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There is no room for hate on Staten Island’: DA, religious leaders, officials take a stand against hate

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Staten Island’s District Attorney, religious leaders, political representatives and officials took a stand against hate at a press conference Thursday in front of the Young Israel of Staten Island synagogue in Willowbrook.

The press conference came five days after the shooting at a Southern California synagogue that killed a woman and left an 8-year-old girl and two men wounded.

Left to Right COJO CEO and Executive Vice President Scott Maurer; Staten Island District Attorney Michael E. McMahon and COJO President Mendy Mirocznik.

“There is no room for hate in New York City,” said Chief Kenneth Corey, the borough commanding officer. “If you commit a hate crime in Staten Island we will investigate. We will find you, we will arrest you. You will be prosecuted to the full extent that the law allows.”

The way the four Staten Island precincts approach hate crimes effectively decreased hate crimes by 12.5% from 2017 to 2018, while New York City as a whole saw an 8% increase.

In 2019, the number of hate crimes keep skyrocketing in the city. New data released on Thursday by the NYPD indicates a 67% increase in hate crimes just in the first four months of 2019.

“We are saying clearly with one voice: Not on Staten Island. We will not tolerate hate crimes of any type,” said Staten Island District Attorney Michael McMahon.

The message sent on Thursday was strong and clear as religious leaders from different religious affiliations stood together.

Pct. 121 Crime Safety Officer John Sibal; COJO President Mendy Mirocznik and Pct. 121 Community Affairs Officer Michael Jacobsen.

“This is the beautiful part of this country,” said Rabbi Yaakov Lehrfield.

COJO President Mendy Mirocznik and Assemblyman Charles Fall.

Mendy Mirocznik, president of the Staten Island Council of Jewish Organizations (COJO), said standing united is what makes today different than 76 years ago, a reference to the Holocaust that killed six million Jews.

 

“Unlike 76 years ago, we are not going to tolerate it,” said Mirocznik.

Mirocznik said more and more people are reaching out to COJO sharing fear, concern and uncertainty.

Representatives from the mayor’s office, the JCC, the United Federation of Teachers and the city comptroller’s office also attended the press conference.

COJO President Mendy Mirocznik; NYPD PBSI Commanding Officer Chief Kenneth Corey and Staten Island District Attorney Michael E. McMahon.

District Attorney McMahon concluded the press conference by thanking COJO CEO and Executive Vice-President Scott Maurer who also serves as the Co-Chair of the District Attorneys Hate Crimes Task Force for coordinating and helping to organizing the press conference, McMahon stated, “COJO’s leadership, partnership and relationship that it has with the broader communities of Staten Island and its ability to communicate effectively with them is the key in winning the war on hate.  I thank Scott Maurer and Mendy Mirocznik for working with my office around the clock in helping to constantly improve the quality of life on Staten Island.”

WJC President Ronald S. Lauder urges international condemnation as three people killed in Israel under siege of rockets

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– Terrorists in the Gaza Strip have fired some 600 rockets at Israel in the last two days, killing three people and wounding several others. Israelis have been asked not to attend the funerals of the victims amid the dangerous escalation in the south. Israel has responded to the intensive barrage with retaliatory air strikes, resulting in the deaths of eight Palestinians.

World Jewish Congress President Ronald S. Lauder said in response to the attacks: “Hamas and its accomplices in the Gaza Strip have laid siege to the State of Israel, indiscriminately terrorizing its citizens and snuffing out innocent lives in an unprovoked attempt to destroy the Jewish state and subvert any efforts to live in peace and coexistence.”

“We call on the international community to face the murderous reality on the ground caused by Hamas and not be taken in by Hamas’ perverted bid to draw international sympathy for its own tyrannical cause and contemptuous disregard for human life. It is beyond time for the UN Security Council and the entire international community to unequivocally condemn Hamas in the strongest terms possible and hold it completely responsible for the loss of life and continued provocation in the territory under its control,” Lauder said. “Every second that passes without such condemnation gives Hamas carte blanche to persist with its cynical violence, threatening and exploiting the lives of both Israelis and Palestinians. This is terror, plain and simple, and must be not be tolerated or condoned in any way.”

From Oy to Joy: A Call for Positivity in Jewish Engagement

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There is a dissonance between the Jewish story and narrative. We are a people who have demonstrated an inverse relationship between numbers and impact for thousands of years and represent an unparalleled catalyst for curiosity and growth. As we celebrate the 71st year since our rebirth, the State of Israel, has achieved mind-boggling feats, against seemingly insurmountable odds and this is just part of the incredible story we have to tell.

Still, with ongoing anti-Semitism at heights unseen in ages, victimization and crisis are deeply ingrained within our national narrative. Too many seem to focus on reactively extinguishing fires rather than proactively sowing seeds and planting trees.

Having grown up in Sydney, Australia, where so many in the community are descendants of “survivors,” the Holocaust has always been a core component of the community’s Jewish identity. The Gen17 Australian Jewish Community Survey found that 95% of participants saw remembering the Holocaust as important to their personal Jewish identity, marking it as the highest factor. Similarly, the 2013 Pew Report revealed that a staggering 73% of U.S. Jews see remembering the Holocaust as essential to their sense of Jewishness, and there are many other studies that reflect the same global trend.

Threats to one’s Jewish identity often provoke an instinctive reaction of protectiveness, but just as the current generation feels less relevance to the destruction of the Temples or the Spanish Inquisition, this approach is becoming less effective as the distance from events such as the Holocaust widens as time marches on.

The establishment of the State of Israel has been coupled with significant general improvements for global Jewry, and many Jews have not been directly exposed to anti-Semitism and the powerfully emotional tribalism it can induce. Instead, as Jewish millennials are welcomed with open arms into Western societies, they have become increasingly disengaged from a heritage with which they struggle to relate.

Desperately attempting to re-establish these stirrings of Jewish pride, I have seen many Jewish educators double down on Jewish victimhood, limiting their educational impact by focusing on instilling a responsibility to lead Jewish lives purely because the victims of prior generations could not. To me this underscores a lack of confidence in our ability to inspire positivity and pride.

When teaching Jewish history, the Holocaust must, of course, be given due attention, but it should not become an emotional crutch alone. The most effective Jewish teachers also focus on the incredible array of Jewish cultures and traditions that emerged over the last 2,000 years, helping young Jews realize that traditions have continued relevance and can be built upon in modern Jewish practice.

