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Is There a Difference Between Jewish Voice for Peace and Students for Justice in Palestine?

Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) members inside the Westlands administrative building at Sarah Lawrence College. Photo: Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP)/Screenshot

On April 20, 2024, during the semester of encampments, the group Jewish Voice for Peace (JVP) posted perhaps its first ever factual statement on Instagram.

The full text reads: “Jewish Voice for Peace stands in solidarity with students as they establish the Popular University for Gaza on their campuses, including at Columbia, Yale, UNC Chapel Hill, and beyond. We are committed to supporting them in their actions and we will serve as an anchor to their cause. Within Universities and beyond, WE ARE ALL SJP!”

Indeed they are.

Both JVP and SJP — Students for Justice in Palestine — are part of  the network of campus anti-Israel activism. Their goals are identical, their rhetoric nearly indistinguishable, and their messages often interchangeable.

Two Differences

There are only two tell-tale indications that a message comes from JVP versus SJP — how each group refers to Israel, and to itself. JVP generally refers to the Jewish State as Israel, whereas SJP uses “the Zionist entity.”

SJP members call themselves “the resistance” and other self-aggrandizing terms, whereas JVP members depend on an association with Judaism to justify their messages. Therefore, they almost always begin their denunciations of Israel with the phrase “As Jews” or “As anti-Zionist Jews.”

On November 26, 2025, National Students for Justice in Palestine (NSJP) posted this message on Instagram: “As the student movement in the imperial core, we vehemently oppose any further encroachment on Palestinian sovereignty.”

Compare this to a May 15, 2025, JVP Instagram post: “As anti-Zionist Jews, our solidarity with Palestinians is unshakable. We stand with Palestinians seeking freedom and affirm their right to return to their homes and to live in safety and dignity.”

Take away the “As anti-Zionist Jews” identifier, and it becomes impossible to distinguish JVP from SJP messaging.

To prove my assertion, compare JVP and SJP messages on the following topics. Which one is JVP and which is SJP?

October 7

The JVP and SJP commentary on October 7 could have been written by the same person. Maybe they were.

One group equivocated that, “Inevitably, oppressed people everywhere will seek – and gain – their freedom. We all deserve liberation, safety, and equality.”

The other group praised the “struggle for complete liberation and return,” claiming that October 7 had “disrupted the very foundation of Zionist settler society.”

The first passage is from one of two messages posted on October 7, 2023,  on JVP’s Instagram page and the second is from SJP’s “Day of Resistance Toolkit.”

Genocide Accusations

Both groups regularly quote Hamas statistics to charge Israel with committing genocide and targeting civilians. Consider the following statements, one from 2021 and one from 2025.

“The Israeli military has devastated entire neighborhoods and cities, and has razed the centuries-old infrastructure of Palestinian life, decimating Gaza’s healthcare infrastructure, water supplies, electricity grid, schools, universities and cultural institutions.”

“Over the past week, Israel has stolen the lives of over 130 Palestinian parents and children and injured thousands … Severe shortages of life-saving medicines, food electricity, and clean water continue to make life unsafe and unbearable – a humanitarian catastrophe deliberately manufactured by a violent colonial project.”

The first passage comes from a recent article on the JVP website titled “Nearly two years of unspeakable loss. No more bombs,” and the second is from the May 18, 2021, Statement-12 on the NSJP website.

The Ceasefire

SJP and JVP have agreed since the October 10, 2025, ceasefire in Gaza was announced that there really is no ceasefire.

While Hamas has violated the ceasefire terms since the beginning, SJP and JVP ignore those violations and remain fixated on Israeli retaliations.

Left: NSJP via Instagram. Right: JVP via Instagram

Holiday Messages

For last year’s November 27 Thanksgiving message, the JVP and SJP Instagram messages are nearly identical, right down to the scare quotes around “Thanksgiving.”

One wrote: “This ‘Thanksgiving,’ we reject any attempt to obfuscate centuries of violence enacted by the American settler colonial project against the Indigenous nations of this land and peoples across the globe … From Turtle Island to Palestine, land back!”

The other wrote: “On this day, Indigenous people and allies confront the settler-colonial narratives of ‘Thanksgiving,’ observing it instead as a National Day of Mourning … Today and every day, we contemplate parallels between the colonization of Turtle Island and Palestine.”

Aside from the logos, it’s practically impossible to discern any differences between the messages from JVP and SJP.

Left: NSJP via Instagram. Right: JVP via Instagram

Likewise, both groups found a way to bring their mutual obsession to their Christmas messages.

Left: NSJP via Instagram. Right: JVP via Instagram

The Minneapolis Riots

Both JVP and SJP found ways to tie the anti-ICE riots in Minneapolis into statements on Gaza.

