| đ Good Monday morning! In todayâs Daily Kickoff , we talk to House Democrats who recently returned from a trip to Israel, and spotlight some of the speakers at Saturdayâs March on Washington. Also in todayâs Daily Kickoff : Mayor Eric Adams, Shikma Bressler and Irwin Cotler. Ahead of Martin Luther King Jr.âs iconic âI Have a Dreamâ speech in front of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C., 60 years ago today, Joachim Prinz, a rabbi who fled Germany in 1937, spoke out against Nazis in the same spot. Prinz, then the president of the American Jewish Congress, addressed the crowd of about 250,000 lining the Reflecting Pool just ahead of King. âI speak to you as an American Jew,â Prinz said on Aug. 28, 1963. âAs Americans we share the profound concern of millions of people about the shame and disgrace of inequality and injustice which make a mockery of the great American idea.â On Saturday, a new generation of leaders stood before tens of thousands of people gathered in the same spot to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the March on Washington, Jewish Insiderâs Melissa Weiss reports. Prinzâs words âstill resonate,â Anti-Defamation League CEO Jonathan Greenblatt, whose organization participated in the original march, said in his address. âThey tell us: stand up in the face of hate, speak out and donât stand idly by.â Sheila Katz, the CEO of the National Council of Jewish Women, noted that her organization also participated in the original march. Pointing to the upcoming Jewish holidays, Katz suggested that âas the high holidays compel us to repair, we also act together. As our kehila kedosha, our holy community, we draw strength from one another. We remind ourselves that we stand in a long line of people of every race and creed willing to stand firm for the values we believe in. We remember Dr. Kingâs refusal to be satisfied âuntil justice rolls down like waters, and righteousness like a mighty stream.ââ Rabbi David Wolpe called King âa modern prophetâ as he quoted the biblical prophet Micah. âMicah looked at the world, a world filled with darkness and despair,â Wolpe said. âAnd he said that each of us will sit under our own vine and fig tree and there will be none to make us afraid. And that is what we pray for. That candle, that moment, that promise, that dream that we listened to 60 years ago. And God-willing with God's blessing once again, listening to each other, we can hear the echoes and the promise of that dream again.â Though most of those who addressed the crowd had not yet been born when King delivered his most famous speech on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial, many of the eventâs speakers invoked the civil rights activist and tied his work to present-day efforts. âStanding on these steps 60 years after Martin Luther King gave his penultimate speech is a very emotional moment for me,â New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft, who was 22 at the time of the first march, told the crowd. âI watched the speech live on television. The clarity, power and cadence of Dr. King's words and his delivery was like nothing I had ever heard before. His speech truly moved me and it moved the nation.â Speakers shared concerns about a resurgence in hatred and intolerance that has had deadly consequences for minority communities. Some 700 miles away in Jacksonville, Fla., three people were killed in a racially motivated attack by a shooter who had painted a swastika onto his gun. âThe hatred Dr. King stood against is the same hatred we're seeing in communities across the nation more and more today,â Kraft said. âWe saw what happened with that kind of hate in Germany in the â30s and â40s, and we saw the way it ripped the fabric of the country apart in the â60s. Today, it is our job to fight all hate: hate against blacks, Jews, Asians, Hispanics and members of the LGBTQ plus community, so that history does not repeat itself.â Imam Abdullah Antepli, a senior fellow at the Shalom Hartman Institute of North America, explained that evil âsays racism is a Black problem, homophobia is a gay problem, Islamophobia is a Muslim problem, antisemitism is a Jewish problem. It divides us. It says Black churches are different than Black mosques. It divides us, weakens us, if we assign these forms and manifestations of hate to particular communities." Read more here. Spread the word! Invite your friends to sign up.đ Share with a friend | trip talk Seven Democratic lawmakers break down takeaways from trip to Israel Rep. Wiley Nickel/Twitter As Israel continues to grapple with internal division over judicial reform, rising Iran-backed terror threats on its borders and the prospect of expanding the Abraham Accords, a delegation of 26 House Democrats traveled to Israel earlier this month on a trip sponsored by the AIPAC-affiliated American Israel Education Foundation. Upon their return, seven of those members â all but one of them House freshmen, some of whom were visiting Israel for the first time, and others visiting for the second time this year â spoke to Jewish Insiderâs Marc Rod, sharing their impressions and takeaways from the trip and what they had learned. Hot topic: The lawmakers described judicial reform as the top issue in Israel, and said theyâd engaged in extensive conversations on the subject, but agreed that it is up to Israelis to resolve the issue. They largely shied away from expressing firm opinions on the topic, at a time when a growing number of progressive Democrats have been outspoken against the Netanyahu governmentâs attempts at an overhaul. Lawmakers said they believed there was broad consensus in Israel around the need for some reforms to Israelâs judicial system. Better perspective: The Democratic lawmakers agreed that the trip had given them a better appreciation for the security threats that Israel faces, with several saying they were especially alarmed by Hezbollahâs buildup of increasingly sophisticated missiles along Israelâs northern border in Lebanon. âThe issues on the northern border, Lebanon, Syria, they are more serious than I realized⊠It is urgent, itâs a daily issue,â Rep. Greg Landsman (D-OH) said. âThis could turn violent very quickly as it has in the past. And this time, they have the ability to do enormous damage.