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Big Apple’s Garment Industry Steps Up to Produce Surgical Gowns During Coronavirus

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The novel Coronavirus has had its negative impact on each industry. New York City’s garment industry, however, is rising up to the call for action. The epidemic has led industry leaders to manufacture much needed surgical gowns for the city’s health care workers

By: Ilana Siyance

The novel Coronavirus has had its negative impact on each industry. New York City’s garment industry, however, is rising up to the call for action. The epidemic has led industry leaders to manufacture much needed surgical gowns for the city’s health care workers. The work will begin this week, and will provide jobs for up to 500 New Yorkers, who would have otherwise been home without work. As reported by the NY Post, the idea for local manufacturers to step up to the task of providing essentials is part of “Operation Local Production”, the White House’s response to Mayor Bill de Blasio’s urgent request for hospital protective gear during an Easter Sunday phone call.

The Mayor’s office was desperate after ordering fabric for 300,0000 hospital gowns from China, which never arrived. Last week, the Mayor said the city had “barely enough” emergency protection gear to protect frontline healthcare workers. Peter Navarro, Assistant to the President for Trade and Manufacturing Policy, had a solution for a fix which would also help the Big Apple’s struggling garment industry.

“New York’s famous garment industry was all but destroyed by the sweat shops of Asia, leaving Americans defenseless in this new war where our weapons range from masks and booties to surgical gowns,” said Navarro, the Nation’s equipment czar. “By setting in motion a plan to reinvigorate that garment industry in just seven days, Operation Local Production perfectly captures the spirit, speed, and innovation of a new Trump economy springing up swiftly in Trump time to combat the invisible virus. This is Buy and Build American at its very best”.

The White House was successful in getting a million yards of waterproof fabric from healthcare company Owens & Minor for NYC within a few days, thanks to the help of private enterprise and the National Council of Textile Organizations. UPS even volunteered a truck and driver which delivered the fabric from North Carolina in only two days. The fabric will be sent to four lead manufacturers, including Course of Trade, which is a non-profit organization in Sunset Park that provides free sewing training to New Yorkers in-need, as per de Blasio’s office.

The Mayor’s office announced that this week over 40,000 gowns will be made with the Owens & Minor fabric. By May 23 the production is slated to jump to 400,000 gowns. “I’m so thankful to Peter Navarro and so proud of the New Yorkers who are coming together in this time of need to help others,” said the Mayor.

“Our healthcare workers are heroes on the front line – we must use every tool we’ve got to ensure their safety,” said de Blasio in a statement.

In contrast, last month White House officials had swiftly sent protective equipment to frontline NYPD detectives, less than 24 hours after getting an emergency email from the chief of department in what became known as “Operation Blue Bloods.”

NYC Food Banks Feeding Record Numbers During Virus Related Unemployment Crisis

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NYC’s food banks are now servicing a wide array of newly unemployed residents. The Big Apple’s soup kitchens, food banks and do-good pop-up services are straining to meet the increasing needs of residents during the coronavirus crisis. Photo Credit: via US Air Force

By Hadassa Kalatizadeh

NYC’s food banks are now servicing a wide array of newly unemployed residents. The Big Apple’s soup kitchens, food banks and do-good pop-up services are straining to meet the increasing needs of residents during the coronavirus crisis. As reported by the NY Post, actors, musicians, artists and even graduate school students are starting to show up at the city’s food banks, as the city’s unemployment rises.

Winston Majette, executive director of the Harlem chamber of commerce, confirmed the influx of hundreds of neighborhood newcomers. “That’s the dynamic in just two weeks,” Majette said. Similarly, City Harvest said it has experience the growing need. The nonprofit, which distributes food donated by restaurants and other retailers to about 250 food pantries and soup kitchens across NYC, says it delivered 6.6 million pounds of food between March 9 and April 12 this year. That is close to 5 million pounds more than the same period last year, as per Racine Lee Droz, City Harvest’s director of food sourcing. “Before COVID, we saw the same faces every week. Now we see lots of families with young children.”

Food Bank for New York City, which is the largest anti-hunger organization in the city, says the number of people served could double or even triple from the 2.5 million level before coronavirus. “In Richmond Hills, Queens, at the River Fund, we had an agency serving 1,000 to 1,500 people before COVID,” said Leslie Gordon, Food Bank’s president and chief executive. “It’s now going up to 5,000 people in line and that could continue to grow. This is not unique. It’s a bellwether for what is happening across New York City.”

“I felt like I had landed in a war zone,” said Diana Lee, founder of the Do-Good Auto Coalition, whose sponsors include Maserati. “There were hundreds of people lined up around the block. They were fighting for food, shouting at each other when they thought some people were taking too much. It was really hard. I’ve never seen anything like it. By the time we unloaded all of the food, 75 percent of it was already gone.” Last week the organization delivered 2,500 pounds of food from three currently shuttered Pret a Manger outlets.

Last week, about 791,000 NY residents applied for unemployment benefits, as per the Department of Labor. A New School study revealed that New York State has already lost 1.2 million jobs, and projects that one-third of the city could soon be unemployed.

Last Wednesday, Mayor Bill de Blasio announced a plan to spend $170 million on food for the hungry. “People are literally asking, ‘Where is my next meal coming from?’,” said de Blasio. Non-profits have been rising to the task left and right, and restaurant-donation pickups from places like Pret A Manger and Paris Baguette have also been swelling.

City Harvest’s Droz says the nonprofit expects things to get even worse before it gets better. “The need will last far longer than when the government reopens the city because so many people are unemployed,” she said. “We plan on operating this way until the end of September.”

NYPD Seizes Drone Documenting Burials on Hart Island Amid Virus

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Workers wearing personal protective equipment bury bodies in a trench on Hart Island, Thursday, April 9, 2020, in the Bronx borough of New York. AP Photo/John Minchillo

By Hadassa Kalatizadeh

Thousands of New York City residents have perished due to COVID-19. This has led to a tragic backlog of bodies in the city’s morgues, hospitals and funeral homes. As a result, NYC officials have said that unclaimed coronavirus victims will be buried in Hart Island, sparking fear that mass burials may be taking place. NY’s Police Department has seized the drone of a photojournalist documenting the burials on Hart Island.