Left: NSJP via Instagram. Right: JVP via Instagram

The Maduro Arrest

Not surprisingly, both JVP and SJP object to the capture and arrest of Venezuelan strong man Nicholas Maduro. Both refer to the act as an “abduction” and “terrorism.” One compares the situation to Iran and one to Gaza. In the two Instagram posts below, one from JVP and the other from NSJP, I have removed the group logos, making it impossible to distinguish SJP’s message from JVP’s message.

NSJP and JVP via Instagram. Can you tell which is which?

With their long history of collaboration, identical agendas, and nearly identical rhetoric, Jewish Voice for Peace is nothing more than Students for Justice in Palestine with a dubious Kosher coating. Taking JVP’s “Jewishness” seriously means falling for SJP’s bait.

To use a term common among terrorism studies, JVP has become the Jewish “Wing” of SJP.

Chief Investigative Project on Terrorism (IPT) Political Correspondent A.J. Caschetta is a principal lecturer at the Rochester Institute of Technology and a fellow at Campus Watch, a project of the Middle East Forum where he is also a Milstein fellow. A version of this article was originally published by IPT.

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Board of Peace Members Have Pledged More Than $5 billion for Gaza, Trump Says

A drone view shows the destruction in a residential neighborhood, after the withdrawal of the Israeli forces from the area, amid a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas in Gaza, in Gaza City, October 21, 2025. Photo: REUTERS/Dawoud Abu Alkas/File Photo

US President Donald Trump said Board of Peace member states will announce at an upcoming meeting on Thursday a pledge of more than $5 billion for reconstruction and humanitarian efforts in Gaza.

In a post on Truth Social on Sunday, Trump wrote that member states have also committed thousands of personnel toward a U.N.-authorized stabilization force and local police in the Palestinian enclave.

The US president said Thursday’s gathering, the first official meeting of the group, will take place at the Donald J. Trump Institute of Peace, which the State Department recently renamed after the president. Delegations from more than 20 countries, including heads of state, are expected to attend.

The board’s creation was endorsed by a United Nations Security Council resolution as part of the Trump administration’s plan to end the war between Israel and Palestinian Islamist group Hamas in Gaza.

Israel and Hamas agreed to the plan last year with a ceasefire officially taking effect in October, although both sides have accused each other repeatedly of violating the ceasefire. According to Gaza’s Health Ministry, more than 590 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli troops in the territory since the ceasefire began. Israel has said four of its soldiers have been killed by Palestinian militants in the same period.

While regional Middle East powers including Turkey, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Israel – as well as emerging nations such as Indonesia – have joined the board, global powers and traditional Western US allies have been more cautious.

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Why a forgotten teacher’s grave became a Jewish pilgrimage site

Along Britton Road in Rochester, New York, a brick gatehouse sits across from ordinary homes. Beyond it lies Britton Road Cemetery, its grounds divided into family plots and sections claimed over time by Orthodox congregations and fraternal associations, past and present. Names like Anshe Polen, Beth Hakneses Hachodosh, B’nai Israel, and various Jewish fraternal organizations are found here.

On the east side of the cemetery, a modest gray headstone draws visitors who do not personally know the man buried there, who were never taught his name in school, and who claim no personal connection to his life. Some leave notes. Some light candles in a small metal box set nearby. Others whisper prayers and stand for a moment before going. They come because they believe holiness can be found here.

The grave belongs to Rabbi Yechiel Meir Burgeman, a Polish-born teacher who died in 1938. He did not lead a major congregation or leave behind an institution that bears his name. And yet, nearly a century after his death, people still visit.

Over time, Burgeman has come to be remembered as a tzaddik nistar, a hidden righteous person, whose holiness is known through their teaching and daily life rather than through any title or position. His grave has become a place of intercession. People come to pray for healing, for help in times of uncertainty, and for the hope of marriage. What endures here is not an individual’s biography so much as a practice: the belief that a life lived with integrity can continue to shape devotion, even after the body has been laid to rest.

In life, Burgeman was not known as a miracle worker or a public figure. He was a melamed, a teacher of children, living plainly among other Jewish immigrants in Rochester’s Jewish center in the early decades of the 20th century. At one point, he was dismissed from a teaching post for refusing to soften his instruction. He later opened his own cheder, or schoolroom. There was no congregation to inherit his name, no institution to archive his papers. When he died, he was buried in an ordinary way at Britton Road Cemetery, one grave among many.

What followed was not immediate.

