on July 13, 2017

Photo Credit: Jewish Press

The Longest Mesechta? We Shall Return To You (Bava Basra 176b)

Mazel Tov to all those Daf Yomi participants who are finishing Mesechta Bava Basra.

* * * * *

The last daf of Tractate Bava Basra is numbered 176, making Bava Basra the longest tractate in the Babylonian Talmud. Those exploring connections between various units of the Oral and Written Torah note that the longest portion of the Chumash, Parshas Naso, contains 176 verses while the chapter with the most verses in Tanach, Chapter 119 of Tehillim, also contains 176 verses.

The Gaons Observation

If not for the comparatively long commentary by the Rashbam, Rashis grandson, Bava Basra would not be the longest tractate. As the Vilna Gaon observes, Berachos is actually the longest tractate, although, when published, it only comprises 64 dapim (since it has little commentary as its subject matter is less complicated than that of other mesechtos).

One Tractate Three Gates

In truth, though, Bava Basra only part of a much longer mesechta. Rav Yosef says (Bava Kamma 102a) that Bava Kamma, Bava Metzia, and Bava Basra are really one tractate divided into three parts. Bava means gate. Thus, Bava Kamma is the first gate, Bava Metzia is the middle gate, and Bava Basra is the last gate. Indeed, ancient manuscripts show all three tractates as one tractate divided into 30 chapters. Interestingly, Rabbi Levi ben Chaviv criticized Mahari Beirav calling Bava Kamma Tractate Kamma as the entire Bava Kamma is only the first gate of a longer tractate (Responsa Ralbach 147).

Halachic Implications

This topic has halachic implications. The Gemara (Bava Kamma 102a) explains that if the Mishnah mentions a difference of opinions regarding a certain halacha and then later mentions just one of the opinions stam, i.e., without mentioning that it is the opinion of only one tanna, we must assume that Rabbi Yehudah HaNasi, the redactor of the Mishnah, ruled according to that opinion. This rule is valid, however, only if all the opinions appear in the same tractate and the Gemara therefore attributes importance to the question of whether Bava Kamma, Bava Metzia, and Bava Basra should be regarded as one tractate or not.

Ignorance And Derision

During the Mendel Beilis blood libel trial of 1913, the Talmud itself was used to support allegations against the Jews. The prosecutors, however, were so ignorant that one of them held up a tractate Bava Basra and called it the last grandmother, hinting at its sinister significance (baba in Russian means grandmother). The Jews present at the trial had to stifle their laughs.

Sanhedrin And Makkos One Tractate?

Some maintain that Sanhedrin and Makkos also comprise one tractate, containing 14 chapters, and a few old manuscripts do indeed combine these two tractates. The Rambam mentions, but rejects, this opinion in the introduction to his commentary on the Mishnah. On the other hand, the Ramban (Devarim 21:13, etc.) and the Rashba (Kiddushin 22a) cite a passage from Talmud Yerushalmis Tractate Sanhedrin when the passage actually appears in Makkos.

The Ralbag (Parshas Mishpatim, Shoresh 16) also calls chapter 2 of Makkos chapter 13 of Sanhedrin, and the commentary Meleches Shlomo on the Mishnah mentions that most of the sefarim he has seen designate the conclusion of Makkos the end of chapter 14 of Sanhedrin.

According to the opinion that Makkos and Sanhedrin are one mesechta, Seder Nizikin is possibly organized according the number of chapters each mesechta has. Bava Kamma, Bava Metzia, and Bava Basra together have 30 chapters; Sanhedrin with Makkos together have 14 chapters; Shevuos has eight chapters; Eduyos has eight chapters; Avodah Zarah has five chapters; Avos has five chapters (chapter 6 is actually a beraisa); and Horayos has three chapters (see Margalios HaYam at the beginning of Sanhedrin and the last page concerning Tractate Avodah Zarah).

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Parashat Pinchas: You are what you consistently do – Jewish Journal

Posted By on July 13, 2017

If somebody asked you to name the most important verse in the Torah, what would you say? The Jerusalem Talmud actually discusses this question. In this talmudic passage, Rabbi Akiba proposes the verse: Love your fellow person as you love yourself (Leviticus 19:18).

No doubt, Rabbi Akibas choice is a worthy one. Loving your fellow person as yourself is about putting yourself in another persons shoes. It is about the foundational ethical and emotional imperative of empathy, of being attuned and sensitized to the feelings and sentiments of another person.

