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	<title>Opinion &#8211; Jewish Post and News</title>
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	<title>Opinion &#8211; Jewish Post and News</title>
	<link>https://jewishpostandnews.ca</link>
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		<title>Did the Jewish Federation&#8217;s stepping in to force the firing of BB Camp co-executive director Jacob Brodovsky lead to the further alienating of many young Jews from the community?</title>
		<link>https://jewishpostandnews.ca/features/letter-from-a-young-jewish-winnipeger-about-the-bb-camp-controversy/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Bernie Bellan]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 13 Jun 2025 17:40:02 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Features]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Opinion]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Main]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://jewishpostandnews.ca/?p=29119</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<img width="150" height="150" src="https://jewishpostandnews.ca/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/BBCAMP-Brodovsky-150x150.png" class="attachment-thumbnail size-thumbnail wp-post-image" alt="" decoding="async" srcset="https://jewishpostandnews.ca/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/BBCAMP-Brodovsky-150x150.png 150w, https://jewishpostandnews.ca/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/BBCAMP-Brodovsky-80x80.png 80w" sizes="(max-width: 150px) 100vw, 150px" />(June 8, 2024) Introduction: We received the following email from a young Jewish Winnipegger re the BB Camp controversy, which we&#8217;ve reported on extensively on this website. We thought it important to post the email as a separate piece rather than as an add-on to an article in which we printed other emails from readers [&#8230;]]]></description>
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<p>(June 8, 2024) Introduction: <em>We received the following email from a young Jewish Winnipegger re the BB Camp controversy, which we&#8217;ve reported on extensively on this <a href="https://jewishpostandnews.ca/faqs/rokmicronews-fp-1/a-detailed-look-at-how-jacob-brodovsky-was-targeted-by-one-particular-website-and-how-that-led-to-him-losing-his-job-as-co-executive-director-of-bb-camp/">website</a>. We thought it important to post the email as a separate piece rather than as an add-on to an article in which we printed other emails from readers expressing their disappointment at what happened to Jacob Brodovsky, the former co-executive director of BB Camp:</em></p>



<p>Dear Mr. Bellan,</p>



<p>Thank you for once again cutting through the noise with your April 23rd column, “What the sordid BB Camp affair says about our community.” Your clarity and courage in calling out our rush to judgment and our narrowing definition of “Jewish identity” are deeply appreciated, especially by those of us who feel increasingly alienated in Winnipeg.</p>



<p>I also want to share a troubling observation about one of the loudest voices attacking Jacob Brodovsky: theJ.ca. Their articles—bylines like “Ron East” or “TheJ.ca Staff”—are, in fact, almost entirely generated by artificial intelligence. They contain no verifiable sourcing, frequently hallucinate details, and appear to be little more than a far-right newsletter running smear campaigns under the guise of “journalism.” The entire BB Camp series reads like an AI trained on extremist talking points, regurgitated daily to bully our community into silence.</p>



<p>As a young Jew in Winnipeg, I—and many of my peers—are horrified by the transformation we’re witnessing. What was once a warm, progressive community is now dominated by:</p>



<p>Bigots and Bullies: Parents threatening to pull their kids unless the camp bows to extremist demands.</p>



<p>Florida-style Republican Judaism: A narrow, intolerant ideology portrayed as the only “true” Jewishness.</p>



<p>Collapsing Leadership: Our Jewish Federation leaders, including Jeff Lieberman, have shown they lack the vision or backbone to navigate this crisis.</p>



<p>We stand at a dangerous inflection point. Our community is on the verge of a total and irreversible fascist takeover—an outcome no amount of regret or retrospective apologies can undo.</p>



<p>Please consider reading firsthand accounts from community members who have bravely spoken out:</p>



<figure class="wp-block-embed is-type-rich is-provider-reddit wp-block-embed-reddit"><div class="wp-block-embed__wrapper">
<blockquote class="reddit-embed-bq" style="height:316px" ><a href="https://www.reddit.com/r/JewsOfConscience/comments/1jw7lzr/farright_canadian_zionist_newsletter_targets_bb/">Far-Right Canadian Zionist Newsletter Targets BB Camp Kenora Director in Coordinated Smear Campaign</a><br> by<a href="https://www.reddit.com/user/GoldLucky27/">u/GoldLucky27</a> in<a href="https://www.reddit.com/r/JewsOfConscience/">JewsOfConscience</a></blockquote><script async src="https://embed.reddit.com/widgets.js" charset="UTF-8"></script>
</div></figure>



<p>I know this letter is anonymous and won&#8217;t be published, but I hope you see it as proof that many of us are desperate for ethical, forward-looking leadership. Thank you again for using your platform to remind us what Jewish community should mean: diversity of thought, compassion for all people, and the moral courage to call out extremism—no matter where it comes from.</p>



<p>This was NEVER a community of far-right Israelis. This is a shame beyond words.</p>



<p>With gratitude and urgency,</p>



<p>A Concerned Young Jew in Winnipeg</p>



<p>Post script: <em>We had heard from many different sources (who all asked to remain anonymous) that the Jewish Federation&#8217;s decision to force the BB Camp board to fire Jacob Brodovsky came as a result of pressure from one or more big donors to the Combined Jewish Appeal. We sent an email to Jeff Lieberman, asking Jeff whether the Jewish Federation&#8217;s decision to force the resignation of Jacob Brodovsky as co-executive director of BB Camp came as a result of a donor (or donors) to the Combined Jewish Appeal threatening to withdraw their donation(s) this year unless Jacob were fired. I don&#8217;t think anyone would be surprised to learn that Jeff did not bother responding to my request for information.  </em></p>



<p><em>The Jewish Federation used to advertise elections to its board in The Jewish Post &amp; News for many years, but no longer does so (in the Jewish Post). Instead, it submits a slate of new appointees to its board to members of the current board to be rubber stamped. Is it any surprise that the donors who contribute the most money call the shots for the Federation</em> <em>(which is as its always been.</em> <em>The only difference is the Jewish Federation and the Winnipeg Jewish Community Council  before it used to operate with a patina of democracy. Sadly, that is no longer the case.)</em></p>



<p><em>We would urge anyone on the Federation board who could give information about what led the board to force the resignation of Jacob Brodovsky to contact us. We would give full anonymity, as we have to the writer of the above letter.</em> </p>



<p>-Bernie Bellan</p>



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		<title>Is It Alberta&#8217;s Turn to Regulate Online Gambling? Looking at the Possibilities</title>
		<link>https://jewishpostandnews.ca/faqs/rokmicronews-fp-1/is-it-albertas-turn-to-regulate-online-gambling-looking-at-the-possibilities/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Bernie Bellan]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 25 Apr 2024 18:11:50 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Local News]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Opinion]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://jewishpostandnews.ca/?p=21398</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<img width="150" height="150" src="https://jewishpostandnews.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/Casino-pic-150x150.jpg" class="attachment-thumbnail size-thumbnail wp-post-image" alt="" decoding="async" srcset="https://jewishpostandnews.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/Casino-pic-150x150.jpg 150w, https://jewishpostandnews.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/Casino-pic-80x80.jpg 80w" sizes="(max-width: 150px) 100vw, 150px" />Online gambling and betting in Canada is booming, with each province allowed to regulate its own space. Ontario, Canada&#8217;s most populated province, turned two this year after leading the way in April 2022. In what should motivate Alberta and other provinces, Ontario is already reaping the rewards, generating $100 million annually in gambling revenue. Will [&#8230;]]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<img width="150" height="150" src="https://jewishpostandnews.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/Casino-pic-150x150.jpg" class="attachment-thumbnail size-thumbnail wp-post-image" alt="" decoding="async" loading="lazy" srcset="https://jewishpostandnews.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/Casino-pic-150x150.jpg 150w, https://jewishpostandnews.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/Casino-pic-80x80.jpg 80w" sizes="auto, (max-width: 150px) 100vw, 150px" />
<p>Online gambling and betting in Canada is booming, with each province allowed to regulate its own space. Ontario, Canada&#8217;s most populated province, turned two this year after leading the way in April 2022. In what should motivate Alberta and other provinces, Ontario is already reaping the rewards, generating $100 million annually in gambling revenue. Will the local administration in Alberta do what is needed?</p>



<p>Talks have been rife that Alberta is considering going the Ontario way by having an open-licensing system. In July 2023, the minister for Service Alberta and Red Tape Reduction, Dale Nally, issued a mandate to make this province a hub of online sports betting and gambling.</p>



<p>Alberta Premier Danielle Smith recently asked Nally to cooperate with indigenous partners and other stakeholders to develop an online gaming strategy. The main focus will be on revenue generation and responsible gambling. In light of this, Nally said Alberta&#8217;s primary focus is becoming a &#8220;leading hub for iGaming&#8221; with streamlined regulations and low corporate taxes. Such conditions should position Alberta to become a leading iGaming destination.</p>



