Russian Jewish Institute
That Other Hassidic Group in NYC, Besides Chabad

satmar

Interestingly we don’t talk very much about Hassidic Dynasties in NYC other than Chabad. The other major dynasty is that of the Satmar’s. Their populations, in NYC, can be found in Williamsburg and Boro Park.

Quick Facts:

They originated from Hungary (and surrounding areas).

They are Anti-Zionist….believe it or not.

They have been locked in a succession (blood) feud for decades.

Satmar communities are hierarchical.

U.S. Satmar populations exist in Williamsburg, Boro Park, and Upstate New York.

Here is what Wikipedia has compiled on the Satmar Hassidim:

Satmar (or Satmar Hasidism or Satmarer Hasidism) (חסידות סאטמאר) is a Hasidic movement comprising mostly Hungarian[1] and Romanian Hasidic Jewish Holocaustsurvivors and their descendants. It was founded and led by the late Hungarian-born[2] Grand Rebbe Yoel Teitelbaum[1] (1887-1979), who was the rabbi of Szatmárnémeti,Hungary (currently Satu MareRomania).[1] The town’s name in German is Satmar. The name Satmar was also used by the Yiddish-speaking population, Yiddish being then the common language of the local Jews. Members of the movement are usually referred to as Satmar Hasidim or Satmarer Hasidim.

The two largest Satmar communities are in Williamsburg, Brooklyn and Kiryas Joel, New York. There are also significant Satmar communities in Borough Park, Brooklyn andMonsey, New York. Smaller communities can be found in North American cities such as Los Angeles, Montreal and Toronto; European cities such as AntwerpLondon andManchester; Argentina; Australia and numerous cities and towns in Israel. The late Satmar Rebbe, Rebbe Yoel Teitelbaum, also held the title of the Chief Rabbi of Jerusalem’sEdah HaChareidis, although he did not live in Jerusalem after 1946.

Satmar is one of the largest and most influential Hasidic movements in existence today, but formal demographic comparisons with other Hasidim are not available. It is believed to number close to 130,000 adherents (including men, women and children), and is rapidly growing due to the extremely high fertility rates of the group. This population figure does not include a number of smaller and related anti-Zionist Hungarian Hasidic groups who align themselves with Satmar.

[3]

To Read The Entire Wiki-Web Satmar Articles, Continue Here.

holy rollers

I also wanted to mention that a film came out recently about certain fringe elements of the Satmar community in NYC.

Holy Rollers (2010), is an actual true story about Satmar kids being used as drug mules. Set in the late 1990s, the height of New York’s rave scene, ecstasy pills were being smuggled by Hassidim.

Holy Rollers stars, Jesse Eisenberg, as a struggling Satmar youth, who was sick of his destiny being decided for him. Now I’m not exactly sure what was in the main characters head, or his motives for taking such risks. Nevertheless, I won’t spoil the film for you. It’s a must see!! I really loved this film.

-David Mirand 

Contributing writer and former Program Director of RJI

Group sues to stop mosque near NYC’s ground zero

NEW YORK — The debate over a planned Islamic community center and mosque near ground zero became a court fight Wednesday, as a conservative advocacy group sued to try to stop a project that has become a fulcrum for balancing religious freedom and the legacy of the Sept. 11 attacks.

The American Center for Law and Justice, founded by the Rev. Pat Robertson, filed suit Wednesday to challenge a city panel’s decision to let developers tear down a building to make way for the mosque two blocks from ground zero.

The city Landmarks Preservation Commission moved too fast in making a decision, underappreciated the building’s historic value and “allowed the intended use of the building and political considerations to taint the deliberative process,” lawyer Brett Joshpe wrote in papers filed in a Manhattan state court. The Washington, D.C.-based group represents a firefighter who responded to and survived the terrorist attack at the World Trade Center.

City attorneys are confident the landmarks group adhered to legal standards and procedures, Law Department spokeswoman Kate O’Brien Ahlers said. A spokesman for the planned Islamic center, Oz Sultan, declined to comment on the lawsuit but said organizers were continuing to work toward choosing an architect.

The mosque has become a national political flashpoint, pitting several influential Republicans and the nation’s most prominent Jewish civil rights group against New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg and others. In one of the latest signs of the issue’s political reach beyond Manhattan, Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick expressed support Wednesday for the proposed mosque.

The group behind the $100 million project, the Cordoba Initiative, describes it as a Muslim-themed community center. Early plans call not only for prayer space but for a swimming pool, culinary school, art studios and other features. Developers envision it as a hub for interfaith interaction, as well as a place for Muslims to bridge some of their faith’s own schisms.

“We want to create a model that shows the world that you can develop moderate Muslim communities,” Sultan said Wednesday. “We would admonish people to, at least, give us a fair shake.”

Opponents, including some Sept. 11 victims’ relatives, see the prospect of a mosque so near the destroyed trade center as an insult to the memory of the nearly 3,000 people killed by Islamic terrorists in the 2001 attacks. Shouts of “shame on you!” erupted from the audience after the city panel voted Tuesday to deny landmark protection to the existing building, saying the 152-year-old structure wasn’t distinctive enough.

Big-name Republicans including former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin and former House Speaker Newt Gingrich have criticized the plan — as has the Anti-Defamation League, a Jewish civil rights group known for advocating religious freedom.

Former Rep. Rick Lazio, a Republican running for governor of New York, has raised questions about the Cordoba Initiative’s imam, Feisal Abdul Rauf. In a “60 Minutes” interview televised shortly after the Sept. 11 attacks, Rauf said that “United States policies were an accessory to the crime that happened.”

But supporters of the planned Islamic center see it as a monument to tolerance and religious liberty.

“The World Trade Center site will forever hold a special place in our city, in our hearts,” Bloomberg, a Republican-turned-independent, said Tuesday. “But we would be untrue to the best part of ourselves, and who we are as New Yorkers and Americans, if we said no to a mosque in lower Manhattan.”

For now, the court case centers on the legalities of the landmarks commission’s vote, which the lawsuit seeks to overturn.

The existing, Italianate building was built for shipping magnates and later occupied by the pharmaceuticals giant Merck & Co., among other businesses.

The law center argues it deserves landmark status for its architectural features — and for its newer historical significance as a structure that withstood being hit by debris from one of the hijacked jetliners used in the terrorist attacks.

“The building is the only building of its kind that links the growth of American free enterprise to the present-day events and the aftermath of Sept. 11, 2001, events which stand as a testament to economic, social and political freedom in the face of violence,” Joshpe wrote.

Assessing Decisionmaking on the NYC Islamic Center: Continuing Our Tradition of Religious Liberty

Religion, Policy and Politics, Civil Liberties

Melissa Rogers, Nonresident Senior Fellow, Governance Studies

The Brookings Institution

August 4, 2010

The New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission announced yesterday that it will not designate the building at 45-51 Park Place in lower Manhattan as an historic landmark.  The building, which is two blocks north of Ground Zero, does not have the architectural or historic significance to merit such a designation, the Commission unanimously said.  While a decision like this normally would not draw national attention, this one already has because it essentially clears the way for the owners of the property to tear down the existing structure and build an Islamic center there. 