While this narrative continues to inspire a sense of Jewishness, it has generally not been strong enough to translate emotion into action in a consistent and pervasive way. As such, this negative narrative is becoming increasingly ineffective and yet crisis remains the dominant narrative for Israel as well.

The Israeli timeline, as taught and discussed, is often dotted with wars. The years 1948, 1967, and 1973 are, in the Jewish psyche, some of the most powerful dates in modern Jewish history and often synonymous with Israel, despite its many other achievements.

As we stand between Yom HaShoah (Holocaust Remembrance Day), Yom HaZikaron (Israeli Memorial Day) and Yom HaAtzmaut (Israel Independence Day), three days that embody the complex duality of tragedy and triumph, we must consider how to shift this balance towards the positive. We must stand tall and say that we are proud to be Jews, not because of terrorism, violence in places like Pittsburgh of Poway, or Israel’s enemies, but in spite of them.

One of my favorite scientific studies shows why this positive approach, in which Judaism’s life-affirming, beneficial value becomes the standard, is more crucial now than ever before.

In the late 1960s, Stanford psychology professor Walter Mischel conducted a series of experiments on delayed gratification known as The Marshmallow Test. Mischel was trying to understand how age and cognitive development affect one’s ability to delay gratification in order to receive a greater reward. Particularly fascinating for psychologists today are the follow-up studies, decades later, which found that childhood ability to delay gratification correlated with higher SAT scores, professional success and better physical health.

Writing for Forbes, Justin Daab, President of Magnani Continuum Marketing, an experience design and strategy firm in Chicago, challenges the notion that delayed gratification results in increased success in life, stating that “Millennials are rationally maximizing their long-term value by sampling a bit of marshmallow today.” As Millennials grow up, they are witnessing the collapse of the long-term security once offered by traditional institutions, older generations losing their entire accumulated wealth, debts rising and job prospects and job security declining. As a result (whether consciously or not), they assign greater social value to experiences – memories that are guaranteed to last.

Hence, when sharing Judaism with young Jewish women and men, positive, transformative experiences are vital and, therefore, serve as a guiding principle of Mosaic United. As Daab explains, “for Millennials, past performance is no guarantee of future performance.”

Judaism, when lived fully, includes enriching, positive substance that can make a far more enduring impact on the individual than the declining sense of obligation to marry Jewish and the uninspired schlep to a synagogue on the High Holidays. On the other hand, exposure to the Shabbat experience, for example, can lead to an appreciation that supposedly disruptive restrictions can grant the freedom and headspace to value the truly important things in life.

Jewish teachings about charity and hospitality allow one to appreciate how an ancient moral compass can enhance quality of life for the most vulnerable members of modern society. And a deeper understanding of the vibrant, nuanced, multi-faceted reality of Israel can allow one to acknowledge its issues while seeing past its falsified reputation and appreciate the truth of its inclusivity and flourishing democracy.

A healthy Jewish communal body cannot thrive on a diet of tragedy alone. It cannot devolve into a skeleton devoid of bone marrow based on external threats, and instead must celebrate the inner beauty of Jewish life. To move from oy to joy, we need a paradigm shift in our pedagogy. The impetus for Jewish living must come from inside the Jewish world, being proactive rather than reactive. We must begin by truly believing that the Jewish story is worth telling and then reconsider how we tell that story.

After all, our children no longer want to hear how not to leave. They need to experience why they must stay.

Rabbi Benji Levy is the CEO of Mosaic United, a partnership between the State of Israel and the global Jewish community dedicated to mapping the broad spectrum of Jewish experiential opportunities and creating seamlessly accessible routes to meaningful Jewish connections for millennials ages 12-35. A recent Oleh from Australia, he previously served as the Dean of one of the largest Jewish schools in the world, Moriah College.

Agudath Israel of America Statement Commending the US Support of Israel’s Right to Defend Itself

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Hamas has fired 600 rockets into Israel from Gaza since the start of the Jewish Sabbath. Three Israelis have been killed and 131 Israeli civilians are being treated for injuries. The rockets have hit a kindergarten, a factory, and homes. Hundreds of thousands of Israelis are in shelters.

The Israeli airstrikes to defend its citizenry from indiscriminate aggression by bloodthirsty sworn enemies is the legitimate response of any responsible government.

We mourn the loss of life and offer our prayers for the injured and the traumatized.

We commend the Trump Administration’s support of Israel’s right, and duty, to defend its territory and its populace.

We call on all civilized nations of the world to support Israel’s sovereignty and demand an end to the Palestinian escalation and aggression towards Israel and its people.

Everything You Wanted To Know About Facebook But Were Afraid to Ask. Why Facebook is EVIL

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Learn more about the constant controversy that swirls around the social media giant.

With the latest round of conservatives (and Louis Farrakhan) being purged from Facebook, and the newly announced attack on average users who may write something supportive of one of the banned personalities such as Alex Jones, Paul Joseph Watson or Laura Loomer;   Facebook has reached a new level of bias and “thought control”.

Facebook censorship is the  hot topic everyone is talking about. Facebook literally wants to suspend users who may post something positive about a person Facebook does not like such as Alex Jones.

Facebook seems to be operating as a publisher as opposed to an open platform.

The Jewish Voice has been covering this topic for the last year. Here is a list of all the reporting we have done on Facebook’s censorship and bias.  Click on the links.

Shame on Facebook for Silencing “The Jewish Voice”
Is Facebook Intentionally Blocking Viewer Engagement on the Jewish Voice Page?
Don’t Get Zucked! End Facebook Censorship of Conservatives!
Facebook, Censorship & Ideology in the Information Age
An Immediate Call for Congress to Step Up to the Plate and Monitor Facebook
Facebook Anticipates FTC Privacy Fine Of Up To $5 Billion
Facebook’s Full Frontal Assault on Conservative Media

Car Bomb in Haifa Seriously Wounds Two; Gang Related Violence Blamed

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In what appears to be gang related violence, a car bomb seriously injured two people in Haifa, Israel on Friday.

Edited by: JV Staff

According to a TOI report, witnesses at the scene of the heinous attack said that the powerful explosion was heard from several blocks away. Video footage of the arrack showed the car erupting in a large orange fireball.

TOI has reported that a 33-year-old man and his 35-year-old girlfriend were taken to the city’s Rambam Medical Center after the explosive device blew up their vehicle as they drove down Haifa’s busy Hanasi Street just before 1 p.m.

