Saturday, September 30, 2023

Man arrested on suspicion of making 150 bomb threats against US Jewish institutions One message prompted the evacuation of 1,100 students from 20 schools in Pennsylvania Richard Percival BY RICHARD PERCIVAL SEPTEMBER 29, 2023 13:55

 

Man arrested on suspicion of making 150 bomb threats against US Jewish institutions

One message prompted the evacuation of 1,100 students from 20 schools in Pennsylvania

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Eddie Manuel Nunez Santos has been arrested by Peruvian police (Photo: Peru National Police)

Peruvian police have arrested a man on suspicion of making bomb threats against 150 US Jewish institutions during the Rosh Hashanah holiday.

Eddie Manuel Nunez Santos is accused of making the threats to schools, synagogues, hospitals and airports. These threats triggered evacuations and flight delays.

The US Department for Justice said the alleged threats, conveyed by email, were directed at targets in New York City as well as in Alaska, Pennsylvania, Connecticut and Arizona.

One threat prompted the evacuation of 1,100 students from 20 schools in Pennsylvania, US authorities said. The threat cited by prosecutors read: "I placed multiple bombs in all of the schools from your School Districts. 

“The bombs will blow up in a few hours. I'll gladly smile when your families are crying because of your deaths."

A spokesperson for the department said all the threats Santos allegedly made proved to be hoaxes. They added that Santos’ motive in some cases was to get youths to send him sexually explicit photos, or he would set off bombs.

US Attorney Damian Williams said the alleged threats "caused an immediate mobilisation by federal and state authorities, diverting critical law enforcement and public safety resources, and caused fear in hundreds of communities across this country.”

The eight-page indictment charges Santos with two felony counts related to messages he is accused of sending to multiple people in New York - making threatening interstate communications and perpetrating a hoax. Each carries a maximum penalty of five years in prison.

Santos, 33 of Lima in Peru, was also charged with attempted sexual exploitation of a child, attempted coercion and enticement of a minor and attempted receipt of child pornography. 

Those charges, for which he could face up to 30 years in prison if convicted, stem from his attempt at persuading a 15-year-old girl in New York to send him sexually explicit photos.

Santos faces extradition to the United States under the New York City federal indictment.

Hamburg's Jews to begin rebuilding synagogue destroyed after Kristallnacht 'This moment is a turning point for our Jewish history in Hamburg', a local community member declared Florence Bean BY FLORENCE BEAN SEPTEMBER 29, 2023 16:34

 

Hamburg's Jews to begin rebuilding synagogue destroyed after Kristallnacht

'This moment is a turning point for our Jewish history in Hamburg', a local community member declared

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Hamburg's Bornplatz Synagogue could accommodate 1,200 people but was destroyed by the Nazis (Photo: Wikimedia Commons)

The Jewish community of Hamburg is to begin rebuilding what was once one of Germany’s most prominent synagogues more than 80 years after it was destroyed following Kristallnacht – the Night of Broken Glass.

Dedicated in 1906, Hamburg’s Bornplatz Synagogue was the city’s main synagogue, and the first in the city to openly face a public street. Its visibility and impressive stature – it accommodated 1,200 worshippers and its dome rose 40 metres into the sky – meant it came to symbolise the legal equality of Hamburg’s Jewish community with its members' non-Jewish contemporaries.

On November 9 1938 it was desecrated during Kristallnacht, the series of pogroms that saw Nazis destroy synagogues and Jewish-owned stores across Germany.

Unlike many other sites targeted by the Nazi forces, Bornplatz was not burned down. Instead, In the spring of 1939, the Jewish community was forced to sell the building to the city of Hamburg for far below its market value and to pay for its subsequent demolition. 

Now, 84 years on, Hamburg officials have cut up a copy of the Nazi-era Aryanisation document that ordered the demolition in a ceremony to officially mark the restitution of the site, and the local community is preparing to rebuild the synagogue.

“We apologise for coming to the decision so late to give them back their property,” Dirk Kienscherf, a local official from the centre-left Social Democratic Party, said to representatives of the Jewish community at the ceremony.

Daniel Scheffer, an Israeli-born Hamburg-based entrepreneur, spearheaded the rebuilding campaign, which began in 2020.

He previously told the JC of how he had been “overwhelmed” to discover a silver Torah crown engraved with a dedication to Markus Hirsch, the first rabbi of the Bornplatz, in the shop of a local antique dealer.

But, he said, “I also felt embarrassed and ashamed and angry, because I was being asked to buy back what was stolen from my ancestors. That feeling lasted for days.”