<p>A few weeks ago, the minister attended the ICE international gaming conference held in London. Together with Ontario&#8217;s Attorney General, Doug Downey, and other stakeholders, Nally participated in a roundtable discussion regarding the status of iGaming in Canada. CDC Gaming Reports also revealed that the discussion highlighted the success of iGaming in Ontario and how Alberta can emulate this success story.</p>



<p>Looking into the Alberta Budget 2024, it&#8217;s evident that state monopoly could soon give way to <a href="https://www.casino.com/ca/">Canadian casinos</a> to thrive in the province. Alberta took the first baby steps towards a more liberal gambling sector after setting aside $1 million for gambling. This budget will support the looming review of the Gaming, Liquor, and Cannabis Act and supporting Regulation. The idea is to review the entire regulatory framework to find more funding ways for Alberta charities and community projects.</p>



<p>Major operators like BetMGM, PointsBet, and PokerStars have since hired lobbyists to ensure commercial operators become a reality in Alberta. Speaking to investors and industry analysts in March this year, PointsBet CEO Sam Swanell tipped Alberta and British Columbia to legalize online betting soon. He noted that this could provide the much-needed expansion of that TAM.</p>



<p>Alberta is yet to take full advantage of online gambling despite being the country&#8217;s fourth-largest province, with around 4.3 million people. Smaller markets in North America, such as West Virginia and Connecticut, are already benefiting from commercialized online gambling. The good news is that noises about legal online gambling are getting louder in Alberta. It&#8217;s just a matter of when the government will make the announcement.</p>



<p><strong>What Next for Online Gambling and Betting in Alberta?</strong></p>



<p>Including a $1 million gambling review budget is definitely a step in the right direction. However, there&#8217;s still much to do to end Alberta&#8217;s long-standing gambling status quo. But at least the budget opens the door for further discussions and reforms regarding iGaming in Alberta. That discussion has been underway, although the momentum has increased in the last year or so.</p>



<p>As it stands, PlayAlberta.ca is the only regulated online gaming platform in Alberta. It&#8217;s a government-run website operated by the AGLC (Alberta Gaming Liquor and Cannabis). Besides casino games, this website provides sports betting and lottery-style gaming experiences. The legal sign-up age on PlayAlberta.ca is 18 years.</p>



<p>For Albertans who prefer more gambling freedom, the government doesn&#8217;t restrict anyone from joining offshore operators. Most gaming sites operating in Alberta are licensed in Curacao, the UK, and Malta. Compared to PlayAlberta.ca, these websites provide a more extensive variety of games, rewards, and general experience.</p>



<p>In conclusion, it&#8217;s just a matter of when Alberta will introduce an open-licensing market. This approach has proved to be a success elsewhere, especially in Ontario. A recent <a href="https://globalnews.ca/news/10403134/ontario-gambling-regulated-market-agco/">Ipsos report</a> in Ontario revealed that only 13.6% of the residents prefer to gamble on offshore websites. Alberta could soon follow this path, although there&#8217;s much work to do to realize this dream.</p>
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		<title>Hamas savages make no distinction between Israeli Jews, Arabs</title>
		<link>https://jewishpostandnews.ca/demo-content/demo-articles/hamas-savages-make-no-distinction-between-israeli-jews-arabs/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Bernie Bellan]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 23 Dec 2023 17:08:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Opinion]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Main]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://jewishpostandnews.ca/?p=18758</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<img width="150" height="150" src="https://jewishpostandnews.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/love-myron-2020-150x150.jpg" class="attachment-thumbnail size-thumbnail wp-post-image" alt="" decoding="async" loading="lazy" srcset="https://jewishpostandnews.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/love-myron-2020-150x150.jpg 150w, https://jewishpostandnews.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/love-myron-2020-80x80.jpg 80w" sizes="auto, (max-width: 150px) 100vw, 150px" />By MYRON LOVE I remember many years ago attending a presentation by Simon Wiesenthal, the world’s leading Nazi hunter, during which he made the point that the focus of Holocaust education should not be on the number six million – the number of estimated Jews who were murdered – but rather on the 12 million [&#8230;]]]></description>
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<p>By MYRON LOVE I remember many years ago attending a presentation by Simon Wiesenthal, the world’s leading Nazi hunter, during which he made the point that the focus of Holocaust education should not be on the number six million – the number of estimated Jews who were murdered – but rather on the 12 million martyrs – including other targeted groups such as the Roma, people who were gay, the mentally and physically handicapped and the many great many Slavic people who were also murdered. After the Jews, the Slavs were next on the list.<br>By focusing strictly on Germans killing Jews, he observed, it became too easy to make it out to be only Germans versus Jews – thereby making it easier for Holocaust deniers and absolving the other European peoples who were complicit in the killings.<br>Similarly, while we naturally mourn our Jewish brethren who were so horribly slaughtered on October 7, we need to also bear in mind that Hamas made no distinction in its murderous rampage between Israeli Jews and Israeli Arabs or between Israelis and foreign workers.<br>In a posting for The Gatestone Institute on November 30, Israeli-Arab journalist Khaled Abu Toameh noted that he Hamas terrorists who attacked Israel on October 7 did not slaughter Jews alone. The terrorists also murdered and kidnapped scores of Muslim citizens of Israel, including members of the Bedouin community. The terrorists’ murder spree made zero distinction between young and old, Muslim and Jew.<br>“Scores of Arab Israelis were wounded, murdered or taken prisoner,” he reported.<br>One such brave individual was 23-year-old Awad Darawshe, an Arab-Israeli paramedic who was on duty at the music festival near Kibbutz Re’im, which was among the first locations under attack. When the medical staff on site were ordered to flee, he insisted on remaining behind to treat the wounded.<br>Abu Toameh suggests that the paramedic thought that because he was Arab, he could reason with the killers. He was murdered nonetheless.<br>Another courageous Arab-Israeli that the writer noted, 50-year-old Abed al-Rahman Alnasasrah, was murdered by Hamas terrorists when he attempted to rescue people from the music festival. He was married and a father of six children.<br>Fatima Altallaqat, 35, from the Bedouin village near Ofakim, was murdered while working with her husband near the city of Ofakim in southern Israel. She was a mother of nine children, the eldest nine years old.<br>Abu Toameh quotes her husband as saying: “We’re a religious Muslim family and she wore the traditional headdress of a devout woman. It is inconceivable they [Hamas terrorists] could not see who was inside [the car]. They were five meters away from her as they passed.”<br>Forty bullets were fired into her.<br>Abu Toameh further cites the comments of Suleiman Zayadneh, brother and uncle, respectively, to four of the Arab-Israeli hostages, who describes himself “as proud to be a Palestinian and Muslim”.<br>‘The people who came to shoot and kill — they know nothing of religion,” the writer quoted Zayadneh as saying. “These [Hamas] people came and killed left and right.”<br>Abu Toameh went on to reference the words of Nuseir Yassin, a video blogger with 65 million followers. Two days after the massacre, he wrote: “I realized that… to a terrorist invading Israel, all citizens are targets. More than 40 of them [the murdered] are Arabs. Killed by other Arabs. And I do not want to live under a Palestinian government. Which means I only have one home, even if I’m not Jewish: Israel…. So from today forward, I view myself as… Israeli first. Palestinian second. Sometimes it takes a shock like this to see so clearly.”<br>Abu Toameh reported that “there have been many storie about reciprocal inter-communal generosity and heroism in the aftermath of this national tragedy, and they create hope for the future”.<br>He quoted a statement by the Darwashe Family:<br>“We are very proud of Awad’s actions… This is what we would expect from him and what we expect from everyone in our family — to be human, to stay human and to die human.”<br>Abu Toameh also quoted Ali Alziadna, four of whose family members were kidnapped, as saying that he was “touched by the outpouring of support” by other Israelis.<br>“People from all over the country have come to hug and support our family,” Alziadna said. “The entire nation is one family now.”</p>