Police have opened an investigation into the blast, but investigators believe it is mob-related and not a terror attack, according to published reports.

The Hebrew-language media has reported that the male victim is known to police and was the target of a car bombing in Eilat last month. His most recent criminal conviction, linked to a stabbing in a Haifa nightclub, came earlier this year.

Drive-by shootings and car bombs as part of underworld gang wars have long wracked Israeli cities, with law enforcement authorities struggling to stem the phenomenon, according to the TOI report.

New York City Ballet Gala Season “Springs” into Action

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Dancers from Balanchine’s Theme and Variations. (Credit for all photos: Lieba Nesis)

Two noticeable trends have been predominant in the gala circuit for the last year: Firstly, every time you pick up a drink or admire a centerpiece it seems to be subsidized by a sponsor who receives mention in the dinner program; and secondly, and more importantly despite celebrities attestations of their love for the arts they are rarely seen at a ballet or opera gala. Having a red carpet at the New York City Ballet (NYCB) Spring Gala surely draws philanthropists and patrons to the flashbulbs but when even a Katie Holmes or a “Game of Thrones” actor is nowhere to be found it is a near certainty this event will receive scant publicity.

By: Lieba Nesis

Thankfully, the socialites came out in droves in their best attire including Jean Shafiroff in a show-stopping Victor de Souza, Joanna Fisher in a feathery whimsical Peter Hidalgo, Michele Herbert in a divine Monique Lhuillier and Patricia Shiah in a lilac Gucci confection. The evening was also about welcoming the new artistic leadership of Jonathan Stafford and Wendy Whelan who will have to work tirelessly to fill the shoes of former Director Peter Martins. While it becomes more evident with each passing month that Martins played favorites and his draconian manner led to the firing of some very worthy candidates including former prima ballerina Suzanne Farrell who was unexpectedly banished from NYCB for no apparent reason, the legend of Martins expertise in all things ballet is undeniable.

Yet, there is a certain relaxed energy pervasive through the Lincoln Center Halls as the domineering Martins no longer towers over every ballet and dancer. While the program stated the night was in celebration of the Company’s rich history and bright future it is evident they were seeking to erase a significant part of that history by obliterating any mention of Martins tenure from the program. The ballet which was held at the David H Koch Theater on a balmy Thursday evening began with cocktails at 5:30 PM as guests gathered on the second floor terrace.

There were numerous competing events on May 2nd including the El Museo Gala, The DKMS Blood Cancer Gala and a Prada resort show being held at The Piano Factory. Nonetheless the $2,500 per ticket evening was nearly sold-out with more than $2.3 million raised. The evening began with Stafford and Whelan welcoming guests to the gala and remarking on how they had both been dancers during the same period without ever sharing a stage. These two are clearly in sync with Stafford holding more of an administrative position while Whelan represents the artsy side of the collaboration. The evening had no major surprises or gimmicks with lovely predictable costumes and choreography that failed to shock or awe.

The first piece “Bright” produced by Justin Peck and danced beautifully by Sara Mearns and Russell Janzen left the audience frustrated due to the brevity of the piece. Contrastingly, the next movement choreographed by Pam Tanowitz was overly long as this modern piece received little love from the audience despite the star power of principal Miriam Miller and the wow factor of Kennard Henson. After a ten-minute intermission ballet lovers were treated to Tschaikovsky Suite No. 3 which was choreographed by Balanchine and has become a staple of classical technique in ballet repertory. Megan Fairchild danced Part 4 with an alacrity belying the fact that she gave birth six months ago-despite being slightly wobbly.

The evening concluded at 9:15 PM with dinner guests heading to the second floor for a vegetarian dinner of fish and asparagus-very politically correct. The opulent room filled with flowers and lanterns was inviting and exciting as Whelan spoke of her admiration for the talented dancers and her enthusiasm for the future. The room was also replete with ballet legends including Baryshnikov, Ed Villella, and Diana Vishneva. Vishneva has been an obsession of mine as I have endlessly pored over videos of her dancing. Tonight, she stood humbly in an ornate white dress as guests came to pay homage to one of the greatest dancers of this generation. When the DJ finally began playing tunes at 11:30 PM dancers Ashley Bouder and Kennard Henson took to the dance floor-a happenstance that only occurs in the cultural center of the world otherwise known as New York.

Tensions Run High in Venezuela as Maduro & Guaido Continue Vying for Military Support

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Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaido says he thought more troops would turn against President Nicolas Maduro during Tuesday’s attempt to oust the embattled leader. 

Edited by: JV Staff

In an interview with The Washington Post, Guaido said he expected Maduro to step down following major defections of members of the military. But, as Maduro and Guaido were vying for military support, there were no mass breakaways in the ranks. 

Tension continues to run high in Venezuela since the failed effort to oust Maduro. The Lima Group, a 12-nation body formed in 2017 to help establish a peaceful end to the Venezuelan crisis, met Friday in Peru’s capital and decided to enlist Cuba in brokering a solution to the turmoil. 

On Saturday, Maduro appealed to the military on state television. 

“We’re not a weak country but one with strong armed forces that has to show itself as united and cohesive as ever. Say no to traitors! Out, traitors! Unity and supreme loyalty to the constitution, the fatherland, the revolution and to its legitimate commander-in-chief!” he said, asking soldiers to raise their weapons in the air.

Later, Maduro visited a military base for a third straight day, hoping to garner support from troops. State television showed him walking with hundreds of uniformed soldiers after commanders briefed him on military issues. There were 3,500 soldiers at the site, according to state television. 

Maduro wrote on Twitter Friday night that he’d met with generals and admirals who vowed to defend “national sovereignty with loyalty and patriotism.” 

Guaido is considered Venezuela’s legitimate leader by the U.S. and 50 other countries. On Friday, he said supporters would hand out a letter to members of the military at a nationwide protest on Saturday, calling on them to support Maduro’s ouster. But that did not appear to be a successful effort. One soldier took the memo handed to him and burned it. 

A plot for some of Maduro’s top aides to defect this week to the opposition appeared to have come apart at the last minute, according to several news reports. 