This decision is one of several in which New York City officials have taken care to treat the planned Islamic center the same way they would treat plans for a YMCA or Jewish community center in this space.  In so doing, these officials have honored core dictates of religious freedom.

Especially because other local leaders across the nation are facing related issues, it’s worth looking at the excellent example set by New York City’s officials.  And with the battle for public opinion over the planned Islamic center still very much in play, an assessment of that debate also is in order.

The First Amendment and RLUIPA


The First Amendment to the United States Constitution bars the state from singling out certain religions for special disabilities.  In 1993, for example, the United States Supreme Court said: “At a minimum, the protections of the Free Exercise Clause pertain if the law at issue discriminates against some or all religious beliefs … .”  This includes discrimination that “is masked as well as overt.” 

Further, a federal law that specifically deals with religious institutions and land use regulation, the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act (RLUIPA), plainly states: “No government shall impose or implement a land use regulation that discriminates against any assembly or institution on the basis of religion or religious denomination.”  Whether the entity is Muslim, Mormon, or Methodist, Congress recognized that faith-based discrimination by the government must not be tolerated.

Thus, if government officials were to reject or specially burden plans for mosques or other Islamic institutions because of their religious affiliation, it would violate both the Constitution and federal statutory law.  This would be true whether the discrimination was plain to see or whether it lurked behind objections about things like traffic, aesthetics, and noise. 

Of course, a commitment to treat all religions the same does not tie the government’s hands regarding specific and credible threats of violence.  To cite a recent example, in March 2010 a federal grand jury indicted members of a Michigan militia group for plotting to attack police and use weapons of mass destruction.  The group was known as “Hutaree,” and its members described themselves as Christian soldiers preparing to battle with the anti-Christ.  That certainly did not stop law enforcement from taking action, and properly so. 

New York City’s Example


At a tense hearing in May 2010, a New York City community board rejected a motion to delay a vote on the planned Islamic center and backed the project by 29-to-1, with 10 abstentions.  New York City Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly said there were no security concerns about building the Islamic center in the area, and city officials quite rightly dismissed the notion that all things Islamic pose violent threats. 

When some later suggested the city should take the land around Ground Zero by eminent domain in order to stop the Islamic center, Governor David Paterson’s office saidsuch a move would be “an obvious violation of the First Amendment’s religion clauses, a gross violation of the spirit and intent of the eminent domain provision in state law, and [it could] run afoul of other federal and state statutes and constitutional provisions.”  He was right.  Others proposed launching a special investigation of the funding sources for this project, even though they admitted there was no evidence of wrongdoing.  Attorney General Andrew Cuomo properly rejected it as a bad idea. 

When the case came before the Landmarks Preservation Commission, many tried to distract the body with issues that were not part of its jurisdiction.  The Commission kept its eye on the ball.  Elisabeth de Bourbon, a spokeswoman for the body, called the controversy over the Islamic center an issue that was “totally separate” from the Commission’s work. “What we’re looking at it is whether the building has the architectural and historic significance to the city of New York to merit landmark designation.”

But the Manhattan figure most identified with these principled, consistent, and no-nonsense stands is New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg.  Whereas former Alaska governor Sarah Palin cited the pain of 9/11 victims and urged Muslims to oppose the project, the mayor noted that American Muslims were among those who were murdered on 9/11.  They too are part of the community in lower Manhattan, he said, and they have a right to build there.  When Newt Gingrich said “[t]here should be no mosque near Ground Zero in New York so long as there are no churches or synagogues in Saudi Arabia,” Mayor Bloomberg invoked our country’s founding. “If somebody wants to build a religious house of worship, they should do it and we shouldn’t be in the business of picking which religions can and which religions can’t,” he said.  Bloomberg continued: “You know, the ability to practice your religion is the- was one of the real reasons America was founded. And for us to say no is just, I think, not appropriate is a nice way to phrase it.”  Indeed, every time New York City officials were urged to place special burdens on this project precisely because it is affiliated with Islam, the mayor cried foul.

Bloomberg capped off these efforts with a stirring speech yesterday on Governors Island.  The mayor said:  “This nation was founded on the principle that the government must never choose between religions or favor one over another. “  He deemed battles like this one as “important [a] test of the separation of church and state as we may see in our lifetimes,” and said “it is critically important that we get it right.”  Mayor Bloomberg has done so here.

An Affront or An Advance?


Now that the Landmarks Preservation Commission has spoken, opponents of the Islamic center are likely to focus largely on the claim that, while the owners of the property may have a legal right to move forward, the project is unnecessarily provocative and hurtful.  Thus, they should pull the plug on their plans, opponents say.

If the sponsors of the Islamic center sympathized with the 9/11 hijackers, this argument would make sense.  But they have said just the opposite.  One of the leaders, Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf, has emphasized that project organizers “have condemned the actions of 9/11,” and “[w]e have condemned terrorism in the most unequivocal terms.”  According to the Imam Feisal, the sponsors of the Islamic center want “to push back against the extremists,” and help“bridge and heal a divide” between Muslims and other faiths.  The FBI has said Rauf assisted its agents in outreach to Muslims in the wake of September 11: “We’ve had positive interactions with him in the past,” a FBI spokesmannoted.  Daisy Khan, Imam Feisel’s wife, and a member of an advisory team for the National September 11 Memorial and Museum, has stressed their efforts “to de-link Islam from acts of terrorists.”  Sharif el-Gamal, a lead developer of the project, and one who assisted first responders on 9/11, has promised that “[r]adical and hateful agendas will have no place” in this endeavor.

In the face of questions about fundraising for the Islamic center, Sharif el-Gamal has said, “We are in the process of establishing a not-for-profit entity, and we have not raised any money from foreign governments.”  Moving forward, el-Gamal has promised “to make sure our fundraising and planning involves people from across the city” and to “do so in a way that hears concerns and responds to them.” He told CNN that project organizers “plan on being very transparent throughout the whole process.”  El-Gamal has extended an open invitation to Americans, including former Alaska Governor Sarah Palin, to visit the community and learn more about the plans.  He said: “You know, I’d love it if Sarah Palin came to Park51 to see our community….  We want to welcome everybody who cares about this city and about this country.”

Given these kinds of statements, it is unsurprising that a number of New York City religious leaders have spoken in favor of the project.  Father Kevin Madigan of St. Peter’s Church said: “I think they need to establish a place such as this for people of goodwill from mainline Christian, Jewish and Muslim faiths so we can come together to talk.” Joy Levitt, executive director of the Jewish Community Center in Manhattan, told the New York Times: “For the J.C.C. to have partners in the Muslim community that share our vision of pluralism and tolerance would be great.”  And a host of local religious leaders turned out yesterday to support plans for the Islamic center, including those from the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese, the Jewish Community Council, the Church of St. Francis of Assisi, the National Jewish Center for Learning and Leadership, Trinity Church, Church of the Nazarene, the Islamic Cultural Center of New York, the New York City Buddhist Church, the United Jewish Agency Federation, and the Interfaith Center of New York. 

