It's one little goat, Michael. What could it cost, two zuzim?
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@thelonelyjew
It's one little goat, Michael. What could it cost, two zuzim?
Pride banned Jews?!?
So it's that time of year again that I see people circulating stuff that is completely fabricated about what they imagine happened at Chicago Dyke March in 2017.
First, Dyke March is not Pride. It is not meant to be apolitical or single-issue. It is explicitly anti-imperialist, anticapitalist, and, yes, antizionist. It's not the big mainstream pride Parade that has corporate sponsors (and ads for gay tourism in Israel), it's a small radical grassroots demonstration.
Ok now that that's out of the way, they did not "ban Jews". I was there. They did not "ban Jewish symbols". They did not ask anyone to leave because of their Jewish pride flag.
What actually happened was three women who turned out to be employed by Israeli pinkwashing operation A Wider Bridge participated in the march with a rainbow flag that featured a blue star of david in the center. I remember seeing it and disliking it bc it gave me Zionist vibes but neither I nor anyone else bothered them about it.
After the march there was a cookout in the park. The women were asked to leave by a Jewish member of the Dyke March Collective after several hours of hanging out at the cookout because they were harassing other marchgoers.
Immediately publications like Forward, Tablet, JTA, as well as more mainstream publications started running stories making wild untrue claims which you can still read if you Google it because none of these were ever corrected or retracted. It's clear that these AWB agents had press releases pre-written and ready to fire as soon as they managed to provoke any reaction that they could spin into a controversy.
The photos that ran along with these headlines were also misleading. One of them showed a photo of a rainbow flag with a white star in the center. The star on the flag I saw was blue, and the shade of the star has specific political connotations. Showing a different flag with the politically significant color removed is extremely misleading. The one that was carried in the march (and which, again, wasn't banned!) looked like this:
Another banner image, this one in a New York Times article, showed a young woman with dark curly hair holding a sign that says "this is who we are". She was clearly chosen to feature because of her stereotypically Jewish features. The article implies that she is one of the supposedly banned Jews. This is false. You know how I know? Bc that was the friend I was there with that day! She does not identify as Jewish, she looks like that bc she is Italian, and she had no idea she was being photographed!
I had a hat decorated with red and black stars of David, and the following year a bunch of us wore Workers Circle sashes with Yiddish text (which uses the Hebrew alphabet) as well. No one who wasn't employed by a Zionist organization was asked to leave or even questioned about anything related to Zionism or Jewish identity.
I'm resigning myself to the fact that this is going to get dug up and passed around every year and people will believe what they want to believe, but if you hear claims that some queer group "banned Jews" or something similar, please look at the source for the information and if possible try to talk to actual Jewish people who participate in the community events being discussed. And if you hear this about Chicago Dyke March in specific, please correct people. I feel like I'm going insane when this many people are insisting that what I saw and experienced wasn't real and pointing to the barrage of misleading articles as what I should believe over my own experiences.
May 20, 1931 Journals of Anais Nin 1927-1931 [volume 4]
I'm doing a presentation for a mandatory cultural equity unit in my OB/GYN nursing rotations and I was assigned the topic of Romani culture. I've got the required scholarly research but I'd really love to hear from Romani people, what do you want nurses to know about Romani culture in order to help provide the best, most culturally competent care during pregnancy, delivery, and postpartum/neonatal care? I'm in the US so anything to do with US Romani culture is especially relevant.
Thanks!
Etrog container. made of copper alloy, inlaid with copper and silver. dated to early 20th century, from Syria. now belongs to the Jewish Museum.
Sukkoth. oil on canvas by Edouard Moyse, c. 1860. Edouard Moyse, who took his father's first name as his surname, was the first French painter to depict scenes of Jewish life. Alongside Edouard Brandon and Alphonse Levy, he was one of the most significant Jewish artists in France in the 19th century.
for anyone who doesnt know. yom kippur is the holiest day in the year. there is nothing i can say anymore. i cant put into words how ashamed and horrified i am. nothing will ever be the same
Tashlich is a Jewish new year ritual of casting off the previous years sins/worries/fears/etc in the form of throwing bread into a river and this year about fifty jews watched in disbelief as my dog slipped quietly into the water and began pac man style sucking up chunks of soggy floating bread and we were absolutely powerless to stop her
Celebration of "Simhat Torah" in a synagogue in Warsaw, Poland, 1980
The jews after Jom Kippur
SHANAH TOVAH!!!!! 🎉 this rosh hashanah please consider including a donation to a palestinian family in need as part of your celebrations! gazafunds is a great resource to use if you’re not sure where to donate. consider also donating an e-sim, or donating to crips for e-sims. please don’t forget the palestinian cause in 5785!
Pro-Israel antisemitism is not an oxymoron. Arthur Belfour was an antisemite, Richard Spencer is an antisemite. The goyische Zionist who shot that antizionist Jewish protester is part of a long tradition of antisemitic Zionism.
Extremely good paragraph from an article exploring the concept of sentience in invertebrates
Scientists wanted to learn whether bees, like humans and other mammals, had any interest in playing for fun's sake. They say they have evide
my favorite jewish meme: you can be in the middle of nowhere, miles from civilization, and what’s that? there on the horizon? a mirage? a dream? no, it’s a chabad house and they’re asking you if you have anywhere to stay for shabbos
I was driving to a job interview in a city I had never been to and I was feeling lonely and thinking about how far away I’d be from my friends and support network, and how scary that would be-
And right as I thought that I passed a Chabad house
It was deeply comforting. Right when I felt alone, I was reminded that the whole damn Jewish community is there.
One of my top ten comic panels of all time.
IMAGE ID: A panel from a Teen Titans Go comic where Starfire is saying “Although I did once visit a Lubavitch Outreach Center on my home planet of Tamaran” and Beast Boy as a cat is saying “those guys are everywhere.” END ID.
This is the funniest thing I’ve ever read
When you’re Jewish but you’re dating a non-Jewish person
Silk velvet Kippah from Afghanistan, early 20th century
A broken rose symbol appers on the matzevah of a person who died tragically young. The person name was Heinrich Hirsch, whose Hebrew name was Mose Hirsch HaKohen. He was born in 1855 and passed away in 1857, on the 6th of February.
The broken rose usually appears as a symbol of a life departed before time, on tombstones of children in both jewish and non-jewish cemeteries. With similar meaning, a broken tree could also appear on the tombstones.
The tombstone is located in the Mainz Jewish Cemetery, which is part of the Unesco World Heritage sites. Now I'm working on a new zine that will present this jewish heritage sites for all.