Weeks of secret talks between the top aides and opposition leaders — including recently freed Leopoldo Lopez — culminated in a document that guaranteed Maduro loyalists like Gen. Ivan Hernandez, chief of military counterintelligence; Defense Minister Vladamir Padrino Lopez; and Supreme Court Chief Justice Maikel Moreno places in a post-Maduro interim government and a promise that they wouldn’t be prosecuted, the Associated Press reported Saturday.

All three officials have remained publicly loyal to Maduro. A fourth top aide, who heads Venezuela’s intelligence agency, Gen. Manuel Figuera, did break ranks and has since disappeared, according to the AP. 

Lopez, a Guaido mentor who had been detained since 2014 and under house arrest since 2017 for organizing marches against Maduro, told the AP that he had been secretly speaking with top Maduro loyalists about their possible defection to the opposition for weeks. 

One former U.S. official who spoke to the AP on background suggested that distrust between Trump administration officials and Maduro’s inner circle contributed to top Maduro aides’ reluctance to abandon the embattled Venezuelan leader. (VOA News)

Trump: Strong US-Russia Alliance Could Make World ‘Better and Safer’

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President Donald Trump said Saturday a strong U.S.-Russia alliance could result in a better global community.

By: Steve Herman

“Tremendous potential for a good/great relationship with Russia,” Trump tweeted one day after he had what he described as a very positive phone conversation with Russian President Vladimir Putin. “The World can be a better and safer place. Nice!” Trump added.

In the conversation, which exceeded an hour, Trump said Venezuela was among the issues he discussed with Putin.

“He is not looking at all to get involved in Venezuela other than he’d like to see something positive happen for Venezuela. I feel the same way,” Trump told reporters in the Oval Office on Friday afternoon.

Trump, speaking alongside Slovak Republic Prime Minister Peter Pellegrini, described his discussion with Putin on Venezuela as “very positive.”

Tension has grown in recent days between Washington and Moscow over the increasingly destabilizing events in Caracas. The Trump administration has accused the Russians of preventing Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro from giving up power and fleeing the country.

“This is our hemisphere,” national security adviser John Bolton said Wednesday. “It’s not where the Russians ought to be interfering.”

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, in a phone call earlier this week, told Secretary of State Mike Pompeo of “grave consequences” should there be further aggressive steps in Venezuela, interpreted as a warning to Washington not to intervene militarily.

Pompeo and Lavrov are scheduled to talk on the sidelines of an Arctic Council ministerial session in Finland next week, and Venezuela is almost certainly to be discussed.

“They will have an opportunity, obviously, to meet and review whatever topics they choose to,” a senior State Department official told reporters on a conference call previewing Pompeo’s trip.

The president’s national security team, including Bolton, acting Secretary of Defense Patrick Shanahan, Undersecretary of Defense for Policy John Rood and the commander of the U.S. Southern Command, Navy Adm. Craig Faller, met Friday in a secure Pentagon room that is reserved for top-level discussions of sensitive issues and military operations.

Defense officials said they discussed options on Venezuela.

“The president is going to do what’s necessary,” Sanders replied to a question from VOA about whether that meeting had moved the ball on U.S. military intervention in Venezuela.

She repeated that “all options continue to be on the table,” something administration officials have stressed for weeks.

Trump issued a couple of tweets Friday afternoon about the call with Putin:

Shanahan told reporters that the meeting reviewed the situation in Venezuela and was to ensure there is alignment within the administration on the South American country. 

The U.S. and most other Western countries no longer recognize Maduro as Venezuela’s legitimate leader, having switched interim recognition to Juan Guaido, the president of Venezuela’s democratically-elected national assembly.

Also discussed was the possibility of a “nuclear deal of some kind” involving the United States and Russia, as well as possibly China.

“We’re talking about a nuclear agreement where we make less and they make less and maybe even where we get rid some of the tremendous firepower that we have right now,” explained Trump. “China, I’ve already spoken to them. They would very much like to be a part of that deal.”

Trump said he also discussed with Putin on Friday the Mueller Report into Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election.

“He actually sort of smiled when he said something to the effect that it started off as a mountain and it ended up being a mouse.”

Repeatedly asked if he told Putin not to meddle in the 2020 presidential election, Trump finally said: “We didn’t discuss that.”

Queried by VOA about what he could do to improve his relationship and communication with the news media, as Friday was being marked as World Press Freedom Day, Trump responded that he has a very good relationship with some reporters.

“Unfortunately, some of the press doesn’t cover me accurately,” Trump contended. “They go out of their way to cover me inaccurately. So, I don’t think that’s a free press, I think that’s a dishonest press. And I want to see a free press.” (VOA)

 

250 Rockets fired from Gaza at Israel; Netanyahu Tells Army to “Give a Hard Blow” to Hamas Terrorists

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Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu met with his security cabinet Saturday afternoon and instructed the army “to give a hard blow” to terror groups in the Gaza Strip amid a fresh escalation of violence.

By: Adina Katz

At least 250 rockets were fired into Israel throughout the day on Saturday, beginning at around 10 a.m. Israel responded with airstrikes on more than one hundred targets across the coastal enclave, according to the Israel Defense Forces (IDF).
The escalation began on Friday when two IDF soldiers were shot and wounded by Gaza gunfire near the Gaza border.
Saturday’s rocket barrage comes less than a day after two militants from Hamas’ armed wing, the Qassam Brigades, were killed in an Israeli strike on Hamas posts in Gaza.
The IDF said that its Iron Dome aerial defense system had intercepted dozens of the incoming rockets.
“Hundreds of Gazans rioted on Israel’s border. Our soldiers stood between the rioters and Israeli families living a short distance away. Using civilians as cover, a sniper fired at our soldiers, wounding two,” the IDF stated on Friday.
Air-raid sirens sounded throughout the south on Saturday and as far north as Bet Shemesh, a central Israeli city near Jerusalem.
Israeli medical officials said an 80-year-old woman was severely wounded by the rocket fire, a 50-year-old man was moderately wounded by shrapnel and a teenage boy was mildly hurt as he ran for cover.

