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Jessica Russak-Hoffman. Credit: Courtesy.

Jessica Russak-Hoffman

Jessica Russak-Hoffman is a writer in Seattle.

Rabbi Shlomo Litvin said Chabad of Bluegrass has already reached out to coroners statewide and urged Jewish leaders in every state to do the same.
JNS reported that Zena Ozeir is no longer an assistant attorney general in the Wolverine State, although the state attorney general’s office wouldn’t say if she was dismissed for antisemitic posts.
“Antisemitism has no place in our city, and I stand shoulder to shoulder with the Jewish New Yorkers who were targeted,” stated Zohran Mamdani, New York City mayor.
The arson of Beth Israel Congregation “is not merely an attack on a building,” the bipartisan measure states. “It is an attack on the right of individuals to worship as they deem proper.”
“We have friends everywhere. We are not alone,” Shayan Arya, a human rights activist, told attendees. “The entire nation of Israel is behind us.”
Zena Ozeir, whose LinkedIn profile still states she is a Michigan government employee, is no longer employed in the Michigan attorney general’s office.
“Be ready, the Pitmaster show is on the way,” the restaurant wrote.
“While the sun is still up, I play. Once Shabbat begins, I leave and go to shul,” Kligman told JNS.
Several bills calling for states to refer to “Judea and Samaria” are a “return to historical truth,” Mark Goldfeder, of the National Jewish Advocacy Center, told JNS.
“You’ve got a guy speaking almost like the Nazis spoke in the ’30s, and he’s meeting with him and not condemning him,” Morton Klein told JNS, after Spielberg met with the new mayor of New York City.
“If we prohibited our Washingtonian law enforcement to go to get the best training in the world, don’t you think that that might be a risk?” a state rep said. “Israelis do that pretty much better than anybody in the world.”
Rabbi A.D. Motzen, who praised the move, told JNS that there is no opt-out mechanism.