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Articles written by cnaan liphshiz


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  • Brussels attack underscores threat of returning jihadists

    Cnaan Liphshiz|Jun 13, 2014

    (JTA)-It was the threat that European authorities dreaded-and Europe's Jews suffered the first blow. The suspect arrested in the attack last month at the Jewish museum in Brussels that left four dead was a French-born jihadist who had returned home from fighting in Syria. Now European Jewish institutions are left to reckon with the danger of European jihadists coming home from Syria with deadly new skills, extremist fervor and malicious intentions. "There has been a change and it requires us to...

  • Shaken by Ukraine's turmoil, Kiev Jews form self-defense force

    Cnaan Liphshiz|Jun 6, 2014

    KIEV, Ukraine (JTA)—At an empty Chabad school near the banks of the Dnieper River here in Ukraine’s capital city, six uniformed Jews with handguns and bulletproof vests are practicing urban warfare. Leading the training last week is a brawny man who at irregular intervals barks Hebrew-language commands at the men to test their drilled responses to different scenarios, including “ma’atzor” (firearm malfunction) and “mekhabel” (terrorist). The men, who belong to Kiev’s newly formed Jewish Self-Defense Force, all have some combat skills from the...

  • Belgian Jews mourn museum deaths

    Cnaan Liphshiz|May 30, 2014

    BRUSSELS (JTA)-Hunched over a small island of memorial candles for the victims of the attack on the Jewish Museum of Belgium, Paul Ambach is lost in thought. "Once again, Jewish blood in Belgium, which is no longer Belgium," said Ambach, a well-known Jewish musician from Antwerp, as he stared at the candles Sunday from a vigil for the four people killed by the unidentified gunman who opened fire at the museum the previous day. Ambach said he was also thinking about past attacks on Belgian Jews,...

  • Tragedy and fancy dinners at new Anne Frank theater in Amsterdam

    Cnaan Liphshiz, JTA|Apr 25, 2014
    1

    AMSTERDAM (JTA)-To millions worldwide, she is a symbol of heroism and a haunting reminder of the dangers of discrimination. But for one Dutch entertainment firm, Anne Frank is a brand name powerful enough to merit millions of dollars of investment. Last week, the Amsterdam-based production company Imagine Nation announced plans to open a huge theater in Amsterdam that will feature only one show: a new play, "ANNE," about the life of the young Jewish diarist. The first production based on the...

  • Putin's Jewish embrace: Is it love or politics?

    Cnaan Liphshiz and Talia Lavin, JTA|Mar 21, 2014

    (JTA)- When even Russian policemen had to pass security checks to enter the Sochi Winter Olympics, Rabbi Berel Lazar was waved in without ever showing his ID. Lazar, a Chabad-affiliated chief rabbi of Russia, was invited to the opening ceremony of the games last month by President Vladimir Putin's office. But since the event was on Shabbat, Lazar initially declined the invitation, explaining he was prevented from carrying documents, among other religious restrictions. So Putin ordered his staff...

  • In Crimea, some Jews feel safer after Russian intervention

    Cnaan Liphshiz, JTA|Mar 14, 2014

    (JTA)-Shortly after Russian soldiers occupied the Crimean city of Sevastopol last week, Leah Cyrlikova took her two children out for an afternoon stroll in a city park. When they passed a group of soldiers, they stopped to have a friendly chat and pose with them for photos. While many Ukrainian Jews have strongly condemned the Russian military incursion into Crimea, others see the intervention as restoring order in the wake of a violent revolution that overthrew the pro-Russian government of Pre...

  • Ukraine Jews hunkering down

    Talia Lavin and Cnaan Liphshiz|Mar 7, 2014

    (JTA)-The turmoil in Ukraine has left one of Europe's largest Jewish communities on edge. After an outbreak of violence in Kiev last week that left dozens of protesters and policemen dead, President Viktor Yanukovych fled the capital and parliament installed an interim leader to take the still-contested reins of power. Like their compatriots, Ukraine's Jews are waiting to see what the future holds for their country, but with the added fear that they could become targets amid the chaos. There...

  • Behind Japanese fascination with Anne Frank, a 'kinship of victims'

    Cnaan Liphshiz|Jan 31, 2014

    AMSTERDAM (JTA)-She speaks only Japanese and is not entirely sure what country she's in, but 18-year-old Haruna Matsui is happy to stand in the rain for an hour with two friends to see the home of a person she has never met yet nonetheless considers her soul mate. "We visited Paris and Brussels, so I just had to come here to see Anne's home," an excited Matsui told JTA last week outside Amsterdam's Anne Frank House. Matsui has read Japanese manga comic book adaptations of Frank's diary several t...