On Wednesday morning, Aerial photographer George Steinmetz, who has an FAA license to fly a drone, launched his $1,500 drone from a City Island parking lot to record the dismal effort in Hart Island. He was abruptly confronted by plainclothes NYPD officers. Only minutes after he began, the group of police emerged from an unmarked van and stopped him. He was issued a misdemeanor summons for “avigation”, which is an old law barring aircraft or drones from taking off or landing anywhere in New York City other than an airport. As per a report by the NY Post, his drone was also confiscated.

Steinmetz posted the following message on Instagram: “For over 150 years this island with no public access has been used to bury over a million souls who’s bodies were not claimed for private burial. With the morgues of NYC strained, the pace of burials on Hart Island has increased dramatically. I was cited by NYPD while taking this photo, and my drone was confiscated as evidence, for a court date tentatively scheduled for mid-August. #keepthememorycard”

“These are humans, and they’re basically being treated like they’re toxic waste, like they’re radioactive,” Steinmetz told the Gothamist. “I think it’s important.”

Steinmetz is not the first journalist to have his drone seized by the police while trying to photograph Hart Island, since the start of the pandemic. Mickey Osterreicher, the general counsel for the National Press Photographers Association, said than an Associated Press photographer faced similar consequences last week, while trying to record the alleged mass burials.

Mayor Bill de Blasio has already responded earlier in the month with reassurance. “There will be no mass burials on Hart Island”, de Blasio had said. “Everything will be individual and every body will be treated with dignity.”

The one-mile long island in the Bronx, has over a million unclaimed people buried there over the past few decades. Annually there have been fewer than 1,500 burials there, but now the demand has increased. Access to the island is restricted by the Department of correction, and the burials are traditionally conducted by Rikers Island jail inmates.

Experts: Coronavirus Brings Spike in Anti-Semitic Sentiments

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In this Oct. 10, 2019 file photo, candles and flowers are placed in front of a synagogue in Halle, Germany after a heavily armed assailant ranting about Jews tried to force his way into the synagogue in Germany on Yom Kippur, Judaism's holiest day, then shot two people to death nearby in an attack. Sign reads, "Jews in Halle–We stay next to you! You are not alone." Israeli researchers in their annual report released Monday, April 20, 2020, reported that the global outbreak of the coronavirus has sparked a rise in anti-Semitic expression blaming the Jews for the spread of the disease and the economic recession it has caused. (AP Photo/Jens Meyer, File)

By: Aron Heller

Israeli researchers reported Monday that the global coronavirus outbreak has sparked a rise in anti-Semitic expression blaming Jews for the spread of the disease and the economic recession it has caused.

The findings, which came in an annual report by Tel Aviv University researchers on anti-Semitism, show an 18% spike in attacks against Jews last year. The report warns that the pandemic has threatened to amp up incitement even more.

Although they did not include 2020 statistics, the researchers said the hatred has come from sources as varied as right-wing European politicians, ultra-conservative American pastors, anti-Zionist intellectuals and Iranian state authorities.

“Since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, there has been a significant rise in accusations that Jews, as individuals and as a collective, are behind the spread of the virus or are directly profiting from it,” said Moshe Kantor, president of the European Jewish Congress, an umbrella group representing Jewish communities across the continent. “The language and imagery used clearly identifies a revival of the medieval ‘blood libels’ when Jews were accused of spreading disease, poisoning wells or controlling economies.”

Tel Aviv University’s Kantor Center for the Study of Contemporary European Jewry releases its report every year on the eve of Israel’s Holocaust Remembrance Day, which begins Monday at sundown.

Researchers said the 18% increase in anti-Semitic violence in 2019 continued a steady rise of recent years. Seven Jews were killed in 2019 in more than 450 attacks across the globe against synagogues, community centers and other Jewish targets.

The researchers said the hateful response to the novel coronavirus — and the COVID-19 illness it causes — was the continuation of an ancient form of anti-Semitism that involves blaming Jews when “things go wrong.”

They recorded expressions such as pinning the source of the virus on Jews rejecting Christ, to accusing Jews of perpetrating the virus’s spread in order to profit from vaccines they would ultimately create to combat it. The FBI also warned against calls coming from neo-Nazis and white supremacists to spread contagion among Jews.

Kantor warned that the virus had the potential to spark populist extremism, similar to what erupted after the Great Depression and contributed to the rise of Nazism.

The dire warning comes on the heels of another difficult year for Jews, capped by the October shooting attack on Yom Kippur against a synagogue in the German city of Halle. Germany averaged five anti-Semitic incidents a day in 2019. Overall, at least 169 Jews were physically attacked in the world in 2019, some close to or even in their homes.

A recent survey, led by the European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights, found that four out of 10 European Jews under the age of 60 have considered emigrating because of the rise in anti-Semitism. It doesn’t say where they want to emigrate. Also, the survey said eight out of 10 feel anti-Semitism is a problem in their countries.

Several governments have taken additional measures to protect Jews, with more than 20 countries adopting the working definition of anti-Semitism as outlined by the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance. A Code of Conduct against illegal hate speech on the web was also signed in 2019 with internet platforms such as Facebook, Twitter and YouTube vowing to scan material identified as such and remove it within 24 hours.

In January, Israel hosted dozens of world leaders for the largest-ever gathering focused on combating anti-Semitism.

            (Associated Press)

NYC Transit Workers Seek Equity with First Responders in Preferential Treatment

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An MTA worker seen on the subway in Brooklyn this week. (AP photo/Frank Franklin II)

By: Hellen Zaboulani

NYC transit workers have been doing essential work and are expected to show up for work despite the risk amid coronavirus. In light of this, some of these workers feel they should be entitled to some preferential treatment when it comes to shopping — such as being permitted to skip lines and avoid product limits. For now, these special privileges are reserved for police officers, emergency responders and doctors. But some argue that transit employee’s are doing “front-line” work as well, and should be given the courtesy.

