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Amy Klein
 
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Conservatives’ ethical seal nearing kosher marketplace

WorldPublished: 28 May 2010

Counterintuitive as the need for that statement about kosher certification might sound, it was just one of the points about the Conservative movement’s planned ethical seal that the group responsible for the certification wanted to clarify at this week’s gathering of Conservative rabbis in New York.

The Hekhsher Tzedek Commission announced at this week’s Rabbinical Assembly convention that it had hired a social auditing firm to compile standards for what the seal will represent. The Magen Tzedek certification has been in development for three years following multiple scandals at the nation’s largest kosher meatpacking plant, Agriprocessors of Postville, Iowa.

 
 

ZAKA expanding Arab units

WorldPublished: 28 May 2010

JERUSALEM – At the scene of terrorist attacks, accidents, and even homicides, most Israelis are used to the sight of ZAKA volunteers — Orthodox men working to save lives or recover body parts of the dead.

What they may not know is that ZAKA, Israel’s Orthodox-run life-saving, rescue and recovery service, also has a minorities unit comprised of Bedouin, Muslim, and Druse volunteers.

Started about five years ago to serve Israel’s non-Jewish communities, primarily Bedouin in the Negev and Druse in the Galilee, the minorities unit is expanding because of its success. Nearly 100 volunteers and three units will be added.

 
 

Orthodox students are embracing social action

WorldPublished: 22 November 2009

NEW YORK – A few months after Hurricane Ike hit Galveston, Texas, in September 2008, Yeshiva University student David Eckstein went to the devastated area with 32 other students to help rebuild homes.

“The doors hadn’t been opened since the hurricane. We took the house apart and started rebuilding it, trying to rebuild someone’s life,” said Eckstein, 23, of West Hempstead, N.Y.

“When you picture something on the news, it’s hard to imagine it, but when you go in person to see the damaged that was done and the lives that were ruined, it’s not just the impact you have on them but the impact is much stronger on the volunteers.”

 
 

Ruth Messinger: We must help, and in the right ways

WorldPublished: 06 September 2009

Shortly after a failed mayoral bid in New York City ended her political career in 1997, Ruth Messinger became president of the American Jewish World Service, an international human rights organization that works to alleviate poverty, hunger, and disease in the developing world. Since then, the organization has seen its annual budget jump from $2 million to $29 million. It distributes about $13 million in grants each year to more than 400 grassroots projects around the world and has sent 3,000 Jewish volunteers overseas.

Messinger, who was recently appointed to the White House Task Force on Global Poverty, talked with JTA about the challenges of globalization, the reasons why young people are inspired to take part in her organization’s trips, and why she thinks Jews should be involved in fixing the world — not just their own communities.

 
 

Zachor: Remembrance and resistance

Denying the deniers: Q&A with Deborah Lipstadt

Cover StoryPublished: 24 April 2009

This month marks nine years since Holocaust denier David Irving lost his libel suit against historian and scholar Deborah Lipstadt, who chronicled her battle against him in “History On Trial: My Day in Court with David Irving” (Harper Collins, 2005). Lipstadt, the Dorot Professor of Modern Jewish and Holocaust Studies at Emory University, has just unveiled on www.hdot.org the translations of the popular “Myths & Facts” sheets, which help refute deniers with historical evidence, in Arabic, Farsi, Turkish, and Russian.

On the occasion of this Holocaust Remembrance Day, April 21 — 70 years since the start of World War II — Lipstadt discusses the changing face of Holocaust denial and anti-Semitism, how the next generation of Jews relate to the Holocaust and the role it should play in forging Jewish identity, and why Hollywood loves her story.

 
 

Seders focus on freedom, hunger, the Earth

Published: 03 April 2009

On April 5, 1968, Arthur Waskow was walking to his house in Washington, D.C., among rioters and armed guards. It was a neighborhood under curfew, the night after the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. was killed.

Waskow, who had been involved in the civil rights movement, spent the week ferrying food, medical supplies, and doctors from the white neighborhoods to the black neighborhoods. The next week was Passover.

“I was walking home past the army and my kishkes began to say, ‘This is Pharaoh’s Army,’” recalls Waskow, now a rabbi.

 
 
 
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