70.2 F
New York
Friday, June 7, 2024
Home Blog Page 5

The Miraculous Story of the Zionist Sephardic Jews of Bulgaria

0
The sanctuary of the Central Sofia Synagogue in the Bulgarian capital’s Square of Religious Tolerance, April 18, 2024. Photo by Joshua Marks

Saved from the Nazi gas chambers during the Holocaust, the community was reborn in the nascent state of Israel.

By: Joshua Marks

Less than a two-hour drive from and southeast of the capital, Sofia, lies Plovdiv, a remarkable ancient Bulgarian city. Plovdiv, known as Europe’s oldest, continuously inhabited city—and one of the oldest cities in the world—is nestled among the famous seven hills along the banks of the Maritsa River. It is here that our Jewish journey begins.

During the Roman imperial period in the 3rd century C.E., the city was called Philippopolis. It is in Plovdiv that the only ancient synagogue in Bulgaria was discovered. At the archaeological museum, visitors can admire a fragmented mosaic floor adorned with a menorah and Greek inscription.

The exterior of the Central Sofia Synagogue in the Bulgarian capital’s Square of Religious Tolerance, April 17, 2024. Photo by Joshua Marks

However, the Jewish presence in this region and its surroundings can be traced back even further, as mentioned in the book Bulgarian Jews: Living History by Clive Leviev-Sawyer and Imanuel Marcus. Hellenistic Jewish philosopher Philo of Alexandria, in his letter “On the Embassy to Gaius,” written around 41 or 42 C.E., refers to Jews residing in Thessaly, Boeotia, Macedonia, Aetolia, Attica and Argos.

In the northern part of Bulgaria, specifically in the city of Oescus, which was part of the Roman province of Moesia Inferior, a Latin inscription from the late 2nd century C.E. was discovered. This inscription features a menorah and mentions the archisynagogos (head of the synagogue).

Joseph Benatov, a Hebrew teacher at the University of Pennsylvania who grew up in Sofia’s Jewish community, shared insights with JNS on the history of Jewish communities in Bulgaria. He stated, “The oldest known communities date back to the Roman Empire, the so-called Romaniote Jews, who are the Greek-speaking Jews. And we have clear evidence of organized Jewish communities from that Roman period when Bulgaria was part of the Roman Empire.”

A plaque commemorating the site where Metropolitan Kiril of Plovdiv protected the local Jews from deportation to the Nazi death camps. Photo by Joshua Marks

Following the Romaniote Jews, Ashkenazi Jews arrived in Bulgaria during the 13th and 14th centuries, migrating from central Europe, as explained by Benatov, who conducts tours of the area through his travel agency Sephardic Balkans.

“It was only after these two groups that a significant wave of Sephardic Jews arrived and settled in the region, being embraced by the Ottoman Empire following their expulsion from Spain and Portugal in 1492 and 1497,” noted Benatov, who is of pure Sephardic descent. “Upon the arrival of the Sephardic Jews, they essentially assumed control of Jewish life in the region.”

According to Benatov, many Ashkenazi Jews learned Ladino and adopted Sephardic prayer customs, leading to a rise in Ashkenazi-Sephardic marriages, particularly in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Nonetheless, there were still distinct Ashkenazi communities in Bulgaria in the early 1900s, constituting around 5% of the Jewish population, while the vast majority, 95%, of Bulgarian Jews in the 20th century until World War II were Sephardic. The Sephardim largely absorbed the Romaniotes, unlike the Ashkenazim who maintained a minor presence.

A Holocaust memorial next to the Basilica of Saint Sofia in the Bulgarian capital, April 18, 2024. Photo by Joshua Marks

Benatov highlighted the fact that the Bulgarian-Jewish identity is a relatively new development, stemming from Bulgaria’s independence in 1878. Throughout the previous 400 years that Sephardic Jews resided in the region, they primarily identified as Ottoman Jews, considering themselves subjects of the Ottoman Empire, and were closely tied to their respective hometowns.

My wife’s DNA is particularly interesting, as it reflects the historical encounters between the Ashkenazi and Sephardic communities in Bulgaria. On her maternal side, her family is of Sephardic descent. However, the genetic analysis also revealed a percentage of Ashkenazi ancestry, which can be attributed to her great-great-grandfather, Mr. Berenstein.

In April, we embarked on a journey from Tel Aviv to Sofia to explore Bulgaria’s Jewish sites. We were fortunate to have a highly recommended tour guide, a knowledgeable local named Philip Stanimirov, who was recommended by Joseph. Accompanying us on the tour were family members from my hometown of Washington, D.C.

One of the initial highlights of our tour was the awe-inspiring Central Sofia Synagogue. This magnificent house of Jewish worship is not only one of the largest Sephardic synagogues in Europe; it’s also the largest in the Balkan Peninsula. It is an absolute must-visit for any Jewish traveler exploring Bulgaria.

The sanctuary of the Zion Plovdiv Synagogue in southern Bulgaria, April 19, 2024. Photo by Joshua Marks

The Moorish Revival synagogue in Sofia, designed by Austrian architect Friedrich Grünanger, was constructed on the site of the previous Ahava ve Chesed synagogue. Completed in 1909, this architectural masterpiece stands as a testament to the Bulgarian people’s renowned tolerance. The Square of Religious Tolerance, located in the heart of Sofia, evokes the ambiance of Jerusalem’s Old City. Within close proximity, one can find the synagogue, the Banya Bashi Mosque, the Eastern Orthodox Hagia Nedelya Cathedral and the Roman Catholic St. Joseph’s Cathedral, which showcase the diverse religious landscape of the area.

Benatov highlighted the significant role that the Bulgarian Eastern Orthodox Church played in condemning discrimination against Jews and protecting the community from persecution during World War II and the Holocaust. Metropolitan Kiril of Plovdiv and Metropolitan Stefan of Sofia spearheaded efforts to rescue Bulgaria’s Jews, and both were recognized in 2002 as Righteous Among the Nations at Yad Vashem. They are buried at the Bachkovo Monastery just south of Plovdiv.

In a remarkable act of civil disobedience, Kiril, who would later become the patriarch of the Bulgarian Church, led a group of 300 church members to the train station in Plovdiv. This station was where thousands of Jews were being forcibly packed into boxcars, awaiting transportation to Treblinka. Despite the presence of Nazi SS officers, Kiril fearlessly pushed through and attempted to enter one of the train cars. However, he was prevented from doing so by the guards. Undeterred, he proceeded to walk to the front of the train and made a bold declaration that he would lie down on the tracks if the train were to start moving.

It is worth noting that Stephan, the bishop of Sofia, fully supported Kiril’s actions. In fact, he even sent a letter to the king, warning that if the Jews were deported, he too would lie down on the train tracks as a form of protest.

A sign outside of the Central Sofia Synagogue in the Bulgarian capital’s Square of Religious Tolerance, April 18, 2024. Photo by Joshua Marks

Benatov stated, “This is something that I think Bulgarians are rightly very proud of, that even on the religious level, the Bulgarian East Orthodox Church as a national institution was adamantly pro-Jewish and defensive of its Jewish neighbors and friends in the country.”

The remarkable story of Bulgaria’s nearly 50,000 Jews who were spared from the horrors of the gas chambers during World War II, despite the country’s alliance with Nazi Germany, distinguishes it from many others that willingly handed over their Jewish population for deportation to death camps.

Regrettably, not all Jews under Bulgarian control were saved. In April 1941, the Germans entrusted Bulgarian Tsar Boris III with the administration of Greek Eastern Macedonia, Western Thrace and the Yugoslav provinces of Vardar Macedonia and Pirot.

Under Bulgarian authority, approximately 11,343 Jews were deported to German-held territories (7,122 from Macedonia and 4,221 from Thrace), where the majority met their tragic fate at the Treblinka extermination camp in Nazi-occupied Poland.

One heroic figure who defied the pro-Nazi cabinet was Dimitur Pešev, the deputy speaker of the Parliament. On March 10, 1943, he courageously intervened and prevented the deportation of 8,500 Jews who had already been rounded up and placed on trains bound for Treblinka.

“He single-handedly halted the initial deportation of Bulgarian Jews,” explained Benatov. “Thanks to him, I believe, King Boris III himself later changed his stance and became much more resolute in defending Bulgaria’s Jewish population when the second attempt to deport them occurred.”

Pešev’s hometown of Kyustendil, situated in far western Bulgaria near the borders of Serbia and North Macedonia, is a stop on Benatov’s tours.

In March 2023, Bulgaria commemorated the 80th anniversary of its decision not to deport its Jewish population. Underscoring the mixed legacy of Boris and the strong emotions he elicits today, however, representatives of the Jewish community refused to attend the official ceremony.

These Jewish leaders cite Boris’s alliance with Hitler’s Germany as the leader of a fascist government, his imposition of discriminatory racial laws against Jews and the deportation of the Jews in Bulgaria’s occupied territories.

However, the book Crown of Thorns: The Reign of King Boris III of Bulgaria, 1918-1943, by the late Bulgarian-born journalist Stephane Groueff, offers a more nuanced and sympathetic take on Boris’s wartime legacy.

For example, Groueff writes, “Boris often received foreign Jewish leaders visiting Bulgaria, like the prominent Zionist Nahum Sokoloff, who declared after the audience: ‘You can be proud of your king; he is a friend of ours.’”

Boris died mysteriously after returning from meeting Adolf Hitler in Germany in 1943. He was buried at Rila Monastery, but his remains were removed by Communist authorities and secretly reburied at Vrana Palace, near Sofia. After the fall of Communism, his heart was reinterred at Rila.

While touring Bulgaria, we also visited several Holocaust memorials, including the three stone tablets situated behind the Basilica of Saint Sofia, a 6th-century Byzantine church. These tablets pay homage to the Bulgarian leaders who were instrumental in saving the Jews during that time.

Last November, a new Holocaust memorial was revealed at Vazrazhdane Square in the capital city. This monument specifically honors the lawyers, judges and prosecutors who played significant roles in rescue operations during the Holocaust.