<p>Abu Toameh pointed out that many Arab citizens of Israel serve as IDF officers and policemen, risking their lives for their fellow Israelis. Many are serving at the front lines, saving lives.<br>Undoubtedly, Abu Toameh suggested, one of the objectives of the Hamas massacre, in addition to slaughtering as many Israelis as possible, was to thwart normalization between Israel and Arab countries, especially Saudi Arabia. Hamas may also have aimed to damage relations between Jews and Arabs inside Israel.<br>”The terror group was, without doubt, hoping that we would witness another cycle of violence between Jews and Arabs inside Israel, similar to that which erupted in May 2021,’ Abu Toameh posited. “Then, Hamas succeeded in inciting a large number of Arab citizens of Israel to take to the streets and attack their Jewish neighbors and Israeli police officers.<br>“This time, however, the Arab-Israelis have not heeded the calls by Hamas. One reason is that Arab-Israelis saw, with their own eyes, how Hamas terrorists make no distinction between Jews and Muslims.<br>“Hamas has repeatedly demonstrated that it cares nothing for the well-being of Arabs and Muslims. From their luxury homes and hotel rooms in the safety of Qatar and Turkey, Hamas leaders give the orders to attack Israel and then sit back and let the world weep over the destruction they wrought upon their own people.<br>“On October 7,” Abu Toameh concluded, “Hamas metaphorically shot itself in the foot by showing the world, with unfathomably ghoulish pride, by way of Go-Pro cameras and other self-documentation, that it has neither a religious nor a secular-humanist set of values. Perhaps the Palestinians in the Gaza Strip should look at the Arab citizens of Israel and note how they enjoy equal rights, democracy, freedom of speech and a free media. If Palestinians wish to live well, like the Arab-Israelis, this is the time for them to get rid of Hamas and all the terror leaders who, for seven decades, have brought them nothing but one disaster after another.”<br>It is too bad that so many gullible fools in our Western societies refuse to open their eyes to the truth.</p>
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		<title>An Arab Trusteeship Council for Gaza</title>
		<link>https://jewishpostandnews.ca/uncategorized/an-arab-trusteeship-council-for-gaza/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Bernie Bellan]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 17 Oct 2023 21:34:16 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Opinion]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://jewishpostandnews.ca/?p=14359</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<img width="134" height="150" src="https://jewishpostandnews.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/Bryan-Schwartz-134x150.jpg" class="attachment-thumbnail size-thumbnail wp-post-image" alt="" decoding="async" loading="lazy" />By Prof. BRYAN SCHWARTZ Oct. 17, 2023 (Originally posted to The Times of Israel)1 No peace is possible with Hamas. It is genocidally antisemitic. This position is foundational, not rhetorical or mutable. Waiting for the emergence of a “pragmatic” version of Hamas is suicidally naïve.2 Peace and cooperation are possible with most of Israel’s non-Iranian [&#8230;]]]></description>
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<p>By Prof. BRYAN SCHWARTZ Oct. 17, 2023 (Originally posted to The Times of Israel)<br>1 No peace is possible with Hamas. It is genocidally antisemitic. This position is foundational, not rhetorical or mutable. Waiting for the emergence of a “pragmatic” version of Hamas is suicidally naïve.<br>2 Peace and cooperation are possible with most of Israel’s non-Iranian neighbours. They are militarily threatened by Iran, not Israel. For many in those countries, Iran’s version of Islam might be more problematic from the religious perspective than Israel’s Jewishness.<br>3 Hamas’ attack was partly to prevent a Saudi deal and a long-term economic cooperation<br>4 Israel has no territorial claim to Gaza and no material, religious, or ideological interest in running it.<br>5 Israel has vital moral and material interests in the emergence of a peaceful, demilitarized, and prosperous Gaza. If that can occur in the medium term, a long-term reconciliation of the Palestinians with Israel is achievable.<br>6 As and when Hamas is evicted from power, Gaza will need some new form of government.<br>7 The Palestinian authority probably cannot be trusted to take over Gaza. It is corrupt and lacked- and probably still lacks- credibility with a majority of the population in Gaza.<br>8 There used to be a concept called trusteeship in international law, whereby foreign powers would govern a territory in its best interests until its final status is clarified at the wishes of its own people.<br>9 The United Nations cannot be trusted to administer Gaza – any more than it has shown to be trustworthy to maintain strategic security in Southern Lebanon or to operate UNWRA in a manner that is effective for Palestinians and not hostile to Israel.<br>10 Consider this alternative. After Hamas is evicted from power, there is an interim period- say five to seven to ten years -of governance over Gaza by an Arab trusteeship council. The Council members are appointed primarily by Arab states sympathetic to Israel and eager to see the people of Gaza thrive. This Council could include local Gaza representatives and a representative of the Palestinian Authority but the majority would be representative of states like Egypt, Morocco, Jordan, and Saudi Arabia.<br>11 The trusteeship agreement would be formal, agreed to by Israel, and unequivocally state its objectives, including:<br>-demilitarizing Gaza;<br>-defining the sole purposes for which outside reconstruction and development money can be spent and requiring strict accounting<br>-ensuring that the education system in Gaza is not contaminated by antisemitic hatred;<br>-promoting sound administration of Gaza, including providing for transparent and non-corrupt government, with significant safeguards for human rights, and conformity to the rule of law;<br>-promoting the development of a real economy for Gaza, not one fuelled primarily by international subsidies.<br>13 No state could participate in the Council without having a peace agreement with Israel.<br>14 In fact, the creation of the Council and Saudi participation in it could be part of a peace deal with Saudi Arabia. The deal could involve a reconstruction package from the Saudis for Gaza, which would help secure the support of the people of Gaza for the Council arrangement as an interim measure.<br>15 Policing would be carried out by a force composed of Palestinians and members of the police forces of Trusteeship states, under the direction of the Council.<br>16 The net effect would be to remove Gaza from Iran’s influence and establish temporary control by a consortium of mostly Sunni states. The latter would be chosen from among those that are at least reasonably friendly to Israel and genuinely committed to good governance in Gaza.<br>17 The definitive solution to the Arab-Israeli conflict can only be achieved in a series of steps. Compromises are even more painful if they are framed as permanent. But if practical peace, stability, and some prosperity can be achieved in the medium term in Gaza and the West Bank, an amicable and enduring resolution should be achievable with the Palestinians.<br>18 While Israel is under severe military menace right now, it is not too early to think about how a positive political outcome can be achieved after the necessary and painful battle is concluded.<br>19 The current catastrophe is a so-far successful attempt by the regime in Teheran to disrupt peace negotiations involving Israel, the United States, and Saudi Arabia. Political vision along with military force might enable Israel to turn around the situation and complete and consolidate a lasting peace with almost all of its Arab neighbours and to set the stage for a formal and enduring peace with the Palestinians. The Teheran regime would be isolated, diminished in prestige, and more likely to be replaced from within.<br>About the Author<br><em>Bryan&#8217;s Jewish-themed musical &#8220;Consoulation: A Musical Mediation&#8221; premiered in the Spring of of 2018; https://consoulation.com His new album will appear in the coming months. Bryan Schwartz graduated with a doctorate in law from Yale School and holds an endowed chair at the University of Manitoba Law School. He is the author or editor of over thirty books and collections of essays. Bryan also created and helps to deliver an annual summer program at Hebrew University in Israeli law and society. He has served as a visiting Professor at both HU and Reichman university. . As a practising lawyer, Bryan has argued a number of cases at the Supreme Court of Canada, advised governments, and served as an arbitrator at the provincial, national and international level.</em></p>
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		<title>Who knew? Former Blue Bomber great Willard Reaves&#8217; father was Jewish &#8211; and is buried in Israel</title>
		<link>https://jewishpostandnews.ca/demo-content/who-knew-former-blue-bomber-great-willard-reaves-father-was-jewish-and-is-buried-in-israel/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Bernie Bellan]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 02 Sep 2023 19:25:44 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Opinion]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://jewishpostandnews.ca/?p=12982</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<img width="150" height="150" src="https://jewishpostandnews.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/Reaves-composite-150x150.jpg" class="attachment-thumbnail size-thumbnail wp-post-image" alt="" decoding="async" loading="lazy" srcset="https://jewishpostandnews.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/Reaves-composite-150x150.jpg 150w, https://jewishpostandnews.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/Reaves-composite-80x80.jpg 80w" sizes="auto, (max-width: 150px) 100vw, 150px" />Usually when I write my column in The Jewish Post &#38; News titled &#8220;Short takes,&#8221; I focus on one or two themes. This time, I’m departing from that style. Instead, I’m going to offer a series of true “short takes.”To begin with, I have to admit my surprise at a story that Sid Halpern related [&#8230;]]]></description>
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<p>Usually when I write my column in The Jewish Post &amp; News titled &#8220;Short takes,&#8221; I focus on one or two themes. This time, I’m departing from that style. Instead, I’m going to offer a series of true “short takes.”<br>To begin with, I have to admit my surprise at a story that Sid Halpern related to me – about former Winnipeg Blue Bomber great Willard Reaves. Reaves, who is running once again for the Liberals in the upcoming provincial election in the riding of Whyte Ridge, against another former Blue Bomber great, Obby Khan, was speaking at the Simkin Centre at a current events program that Sid runs (and which I occasionally host as well).<br>At that recent program, Reaves told the Simkin Centre residents who were gathered to hear him that his late father was Jewish and that he was buried in Israel.<br>When Sid related that story to me my reaction was – and I’m sure it would be the same for anyone else who knows who Willard Reaves is: “You’re kidding. What’s the story behind that?”<br>So, I contacted Willard and asked him to fill me in. He told me that his father, whose name was Johnny Reaves, had been a brilliant engineer who worked for General Dynamics in Fort Worth, Texas. Willard said that his parents separated when he was young and that he grew up in Flagstaff, Arizona, although he and a brother of his did spend half a year living with their father in Fort Worth.<br>According to Willard, his father was interested in finding out about different denominations, including Judaism. Eventually, Johnny Reaves converted to Judaism and, in 2016, he moved to Israel, saying “good bye to me,” Willard said, adding that his father also said “I will die in Israel.”<br>It was in Israel that Johnny Reaves took the Hebrew name “Tzadok Avraham,” Willard added. He also became fluent in Hebrew, Willard said (in addition to four other languages he spoke). In 2021 Johnny Reaves – or Tzadok Avraham, as he was then known, died. Willard said that he had wanted to fly to Israel for the funeral, but was told that his father was going to be buried the next day – which wouldn’t have given Willard enough time to make it there for the funeral.<br>Quite the story, but to give equal time to Obby Khan, about whom I’ve written in the past, when he sponsored a floor hockey tournament at the Rady JCC in memory of Obby’s late mentor, Richard Tapper, Obby will also be appearing at the Simkin Centre in September – and when he does, we’ll try and grab an interview with him as well.</p>