“As far as first-responders go, we’re taking them to work — and we’re not being afforded any form of courtesy or respect,” subway operator Adam Black told the Post. Black says he tried to explain this and evade the line in a Brooklyn supermarket, but to no avail. In a video he posted on Facebook, he told the grocery store security guards, “I’m dying out here. … My brethren are dying. … We’re the ones taking the first responders where they gotta go.” One of the guards acknowledged that transit workers are “essential” workers, but he said the privileges are still only for “first responders.”

As reported by the NY Post, the Transport Workers Union Local 100, which Black is a member of, said it has had a staggering 42 workers die from COVID-19. That is more casualties than was suffered by the city police, firefighters and EMTs — combined. “We are getting the essential workers to their jobs. Dozens of transit workers have died,” said union President Tony Utano. “[Transit workers] absolutely should be recognized for all that they are doing and have sacrificed.”

MTA bus driver Letty Daniels, 33, also said she tried to convince store managers to allow her to bypass the line or to purchase two packs of disinfecting wipes instead of the limit one. “We’re not saying we’re first-responders per se, but we are front-line workers. We’re on the front lines. The doctors can’t get to where they’re going, the nurses can’t get to where they’re going” without mass transit,” Daniels said. “We’re basically risking our lives, and we’re not even getting the respect that’s due.”

The MTA said it fully backs the transit workers’ push. “New York City Transit’s work force are truly heroes of this crisis,” agency spokesman Shams Tarek said in a statement. “The MTA supports any effort to provide them with a priority access to benefits being afforded our region’s heroes.”

Queens Woman Dies After Doc Prescribes Controversial Drug Cocktail Without Virus Testing

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By: Jared Evan

A 65-Year-old woman died after her doctor prescribed hydroxychloroquine and the antibiotic azithromycin, after she described coronavirus like symptoms over the phone, NY Post reported.

In early April, Ligia, a 65-year-old Queens resident, was given the drug by her general practitioner after she reported having a bad cough, fever, and shortness of breath. Ligia’s last name is being withheld on the request of her children, NBC News reported.

The doctor never tested the patient for COVID-19, but only based the prescription on her described symptoms.

NBC reported: Ligia’s symptoms were consistent with those of COVID-19, the illness caused by the coronavirus, she was never tested for the virus, her brother-in-law, Lee Levitt, told NBC News. Ligia received the drug after speaking by phone with her doctor, Levitt said. She was never evaluated in person and received no heart screening or warning about the potential side effects.

“It was handed over like a bag of cookies,” Levitt said.

The victim’s family is not sure the drugs caused her death and as of press they have not received a certificate of death.

American Heart Association have issued warnings about the drug’s potential to trigger heart arrhythmia in some patients.

The Food and Drug Administration has only approved hydroxychloroquine — which is typically used to treat malaria, lupus and rheumatoid arthritis — for treatment of COVID-19 in advanced cases of the virus and by the time patients have to rely on ventilators, the NY Post reported.

She filled her prescription on April 4, four days before the American Heart Association and the American College of Cardiology provided guidance for doctors prescribing hydroxychloroquine and azithromycin.

The AHA urged caution given that “each have potential serious implications for people with existing cardiovascular disease,” including increased risk of sudden death.

However, she never even was seen by her physician or tested to see if she actually had COVID-19.

The drug combination which President Trump has been overly excited about, has received mixed reviews from various studies. In China, a study of 50 patients found that hydroxychloroquine did not provide better help than standard care and was much more likely to cause side effects.

However, there have also been rousing success stories.

Dr. Mohammud Alam, an infectious disease specialist affiliated with Plainview Hospital, said 81 percent of infected covid patients he treated with hydroxychloroquine at three Long Island nursing homes recovered from the contagion, TJV previously reported.

Michigan State House Rep. Karen Whitsett, who represents District 9 in Detroit, credits hydroxychloroquine and President Donald Trump with saving her from the COVID-19 coronavirus, ABC reported.

Finally, The National File exclusively reported David Bryan keyboard player from Bon Jovi credited Hydroxychloroquine with helping him recover from COVID-19.

Any reputable doctor should know better than to prescribe a powerful drug, with many known side effects over the phone without even personally verifying the symptoms of the patient, let alone testing for coronavirus. It is conceivable with the pandemic in full swing in NY, some people might assume they actually have the virus, based on what they learned online and on the news.

One should never self-diagnose and its reprehensible the unnamed doctor accepted a self-diagnosis as coronavirus and prescribed powerful drugs which can affect one’s cardiovascular functioning.

11 Numbers that Show How Much NYC Has Changed Since the Virus Outbreak

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“During the week of March 22, nearly 144,000 unemployment claims were made in New York City,” Times editors Corina Knoll, Azi Paybarah, Jacob Meschke and Elaine Chen noted. “That constituted a 2,637 percent increase from last year, when the same time frame yielded about 5,300 claims.” Photo Credit: labor.ny.gov

By: Howard Riell

They say numbers don’t lie. But they certainly tell stories – including the story of New York City in this time of pandemic.

And the story is an unusual one, as the New York Times recently chronicled in its statistical look at how the coronavirus has changed life in the Big Apple. For example:

* 2,637%: Increase in unemployment claims. “During the week of March 22, nearly 144,000 unemployment claims were made in New York City,” Times editors Corina Knoll, Azi Paybarah, Jacob Meschke and Elaine Chen noted. “That constituted a 2,637 percent increase from last year, when the same time frame yielded about 5,300 claims.”

* 7%: Decrease in trash collection in Manhattan. Information for the month of March from New York City’s Department of Sanitation shows “the amount of refuse collected from Manhattan residences shrank by nearly 7 percent compared to the borough average for that month over the last five years.”