Having dedicated their project to this spirit, and having made these promises, I would urge Americans to welcome the organizers’ efforts.  As noted above, opponents of the project say Islamic symbols and institutions create pain because they associate them with the 9/11 attacks.  But many Muslims who condemn terrorism also claim those symbols and institutions — they did before 9/11 and they do today.  If Americans rebuff high-profile efforts by Muslims who condemn terrorism to reclaim their faith, we effectively give the 9/11 hijackers and their ilk a monopoly on the symbols and institutions of Islam.  This would provide violent extremists with a powerful recruiting tool, and it would be deeply unfair to the vast majority of Muslims who practice their faith in peace. 

Making Peace, Building Solidarity


As other cities and towns consider plans for mosques and other Islamic institutions in their communities, they should read a two-year study of American Muslims and terrorism done by Duke University scholar David Schanzer.  Professor Schanzer and his colleagues found that “Muslim-American organizations and the vast majority of individuals who we interviewed firmly reject the radical extremist ideology that justifies the use of violence to achieve political ends.”  They also discovered that “Muslim-Americans have taken a number of positive steps to reduce the potential for radicalization.”  In addition to publicly and privately condemning terrorist incidents, they have warned congregants against propaganda, performed background checks on proposed speakers at mosques, pre-viewed texts to be offered at Friday prayer services, and barred certain speakers from their communities.  They have sponsored anti-terrorism workshops and provided forums for youth to head off potential problems.  Muslim Americans also have provided information to law enforcement about individuals who might engage in violence.  Thus, thwarting the building of American Muslim communities would often mean thwarting some of our best weapons against terrorist threats.

Local officials who are facing related issues also should study New York City’s example.  In the face of enormous pressure to do otherwise, city officials held fast to the principle that the government must apply the same standards to all faiths, a linchpin of the American tradition of religious liberty.  Adherence to this principle has helped us to make peace and build solidarity in a nation where a stunning array of religions are practiced, often with great fervor, and frequently side-by-side.  Contrary to Newt Gingrich’s suggestions, honoring this standard of religious freedom has not made us “weak” or “submissive.”  It has made us strong.

A Bukharian Forum in Forest Hills, Queens with Sergey Kadinsky

bukharian teacher

A traditional Bukharian teacher instructs students. Photo courtesy of Central Queens YM & YWHA

YourNabe.com

By Anna Gustafson
Monday, June 28, 2010 1:13 PM

Forest Hills and Rego Park are home to one of the largest populations of Bukharian Jews in the world, but not many of their neighbors know much about the religious group that hails mainly from Central Asia — something Forest Hills resident Sergey Kadinsky said he hopes to change.

Kadinsky will speak about the history and culture of the Bukharian Jewish community at the Central Queens YM & YWHA in Forest Hills at 1:30 p.m. June 29.

“I’ve noticed many don’t know much about Bukharians besides the fact they have big fences and houses,” said Kadinsky, 25. “I want them to see the culture that resides in these homes.”

Tensions have surfaced between Bukharians and non-Bukharians in recent years, predominantly because Forest Hills residents have said they were resentful that some Bukharians would tear down smaller homes in the neighborhood and build larger ones.

In response to complaints about over-development in the Cord Meyer area of Forest Hills, the City Council passed a rezoning plan last year that limits a house’s height.

“By learning about their history and culture, you’ll appreciate their ideas,” Kadinsky said. “For example, why do they like to build large homes? Because they like to have grandparents and grandchildren in the same home.”

Kadinsky, a Latvian native, is not Bukharian but has spent years researching Bukharian culture after Robert Pinkhasov, a retired urologist from Rego Park, asked Kadinsky, who speaks fluent Russian, to help translate a book he was writing about Bukharians.

Bukharian Jews, who primarily come from Central Asia, faced economic decline and civil unrest following the breakup of the former Soviet Union. Many of the world’s 250,000 Bukharian Jews left Central Asia for places like Israel and the United States, with some 50,000 now living in Forest Hills and Rego Park, according to the United Jewish Appeal Federation of New York.

Pinkhasov’s book, “Bukharian Jews: An Encyclopaedic Reference,” was published by the author and may be used in a recently launched Queens College course on Bukharian Jews taught by Rego Park resident Imanuel Rybakov.

The Bukharian community has become increasingly involved in area politics, and Kew Gardens resident Albert Cohen was the first Bukharian Jew to run for citywide office last year. Cohen, originally from Tajikistan who became known to some as the “Bukharian Barack Obama,” ultimately lost the Democratic primary for the 29th Council District to present Councilwoman Karen Koslowitz (D-Forest Hills), but many Bukharians saw it as an important first political step for their community.

The Central Queens Y is at 67-09 108 St. in Forest Hills. The June 29 event is open to the public and a $5 donation is suggested. For more information, call 718-268-5011, Ext. 151 or visit cqyjcc.org.

Reach reporter Anna Gustafson by e-mail at agustafson@cnglocal.com or by phone at 718-260-4574.

NY suspect dubbed femme fatale of Russian spy case

NEW YORK — Anna Chapman has been called the femme fatale of a spy case with Cold War-style intrigue — a striking redhead and self-styled entrepreneur who dabbled in real estate and mused on her Facebook page, “if you can dream, you can become it.”

Chapman’s American dream, U.S. authorities say, was a ruse.

The 28-year-old Chapman, they say, was a savvy Russian secret agent who worked with a network of other operatives before an FBI undercover agent lured her into an elaborate trap at a coffee shop in lower Manhattan.

Though the U.S. has branded the operatives as living covertly, at least in Chapman’s case, she had taken care to brand herself publicly as a striver of the digital age, passionately embracing online social networking by posting information and images of herself for the world to see.

Prosecutors have charged Chapman and 10 other suspects with following orders by Russian intelligence to become “Americanized” enough to infiltrate “policymaking circles” and feed information back to Moscow.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Michael Farbiarz has called evidence against Chapman “devastating.” She is “someone who has extraordinary training, who is a sophisticated agent of Russia,” he said.

Chapman and nine others accused of being ring members were arrested across the Northeast and charged with failing to register as foreign agents, a crime that is less serious than espionage and carries up to five years in prison. Some also face money laundering charges. An 11th suspect was arrested in Cyprus, accused of passing money to the other 10 over several years.

Prosecutors said several of the defendants were Russians living in the U.S. under assumed names and posing as Canadian or American citizens. It was unclear how and where they were recruited, but court papers said the operation went as far back as the 1990s. Exactly what sort of information the agents are alleged to have provided to their Russian handlers — and how valuable it may have been — was not disclosed.

The FBI finally moved in to break up the ring because one of the suspects — apparently Chapman, who was bound for Moscow, according to court papers — was going to leave the country, the Department of Justice said Tuesday.

The court papers allege that some of the ring’s members were husband and wife and that they used invisible ink, coded radio transmissions and encrypted data and employed methods such as swapping bags in passing at a train station.

Farbiarz called the arrests “the tip of the iceberg” of a conspiracy by Russia’s intelligence service, the SVR, to collect information inside the U.S. The arrests raised fears that Moscow has planted other couples.