This perspective also is endorsed by Rabbi Hillel the Elder in the Babylonian Talmud. When asked by a prospective convert to recite the entirety of the Torah while standing on one foot, Hillel famously stated: Dont do unto another that which is hateful to you. The rest is commentary, now go and learn.

But not everybody concurs with this answer that loving another person as you love yourself is the klal gadol baTorah (fundamental Torah principle). According to Ben Azzai, a second-century contemporary of Rabbi Akiba, the overarching metaprinciple of the Torah is to be found in Genesis 5:1, a verse which includes the statement that man is created in the likeness of God.

If Rabbi Akibas choice was to opt for a verse that is a cornerstone of human psychology, then Rabbi Ben Azzai opted for a verse with far-reaching consequences for political thought. According to Rashi, Ben Azzai argues that because we all are fashioned in the Divine image, we all possess innate, intrinsic and nonnegotiable human dignity and worth, and thus must not be dehumanized, discriminated against or murdered.

Indeed, the Torah and the rest of the Hebrew Bible are quoted hundreds of times in the works of political theorists such as Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Thomas Hobbes, Immanuel Kant and John Locke, who envisaged modern-day representative democracy. There is a clear and pervasive linkage between the Torahs revolutionary notion that we all are in Gods image and the modern application of this sacred ideal in the American Declaration of Independence (All men are created equal) and the Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen, endorsed by the French National Assembly after the French Revolution.

The prayer Shema Yisrael, the Lord is our God, the Lord is one (Deuteronomy 6:4), also can be regarded as the central verse of the Torah. Spiritually and theologically, the Shema may indeed be the prime verse of the Torah, as it captures the monistic unity of God, and also the kabbalistic-panentheistic insight that everything which exists is contained within the infinity and eternity of the oneness of God.

In addition to the three cardinal verses discussed so far, there is a fourth contender for the most central verse in the Torah.

In the midrashic anthology Ein Yaakov, compiled by the 15th-century Sephardic sage Rabbi Yaakov ben Habib, we find this verse, which is brought forth in the name of Rabbi Shimon ben Pazi. According to ben Pazi, the chief verse of the Torah appears in this weeks parsha, and it reads: You shall offer the first lamb in the morning, and the second lamb during twilight (Numbers 28:4).

This is most perplexing. After all, this verse seems to be discussing a mere administrative technicality, namely, what is the prompt and opportune time at which to bring forth the Temple offerings. A contemporary reader might easily glance over this verse and dismiss it as mere ancient esotericism.

Nothing could be further from the truth. The reason ben Pazi crowns this precious verse as the most cardinal one in the Torah is because he has the genius to understand that there is only one thing that truly attests to a persons character his deeds.

The key to success and growth in any field of human endeavor, this verse implies, is daily regularity. For example, if I want to be a spiritual person, then I should pray every day, thrice daily, and not just when the spirit moves me.

All too often, people seek a breakthrough in their lives and strive to attain growth in one large stride. Thats not the most effective way, implies our verse. The best way to become your highest self to awaken the giant within, in the words of Tony Robbins is simply to put in the work, day in and day out.

Or as the late Stephen Covey explained in his masterful work The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People, it is precisely our habits, the things we regularly do, that define us, who we are and what we stand for.

No non-Jewish sage appreciated and internalized the veracity of this universal truth better than Aristotle, who already observed 2 1/2 millennia ago that excellence is an art won by training and habituation. We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act but a habit.

Shabbat shalom.

Rabbi Tal Sessleris senior rabbi of Sephardic Temple Tifereth Israel. He is the author of several books dealing with philosophy and contemporary Jewish identity.

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Parashat Pinchas: You are what you consistently do - Jewish Journal

Kosher Quiet – Jewish Link of New Jersey

Posted By on July 13, 2017

In the 1830s, Scottish poet Thomas Carlyle authored a novel, Sartor Resartus (The Tailor Re-Tailored), in which one character expounds on the virtues of silence: Sprecfien ist silbern, Schweigen ist golden. Translation: Speech is silvern but silence is golden.