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<p>The movie “Golda” has received fairly awful reviews from critics – and deservedly so. It’s hard to understand why this movie was even made. Aside from having an A-list star, Helen Mirren, in the title role, honestly, how many people out there who aren’t Jewish and of a certain age would be interested in seeing a movie about Golda Meir?<br>It’s the kind of movie that you might expect to have been made for a streaming service rather than be given a theatrical release. It’s quite dark – and despite the action revolving around the Yom Kippur War, there’s no dramatization of any battle scenes nor, for that matter, is there much in the way of actual footage from the war – which could have easily be integrated into the film.<br>Like a lot of others who have already commented on “Golda,” I’m trying to figure out what the motivation was of whoever was behind it?</p>



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<p>By this time of year one would have expected to see the report of the Jewish Federation’s Budget and Allocations Committee. That particular committee is tasked with divvying up funds for the 13 beneficiary agencies of the Jewish Federation and, although I’m told each agency has been informed by now what the allocation they will be receiving will be, the Federation’s fiscal year begins September 1, and in the past we’ve been able to report on the allocations either in June or July at the latest.<br>There have been a series of changes at the top level of the Jewish Federation this past year, including the most recent one – which, of course, we’ve given major attention, that being the hiring of Jeff Lieberman as the Federation’s new CEO.<br>But the awful slowness in receiving the report of the Budget and Allocations Committee points to how much the Federation has been missing the absolutely key contribution that Faye Rosenberg Cohen made in her capacity as the Federation’s Chief Planning and Allocations Officer. Faye, who had been an employee of the Federation since 1994 – up until her retirement this past December, was largely responsible for drawing up the report of the Budget and Allocations Committee.<br>And, although the committee always has a number of experienced volunteers serving on it, nothing can replace the type of experience that a seasoned staff member such as Faye was able to bring to the job. Sharon Graham has been hired as Faye’s replacement and, although we’re sure that Sharon will prove fully capable of filling Faye’s shoes, replacing someone with 29 years experience in a job can’t happen overnight.</p>



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<p>In addition to Faye’s retirement, there have been two other notable departures from the Federation in recent months. In June we announced that Rebecca Brask was leaving the position of Chief Development Officer for the Federation. Rebecca’s replacement is Graciela Najenson, who has been with the Federation since 2017. The fact that Graciela had been serving as Development Director makes her transition to the role previously held by Rebecca somewhat easier.<br>And, just recently Carlos Benesdra moved on from being Chief Financial Officer of the Federation to CFO of Gray Academy, while Shannon Slater has moved over from the Asper Jewish Community Campus to take over as Federation CFO.<br>Those are four major moves within a three-month period. Based on my recent experience of not being able to get information about the all-important allocations that our Jewish agencies are going to be receiving, I can only surmise that the Federation is in a state of flux.</p>



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<p>The success of the Israel pavilion continues to reverberate. As I note in my look back at the early days of the Israel pavilion on page 1, back in 1970 it would have been impossible to anticipate how important both Foklorama &#8211; and the Israel pavilion, would become. As David Greaves writes in his paean to the Israel pavilion on page 16 of this issue, the role that the Israel pavilion now plays in boosting Israel’s image is immeasurable.</p>



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<p>The sale of the Etz Chayim is not yet complete. Although there is an offer on the table, nothing has been finalized, according to congregation president Avrom Charach.<br>Here is an email exchange I had with Avrom on August 23:</p>



<p>“Hi Avrom,<br>“I’ve heard that the building has been sold &#8211; again. Can you confirm?<br>“-Bernie”</p>



<p>Avrom responded (less than an hour after I emailed him. That could be a lesson for some other Jewish organizations in this city, where respondents often don’t respond or take an interminable amount of time to respond):<br>“We accepted an offer within two weeks of the previous deal not closing.<br>Their due diligence period has not yet finished but we are getting close to the day when it does.<br>“As such I can confirm we are conditionally sold but nothing more than that.”</p>