* 3,000: Number of applications to Foster Dogs. With not much to do and the need for contact, people have been reaching out to man’s best friend. “Interest in fostering pets has surged in the city, as many New Yorkers find themselves looking for companionship and having more time at home to care for a pet,” the Times pointed out.

* 18%: Decrease in morning electricity usage. The stats began to show a decrease once offices, businesses and schools started to shut down. By the end of March, the Times noted, “the city’s energy use was down by more than 10 percent, according to the New York Independent System Operator, the agency responsible for managing the state’s electric grid. The change was most pronounced on weekday mornings, when usage would normally spike as people started their days and businesses opened. With nonessential workers ordered to stay home, it appeared that many were awakening later than usual.”

42%: Increase in complaints about loud televisions. The TV has turned out to be the indispensable piece of equipment for New Yorkers trapped at home, and many try and drown out the sounds of normal life by pumping up the volume. “New Yorkers’ patience with noisy neighbors has run thin, particularly when it comes to blaring televisions, which prompted a 42 percent increase in 311 complaints in March compared to last year, according to NYC Open Data,” the Times wrote. “Complaints of loud talking and music increased by 12 and 30 percent across the city. Similarly, residential noise complaints, a broad category that’s also one of the most common, rose significantly in every borough, peaking with a 33 percent increase in Staten Island. New Yorkers are especially irritated with helicopter noise; grievances about helicopters have tripled across the city.”

NY Supreme Court Judge & Former City Councilman Noach Dear Dies of COVID-19

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Brooklyn's Orthodox Jewish communities were plunged into a sea of grief early Sunday morning when news emerged about the untimely passing of New York Supreme Court Judge and former NY City Council member Noach Dear, 67.

A beloved community activist and staunch advocate for Jewish rights

Edited By: Fern Sidman

Brooklyn’s Orthodox Jewish communities were plunged into a sea of grief early Sunday morning when news emerged about the untimely passing of New York Supreme Court Judge and former NY City Council member Noach Dear, 67. Dear had valiantly fought for his life for the last few weeks while attached to a ventilator. He too was a victim of the deadly invisible enemy known as the horrific COVID-19 novel coronavirus.

Dear, a beloved figure throughout the Jewish community, was a native Brooklynite and as a child he was in Eli Lipsker’s Pirchei Agudath Israel Choir, and sang on the first New York Pirchei album. He attended Yeshiva Torah Vodaath and went on to Brooklyn College where he graduated in 1975 with a BS degree. He also attained a Masters in Social Work degree from Yeshiva University’s Wurzweiler School of Social Work and a JD degree from Brooklyn Law School in 1991.

As a well respected and active member of the Jewish community of Midwood in Brooklyn, Dear always placed himself in the forefront of burning Jewish issues and was an ardent and vocal supporter of Israel. As a prominent member of the New York City Council from 1983-2001, he championed the issues of the communities he represented (Midwood, Bensonhurst and most of Boro Park in the 44th district) before the Council and worked tirelessly with his colleagues and former NYC Mayor Ed Koch, who gave Dear his ringing endorsement.

HaModia reported that Dear was known as an ardent advocate of protecting the morality issues which were close to the hearts of his constituents despite what other politicians held on these matters. In 1986 Dear voted against a civil rights bill that prohibited discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation in employment, housing and public accommodation. The bill passed anyway.

While serving on the Transportation Committee of the City Council, Noach opposed “dollar vans,” commuter vans which offered a transportation alternative.

After his tenure on the City Council, Dear was appointed as Commissioner of the Taxi and Limousine Commission for a seven-year term.

In 2008 he began his career on the bench, serving first as a civil court judge, then as an acting Supreme Court Justice in 2010, and finally in 2015 as a permanent justice in the Brooklyn Supreme Court, as was reported by the Jewish Press.

Dear’s civil court judgeship represented Brooklyn’s Fifth Municipal Court District, chiefly his old Boro Park base when he served on the City Council, as was reported by Matzav.com.

After serving in the civil court system for a bit over two years, Chief Administrative Judge Ann Pfau appointed Dear as a Supreme Court Justice largely as a result of his impressive accomplishments in consumer debt court. He quickly gained acclaim for cracking down on suits by debt collectors, as was reported by Matzav.

Dear became increasingly focused on consumer debt, and became the ranking judge in Brooklyn in consumer debt issues. He developed a manual for judges on credit card debt at the instruction of the state’s retiring Chief Justice Jonathan Lippmann. “I took this whole concept of consumer debt and turned it into a national issue. We changed the way we do business,” Dear told Hamodia at the time.

When Rachel “Ruchie” Freier made history in Brooklyn by becoming the first-ever Hasidic woman to become a judge in the U.S., it was Noach Dear who served as master of ceremonies for the event that was held at Borough Hall in downtown Brooklyn.

According to a December 2016 report in the Brooklyn Eagle, Dear said, “When Ruchie decided to run, I don’t think there was anybody anywhere who thought Ruchie was going to win. They said that Borough Park is never going to vote for a woman for judge. They got that wrong. One of the things I said to them was ‘Did you meet her yet? Meet her and tell me then.’ I met her a few years ago, and I said to myself that this is someone who is outstanding, she’s really good. She’s prepared and ready.”

Yeshiva World News reported that Dear’s name was splashed on newspaper headlines in 2017 when he was subject to an anti-Semitic incident on the streets of Brooklyn. A man began screaming anti-Semitic expletives at him as he was walking near Maimonides Hospital early in the morning. Dear ignored the man, entered his car and called the police.

Former New York State Assemblyman Dov Hikind, who served the same general community as Dear on the state level, said, “This is such sad news. Noach was a champion, a fighter for his people and all of his constituents. He especially cared for the voiceless and powerless, and dedicated his every single day to making the world a better place.”

“Judge Dear had a certain energetic, colorful persona that epitomized the great diversity not only with respect to the Kings County Judiciary but also as a member of our Bar Association and Brooklyn Community at large,” said Brooklyn Bar Association President Frank Carone. “He will be sorely missed.”