After purchasing the crown Sheffer brought it with him to dozens of meetings with public officials and other potential supporters of his campaign, “No to antisemitism. Yes to the Bornplatz Synagogue.”

While some have expressed concern that the rebuilding could make it possible for the atrocities of the Holocaust to slip out of public consciousness – currently a mosaic at the site commemorates the synagogue’s destruction – Sheffer has hailed the restitution of the site as a major turning point.

“This moment today is a turning point for our Jewish history in Hamburg,” a local radio station quoted him as saying.

“It is the victory of justice and Jewish life in Hamburg over the barbarism of the Nazis.”

The site is currently being excavated. When this process has been completed an architectural competition to determine the designer of the new synagogue will be held. A bunker standing next to the synagogue will be demolished.

Lionel turns shul singing into a family affair World-renowned cantor Chazan Rabbi Lionel Rosenfeld was joined by close family as he led congregants at Woodside Park Synagogue over Yom Kippur Gaby Wine BY GABY WINE SEPTEMBER 28, 2023 14:57

 

Lionel turns shul singing into a family affair

World-renowned cantor Chazan Rabbi Lionel Rosenfeld was joined by close family as he led congregants at Woodside Park Synagogue over Yom Kippur

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Rabbi Lionel Rosenfeld with his grandson Ori

Bands consisting of family members have long been a source of fascination — as well as brilliant music. Think Jackson Five, the Carpenters and, in more recent times, the notorious Gallagher brothers.

Now Anglo-Jewry can boast its own (far more harmonious) family singing group, consisting not only of siblings but members of three generations.

Chazan Rabbi Lionel Rosenfeld (inset) regularly sings with his family, and this Yom Kippur, the world-renowned cantor was joined by his two sons, two sons-in-law and three grandsons as he led congregants at Woodside Park Synagogue in north-west London.

Reflecting on the inter-generational group, who were accompanied by several other choristers, Rabbi Rosenfeld said: “It’s an incredible experience emotionally and so satisfying to know that [singing chazanut] has been passed down to my grandchildren.

“All my children love to sing and have wonderful voices, including my daughters.”

It was the second year running that Rabbi Rosenfeld, 81, who served as chazan and later the rabbi of Western Marble Arch Synagogue for more than 25 years before moving to Israel, had flown over to lead the Yom Kippur overflow service with his family, having been invited by his nephew, chazan David Behrman, who led the main service.

Speaking to the JC, synagogue chairman Andrew Harris said: “[Chazan Rosenfeld and his choir] created a wonderful atmosphere, encouraging everyone to participate in what was an inspiring and uplifting experience.

“Both chazans worked together seamlessly and [...] provided a fabulous variety of services.”

While all his children and grandchildren have grown up immersed in liturgical Jewish music, Rabbi Rosenfeld said that the gift of singing was “totally genetic”.

His grandfather, Notte Rosenfeld, was a well-known chazan, who had lived in Jerusalem’s Old City.

His father, the late Rabbi Abraham Rosenfeld, who was the chazan at Finchley United Synagogue, “taught me everything I know”, he said, adding: “I inherited my father’s voice and interpretations, which are all about explaining the meaning of words through music.”

Rabbi Lionel Rosenfeld has long been credited with revolutionising Jewish cantorial music after composing new tunes for the Selichot service with Stephen Glass, greatly encouraged by the former’s long-time friend, the late chief rabbi, Lord Jonathan Sacks.

“Rabbi Sacks said: ‘We have to energise the service and give it momentum. Go and write a waltz for Selichot,’” said Rabbi Rosenfeld.

“In Judaism, we don’t say prayer, we chant it.

“Rabbi Sacks defined Jewish prayer as words that come from the heart and music which comes from the soul.”

With a huge following already in the UK, Rabbi Rosenfeld is now making a name for himself in Israel. A few days before Yom Kippur, he took to the stage in Jerusalem at Beit Tovei Ha’ir retirement community with his son Gidon, 50, and grandson Ori, 21.

Ra’anan Hirsch, director of sales and marketing at the residence and Rabbi Rosenfeld’s son-in-law, told the JC: “I had the idea that three generations giving a concert would be really beautiful for the residents. It really reflected the values that we as a family cherish — family, community and singing.”

1 Million March 4 Children REJECTS Canadian LGBT Insanity | Kamel El-Cheikh 1 day ago

 


1 Million March 4 Children REJECTS Canadian LGBT Insanity | Kamel El-Cheikh 1 day ago

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Is it OK for Christians to Have Tattoos? Is It a "salvation' issue? SEP 30;It’s estimated that one in five U.S. adults has at least one tattoo. Entertainers, professional athletes, and even a version of the Barbie doll have them.

 

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