â Read the full story here. Bonus: Reps. French Hill (R-AR), Ben Cline (R-VA) and Scott Fitzgerald (R-WI) briefly traveled to northwest Syria on Sunday â the first time in six years that U.S. lawmakers have crossed the border into the country. politically correct NY mayor admires drones, slurps vegan honey in Israel tech tour ISRAEL GOVERNMENT PRESS OFFICE New York City Mayor Eric Adams got a crash course in Israelâs startup scene during his three-day tour last week, which was tailored to the former police captainâs interests in surveillance drones, crowd control and vegan cuisine, Linda Gradstein writes for The Circuit. Surveillance drones: During a demonstration at Israelâs National Police Academy, Adams showed particular interest in the symbiosis between leather-jacketed motorcycle cops and the crowd-surveillance drones flying above them. He challenged the New York police brass with whom he traveled to figure out how such methods could be adopted back home. The mayor was less enthusiastic about face-recognition technology, which has been criticized by some over privacy concerns. Treading carefully: The mayor came to Israel at an especially fraught time over anti-government protests and met with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as well as several activists in the opposition movement. Adams stressed that he met people with differing viewpoints and did not take a side on the governmentâs efforts to reform the judicial system. âI listened. I didnât weigh in,â he said. Read the full story here and sign up for The Weekly Circuit newsletter here. an open book Sefaria launches first-ever digital Torah-writing project courtesy Jews are often referred to as Am Ha Sefer, âPeople of the Book,â because of their close relationship with the Torah. A new project aims to give all Jewish people worldwide a small part in âwritingâ a Torah â all 304,805 letters. The initiative was launched Aug. 20 by Sefaria, a digital library of Jewish texts with 650,000 monthly users, in honor of the nonprofitâs 10th anniversary. Called the âGlobal Community Torah,â the project is the first digital Torah scroll that provides the opportunity for Jews of all ages and backgrounds to participate in its writing, eJewishPhilanthropyâs Haley Cohen reports. So far: Since its launch last week, individuals from 73 countries have participated. As of Thursday, the writing has reached Genesis chapter 2, verse 20. How it works: Users first learn about different Hebrew typefaces and select their font before âmaking their markâ by entering their first name and location, according to Sefaria. Next they receive emails with a graphic of the Torah verse containing their letter and information about the parshah, or weekly Torah portion in which the verse appears. Participants can spin the digital globe to view locations of fellow contributors. They can also read the entire digital scroll when completed, hovering above each letter to learn about their fellow digital âscribes.â No rush: Just like a physical Torah scroll, each letter must be perfect. âSo it will be complete whenever it is complete,â Chava Tzemach, a Sefaria spokesperson, told eJP. Read the full story here and sign up for eJewishPhilanthropy's Your Daily Phil newsletter here. | đ€ Trade Deals: In The Atlantic, Kylie Moore-Gilbert, an Australian academic who was held in Iranâs Evin prison for more than two years, considers the implications of prisoner swaps, days after such an agreement between Iran and the U.S. was announced. âEvery time a hostage is freed, those of us who have survived Iranâs prison system collectively rejoice. We are a surprisingly large cohort, and our numbers swell further as Iranâs hostage-taking grows bolder and more blatant. Namazi, Tahbaz, Shargi, and two other Americans whose names have not been released have been removed from prison and placed under house arrest, in anticipation of the second phase of the deal: The arrival of the $6 billion into a Qatari bank account. The Qataris will ostensibly act as guarantors to ensure that the Iranians use these funds only for humanitarian purposes. Such provisions should be taken with a healthy dose of skepticism, however. Nothing is preventing Iran from, for example, moving the equivalent of $6 billion from school and hospital funding across to the military or the IRGC, before plugging the gap with the South Korean money. Although our community of former Iran hostages is thrilled that five innocent Americans are soon to be freed, many of us have felt compelled to speak out against any deal that might conceivably incentivize Iranâs hostage-taking further.