Chaskel Bennett, a community askan, said Dear was a “legendary public servant & representative who understood that his position should be used to help the most vulnerable & downtrodden. He was respected & admired. To watch him pray was an experience. He will be deeply missed.”

Mourning the Loss of Rabbi Baruch Pollack; 1st Grade Rebbe for 60 Years

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Klal Yisroel has lost one of its most experienced Rebbeim. Rabbi Baruch Pollack was niftar Motzei Shabbos HaGadol at the age of 92 in Yerushalayim. Rabbi Pollack had been a 1st grade Rebbe for over 60 years.

Edited by: JV Staff

Klal Yisroel has lost one of its most experienced Rebbeim. Rabbi Baruch Pollack was niftar Motzei Shabbos HaGadol at the age of 92 in Yerushalayim. Rabbi Pollack had been a 1st grade Rebbe for over 60 years. He started in Yeshiva of Lubovitch in the Bronx and then taught in Yeshiva of Eastern Parkway in Brooklyn and Yeshiva Mercaz HaTorah (RJJ) in Staten Island. Rabbi Pollack was extremely beloved by 3 generations of students and their parents.

They appreciated his tremendous devotion and tireless dedication to his “boyalach” as he called them. His excitement for the chumosh and other Torah subjects he taught was contagious. It’s no wonder that so many of his students remember him as being the best Rebbe/teacher they ever had. He had a profound influence on thousands of students and gave the boys a solid basis to love their learning and Yiddishkeit. Rabbi

Pollack was born in 1927 in Brownsville, Brooklyn. He was an orphan from birth(his father died when his mother was yet pregnant with him).

He was called to the Torah as Baruch ben Baruch and used to quip to the gabbai he got the name backward! After receiving semicha from Rav Hutner in Yeshiva Chaim Berlin, he and his family moved to East Flatbush where he helped found and was very active in

Rav Asher Zimmerman’s Young Israel of Remsen. He was an expert Baal Tokea and on Rosh Hoshana would go to nearby Brookdale Hospital to blow shofer for the patients. Later, the family moved to Flatbush where he continued to use his talents as gabbai in Rav Poupko’s shul.

Anyone who came in contact with him appreciated his sharp wit and “vertlach” that he enjoyed sharing. In addition, he was the executive director of Y.I. of Bedford Bay where he ran a Talmud Torah and summer camp. There too, he influenced many children to come closer to Torah. Many of his talmidim, from both the yeshivos and Talmud Torah, are today great mechanchim themselves who have continued in Rabbi Pollack’s footsteps. He lived his final year in the Ramot neighborhood of Yerushalayim and merited burial in Eretz Yisroel. He is survived by his devoted wife of 71 years as well as 3 sons, grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

Staten Island Cemetery Races to Keep Up as NY Virus Deaths Mount

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Rabbi Shmuel Plafker, rear, finishes a prayer during the burial service for David Tokar as gravediggers prepare a plot for the next burial at Mount Richmond Cemetery in the Staten Island borough of New York, Wednesday April 8, 2020. (AP Photo/David Goldman)

By: David Goldman & Matt Sedensky

The streets are eerily quiet. Barely a soul walks by. But when Rabbi Shmuel Plafker arrives at the cemetery, it’s buzzing: Vans pulling in with bodies aboard, mounds of dirt piling up as graves are dug open, a line of white signs pressed into the ground marking plots that are newly occupied.

Some of the few signs of life in this anguished city are coming from those tending to the dead.

As the world retreats and the pandemic’s confirmed death toll in New York City alone charges past 10,000, funeral directors, cemetery workers and others who oversee a body’s final chapter are sprinting to keep up.

Plafker, the chaplain at Mount Richmond Cemetery on Staten Island, grips in hands covered by rubber gloves the long list of burials he must preside over this day. In the notes section beside each person’s name, the reason for their demise: “COVID.” “COVID.” “COVID.”

“There’s a tremendous sadness,” he says. “Were it not for this, they would be living, some healthy, some not so healthy. But they would be alive.”

Mount Richmond is run by the Hebrew Free Burial Association, which buries Jews who die with little or nothing. A century ago, it buried garment workers killed in the Triangle Shirtwaist fire and those who fell to the Spanish flu. More recently, it was Holocaust survivors who fled Europe.

And now, those dying of the coronavirus.

A stream of people trusted with preparing Mount Richmond’s dead for burial continues to arrive at the cemetery, carefully washing the bodies as Jewish law dictates, then placing them in a white shroud. The Torah calls for burial as soon as possible. These days, it’s more of a challenge than ever.

Companies that transport the dead to their final resting places are backed up, part of a chain reaction of hold-ups that includes overbooked funeral homes and cemeteries that are turning families away.

“The casket companies have no caskets,” says James Donofrio, a funeral director who handles Mount Richmond’s arrangements.

Hebrew Free Burial stocked up on caskets before the coronavirus unleashed its worst, just as they did with protective gear for workers, garments for the dead and other supplies. They think they have enough. Then again, they thought the mortuary cooler they ordered a month ago to fit an extra four bodies would be enough extra space. Now they have a refrigerated trailer big enough to hold 20.

Amy Koplow, who runs Hebrew Free Burial, worries about staff maintaining such furious pace and raising enough money to cover the costs being run up. But they’ve vowed to plod on.

They were used to burying one person on an average day. A “crazy day,” Koplow says, would be five.

The other day, they put 11 people in the ground.

Staffers find themselves exchanging texts about death certificates at 2 a.m. and fielding dozens of calls at a time. It takes its toll on everyone.

Plafker looks at the trees in bloom and the grass sprouting and finds spring’s signs of rebirth so paradoxical given the death that surrounds him. He thinks of the centuries-old words he recites on the High Holy Days, that seem to carry so much more weight now.

“How many shall pass away and how many shall be born,” it says. “Who shall perish by water and who by fire? Who by sword and who by wild beast? Who by famine and who by thirst? Who by earthquake and who by plague?”

