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These Utah rabbis displayed ‘I’m Jewish and I’m proud’ signs at NBA game to send Kyrie Irving a message

(JTA) — When Kyrie Irving’s Dallas Mavericks came to Salt Lake City on Monday to face the Utah Jazz, Rabbi Avremi Zippel knew he had to be there.
Zippel, his brother Chaim, their father Benny and their friend Moshe Nigri — all of whom attended Monday night’s matchup — are Chabad rabbis who work at the Hasidic movement’s Utah outpost in Salt Lake City. Avremi is a huge Jazz fan, and he wanted to send a message to Irving, the NBA star who was suspended in November 2022 after he promoted an antisemitic documentary that denied the Holocaust and initially refused to apologize. He later apologized following an eight-game suspension.
The episode still stung Zippel, so the quartet of rabbis secured courtside seats and held up identical signs reading, “I’m a Jew and I’m proud,” with a Star of David replacing the “o” in “proud.”
“Some of the things that Kyrie said about the Jewish community and about Holocaust denial were vile and disgusting,” Zippel told The Salt Lake Tribune. He did not respond to Jewish Telegraphic Agency requests for comment on Wednesday.
Kyrie Irving playing in the SLC tonight.
With everything that happened this morning, I thought it’d be appropriate to give him a welcome.
Stay tuned… pic.twitter.com/khs8CkxqDs
— Avremi Zippel (@UtahRabbi) January 2, 2024
An arena guard snapped the rabbis’ picture and Jazz owner Ryan Smith greeted them. At first, Zippel said, the signs did not appear to upset anyone — including Irving, who complimented the message and showed the rabbis his Star of David tattoo.
“He comes by, he looks at the sign, and he says, ‘Nice. I’m a Jew, too,’” Zippel told the Tribune, adding that Irving’s response bothered him. Irving — who isn’t Jewish but has said he has Jewish relatives — may have been echoing the Black Hebrew Israelite claim that African-Americans are the true Jews. But Zippel said he wished Irving a happy new year and moved on.
But moments later, according to Zippel, Irving’s tone changed: As the Dallas guard dribbled the ball up the court, he yelled to the rabbis, “Don’t gotta bring something like that to the game.”
During the next timeout, a security guard approached Zippel’s group and checked their tickets. Then another guard told them to put the signs down, according to Zippel’s account. At halftime, a Jazz staffer told them that Irving had complained to security.
On Tuesday, the Jazz said in a statement that Zippel’s signs violated the policies of the team’s arena, the Delta Center, meant to ensure that “games can be played without distraction and disruption. No matter where someone is in the arena, if a sign becomes distracting or sparks an interaction with a player, we will ask them to remove it.”
The statement added, “The issue was the disruptive interaction caused by usage of the signs, not the content of the signs.”
Zippel said he had checked the arena’s regulations before the game and did not think that his group had violated any rules. And he disputed that his signs had caused any disruption.
“The Jazz seemed to fully acknowledge that we said nothing to Kyrie, [but that] Kyrie walked over, saw the sign, and chose to comment on it,” Zippel told the Tribune. “And so this idea that if you have signage that sparks interaction with a player, we’re going to ask you to take down that sign, I’m curious where that precedent leads to; I’m curious where that goes, how broadly that can be applied?”
Zippel added in a post on X that “there was one person, in a building of 18,000+, that was triggered” by his signs.
“Why that bothers him so, to the point that it sparks an interaction, should be the real question anyone is asking,” he wrote.
The Jazz, who celebrate home victories by playing “Hava Nagila” over the arena’s loudspeakers, defeated the Mavericks 127-90. Irving, whose team recently changed Jewish owners — from Mark Cuban to Miriam Adelson — scored 14 points.
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Actor Jason Isaacs Vows to Keep Wearing Hostage Pin During Public Appearances Despite Criticism

Jason Isaacs attends the 2025 White House Correspondents’ Dinner at the Washington Hilton in Washington, DC on April 26, 2025. Photo: Annabelle Gordon/Sipa USA via Reuters Connect
British actor Jason Isaacs said he remains committed to wearing in public a pin honoring the Israelis held captive by Hamas terrorists in the Gaza Strip for 20 months because “it matters” to the families of hostages.
The “White Lotus” star, who is Jewish, has been seen on several red carpets this year wearing a yellow ribbon pin that draws awareness about the hostages abducted from Israel on Oct. 7, 2023. Isaacs has worn the pin at the Los Angeles season three premiere of “The White Lotus” in February, the BRIT Awards in London in March, and the White House Correspondents’ Dinner and 42nd Miami Film Festival, both in April, among many other events. He also wore the pin during red carpet appearances last year, including the British Independent Film Awards and even the opening night of the production “Barcelona” in London’s West End.