Local Jews established the Monument of Gratitude in Plovdiv, Bulgaria’s second-largest city, in 1998. This monument commemorates the successful prevention of the deportation of the city’s Jewish community on March 10, 1943. The inscription on the monument is in Bulgarian, Hebrew and English, expressing gratitude to all those who contributed to the rescue efforts on that day.

This article commenced by discussing an ancient synagogue in Plovdiv. In addition, a contemporary synagogue in the same area was explored, showcasing the continuous presence of Jewish culture in this Balkan country despite challenges and discrimination. Constructed in 1892 following the Ottoman architectural style, the Zion Plovdiv Synagogue stands as the sole functioning Jewish place of worship apart from the Central Sofia Synagogue. Situated amid the traditional Jewish district of Orta Mezar, this Sephardic synagogue underwent a complete restoration in 2003.

The two active synagogues in Bulgaria have numerous empty seats, underscoring the limited number of Hebraic individuals in the country today. This also serves as a poignant reminder that most of Bulgaria’s Sephardic Zionist Jews relocated to Israel following World War II. About 42,000 of the 50,000 surviving Jews made aliyah between 1947 and 1952. Another 3,000-4,000 Jews who endured the Communist era migrated to Israel in 1990, marking the final and most recent wave of aliyah from Bulgaria.

Based on the 2011 census, Bulgaria is home to 1,162 Jews. However, the World Jewish Congress estimates that the country’s Jewish population ranges from 2,000 to 6,000 individuals.

Benatov explained that during the Communist period after World War II, there was a significant amount of intermarriage within the Jewish community. As a result, it is common to encounter community members who come from intermarried families. In many cases, only one grandparent may have Jewish heritage, often of Sephardic origin. Nevertheless, the local Jewish community considers all these individuals as full members.

Despite the community’s small size, there has been a revival of Jewish life and a growing acknowledgment of the historical importance of Jews in the region. This phenomenon is evident in Vidin, a port city on the southern bank of the Danube River in northwestern Bulgaria, near the borders of Romania and Serbia.

The city was previously inhabited by a significant Jewish population, reaching its peak at approximately 2,000 Jews just before World War II, constituting 5% of Bulgaria’s Jewish community. Following the war, most of Vidin’s Jewish residents relocated to Israel to start anew. A recent $6 million initiative successfully transformed the deserted 19th-century main synagogue into a cultural center and communal focal point, which Benatov says is “very worth visiting.”

Benatov also recommended visiting Samokov in the southwestern part of the country, an hour’s drive from Sofia, where the wealthy Sephardic dynasty, the Arie family from Vienna, settled and built an empire. One of the Arie family homes has been turned into a museum. A synagogue built by the Arie family is a national historical monument.

The Zionist movement first emerged within the Ashkenazi Jewish communities of central and eastern Europe during the late 1800s. But the Sephardic Jews of Bulgaria stood out as some of the most enthusiastic advocates for the restoration of Jewish self-governance in the ancestral land of Israel.

Benatov asserted that the Bulgarian-Jewish community embraced Theodore Herzl’s concept of a Jewish national home in the eastern Mediterranean because of the groundwork laid by local proto-Zionist organizations. Moreover, the Jewish community in Bulgaria, being more secular, adopted Zionism as the central principle guiding Jewish life, supplanting religion.

According to Benatov, the Bulgarian Jewish community exhibited a strong sense of pride in their Jewish heritage, viewing it from a Zionist perspective.

Bulgaria boasted numerous Zionist organizations, including sports and cultural clubs, camps, women’s groups, international Zionist organizations and Maccabi.

“Zionism truly governed and organized Jewish life in Bulgaria,” Benatov explained. “It served as the foundation for the school system in Jewish schools, which followed a Zionist-driven curriculum emphasizing Hebrew and other subjects of significance to political Zionism.”

Upon their arrival in Israel, most Bulgarian Jews chose to settle in Jaffa, an ancient port city located in southern Tel Aviv. Over time, Jaffa earned the nickname “Little Bulgaria” due to the prevalence of Ladino and Bulgarian languages spoken there.

Similar to their reputation in Bulgaria, the Bulgarian Jews quickly established a positive image in Israel. They were recognized for their strong work ethic, honesty, humility and lack of demanding nature, as stated by Benatov.

Furthermore, the Bulgarian Jews gained recognition for their athletic abilities. In 1949, they founded the Maccabi Jaffa Football Club, which started as the Zionist association of Maccabi Jaffa. The team came close to winning the championship twice during the 1960s and was affectionately known as “The Bulgarians.”

As a successful immigrant community, the Bulgarian Jews gradually expanded beyond Jaffa’s confines and became an integral part of modern Israeli society.

In his book From Sofia to Jaffa: The Jews of Bulgaria and Israel, author Guy H. Haskell describes Jaffa as a sentimental hub for the Bulgarian Jewish population, even as their numbers dwindled. As the new immigrants became more established, they moved on to other areas. Today, only a small community of mostly retirees and their social clubs remain in Jaffa.

My wife’s grandparents were part of the wave of Bulgarian Jews who migrated to Israel. They both came in 1948 when they were just 14 years old, her grandmother aboard the steam merchant Pan York (also known as Kibbutz Galuyot and later Komemiyut) and her grandfather on a rundown ship from Bulgaria. Following David Ben-Gurion’s declaration on the radio, her grandmother joyously joined the crowds dancing in the streets to celebrate Israel’s independence, marking a new beginning for the Sephardic Jews who were expelled from Iberia to the Ottoman Balkans, then Bulgaria, and finally found their home in Israel, the Jewish homeland.

(JNS.org)

Can AI Create a Personalized Diet for Gut Healing?

0
The frontiers of microbial health still hold significant, unexplored territory, yet insights about bacteria and their health effects are forging their way into new treatments for gut issues. Credit: (Baba.Images/Shutterstock)

Apps that tell you what to eat based on your gut microbes are growing in popularity but questions remain about whether the concept is ideal.

By: Amy Denney

The frontiers of microbial health still hold significant, unexplored territory, yet insights about bacteria and their health effects are forging their way into new treatments for gut issues.

In a recent study, an “artificial intelligence-assisted personalized diet” went head-to-head with a low-FODMAP diet, an elimination diet considered the “gold standard” for treating irritable bowel syndrome (IBS).

The randomized trial published last month in the American Journal of Gastroenterology showed the artificial intelligence (AI)-powered personalized diet compared favorably to the low-FODMAP diet for IBS management. The AI-generated diet also had the added benefit of creating more diversity in the gut microbiome—and diversity in bacteria has been associated with better health outcomes.

FODMAP is the acronym for fermentable oligosaccharides, disaccharides, monosaccharides, and polyols—small carbohydrates the body can’t digest without a robust microbial community. The diet was developed by Monash University, particularly for IBS and other digestive symptoms.

“It is a very strict elimination diet that only suppresses symptoms and does not address the root cause of the problem. Due to its nature, sustainable adherence to the diet is very hard and alerts risk for nutritional deficiencies,” said Yüsra Serdaroğlu, head of nutrition at Enbiosis Biotechnology, designers of the app, said in an email to The Epoch Times. “Professionals have already started to highlight even personalization of the low-FODMAP diet.”

The low-FODMAP diet is a medical diet for those with IBS and uses three steps aimed to correct food intolerances and alleviate symptoms such as abdominal pain, gas, and irregular bowel habits such as frequent diarrhea or constipation.

The three steps are:

Eliminating all FODMAP foods for two to six weeks

Introducing those foods back into the patient’s diet one at a time over eight to 12 weeks

Adjusting the diet to include only those foods that don’t trigger symptoms

The goal is a less restrictive diet in the long term.

Research continues to add to the credibility of a low-FODMAP approach for alleviating IBS symptoms, with a study published in April in the Lancet Gastroenterology and Hepatology comparing it with another dietary approach and medication.

In the study, 76 percent of those on the low-FODMAP diet had a reduction in symptoms compared to 71 percent on a low-carbohydrate diet, and 58 percent in the medical treatment group.

 

Designing an Ideal Diet

By comparison, the Enbiosis app aims to only remove foods from the diet that are identified as problematic for that person’s unique gut microbiome. It rates foods for each user based on a database that gives food microbiome modulation rankings. In other words, the food’s score is based on how well it increases specific good bacteria users are lacking.

Low-ranked foods are to be avoided, and the diet calls for eating those foods rated from four to 10. Foods from eight to 10 are particularly needed for that user. There are 300 foods scored in the app, which also includes food plans and recipes.

The first thing the app does, however, is use each person’s microbiome composition, derived from a stool sample, to assess metabolism, immunity, food intolerances, damage to the gut microbiome, and their gut-brain axis, according to Özkan Ufuk Nalbantoğlu, who has a doctorate in engineering from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln and is chief technology officer of Enbiosis.

“The second capability is determining the optimal nutrient composition needed to modulate the microbiome towards healthier states,” Mr. Nalbantoğlu told The Epoch Times in an email. “These functions are achieved through machine learning algorithms and recommendation systems, respectively. Lastly, a generative AI translates these findings into practical dietary plans. As an end-to-end system, it allows for an analysis of your gut microbiome DNA and the provision of your optimal diet plan.”

 

Improving Bacteria and Symptoms

The study included 70 patients following Enbiosis personalized diets and 51 following the low-FODMAP approach. In addition to testing the microbiome before and after the six-week intervention, the study also evaluated symptom severity, anxiety, depression, and quality of life. It broke down results into three types of IBS—described by stool type—as IBS-C for mostly constipation, IBS-D for mostly diarrhea, and IBS-M for mixed stool type.

Only the IBS-C and IBS-D groups experienced a significant improvement in their microbiome health. There was no change in the low-FODMAP group.