  • Romania has come a long way on Holocaust remembrance, but denial persists

    Cnaan Liphshiz, JTA|Jan 31, 2014

    BUCHAREST, Romania (JTA-Touring the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in 2005, Romanian President Traian Basescu was unprepared to confront some painful truths. Facing a photograph showing pro-Nazi Romanian troops offloading their Jewish countrymen from cargo trains, Basescu was shocked and saddened. For decades, his country's educational system had obscured the truth of Romanian complicity in the deaths of their Jewish countrymen. Now here he was in Washington seeing hard evidence to the...

  • As quenelle spreads to pitch, British soccer bosses staying on sidelines

    Cnaan Liphshiz, JTA|Jan 24, 2014

    (JTA)-When West Bromwich Albion striker Nicolas Anelka exposed British soccer fans to the vaguely Hitlerian salute now sweeping his native France, Jewish groups were confident a strong response was coming. After all, Britain is considered a leader in the fight against xenophobia in sports thanks to its successful education programs and the tough stance of its soccer institutions, courts and police. But their confidence has been shaken by the refusal of British soccer bosses to condemn Anelka...

  • Israeli celebrity chef injects hummus, 'balagan' into Jewish heart of Paris

    Cnaan Liphshiz, JTA|Jan 10, 2014

    PARIS (JTA)-In the elegant silence of a narrow street near the River Seine, David Moyal takes a breath of fresh winter air and enters a noisy restaurant in the French capital. Inside Miznon, he is transported to another world, filled with the cacophony of Hebrew voices and Israeli music. A bustling new bistro that Moyal runs in the 4th arrondissement, Miznon is becoming hugely popular with Israelis and French Jews thanks to its Tel Aviv feel and audacious mission to pack Paris into a pita. Insid...

  • Israel's circumcision interventions draw mixed reception from European Jews

    Cnaan Liphshiz, JTA|Jan 10, 2014

    PARIS (JTA)—The Israeli government is wading into the burgeoning European debate over circumcision and receiving a mixed reception from the continent’s Jews. On Dec. 11, Israel initiated a motion in defense of circumcision at the Council of Europe, an intergovernmental organization devoted to enhancing cooperation among its 47 member states. Intended to offset a nonbinding October resolution approved by the council’s Parliamentary Assembly that condemned non-medical circumcision of boys, the Israeli initiative will be reviewed in January and p...

  • Jet-setting Edgar Bronfman flexed muscles for Jewish causes

    Cnaan Liphshiz and Julie Wiener, JTA|Jan 3, 2014

    (JTA)-In 1992, Edgar Bronfman was preparing to leave North America for Paris for his first meeting with then-French President Francois Mitterand at the Elysee Palace when at the last minute Bronfman decided he wanted to take an unexpected meeting in Geneva instead. So he asked Serge Cwajgenbaum, Bronfman's right-hand man in Europe, to phone the palace and ask to reschedule. The Elysee secretary, Hubert Vendrine, exploded. "He asked me who Edgar Bronfman thinks he is to move around a meeting...

  • In France, quasi-Nazi salute aims to evade long arm of the law

    Cnaan Liphshiz, JTA|Jan 3, 2014

    PARIS (JTA)-To outsiders, they seem like ordinary men striking macho poses for the camera. But there is a dark side to the photos that are appearing with growing frequency in the French media. The men-and less frequently women-are performing the "quenelle," a gesture vaguely similar to the Nazi salute that some believe was invented solely to express hatred of Jews without inviting prosecution. In France, displaying Nazi symbols is illegal if done to cause offense. But the quenelle, in which one...

  • How culpable were Dutch Jews in the slave trade?

    Cnaan Liphshiz and Iris Tzur, JTA|Jan 3, 2014

    THE HAGUE, Netherlands (JTA)-On a busy street near the Dutch Parliament, three white musicians in blackface regale passersby with holiday tunes about the Dutch Santa Claus, Sinterklaas, and his slave, Black Pete. Many native Dutchmen view dressing up as Black Pete in December as a venerable tradition, but others consider it a racist affront to victims of slavery. With Holland marking the 150th anniversary of abolition this year, the controversy over Black Pete has reached new heights. Hundreds...

  • Why is France taking a harder line on Iran than the United States?

    Ron Kampeas and Cnaan Liphshiz|Dec 13, 2013

    WASHINGTON (JTA)-When reports emerged over the weekend that France's hard line was responsible for the failure of negotiations over Iran's suspected nuclear weapons program, supporters and critics of the diplomatic push resorted to familiar stereotypes. Conservatives scoffed that even the conflict-averse French had outflanked President Obama. Leftists accused Laurent Fabius, the French foreign minister, of doing Israel's bidding. The reality typically is more nuanced. France's posture in the...

  • Mega-menorah builds bridges between Dutch Jews and non-Jews

    Cnaan Liphshiz, JTA|Dec 6, 2013

    BERLIKUM, Netherlands (JTA)-In a windswept parking lot near the North Sea shore, Klaas Zijlstra stands motionless as he admires his latest creation. It's the first time he is testing the 36-foot menorah he has spent weeks designing and building in the shape of a Star of David in his metal workshop in the northern tip of the Netherlands. Despite strong winds, the menorah holds, thanks in no small part to its 6-ton base. This isn't just any mega-menorah. For one thing, it may be the largest in...