United Hatzalah volunteers in the south treated numerous people who were injured over the course of the day. Some of those injured were in serious condition while others were moderately or lightly injured, the emergency medical services organization said.
In response to the Gaza rocket fire on Saturday, Israel’s military said, IDF began aerial strikes on Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad targets (PIJ) at about 2 p.m., including: four Hamas training and weapons manufacturing compounds. Hamas naval compound and a PIJ-Hamas joint military compound.
The Israeli military reportedly hit a six-story commercial and residential structure Saturday evening.
The flare-up occurs just ahead of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, which begins on Sunday, and Israeli Independence Day.
Under orders from the IDF, schools in the cities and towns near the Gaza Strip were canceled for Sunday. With no imminent end to the hostilities in sight, workplaces will only be permitted to open only if they have access to a bomb shelter, and gatherings of more than 300 people also will not be allowed, including in shopping centers, Times of Israel reported.
Hamas has threatened to disrupt the Eurovision song contest slated to be held in Tel Aviv next month.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu met with his security cabinet Saturday.
“As a tense and worrying Shabbat ends, I am praying for those injured and thinking of those sheltering from rockets in their safe spaces. We will continue to stand against this dreadful terror and will respond forcefully and unwaveringly to any attack on the security of our people. I ask you all, please, to listen carefully to the instructions of the DF Homefront Command which save lives time after time, and take good care of yourselves,” President Reuven Rivlin stated.
“The State of Israel has the duty and the full right to do all that is necessary to protect our people and our sovereignty, and we will continue do so at all times,” Israel’s U.N. Ambassador Danny Danon said, calling on the Security Council to “take this opportunity to finally condemn terrorism against Israel, designate Hamas as a terrorist organization and support the fundamental right of Israel to self-defense.”
The delegation of UN ambassadors currently visiting Israel, at the initiative of Ambassador Danon, is scheduled to visit the south, Israel’s mission to the U.N. said.
CNN reported that the UN says it is working with Egypt to try to restore a ceasefire and says both sides are putting at risk efforts to relieve the suffering of people in Gaza.
The UN’s Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process, Nickolay Mladenov, announcing renewed efforts with Egypt to restore calm, called on all parties to immediately de-escalate or risk a conflict with “grave consequences for all.”
Turkey has condemned a strike on a building housing the office of its state-run Anadolu news agency, a building which Israel says is also used by Hamas’s military intelligence, according to a CNN report.
Israel announced that it is closing the two border crossings between Israel and Gaza, as well as closing the Gaza fishing zone.
The fishing zone was restricted to 6 nautical miles earlier this week following a rocket fired from Gaza that landed off the coast of Israel.
There was no specific date for when the crossings and the fishing zone would reopen, according to the CNN report. (World Israel News)
Read more at: worldisraelnews.com

MARCH OF THE LIVING FOUNDER: “THE ONLY THING WORSE THAN AUSCHWITZ IS THE WORLD FORGETTING ABOUT AUSCHWITZ”

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On Holocaust Memorial Day (Yom Hashoah), Thursday, May 2, under the theme “Say No To Anti-Semitism,” more than 10,000 Jewish and non-Jewish youth from 40 countries and dozens of Holocaust survivors and dignitaries from around the world participated in the 31st annual International March of the Living to pay tribute to all victims of the Holocaust and call for an end to anti-Semitism.

special delegation of US Ambassadors and White House representatives headed by the US Ambassador to Israel David Friedman poses in Auschwitz ahead of the 31st annual International March of the Living.

A special delegation of US Ambassadors and White House representatives headed by the US Ambassador to Israel David Friedman, and a distinguished delegation honoring Greek Jewry, which was almost completely annihilated by the Nazis and their collaborators, headed by His All-Holiness Bartholomew I Archbishop of Constantinople New Rome and Ecumenical Patriarch, and the Speaker of the Greek Parliament, Mr. Nikos Voutsis, joined the thousands of international participants on the 3-kilometer march from Auschwitz to Birkenau.

 

“In taking part in the March of the Living, you are marching at a time when a growing wave of anti-Semitism is yet again sweeping the world.  But in truth, anti-Semitism never really disappeared – it simply lay barely hidden under the surface waiting for the right time to strike again.  And strike it did – in deadly fashion – at the Eitz Chaim synagogue in Pittsburgh last year, and just a few days ago, on the last day of Passover, at the Chabad synagogue in Poway,” said Dr. Shmuel Rosenman, Founder and Co-Chairman of the March of the Living, while addressing the participants just prior to the march.

 

Dr. Shmuel Rosenman, Founder and Co-Chairman of the March of the Living, is flanked by Israel’s Ambassador to the United Nations Danny Danon, Jewish Agency Chairman Isaac Herzog, US Ambassador to Israel David Friedman A special delegation of US Ambassadors and White House representatives headed by the US Ambassador to Israel David Friedman, Former Israeli Chief Rabbi Israel Lau, and His All-Holiness Bartholomew I Archbishop of Constantinople New Rome and Ecumenical Patriarch at the entrance to Birkenau during the 31st annual March of the Living.

“But today, on Yom Hashoah we gather together in Auschwitz to mourn our 6 million ancestors, a third of the entire Jewish people, who were murdered in the most unprecedented genocide in history.  Today, we proclaim to our enemies with a loud and clear voice: We shall not be defeated!  We will return here year after year to raise our voices against anti-Semitism and, indeed, against all forms of racism and hatred.  As a survivor of Auschwitz once said, the only one thing worse than Auschwitz is if the world ever forgets that there was an Auschwitz.  We promise to never allow that to happen.”

 

Jewish Agency Chairman Isaac Herzog also led a Jewish Agency delegation behind a far-reaching international campaign against anti-Semitism.  In addressing the crowd at Birkenau, Chairman Herzog called on world leaders to fight the rampant anti-Semitism erupting the world over, specifically highlighting the dramatic rise of hate crimes against Jews in Europe.  “It cannot be that 74 years after this wretched war, Jews are once again unsafe on the streets of Europe. Jews cannot be murdered in Pittsburgh and Poway or anywhere! Let us heed the warning and take to heart the lessons of the Holocaust.  World leaders must unite in zero tolerance for hate crimes of any kind.”

 

His All-Holiness Bartholomew I Archbishop of Constantinople New Rome and Ecumenical Patriarch echoed the sentiments of those who spoke before him, urging global attention to the current egregious wave of unchecked racism and hate.  “It is not enough to remember the victims of the Holocaust in the face of the hatred that is sweeping the world.  Silence in the face of helpless suffering and the ideologies of racism and intolerance only exacerbates this problem,” said the Archbishop. “We must do everything in our powers to prevent another tragedy like the Holocaust.  The only way to accomplish this is by striking down all actions that are an afront to our basic humanity.”