Key study results, according to Ms. Serdaroğlu, were:

Positive microbiome shifts, including an increased level of Faecalibacterium prausnitzii (F. prausnitzii)

40 percent decrease in the severity of abdominal pain and distention

30 percent decrease in the frequency of abdominal pain, irregular bowel habits, and life interference

Enhanced quality of life

Reduced anxiety and depression scores

F. prausnitzii is “notable for its anti-inflammatory properties and its ability to produce short-chain fatty acids, especially butyrate, which nourishes the gut lining cells and reduces inflammation,” the study noted.

Previous research has reported that low levels of F. prausnitzii and IBS go hand-in-hand, indicating that an increase in this particular species could be one way to minimize IBS symptoms.

According to the study, F. prausnitzii is not found in any probiotic supplements, so the only way to increase the bacteria is through diet. A 2021 study in Frontiers Pharmacology noted that diets rich in certain non-digestive carbohydrates, or prebiotics, can increase F. prausnitzii. The study also noted that other research has found a kiwi-based supplement can increase F. prausnitzii.

 

AI Apps Growing in Popularity

Enbiosis isn’t the first to design an app to help alleviate gut symptoms and/or improve health outcomes.

Some improvements in IBS symptoms were noted in a 2021 study in the Journal of Medical Internet Research that looked at whether an app called Heali could improve adherence to the low-FODMAP diet over four weeks.

Only 25 of 58 participants recruited completed the study in which they were randomly assigned to receive either educational materials about the diet or the materials along with access to the app.

Participants recorded experiences before and after the study to determine their knowledge of the diet and adherence to it, as well as quality of life and symptom improvement. There was a small improvement in symptom severity among app users, as well as better satisfaction with bowel habits.

Another popular app called ZOE incorporates stool and other testing with food recommendations that are best suited to how users’ blood fat and blood sugar levels respond to food.

Zoe members also agree to be part of ongoing research—and a big part of that is figuring out how gut microbes contribute to or harm human health. So far ZOE has incorporated 100 microbes—50 good ones and 50 bad ones—including bacteria new to science, in its app from among data of 35,000 stool samples.

Those labeled as “bad” are associated with higher risk of cardiovascular disease, inflammation, Type 2 diabetes, and visceral or belly fat.

Are Apps for Everyone?

Nicola Moore, a nutritionist who specializes in cognitive reframing, noted on her website that apps like ZOE that include strict food logging and restrictions could be damaging, especially for anyone who’s struggled with dieting.

“If you come from a background of yo-yo dieting, restriction, a challenging relationship with food, or health anxiety, my fear with ZOE is that it could become something that causes a degree of stress and unhelpful preoccupation with food, along with feelings of shame and guilt if you’re not able to ‘do it properly,’” she wrote. “It encourages a microscope style approach to eating that may very well zap the joy out of food (and possibly life).”

There’s another reason to be concerned about the restrictive element of diets, including those in apps, according to Dr. William Davis, cardiologist, best-selling author, and founder of Infinite Health.

“All they’ve done is gone a step beyond the … FODMAPS concept to refine it a little bit,” he told The Epoch Times. “In their defense, they did show some beneficial effects in the microbiome changes.”

Dr. Davis pointed out that the technology could contribute to normalizing food intolerances, which he sees people wearing as a “badge of honor” as their diets become even more prohibitive even while symptoms expand.

While the ultimate goal of a low-FODMAP diet is to reintroduce foods that were at one point causing symptoms, that doesn’t appear to ease suffering for everyone, as a 2017 article in Gastroenterology and Hepatology pointed out.

“As a restrictive diet, the low-FODMAP diet carries risks of nutritional inadequacy and of fostering disordered eating, which has received little attention. Strict FODMAP restriction induces a potentially unfavorable gut microbiota, although the impact of this consequence upon health is unknown,” the article stated.

Eliminating foods can cause people to lose bacterial species and make it hard for them to regain them, Dr. Davis said. That could put people at risk of severe microbial imbalances and cause conditions like small intestinal bacterial overgrowth (SIBO), where “bad” bacteria proliferate in the small intestine.

          (TheEpochTimes.com)

Penetrating Brain’s Natural Barrier to Deliver Life-Saving Drugs

0
(Image: Deposit Photos)

By: Ruthie Edelstein

More than 400 million people in the world suffer from brain diseases that cannot be treated with modern drugs (biological therapies such as antibodies) because of one major obstacle: a barrier to the brain.

For the average healthy person, the blood-brain barrier (BBB), an extra layer found on blood vessels in the brain, is what protects and defends the sensitive organ from harmful substances, germs and many other sources of potential damage.

But when it comes to treating brain cancer and neurodegenerative diseases, the blood-brain barrier is less of a protective layer and more of a hindrance to effective treatments, presenting one of the biggest medical challenges in modern medicine today.

Nanocarry Therapeutics is hoping to bring an end to this devastating situation. The Ness Ziona-based biopharmaceutical company is developing a novel class of drugs, based on their innovative nano-platform technology, which are able to increase penetration to the BBB and deliver potentially life-saving therapies to the brain.

“This platform has limitless possibilities because we can attach any antibody to it and deliver it to the brain,” Michal Roytman Haham, Chief Business Officer of Nanocarry, tells NoCamels.

With a successful non-invasive technology for traversing the blood-brain barrier, Nanocarry could ultimately extend the reach of already existing therapies to the brain – a location that was previously out of reach.

To get the process started, the company selected HER2 positive breast cancer brain metastases as the area of focus for their first drug development.

The Mayo Clinic explains HER2 positive metastatic breast cancer as a condition that tests positive for a protein called human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2), which promotes the growth of cancer cells.

Cancer cells growing on healthy tissue. Nanocarry says it can help innovations in cancer treatments include tumors that have spread to the brain (Image: Depositphotos)

Nanocarry says it chose to tackle this medical condition because there is already a highly effective treatment for HER2 metastatic breast cancer, but it is in desperate need of what the company is offering – a successful platform to deliver the drug through the BBB to provide direct treatment to the brain.

Roytman Haham says that while HER2 positive metastatic breast cancer has undergone a “really dramatic revolution” over the past two decades, primarily due to the introduction of biological therapies, this unfortunately does not include the cases that have spread to the brain, which happens in 50 percent of patients, because of the inability of these biological drugs to cross the BBB in sufficient quantities.

“The drugs that normally work very well outside the brain cannot enter the brain and therefore, the prognosis actually plummets to less than one year,” Roytman Haham tells NoCamels.

“This is exactly what we were looking for when searching for a disease where our technology can make a real difference in patients’ lives. A disease that has a systemic and brain manifestation and while the systemic disease, meaning outside the brain, is treated effectively, the brain remains unreachable,” she says.

“That leads to an extremely tragic situation where women who achieved disease control and potentially still have a life to live, lose their lives because of brain metastases.”

Roytman Haham explains that for metastatic HER2 positive breast cancer that has not metastasized to the brain, there has been transformative advancement in treatment over the past 20 years, with the introduction of biological therapy.

Known commercially as Herceptin (trastuzumab) and Perjeta (pertuzumab), these two antibodies are considered the gold standard in treating HER2 positive metastatic breast cancer patients.

With the help of Nanocarry’s BBB technology platform, Herceptin and Perjeta could penetrate the blood-brain barrier, together, to reach the brain and deliver treatment directly to the site of the tumor, potentially transforming the survival of patients with brain metastases as well.

Indeed, the US government’s National Cancer Institute says HER2 positive breast cancer that has not spread to any other organs in the body or the axillary lymph nodes has a 5-year relative survival rate of between 97.3 to 98.8 percent.

Roytman Haham stresses that Nanocarry is not the only company that targets blood-brain barrier penetration, with both invasive and noninvasive technologies already under development.

While the technologies that are invasive do disrupt the blood-brain barrier, the noninvasive technologies are based on a scientific concept called the “trojan horse,” which leverages the brain’s natural processes by targeting receptors on the BBB, enabling large molecules to enter the brain.

Nanocarry says it has innovatively combined this approach with nanoparticle technology to enhance its effectiveness. The company is using insulin as its trojan horse, attached to nano-particles that also carry multiple copies of antibodies.

The insulin binds to insulin receptors that are abundant on the BBB cells, resulting in quick internalization across the barrier and providing efficient drug delivery.

What sets Nanocarry apart from the other “trojan horse” technologies is that it is the only company able to utilize insulin as the shuttle molecule, made possible by the distinctive design of their gold nanoparticles platform. Insulin is considered to be 10 times more effective than other shuttle molecules in penetrating the blood-brain barrier and delivering treatment.

This capability holds great promise in delivering sufficient doses required for diseases such as breast cancer brain metastases.

“It remains stable, and it reaches the brain, safely delivering the drug in high amounts. So basically, we’re the only company that has been able to devise this very, very effective shuttle across the blood-brain barrier,” Roytman Haham says.

The first therapy being developed with Nanocarry’s BBB technology carries multiple copies of Herceptin and Projeta, delivering them directly to the tumor site inside of the brain.

The potentially lifesaving technology was developed over the course of a decade at the Bar Ilan University Faculty of Engineering, in the lab of Prof. Rachela Popovtzer, a world expert in nanomedicine and today Nanocarry’s chief scientific officer. And the solution was formulated by Nanocarry COO Dr. Oshra Betzer as part of her PhD and postdoctoral work.

Popovtzer and Betzer founded Nanocarry in 2021, along with its CEO and experienced biotech executive Dr. Revital Mandil Levin. Today, the three women founders run the company with their small team, also made up primarily of women.

Having successfully completed proof of concept studies in animal models, the biopharmaceutical company is now starting their studies towards receiving Investigational New Drug (IND) status by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA), which is granted to experimental therapies for serious or immediately life-threatening conditions that show promise in clinical testing.

With the urgent unmet needs in treatment of brain metastases in breast cancer patients, Roytman Haham explains, the FDA usually expedites the approval process for pharmaceutical companies in order to bring such life-saving treatments to market as soon as possible.