  • 'Asylum' request focusing attention on anti-Semitism in Sweden

    Cnaan Liphshiz, JTA|Dec 6, 2013

    (JTA)-With an asylum application to her own homeland, Annika Hernroth-Rothstein was hoping to draw attention to the problem of anti-Semitism in Sweden. Hernroth-Rothstein acknowledges the bid is "absurd"-but it's working, having garnered international media coverage and stirring debate. "EU statutes provide that asylum be granted to persons with 'well-founded reasons to fear persecution due to race; nationality; religious or political beliefs; gender; sexual orientation; or affiliation to a...

  • French Jews who anticipated the Nazi onslaught

    Cnaan Liphshiz, JTA|Dec 6, 2013

    (JTA)-His hearing isn't what it used to be, but Georges Loinger still remembers Adolf Hitler's voice emanating from the radio at his Strasbourg home. Growing up in the heavily Germanic Alsace region of eastern France, Loinger and his family tuned in regularly to broadcasts of Hitler's speeches. They heard his "electrifying voice" and the plans he had in store for the Jews of Europe. So when the Nazis' anti-Jewish propaganda turned to deadly violence on Kristallnacht, the pogrom unleashed on the...

  • Deeply unpopular at home, French president praised on Israel trip

    Cnaan Liphshiz, JTA|Nov 29, 2013

    (JTA)-For Francois Hollande, the most unpopular head of state in France in more than half a century, his first presidential visit to Israel and the Palestinian Authority promised a respite from the daily pummeling over his country's stunted economy and his perceived flimsiness as a leader. In Israel, everything was set for a hero's welcome for someone who supported Europe's blacklisting of Hezbollah's military unit, waged a relentless war on anti-Semitism and scuttled a nascent deal over Iran's...

  • Norwegian Jews hope new circumcision rules head off ban

    Cnaan Liphshiz, JTA|Nov 29, 2013
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    (JTA)—News that Norway is planning unspecified new regulations on ritual circumcision could not have come at a more sensitive time. The announcement last week that Norway intends to introduce a bill to “regulate ritual circumcision” comes just over a month after an overwhelming majority of Council of Europe assembly members passed a landmark resolution against non-medical circumcision of boys. The resolution, which states that circumcision is a “violation of the physical integrity of children,” is unprecedented among an organization of the ca...

  • Shrugging off critics and an assassination attempt, Vadim Rabinovich claims mantle of Jewish leader

    Cnaan Liphshiz, JTA|Nov 8, 2013

    KIEV, Ukraine (JTA)-The explosion that ripped through Vadim Rabinovich's luxury SUV in central Kiev was strong enough to send a shock wave from the parking lot up to his third-floor office in the heart of the Ukrainian capital. "It was a shock for a day or two," Rabinovich said, "and then I moved on." The 60-year-old media mogul and Jewish philanthropist views the March 4 explosion as an attack on his life. He has accused Andrey Derkach, a businessman and former politician, of being...

  • Putin's party loses key city to tough Jew with checkered past

    Cnaan Liphshiz, JTA|Nov 1, 2013

    YEKATERINBURG, Russia (JTA)-Growing up in one of the Soviet Union's richest cities, Elena Chudnovskaya never imagined that she would be raising her daughter in a place so full of drug addicts that "the flowerbeds became strewn with syringes." But that is what became of her downtown apartment block after the collapse of communism, when soaring unemployment and the proximity to drug-producing countries unleashed a narcotics epidemic of alarming proportions in this district capital of 1.3 million...

  • Museum on Belgian shipping line stirs debate on Holocaust history

    Cnaan Liphshiz, JTA|Oct 25, 2013

    ANTWERP, Belgium (JTA)—With the confidence befitting a septuagenarian grandmother, Ellen Bledsoe-Rodriguez briskly leads her family past the beer stalls and DJs that dot the Flemish capital’s historic port on sunny autumn days. Bledsoe-Rodriguez is uninterested in such diversions. She and nine of her relatives had traveled 5,600 miles from California for last week’s opening of a museum devoted to the Red Star Line, the maritime travel company that nearly a century ago transported her mothe...

  • For Nairobi Jews, mall attack undermines already fragile sense of security

    Cnaan Liphshiz, JTA|Oct 11, 2013

    (JTA)—When Rina Attias phoned to say that she was trapped with terrorists inside Nairobi’s Westgate mall, her husband Albert replied with a short instruction: Hang up right now. Albert Attias, the head of the Jewish community in the Kenyan capital and an Israeli military veteran, wanted to communicate with his wife by text message so she wouldn’t be overheard speaking Hebrew. Their Israeli connections were not something the couple was eager to advertise, even in normal circumstances. “I was grav...

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