 

One day prior to the march, more than 200 young leaders from 10 countries – Jewish and non-Jewish – gathered at the Jageillonian University in Krakow, Poland, to take part in the first-ever ‘Emerging Leadership Conference,’ an initiative of the International March of the Living launched in response to the torrent of anti-Semitic events and growing global trend of hate crimes against Jews over the last two years.  Following a wide-ranging discussion of the young leaders’ responsibilities as the new frontline in the war against anti-Semitism, the students drafted a declaration that launched a campaign to rally the support of their peers around the world.  The youth delegates read their declaration aloud for the first time at the closing ceremony.

 

“It has been said: ‘The path to Auschwitz was built by hatred, but paved by indifference.’  We have the ethical obligation not only as Jews but as human beings to transform the world we see into a place where we want to be,” read youth delegates Eial Rosenzvit of Argentina, Noah Tradonsky of South Africa, and Sharon Ghelman of the United States.  “Reaching that goal requires us to understand that simply refraining from evil will not allow our vision to reach fruition, for it is in the active pursuit of goodness and the relentless search for kindness that humanity may fulfill its potential.  With this declaration we vow to be builders of the future, not victims of the past, and here today we pledge to stand tall in the face of bigotry, raise our voice against anti-Semitism, speak out against racism, and commit to loving all our neighbors as ourselves.”

 

The ceremony also included the lighting of six torches, each one honoring a different group of Holocaust heroes: the Righteous Among the Nations, who risked their lives to save Jews during the Holocaust; survivors  of the Holocaust, who picked up the pieces of their shattered world and established new families after suffering through unspeakable horrors; the more than 1 million innocent Jewish children murdered by the Nazis during the Holocaust; the countless numbers of rabbis, scholars and teachers murdered in the Holocaust, who dedicated their lives to teaching until the very last moments of their lives; the members of the resistance, who fought to liberate Europe from the hands of Nazi Germany; and those born in the State of Israel, where the Jewish people were reborn after the Holocaust.

Other high-profile marchers and participants include Prime Minister of Romania and President of Council of EU Viorica Dăncilă, Holocaust survivor and Former Israeli Chief Rabbi Israel Lau, who has accompanied every march since 1988, and members of the Premier League’s Chelsea Football Club and Major League Soccer’sNew England Revolution, two professional soccer teams proudly supporting the #SayNoToAntisemitism campaign.  In addition, Israel’s Ambassador to the United Nations Danny Danon led a delegation of dozens of UN ambassadors from around the world, including the ambassadors of Argentina, Latvia, Guatemala, and Honduras among others.

 

The International March of the Living is an immersive Holocaust education experience – the largest of its kind – that brings tens of thousands of individuals to Poland every year to examine the roots of prejudice, intolerance and hatred.  Since its inception in 1988, more than 300,000 participants from 52 countries have marched down the same 3-kilometer path leading from Auschwitz to Birkenau on Holocaust Memorial Day as a tribute to all victims of the Holocaust.  Over the last 30 years, high-profile participants have included Israeli Prime Ministers, Presidents, Members of Knesset, Chiefs of Staff, and Ministers, as well as Presidents, Ministers of Education, intellectuals, and educators from around the world.

Poway Rabbi Encourages ‘Moment of Silence’ at White House

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He was not originally included on the roster of speakers at the National Day of Prayer at the White House, but Rabbi Yisroel Goldstein, heroic senior rabbi of Chabad of Poway, drew tears from his listeners and words of grateful appreciation from President Donald Trump when the president spontaneously called him up to share his message of pride and strength in the face of evil. In the words of the president: “There was no one who expressed the horror and beauty of what you represent better than you did.”

By: Menachem Posner

Speaking with bandages on his hands and bags under his eyes following the harrowing anti-Semitic shooting at his synagogue last Saturday that resulted in the death of congregant Lori Gilbert Kaye, two others injured, and the loss of one of the rabbi’s fingers, Goldstein quoted the Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson, of righteous memory, who so often spoke of the vital need for moral education in American society. He noted how in the early 1980s, not long after the assassination attempt on President Ronald Reagan, the Rebbe began speaking of the dire importance of making a daily Moment of Silence a standard practice in public schools across the nation.

“Just five days ago,” said the rabbi, “Saturday morning, I faced evil and . . . darkness . . . right in our own house of worship, right at Chabad of Poway. I faced [the killer] and I had to make a decision. Do I run and hide or do I stand tall and fight and protect all those who are there? We cannot control what others do, but we can control how we react. My dear rebbe, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, taught me, that the way we react to darkness is with light. It was that moment that I made a decision, no matter what happens to me, I’m going to save as many people as possible. I should have been dead … The Rebbe taught me that as a Jew, you are a soldier of G d, you need to stand tall and stand fast do what it takes to change the world.

“My life has changed forever,” he continued, “but it changed so that I can make change, and that I can teach others to be mighty and tall. Many have asked me, ‘Rabbi, where do we go from here?’ … My response is what the Rebbe [said] when President Ronald Reagan was shot. The Rebbe said we need to go back to the basics and introduce a Moment of Silence in all public schools so that children from early childhood on can recognize that there is more good to the world, that they are valuable, there is accountability and every human being is created in G d’s image. If something good will come out of this terrible, terrible horrific event, let us bring a Moment of Silence to our public school system … ”

A Personal Request for a Moment of Silence in Schools

In addition to several Chabad-Lubavitch rabbis, Goldstein was accompanied by congregants and fellow heroes of the attack, Oscar Stewart, the combat veteran who chased the shooter from the synagogue; and Jonathan Morales, the off-duty border-patrol agent who took up the chase and managed to shoot the attacker’s car several times.

The president asked both men to share a few words. Like his rabbi, Morales quoted the Rebbe and asked his audience to increase in mitzvah observance and acts of goodness and kindness.

Following the rabbi’s emotional remarks, the president thanked him, saying that “truly your courage and grace and devotion touches every heart and soul in America.”

Before the National Day of Prayer gathering in the Rose Garden, Goldstein met President Trump in the Oval Office for a discussion that focused on how the next generation of young people could be influenced for good. “I asked him for a personal favor,” Goldstein told reporters gathered on the White House driveway. He described the Rebbe’s vision for a Moment of Silence: “To be able to introduce our children, at a very young age, to know that they are created in G d’s image, they are valuable, other human beings are valuable. There’s accountability; there’s a higher Deity.”