Based on the timeline for drugs that have been approved for similar life-threatening diseases, Nanocarry are confident that they will have that fast track to market. Nanocarry expects to run two clinical trials, which are estimated to begin next year, followed by the expedited FDA approval.

“Our results are truly unprecedented,” says Roytman Haham.

“We’ve shown massive brain penetration and accumulation within the tumor site and very significant tumor growth inhibition – exactly the effect these drugs achieve outside the brain.”

In its early days, Nanocarry’s main backer was the US-Israeli venture capital firm NFX. Additional firms now also provide funding, including Sapir Venture Partners and UnBox Ventures, the on-site venture studio at Bar-Ilan University. It has also received support from the Israel Innovation Authority, the branch of the government dedicated to promoting the national high-tech sector, and several private investors.

Nanocarry is focusing first on FDA approval, which it intends to follow with EU authorization, and hopes to be on the market in 2028.

If they achieve their date target, Nanocarry will have made it to market just seven years after the company’s founding. The development time of new drugs takes on average 10 to 15 years, and even longer for newer branches of medicine.

Ultimately, Nanocarry hopes to continue to develop their BBB drugs and provide more effective forms of treatment for many of the other devastating brain diseases for which treatment has proven elusive.

“Potentially, we can attach any drug and deliver it to the brain,” Roytman Haham concludes, “unlocking limitless possibilities in a wide range of central nervous system diseases, including Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, neuro-inflammatory diseases and beyond.”

          (NoCamels.com)

Glaucoma: Symptoms, Causes, Treatments, and Natural Approaches

0
Glaucoma is the second leading cause of blindness next to cataracts. (Illustration by The Epoch Times)

Affecting over 3 million Americans, glaucoma is an eye disease that can lead to vision loss or blindness caused by fluid buildup in the front of the eye.

By: Mercura Wang

Glaucoma is a group of eye diseases that can lead to vision loss or blindness by damaging the optic nerve at the back of the eye. This damage typically occurs due to increased pressure caused by fluid buildup in the front part of the eye, harming the optic nerve over time. Glaucoma ranks as the second most common cause of blindness globally (next to cataracts), affecting over 3 million Americans.

 

What Are the Types of Glaucoma?

There are two main categories of glaucoma: primary and secondary. Primary refers to cases where the exact cause of the condition is unknown. When other medical conditions cause glaucoma, it’s called secondary glaucoma.

 

Primary

Primary open-angle: Open-angle glaucoma is the most common type in the United States, comprising 90 percent of all glaucoma cases. It is characterized by damage to the optic nerve, a wide anterior chamber angle (the space between the cornea and the iris surface), and increased intraocular pressure (IOP; eye pressure) of over 21 millimeters of mercury (mmHg). This type of glaucoma is a significant cause of blindness, particularly among African Americans, where it accounts for nearly 20 percent of all cases.

Normal-tension: Normal-tension glaucoma is a form of open-angle glaucoma that occurs in people with regular eye pressure (below 21 mmHg). In the United States, between one-third and one-half of people with glaucoma have this type.

Angle-closure: Also called narrow-angle or acute glaucoma, angle-closure glaucoma is a medical emergency. It accounts for approximately 10 percent of all glaucoma cases in the United States.

The “angle” is where the iris and cornea meet at the outer edge of the anterior chamber. Angle-closure glaucoma occurs when the outer edge of the iris obstructs fluid drainage from the front of the eye, leading to rapid fluid buildup and a sudden rise in pressure. Without prompt treatment, this type of glaucoma can result in severe vision loss or blindness within a few days. Chronic angle-closure glaucoma progresses gradually and may not exhibit symptoms other than vision loss.

Primary congenital: Primary congenital glaucoma is a rare condition resulting from improper development of the aqueous drainage system before birth. It affects approximately 0.01 percent of babies born in the United States.

 

Secondary

Other medical conditions, such as cataracts, tumors, diabetes, eye surgery complications, and the use of certain medications can also cause the following glaucomas:

Neovascular: Neovascular glaucoma occurs when excessive blood vessel growth obstructs the eye’s drainage area, typically due to underlying medical conditions such as diabetes or high blood pressure.

Pigmentary: Pigment dispersion syndrome occurs when pigment rubs off from the back of the iris, potentially increasing eye pressure and causing pigmentary glaucoma.

Exfoliation: Exfoliation glaucoma, also known as pseudoexfoliation glaucoma, is a form of secondary open-angle glaucoma occurring in individuals with exfoliation syndrome. This syndrome leads to the accumulation of cellular material on various parts of the eye, thus obstructing fluid drainage.

Uveitic: Uveitic glaucoma is a common complication of uveitis, which causes eye swelling and inflammation. Around 20 percent of people with uveitis develop uveitic glaucoma. Experts believe inflammation and scar tissue formation in the eye’s middle region may block fluid drainage, leading to increased eye pressure, uveitic glaucoma, and eventual vision loss.

Secondary childhood: Secondary childhood glaucoma results from an eye developmental anomaly unrelated to the aqueous drainage system, a syndrome, or another eye condition.

Some individuals may have increased eye pressure without visible damage. These patients are called “glaucoma suspects” as they have an increased risk of developing glaucoma later on. Even those with normal eye pressure may be considered glaucoma suspects if their optic nerve shows unusual characteristics. However, most glaucoma suspects do not experience symptoms, underscoring the importance of regular monitoring by an ophthalmologist.

 

What Are the Symptoms and Early Signs of Glaucoma?

Glaucoma often begins without noticeable signs, so 50 percent of those affected are unaware of their condition. As it progresses, vision loss typically begins with peripheral vision, which may go unnoticed initially due to its slow development. Without intervention, glaucoma can lead to blindness.

The specific symptoms also vary depending on the type of glaucoma, as indicated in the following:

Primary open-angle: This type is nicknamed “the silent thief of sight” as patients often experience no symptoms until vision damage becomes significant when blind spots start developing in the side vision. The symptoms include increased IOP and tunnel vision.

Normal-tension: Patients typically don’t experience symptoms until it’s too late, which is the same for people with open-angle glaucoma (except open-angle exhibits elevated IOP). Patients may also experience bleeding in the nerve fiber layer of the optic disc.

Angle-closure: Symptoms include severe eye pain, nausea, red eye, and blurred vision. If you suddenly experience these symptoms, seek medical attention immediately.

Primary congenital: Children diagnosed with congenital glaucoma often exhibit cloudiness in their eyes, light sensitivity, abnormally high tear production, and possibly larger-than-normal eye size.

Neovascular: Symptoms include eye pain or redness and loss of vision.

Pigmentary: Individuals with pigment dispersion syndrome or pigmentary glaucoma may experience halos (rainbow-colored rings around lights) or blurred vision following activities such as jogging or playing basketball.

Exfoliation: While exfoliation glaucoma shares the same symptoms as primary open-angle, it can advance more rapidly and frequently results in increased eye pressure.

Uveitic: Uveitic glaucoma can damage the optic nerve and induce a loss of visual field. Patients with it experience symptoms of both uveitis and glaucoma, including red eyes, pain, sensitivity to light, spots in vision, and blurred vision.

 

What Causes Glaucoma?

In glaucoma, retinal ganglion cells and nerve fibers in the optic nerve are gradually lost. This leads to a telling appearance of the optic nerve head and progressive vision decline. The pattern of peripheral vision loss is a key feature that sets glaucoma apart from other eye conditions.

Researchers believe that glaucoma occurs when there’s too much aqueous humor, the fluid that nourishes the eye, leading to high pressure (IOP) inside the eyes.

Usually, this fluid moves like water filling a sink. The faucet (the ciliary body) produces it, and drains (drainage canals) remove it from the eye to maintain a normal fluid level. As drainage canals become clogged, the fluid doesn’t drain properly, resulting in an imbalance. When pressure becomes abnormally high, it harms the optic nerve, leading to glaucoma.

Low- or normal-tension glaucoma can occur when eye pressure is within the normal range but still too high for the optic nerve.

Certain factors put people at higher risk, including:

Age: African Americans 40 years old and above and people of all ethnicities who are 60 years old and above (particularly Hispanics) are at a higher risk of developing glaucoma. Males in their 30s are at the highest risk for pigmentary glaucoma, with the ratio of males to females ranging from 2:1 to 5:1, depending on the study.

          (TheEpochTimes.com)

Matcha Mouthwash Inhibits Bacteria That Cause Periodontitis, New Research Suggests

0
Mouthwash containing match may prevent and treat inflammatory gum disease. Credit: (Brent Hofacker/Shutterstock)

In two studies, researchers found catechins in mouthwash containing matcha green tea powder inhibit P. gingivalis bacteria that causes periodontitis

By: Megan Redshaw, J.D.

New research suggests that using a mouthwash containing matcha, a finely ground green tea powder, may prevent and treat inflammatory gum disease.

In a report published on May 21 in Microbiology Spectrum, researchers from Japan found that matcha inhibits the growth of Porphyromonas gingivalis (P. gingivalis)—a type of bacteria known to cause periodontitis.

Periodontitis, or gum disease, is a serious infection of the oral cavity triggered by poor oral hygiene. The condition causes a sticky biofilm of anaerobic bacteria to build up on the teeth and, if left untreated, destroys the supporting tissues and bones.

In their initial study, the researchers conducted in vitro experiments to test the efficacy of a matcha solution against 16 bacterial species found in the mouth, including three strains of P. gingivalis. Within two hours of exposure to the solution, nearly all of the P. gingivalis cells were killed. At four hours, all the cells died, suggesting matcha inhibits bacterial growth and has bactericidal properties.

In a second clinical study, the same researchers divided 45 people with chronic periodontitis into three groups and gave each group either sodium azulene sulfonate hydrate, barley tea powder, or matcha powder to assess whether mouthwash solutions derived from the powders eliminated P. gingivalis in the oral cavity.

The participants prepared mouthwashes at home using specific tap water concentrations and rinsed twice daily with 10 milliliters of mouthwash for a month. After rinsing, they avoided eating and drinking for 30 minutes.