Now, it seems, a plague is upon him.

            (AP)

NYC Teachers Prepare for Student Mental Health Issues When Schools Reopen

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The emotional damage that is being caused by the coronavirus crisis is very real – and something that educators and mental health professionals will have to grapple with when school in New York City eventually resumes. Photo Credit: wichita.edu

By: Howard M. Riell

The emotional damage that is being caused by the coronavirus crisis is very real – and something that educators and mental health professionals will have to grapple with when school in New York City eventually resumes.

Mayor Bill de Blasio told the media last week that a “focus on mental health and support for everyone who’s been through this crisis will be crucial to our plan to reopen in September.”

“But advocates say the city’s current approach to dealing with the most severe mental health challenges is drastically lacking,” reported the New York Daily News. “Despite an influx of new social workers, city students were escorted to hospitals for mental health crises more than 3,000 times last school year — trips that advocates argue are unnecessary and traumatic.”

“We have to do things differently,” Dawn Yuster, the director of the School Justice Project at Advocates for Children, one of dozens of organizations that sent a letter Friday to the city Education Department sounding the alarm on mental health services, told the paper. “The public health crisis is hopefully going to shine a light on the fact that we cannot continue to treat students the way we have in our schools.”

According to the city’s Department of Education, mental health “impacts not only our students but our families, schools, and communities” even in the best of times. “One in five children struggle, or at some point in their life will struggle, with their mental health. Half of all mental-health and substance-use conditions start before age 14. Approximately one in five students who could benefit from additional mental-health supports does not get them.”

For reasons every parent understands, kids are especially sensitive to the sorts of drastic changes imposed by the pandemic. “Nobody knows when or if life will return to normal after the coronavirus pandemic,” noted usatoday.com. “But as the weeks of stay-at-home orders and school closures continue nationwide, parents are questioning whether isolation measures and physical distancing are doing lasting damage to their kids’ emotional development.

Questions remain unanswered. “Will this generation grow up fearful of touching or standing too close? Will they know how to make friends or interact in group gatherings? And how will it affect their academics and job prospects?” reported usatoday.com. “Psychologists and economists are still gathering data, but here’s the consensus for the short term: Most of the kids will be all right.”

The CDC is advising parents to watch for behavior changes in their kids. “Not all children and teens respond to stress in the same way.” Some common changes to watch for include:

– Excessive crying or irritation in younger children

– Returning to behaviors they have outgrown (for example, toileting accidents or bedwetting)

– Excessive worry or sadness

– Unhealthy eating or sleeping habits

– Irritability and “acting out” behaviors in teens

– Poor school performance or avoiding school

– Difficulty with attention and concentration

– Avoidance of activities enjoyed in the past

– Unexplained headaches or body pain

– Use of alcohol, tobacco, or other drugs

Deal Reached: Gantz & Netanyahu Sign Unity Agreement

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Blue and White leader MK Benny Gantz (r) shakes hands with President Reuven Rivlin (c) and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Sept. 19, 2019. (Flash90/Yonatan Sindel)

The agreement was reached on Monday afternoon despite reports that the talks had “exploded.”

By: David Isaac

Against what appeared all odds, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Blue and White Chairman Benny Gantz signed an agreement for a unity government. The breakthrough came late Monday shortly before the start of Yom HaShoah, Holocaust Remembrance Day.

The agreement brings to a close a political crisis that has lasted a year-and-a-half and has led to an unprecedented three consecutive elections in Israel.

Netanyahu will serve as prime minister on a rotational basis. Netanyahu will start in the role for 18 months. Gantz will take over in October 2021.

Netanyahu appears to have won a victory on the matter of the Judicial Selections Committee, one of the key sticking points. The Likud will have a majority on that committee, which picks judges to the Supreme Court, Israel’s Channel 11 reports. Netanyahu also will have a veto over senior appointments.

The government that will emerge will include up to 36 ministers and 16 deputy ministers.

Ynet reports that Blue and White will receive the ministries for defense, justice, aliyah and integration, culture and sports, finance, economy, communications, agriculture, strategic affairs, tourism, social equality and diaspora affairs.

The foreign ministry will be split between Blue and White and Likud with each party running it for half the government’s term.

Likud will receive the ministries of treasury, interior, transportation, housing, education, environmental protection, energy, Jerusalem affairs, and other smaller portfolios.

The Likud will run several key committees, including finance, labor and welfare and immigration and absorption. It will also run the constitution, law and justice committee and the special committee dealing with the corona crisis.

The ambassador to the UN will come from the Likud party.

One of the portfolios will be given to Orly Levi-Abekasis of the Gesher party, who split from the Labor-Meretz-Gesher faction and joined with the right-wing bloc. She had expressed strong opposition to the possibility of forming a government that rested on the Arab Joint List party shortly after the March 2 elections.

All may not be clear sailing for Netanyahu, however. Given the major committees that have been handed to Blue and White, problems may arise among the Likud’s right-wing partners. Yemina, led by Defense Minister Naftali Bennett, has requested three portfolios in exchange for its participation in the government. The party has made it plain that it opposes handing the justice ministry to Blue and White.

The agreement came as a surprise to most media pundits. On Monday morning, it appeared that talks had reached a dead end after Gantz walked out on a meeting with Netanyahu.

Gantz then signaled he would push forward with legislation targeting Netanyahu in the Knesset, a move the Likud said would spell the end of negotiations.

The collapsing talks encouraged those members of Gantz’s party who split with him over his decision to enter a unity government with Netanyahu. Moshe Ya’alon, a former political partner, urged him to cut off the talks.

Avigdor Liberman of the Israel Beiteinu party tweeted earlier on Sunday, “Benny Gantz, this is your moment of truth. As someone who knows Netanyahu better than anyone, I estimate that he won’t sign a coalition deal with you, not today, not tomorrow.”