The “Harry Potter” star said in an interview with Vulture published on Monday that he “always” wears the pin if he is making a red carpet or press appearance.
“I wear the hostage pin because there are innocent people who were taken from their homes. Most of them are peace activists who lived in border communities where they were ferrying sick kids to hospitals and working with people from Gaza constantly,” he said. “There are Holocaust survivors, there are children who were taken, there are people being starved and tortured and raped who have no access to the Red Cross.”
“People are rightfully talking and thinking about all the civilians that are in danger everywhere else,” he added. “But those people in tunnels, it’s now 600 days they’ve been there, they’ve been forgotten entirely.” He also admitted that he understands why many other celebrities have chosen not to wear similar pins publicly.
Hamas terrorists are still holding captive 53 men and women – including two Americans – who were abducted on Oct. 7, 2023, during the Hamas-led deadly rampage across southern Israel. They include several civilians who have been confirmed dead — such as 84-year-old Amiram Cooper and 86-year-old Arie Zalmanowicz — and their bodies are being held hostage by Hamas.
Isaacs told Vulture he has been called a “Zionist baby killer” and “Zionazi” for choosing to wear the hostage pin. “Even a yellow hostage pin for innocents is deemed political, which it isn’t,” he noted.
He additionally shared a story about the family of a hostage who thanked him for wearing the pin in public appearances.
“I now am aware that they are watching me and that it matters to them,” Isaacs explained. “If my son or sister or daughter or father was being kept in a tunnel somewhere and weighed 25 kilos now, or may have been strangled or shot, and it felt important to me that some actors somewhere wore the yellow hostage pin, then who am I to not wear it?”
The Bring Them Home Now campaign, which calls for the immediate return of the hostages, additionally thanked Isaacs for his commitment to wearing the pin in an Instagram post this week after his interview with Vulture was published.
During his conversation with the publication, Isaacs also shared his thoughts on the Israel-Hamas war. He said it is a complex issue and that he ultimately wishes for peace in the region for everyone. “Who doesn’t?” he asked. “I don’t know anybody, apart from the extremists on all sides, who want either continued war or tension.”
The post Actor Jason Isaacs Vows to Keep Wearing Hostage Pin During Public Appearances Despite Criticism first appeared on Algemeiner.com.
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Iran Held Direct Talks With US Amid Intensifying Conflict With Israel, Diplomats Say

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi arrives to Lebanon to meet with Lebanese officials, at Beirut international airport, Lebanon, June 3, 2025. Photo: REUTERS/Mohamed Azakir
US special envoy Steve Witkoff and Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi have spoken by phone several times since Israel began its strikes on Iran last week, in a bid to find a diplomatic end to the crisis, three diplomats told Reuters.
According to the diplomats, who asked not to be identified due to the sensitivity of the matter, Araqchi said Tehran would not return to negotiations unless Israel stopped the attacks, which began on June 13.
They said the talks included a brief discussion of a US proposal given to Iran at the end of May that aims to create a regional consortium that would enrich uranium outside of Iran, an offer Tehran has so far rejected.
US and Iranians officials did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment on the matter.
This week’s phone discussions were the most substantive direct talks since the two began negotiations in April. On those occasions, in Oman and Italy, the two men exchanged brief words when they encountered each other after indirect talks were held.
A regional diplomat close to Tehran said Araqchi had told Witkoff that Tehran “could show flexibility in the nuclear issue” if Washington pressured Israel to end the war.
A European diplomat said: “Araqchi told Witkoff Iran was ready to come back to nuclear talks, but it could not if Israel continued its bombing.”
Other than brief encounters after five rounds of indirect talks since April to discuss Iran‘s decades-old nuclear dispute, Araqchi and Witkoff had not previously held direct contacts.
A second regional diplomat who spoke to Reuters said “the [first] call was initiated by Washington, which also proposed a new offer” to overcome the deadlock over clashing red lines.
URANIUM ENRICHMENT
US President Donald Trump wants Tehran to end uranium enrichment on its soil, while Iran‘s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has said Tehran’s right to enrichment is non-negotiable.
Trump has been keeping his cards close to his chest over whether he will order US forces to join Israel‘s bombing campaign that it says aims to destroy Iran‘s nuclear program and ballistic capabilities. But Trump offered a glimmer of hope that diplomacy could resume, saying Iranian officials wanted to come to Washington for a meeting.