Such deep-cover agents are known as “illegals” in the intelligence world because they take civilian jobs instead of operating inside Russian embassies and military missions.

Russian officials initially denounced the arrests as “Cold War-era spy stories” and accused elements of the U.S. government of trying to undermine the improving relationship between Moscow and Washington. But the White House and Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin expressed confidence that the arrests would not damage ties between the two nations.

At a court hearing Monday in federal court in Manhattan, where Chapman was jailed without bail, her attorney called the case against her weak. He said she had visited the United States on and off since 2005 before settling in Manhattan to start a business.

Chapman took an apartment a block from Wall Street and began using online social networks, including LinkedIn and Facebook, to develop business contacts and to market her skills. On her LinkedIn page, Chapman is listed as the chief executive officer of PropertyFinder Ltd., which maintains a website featuring real estate listings in Moscow, Spain, Bulgaria and other countries.

“Love launching innovative high-tech startups and building passionate teams to bring value into market,” Chapman’s LinkedIn summary says.

She lists previous jobs at an investment company and a hedge fund in London. The summary also says she earned a master’s degree in economics at a Russian university in 2005.

In more than 90 photos posted to Facebook, Chapman is pictured in various countries, including Turkey, where she is in one of the rooms of the luxurious Hotel Les Ottoman, in Istanbul. There are also what look like family photographs from Russia and photographs of her dressed in a student uniform.

Her Internet footprints also include a photo of her posing with a glass of wine between two men at the Global Technology Symposium at Stanford University in March — it cost more than $1,000 to attend — and video clips, speaking in Russian about the economic opportunities in her adopted home.

Media reports quickly branded her a femme fatale, and tabloids splashed her photos on their front pages.

An acquaintance, David Hartman, owner of a New York real estate company, described Chapman as “pleasant, very professional, friendly.”

“There’s nothing too crazy about her that I knew of,” he said.

A criminal complaint alleges that, unbeknownst to her business contacts such as Hartman, Chapman was using a specially configured laptop computer to transmit messages to another computer of an unnamed Russian official — a handler who was under surveillance by the FBI.

The laptop exchanges occurred 10 times, always on Wednesdays, until June, when an undercover FBI agent got involved, prosecutors said. The agent, posing as a Russian consulate employee and wearing a wire, arranged a meeting with Chapman at a Manhattan coffee shop, they said.

During the meeting, they initially spoke in Russian but then agreed to switch to English to draw less attention to themselves, the complaint says in recounting their recorded conversation.

“I need more information about you before I can talk.”

“OK. My name is Roman. … I work in the consulate.”

The undercover said he knew she was headed to Moscow in two weeks “to talk officially about your work,” but before that, “I have a task for you to do tomorrow.”

The task: To deliver a fraudulent passport to another woman working as a spy.

“Are you ready for this step?” he asked.

“S—-, of course,” she responded.

The undercover gave her a location and told her to hold a magazine a certain way — that way, she would be recognized by a Russian agent, who would in turn confirm her identity by saying to her, “Excuse me, but haven’t we met in California last summer?”

But Chapman was leery, prosecutors said.

“You’re positive no one is watching?” they say she told the undercover agent after being given the instructions.

Afterward, authorities say, she was concerned enough to buy a cell phone and make a “flurry of calls” to Russia. In one of the intercepted calls, a man advised her she may have been uncovered, should turn in the passport to police and get out of the country.

She was arrested at a New York Police Department precinct after following that advice, authorities said.

Authorities say the undercover’s parting words to her had been, “Your colleagues in Moscow, they know you’re doing a good job. So keep it up.”

Contributing to this report were Associated Press writers Pete Yost in Washington, D.C., and David Caruso and Eva Dou in New York.

Copyright © 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

N.Y. to host ‘Jewish World Cup’

soccer

NEW YORK (JTA) — Jews from more than 15 countries will compete in a “Jewish World Cup” in New York on June 27. 

The soccer tournament, hosted by the Jewish Community Relations Council of New York, will take place on Randall’s Island, between Manhattan and the Bronx. The tournament is for adults; soccer clinics are planned for children.

The tournament is part of JCRC’s effort to reach out to overseas Jews living in New York and integrate them into the American Jewish community.

“There are many different groups of international Jews in New York who are not connected to each other as a community, nor are they connected to the broader community of New York Jews,” said Hindy Poupko, director of Israel and international affairs at the JCRC. “Our goal is to bring these groups together as international Jews and as a part of the broader Jewish community.”

We found an event guide online made for Russians living in NYC (mostly Jews). We’ve posted some of the events they have below.

RUSSIAN MIX

ttpoom

flyer

flyer 3

flyer4

For more featured Russian culture events in NYC visit Russian Mix

Russian Music Alive and Well in New York City

concert

Anyone who goes to Europe, Asia or Africa will find that American pop music has traveled around the world. Due to marketing, it is likely that whatever is in the top 40 in New York or Chicago is a mega hit in Rome and Berlin as well.

Music is big business. It is not just a matter of transmitting cultural values. I have heard people sing songs in English without an accent who don’t speak a word of English. How many Americans have the same familiarity with a European or African band singing in a local language ?

When Russia was freed from communism, they did not stampede mindlessly to listen to American and British music. Some of the underground bands like DDT and Akvarium went above ground and started making big money. Although American styles certainly played a major role, the post communist music showcased the beauty of the Russian language.

One of the most haunting Akvarium videos is interspersed with grainy documentary footage of old Russian Orthodox cathedrals being knocked down. An American like me who does not understand Russian will hear the influence of Bob Dylan and sense the historical import of Russian history being revisited.

Then there is the American phenomenon of bands like Back Street Boys refracted through a Russian lens. America’s ethnic rainbow tends to run from European to African American to Hispanic. Russia has its own ethnic rainbow, with a more Asian flavor. Aleksei Chumakov headed a Russian band that made a mega hit about 4 years ago. “Neobiknavenia” , which is the title ofChumakov’s mega hit translates as “incredible”. Comparing it to Back Street Boys or other “boy bands” does not do it justice. The song showcases the beauty of the Russian people and language.

In New York you can find the latest Russian music on the radio, in record stores and even in concert venues where Russian musical groups attract a nice crowd. It should be noted that Russia is a regional superpower and that its language crowds out Ukrainian, Belarussian and other local languages. That is a new issue being dealt with in the former USSR.

I feel fortunate to live in a city where the Russian music scene has such a strong pull. It is clear to me that the world listens to America. I think we should return the favor. And that is what I do.

Each of the links in this article is to a great Russian band. I hope my readers will check them out. It could open up a new world.

The illustration with this article is from the Akvarium web site and is one of their Blue Album of 1981.

Russian Radio 87.7 FM NYC Back On - Confirmed

letters

Several members have reported that Russian Radio 87.7 FM NYC is back on the air.

So if you live in NYC tune in again, or try it for the first time.

Big thank you to Eric!

Russian Radio 87.7FM NYC Speculation

nyc4

From what we’re understanding, 87.7 FM Russian Radio in NYC, is back on!! 

We are trying to confirm this. More to come.

