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WHAT’S DRIVING THE AMERICAN JEWISH CONVERSATION

Hostage families say Biden now has political freedom to pressure Israel and Hamas, Netanyahu travels to U.S. for speech to Congress, Louisiana will slightly delay Ten Commandments rule in classrooms, and why a pro-Palestinian activist may sue Adidas.

BIDEN STEPS BACK

A man shows his support on Sunday outside the White House. (Getty)

Opinion | The profound Talmudic resonance of Biden’s departure


“Who is rich?” asks the seminal Jewish moral code, Ethics of the Fathers. “The person who is satisfied with their portion.”


Our editor-in-chief, Jodi Rudoren, writes that “Biden’s ‘portion’ — 36 years in the United States Senate, eight as vice president and an unlikely topper of a term as commander in chief — was unimaginably larger than he could have dared dream as a boy with a stutter growing up in hardscrabble Scranton, Pennsylvania.”


Vice President Harris is also a student of Ethics of the Fathers. “At the Rosh Hashanah reception I attended at her residence in 2022,” Jodi recalls Harris quoting another of its famous aphorisms: “It is not your duty to finish the work, but neither are you at liberty to neglect it.”


Read Jodi’s new column, which also discusses the death of her father and lessons learned from The West Wing on presidential legacy.


More on Biden…

Vice President Kamala Harris and Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro earlier this month in Philadelphia. (Getty)

Looking ahead…


What would a Kamala Harris presidency mean for American Jews and Israel?Harris would continue Biden’s Gaza policy, backing a proposal for a hostage-ceasefire deal. As president, she would likely be engaged in a postwar plan for regional peace and the creation of a Palestinian state. Read the story ➤


Related: If Harris is elected president, Doug Emhoff would become the first Jewish presidential spouse. He is already well-known as the public face of the administration's national plan to counter antisemitism.


What would a Josh Shapiro vice presidency mean for American Jews and Israel? Joshua David Shapiro (yes, we could have a JD vs. JD VP race) proudly embraces his Judaism — keeping a kosher kitchen in the Pennsylvania governor’s mansion — and has spoken out forcefully against rising antisemitism. He’s been politically active since the age of 6, when he helped raise money for Soviet Jewry. He supports a two-state solution in Israel and has called Netanyahu “a failed leader.” Read the story ➤

President Joe Biden during a visit to Israel on Oct. 18, 2023, after the start of the war. (Getty)

Commentary…


Opinion | Joe Biden was a remarkable president for Israel — and very likely the last of his kind:“As a member of the generation that came of age in the years immediately after World War II and the establishment of Israel, Biden has throughout his political career been a friend of the version of Israel that dominated the discourse in those years,” writes our columnist Dan Perry. “To Biden and his peers, Israel was seen as having laid a marker in the sand — not just for the Jewish birthright in the Holy Land but also for Western civilization in the Middle East.” Read his essay ➤

Lew Goldstein in the entryway of P.S. 108, a public school in the Bronx where he was a teacher in the 1970s and 1980s. (Brittainy Newman)

And one more thing…


What this Jewish, gay, 81-year-old Democratic delegate thinks of Biden’s decision:Lew Chaim Goldstein, who is the same age as Biden, is a delegate to this year’s Democratic National Convention in Chicago, as he was during the tumultuous one in 1968. He was also the fourth grade civics teacher of our news editor, Lauren Markoe, who met up with him at their old elementary school in the Bronx to get his take on the historic moment we’re in. “I’m feeling optimistic,” he said. Read the story ➤


Follow our continuing coverage on the 2024 elections

ISRAEL AT WAR

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu last week in Jerusalem during a ceremony for soldiers killed during the war. (Getty)

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is traveling to the U.S. today ahead of his scheduled Wednesday address at 2 p.m. in front of a joint session of Congress. The Israeli leader is set to meet Tuesday with President Biden who, according to the White House, “continues to improve steadily” from COVID-19. Vice President Harris also plans to meet with Netanyahu while he is in D.C.


Hall pass: Some Democrats, angry over the mounting death toll in Gaza, are planning to boycott Netanyahu’s speech. Congress members have a history of boycotting invited speakers — including Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and Pope Francis.


While he’s in town: Netanyahu may also attend a Wednesday morning memorial service at D.C.’s Adas Israel Congregation for former Sen. Joe Lieberman, who died in March.


From the flight deck: This is Netanyahu’s first time out of Israel since the outbreak of the war in October. It is also his inaugural flight on Wing of Zion, the Israeli version of Air Force One. Previously, Netanyahu and his entourage leased El Al planes for their travel needs.


Related…

Bella Hadid, a supermodel and pro-Palestinian activist, in an ad for an Adidas sneaker commemorating the 1972 Munich Olympics, where Israeli athletes were murdered. (Courtesy)

And in other Israel news…

  • In a first, the IDF issued draft orders Sunday to 1,000 Haredi men. Our columnist Dan Perry writes in an opinion essay how this could change Israel — for better and for worse.


  • Thousands of pro-Palestinian demonstrators were arrested on college campuses this spring. Months later, many of the charges against them have been dropped. “The goal isn’t to punish people,” said an expert in criminal law. “It’s to clear the streets.”


  • Israel’s soccer team has been cleared to play in the Olympics, which begin this week in Paris, after the sport’s governing body postponed a decision to ban Israel.


  • Adidas made a new shoe to honor the 1972 Munich Olympics, where members of the Israeli delegation were murdered, and hired Bella Hadid, a supermodel and pro-Palestinian activist, to promote it. After backlash, Adidas said it would revise the campaign. Now Hadid is mulling legal action against the shoe company.

WHAT ELSE YOU NEED TO KNOW TODAY

A woman holds a sign at a rally against antisemitism last month in Paris. (Getty)

🤷  The majority of European Jewish leaders are worried about a rise in antisemitism, yet they have no plans to leave, according to a new survey published this morning. (JTA)


🏫  A federal judge in Louisiana ruled that a new law requiring the Ten Commandments be displayed in every classroom will be delayed until at least November as a lawsuit filed by families — three of whom are Jewish — works its way through the court system. (AP)


🇦🇷  Argentina’s non-Jewish president has developed a public adoration with Judaism unusual for a leader of a mostly Roman Catholic country. “He also regularly studies the Torah, attends Shabbat dinner and has said that perhaps his most important adviser is his rabbi.” (New York Times)


🦸  Marvel was accused of erasing the Israeli identity of the Sabra superhero, portrayed by actress Shira Haas, in the upcoming Captain America movie. But two insiders say she is still Israeli in the film. (Wrap)


📙  A professor of world religion and philosophy died while she was in the middle of writing a book about Emma Mordecai, a Confederate Jewish woman who owned slaves. One of her colleagues, an American Jewish historian who appeared on Jeopardy!, picked up the project and finished the book. (Jewish Exponent)


What else we’re reading ➤  Their son captive in Gaza, parents dedicate a Torah scroll to 120 remaining hostages … How to succeed in business as a Hasidic Jew? A giant expo offered tips and networking … Barney Greengrass, a popular New York deli, is collaborating with an unlikely partner: Nordstrom.

VIDEO OF THE DAY

Everybody’s talking about the elections. Here’s how to do so in Yiddish, with a little help from our Rukhl Schaechter.

Thanks to Jacob Kornbluh, Lauren Markoe, Julie Moos and Talya Zax for contributing to today’s newsletter, and to Beth Harpaz for editing it. You can reach the “Forwarding” team at editorial@forward.com.

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