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Mamdani skips Israel parade, while Jewish NYPD commissioner will march as marshal

New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani said Thursday that he will not attend this year’s Celebrate Israel parade on Sunday, bucking a longstanding mayoral tradition, but insisted that his administration is fully committed to ensuring the event proceeds safely and without disruption. Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch, who is Jewish, said she’ll represent the city in what is widely considered the largest annual celebration of Israel’s independence in the diaspora.

“I don’t believe that my presence as the mayor should determine whether or not a New Yorker is safe or secure,” Mamdani said at a press briefing at One Police Plaza alongside parade organizers and NYPD officials, which was not livestreamed on the mayor’s official social media platforms. “As the mayor of our city, I take seriously my responsibility to protect the safety and well-being of every New Yorker at every event, regardless of my attendance.”

The annual parade, now in its 62nd year, regularly draws tens of thousands of marchers and spectators to Manhattan’s Fifth Avenue, and some adjacent groups of demonstrators. It has long served as a public display of support for Israel within New York’s Jewish community. Prominent Israeli and New York politicians lead the parade, while elected officials march with their own teams alongside the route.

Eric Adams is expected to make his first public appearance since he left office on Sunday at the parade, saying in a video he posted on X that he “will be right there” to send a message of solidarity amid rising antisemitism.

Mamdani, an outspoken critic of Israel who has described the war in Gaza as a “genocide,” has faced scrutiny from Jewish leaders and Zionist organizations over his sharp criticism of Israel and embrace of Palestinian activism that is shaping his tenure as leader of the city with the largest population of Jews outside Israel. During his mayoral campaign, Mamdani refused to recognize Israel as a Jewish state and said he wouldn’t travel to the country or march in the annual parade.

Mark Treyger, CEO of the Jewish Community Relations Council of New York, which organizes the parade, praised Mamdani for his assurances after the election that the parade would receive the same level of municipal support under his administration.

When asked by the Forward who would represent the administration at the parade in his absence, Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch immediately pointed to herself. Mamdani nodded in agreement.

By designating Tisch, who was reappointed after serving in the Adams administration, strongly supports Israel and is widely respected in the Jewish community, Mamdani appeared to create some distance between himself and the parade’s pro-Israel themes while still signaling institutional support from City Hall. The choice was notable given Mamdani’s past criticism of both Israel and policing tactics, including past comments that resurfaced during the campaign in which he said: “We have to make clear that when the boot of the NYPD is on your neck, it’s been laced by the IDF” — invoking a claim made by some anti-Israel activists that training received from members of Israel Defense Forces has had a toxic effect on U.S. police.

Mamdani did not back away from his comments when asked about them last year.

Tisch said on Thursday that she will serve as one of the parade’s grand marshals and that she was “incredibly proud” to participate in what she described as “one of the most joyful days of the year.”

The police commissioner said enhanced security measures will include the largest police presence in its history, specialized crowd-safety and rapid-response units, heavy-weapons teams, robust camera coverage, and “comprehensive screening” of everyone entering the parade route. “To be blunt, we are not messing around with security at this year’s parade,” Tisch said. “We will not tolerate any disruptions to the parade. Any unauthorized persons entering the parade route will be arrested.”

Asked what guidance he had given Tisch and the NYPD regarding expected protests around the route, Mamdani said that he “made it very clear” that participants should be safe while protecting the right to protest. “We will deliver all of these things,” he said.

The post Mamdani skips Israel parade, while Jewish NYPD commissioner will march as marshal appeared first on The Forward.

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Yad Vashem chooses Germany for first overseas education centers

(JTA) — BERLIN – For the first time in its 73-year history, Yad Vashem, Israel’s Holocaust memorial museum and archive, is establishing educational centers outside the Jewish state.

The institution announced in a statement Thursday that the first centers will be in Germany — one in Munich, and a subsidiary in Leipzig.

The Conference of European Rabbis, which moved to Munich from London in 2023, said it looked forward to working together with the new center.

And Rabbi Zsolt Balla, State Rabbi of Saxony, said the decision to open an extension in Leipzig “sends a strong signal in support of a culture of remembrance, education and the protection of Jewish life.”

The sites will be shaped in consultation with partner organizations in Germany, Yad Vashem added. A brainstorming meeting is tentatively planned for early next year, with programming expected to begin in three years.

“Working together with our German partners, this center will help ensure that the truth of the Holocaust is preserved and passed on to future generations,” said Yad Vashem Chairman Dani Dayan.