Twitter Redefining ‘Local’ for Russian Non-Profit

rji logo

zsniderman.wordpress.com

Zack Sniderman

The Russian Jewish Institute doesn’t physically exist. Without an office, a phone line, or a full-time staff, there are few signifiers of its presence in Forest Hills, Queens. However, the institute does exist, with a growing membership, in cyberspace.

The Queens-based non-profit was forced to close its doors this summer because of the recession. The institute was created to help the area’s Russian Jewish community become more active in politics through advocacy and education. However, without a steady flow of money to support them the institute has turned to the Internet for survival. Using a combination of its own website, Facebook, Twitter, and the blogging tool Tumblr, the institute is actually growing in numbers.

The institute was started two years ago by a group of six young, Russian Jewish business owners. Without any sponsorship they funded the non-profit out of their own pockets. The annual budget of about $150,000 was directed towards start-up costs. They advertised online and in local publications, they printed pamphlets and brochures, and were responsible for covering administrative costs like rent and salary for their sole employee and two part-time assistants.

That employee is David Mirand, a 29-year-old Russian Jew from Edmonton, Canada. Mirand, the program manager, is currently managing the institute’s collection of sites from Canada and for free. Without a green card, he cannot legally live in the states while unemployed, and has moved home to find work. Mirand said he is working, unpaid, until they can find enough money to re-open shop. “We’re hoping to rebound in six to 12 months. I’m just trying to keep it alive and in a format that costs us no money.”

The non-profit’s goals were to increase political awareness and representation in the Forest Hills community. Forest Hills and the neighboring Rego Park have a Russian population of over 8,000, according to the most recent United States census. This number is in part due to a 22 percent increase in the New York City’s Russian population following the fall of the Soviet Union. The Forest Hills and Rego Park area holds the second largest concentration of Russians in New York outside of the Brighton Beach region of Brooklyn.

While not in direct correlation, the Jewish population in Forest Hills and Rego Park has also increased according to the Religious Congregations and Memberships Study. The number of Jewish residents went from around 1 percent of the community in 1980, to between 25 and 32 percent of the community by 2000.

With this surge in the Russian and Jewish populations, Mirand said the current need for organizations to help immigrants with preliminary needs like housing has diminished. Instead, the institute worked to educate immigrants about American democracy and voting procedures. “There is a huge population here and they have yet to find themselves a councilmember to represent them,” Mirand added.

Political engagement is a touchstone for modern American communities, believes Carl Bonomo, a law professor at Queens College City University and an unpaid political advisor to the Russian Jewish Institute. “If you expect your community needs to be met or to bring its unique perspective, you need a community that goes out and pulls a lever, that follows the issues.” Bonomo has no ethnic ties to the Russian Jewish Institute. After hearing how David wanted to help the community, Bonomo signed on. Regardless of personal ancestry, “democracy requires participation. That’s the draw that I saw.”

But the Russian Jewish Institute has been plagued by finances. “We always had limited funding,” Mirand said. “It generally came from individual donations… and the board of directors was mostly the people doing the funding.”

Emanuel David, a founder and current executive director of the institute, described this hesitancy. “We didn’t go out to get the $5 or $10 [individual donations]. … We thought that wasn’t the best idea until we got better known in the community.” David said the institute was meant to be supported by the local, and largely successful, business community.

The Internet is providing a temporary solution for the institute’s economic troubles. The Russian Jewish Institute has 147 ‘followers’ on Twitter, 163 ‘fans’ on Facebook, 103 ‘followers’ on Tumblr, and an average of 65 unique page views every day on its home website (according to websiteoutlook.com). While they may seem small, the numbers add up. Mirand said the institute’s membership has nearly doubled, and in several months its page views have shot up from thousands to hundreds of thousands.

Bonomo, Mirand and David agree that the Internet has actually increased their visibility in the community. Moreover, the move has appealed to younger people more likely to use the Internet and social media sites like Facebook. According to Facebook, approximately 60 percent of the institute’s members are between the ages of 13 and 24.

The institute is looking to these younger generations to overcome lingering government distrust from people that grew up under the Soviet regime. “Russians are skeptical,” David said. “It’s the old Soviet mentality. They are fearful of the government, that someone is taking advantage of them.” Mirand called it paranoia. “They don’t want to cause many waves in government. That definitely translated and stayed ingrained in older Russians.” But Bonomo remained optimistic. “The old guard is very hesitant, but the [younger] members are more likely to be engaged.”

The Russian Jewish Institute hopes to reacquire an office within the next six months and continue its work within the community. Its relative success online, however, suggests that even without a storefront, it might have even more influence than before.

Jewish Fashion Icon: Donna Karan

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Donna Karan was born on October 2, 1948, in Forest Hills, New York. At a very young age Karan began working for Liz Claiborne. Although she attended Parsons School of Design, she dropped out in 1968. In 1971, she became associate designer with Anne Klein. After Anne Klein died in 1974, Karan became the company’s chief designer. In 1984, Karan left Anne Klein and, with her husband Stephan Weiss, she founded her own clothing company, Donna Karan Co. Her first women’s collection premiered in 1985. She also created a bridge line, DKNY, in 1988. She became highly successful from her Essentials line and elastic bodysuits. Today, the Donna Karan collection designs everything from women’s formal attire, to beauty products, to furniture. In 1996, Donna Karan went public and became Donna Karan Inc.

Karan is the founder of many charities including, most recently, the Urban Zen initiative. On March 14 and 15 2008, Karan organized a huge sale of her personal belongings and vintage company samples at her late husband’s studio to benefit the cause. In October 2008, a foundation run by Karan donated $850,000 to New York’s Beth Israel Medical Center. The grant will be used for testing whether yoga, meditation and aromatherapy can enhance the traditional cancer treatments of chemotherapy and radiation.

She studies Kabbalah and is listed among the top Jewish Fashion Icons

Sources:

http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/biography/Fashion.html

http://www.infomat.com/whoswho/donnakaran.html

Did The Death Of Communism Take Koestler And Other Literary Figures With It?

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Anne Applebaum
The New York Review Of Books


“Koestler: The Literary and Political Odyssey of a Twentieth-Century Skeptic”
by Michael Scammell, Random House, 689 pp., $35.00

He began his education in the twilight of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, at an experimental kindergarten in Budapest. His mother was briefly a patient of Sigmund Freud’s. In interwar Vienna he wound up as the personal secretary of Vladimir Jabotinsky, one of the early leaders of the Zionist movement. Traveling in Soviet Turkmenistan as a young and ardent Communist sympathizer, he ran into Langston Hughes. Fighting in the Spanish civil war, he met W.H. Auden at a “crazy party” in Valencia, before winding up in one of Franco’s prisons. In Weimar Berlin he fell into the circle of the infamous Comintern agent Willi Münzenberg, through whom he met the leading German Communists of the era: Johannes Becher, Hanns Eisler, Bertolt Brecht. Afraid of being caught by the Gestapo while fleeing France, he borrowed suicide pills from Walter Benjamin. He took them several weeks later when it seemed he would be unable to get out of Lisbon, but didn’t die (though Benjamin, denied passage into Spain at the French border, took them and did).