One could argue that, generally speaking, Jews are not the silent type. Many Jews like to kibitz and schmooze and, for some, small talk is their only form of exercise. (For such folks, doing a squat means sitting down and having a chat.) A few individuals, sometimes lovingly referred to as Yentas, gossip so incessantly that its like theyre being paid by the rumor. Of course, schmoozing can be a very valuable tool for discovering critical information like (i) mitzvah opportunities in your area, (ii) matchmaking candidates in your town and (iii) secret ingredients in your neighbors competition-level cholent. Of course, not all Jews excel at gabbing, just like not all Jews excel at hora dancing, shofar blowing or sukkah building. Some Jews are less loquacious than others and taciturn Jews typically excel in other aspects of Jewish life, like the silent Amidah.

There are certain instances, however, when even the most garrulous Jews embrace, or at least accept, silence. So, the question is: in the Jewish world, when is silence golden?

For the record, Jewish law is not silent on silence. The Talmud, at Megillah 18a, states: A word is worth a sela [coin], but silence is worth two. Other Jewish texts also extol the virtues of silence. In Pirkei Avot (Ethics of the Fathers), Section 1:17, the following is noted: I have found nothing better for the body than silence. Later in Pirkei Avot, in Section 3:17, it is written: Rabbi Akiva said... a protective fence for wisdom is silence.

In practical terms, silence can be an important asset in day-to-day interactions. For example, if you are playing hide-and-go-seek and its your turn to hide, silence is golden. If youre in the jungle and walking past a sleeping tiger, silence is golden. If your significant other asks How do I look? and they actually look awful, silence is golden. If a jeweler appraises your gold necklace for more than you thought it was worth, then, literally and figuratively, silence is golden.

There is at least one form of silence that occurs regularly in Jewish life. It occurs before a meal, right after the traditional washing of the hands but before the making of the Hamotzi (the blessing over bread). During this intermediate period, it is customary to remain perfectly silent. This practice is derived, in part, from a statement in the Talmud, at Brachot 52b, which states: Immediately after the washing is the meal. (See, Brachot 52b). Thus, Jews have developed the practice of remaining silent after washing to avoid any interruptions, disturbances or distractions before making the Hamotzi blessing and beginning the meal. Technically, the silence should not be broken until one has actually said the Hamotzi and consumed a piece of bread. All of this can lead to some uncomfortably quiet moments, especially during a meal on Shabbat involving numerous guests. The strange silence around the table can be particularly unsettling for the uninitiated who are not familiar with these pre-Hamotzi habits.

For those unaccustomed with pre-Hamotzi silence, perhaps the best way to explain it to them is through song. (Yes, teaching silence through song is oxymoronic and arguably just plain moronic.) So, lets change the lyrics of the most famous song ever about silence, namely, Simon & Garfunkels 1964 legendary hit, The Sound of Silence. Have this timeless tune in mind when singing the following:

Hello Shabbos, my old friend

Ive come to break bread with you again

All of our guests have now washed

their hands

Around the table is where they stand

But nobody, is saying a single word

They all concurred

With the sound of silence.

And in the naked light I saw

Ten silent guests, maybe more

People nodding without speaking

People shrugging without talking

People miming signs like they

were playing charades

Theyre so afraid

To disturb the sound of silence.

But the people pointed and stared

At the host who did not care

So his spouse flashed out

a stern warning

With a look that meant he was

so annoying

Her expression said: The words of the

Hamotzi are written in the

prayer book?

Dont be a schnook

Please end the sound of silence.

And so Hamotzi was quickly said

And the guests were quickly fed

The whole meal went off without a hitch

Notwithstanding the pre-Hamotzi glitch

As the guests departed, so did all

of the noise

Now the hosts enjoyed

The peaceful sound of silence.

Bottom-line: If silence is golden and speech is silvern, does that mean that yodeling is bronzen?

By Jon Kranz

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Kosher Quiet - Jewish Link of New Jersey

How this 650-year-old French synagogue withstood centuries of anti … – Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Posted By on July 13, 2017

Women from the Jewish community of Carpentras chatting while preparing for Shabbat at the towns synagogue, July 7, 2017. (Cnaan Liphshiz )

CARPENTRAS, France (JTA) The synagogue in this Provence town is Europes oldest functioning Jewish house of worship and one of theprettiest on the continent.