The researchers found that participants in the matcha mouthwash group had significantly lower levels of P. gingivalis in their saliva samples at the end of the study compared with the two other groups.

While the report isn’t the first to find that tea-derived compounds have antimicrobial effects on P. gingivalis, the authors said their study supports using matcha as a prevention or treatment plan for people with periodontal disease.

 

How Matcha Differs From Green Tea

Matcha, along with green, white oolong, and black teas, are produced from the Camellia sinensis plant. However, they differ in how they’re cultivated, processed, and prepared. For example, green tea leaves are not shielded from direct sunlight before harvesting, which results in a lighter green color and a different nutrient profile. Green tea is prepared by steeping whole leaves in hot water, which are then removed before drinking.

Matcha is derived from the same plant that is cultivated in the shade for several weeks before harvesting. This method protects the young leaves from the sun and increases the accumulation of biologically active compounds such as chlorophyll, caffeine, theanine, and catechins. The leaves are then ground into powder and infused into water.

Although matcha is lower in catechins compared with other teas derived from the same plant, once it is dissolved in water, it produces three times more catechins than loose-leaf green tea. Compared to green tea, the nutrients in matcha are more bioavailable and higher in antioxidants, caffeine, and amino acids.

 

Catechins May Explain Bactericidal Effects

Studies suggest catechins in matcha may explain the bactericidal effects observed by researchers. Catcheins are the main polyphenols and antioxidant agents found in the leaves of the tea plant that give it antimicrobial and other beneficial properties. The preparation methods of the plant and the differences in variety, origin, and growing conditions influence the quality and quantity of the catechins.

          (TheEpochTimes.com)

PTSD Rates Surge Among College Students: Report

0
A new study shows a rise in post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Credit: (Francisco Moreno/Unsplash.com)

By: Amie Dahnke

A new study shows a rise in post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) among American college students. PTSD rates increased by 4.1 percentage points, jumping from 3.4 percent in 2017-2018 to 7.5 percent in 2021-2022.

Researchers from the University of Alabama at Birmingham, who conducted the study, suggest the stark increase likely stems from a combination of events, including campus shootings, nationwide racial tensions, and the loss of loved ones during the COVID-19 pandemic.

 

Trauma Grips US Colleges

In the analysis, published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, the team examined student populations from a diverse array of 332 higher education institutions across the U.S., encompassing a broad geographic range and various institutional types. Their extensive survey captured data from nearly 400,000 college students, with females comprising a slight majority at 57.7 percent.

Over the five-year period from 2017 to 2022, the researchers also observed an increase in the prevalence of acute stress disorder (ASD) among college students. ASD prevalence rose by 0.5 percentage points, growing from 0.2 percent to 0.7 percent over the same timeframe.

Even after accounting for demographic differences among participants, statistical analysis confirmed these upward trends remained statistically significant.

“These trends highlight the escalating mental health challenges among college students, which is consistent with recent research reporting a surge in psychiatric diagnoses,” the authors wrote.

The authors warned that “PTSD and ASD can severely impair college students’ academic and social functioning.” These conditions can have far-reaching negative impacts that extend well beyond the college years. They have been linked to persistent, long-term health problems.

The wide-ranging societal repercussions of PTSD and acute stress disorder include diminished productivity in the workforce and escalating financial strains on health care systems and the broader economy, according to the study.

A 2023 annual report from the Center for Collegiate Mental Health at Pennsylvania State University suggested that nearly half of all college students seeking counseling have experienced some form of trauma. This figure represents a staggering 10 percentage point spike compared to the center’s initial 2012 report, surging from 37.5 percent to 46.8 percent.

 

1 in 16 Americans Grapple with PTSD in Their Lifetime

Approximately 6 percent of Americans will experience PTSD at some point in their lifetime, according to the National Center for PTSD. In 2020 alone, around 13 million Americans grappled with this disorder. Women are more susceptible, with an 8 percent likelihood of developing PTSD compared to 4 percent for men. Veterans face an even higher risk due to the traumatic nature of wartime experiences, which are a common trigger for PTSD.

The American Psychiatric Association defines it as a psychiatric disorder that can occur after an individual has experienced or witnessed a traumatic event, series of events, or set of circumstances. In the aftermath, the person may perceive the trauma as emotionally or physically harmful, or even life-threatening. When reliving the trauma, people with PTSD often experience intense, disturbing thoughts and emotions so vivid that it feels like they are re-experiencing the traumatic event all over again. Common symptoms include intrusive thoughts, avoidance behaviors, alterations in cognition and mood, and changes in arousal and reactivity.

 

Finding Relief

While symptoms of PTSD can occasionally subside on their own, more frequently, people require professional treatment to overcome the psychological distress caused by this disorder.

Professional treatment typically involves working with a psychiatrist or other mental health professional who can provide medication management or talk therapy approaches.

(TheEpochTimes.com)

Former Black Panther Leader Explains Why He Supports Trump For President

0
The first of Donald Trump’s four criminal trials will begin April 15, a Manhattan judge ruled Monday.

(Daily Caller) A man who says he was a founding member of the Black Panther explained why he supported former President Donald Trump for president in an interview posted Monday afternoon to TikTok.

The man in the video said he was David Hilliard, who served as the Chief of Staff of the Black Panther Party. He referred to Trump as a “friend to African Americans” and a “decent man” who financially supported his organization. He said he knew the former president as a college student during the time he allegedly supported the organization in the 1960s, where he reportedly “owned all of Harlem.”

@carol.mitchell27 #davidhilliard #blackpanthers #donaldtrump #trump2024 #patriots #breakingnews #specialreport #fyp #votetrump ♬ original sound – Carol D. Mitchell

“Trump’s a friend of African Americans, and I knew Trump from the 1960s in New York, where he comes from and he’s a friend to African Americans. He’s a decent man … I mean he’s not a racist,” the man said. “He’s not a racist, fascist, white man. He supported black people.”

The man who said he was Hilliard alleged that Trump has been convicted of felony charges because of his said friendliness towards the black community. The jury found Trump guilty of falsifying business records to cover up a $130,000 hush money payment to former porn actress Stormy Daniels to keep affair allegations undisclosed ahead of the 2016 election, making him a convicted felon months before the 2024 election.

“Because Trump likes Africans in America. He likes black folks. That’s one. I think that Trump is qualified and a very decent approach to having somebody representing America. Trump is a very decent man … He’s always been a friend of black people, that’s where I know him from,” Hilliard continued.

Trump’s campaign has reached out to the black community following his conviction to resonate with the alleged unfair treatment of himself and African Americans by the justice system, according to Axios. Republican South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott, a former primary candidate, reportedly told CNN black Americans are veering their support toward Trump for “jobs and justice.”

“The reason we’re seeing so many African Americans come into the Trump campaign — two big things: jobs and justice,” Scott said, according to Axios. “As an African American born and raised in the Deep South who had concerns about our justice system as it relates to race, I’m now seeing it play out from a partisan perspective.”\

Black support toward President Joe Biden has fallen to a record low since the Civil Rights era, with Biden currently leading former president 70% to 18% among black voters, according to a New York Times/Sienna College poll from late May. The incumbent garnered 92% of the black vote in 2020.

Biden is only leading Trump 47% to 42% among Hispanic voters, according to the NYT/Sienna poll.

Couple Pulls up Safe With $100K Cash While ‘Magnet Fishing’ in NYC Park

0
In these still images from video, magnet fisher James Kane displays the part of the contents of a safe he pulled out of a pond, in Flushing Meadows Corona Park, in the Queens borough of New York, Friday May 31, 2024. Kane, 40. and his girlfriend, Barbi Agostini, 39, estimate the safe contained $100,000 in waterlogged, damaged but exchangeable currency. The bills featured the holographic bars indicating that they were of recent vintage, but the safe bore no clues to a rightful owner. (James Kane and BarbI Agostini @LetsGetMagnetic via AP)

(AP) — James Kane has used a powerful magnet to fish all manner of junk from New York City waterways, but he says the stacks of $100 bills he pulled from a safe were something else entirely.

Kane’s girlfriend, Barbi Agostini, was recording last Friday as he pulled a slimy safe out of a lake in Flushing Meadows Corona Park, famous as the location of the 1939 and 1964 World’s Fairs, and extracted bags of waterlogged, gunk-covered Benjamins from inside it.

“Oh, that’s money,” Kane said in the video of the discovery. “Oh, it is! Stacks of bills, dude!”

“Oh, my God!” Agostini says.

The couple estimates that the safe contained as much as $100,000, though the bills were partly decomposed and stuck together.

The bills featured the 3D security ribbon that indicates recent vintage, but the safe bore no clues to a rightful owner.

Kane and Agostini said they called the police to report their discovery and were told there was no evidence of a crime.

“They gave it to us, as, I guess you call it a finders keepers thing,” Kane said.

In this still image from video, Magnet fisher James Kane exclaims as he reacts to the contents of a safe he pulled out of a pond, in Flushing Meadows Corona Park, in the Queens borough of New York, Friday May 31, 2024. Kane, 40. and his girlfriend, Barbi Agostini, 39, estimate the safe contained $100,000 in waterlogged, damaged but exchangeable currency. (James Kane and BarbI Agostini @LetsGetMagnetic via AP)

The New York Police Department’s public information office said in a statement that “the value and authenticity of the alleged currency” could not be determined due to its “severely disintegrated condition.”
Kane is far from the only magnet fisher who has made a mark in recent years.

A magnet fisher found a human skull padlocked to an exercise dumbbell in New Orleans last month. Someone fishing in a creek in Georgia in April pulled up a rifle and some belongings of a couple who were killed nine years ago.

People who dabble in the hobby heave long ropes into the water attached to powerful magnets, some capable of staying latched to objects weighing 2,000 pounds (907 kilograms). They drag the lines through water and muck, hauling up objects that would likely go unfound by a beachcomber with a metal detector.