Along the way he had lunch with Thomas Mann, got drunk with Dylan Thomas, made friends with George Orwell, flirted with Mary McCarthy, and lived in Cyril Connolly’s London flat. In 1940, Koestler was released from a French detention camp, partly thanks to the intervention of Harold Nicholson and Noël Coward. In the 1950s, he helped found the Congress for Cultural Freedom, together with Mel Lasky and Sidney Hook. In the 1960s, he took LSD with Timothy Leary. In the 1970s, he was still giving lectures that impressed, among others, the young Salman Rushdie.

It is difficult, in other words, to think of a single important twentieth-century intellectual who did not cross paths with Arthur Koestler, or a single important twentieth-century intellectual movement that Koestler did not either join or oppose. From progressive education and Freudian psychoanalysis through Zionism, communism, and existentialism to psychedelic drugs, parapsychology, and euthanasia, Koestler was fascinated by every philosophical fad, serious and unserious, political and apolitical, of his era.

Nor were these shallow passions. His belief in communism led him to fight in Spain and travel in the USSR. His Zionism led him to a kibbutz near Haifa. At different times, he advocated the use of violence, whether to bring about a Communist utopia or to create the state of Israel. Even when he turned against his previous causes (and against his previous friends who still believed in them) he did so with real fervor. He is, after all, best known as an anti-Communist, not as a Communist, largely because of his best and most influential book, Darkness at Noon, a fictional account of the interrogation of a leading member of an unnamed Communist party. His involvement with Revisionist Zionism is also probably less well known than The Thirteenth Tribe, a book that argues that modern European Jews are descended from the Central Asian Khazars, and not from the Jews who lived in the Palestine of antiquity—a thesis which, whatever its merits, is hugely popular among the enemies of Zionism. Even so, when in the grip of one particular mania he was incapable of seeing the counterarguments: in the face of all rational argument, he even stuck to his late passion for telepathy and ESP—so much so that he left most of his estate to fund a professorial chair in parapsychology.

Koestler was equally likely to succumb to extreme passions in his personal life—notoriously so. He was variously in thrall to Jabotinsky, to his analyst, and to an extraordinary series of women. He was also consumed by violent hatreds—starting with his mother—and pursued many vendettas, against fellow writers (he was fiercely jealous of Hemingway, loathed Bertrand Russell) as well as romantic rivals (including Edmund Wilson) and ex-husbands. Eventually, he offended almost everyone he knew, but only after getting drunk with them first.

Even his entertainments often went to extremes, as this superb new biography well illustrates. Far and away my favorite Koestler moment—in a book full of amazing Koestler moments—is Michael Scammell’s description of an evening in 1946, during which Koestler and his then girlfriend (and later wife) Mamaine Paget went out drinking with Jean-Paul Sartre, Simone de Beauvoir, Albert Camus, and Camus’s wife, Francine. The festivities began with dinner in an Algerian bistro, continued in a dance hall “lit with pink and blue neon lights,” and then, at Koestler’s insistence, progressed to Schéhérazade, a nightclub filled with “violinists wandering about playing soulful Russian music into the guests’ ears.” There were arguments about communism, and about friendship. “If only it were possible to tell the truth,” exclaimed Camus at one point.

At about 4 AM, Koestler was pried away from the nightclub, and the group “repaired to Chez Victor in Les Halles for onion soup, oysters, and white wine.” Roaring drunk, Koestler threw a crust of bread across the table and hit Mamaine in the eye; Sartre, equally drunk, poured salt and pepper into napkins that he put in his pocket and said he had to deliver a lecture at the Sorbonne in the morning on “The Responsibility of the Writer.” Camus said, “Well, you’ll have to speak without me” (“Alors, tu parleras sans moi “). Sartre said he wished he “could speak without me too” (“Je voudrais bien pouvoir parler sans moi “) and collapsed into giggles.

Scammell, whose fine-tuned sense of irony serves him well here, describes that evening’s conclusion:

They broke up at dawn. Alone with Sartre, Beauvoir sobbed “over the tragedy of the human condition,” then leaned on the parapet of a bridge over the Seine and said: “I don’t see why we don’t throw ourselves in the river.” “All right,” agreed Sartre, “let’s throw ourselves in,” and began to cry himself. In another part of the city, Koestler too burst into tears as he stared into the Seine. Then he disappeared into a pissoir and shouted to Mamaine, “Don’t leave me, I love you, I’ll always love you.” They got home at about eight o’clock and slept all day, except for Sartre, who stuffed himself with pep pills and dragged himself off to the Sorbonne to give his lecture. It wasn’t possible even for an existentialist to address the students “sans moi.”

Leaving aside its entertainment value, that particular passage raises some interesting questions. We are not so many years removed from 1946, in the grand scheme of things. Yet much has changed since then, starting with the rules of acceptable public behavior. It is simply not possible to imagine any three prominent contemporary American public intellectuals—say, Malcolm Gladwell, Niall Ferguson, and David Brooks—indulging in a night on the town such as that one, let alone weeping over the human condition and threatening to throw themselves into the Seine at the end of it. Hollywood starlets and pseudo-celebrities behave that way in our culture, not serious people.

More to the point, Koestler was, in our contemporary definition of these things, an alcoholic, as were many of the people around him. He was also, in our contemporary definition of these things, a sexual predator. He was blatantly unfaithful to all of his three wives, as well as to the other women he lived with. He flirted outrageously, and sometimes aggressively, with other men’s wives too. Just a few days before the evening at Schéhérazade and Chez Victor, Koestler actually went to bed with Simone de Beauvoir.

David Cesarani, a previous biographer of Koestler, has even described him as a “serial rapist.”[1] Scammell disputes that accusation at some length. In the end, only one woman—Jill Craigie, the wife of the British Labour leader Michael Foot—ever actually accused him of rape, and there are some ambiguities about her story. She made the charge when she was in her eighties, and Koestler was dead. Others, including her husband, remembered the incident differently. Scammell notes these discrepancies, and convincingly dismisses some of Cesarani’s other accusations as unfounded. He also notes that the charge has nevertheless deeply tarnished Koestler’s posthumous reputation. This is not at all surprising. Even if “rape” is not the right word, some of the sexual behavior Scammell describes would, in the contemporary world, be considered absolutely beyond the pale—and probably illegal as well.

Nor are the rules of public behavior the only things that have changed. The professionalization of literary and intellectual life was underway even in Koestler’s lifetime, and he chafed against it. He disliked the lecture circuit and never had any real interest in teaching. He had very little time for universities in general. He also refused to be categorized as a simple “novelist” or “journalist,” and in the latter part of his career wrote books about science, philosophy, history, and psychology. He understood the term “intellectual” in a much broader sense than we do today, and felt comfortable ranging over a huge number of fields in which he had no professional expertise whatsoever. This approach to the life of the mind, perfectly acceptable in the Vienna of Koestler’s youth, simply looks amateurish from the perspective of the present. As a result, many of his later books have slipped off the radar and are long out of print. Others, notably “The Thirteenth Tribe”, are considered curiosities that appeal to conspiracy theorists, not scholars.