“I pray and I hope that from the darkness of this, a lot of good will happen.” (Chabad.org)

 

“What If a Girl in the Holocaust Had Instagram?” – Eva Stories Educates a New Generation of Jews About the Holocaust

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Social media platforms have indeed revolutionized the communication age in ways that were never thought possible. Now it appears that Instagram users can learn about the horrors and atrocities of the Holocaust through a new account that was open for this specific reason.

By: Edwina Seville

The NY Daily News reported that the Instagram account known as “Eva Stories” is predicated on the true diary entries of Eva Heyman, who in 1944 was killed by the Nazi murder machine in Europe. She was a young Jewish girl from Hungary when her life was snuffed out by the Nazi beasts.  

The Daily News reported that the account officially launched on Wednesday, May 1st, to coincide with the official commemoration of Holocaust Remembrance Day in Israel.  

The series will follow Eva over the course of 70 episodes, according to The New York Times. The production will depict Eva as she’s taken from her comfortable life in former-Hungary, transferred to a ghetto and relegated to the Auschwitz death camp, where she ultimately died, according to the Daily News.

The account posted a teaser for the project earlier this week: “What If a Girl in the Holocaust Had Instagram?”

The trailer, subtitled in Hebrew, begins with simple but cheery touchstones of adolescence, from selfies with Eva’s crush to having a laugh with adoring grandparents.

The Jerusalem Post reported that the team behind the project – which is spearheaded by billionaire Mati Kochavi and his daughter, Maya – said Thursday morning that it had already received more than 100 million views in its first 14 hours.

As of Thursday afternoon, the account had close to 800,000 followers.

Instagram stories are short photos or video clips that are posted online and disappear 24 hours later. But the project has used Instagram’s “highlight” feature to save the videos, pinning them to the Instagram account’s page for more permanent viewing.

“The memory of the Holocaust outside of Israel is disappearing,” Kochavi explained, noting it cost “less than $5 million” to bring to life. In his first public statement about the project, he noted, “In the digital age, when the attention span is low but the thrill span is high, and given the dwindling number of Holocaust survivors, it is imperative to find new models of testimony and memory.”

On Monday, the JPost reported that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu urged his social media fans to follow the account. On Wednesday, the official Instagram of the White House – with 4.7 million followers – promoted the project.

According to the JPost report, Comedian Sarah Silverman posted on Twitter late Wednesday: “Who’s watching @eva.stories on IG? Wow.”

Many have praised the project for its innovative storytelling aimed at the next generation. But others have criticized it for cheapening the memory of the Holocaust and turning a tale of genocide into a series of hashtags.

“Dumbing down history? Or bringing history to a new generation?” asked Andrew Stroehlein, European media director for Human Rights Watch on Twitter.

 

Superstar Gal Gadot to Earn $10M For Reprising her Role as Wonder Woman in Upcoming Film

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It appears that Israeli actress Gal Gadot will earn in the neighborhood of northward of $10 million for reprising her role as the one and only Wonder Woman for the fourth time in Wonder Woman 1984. Photo Credit: Shutterstock

Comic book aficionados are in store for a bonanza of big screen films that depict their favorite comic super heroes and villains in their glory. Those familiar with the iconic brand of DC Comics will be more than excited to learn that in the next two years, the comic book syndicate’s film division, known as DC Films, will release such blockbusters as Wonder Woman 1984,  starring Gal Gadot, Birds of Prey (and the Fantabulous Emancipation of One Harley Quinn) starring Margot Robbie, and Joker starring Joaquin Phoenix

By: Billy Lundgarden

Ever wondered just how much money these actors earn for portraying comic book royalty? According to a report on the Heroic Hollywood web site, it appears that Israeli actress Gal Gadot will earn in the neighborhood of northward of $10 million for reprising her role as the one and only Wonder Woman for the fourth time in Wonder Woman 1984.  In the director’s chair for the upcoming Wonder Woman flick will be Patty Jenkins, who will take home approximately $9 million for her directorial abilities. That appears to be a substantial upgrade from the $1 million she earned for the first film.

Hitting theaters later this year, the report on the celebrity site indicates that Joaquin Phoenix is expected to make $4.5 million for his efforts portraying Arthur Fleck in Joker. Coming next is Margot Robbie’s second outing as mentally disturbed anti-heroine, Harley Quinn, in Birds Of Prey (and the Fantabulous Emancipation of One Harley Quinn) which will earn her somewhere in the $9-$10 million range.

The Jewish Voice reported last year that Gadot had gathered up gathering up some lucrative commercial endorsements as well.   Gadot had entered into a deal with Reebok Sportswear that was reported at the time to be worth $10 million. That figure was published by the Israeli newspaper, Hadashot. The major manufacturer of athletic apparel has extended plaudits to Gadot; calling her “a worldwide symbol of confidence, defiant courage, and strength” in a statement that was posted on the Reebok web site.

Also on the Reebok web site, acolytes of the actress can download phone wallpapers   “inspired by some of her most powerful quotes.”

As was reported last year, Gadot took to her Instagram account to engage her fans and followers Gadot declared that she was “pumped” about being a central figure in the Reebok sponsorship. She exhorted women to “Get ahead of the game! Get into the action!”

Gadot recalled her formative years when she said, “I was lucky enough to grow up with a mother who was a gym teacher, so the importance of having someone push me out of my comfort zone and being active – and the benefits of it – were ingrained in me as a young girl.”

Now that she has put her John Hancock on the Reebok endorsement contract, Gadot joins other prominent female personalities in the sports, culture and entertainment industries who have also been previous endorsers of Reebok products. They include    Victoria Beckham, Gigi Hadid, and Ariana Grande.

Israel Honors the 6 Million on Holocaust Remembrance Day

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Israel came to a standstill starting Wednesday night as it began to mark the Holocaust Martyrs’ and Heroes’ Remembrance Day.

By: Roseanne Tabachnik 

Israel came to a standstill on Wednesday night as it began to mark the Holocaust Martyrs’ and Heroes’ Remembrance Day, Yom HaShoah, with an opening ceremony at the Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial in Jerusalem.

President Reuven Rivlin and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu delivered their speeches at the ceremony, honoring the six million Jews murdered by the Nazis during World War II.

“Eighty years have gone by since that war broke out where they planned and executed the methodical extermination of the six million of our brothers and sisters,” President Rivlin said.