As magnet fishing videos rack up views on YouTube, skeptics grumble on Reddit that some of the finds must be fake.

Kane may just be lucky. He’s hauled up bicycles, guns, grenades, and jewelry from New York City waterways, promoting his exploits on YouTube, TikTok and Instagram.

“I have seen and worked with other magnet fishers that can hit a spot for three months, and I’ll come along and throw the same magnet and get and find something that they’ve been trying to get the entire time,” he said. “I personally can’t explain that.”

Several of Kane and Agostini’s videos end with them calling the police to report that they have recovered weapons, with the officers donning gloves to examine the finds and take them away as potential evidence. In one, they documented a police bomb squad arriving to take possession of an old grenade. In another, they call police to turn over the contents of a safe filled with credit cards.

Kane, 40, said he and Agostini, 39, plan to take their soggy money to the Bureau of Engraving and Printing in Washington to redeem it, though he acknowledged some portion of the bills will likely be too damaged to recover.

The pair have ideas for spending whatever they end up with, including a new vehicle and upgrades to the equipment they use to produce content.

 

House passes bill that sanctions those who help ICC pursue Israeli officials

0
FILE - Exterior view of the International Criminal Court, or ICC, in The Hague, Netherlands, Tuesday, April 30, 2024. The International Criminal Court's chief prosecutor said Monday, May 20, 2024, that he’s seeking arrest warrants for both Israeli and Hamas leaders in connection with their actions during the seven-month war. (AP Photo/Peter Dejong, File)

( JNS)  The U.S. House of Representatives voted 247 to 155 on Tuesday to pass H.R. 8282, the Illegitimate Court Counteraction Act. Two Republicans voted “present” and 42 Democrats voted with Republicans for the bill.

AIPAC stated that the bill responds to the “morally bankrupt and legally baseless attack against Israel” leveled by Karim Khan, the chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, a United Nations agency located in The Hague.

Khan announced that he was seeking arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, as well as for Hamas leaders.

“The ICC’s attack on Israel is a dangerous precedent that could be used in future efforts against America,” AIPAC said, lauding the bill’s passage in the House. “Since the court’s establishment, Democratic and Republican presidents have chosen not to join the ICC as they feared politically motivated trials that could impact our citizens and soldiers. This case affirms that decision.”

AIPAC “urges the Senate to adopt this important legislation,” it added.

The bill, which Rep. Chip Roy (R-Texas) introduced, calls the ICC’s actions against the Jewish state “illegitimate and baseless,” requires the U.S. president to sanction those who assist the ICC in its investigation, arrest, detention or prosecution of “a protected person” and sanctions and imposes visa bans on such people and their families, according to AIPAC.

The U.S. president could waive such sanctions “on a case-by-case basis” when such exceptions are “determined to be vital to the national security interests of the United States,” AIPAC added.

House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) called the ICC’s actions “outrageous” and “unconscionable” in a press conference on Tuesday morning prior to the vote.

“The ICC has to be punished for this action,” he said. “We cannot allow this to stand. If the ICC was allowed to do this and go after the leaders of countries whose actions they disagree with, why would they not come after America?”

“The ICC chose the wrong side of history when they issued a warrant for Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu and other Israeli defense officials,” wrote Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-N.Y.), chair of the House Republican Conference, after the bill passed.

“These corrupt bureaucrats will be held accountable for punishing our greatest ally Israel in her hour of need,” Stefanik added.

Roy, who introduced the bill, stated that its passage “sends a strong message to the ICC that we will not tolerate their outrageous attacks on Israel.”

“But let’s be clear. This isn’t just about Israel. This is about ensuring that our nation’s sovereignty is protected, as well as our servicemembers,” he said. “Absent decisive leadership at the White House, Congress must stand in the breach defending our allies and our sovereignty.”

Earlier in the day, Matthew Miller, the U.S. State Department spokesman, was asked if Foggy Bottom supported the bill.

“We have made clear that while we oppose the decision taken by the prosecutor of the ICC—we don’t think it was appropriate, especially while there are ongoing investigations inside Israel looking at some of these very same questions—and we are willing to work with Congress on what a response might look like, we don’t support sanctions,” he said.

Miller was asked what that response would look like if it didn’t involve sanctions.

“So that is a consultation that we will have with Congress. I’m not going to preview it from here,” Miller said. “Those are discussions we need to have with members of Congress. But our position as the administration is that we don’t support sanctions, don’t believe they’re appropriate at this time.”

IDF Chief of Staff: Near ‘Decision’ on War in Lebanon

0
Herzi Halevi, chief of staff of the Israel Defense Forces, speaks during a meeting with pilots at the Nevatim Air Force base in southern Israel, on April 15, 2024. He stated on Monday that a response is imminent following Iran’s “unprecedented” missile and drone attack on Israel. (IDF/Handout via Xinhua)

Joel B. Pollak (Breitbart)

Israel Defense Forces (IDF) Chief of Staff Herzi Halevi said Tuesday that Israel was reaching the “decision” point on whether to go to war in Lebanon against the Iranian-backed terror group Hezbollah.

The need to go to war to defend Israel’s northern region has become more acute since a barrage of Hezbollah rockets and drones over the weekend ignited major wildfires. Most border towns in Israel have been evacuated for months.

In a statement, the IDF said:

Today (Tuesday), the Chief of the General Staff, LTG Herzi Halevi, conducted a tour and situational assessment with the Israel Fire and Rescue Services Commissioner, Fire Commissioner Eyal Caspi at the ‘Gibor’ Camp on the northern border, with the participation of the Commanding Officer of the 91st Division, (BG) Shai Klapper, Northern Region Commander in the Israel Fire and Rescue Services, Assistant Fire Commissioner Yair Elkayam, and additional commanders.
Following this, they met the forces that operated last night (Monday) to put out the fires in the north, and noted the determination and professionalism with which they operated.

Additionally, the Chief of the General Staff spoke with the commanders of the Golani Brigade who are currently on the northern border.
From the statement of the Chief of the General Staff, LTG Herzi Halevi: “We are approaching the point where a decision will have to be made, and the IDF is prepared and very ready for this decision. We have been striking here for eight months and Hezbollah is paying a very, very high price. Hezbollah has increased its attacks in recent days and we are prepared after a very good process of training up to the level of a General Staff exercise to move to an offensive in the north. Strong defense, readiness for an offensive, we are approaching a decision point.”

From the statement of the Israel Fire and Rescue Services Commissioner, Fire Commissioner Eyal Caspi: “The collaborations that take place routinely with the IDF lead to the required preparation and readiness of both bodies, and are implemented in practice also in wartime, while maximizing the relative advantage of each of the formations for the benefit of the State of Israel.”

Hezbollah is operating near the Israeli border in blatant violation of United Nations Security Council Resolution 1707 (2006), which ended the Second Lebanon War. Neither the UN nor the Lebanese military has enforced the resolution.

The Israeli government’s “war cabinet” met Tuesday night, ostensibly to discuss the situation in Lebanon. No decisions had been reported as of the time of this writing, but Israel has been preparing for a possible second front.

Joel B. Pollak is Senior Editor-at-Large at Breitbart News and the host of Breitbart News Sunday on Sirius XM Patriot on Sunday evenings from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. ET (4 p.m. to 7 p.m. PT). He is the author of the recent e-book, “The Zionist Conspiracy (and how to join it),” now available on Audible. He is also the author of the e-book, Neither Free nor Fair: The 2020 U.S. Presidential Election. He is a winner of the 2018 Robert Novak Journalism Alumni Fellowship. Follow him on Twitter at @joelpollak.

Joe Biden’s Time Interview Was Full Of Senior Moments

0
. Credit: AP

Reagan Reese(Daily Caller)

President Joe Biden’s interview with Time Magazine was full of slip-ups and gaffes, feeding into concerns about the 81-year-old’s fitness for office ahead of the 2024 election.

Time Washington Bureau Chief Massimo Calabresi and Editor-in-Chief Sam Jacobs conducted an interview with Biden and released the transcript Tuesday, as well as a fact-check on some of the president’s statements. Throughout the interview, the president attempted to quell concerns about his age, but not before he forgot the timeline of calls, where key officials were and other various facts.

“What are the nature of your conversations with the Israelis right now? Have you spoken with Bibi?” Time asked Biden.

“I have not spoken with Bibi since—I have not spoken with Bibi since the attack on Sunday. Was it Sunday?” Biden said, before White House communications director Ben LaBolt confirmed that the president was right.

At another point in the interview, Biden seemed to lose track of where the Director of the Central Intelligence Agency, Bill Burns, had recently been.

“On what Hamas has done, are the eight US hostages there in Gaza is still alive?” the magazine asked.

“We believe there are those that are still alive. I met with all the families,” the president began. “But we don’t have final proof on exactly who’s alive and who’s not alive. And by the way, I’ve been calling for—we should have a ceasefire, period. And to get those hostages. That’s the main reason why we push.”

“Both the Israelis desperately want a ceasefire in order to get the hostages home. And it’s a way to begin to break the momentum. And so that’s why we’re pushing hard for the—and we’re—Is our intelligence chief in? Where is he now?” Biden said, causing White House national security spokesman John Kirby to jump in.

“He is back, sir. He was just over in Europe, in Brussels, over the weekend,” Kirby told the president.

People in the executive branch are so busy that they can’t be blamed for not remembering details such as what day of the week certain things happened several weeks ago, a White House official told the Daily Caller.

Later in the interview, Time Magazine noted that the president appeared to confuse Russian President Vladimir Putin with Chinese President Xi Jinping when talking about China.

“But Mr. President, won’t your newly announced tariffs raise the prices on American consumers?” TIME asked.

“No, because here’s the deal. There’s a difference. I made it clear to Putin from the very beginning that—I’m not, we’re not engaging in…For example, Trump wants a 10% tariff on everything. That will raise the price of everything in America,” the president responded.