The most important change, however, is political. To put it bluntly, the deadly struggle between communism and anticommunism—the central moral issue of Koestler’s lifetime—not only no longer exists, it no longer evokes much interest. Thanks to the opening of archives, quite a few Western historians are, it is true, still investigating the history of the Soviet Union and of the international Communist movement. But outside of a few university comparative literature departments, Soviet-style Marxism itself is not a living political idea anywhere in the West. In the wake of the Lehman Brothers crash in the autumn of 2008, there were calls for a government bailout of the auto industry. No one—no major newspaper columnists, no leading politicians, no popular intellectual magazines—called upon the vanguard of the proletariat to rise up and overthrow the bourgeois capitalist exploiters. In the Europe of 1948, somebody would have done so.

What that means, though, is that the entire political context in which Koestler, Sartre, and Camus functioned—and in which Koestler’s most important works were written—is now gone. In the years following their debauched evening in Paris, Sartre and Koestler actually stopped speaking to each other. Partly this was personal: Sartre tried to seduce Mamaine, Koestler did seduce Beauvoir, and there were bad feelings all around. But the more important reason was political. After “Darkness at Noon” became a best seller in France, Sartre distanced himself from its author, on the grounds that Koestler, by publicizing the crimes of the repressive Soviet regime, was putting himself at the service of American imperialism and blocking the progress of the left. It was not that Sartre did not know about the horrors Koestler described—the prisons, the torture, and the labor camps of the Soviet Union—it was that he did not find them politically convenient. They gave too much encouragement to the bourgeoisie.

What was true of Sartre was true of many, many others, and not only those on the far left. In his superb recent account of the publication of “Darkness at Noon” and its impact on the Western public, Princeton literary scholar John Fleming writes that any appreciation of the heated international debate about the book “requires the reconstruction of some modes of thought nearly vanished from the earth.”[2] Concepts like “belief” and “faith” do not figure very often anymore in contemporary Western politics—and even when they do (as perhaps they did in the 2008 American presidential election) they are almost always a preface to disillusion. In the 1930s and 1940s, by contrast, belief and faith mattered a great deal, and true Communists and fellow travelers did not become disillusioned. They simply altered their analysis of the current situation, put their trust in the ultimate wisdom of the Party, and progressed onward toward the construction of utopia.

Koestler had an almost unique ability to shake such people to their foundations. Unlike right-wing and even liberal critics of communism, he had a certain status on the cultural left. He was a victim of fascism, an ex-refugee, a familiar face in Comintern circles, a former combatant in the Spanish civil war. His devastating critique of the Soviet Union therefore had to be taken seriously by his former comrades. To some of them, he was a heretic, a defector, a traitor to the cause. To others, he became a hero.

As for “Darkness at Noon”, it was not just a popular book, it was one of the primary reasons that the Communist Party never came to power in France, a real possibility at the time. Hard though it is for us now to imagine, it was not at all obvious, in 1946 or even 1956, that Western Europe and the United States would remain solidly united for fifty years. Nor did it seem at all inevitable that the West would win the cold war. Along with Orwell’s “Animal Farm” and Victor Kravchenko’s “I Chose Freedom”, “Darkness at Noon” was one of the books that helped turn the tide on the intellectual front line, and ensured that the West prevailed. But unless one understands all of that, the political and literary achievements of Arthur Koestler are, to a contemporary reader, easily outweighed by the extravagance of his sexual and personal transgressions.

For all of those reasons, Michael Scammell cannot have found this an easy book to write, and indeed it took him a very long time to write it. Scammell is the author of the definitive and deservedly celebrated biography of Alexander Solzhenitsyn, published in 1984.[3] A few years after it was finished, he set out to follow up with a biography of Koestler. This turned out to be a major feat of endurance scholarship. By his own admission, he “followed [Koestler] to fourteen countries on three continents,” interviewed hundreds of people, and read through many boxes of archives. This effort has certainly paid off.

Because he has looked at all possible forms of documentation, he is able to reconstruct complicated scenes from Koestler’s life with real historical and literary flair. More than once, he tells us what is happening from several perspectives: what Koestler said, what Koestler’s then girlfriend said, what another person at the party remembered twenty years later, and how another writer depicted the event in his diaries. Scammell is also a scholar of Russian literature, and this shows too. Although this is a long book, it feels compact. None of the carefully selected details or quotations seems extraneous. The main characters are shown from every angle, with all of their faults and virtues. Koestler himself seems at times so alive he might leap off the page.

And yet the passage of time is a problem, if not for Scammell then for his readers. An elderly Central European acquaintance recently told me that in his youth, nothing was considered so tacky and outdated as art nouveau furniture. Something similar has happened to Koestler. At the moment, he still seems like yesterday’s man, unfashionable and obsolete. His better qualities might eventually be visible to a younger generation, just as an elegantly restored art nouveau table now appeals to collectors and connoisseurs. But a good deal of historical and literary work will have to be done, and more time may have to pass, before that is possible.

In the case of Koestler, a number of other things are also working against his posthumous reputation. One of these is the nature of his death, a double suicide, carried out in tandem with his wife. Koestler himself was seventy-seven years old and dying of leukemia. But his wife, Cynthia, was fifty-five and healthy. Unlike his previous wives, she was neither beautiful nor accomplished. She had been his secretary—in effect his servant—before they were married. Above all he admired her ability to take dictation. Though it seems that in the last part of their lives the power balance between them evened out, and though it is very clear that she was in full possession of her faculties at the time—she even had the presence of mind to cancel the newspapers—it is impossible to escape the suspicion that somehow, in an effort to achieve a spectacular grand finale, he bullied her into killing herself alongside him.

Cynthia’s death was not only distasteful to the public, it left Koestler’s literary estate without an obvious manager. Having persuaded numerous women to have abortions, he had no children, with the possible exception of one unacknowledged daughter (who had nothing to do with him, or he with her). By the time of his death he had fallen out with those of his contemporaries who were still alive. Most of his later books were financially and critically unsuccessful. His final legacy, that gift of money for the study of parapsychology, didn’t exactly enhance his reputation either. Nor did he have, as Orwell did, an obvious national audience. As a Hungarian Jew and native German speaker who wrote in English, he isn’t a natural part of anybody’s literary canon. There is an Orwell Society at Eton, but I doubt very much that there is a Koestler Society at any school in Budapest.

As a result, Koestler’s reputation has waned dramatically since his death. Although “Darkness at Noon” remains high on lists of “great books of the twentieth century,” his journalism, which in its time was at least as significant as that of Orwell, is hardly known at all. Before coming to write this review, I had not read “Scum of the Earth”, Koestler’s autobiographical and journalistic account of the fate of refugees in wartime France. I can’t remember anybody ever telling me to read it either. But because Scammell praises it, and because “Scum of the Earth” is still in print, I bought a copy. It was a revelation: astonishingly fresh, clear, and relevant, not only explaining the rapid collapse of France in 1940, but also illuminating some of the difficulties that France and other European countries still have in absorbing “foreigners” even today. After I’d finished, I lent the book to somebody else. And this, it occurred to me, is how a literary reputation revives.