In his speech, the president warned that Israel must not form alliances with extremists and racist groups, who fail to recognize their wrongdoing and responsibility in the Holocaust.

Mr. Rivlin continued to speak of Israel’s strength and power in modern times. “I am not afraid for us, for the State of Israel. The Jewish people are no longer weak. It is not defenseless. The State of Israel is not only a stable democracy, we’re also powerful.”

Prime Minister Netanyahu’s address followed Rivlin’s, emphasizing the significant role of Holocaust survivors in the state of Israel.

“I felt huge pain for this terrible disaster that befell us, but together with that, I felt a huge pride to represent our people who rose from the ashes in our independent state,” the prime minister said.

Netanyahu drew references to anti-Semitism rising around the world and in the U.S., hinting at the recent caricature published in the New York Times. “The publication of caricatures of hate towards Israel undermines the legitimacy of the Jewish state,” he said.

After Netanyahu’s speech, Holocaust survivor Bela Eizenman lit the first torch at the ceremony, followed by Shaul Lubovitz, Fanny Ben-Ami, Menachem Haberman, Sara Shapira, and Yehuda Mimon. Inspiring films describing their heroic survival during the Holocaust and the large families they raised in its wake were played before each one in turn lit a memorial torch.

A two-minute-long siren sounded throughout the country on Thursday at 10 a.m., during which the entire country stood in unison in a moment of silence in memory of the six million Holocaust victims.

In a related development, World Israel News has reported that a far-right faction of Poland’s parliament, Kukiz 15, chose Holocaust Remembrance Day to submit a bill to protect Poland against Jewish restitution claims for the Holocaust.

On Tuesday, punk rock musician turned politician Paweł Kukiz, who founded Kukiz 15, after doing surprisingly well in his 2015 run for president, posted on Facebook that “in order to protect Poland as much as possible against possible Jewish claims resulting from U.S. law 447, we are submitting a bill for the protection of property of the Republic of Poland against claims regarding non-hereditary property.”

Mr. Kukiz refers to the Justice for Uncompensated Survivors Today (JUST) Act, passed by the U.S. Congress in 2017, which “requires the Department of State to report to Congress assessing the national laws and enforceable policies of covered countries regarding the identification and return of, or restitution for, assets wrongfully seized or transferred during the Holocaust era.”

Kukiz 15 appears to be playing on Polish fears regarding the section of the law that deals with “the restitution of heirless property to assist needy Holocaust survivors.”

The Jewish Press quotes Polish news website wyborcza.pl, which says “the 447 right-wing law adopted by the U.S. Congress scares voters in Poland. … it serves to demand in the future compensation from the Polish state for real estate lost during World War II by Polish Jews. It is to apply to property for which there are no claims from former owners or their heirs.”

Kukiz 15 holds about 30 seats in the Sejm, Poland’s lower house of parliament. It won 42 percent among voters aged 18 to 29 in the 2015 presidential election. (TPS & World Israel News)

Read more at: worldisraelnews.com & Tazpit Press Service

 

 

 

Chelsea Clinton Racking Up Millions as Board Director of Companies Owned by Parents’ Friend, Barry Diller

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Seems like bearing the surname of Clinton and being a direct descendant of the former president and Secretary of State can be a powerful tool for making a substantial and very easy profit.

By: Horace Steinbloom

The Daily Mail of the UK reported that records have emerged that indicate that former first daughter and now mother of two, Chelsea Clinton, 39, raked in $600,000 last year for her work as director of the boards of IAC and Expedia, (two companies owned by Barry Diller). The evidence that the Daily Mail reported on says that the “IAC board met just six times in 2018, while some members of the Expedia board were only obligated to attend two meetings last year.” 

Barry Diller, the owner of these two successful companies is a billionaire businessman and longtime partner of designer Diane von Furstenberg, who is often spotted attending Broadway shows with Chelsea and her parents, according to the Daily Mail report.

Caption: The pilings for Diller Island, the futuristic park and performing arts venue, are being built. The dream is being sponsored by Barry Diller, the entertainment mogul, and his wife, fashion designer Diane von Furstenberg. With a hefty price tag of $250 million, the island is slated to open in spring of 2021.

Diller is not only an entertainment mogul but a very close friends of Chelsea’s parents, Bill & Hillary. In December of 2018, the Jewish Voice reported that the plans to build Diller Island on the West Side of Manhattan in the Hudson River had begun to materialize as pilings could be seen being built.

With a hefty price tag of $250 million, the island is slated to open in spring of 2021. The estimate budget jumped from a mere $35 million, mainly because of the design complexity and legal battles. The project struggled against seven years of planning and bureaucratic maneuvering while wrangling with an environmentalist opposition group, due to the protected status of the river.

The park, named after Mr. Diller, will feature a performing arts center, with a 700-seat amphitheater for music, dance and theater productions. As reported by the NY Times, British designer Thomas Heatherwick, is creating a 2.4-acre platform which will seem to rise out of the river like a green Neverland. The supports surrounding the perimeter will appear as clusters of Champagne-glass-shaped planting pots seemingly sprouting from pilings beneath the riverbed. The addition of two walkways, which will connect the park to the shoreline and make it part of Hudson River Park, are also already underway.

But back to Chelsea for a moment. The Daily Mail reported that when the market opened this past Friday, the trading prices of both IAC and Expedia revealed that compensation packages that the younger Clinton is receiving would amount to just over $400,000 of Expedia stock and shares in IAC. This pretty package with a bow on top adds up to a whopping $6.3 million for the first daughter and savvy businesswoman.  Moreover, she has over $400,000 worth of Expedia stock, bringing her to over $6.7 million in combined stock from the two companies

The 10-K that was filed this week by Expedia shows that Chelsea’s total compensation package was $302,880 for the most recent fiscal year, according to the Daily Mail report.

Chelsea also picked up a cool $52,953 as a cash fee for assuming the role as director of the board and her stock award was $249,927. Other members of the boards of both companies were compensated in the same amount.   She was required to attend just six meetings in her role at the company, where she has been on the board since 2011

It appears that Chelsea also represents the youth voice on the boards of the companies that she serves on. She is the youngest at age 39 and joins such people as producer Scott Rudin, 60, Uber CEO Khosrowshahi and Diller’s stepson Alexander von Furstenberg, both 49, and Courtnee Chun, who at 43 is the closest in age to Clinton, according to the Daily Mail report.