<p>otage from the war –</p>
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		<title>Will the affable Jeff Lieberman be able to make tough decisions in the years to come?</title>
		<link>https://jewishpostandnews.ca/demo-content/demo-articles/will-the-affable-jeff-lieberman-be-able-to-make-tough-decisions-in-the-years-to-come/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Bernie Bellan]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sun, 23 Jul 2023 19:14:37 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Opinion]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://jewishpostandnews.ca/?p=12312</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<img width="150" height="150" src="https://jewishpostandnews.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/Bernie-new-pic-150x150.jpg" class="attachment-thumbnail size-thumbnail wp-post-image" alt="" decoding="async" loading="lazy" srcset="https://jewishpostandnews.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/Bernie-new-pic-150x150.jpg 150w, https://jewishpostandnews.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/Bernie-new-pic-80x80.jpg 80w" sizes="auto, (max-width: 150px) 100vw, 150px" />By BERNIE BELLAN The hiring of Jeff Lieberman as the new CEO of the Jewish Federation got me to thinking about how long I’ve been with this newspaper. I started with The Jewish Post two years before Bob Freedman was hired as Executive Director of what was then the Winnipeg Jewish Community Council.As a matter [&#8230;]]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<img width="150" height="150" src="https://jewishpostandnews.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/Bernie-new-pic-150x150.jpg" class="attachment-thumbnail size-thumbnail wp-post-image" alt="" decoding="async" loading="lazy" srcset="https://jewishpostandnews.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/Bernie-new-pic-150x150.jpg 150w, https://jewishpostandnews.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/Bernie-new-pic-80x80.jpg 80w" sizes="auto, (max-width: 150px) 100vw, 150px" />
<p>By BERNIE BELLAN The hiring of Jeff Lieberman as the new CEO of the Jewish Federation got me to thinking about how long I’ve been with this newspaper. I started with The Jewish Post two years before Bob Freedman was hired as Executive Director of what was then the Winnipeg Jewish Community Council.<br>As a matter of fact I did an hour-long interview with Bob in 2021 (that can still be viewed on Youtube at <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i66AyZ8x60k)">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i66AyZ8x60k)</a> in which he looked back over his long career with both the WJCC and the Jewish Federation.  Be warned, however: Bob had quite the potty mouth during that interview.)<br>Bob Freedman though, had quite a grasp of how to run the Jewish Federation – which could occasionally lead him to knocking heads with members of the community, especially when it came to him telling various leaders of organizations that they weren’t going to get what they wanted from the Federation.<br>I especially recall when the Gwen Secter Centre was in a very precarious situation – when the building that had been the home for that centre was going to be sold by the National Council of Jewish Women. (Does anyone remember the reason that the NCJW gave for wanting to sell that building? I do. It was to raise money for something to do with addictions. I’m still waiting for that to happen – more than seven years after the NCJW received over $900,000 for the building as the result of a gift from an angel donor – whose name I have kept secret all these years, as I was asked to do.)<br>It was a tough time to be the CEO of the Jewish Federation – and to turn down a request to step in and help keep the Gwen Secter in its Main Street home, but Bob Freedman had the strength to say no. Was he right to do that? That’s for others to judge, but since that near-death experience for the Gwen Secter Centre, it has turned out to play a very important role for the Jewish community, providing a variety of programming that is certainly far above what one would expect from an organization that was hanging on the precipice eight years ago. But Bob couldn’t have known that, so I’ll absolve him of blame on that one.<br>Certainly the impact that Covid had on so many community organizations is still being felt – and our Jewish community is continuing to evolve a great deal in response to how Covid affected so many community institutions. One need only look at the huge changes that our two major synagogues are undergoing in order to realize how much the Jewish community has changed over the past 20 years – as both the Shaarey Zedek and the Etz Chayim have had to rethink their roles, at least partly in response to how Covid changed how members now interact with synagogues.<br>Something else that any Federation CEO is going to have to address is the relative decline in moneys raised by the Combined Jewish Appeal in recent years, at least when one takes inflation into account. While the amount raised this past fiscal year was $6.3 million, five years ago it was $5.6 million, but when one factors in inflation (approximately 19.4% cumulatively over the past four years) that means the CJA is raising much less on a relative basis than it was five years ago. The CJA would have had to raise well over $7 million this past year just to keep pace with inflation.<br>The saving grace for the Federation, as I’ve noted in the past two years, has been the huge increase in the total amount that the Jewish Foundation has been distributing, including to local Jewish organizations. No doubt that has taken some of the pressure off the Jewish Federation to increase what it distributes to its beneficiary agencies, but going forward it is difficult to see how the Federation will be able to come up with the funds that the beneficiary organizations are going to need simply to maintain their present levels of service.<br>A few weeks back we reported that the Federation had released a strategic plan to direct resources and planning for the next six years, but that plan was couched in such generalities that it seemed more like a wish list with which no one could argue. How, for instance, could one object to enhanced “collaboration with community partners; increased engagement through education and training; strategies to develop Jewish life; developing external relationships with other community and faith-based organizations; and combating anti-Semitism” – among its objectives?<br>While Jeff Lieberman comes into his new position of CEO saying that his strength is “building relationships” and being “a good people person,”I’d sure like to know whether he has a long-term vision for the community. Bob Freedman presided over what was probably the most exciting period in the history of our Jewish community when he played an instrumental role in the development of the Asper Campus, but that period is over. Does Jeff have a vision similar to what Bob had? I didn’t ask him that when I chatted with him &#8211; mostly because that’s the kind of question that is unfair to spring on someone, but I do wonder whether he was asked that when he was interviewed for the job and, if so, how did he answer?<br>As I attempted to demonstrate in various articles I wrote about the 2021 census, the Jewish community in Winnipeg – if it can even be called a community since it’s now so disparate, is hardly the kind of community that we used to recognize. When only a little more than 6,000 individuals say they’re Jewish both by ethnicity and by religion – well, that goes to show how much the Jewish “community” has changed in the past 20 years – which is when the last authoritative census was conducted.<br>While the River Heights – Tuxedo-Crescentwood neighbourhoods still contain large numbers of Jews according to the census, there has been a huge shift in where Jews are now living &#8211; especially to areas such as south St. Vital, and south Ft. Garry (including Bridgewater). Of course, given how people interact with each other these days, especially through social media, it matters little where people live in terms of how an organization such as the Jewish Federation might want to reach them, but the sense of community that Jews used to have from seeing one another physically cannot be replicated by posts on Instagram, for instance – which it seems is where the Jewish Federation now concentrates a fair bit of its resources.<br>If there’s anything that I’ve learned over the years, however, it’s that former members of Winnipeg’s Jewish community who have left for other cities still retain a significant attachment to the Jewish community here – perhaps more so than can be said of any other city that Jews would have called home. There is still such an eagerness among ex-Winnipeg Jews to keep informed – and in touch with what’s going on in Winnipeg within our Jewish community, that in many ways it’s helped to sustain this newspaper.<br>In that vein – I’m pleased to announce that, after an almost two-month period in which our website, jewishpostandnews.ca, was not up, it’s back – and it’s been totally revamped. While I wouldn’t pretend that the website is constantly updating local news – it does have a constinually refreshing news feed provided by the Jewish Telegraphic Agency that is proving to be hugely popular with viewers. As well, the website does include all obituaries that appear in the print version of The Jewish Post &amp; News and, as most readers are no doubt aware, obituaries and memoriams are an integral part of what keep former Winnipeg Jews in touch with the community here. In time we hope also to have a section for memoriams on the website – as we continue the process of providing the same experience online as readers can have by reading the print paper (or a pdf version of the paper, which is also available to any print subscribers).<br>And that’s where I think Jeff Lieberman – and the rest of the Jewish Federation, can take a cue from this paper. It’s all well and good to offer grandiose plans for the future, but it’s still important to remember what made this community great – which was a deep respect for continuing what helped to build the Jewish community here. At the same time though, what always marked the Jewish community here was a tradition of different individuals and groups challenging accepted orthodoxies, be they religious, political, social, or otherwise. However, I’ve never thought of either the Winnipeg Jewish Community Council or the Jewish Federation as being interested in hearing from voices that challenge accepted orthodoxies, especially when it comes to criticizing Israel. And, I don’t expect that’s going to change with Jeff Lieberman at the head. On the other hand, a quirky s-t disturber like me is probably not what the community needs as its head either.</p>
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		<title>The news coming out of Israel was making my head spin</title>
		<link>https://jewishpostandnews.ca/demo-content/demo-articles/the-news-coming-out-of-israel-was-making-my-head-spin/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Bernie Bellan]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 31 Mar 2023 16:57:11 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Opinion]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://jewishpostandnews.ca/?p=10442</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[By BERNIE BELLAN Our March 20 print issue represented the largest Passover issue we have published in many years. I’m grateful for the continued support The Jewish Post &#38; News has received, both from advertisers and subscribers. The fact that this paper has not only survived, but continues to thrive, comes as much of a [&#8230;]]]></description>
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<p>By BERNIE BELLAN Our March 20 print issue represented the largest Passover issue we have published in many years. I’m grateful for the continued support The Jewish Post &amp; News has received, both from advertisers and subscribers. The fact that this paper has not only survived, but continues to thrive, comes as much of a surprise to me though, as it probably does to readers who no doubt have been reading of the ongoing struggles of print newspapers. By the way, if you&#8217;re reading this on our website and might want to subscribe to the online version of The Jewish Post &amp; News, the cost is only $26. Click here to subscribe: <a href="https://jewishpostandnews.ca/uncategorized/subscriptions/">https://jewishpostandnews.ca/uncategorized/subscriptions/</a><br />What you might see &#8211; if you were to subscribe, are the two pages of often fiery letters that we published in our March 29 issue.</p>