Wenzel Michalski, chair of the Berlin-based Friends of Yad Vashem, participated in talks leading to the decision.

“We’re coming to an era where the witnesses are dying,” Michalski said. His late father, Franz, spoke with many school groups in Germany about his experiences during the Holocaust.

German Education Minister Karen Prien, who has Jewish roots, said that one of the goals of the centers is to help “combat antisemitism across Germany and Europe.” She added that many young people in the country “still know too little about the Shoah.”

“In a world without Holocaust survivors, one needs new ways to tell the story,” said Michalski. “It is the chief obligation and task of Yad Vashem” to ensure that they do.

The post Yad Vashem chooses Germany for first overseas education centers appeared first on The Forward.

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A rabbinical school turf war brews in Ohio over Hebrew Union College’s assets

(JTA) — Days after Hebrew Union College graduated its final rabbinical class in Cincinnati, a new Jewish seminary has its eyes on the school’s campus — and wants the state of Ohio to bestow the prize on them.

The College for Contemporary Judaism, which aims to become a new home for liberal rabbinical students in the Midwest, on Thursday added its voice to a lawsuit against HUC brought by Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost. The state’s suit claims that HUC, the Reform rabbinical school, violated state nonprofit law and misled its donors by shuttering its historic Cincinnati campus this year.

In its motion to intervene, the new college argues that it should be the rightful steward of HUC’s campus, as well as all other Cincinnati assets of the Reform movement mainstay. They include the Klau Library, the American Jewish Archives, the Skirball Museum and hundreds of millions of dollars given by donors who believed HUC would “permanently” remain in the city.

“The Attorney General has appropriately stepped forward to enforce the charitable trust obligations that bind those assets to the State of Ohio and their underlying charitable mission,” CCJ argues in its brief.

Now, the new college argued, the court “has before it a concrete, mission-aligned Ohio candidate capable of carrying forward the very charitable purpose at issue,” referring to CCJ.

A representative for HUC said the school “is responding to the Ohio attorney general’s unwarranted lawsuit and will respond appropriately to any additional filings.” A representative for Yost declined to comment, citing pending litigation.

HUC has previously criticized the state’s lawsuit against them and is fighting the state to retain its assets. The school’s president, Andrew Rehfeld, has said the allegations “mischaracterize our decision-making, misrepresent our stewardship of donor funds and ignore our sustained record of transparency and good faith.”

The College for Contemporary Judaism’s request is unusual for an institution that, for now, exists in name only. The CCJ, formally founded in 2022 in response to HUC’s closure, has no permanent home and has yet to enroll any students. It also lacks a set timeline for when its first class would start. HUC, meanwhile, with campuses in New York, Los Angeles and Jerusalem, has been the Reform movement’s foremost seminary since its founding in Cincinnati in 1875 by Rabbi Isaac Mayer Wise.

CCJ’s founders, most of whom have deep associations with HUC, argue they are better positioned than any other party to carry on the mission of ordaining liberal rabbis in the Midwest. It’s a cause they say HUC is abandoning, in violation of its own charter language promising to “permanently maintain” a campus in Cincinnati — the same language AG Yost is drawing on in the state’s suit against the college.

“We are stepping forward and saying, ‘We are willing to undertake this role,’” Andrew Berger, a founder and board chair of CCJ, told JTA. Berger added that the state AG’s office was “aware of us.”

Berger is a former HUC board chair, while CCJ’s founding president, Rabbi Gary Zola, is the former longtime executive director of HUC’s archives. The school’s honorary president, Rabbi Sally Priesand, was ordained at HUC as the first woman rabbi in the United States.

Such deep connections to HUC make their participation in a lawsuit against the seminary “very difficult,” Berger said. He said the school had angered many when it pulled out of Cincinnati, which he argued was “a completely unnecessary decision.” (HUC has cited financial struggles, while its opponents argue that the move didn’t result in major cost savings.)

Critics of the move have also accused HUC of abandoning Jews in the Midwest, South and Mountain West, regions where its Cincinnati graduates would often find work. The school also sparked blowback, and earlier attention from AG Yost, by proposing a sell-off of some of its rare books.

Other graduates and staff have argued the move makes sense as the school focuses on its New York and Los Angeles campuses, which were established in the 1950s and ’60s following the college’s merger with the Jewish Institute of Religion. Prior to the closure decision, HUC said enrollment at the Cincinnati campus was falling far faster than at the L.A. and New York campuses, reflecting the preference of students to live and study at its coastal locations.