(World Israel News)

read more at: www.worldisraelnews.com

Eli Beer Returns to Israel After Struggling for his Life in Miami Hospital

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As the Jewish community held more than 1,000 funerals over Pesach due to coronavirus deaths, they were thankfully greeted with the auspicious news that Israel Hatzalah founder Eli Beer had recovered after three weeks in a medically induced coma at a Miami hospital.  Photo Credit: YWN

By: Lieba Nesis

As the Jewish community held more than 1,000 funerals over Pesach due to coronavirus deaths, they were thankfully greeted with the auspicious news that Israel Hatzalah founder Eli Beer had recovered after three weeks in a medically induced coma at a Miami hospital. His wife, Gitty, and five children, urged the community to pray for his well being and their prayers were answered when the 46-year-old awoke on April 9th. Beer entered the Miami hospital with pneumonia-like symptoms on March 17th expecting to be discharged a few days later. Unfortunately, his situation took a turn for the worse and on Friday March 20th he revealed in a harrowing video that he was going to be sedated and that the world should continue doing good deeds during this critical period. Eli had been separated from his family for four months after leaving on a fundraising trip to India, London, Turkey, New York and finally Miami-where he contracted the coronavirus.

To know Eli is to love him, his friendly demeanor and open-hearted personality are treasured by all. One of his acolytes is the comic Jay Leno. In February 2020 Leno along with Miriam and Sheldon Adelson joined Beer in a 1,000-person event at the Beverly Hilton that raised $15 million. That type of charisma is what has catapulted Hatzalah to stratospheric heights. Eli’s calling, after witnessing a bus bombing in Israel at the age of 5, has been saving lives; volunteering in an ambulance at the age of 15 and setting up a Jerusalem volunteer unit two years later. His organization currently has more than 6,000 volunteers serving 300,000 people a year-a remarkable achievement.

No one ever imagined Beer would be a recipient of his own services during this dire time. When Eli awoke from coma his body was still having trouble acclimating. After a week of intense physical therapy to aid him in walking and to strengthen his muscles and lungs in the surgical unit of the Miami ICU, philanthropists Miriam and Sheldon Adelson, arranged for a private plane to return Beer to Israel so he could reunite with his family and colleagues. Miriam Adelson, a hands-on savior, assured Beer was given optimal treatment during his stay at the Miami hospital, including plasma donated blood from recovered patients.

Upon arrival at the Israeli airport Beer was greeted by hundreds of Hatzalah volunteers. Stepping off the tarmac, an emotional Beer can be seen crying as he recites the Shema and thanks G-d for his recovery. Despite donning a mask to cover his face, the video of Eli shows readily visible tubes emanating from his arms as he leaves the plane in a stretcher. Eli’s path to healing will undoubtedly be arduous as he is unable to reside with his family in Israel who live in a fourth floor walk-up. However, when he does return his passion for saving lives will be even more unyielding than before.

Coronavirus Vaccine in Months? Israeli Scientist Awarded US Patent for Vaccine Design

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Professor Jonathan Gershoni of Tel Aviv University’s School of Molecular Cell Biology and Biotechnology was granted a patent by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) for his innovative vaccine design for the Corona family of viruses. Photo Credit: Tel Aviv University

By: TPS

Professor Jonathan Gershoni of Tel Aviv University’s School of Molecular Cell Biology and Biotechnology was granted a patent by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) for his innovative vaccine design for the Corona family of viruses.

The vaccine targets the novel Coronavirus’s “Achilles’ heel,” its Receptor Binding Motif (RBM), a critical structure that enables the virus to bind to and infect a target cell.

Gershoni explained that the vaccine would reconstruct the coronavirus’s RBM, a tiny feature of its “spike” protein. Though the virus uses many different proteins to replicate and invade cells, the “spike” protein is the major surface protein that it uses to bind to a receptor — another protein that acts like a doorway into a human cell. After the spike protein binds to the human cell receptor, the viral membrane fuses with the human cell membrane, allowing the genome of the virus to enter human cells and begin infection.

“We have been working on Coronaviruses for the last 15 years, developing a method of reconstructing and reconstituting the RBM feature of the spike protein in SARS CoV and subsequently in MERS CoV,” clarifies Gershoni.

“The moment the genome of the new virus was published in early January 2020, we began the process of reconstituting the RBM of SARS CoV2, the virus that causes COVID-19, and expect to have a reconstituted RBM of the new virus soon. This will be the basis for a new vaccine, which could be ready for use within a year to a year and a half,” he said.

The spike protein is quite large, containing about 1,200 amino acids. Some researchers have limited their research to a region of the spike known as the receptor-binding domain (RBD) that comprises some 200 amino acids. However, the problem is that these relatively large areas have a variety of targets, and the immune system produces antibodies for all of them indiscriminately – reducing the effectiveness of a potential vaccine.

The RBM, a highly complex three-dimensional structure, is only 50 amino acids long. Functionally reconstituting such a structure would be very challenging, but it would be an extremely effective basis of a vaccine, says Gershoni.

“The smaller the target and the focus of the attack, the greater the effectiveness of the vaccine,” he adds. “The virus takes far-reaching measures to hide its RBM from the human immune system, but the best way to ‘win the war’ is to develop a vaccine that specifically targets the virus’s RBM.”

Gershoni’s team has completed their initial steps toward reconstituting the new SARS CoV2’s RBM. The reconstitution of the new SARS CoV2’s RBM and its use as a basis for a new vaccine is covered by an additional pending patent application, filed by Ramot, TAU’s technology transfer arm, to the USPTO.

“Now that we have received serum samples we should be able to isolate RBM-based vaccine candidates in the next month or two,” concludes Prof. Gershoni. “The discovery and production of a functional RBM for the new coronavirus is fundamental and critical for the production of the vaccine we propose.

“Our successful isolation and reconstitution of such a functional RBM will allow the industry to incorporate it into a vaccine, which will be produced by a pharmaceutical company. Development of such an RBM-based vaccine should take months and then would need to be tested in Phase 1, 2 and 3 clinical trials which would then take up to a year.”