The Synagogue of Carpentras, which this year is celebrating its 650th anniversary,has a Baroque-style interior and a gold-ornamented hall with a blue domed ceiling. The rabbis pulpit is, unusually, on a balcony that overlooks the pews and the Torah ark the work of thenon-Jews who built the synagogue in a Christian style in the16th century atop its earlier structure, which was first established in 1367.

Most impressive of all is that the synagogue is housed withina larger building that once functioned as an ancient Jewish community center of sorts. The space boasts spectacular facilities, including a 30-foot-deep ritual bath, or mikvah, fed by turquoise waters from a natural spring, another heated bath, a kosher abattoir and a bakery with large ovens that burned year round.

Yet the architects did their best to conceal the buildingssplendor. The small, wooden front door is buta drab opening in a simple facade that unlikeEuropes other majestic synagogues does not even hint at the bling inside.

The juxtapositionbetween the majestic interior and basic exterior is theresult of French Jewrys long-held desire to celebrate its greatness without attracting too much attention.

A view of the Synagogue of Carpentras, July 7, 2017. (Cnaan Liphshiz)

The Synagogue of Carpentras is, to French Jews today, a testament to that conflicted sentiment and tangible proof of their deep roots in a country where many of them nonetheless feel they are treated as outsiders.

At a time when on some streets in France people are shouting Jews, get out, France is not yours, the Synagogue of Carpentras and its 650th anniversary are proof of just how deep our roots run here, CarineBenarous, the communications officer of the Fleg Jewish Community Center in Marseille, 80 miles south of Carpentras, told JTA last week.

Benarous was referring to a slogan that shocked many in France in 2014, when the media reported its use at anti-Israel protests in several cities.

In May,the chief rabbi of France, Haim Korsia whom many French Jews treat with the kind of adoration typically reserved for rock stars traveled more than six hours from Paris tospend Shabbat with the Carpentras Jewish community of 125 members. Alongside a regional archbishop, an influential imam and other rabbis from across the Provence region, Korsia also attended a ceremony marking the 650th anniversary.

Here we acknowledge how deeply our history and our roots are anchored in the soil of France, he said, noting that a Jewish presence has been documented in Provence since the first century.

In his speech, Korsia recalled a different slogan one used several times by Frances former prime minister, Manuel Valls, following a wave of terrorist attacks on Jews. Valls had said that without Jews, France isnt France.

The Synagogue of Carpentras, Korsia said, is proof of that.

Meyer Benzecrit, the president of the Jewish community of Carpentras, delivering a speech at the towns synagogue, May 28, 2017. (Courtesy of the municipality of Carpentras)

I still have goose bumps from his speech, said Franoise Richez, a Carpentras Jew who gives tours of the synagogue.

But Carpentras, she added, is also a testament to the long and, unfortunately, unfinished history of anti-Semitism.

Carpentras was one of only four locales in present-day France where Jews were allowed to stay even after the Great Expulsion of French Jewry, decreed by King Philip IV of France in 1306, according to Ram Ben-Shalom, a historian and lecturer at theHebrew University of Jerusalem specializing inthe Jewry of Provence.

Jews were allowed to live in closed, guarded and crowded ghettos, known as carrieres, in Carpentras, Avignon, Cavaillon and LIsle-sur-la-Sorgue because these locales in Provence were on lands owned by the pope, who took in Jews in exchange for payment. Additionally, he said, Jews were made to wear distinctive clothing, often a cape.

As for the synagogues serving the carrieres, they were designed by Christians because the Jews were only allowed to work as traders or moneylenders, according to Yoann Rogier, a guide at the Synagogue of Cavaillon, which was built in 1494 but now functions as a museum of the towns historic Jewish population, its door frames lacking a mezuzah.

As such, in both Carpentras and Cavaillon, congregants must turn their backs to the Torah ark if they want to face their rabbi, and vice versa. (In most synagogues, the rabbis pulpit sits on a bimah, or platform, situated in front of the ark or in the middle of the sanctuary.) To read from the Torah, the rabbis of both synagogues had to carry the Torah scroll up to their balcony. The Cavaillon synagogue still has a portable ark with wheels for this purpose.

Despite the imperfect circumstances, the Jews of Carpentras ingeniously turned their synagogue into a labyrinthine community center, making maximum use of the limited space allotted to them thanks to partitions, underground passages and interior courts that offered facilities for every aspect of Jewish life. The synagogue complex even had a special matzah bakery.

