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“Establish the task force your commission recommended,” said Rabbi Amanda Greene, of Chicago Sinai Congregation. “Make progress public.”
Yaacov Behrman, a Chabad spokesman, said that the former Fox News host was spreading a “dangerous blood libel.”
“It’s hard for me to believe that someone would spend $70,000 to $80,000 to go to a school where people hate you because of your beliefs,” David Rancourt, vice provost of New College, told JNS. “I assure you that does not happen here.”
“Since the founding of our country, Jewish Americans have made significant contributions to our nation’s culture, economy and civic life,” Gov. Kim Reynolds stated.
“This is an opportunity to inspire people as to what it is about Judaism that’s actually worth defending,” he told JNS.
New Jersey working to assist residents stranded in Middle East amid regional conflict, governor says
Gov. Mikie Sherrill criticized the federal response, stating that “this administration was slow to provide proactive notifications or adjust travel warnings until many were already in a dangerous situation.”
“Hate when spoken is a First Amendment-protected activity,” Howie Beigelman, former CEO of Ohio Jewish Communities, wrote. “But hate when acted upon is illegal.”
A spokesman for the U.N. agency told JNS that it has sought information in vain from the United States, but a source close to a U.S. probe of UNRWA said that the latter withholds information.
Authorities reported that the attacker repeatedly punched a 54-year-old man while making anti-Jewish statements and forcibly removed the victim’s yarmulke before fleeing.
The South American country said that it wasn’t picking sides in the case South Africa is bringing against the Jewish state but argued that the court must not expand the definition of “genocide.”
The diplomatic backing Jerusalem has received during the war, “at least at this moment,” has been “good,” according to the foreign minister.
“School-related antisemitic incidents remain double pre-2023 levels, and too many Jewish teachers who raised concerns felt that nothing was done,” said the country’s education secretary.