   (TPS)

Israel Slams Iran for its State-Sponsored Anti-Semitic Coronavirus Cartoon Contest

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Israel and an anti-Semitism watchdog have condemned the Islamic Republic of Iran for launching an international cartoon contest on the Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic that featured anti-Semitic and anti-Israel cartoons. Photo by Kobi Richter/TPS on 19 April, 2020

By: Aryeh Savir

Israel and an anti-Semitism watchdog have condemned the Islamic Republic of Iran for launching an international cartoon contest on the Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic that featured anti-Semitic and anti-Israel cartoons.

The Tehran Times reported last week that Iran’s “We Defeat Coronavirus International Cartoon Contest” has received 4,200 submissions from cartoonists from 88 countries.

“Out of all the submissions, about 2,000 cartoons were showcased for 28 days at irancartoon.ir, which has been visited by 1,340,000 people,” said Masud Shojaei-Tabatabai, the director of Iran’s Art Bureau’s Visual Arts Office that launched the competition.

Shojaei-Tabatabai has [previously curated anti-Semitic and anti-Israel cartoon contests.

“Why is Iran’s Health Ministry promoting hatred and anti-Semitism via a cartoon contest it sponsored on COVID-19?” Israel Foreign Ministry tweeted.

“It should focus on saving Iranians, not promoting hatred of Jews,” it added.

One cartoon depicts Israeli scientists as fiendish characters spreading the virus and others blame the US and the Jews for the spread of the virus.

Yuval Rotem, Director General of the Foreign Ministry, further noted that it is “not surprising that the Iranian regime once again promotes hatred, anti-Semitism and conspiracy theories, rather than face the tough reality: The regime’s cruel mismanagement of the COVID-19 crisis has cost the lives of thousands in Iran and across the region.”

Iran has registered 80,868 Coronavirus cases and over 5,000 deaths. The number of deaths may be far higher.

Anti-Defamation League (ADL) Senior Vice President for International Affairs Sharon Nazarian stated that “at a time when it should be focused on saving lives, Iran’s health ministry sponsored a cartoon contest on COVID-19. As you could imagine, some of the submissions we found were horrifically and sadly unsurprisingly antisemitic.”

Iran has a long history of promoting anti-Semitism and Holocaust denial and has hosted several international cartoon contests promoting these themes.

A 2015 contest equated Israel and the US with the Islamic State (ISIS) terror organization.

            (TPS)

Sources: Hamas Involved in Embezzlement of Donations Meant for Gaza’s Residents

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Residents of the Gaza Strip are complaining that donations collected on their behalf in Arab countries are not reaching them, and even as the economic hardship in the Strip intensifies Hamas is not transferring budgets from its funds to deal with the Coronavirus (COVID-19) crisis. Photo by Majdi Fathi/TPS on 19 April, 2020

By: Baruch Yedid

Residents of the Gaza Strip are complaining that donations collected on their behalf in Arab countries are not reaching them, and even as the economic hardship in the Strip intensifies Hamas is not transferring budgets from its funds to deal with the Coronavirus (COVID-19) crisis.

Sources in the Gaza Strip say that in recent days, following the Corona crisis and the deteriorating situation in the Gaza Strip, there has been severe criticism of Hamas after disclosures of its corruption and embezzlement of donations for those in need, as well as over the fact that Hamas has not thawed its own budgets in favor of the civilian systems in Gaza.

Hamas, in turn, is accusing the Palestinian Authority (PA) of not passing on the donations and assistance to Gaza’s residents.

In an interview with the Hamas website, Khalil Al-Haya, a member of Hamas’ political bureau, said Saturday that Hamas has harnessed all its organizational, financial and logistical capabilities for the benefit of the Gaza Strip in its fight against the Coronavirus and also designated its charities and the Izz A-Din Al-Qassam brigades for the benefit of the various authorities.

Al-Haya stressed that the building of 1,000 isolation rooms was funded by Hamas and so was the purchase of 30 respirators. He said Hamas also provided financial assistance to the camps in Lebanon and other countries, with the aid of Qatar and charities.

Al-Haya’s remarks came in response to criticism from Gaza residents and to a series of publications on Hamas’ corruption during the Corona crisis.

One recent case involves Masa’ev Al-Haya, his associate and relative, who is accused of embezzling funds contributed to the Gaza Strip by Turkey and Iran.

Last week, a Jordanian news site published an article based on Hamas sources, saying that while the Gaza Strip is suffering a severe economic crisis following the Coronavirus outbreak, corruption is broadening among Hamas’ leadership.

The report quotes sources who said that Zahar Jabarin, who oversees the Hamas headquarters in Turkey, has embezzled over $ 2 million in organization funds and is also using his position in the top Hamas headquarters to acquire real estate and assets.

The paper further reported that Jabarin recently opened bank accounts on his wife’s behalf because his name appears on the blacklist of terrorists sanctioned by the US.

Hamas fears the damage to its image and the recent revelations of corruption and is now blaming the PA for denying essential aid to Gaza residents. In the interview, Al-Haya noted that donations to the Palestinian people were not transferred to the Gaza Strip.

The PA, for its part, has so far not complied with Hamas’ demands to remove the economic sanctions over the Gaza Strip and reportedly opposes transferring external aid directly to the Gaza Strip.

Al Haya signals that the solution to the situation is threatening Israel and said that “all options are open to us to compel Israel to provide the Gaza Strip’s needs and requirements, and if needed, we will take other steps to force Israel to deliver aid.”

He said Hamas was in contact with Egypt and Qatar and demanded that they press Israel to transfer medical aid and equipment to the Gaza Strip.

However, the IDF last week transferred 88 tons of medical supplies through the Kerem Shalom Crossing into the Gaza Strip.

Thousands of COVID-19 test kits have been transferred to Gaza through COGAT’s Coordination and Liaison Unit and to Judea and Samaria through the Civil Administration, as well as thousands of personal protective equipment (PPE) kits for medical staff and disinfectant material.

(TPS)