Gilberte Levy, another member of the Carpentras Jewish community, is among the many local Jews who can trace their lineagenearly to the year that the synagogue was established.

They call me the communitys Brontosaurus, she said, laughing.

To Richez, whose husband is descended from a Jewish family forced to convert to Christianity in Spain during the Inquisition, the Carpentrassynagogue shows that despite everything, we prevailed, she said.

Yet Carpentras also is symbolic of more recent struggles for French Jews.

Franoise Richez talking about the ritual bath, or mikvah, of the Jewish community of Carpentras, July 7, 2017. (Cnaan Liphshiz)

In 1990, it saw one of the worst cases of anti-Semitic vandalism in France after the Holocaust: Neo-Nazis smashed dozens of tombstones in the ancient graveyard. The incidentpredated the current wave of anti-Semitic violence that is causingmany thousands of Jews to leave France and was particularly shocking.

Today, Carpentras is one of the few active synagogues in France without army protection. Unlike most French synagogues, visitors may enter without first undergoing a security inspection. While this is good for tourism, the important thing is that the tourism stops at 6 p.m. and this returns to being an active Jewish synagogue, said Richez, a mother of two. We dont want to end up with just a museum, like in Cavaillon.

There used to be more incidents, anti-Semitic shouts and such around the synagogue, Richez added, but matters improved after the municipality closed the synagogues street to vehicles.

All in all, she said, I think were pretty privileged here.

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How this 650-year-old French synagogue withstood centuries of anti ... - Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Exuberant ‘Women’s Balcony’ shows a Jerusalem synagogue’s … – Salt Lake Tribune

Posted By on July 13, 2017

The men gather for prayers, but are short the 10 needed to complete a minyan, or quorum. They ask passing strangers to join them, and one young man not only says yes, but brings along students from his yeshiva. The man, Rabbi David (played by Aviv Alush, whom Christian audiences will recognize for his role as Jesus in "The Shack"), seems to be the answer to the congregation's prayers.

The men of the congregation, like the shopkeeper Zion (Igal Naor), are impressed with Rabbi David's passionate sermonizing. But Zion's wife, Etti (Evelin Hagoel), and the other women bristle at the rabbi's extremist reading of Talmudic law like insisting that women cover their heads.

As Rabbi David's influence grows, so does a rift within the congregation. Some of Etti's friends start shunning her, while Zion notices he's being spied on by a student of David's yeshiva. The split takes on a "Romeo & Juliet" quality when young Yaffa (Yafit Asulin), Etti's niece, starts dating Naftali (Assaf Ben Shimon), Rabbi David's loyal assistant.

First-time screenwriter Shlomit Nehama invests her script with plenty of heart, good humor and some pleasant surprises. Director Emil Ben-Shimon navigates a strong ensemble cast through Nehama's story, finding jewels for each performer to polish until they gleam.

There's a serious undercurrent running through "The Women's Balcony," a warning about the dangers of fundamentalism tearing friends and family apart. But that message is delivered in such a powerfully heartwarming way that it leaves one smiling by the conclusion.

movies@sltrib.com

Twitter: @moviecricket

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Exuberant 'Women's Balcony' shows a Jerusalem synagogue's ... - Salt Lake Tribune

Landmarks approves partial demolition of LES synagogue … – The Architect’s Newspaper

Posted By on July 13, 2017

Update 7/12/17: The article was updated to clarify the resolution the commissionersvoted on yesterday afternoon.

On TuesdaytheLandmarks Preservation Commission (LPC) debated how topreserve a Manhattansynagogue guttedby fire earlier this year. Instead of approvingthe owners request to demolish the building entirely, the commission agreed that important parts of the structure should be salvaged, where possible.

The building in question is the Beth Hamerdash Hagodol, at 60 Norfolk Street on the Lower East Side. The modified Gothic Revivalstyle structure was built in 1850 as a Baptist church and converted to a synagogue in 1885. Home to a Russian Jewish Orthodox congregation for more than a century but vacant since 2007, it was one of the first structures added to New Yorks landmark list, in 1967.

Beth Hamerdash Hagodol interior after the fire. (Courtesy HLZA/ Image via LPC)

In May,the building was destroyed by ablaze that was later characterized as arson; its missing its roof and most of the interior is filled with rubble.Given the extensive damage, the hearing focused on whether the building hasenough integrity to remain an individual landmark, and if so, how its structure should be preserved.