<p>The fact that this paper remains provocative in ways that continue to engender a kind of fierce debate unlike any other that you are likely to see in another Jewish newspaper is part of the reason that we have not only survived the many difficulties that plague other Jewish newspapers, we have done quite well.<br />Are our readers more open-minded than readers of other Jewish newspapers – to the point where they’re prepared to read and even attempt to understand points of view with which they vehemently disagree? I would suggest that is indeed the case, otherwise readers would have turned away from a newspaper that attempts to provide as many points of view on controversial issues as possible.<br />When I began preparing material for this particular issue months ago, I did collect quite a few articles related to the Passover holiday itself. But honestly, aside from running a series of Passover recipes in our last (March 15) issue, even though there were some fairly interesting stories available to me from which to choose which were directly related to Passover, instead I chose to make the content of this issue as eclectic as possible – with only a scant reference to the actual holiday.<br />Lately, the news that has caught the Jewish world’s attention &#8211; and much of the non-Jewish world’s as well, has been about the unprecedented fight going on within Israel over the government’s proposed judicial reforms. This particular issue reflects that fight to a large extent, with many stories centering on the impact that story is having.<br />Even as I write this column it is not at all clear what lies ahead insofar as the proposal to strip the judiciary of its power in Israel goes. The latest news about what was happening in Israel with regard to opposition to the proposed reforms was changing so rapidly that this column had to be completely revised when it was learned that Israel’s defence minister, Yoav Gallant, had come out in opposition to the proposed reforms on Saturday, March 25 &#8211; and was supposdely backed by two other Likud Members of the Knesset, onty to be fired by Netanyahu on Sunday, March 26. At that point the two other MKs changed course. What a whirlwind of events!<br />The fact that Bibi Netanyahu has thrown his lot in with a group of Ultra-Orthodox extremists is in itself confounding. Here we have a man who is decidedly secular in his own life and who, in his past iterations as prime minister, was singularly obsessed with external threats to Israel’s survival, especially the Iranian one, not the aspirations of the Ultra-Orthodox to turn Israel into a theocracy.<br />One can’t help but wonder at the irony that, as Iran is just weeks away from producing a nuclear bomb, there is nary a word coming from Netanyahu about that looming existential threat. Instead, he has plunged Israel into a crisis of unimagined proportions by catering to the Ultra-Orthodox element of his coalition.<br />There is no doubt that much of Netanyahu’s anger at the judiciary is motivated by the legal charges of corruption that still hang over his head, but for a man who has maintained for years that only he can insure Israel’s survival against the Iranian threat, to have his eye taken off the ball at this point by a ludicrous campaign to overhaul Israel’s judiciary speaks of his obsession with his own personal well-being – and survival, not the survival of the nation state of Israel.<br />In advance of writing this column, I took another look at a review I had written of a biography of Netanyahu that was published in May 2018, titled “Bibi – The Turbulent Life and Times of Benjamin Netanyahu,” written by Anshel Pfeffer. And, although Pfeffer is a columnist for Haaretz, the scourge of right-wing Jews everywhere, I noted in my review that his treatment of Netanyahu was quite even-handed – and even sympathetic in many instances.<br />There were two particular parts of my review which stood out for me upon rereading it: One was that the politician with whom Netanyahu worked most closely over the years was actually his political rival, Ehud Barak, who had replaced him as prime minister in 1999, but who later served as defence minister in a Netanyahu-led government. Barak and Netanyahu shared a common point of view with regard to the threat posed by Iran – and that shared point of view led them to the belief that all other issues could be put aside for the sake of preventing Iran from acquiring the bomb. The other part that stood out for me was the close relationship Netanyahu developed early in his life with the Lubavitcher Rebbe, Menachem Shneerson.<br />If Netanyahu was able to work well with individuals with whom he shared only certain specific interests – but constantly laboured to remove potential rivals to his leadership within his own Likud Party with whom you might have expected he would have shared a common ideology, then you can acquire a better understanding of how, in the current situation, he has decided to align himself with the Ultra-Orthodox members of his coalition. As Pfeffer noted in his book, “Netanyahu has no plans because his policies are tailored only for his political preservation…”<br />Thus, for the moment, Netanyahu is willing to work with a bloc that, in previous incarnations as prime minister, he kept on the sidelines. But, despite the protestations of many on the right that what Netanyahu is attempting to do is simply correct an imbalance that has occurred within Israel ever since Abraham Barak became the chief justice of Israel’s Supreme Court in 1993 and the Supreme Court took a more activist approach to legal issues, there is nothing in Netanyahu’s past to suggest that he was particularly interested in what Israel’s Supreme Court was doing – until he himself became the subject of a legal prosecution.<br />While many readers might have only a passing interest in what is currently going on in Israel, no one should minimize the impact of what the Ultra-Orthodox are attempting to do in Israel. For instance, as we noted in our last issue, if you want to get married in Israel, while there is no such thing as a civil marriage being performed in Israel itself, until now you could fly to Cyprus and get married there and have the marriage recognized in Israel – or, as was explained in our last issue, you could also get married online – in Utah, of all places. No doubt, if the courts are stripped of their ability to overrule laws passed by the government, the Ultra-Orthodox will move quickly to pass laws banning those types of marriages.<br />Further, the claims brought by a great many immigrants to Israel over the years that they are legitimately Jewish have often been subject to skepticism by Ultra-Orthodox Israelis. Governments in the past have tacitly accepted the claims of those immigrants of their Jewish ancestry. What if future immigrants’ claims of Jewish ancestry are rejected – or even worse, the claims of past applicants are subjected to further scrutiny and they are retroactively rejected – where will that leave the status of all those immigrants – and the rights of their children to marry Israeli citizens?<br />Almost all of us have some sort of familial connections to Israelis and, even if we don’t, we have friends and colleagues who live there. The significance of what the Ultra-Orthodox are attempting to do should not be glossed over with mere suggestions that they represent the “democratic” will of the Israeli electorate. To think that “Haredim,” who refuse to serve in the army, who prevent their children from receiving a general education, who loath and ostracize members of the LGBTQ community – not to mention their antidulivian views on women, have now realized that a political system which they once scorned has now become useful to their forcing their views on the rest of Israeli society is the stuff of nightmares.<br />Finally, although the notion that many Israelis might flee the country, as well as many businesses, if the proposed judicial reforms get passed, might not be as real a possibility as some may suggest, the mere fact that it is even being contemplated will no
doubt affect the long-range planning of many Israelis for years to come.<br />And this is all the result of demographics. The Ultra-Orthodox in Israel now have sufficient numbers – and the concomitant votes to cast – to hold the balance of power in Israel going forward. Only a Supreme Court that has the power to protect the rights of the non-Orthodox members of Israeli society stands in the way of Israel’s becoming a theocracy. That danger should not be misunderstood – or minimized by anyone who cares about the future of Israel.</p>
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		<title>What Netanyahu is doing has even led our staid Jewish Federation to protest</title>
		<link>https://jewishpostandnews.ca/demo-content/demo-articles/what-netanyahu-is-doing-has-even-led-our-staid-jewish-federation-to-protest/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Bernie Bellan]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 18 Mar 2023 15:13:49 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Opinion]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://jewishpostandnews.ca/?p=10175</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[By BERNIE BELLAN The story within the Jewish world that, of late, has been crowding out almost every other story of particular interest to Jews has been the determined effort by the Netanyhau government to emasculate Israel’s Supreme Court – and the fierce opposition that effort has engendered, not only within Israel, but within much [&#8230;]]]></description>
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<p>By BERNIE BELLAN The story within the Jewish world that, of late, has been crowding out almost every other story of particular interest to Jews has been the determined effort by the Netanyhau government to emasculate Israel’s Supreme Court – and the fierce opposition that effort has engendered, not only within Israel, but within much of the Jewish diaspora as well.<br />Has there ever been a time when so many Jewish voices have been raised in criticism of an action undertaken by a government in Israel? Elsewhere on this website you can find a story (<a href="https://jewishpostandnews.ca/rss/pro-israel-stalwarts-miriam-adelson-and-noa-tishby-join-chorus-condemning-judicial-reforms-as-protests-enter-10th-week">https://jewishpostandnews.ca/rss/pro-israel-stalwarts-miriam-adelson-and-noa-tishby-join-chorus-condemning-judicial-reforms-as-protests-enter-10th-week</a>) about two staunch defenders of Israel also raising their voices in protest of what the governing coalition in Israel is doing. The fact that the nature of the opposition that has emerged as a result of the Netanyahu coalition’s dogged insistence on “judicial reform,” as it’s proponents like to euphemistically refer to what they want to do, is so widespread, has to be of concern to Jews everywhere. The reason I’ve selected that story – about Noa Tishby and Miriam Adelson criticizing the Israeli government, is because the credentials of both those two women as fierce defenders of Israel cannot be called into question.<br />What the current Israeli government is proposing to do is not only to control appointments to Israel’s Supreme Court, which until now have been the prerogative of the President of Israel &#8211; acting upon the advice of a Judicial Selection Committee, but to prevent the Supreme Court from overturning any legislation passed by the Knesset.<br />When you see someone like Miriam Adelson who, together with her late husband, Sheldon Adelson, were two of the foremost backers for Likud over the years, pouring millions of dollars into Likud campaigns &#8211; emerging as a critic of what is being proposed – well then, you have to realize that Netanyahu is really taking a chance on alienating some of his staunchest supporters.<br />While Myron Love may purport to be a fierce defender of anything that the right wing coalition currently in power in Israel may want to propose &#8211; and he has been turning to someone named Melanie Phillips to provide a kind of twisted reasoning for that defence, here’s something you should know about Melanie Phillips: Her columns can be found on the Jewish News Syndicate website which, by the way, is free for anyone to look at or subscribe. And do you know who have been the largest financial supporters of the Jewish News Syndicate? None other than Miriam Adelson and her late husband, Sheldon.<br />Sheldon Adelson also started a newspaper, “Israel Today” or “Yisrael Hayom” in Hebrew, which has been given away free ever since its inception, simply because he wanted to offer a counterweight to what he thought was the excessively liberal bias of Israeli media.<br />The lesson in all this is that, if you’re a journalist or a columnist, and you want to make some money writing about Israeli issues, the money will be there for you if you take a right wing slant. And, it’s not just individuals working in media that have found they can make money by adopting a right wing position when it comes to speaking out about Israel – there are a whole host of organizations and public relations firms that have found there is much money to be made by doing the same.<br />So, what are we to make of someone like Miriam Adelson coming out in criticism of the Israeli government for its anti democratic position when it comes to judicial reform? I wonder whether any of those many right wing columnists who are being paid by the Jewish News Service might be having second thoughts now, especially if one of the most prominent supporters of that news service has taken a position that is at direct odds with what almost everyone writing for that new service has been advocating?<br />As publisher of this newspaper I’m beholden to no one. Lately I’ve been asked many times why I continue to tolerate Myron Love’s extreme opinions? It’s not as if there’s any particular financial reward for this newspaper by continuing to carry what I myself dismiss for the most part as right wing zealotry on Myron’s part.