Remembered in return

Rabbi Yechiel Meir Burgeman's grave is one among many at a Jewish cemetery in Rochester, New York.
Rabbi Yechiel Meir Burgeman’s grave is one among many at a Jewish cemetery in Rochester, New York. Photo by Austin Albanese

The meaning attached to Burgeman’s resting place accumulated slowly. Stories began to circulate. People spoke of his kindness, his discipline, his integrity. Over time, visitors came. The grave became a place not of answers, but of belief. For generations, this turning toward the dead has taken this same form. It is not worship. It is proximity. A way of standing near those believed to have lived rightly, and asking that their merit might still matter.

In Jewish tradition, prayer at a grave is a reflection on those believed to have lived with righteousness, asking that their merit accompany the living in moments of need. Psalms are traditionally recited. Words are often spoken quietly.

I have done something similar too. Years ago, before I converted to Judaism and before I had the means to travel, I sent a written prayer through a Chabad service that delivers letters to the grave of the Lubavitcher Rebbe in New York. Someone else carried it. I cannot say with absolute certainty what happened because of it. Only that the practice itself made space for hope that I was seen, and that a prayer was later answered in ways that shaped my life and deepened my understanding of Judaism.

Burgeman’s grave functions in a similar register, though without any institutional frame. People come not because his name is widely known, but because the story has endured. Over time, that story gathered details. The most persistent involves a dog said to have escorted Jewish children to Burgeman’s cheder so they would not be harassed along the way by other youths. The dog then stood watch until they were ready to return home. The versions differ. Some are reverent. Some are playful. Some verge on the miraculous. The story endures because it names something children needed: care, in a world that could be frightening.

In recent decades, Burgeman’s afterlife has taken on a digital form. His name surfaces in comment threads and genealogical forums, passed along by people who never met him and are not always sure how they are connected. Spellings are debated. Dates are corrected. A descendant appears. A former student’s grandchild adds a fragment. Someone asks whether this is the same man their grandmother spoke of. No single account settles the matter. Instead, memory gathers. What once traveled by word of mouth now moves through hyperlinks.

The internet allows fragments to remain visible. Burgeman’s story survives not because it was officially recorded, but because enough people cared to remember it. In this way, his legacy resembles the man himself: quiet, unadorned, sustained by actions rather than declaration.

Visitors leave letters at the grave of Rabbi Yechiel Meir Burgeman in Rochester, New York.
Visitors leave letters at the grave of Rabbi Yechiel Meir Burgeman in Rochester, New York. Photo by Austin Albanese

This story does not offer certainty. It is about remembering a life and asking if we might still learn from it and if, perhaps, it can bring us closer to faith. Burgeman left no grand monument. He left descendants. A grave. A life of Jewish values that continues to teach.

Burgeman did not seek recognition in life. After death, he became something else: a teacher still teaching, not through words, but through the way people continue to act on his memory. That is the lesson. Not any miracle. Not any legend. The quiet insistence that a life lived with integrity does not end when the casket is placed into the earth.

Some graves are instructions.

This one still asks something of us.

The post Why a forgotten teacher’s grave became a Jewish pilgrimage site appeared first on The Forward.

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Turkey Sends Drilling Ship to Somalia in Major Push for Energy Independence

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan speaks during a ceremony for the handover of new vehicles to the gendarmerie and police forces in Istanbul, Turkey, Nov. 28, 2025. Photo: REUTERS/Murad Sezer

i24 NewsTurkey has dispatched a drilling vessel to Somalia to begin offshore oil exploration, marking what officials describe as a historic step in Ankara’s drive to strengthen energy security and reduce reliance on imports.

Turkish Minister of Energy and Natural Resources Alparslan Bayraktar announced that the drilling ship Çagri Bey is set to sail from the port of Taşucu in southern Turkey, heading toward Somali territorial waters.

The vessel will pass through the Strait of Gibraltar and around the coast of southern Africa before reaching its destination, with drilling operations expected to begin in April or May.

Bayraktar described the mission as a “historic” milestone, saying it reflects Turkey’s long-term strategy to enhance national energy security and move closer to self-sufficiency.

The operation will be protected by the Turkish Naval Forces, which will deploy several naval units to secure both the vessel’s route and the drilling area in the Gulf of Aden and the Arabian Sea. The security arrangements fall under existing cooperation agreements between Ankara and Somalia.

The move aligns with a broader vision promoted by President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, aimed at reducing Turkey’s dependence on foreign energy supplies, boosting domestic production, and shielding the economy from external pressures.

Bayraktar said Turkey is also working to double its natural gas output in the Black Sea this year, while continuing offshore exploration along its northern coastline. In parallel, Ankara is preparing to bring its first nuclear reactor online at the Akkuyu Nuclear Power Plant, which is expected to begin generating electricity soon and eventually supply about 10% of the country’s energy needs.

The current drilling effort is based on survey data collected last year and forms part of Ankara’s wider plan to expand its energy exploration activities both regionally and internationally.

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