The president also added that there would be “a billion people” in Africa in the coming years, though there are already 1.4 billion people living on the continent, the interview transcript shows.

Biden, at one point during the interview, began to talk about deforestation in the Amazon of South America, before going on to say that the situation was the reason why his administration was working to install solar infrastructure in the African country of Angola.

“We, on the climate side, have come along and we’ve done everything that is reasonably—and three other countries are the reason we’re in the problem we’re in. But what happens if all of a sudden, on the Amazon, they’re starting to clear, vast swaths of land, cut down forests, etc.,” Biden started, answering a question on potential second term goals.

“Back when Dick Lugar was alive, he and I started something back in the 90s, where we said—late 80’s, excuse me—where we said to, in the Amazon, they said, look, if you, we’ll make a deal with you Brazil. You don’t cut your forest, we’ll pay you not to do it. We’ll pay you not to do it, We have to prevent—And that’s why we’re working so hard to make sure Angola can be in a position that they have more solar capacity than almost any place in the world, to help that whole continent,” he continued.

Seventy-six percent of Americans said in February they were worried about Biden’s age and health. Special Counsel Robert Hur concluded a report into the president’s handling of classified documents on Feb. 8. Though Hur chose not to pursue charges against Biden, he justified his decision by saying the jury might see Biden as “a sympathetic, well-meaning, elderly man with a poor memory.”

During a two-day, five hour interview between Hur and Biden, the president appeared to forget when his vice presidency started and ended as well as the date of his late son, Beau Biden’s death.

“And what do you say to Americans who are worried about it?” the TIME asked, referring to Biden’s age.

“Watch me. Look, name me a president that’s gotten as much done as I’ve gotten done in my first three and a half years,” Biden responded.

“When all of you wrote in Time magazine I couldn’t get any of it done. When you told me there’s no pay, no way, no way he can get a trillion-plus dollar bill done in terms of, to deal with infrastructure, where there’s no way he gets $368 billion for dealing with the environment, where there’s no way I could get the, the, the legislation passed on,” he added.

Prosecutor: Hallie Biden to Testify About ‘Embarrassing’ Use of Crack with Hunter Biden

0
Republicans in congress are probing Hunter Biden’s previous business dealings with international business partners from countries including China and Ukraine. Credit: AP

By Wendell Husebo

Hallie Biden, the ex of Hunter Biden and widow of his brother, will testify about her use of crack with Hunter, prosecutor Derek Hines said during Tuesday’s opening statements of the gun trial.

Hallie, 50, dated Hunter in 2018 and found a Colt Cobra .38 handgun in Hunter Biden’s truck outside her home, prosecutors say. Hallie dumped the gun in a nearby grocery store trash bin, according to prosecutors.

Hunter used crack when he purchased the firearm, a wide variety of photos from the time on his abandoned laptop show. The Secret Service allegedly intervened in the investigation of that incident.

Hunter Biden is charged with one count of false statement in the purchase of a firearm, one count of possession of a firearm by a person who is an unlawful user of or addicted to a controlled substance, and one count of false statement related to information required to be kept by a federal firearms licensed dealer.

Hines said Hallie’s testimony would be “embarrassing” but necessary, according to court reporters.

The prosecution will call several additional witnesses, including Gordon Cleveland, who sold the gun to Hunter Biden at Starquest Shooters, NBC News reported:

Hines revealed that both Hallie Biden and Zoe Kestan, a woman who was romantically involved with Hunter Biden, will be testifying under immunity agreements.

The prosecution will also call Kathleen Buhle, the ex-wife of Hunter Biden who shares three daughters with him and who did not use drugs herself. Kathleen will not be testifying under any immunity agreement.

Laying out the three charges against Hunter, Hines emphasized that on the third count, concerning his possession of the gun for 11 days, Hunter did not get rid of the gun by choice. “The only reason he had the gun for 11 days is because Hallie took it from him,” he said.

The judge barred TV, audio, and Slack messages at Hunter’s trial, so court reporters have to rely “on notes, runners, or for reporters to come out of the courthouse in person,” CNN reported.
The case is United States v. Hunter Biden, No. 24-1703 in the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit.

Wendell Husebo is a political reporter with Breitbart News and a former GOP War Room Analyst. He is the author of Politics of Slave Morality. Follow Wendell on “X” @WendellHusebø or on Truth Social @WendellHusebo.

Biden: Netanyahu under ‘enormous pressure’ to bring hostages home

0
U.S. President Joe Biden and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Tel Aviv, Oct. 18, 2023. Photo by Avi Ohayon/GPO.
(JNS) U.S. President Joe Biden said in an interview with Time published on Tuesday that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was under “enormous pressure” to forge a hostages-for-ceasefire deal with Hamas.
“The last offer Israel made was very generous in terms of who [Palestinian prisoners] they’d be willing to release, what they’d give in return, et cetera. Bibi [Netanyahu] is under enormous pressure on the hostages… and so he’s prepared to do about anything to get the hostages back,” said Biden.
Freeing the hostages is the main reason the White House is pushing for a ceasefire, Biden said.
Asked about the condition of the eight U.S. citizens held hostage by Hamas in Gaza, Biden said, “We believe there are those that are still alive. I met with all the families. But we don’t have final proof on exactly who’s alive and who’s not alive.”
The U.S. president emphasized that his key argument with the Israeli premier centers on the “day after” Hamas in Gaza.
“My major disagreement with Netanyahu is, what happens after, what happens after Gaza’s over? What, what does it go back to? Do Israeli forces go back in?” Biden said.
“I’ve been talking to the Egyptians and been talking to the Saudis. I’ve been talking to the Jordanians, I’ve been talking to the Emiratis. The answer is, if that’s the case, it can’t work. There needs to be a two-state solution, a transition to a two-state solution. And that’s my biggest disagreement with Bibi Netanyahu,” added the president.
When asked by TIME if Benjamin Netanyahu is prolonging the war for his own political reasons, Joe Biden admits, “There is every reason for people to draw that conclusion”
Biden also made the controversial suggestion that “there is every reason” to believe that Netanyahu is prolonging the Gaza war for political reasons.
Biden referred to the divisive judicial-reform debate that was roiling Israeli society before the Oct. 7 Hamas-led attack that started the war.
“[B]efore the war began, the blowback he was getting from the Israeli military for wanting to change the constitu[tion]—change the court,” he said. “And whether he would change his position or not, it’s hard to say, but it has not been helpful.”
Asked whether Israel had committed war crimes in Gaza, Biden said, “The answer is it’s uncertain and has been investigated by the Israelis themselves.”
“The ICC [International Criminal Court at the Hague] is something that we don’t… recognize. But one thing is certain, the people in Gaza, the Palestinians have suffered greatly, for lack of food, water, medicine, etc. And a lot of innocent people have been killed.”
Biden also blamed Hamas. “[A] lot of it has to do not just with Israelis, but what Hamas is doing in Israel as we speak. Hamas is intimidating that population. I went over right after that attack on the Israelis. What they did was—exceeded anything I’ve ever seen. And I’ve seen a lot. Tying mothers and daughters together with rope and pouring kerosene on it [sic] and burning them to death. That kind of thing, attempting to intimidate. And it is dastardly.”
While stopping short of agreeing with those who accuse Israel of intentionally starving the Gaza population, another accusation that Jerusalem flatly rejects, Biden said that Israel was engaging “in activity that is inappropriate.”
“[W]hen I went over immediately after… Hamas’ brutal attack, I said then, and it became public… don’t make the same mistake we did going after bin Laden. Don’t try. The idea of occupying Afghanistan, the idea that you had nuclear arsenals in Iran, that were being, I mean, in Iraq, that were being generated, simply not true. And it led to endless wars. They were not true. Don’t make the mistakes we made. And they’re making that mistake, I think,” Biden said.
As to whether Netanyahu alone was responsible for Oct. 7, the president said others share in the failure.
“I don’t know how any one person has that responsibility. He was the leader of the country… But he wasn’t the only one that didn’t pick it up.”