<br />But Myron’s latest column in our print issue (not published on this website) is really over the top when he refers to another one of Melanie Phillips’ columns (taken from the Jewish News Syndicate) in which she justifies anything the Israeli government might do on the grounds that it represents the wishes of Israeli voters.<br />Do I need to remind anyone that the National Socialist Party in Germany also won a fully democratic election in that country in 1933 with only 33% of the vote and was able to take power as a result? Once in power, of course, the Nazis began the rapid emasculation of democratic institutions within that country, among which were the courts.<br />We have seen this played out in so many other countries, where an ostensibly democratically elected government begin either to dismantle or neuter democratically constructed institutions, especially courts, that were put in place by the founders of those countries to protect the citizenry from having their rights taken away by politicians who do not believe in democracy. We saw it with Donald Trump, with Jair Bolsenaro in Brazil, and we’re still seeing it with Narendra Modi in India.<br />To pretend that simply holding an election where a party or parties win enough votes – in whatever electoral system might be in place, is sufficient evidence that a country is democratic is either hopelessly naïve or it’s cynical to the extreme, when it is meant to serve as a justification for the trampling of the powers of the courts in a particular country.<br />I was glad to see that even the President and CEO of our own Jewish Federation here actually issued a criticism of what the government of Israel is doing in their most recent message to members of the community. Here, if you haven’t seen it already, is what Gustavo Zentner and Elaine Goldstine had to say in their message, which was issued on March 10, about what the Netanyahu government is proposing to do:<br />“Unfortunately, Israel has also seen an increase in polarization and tensions regarding proposed judicial reforms. This has sparked complex political debates that are taking place within Israel, and throughout the diaspora, with many of us concerned of how outcomes of these issues will affect our ties to Israel and Jews in the diaspora. While governments and policies change, our support of Israel remains steadfast. Yet, our strong bond and our love for Israel and its people has not stopped us from voicing our concerns regarding those policies, which have also been shared through our agency partners, as well as Jewish Federations of North America. In an open letter to the Government of Israel, our community highlighted that ‘the essence of democracy is both majority rule and protection of minority rights’ which is critical to the continued prosperity of Israel, its society, and people. We are monitoring the situation constantly and will continue to act accordingly.”<br />As well, you can read a story elsewhere on this site (<a href="https://jewishpostandnews.ca/rss/mike-bloomberg-israels-judicial-reforms-could-make-brexits-economic-effects-look-like-bubkes/">Mike Bloomberg on Israel&#8217;s proposed judiciary reform)</a> about what former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg had to say about what is going on in Israel, when he compared what will happen to Israel’s economy if the judicial reforms that are being proposed go through with what happened to Britain’s economy following Brexit.<br />Granted, most of us are still supportive of Israel – and we draw a distinction between what we see as Israel and the government that happens to be in power at any given moment, but when Israel is tipping toward becoming an autocratic theocracy, many of
us in the West – as well as a good many Israelis themselves, are disgusted. One wonders whether, if Israel’s economy does begin to suffer as a result of what the new government is doing, whether the religious parties in the coalition will be willing to absorb cuts to the financing of their religious schools as a result? Hardly likely.<br />Speaking of cuts in Israel, I was made aware of something that has happened in that country as a result of a story we published last issue about Miles Guralnick, who was trying to raise money for Parkinson’s research by collecting donations for a run he will be doing on March 17.<br />In that article, I wrote that Miles was a medical student in Israel. I was corrected by his mother, Rebecca Guralnick. (By the way, Miles’ wife’s name is also Rebecca – daughter of Jack and Belva London. Talk about confusing.) Apparently Miles would like to enter into Medicine, but if he does, it won’t be in Israel. Rebecca Guralnick explained to me that foreign students are no longer able to enroll in Israeli medical schools. I checked – and that is indeed the case as of September 2022. It turns out that Israel is suffering from a doctor shortage – the same as so many other countries around the world, and because many students from outside Israel had studied medicine there through the years, but had left Israel to return home – or practice elsewhere, the Israeli government had decided not to allow foreign students to enroll in medical schools there any longer.<br />I also looked into the nursing situation in Israel – out of curiosity. It turns out that Israel is suffering from a nursing shortage as well. I don’t know if you’re as surprised to learn that as I was. I suppose I was labouring under the misconception that Israel had a first-rate medical system, including plenty of doctors and nurses. Maybe that was once the case, but it appears it’s not the case any more.<br />So, while there is still much to admire about Israel, there is also a great deal that leaves me shaking my head – wondering where Israel is headed. And, as I’ve noted many times previously, with Winnipeg having become a prime destination for many Israelis intent on leaving that country over the past 20 years, one wonders how many more Israelis might be thinking about leaving as well &#8211; and coming to Winnipeg?</p>
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		<title>Judicial Reform: An alternate midrash to Minister Karhi’s</title>
		<link>https://jewishpostandnews.ca/demo-content/demo-articles/judicial-reform-an-alternate-midrash-to-minister-karhis/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Bernie Bellan]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 18 Mar 2023 14:57:57 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Opinion]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://jewishpostandnews.ca/?p=10169</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[By BRYAN SCHWARTZ Shlomo Karhi, Minister of Communications, the other day sent a Purim-time message to Israeli reserve soldiers who are protesting against judicial reform, even to the point of refusing to report for service. Minister Karhi quotes Mordecai telling Esther that if she does not speak up, “salvation will come from elsewhere” and her [&#8230;]]]></description>
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<p>By BRYAN SCHWARTZ Shlomo Karhi, Minister of Communications, the other day sent a Purim-time message to Israeli reserve soldiers who are protesting against judicial reform, even to the point of refusing to report for service. Minister Karhi quotes Mordecai telling Esther that if she does not speak up, “salvation will come from elsewhere” and her house will be destroyed. Just as Mordecai would not bow down, so must the governing coalition refuse to yield to “hegemony”. He tells the reservists that they should suffer the fate of the scapegoat during a different holy day, Yom Kippur.<br />Minister Karhi is not actually a member of the National Religious Party, but he is supporting its agenda on judicial reform.<br />What about another plank of the National Religious Party that wants the value of Torah Study written into the Israeli constitution?<br />All right then, let us study some Torah here.<br />Specifically, the Book of Esther.<br />Mordecai refused to bow down to secular tyrants because only the Creator is sovereign. That is not the same as believing the views of your own political faction are supreme and refusing to respect the views of many – likely most – of the Israeli population against radical judicial reform. Still less did Mordecai express contempt for views of the part of his people who are regularly risking their livings for their nation – as do the reservists.<br />As for Mordecai advising about salvation coming from elsewhere. Let us look at the whole quote. Esther had just reminded Mordecai that the penalty for her approaching the king without permission is death. What Mordecai wanted her to do was not to stay silent but rather to speak truth to power.<br />How did Minister Karhi miss Mordecai’s words about not staying silent in the face of power? The traditional view of Torah interpretation was to consider the entire corpus of scriptures and find ways to interpret all the different passages so that they cohere. The rules do not permit selectively ignoring words within the very same sentence as you are quoting.<br />Mordecai is urging Esther to step up and risk her life even though she currently occupies a position of luxury and privilege. How is that analogous to army reservists who are speaking up against an initiative of the current government that, in their sincere belief, jeopardizes themselves and the whole nation? Reservists are not a pampered or arrogant elite. They are the people who serve in the army, stay in Israel despite all the stress and danger, and continue to do their duty year after year.<br />What is the “elsewhere” that Mordecai refers to as the alternate source of salvation? Perhaps divine intervention, perhaps through some other human instrument than Esther if she resiles from her duty? Minister Karhi says the “people of Israel” will manage without the protesting reservists. Precisely who within the people?<br />If Minister Karhi continues to align himself with the Religious Zionist party, then salvation will not come from Torah students who will be exempted from military service. It is less likely to come from new immigrants to Israel; many will be deterred by narrowing changes to the Law of Return, by refusals to accept conversions done otherwise than in accordance with the views of the state-recognized rabbinate.<br />Many of us believe that if you identify as Jewish and Israeli and are willing for those reasons to serve in the army, you deserve abiding gratitude and unstinting acceptance – including from people who have never so served and never will.<br />Minister Karhi claims that the governing coalition came to power to carry out the judicial reforms. Proof text, please. I see where the Religious Zionist party clearly sets out its agenda in this respect. But the Smotrich party won about a tenth of the overall vote. Where exactly, in writing, does the Likud party’s official platform adopt the Smotrich view on judicial reform?<br />Or are we referring to an oral tradition of Likudism, outside of the written canon? Can you show us the pre-election videos, the recorded interviews, and the speeches at rallies, where Likud adopted as a core plank the ultra plans of the Smotrich party?<br />Maybe somebody in Likud said something at some point, I do not know. But enough to show that a majority of Likud supporters, let alone a majority of Israelis, voted to endorse the Smotrich agenda?<br />In any event, a party platform is not a revelation from Sinai. It is a principle of constitutionalism in democracies generally that reform to the supreme law of a state, in particular, requires an exceptional degree of deliberation and support.<br />Maybe by “coming to power”, Minister Karhi is referring to the coalition deal involving his party and the Smotrich faction. But how is legitimacy on a fundamental constitutional reform secured by adhering to any particular demand by a particular faction in the Knesset – indeed, still a relatively small faction in the governing coalition itself?<br />Minister Karhi actually is in power. Yet he speaks as though he is an intrepid outsider, the prophet, the dissident, attacking the ruling hegemons. If he rejects the idea that a particular faction of jurists should be able to ensure that they are exclusively replaced by like-minded jurists, fair enough. None of which leads to the idea that you should act like a hegemon yourself, rather than seeking peace and consensus in your community. Mordecai is remembered by the Torah – in the conclusion of the book of Esther –as seeking the good of his people and “speaking peace” to all their descendants.<br />Israel is long past the time it can afford more inflammatory statements like Minister Karhi’s. No outcome justifies disdain for committed members of Israeli society; for consuming society with internal conflict; for encouraging Israel’s mortal enemies to exult in its divisions.<br />I call again for even half a minyan with the governing coalition – that is all it would take – to state with clarity and conviction that they will follow President Herzog’s call to end immediately the self-immolation. Responsible officials should sit down and reason together. I believe that is what Mordecai would have wanted. That is the least that the people of Israel – all of its people – deserve.<br />About the Author<br />Bryan&#8217;s Jewish-themed musical &#8220;Consoulation: A Musical Mediation&#8221; premiered in the Spring of of 2018; https://consoulation.com His new album will appear in the coming months. Bryan Schwartz graduated with a doctorate in law from Yale School and holds an endowed chair at the University of Manitoba Law School. He is the author or editor of over thirty books and collections of essays. Bryan also created and helps to deliver an annual summer program at Hebrew University in Israeli law and society. He has served as a visiting Professor at both HU and Reichman university. . As a practising lawyer, Bryan has argued a number of cases at the Supreme Court of Canada, advised governments, and served as an arbitrator at the provincial, national and international level.</p>