He rebuffed President Emmanuel Macron earlier this week when the French leader said Trump had told G7 leaders at a summit in Canada that the United States had made an offer to get a ceasefire and then kickstart broader discussions.
European officials have been coordinating with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who was also at the G7 summit.
Britain, France, and Germany, known as the E3 and party to a 2015 nuclear deal between world powers and Iran, held a ministerial call with Araqchi on Sunday. The three countries and the European Union are set to meet him in Geneva on Friday, Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baghaei and an EU official said.
Earlier in the week, both Rubio and Araqchi told the Europeans in separate talks about a possible diplomatic initiative, three diplomats said.
A senior European diplomat said what emerged at the G7 was that Trump wanted the operations to end very quickly and that he wanted the Iranians to talk to him, while making clear that they had to accept his demands if they wanted the war to end.
Given the Israeli strikes and Trump’s rhetoric, diplomats said Iran was in no position to hold public talks with the US, but that a meeting with the Europeans as a link to try and advance diplomacy was deemed more realistic for Tehran.
The post Iran Held Direct Talks With US Amid Intensifying Conflict With Israel, Diplomats Say first appeared on Algemeiner.com.
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Arab Town in Israel Weeps for Four Family Members Killed in Iranian Strike

Relatives and friends attend the funeral of four members of a family who were killed during a missile attack from Iran on Israel, in Tamra, north Israel, June 17, 2025. Photo: REUTERS/Ammar Awad
When a phone alert sounded on Saturday night to warn of Iranian missiles flying towards his town of Tamra in northern Israel, Nidal Abu Al Heija called his sister to tell her to take shelter with her daughters, but no one answered.
After the alert, he rushed to the area where she lived. The street was full of people and littered with debris.
“I was asking people what happened, and someone, he just said to me ‘oh, Nidal.’ He didn’t know what to say. And then the other one says, ‘it’s your own sister’s house,’” Abu Al Heija said, speaking to Reuters four days after the strike.
The house had taken a direct hit. Part of the roof had collapsed, crushing the top floor. Windows and walls were blasted out and rubble tumbled down the side of the house.
“Darkness, dust, smell of bomb, something I don’t want to remember,” said Abu Al Heija.
“I was just going there shouting ‘Noura! Noura! Shada! Hala!’ And then unfortunately I saw her coming, people holding her, with no breath.”
Known to her family as Noura, Manar Abu Al Heija Katib, 45, and two of her daughters, Shada, 20, and Hala, 13, were killed, along with Manar’s sister-in-law, Manar Diab Katib, 41.
The only survivors were Manar Abu Al Heija Katib’s husband, Raja Katib, and their third daughter, Razan.
The dead were among those killed in the conflict with Iran since Israel launched air and missile attacks on Iran a week ago that have wiped out the top echelon of Iran’s military command, damaged nuclear capabilities, and killed hundreds of Iranians.
Iran has aimed hundreds of retaliatory missiles at Israel and killed at least two dozen people.
‘BURNING FIRE INSIDE’
In Tamra, a small Arab town about 25 km (16 miles) east of the port city of Haifa, relatives and the wider community are in shock.
“If I would have gone [died] with my wife and my two girls, it would have been easier because I have a burning fire inside,” Manar’s husband told reporters on Wednesday.
The sisters-in-law were both teachers. Their husbands, Raja Katib and his brother Ihab Katib, have described them to local media as wonderful women. Pictures of the two daughters showed them smiling warmly.
Nidal Abu Al Heija recalled telling people previously that the chances of being killed in the war with Iran were tiny. Now he said he was dealing with an unfathomable loss.
“Noura was the thing that we loved. Noura was the thing that united the family,” he said.
The four had run to a protected room on the top level of the house, he said, but it could not withstand the Iranian missile.
Tamra has been hit by rockets before, but smaller ones fired by terrorist group Hezbollah from southern Lebanon.
Since Saturday’s strike, many residents of Tamra have begun spending the night in public shelters inside schools.
On Tuesday, four simple wooden coffins with wreaths of red and white flowers were carried through the narrow streets of Tamra, with crowds of men chanting as they walked alongside and people watching from every window and doorstep.
At the town‘s cemetery, Muslim prayers rang out from a loudspeaker and a large number of men, mostly dressed in black, surrounded the gravediggers and relatives as the four were laid to rest.
Afterwards, a group of women and girls paid their respects by the graves. They wept and embraced each other as they walked away.
The post Arab Town in Israel Weeps for Four Family Members Killed in Iranian Strike first appeared on Algemeiner.com.