Plan view. (Courtesy HLZA / Image via LPC)

In testimony to the commission, Bryan Chester, an engineer fromHoward L. Zimmerman Architects, detailedthe shuls precarious structural integrity. The wooden roof trusses are beyond repair, while the masonry bearing walls are unstable and severely deteriorated. Of the two towers that flanked the main (west) entrance, the northern one is in bad shape, but the south and east facades, thoughunstable, are in slightly better condition.The building had no fire insurance, and the extent of the damages put restoration out of the questionany materials above the window sills would probably be unsalvageable, Chester said.

Areas in red were deemed beyond repair, though the south and east facades could be saved in some form. (Courtesy HLZA/ Image via LPC)

On the whole, those who testified before the commission advocated against demolition and for preservation in some form.

Simeon Bankoff, executive director of preservation group Historic Districts Council, said the group strenuously objects to demolition, while noting that the owners negligence over the years shouldnt be rewarded with a tear-down. The synagogue is on a prime lot on theLower East Side, a districtthat by some measures is one of Manhattans mostgentrified.

Speaking for Friends of the Lower East Side, a group that preserves the architectural and cultural heritage of the neighborhood, Joyce Mendelsohn said the group was in total opposition to demolition. Andrea Goldman of the New York Landmarks Conservancy agreed, noting that years before the fire, the preservation advocacy group had worked with the congregation to come up with an action plan for the building, whichwas in poor repair. (Right before the blaze, the synagogue had almost reached a deal with the Chinese American Planning Council, a nonprofit that owns two neighboring sites, to restore the buildingand erect affordable housing.)

Considering the state of the structure, demolition seemed a done deal, but the LPC commissioners were hesitant to okay the applicants request in light of the buildings cultural significance. Scaffolding surrounds the ruins; right now, theres little danger the remaining structure could topple, but Chester said that in a few more months the situation could be more dangerous.

So what could be salvaged, and how should the buildings heritagehonored?

Landmarks hired engineers at Superstructuresto independently evaluate the site. The firm concurred with the Zimmerman team that the south and east facades, though unstable, were repairable. The demolition team would deploy tall machines to take the synagogue apart from the top down, a process Chester likened to dinosaurs chomping on trees. But commissioners had questions: What if the crew destroys more of the remains than necessary? What if the building could be preserved and appreciated like Roman or Mayan ruins, or the Carmo Convent in Lisbon?

Im unconvinced of the absolute necessity for demolition, said Commissioner Michael Devonshire, even when taking into account the buildings unstable walls. Fellow Commissioner Frederick Bland added that the group needed to see whats left and re-assess after the structure has been stabilized.

At the meeting, the commissioners decided to preserve, where feasible, the buildings most important elements, but did not vote up/down on the owners demolition bid. Instead, LPC general council Mark Silberman was asked to draft a resolution on the project that modified the owners request. The resolution states that parts of the building need to be removed for safety reasons, especially around the north, south, and west facades, while retainingas much material as possible, with significant architectural featuressalvaged. The whole process will be overseen on-site by the LPCs engineers. Itwasapproved yesterday afternoon.

Edward Gunts contributed reporting.

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Landmarks approves partial demolition of LES synagogue ... - The Architect's Newspaper

Synagogue Holds Open House – CapeNews.net

Posted By on July 13, 2017

The membership committee of Cape Cod Synagogue invites Jewish individuals and families to attend an open house on Sunday, July 23, beginning at 3 PM.The synagogue is at 145 Winter Street in Hyannis.

Come explore the synagogues building and grounds from the Jerusalem stone in the synagogues sanctuary to its social hall and full service kitchen to the religious school wing. During the open house, the membership committee will be able to answer questions and talk about multiple membership possibilities; the congregations numerous programs and groups and committees; the calendar of yearlong activities; religious programming and services; and the religious and Hebrew school.

Following the open house, prospective members can stay for the synagogues annual barbecue, where they will have an opportunity to meet many synagogue members, enjoy dinner and take part in 9hole mini golf. To contact the synagogue, call 5087752988.

The Cape Cod Synagogue is a Reform Jewish congregation in Hyannis and a religious and social community of diverse ages and family structures. To learn more about Cape Cod Synagogue, visit http://www.capecodsynagogue.org.

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Synagogue Holds Open House - CapeNews.net


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