Scammell has clearly set out to make this happen, and in that sense, this is more than a biography. It is an argument in defense of Koestler’s literary oeuvre, if not entirely in defense of Koestler himself. Scammell does not make excuses for his subject, and does not gloss over his many faults. But by recreating the historical setting in which Koestler lived and worked, by fitting him squarely in the middle of the great debates of the twentieth century, he makes his achievements much clearer to a contemporary reader—and thus there is a chance, at least, that he will succeed.

————
Anne Applebaum is a columnist for The Washington Post. Her book Gulag: A History won the 2004 Pulitzer Prize for nonfiction.

New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg celebrates his victory for a third term as mayor of New York City.

Bloomberg victory

ap logo

Nov . 3, 2009

Billionaire Michael Bloomberg won a third term as New York mayor Tuesday in a closer-than-expected race against a Democratic challenger who stoked voter resentment over the way Bloomberg changed term-limits law so he could stay in office.

With 99 percent of precincts reporting, Bloomberg, the richest man in New York and founder of the financial information company Bloomberg LP, defeated William Thompson Jr. 51 percent to 46 percent.

In the days leading up to the election, polls showed Bloomberg with as much as an 18-point lead, an edge so big that critics accused the mayor of overkill in his strategy of bombarding the city with campaign ads.

His margin of victory was far smaller than the nearly 20-point blowout he pulled off in 2005.

At a victory rally with supporters, Bloomberg lauded Thompson for running “a spirited campaign.”

“We will get our city through these tough times,” he promised. “We’ll come out stronger than ever.”

More than $100 million spent
When all the bills are paid, Bloomberg will probably have spent more than $100 million on his campaign, the most expensive self-financed campaign in U.S. history. Thompson, the city’s comptroller, relied on donations and matching funds for his mayoral bid, and was on track to have spent about a tenth of Bloomberg’s staggering total.

Thompson ran up huge margins in black and Hispanic neighborhoods, winning by a 3-to-1 margin in some districts.

He beat Bloomberg handily in predominantly black neighborhoods like Bedford-Stuyvesant in Brooklyn and Jamaica in Queens. He won Harlem and East Harlem easily, along with other heavily Hispanic districts in upper Manhattan and the Bronx.

By contrast, Bloomberg won easily on Staten Island, which has a much larger white population. He also fared better in Manhattan, particularly on the Upper East Side, where he lives.

The tiny margin could weaken his power and make his third term more difficult at City Hall, where Democrats poised to sweep into citywide offices indicated they would not shy away from disagreeing with the mayor.

“You’ll see a lot of strong voices as checks and balances,” said Democrat Bill de Blasio, who won the job of City Hall ombudsman Tuesday. “It will be a very different experience than what he experienced the last eight years.”

Bloomberg is just the fourth mayor to win a third term, after Fiorello La Guardia, Robert Wagner and Ed Koch.

Campaign faced obstacles
Bloomberg was a Republican but left the party in 2007 to explore a presidential bid, a dream he eventually abandoned. For his third mayoral run, he ran again on the GOP and Independence Party lines.

While Bloomberg was often described as having every advantage in the race, including his estimated $17.5 billion fortune and consistently high approval ratings, his campaign did have to overcome some obstacles.

The mayor, who has close ties to Wall Street and development, was running for re-election at a time when finance and real estate were falling apart and those relationships were not necessarily seen as positives.

There are also the numbers — New York City leans heavily to the left, with Democrats outnumbering Republicans by a ratio of 5-to-1. Democrats were also energized by their party’s White House win in 2008.

And New Yorkers were angry that Bloomberg reversed his long-held support for term limits last year and persuaded the City Council, in a matter of weeks, to extend the law so he could run for a third term.

Thompson sought to stoke that resentment, but it was not enough. He did not make a strong, separate case for why he should be elected.

Many Thompson supporters said Tuesday that term limits was the single reason why they voted for him.

Defining Thompson through negative ads
Jason Gerald supported Bloomberg in 2005 but voted for the Democrat this year.

“I didn’t like the way he overturned term limits,” said Gerald, a retired police officer. “He thinks he’s the only person who can lead this city.”

When Bloomberg announced last year his intention to change the law and run again, he said it was because the city needed his financial expertise to get through the economic meltdown.

He never revived that argument during the race, though, which grew increasingly negative as Election Day drew near and polls showed most voters still did not know much about Thompson.

The Bloomberg campaign saw its opportunity — it defined Thompson through negative ads and attacks before the Democrat could do it himself.

He will likely have spent more than $50 million on advertising alone, and millions more on his huge army of staffers, some of them the top strategists and consultants plucked from presidential-level campaigns.

The mayor was able to target each voter with unique messages using a database managed by Ken Strasma, who was President Barack Obama’s national targeting director in 2008.

The data was crucial not only in shaping the campaign’s messages, but also for Election Day operations as the campaign tracked voter turnout in every election district.

For example, campaign officials noticed lower turnout in some areas of the Bronx and Queens than the data had predicted, so the campaign changed its operations on the ground.

Field workers were rerouted to different areas in Queens to knock on doors and get voters to the polls, and former Mayor Ed Koch was summoned to record a last-minute robocall that began calling Bronx voters around 5 p.m.

What we at the Russian Jewish Institute (RJI) Strive for

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“Preserving and Unifying the Ideals of the Russian Speaking Jewish Community”

Each culture, each community brings something unique to America. Often referred to as a melting pot many Americans confuse this with an abandonment of their historic communities. In fact, America is not so much a melting pot as it is a tapestry of unique cultures and people. In this way preserving the American way of life is about preserving individual cultures. In America we celebrate and are nourished by other communities, other cultures. In this way we are the standard-bearers of, and responsible for, keeping our culture alive. America is not a chorus that sings unison, it sings harmony. Therefore, preserving and unifying the ideals of the Russian speaking Jewish community with its varied history and culture is an American expectation, an American responsibility, that each culture is expected to shoulder.

The Challenges We Face

We are first and foremost Jews. In Russia geography, where we were from, did not matter. In coming to America we have lost sight of this one immutable fact – we are Jews, and we need to let the differences in geography not deplete us but enrich us and our communities. Because we are so diverse the challenges we face in trying to keep our community intact are difficult but not insurmountable. One of the greatest challenges we face is keeping our community together.

Why it is important to keep our “neighborhood” intact.

It is important to understand that while it is best if we have Russian-Jews living and working in close proximity to one another so there is a large Russian-Jewish presence this is not always possible. However, moving away from the community does not mean leaving the community.

Keeping Traditions Alive

Keeping our traditions alive will strengthen our heritage and strengthen the bonds between us. Traditions establish a support network for all Russian Jews now and into the future. When people move away and do not stay connected to their community they weaken those bonds and make it easier to lose them.

Keeping traditions alive means we must create an environment that is the type of environment we want to live, work and raise our children in. Issues such as schools (education) clean, safe streets, open green spaces (parks and fields), and zoning and development issues are all better addressed by an intact community with a unified voice.

Traditions however do something even more important, they strengthen the bonds between parent and child. By readily reinforcing a common culture we create an environment that we all understand and can function most effectively in.

Founder: Emanuel David

Program Director: David Mirand