Jewish Survival in the Diaspora – Chapters 2 & 3

0
Young American Jews. Credit: SeeSaw GmbH/Shutterstock.

Jewish Survival in the Diaspora – Chapters 2 & 3

By: Clifford Rieders
David Ben Hooren covered Chapter 1 very well, the lack of coordination on behalf of the Jewish community in the Diaspora emanating from the State of Israel. Read more about it on the Jewish Voice website: https://tjvnews.com/2024/05/israel-is-losing-the-battle-for-public-opinion/
The national experiment of the Jewish people in the Middle East arguably could do more to add the Diaspora community and its desperate fight for survival. On the other hand, there are those who argue that Israel has enough on its plate, and it should do little or nothing to meddle in the affairs of Jews throughout the world who are more assimilated and less connected to Israel than might be imagined by even the most optimistic soothsayers.
That brings us to Chapter 2, Lack of Coordination and Cooperation in the United States in Connection with the Jewish Community and Chapter 3, Why do We Even Bother to Support Israel from the Jewish Community Overseas?
The lack of coordination and cooperation of the United States among Jewish groups is stunning. While we have the Conference of Presidents, a worthy organization, its absence in the foxhole is more evident than its involvement.
A few stories will suffice, as exemplars. In dealing with legal issues, groups that represent Jewish interests rarely, if ever, work together. They almost never share funds and helping one another in connection with the necessary legal work to bring cases on behalf of the Jewish community is almost non-existent.
The question is why do these groups work so badly together, when they share many of the same goals, and the individual lawyers (and their supporters) have much in common?
One reason is fundraising. I have been told directly that, “It is all about donors.” The fight for donors, particularly in the United States, has reached extreme proportions. There are less people in the Jewish community willing to support the future of Diaspora Jews, and it seems as though there is less money to go around.
One of the reasons why Jewish groups do not cooperate with one another is the fear that someone else will get the credit. Those who get the credit will ultimately get the money.
In writing this story, there are many specifics that can be told, but it would involve disclosing names, organizations, and events, the disclosure of which might cause more harm than good. In attempting to electrically jolt the American Jewish Diaspora community, it may be a good thing to be specific, but it may also cause further rifts, anger, and distress.
Suffice it to say that in raising money for important legal battles, there is almost never money sharing and there is little sharing of human resources. It is almost as though the American Jewish community is made up of a bunch of small law firms and businesses, each one competing against the other for credit, money, power, and success. That will guarantee the failure of all.
 Many hemolytic expressions would suffice: “We either stand together or hang together.” That butchery of the American Revolutionary quote, is just one way to look at Jewish American failure to cooperate. We also are a “house divided.” Thank you Mr. Lincoln.
The reality is that everyone in the Jewish community world knows precisely what we are talking about, this is not only true from the perspective of those pursuing legal channels. In organizational efforts, there is no shortage of badmouthing. Just as Israel politicians commit the sin of destroying one another, and therefore the nation, we in the American Jewish likewise hurt ourselves by not helping ourselves.
It is no secret that some of the most dramatic funding for anti-Semitic college behaviors are funded by Jews and Jewish groups, such as the well-known evil George Soros. There are others whose names have also come to attention that for some reason have conflated their leftwing liberal philosophy with an anti-Israel, anti-Jewish perspective. It is beyond understanding as to why or how someone who generally supports Judaism, can spend so much time, money, and effort trashing Israel and Zionism. Yet, it is the reality of today.
Being self-destructive is not unique to Jews alone. The Muslims have broken into factions, blow up one another at every opportunity. Witness Iraq, as a case in point. Protestants and Catholics did a good job murdering each other for centuries. There still is a fair amount of negative feeling between and among churchgoers, to the extent that adherents have not left Christianity altogether.
Jews, who are among the least religious, in the United States at any rate, have a long history of eating one another alive while walking away from their religious tradition and embracing the hostile views of the petrie dish in which they live and exist.
No one in particular has an answer to all of this, since we do not in Diaspora have a charismatic leader around to which many people can comfortably flock. Perhaps one example of success is the man that I knew as Menachem Mendal Schneerson, “The Rebbe.” He built an empire from one or two Chabad houses into well over 4,000. Chabad is all over the world, in places that I never heard of. Sometimes it is a headscratcher as to why there will be a Chabad in some Asian or African town with no Jews, while a place like Williamsport, Pennsylvania cannot qualify for a much needed Chabad house. That is a personal gripe of mine, since this article is about gripers.
The Rebbe movement is not merely religious. It brings people together in a non- political environment where they can mingle, schmooze, and just talk with other Jews. The Chabad movement has been successful because it does not seek to undermine other Jewish interests. Not all agree. There are some towns and cities where Chabad has moved in and the preexisting Jewish culture has been extremely resentful of the competition. In other places, the Chabad houses have been welcome additions to the Jewish community and have helped the preexisting Jews in a particular location to thrive.
So long as the American Jewish Diaspora fights among itself over politics, religion, money, and leadership, we will have no success and our enemies will prevail at every turn of events. College campuses will become more hostile for Jews, unless they are
willing to depart from the religion and any connection with Israel, and in a most aggressive way. Even that form of relinquishment did not help the German Jews when the ovens were built in Germany and Poland.
Chapter 3, Jewish Observance
At the bottom line, there will be no Judaism, study of Jewish history, or accomplishment of shared goals without the religion. At some very fundamental level, Judaism has to be more than bagels, lox and cream cheese or an occasional Torah study, maybe once or twice a year.
Judaism has to be about the religion of the Jews. We are the survivors of only two of the ancient Hebrew tribes. Yet, we have been willing to throw away the spiritual life that we gave to the world as a special gift.
The two great religions that dominate the west, Christianity and Islam, would not exist in anything like their present form, and certainly would not be monotheistic, were it not for Judaism. Our gift, however, has become an anathema to those who received it.
The roots of anti-Semitism are well beyond the purview of this article. The fundamental disposition as to how to save Jews and Judaism in Israel and abroad is to rekindle the passion, the flame that made Judaism a worldwide religion and a spiritual philosophy worth preserving.
We need a new generation of leaders, thinkers, and organizers who will be unafraid to promote Jewish practice as worthwhile.
Frequently, I find myself as the only Jew in a group or crowd asking for kosher food or unwilling to work on the holidays and Shabbat. That used to bother me, I was uncomfortable with it. A new dawn has occurred for me and many other Jews. I have come to realize that not just preservation but also practicing of our spiritual path is a sure way to inner peace and survival as a people.
As noted earlier, Chabad has done a great job of helping to kindle the flame and keep it burning. However, Chabad should not be asked to do the job alone.
Every Jewish organization needs to link its efforts with what it means to be a Jew and practice the religion. Getting along with each other and tolerating divergent Jewish points of view should be a fundamental tenant of how we practice our religion. In Perkey Avot, we read that it is inappropriate to have contempt for anyone or any idea. That is hard to swallow, and I spend much time meditating on what it means. I have read dozens of commentaries on that simple phrase, and still do not have an understandable conclusion. The point is that being a Jew means understanding our history, precepts, and observances, even if we continue to do it differently. Jews are people not a religion alone.
Presis.
 The salvation for the Jew will not come from Israel alone, the Diaspora, or even the practice of our religion, but all three together are unbeatable in the cauldron of fire that defines Jewish existence.

Capitol Hill to mark Jerusalem Day in shadow of war

0
Israeli youth wave flags in Jerusalem. (Flash90/Yonatan Sindel

(JNS) A group of bipartisan lawmakers plan to gather on Capitol Hill on Tuesday to celebrate Jerusalem Day and the reunification of Israel’s capital nearly six decades ago.

The annual event comes just days after it was announced that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had accepted an invitation to address a joint session of Congress, and serves as reaffirmation of bipartisan support for Israel even as ties with the Biden administration have been strained amid the Jewish state’s nearly eight-month-old war against Hamas in Gaza.

“It is a great honor to stand in the House of Representatives of the modern nation of freedom as an envoy of the ancient nation of freedom, with true friends who, just a few years ago, relocated their embassy to the eternal capital of our people, the city of awe and peace, the cradle of Judeo-Christian civilization,” said Israel’s Diaspora Minister Amichai Chikli, who will be representing Israel at the event.

“This year, it is more important than ever to come together and declare our support for Israel and her people,” said Rep. Doug Lamborn (R- Colo.). Lamborn co-chairs the Congressional Israel Allies Caucus, which is hosting the event.

“While we celebrate Jerusalem and Israel’s deep commitment to safeguarding it for future generations, we also pause with great sadness to remember the collective pain of the Israeli people, as over 120 hostages—including 8 Americans—are still being held by the murderous terrorist group Hamas,” he said.

Fellow Caucus co-chair Rep. Brad Schneider (D-Ill.) said, “Israel is our most important ally in the Middle East—we will always have her back.”

Faith-based diplomacy

Founded in 2006, the bipartisan Congressional Israel Allies Caucus was the first in a parliamentary network of more than 50 pro-Israel caucuses the world over which mobilize political support for Israel based on shared Judeo-Christian values.

Run under the aegis of the Israel Allies Foundation, this faith-based powerhouse is a testament to the burgeoning relations between Israel and the predominantly supportive evangelical Christian community around the world.

Tuesday’s congressional event, which will be attended by scores of rabbis, pastors and national political leaders, including Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas), comes as fallout from the Israel-Hamas war has spilled over onto American streets and campuses and shaken the Jewish community in ways not seen since the end of World War II.

“Our voices will not be silenced by these willfully ignorant antisemites,” said Jordanna McMillan, U.S. director of the Israel Allies Foundation. “Jerusalem Day is a day of hope—of ancient and modern day promises fulfilled. ”

IAF President Josh Reinstein said, “As we celebrate Jerusalem Day and the power of faith-based diplomacy, this gathering on Capitol Hill reaffirms the enduring bond between the United States and Israel. Today, we stand together against terrorism and hate and in support of peace and our shared Judeo-Christian values.”

Anti-Israel protesters arrested for occupying San Francisco building housing Israeli consulate

0
Anti-Israel protesters occupy a building in San Francisco that houses the Israeli embassy (YouTube screenshot)
By Vered Weiss, World Israel News
San Francisco police arrested 69 anti-Israel protesters after they occupied a building housing the Israeli consulate on Monday.
Law enforcement forcibly removed protesters, fastened their arms with zip-ties, and moved them into vans.
The protesters, who were demonstrating against Israel’s operations in Gaza, occupied the lobby of the building for several hours.
When police arrived on the scene, they first encouraged them to leave the building of their own free will and then began detaining them.
The demonstrators arrived at 9 am on Monday but didn’t manage to get inside the Israeli consulate. However, some people had to change their appointments because of the obstruction created by the protesters.
While inside, they began chanting, “Not another nickel, not another dime, no more money for Israeli’s slaughter,” and taped up signs saying, “Anti-Zionism Isn’t Antisemitism.”
Sara, a San Francisco resident, said that many of the demonstrators were anti-Zionist Jews, and they aimed to pressure House Speaker Emerita Nancy Pelosi to be more vocal in pressuring a ceasefire in Gaza and an end to “all aid to Israel.”
Sara told the San Francisco Chronicle, “While we regret the inconvenience to people who are here for the Colombian (consulate), these kind of devastating and catastrophic times of genocide require strong action.”
The building also houses the Columbian consulate, and she did not apologize for the inconvenience caused to those visiting the Israeli consulate.
With anti-Israel protests erupting all over the United States, California has seen some of the most extreme incidents.
In one report, anti-Israel activity among University of California faculty has risen tenfold since October 7th.
Many UC Professors are involved in the Faculty for Justice in Palestine (FJP) and have used their classrooms to indoctrinate students into becoming anti-Zionist while alienating and defaming Jewish students as “privileged” and “genocide deniers,” according to the study.
In mid-May, it took police four hours to clear the UC of Irvine encampment of violent protesters by making dozens of arrests.