This month, four rabbis were ordained at the Cincinnati campus, and six students received their doctoral or master’s degrees, according to HUC. Nineteen rabbis and cantors were ordained in New York, and six rabbis were ordained in Los Angeles.

CCJ, its founders say, was formed in response to the void being left by HUC.

“There are not enough rabbis being ordained today,” Berger said. “With all the rabbinical seminaries now being on the coasts, I very much fear for Jewish life in the middle of the country. It’s always been a little difficult to recruit rabbis to the middle of the country, but it’s going to be so much harder without a seminary here.”

To make its argument for HUC’s assets, CCJ is drawing on a legal term known as “cy pres,” which permits charitable assets reclaimed by a court to be redistributed to a different nonprofit with a similar mission. Yost’s lawsuit, which he filed last month, asks the court to redistribute ownership of HUC’s campus and other assets to a different, unspecified “permanent” rabbinical seminary in Cincinnati.

CCJ, which bills itself as a nondenominational “school for Liberal Judaism,” wants to be that home. Its ordination procedures will be administered by the school itself, rather than any particular movement.

Though Berger said the school has not yet held direct conversations with movement leaders, he noted that, due to a general shortage of clergy, many liberal congregations today are hiring rabbis with nontraditional ordinations.

While HUC leaders sometimes spoke of their struggles to fill Cincinnati’s classrooms, CCJ is confident they can recruit their own student body.

“We’ve been approached by a number of prospective students who have said to us, ‘We would love to come to your school,’” Berger said.

The post A rabbinical school turf war brews in Ohio over Hebrew Union College’s assets appeared first on The Forward.

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Jewish group files cease and desist order against Park Slope Food Coop

(New York Jewish Week) — A group of pro-Israel activists has filed a cease and desist motion in response to a prominent Brooklyn grocery store’s decision to boycott Israeli products, the Jewish Telegraphic Agency has learned.

The letter was sent to the manager and board of directors of the Park Slope Food Coop, alleging that the boycott approved in a vote on Tuesday night is illegal.

The cease and desist letter was submitted by the National Jewish Advocacy Center, a legal and civil rights group, on behalf of Jewish member-owners of the coop.

It alleges that the boycott came about “through a campaign of harassment, intimidation, deception, and slurs,” and that the board of the coop itself “used its authority to target, exclude, or economically disadvantage Jews and Israelis while exposing the cooperative to risk.”

The letter further alleges that the boycott violates the basic principles of the coop’s autonomy by permitting the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement to gain a foothold through the PSFC Members for Palestine group.

The Park Slope Food Coop did not return JTA’s request for comment.

Thursday’s cease and desist is not the first legal action taken in the two days since the boycott passed.

CUNY law professor Jeffrey Lax announced in a post on X Wednesday that he had filed a New York State Division of Human Rights complaint on behalf of his advocacy group, S.A.F.E Campus. It alleges that the boycott violates a state law preventing the boycott or blacklist of products based on protected classes, including national origin. (The law does not apply to boycotts related to labor disputes or unlawful discriminatory practices.)

Barbara Mazor, a member and organizer of Coop4Unity, which opposed the decision to bar Israeli products from the grocery store, said in a statement shared with JTA that she does not believe members fully understood the consequences of the boycott ahead of the vote.

“Cooperatives are based on the concept that people are able to set aside their differences to come together and work collectively on a shared project for mutual benefit,” Mazor said. “It is truly sad that the membership has chosen to adopt this resolution, which I believe will only harm the Coop and provide no relief from the bloodshed and destruction. It is a missed opportunity to amplify voices working toward rebuilding and coexistence.”

Some members are considering cancelling their memberships, while others have suggested temporarily suspending their memberships, texts viewed by JTA show. But Coop4Unity leadership is asking its supporters to refrain from taking action until next month’s general meeting, during which members will elect one person to an open seat on the board of directors.

Among the nine Israeli products that will no longer be sold by the coop, two are made at least in part by Arab Israelis. Julia Zaher, an Arab-Israeli woman from Nazareth, is the owner and CEO of Al Arz Tahini. Equal Exchange olive oil is an Arab-Jewish collaborative product created by nonprofit Sindyanna of Galilee. (Equal Exchange also sells a Palestinian olive oil from the West Bank.)

UJA-Federation of New York announced in a press release Thursday that it will distribute 20,000 bags of Bamba at the Celebrate Israel Day Parade on Sunday in response to the boycott results.

The post Jewish group files cease and desist order against Park Slope Food Coop appeared first on The Forward.

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