<p><em>The preceding article first appeared on The Times of Israel website<br />Reprinted with permission</em></p>
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		<title>Some observations about the shifting Jewish population in Winnipeg and the legacy of Harvey Rosen</title>
		<link>https://jewishpostandnews.ca/demo-content/demo-articles/some-observations-about-the-shifting-jewish-population-in-winnipeg-and-the-legacy-of-harvey-rosen/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Bernie Bellan]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 07 Jan 2023 22:02:37 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Opinion]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://jewishpostandnews.ca/?p=8961</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[By BERNIE BELLAN I’ve been writing about Jewish population trends in Winnipeg for many years now, but never more so since the 2016 census produced wildly inaccurate results for the entire Jewish population of Canada. (I’ve explained numerous times why the figures from the 2016 census were so out of whack. Simply put, it was [&#8230;]]]></description>
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<p>By BERNIE BELLAN I’ve been writing about Jewish population trends in Winnipeg for many years now, but never more so since the 2016 census produced wildly inaccurate results for the entire Jewish population of Canada. (I’ve explained numerous times why the figures from the 2016 census were so out of whack. Simply put, it was because “Jewish” was no longer listed as a choice for respondents in answer to the question about ethnic origin. Instead, one had either to write in “Jewish” or else choose a different ethnic origin.)<br />But now that the 2021 census has provided the most complete information ever obtained about the ethnic and religious composition of Canada, one would expect that Jewish federations throughout the country would be eager to analyze those results almost immediately.<br />It may be time consuming for someone to begin analyzing data from the 2021 census, but statisticians from statcan are very helpful when it comes to providing data that cannot be readily extracted simply by taking a look at the statcan 2021 census site. Unfortunately, there doesn’t seem to be any great rush for Jewish federations across the country to begin analyzing data from the 2021 census, especially as it relates to Jewish populations in different cities.<br />When I asked a spokesperson from our own Jewish Federation whether they’d be interested in having statcan produce specific data as it would relate to our own Jewish community I was told that all Jewish federations across the country have hired one individual to analyze all data. You would think though that, considering our federation has long employed an individual whose ostensible responsibility included “planning,” that the federation here would be eager to analyze the data that statcan has now produced.<br />So, instead of waiting for who knows how long for one individual working for all Jewish federations across the country to begin to analyze census data, I took it upon myself to work with a statistician from statcan and begin analyzing the data.<br />Why have I been so interested in analyzing data about the Jewish population of Winnipeg, you might ask? It’s simply because I’ve never trusted the data that our Jewish Federation has been reporting for years. For so long the Jewish Federation here has been reporting various figures for the size of our Jewish population – always in the neighbourhood of 16,000, but without any empirical evidence to support that figure. My own analysis of available data showed that the true figure was in the 12,000 range.<br />I could never get anyone from the Jewish Federation to provide empirical date that would substantiate a figure of 16,000 for our Jewish population here.<br />For instance, when I interviewed Faye Rosenberg Cohen, who was then the Chief Planning and Allocations Director for the Jewish Federation of Winnipeg, I posed this question to her: “…can you put your finger on how many new immigrants have come here over the years?”<br />Faye responded: “I can honestly say when I look at those numbers it’s somewhere around 1/3 of the community.”<br />JP&amp;N: “So you’d say it’s somewhere between 4-5,000?”<br />Faye: “I think it’s more than that.”<br />Based upon that answer, the Jewish population of Winnipeg would have to be at least 15,000, but as I’ve shown since information about Canada’s ethnic and religious composition was released this past November, it is simply impossible that Winnipeg’s Jewish population could be more than 14,270 – at an absolute maximum, and is very likely much smaller than that, because many of those 14,270 individuals reported that while, one of their ethnic origins may have been “Jewish,” their religion was something else entirely. I suppose one can still identify as “Jewish” when one’s religion is Christian, but I would submit that would be a real stretch for most people to accept.<br />It shouldn’t come as a surprise though that the Jewish Federation here would want to embellish the size of our community; it serves to bolster the federation’s case that it has been so successful in attracting immigrants here. And, it has been very successful in doing that.<br />But, back in August I asked Faye Rosenberg Cohen what I described as a key question: “Does anyone keep track of how many immigrants actually stay here?” The answer, unfortunately, is no. So, even if the Federation has been quite successful in attracting Jewish immigrants here, it is not only possible that a very high proportion of those immigrants have left Winnipeg, it is very likely the case. Otherwise, the data from the 2021 census would have shown a great many more individuals as reporting they were Jewish, either by ethnic origin or religion.<br />Further, as my story on page 1 of this issue demonstrates, individuals who identify as “Jewish” by religion are now spread out throughout the entire city. There are now only 1,035 Jews living west of the Red River and north of the CPR tracks. There are more Jews living east of the Red River than in that entire area north of the tracks – which was once home to 90% of the Jewish population as recently as 1961, when the Jewish population here almost reached 20,000.<br />Clearly, the move to newer neighbourhoods – especially in Charleswood, Bridgewater and other parts of Ft. Garry, St. Vital, and Transcona, is being spurred by the arrival of new immigrant families in seek of lower-cost housing, but what are the implications for some of the bedrock organizations of our Jewish community, especially the Rady JCC and Gray Academy?<br />We’ve already seen one of the results of the drastic decline in the Jewish population north of the CPR tracks with the decision by Etz Chayim Congregation to move to a much smaller facility on Wilkes Avenue. It will be interesting to see whether that leads to more members deciding to join that congregation once the move takes effect this summer.<br />One of the other significant aspects of the continued movement of individuals away from the entire area north of the CPR tracks and west of the Red River has been the concentration of seniors in apartments, assisted living facilities and personal care homes all south of the Assiniboine River. With the aging of our community, in which a full 23% of our Jewish population is now over 65 – the highest proportion it’s ever been in our history, one wonders what the long-term consequences will be for that trend.<br />With a high number of Jewish seniors now living in Crescentwood, especially in apartments on Wellington Crescent and neighbouring streets, that certainly portends well for the Shaarey Zedek once renovations are complete there in 2024. But, just as the Rady JCC has seen quite a large drop-off in membership ever since the onset of Covid, one wonders whether many seniors will be as anxious to return to attending synagogue in person once the Shaarey Zedek returns to its traditional home.<br />The combination of population shifts along with the Covid epidemic has drastically altered the preferences of large portions of what is now our Jewish population in terms of which Jewish facilities they choose to use. Are our organizations doing enough to take into account those very significant changes in our Jewish community? That remains to be seen.<br />Turning to another story on page 1 &#8211; about the passing of Harvey Rosen, I was always interested in reading Harvey’s columns, both for the information they contained, and for his unique turns of phrase. I was especially fond of his use of the expression, “a member of the Hebraic persuasion,” which he used instead of simply saying someone was Jewish.<br />Myron Love references Harvey’s determination to find Jewish athletes, particularly in professional sports. I remember Harvey describing his going up to a hockey player by the name of Jayden Schwartz who, at the time was playing for the St. Louis Blues, and asking Jayden whether he was “Jewish?”<br />Harvey said that Jayden very politely answered that he wasn’t Jewish, but he didn’t seem offended that someone might think he was Jewish. On the other hand, Harvey did seem obsessed with f
inding out the parentage of many athletes, as Myron notes in his story.<br />We still carry the occasional story about Jewish athletes, but those stories comes from our news agency, the Jewish Telegraphic Agency, and they tend to focus either on American or Israeli athletes. Where Harvey truly excelled was in finding local Jewish athletes. I always found it remarkable that, if there was a Jewish youngster who excelled at a particular sport here, Harvey would find them.<br />Although we occasionally get contacted by someone who informs us of a particular athlete whose story would be of interest to our readers, I’m sad to say that doesn’t happen very often. In looking back at old issues of The Jewish Post I saw that, prior to Harvey coming on board in 1976, the paper relied upon Leible Hershfield for sports stories, but Leible’s interest was in the athletes of yesteryear &#8211; when he himself was our community’s most famous athlete.<br />Harvey, though, excelled in finding the up and coming future stars of our community. And, to think he produced over 2,000 columns over the years &#8211; I wonder whether there’s another sportswriter for a Jewish paper anywhere who could match that total?</p>
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