â [TheAtlantic] đȘ§ Physicist and Protestor: The Financial Timesâ James Shotter interviews Israeli physicist Shikma Bressler, a prominent leader of the protests against the governmentâs judicial overhaul effort. ââFor us, this is the biggest battle of our generation,â she says. âWe have no choice but to win. If we lose, this country will still be called Israel. But it wonât be Israel as you thought of it [before]âŠâ As the waitress walks away, I ask Bressler about the battle consuming Israeli society, which has split the country into two camps: one broadly nationalist and religious that backs the governmentâs overhaul as a way to rein in an overly activist judiciary; and another, more secular and politically heterodox, which sees it as an assault on Israelâs checks and balances that will allow Netanyahuâs ultraorthodox and extreme-right allies to impose their worldview on the rest of society. Bressler is firmly in the second group. âIn the end, itâs about getting full power and staying in power,â she says of the judicial overhaul, likening Israel to a list of other states, from Poland to Turkey, that have seen similar battles. â[But] I think that each country has its own flavour.ââ [FT] âïž Countering the Court: In the National Post, former Canadian Minister of Justice and Attorney General Irwin Cotler and Orde Kittrie, a senior fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, argue against a potential International Court of Justice advisory opinion requiring Israel to unilaterally withdraw unconditionally from the Palestinian territories. âThe current UNGA request to the ICJ is manifestly designed to replace that âland for peaceâ framework with an ICJ opinion that international law requires Israel to withdraw from the disputed territories without any Palestinian concessions on any of the permanent status issues. Such an opinion would make it far more difficult or even impossible for Palestinian leaders to compromise with Israel on such issues. If the ICJ were to treat Israel as if it has annexed the disputed territories, when it has not done so, it would likely encourage Israeli extremists to urge the government to proceed with annexation. No Israeli government will agree to unilaterally withdraw from the West Bank. Israelâs presence in the West Bank has enabled it to keep the number of rockets fired into Israel from there to around five since 2005. In contrast, over 20,000 rockets have been launched at Israel from the Gaza Strip since Israelâs withdrawal in 2005.â [NationalPost] đźđ· Aftermath of a Coup: The Associated Press' Nasser Karimi and Jon Gambrell explore the lasting impact of the CIA-backed 1953 coup in Iran, 70 years after it toppled then-Prime Minister Mohammad Mosaddegh. ââMaybe the U.S. did this out of fear of the emerging power of the Soviet Union, but it was like wishing for an earthquake to get rid of a bad neighbor,â said Rana, a 24-year-old painter who like some others who spoke to The Associated Press gave only her first name for fear of reprisals. For Iranians, âthe rancor has never melted.â The August 1953 coup stemmed from U.S. fears over the Soviet Union increasingly wanting a piece of Iran as Communists agitated within the country. The ground had been laid partially by the British, who wanted to wrest back access to the Iranian oil industry, which had been nationalized earlier by Mossadegh. Though looking initially like it failed, the coup toppled Mossadegh and cemented the power of Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi. It also lit the fuse for the 1979 Islamic Revolution, which saw the fatally ill shah flee Iran and Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini usher in the theocracy that still governs the country.â [AP] | Be featured: Email us to inform the JI readership of your upcoming event, job opening, or other communication. | đłïž Trail Talk: GOP presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy unveiled his foreign policy platform, pledging to âlead our nation from the bloody follies of neoconservatism and liberal internationalism abroad towards a strategy that affirmatively defends our homeland: Ramaswany also expressed hope âthat the United States will need to concern itself with the Middle East far less than we have in the last centuryâ and suggested the U.S. âreturn to the Nixonian wisdom of keeping a minimal footprint in a region beset by historic grievances that Americans neither can change nor should even try to change with social engineering, unless a major great power threat emerges.â đźđ± Israeli Concessions: Biden administration officials reportedly told Israel that it would have to make concessions to the Palestinians as part of any broader normalization agreement between Israel and Saudi Arabia. Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich told Israelâs Army Radio today that an agreement with Saudi Arabia has âno connection to Judea and Samariaâ and that Israel wonât make any concessions to the Palestinians. đŹ Debate Drama: Biden administration advisors are privately expressing concerns over a planned debate between California Gov. Gavin Newsom and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis. âŹïž Scooting from Scooter: Puck looks into why talent manager Scooter Braun has lost a number of high-profile clients in recent days. đ Data Rebbe: Yitzhak Kesselman, the vice president of messaging and real-time analytics platform at Microsoft, is completing his rabbinic ordination. đœ Professor E.T.: The New York Times Magazine spotlights Harvard University theoretical astrophysicist Avi Loeb, who has drawn both praise and criticism for his theory about an interstellar object in the sunâs orbit. đ Bad Apple: A farmerâs market in Overland Park, Kan., suspended a vendor after complaints over his social media posts, including his allegation that Jewish people âbelieve we only exist to serve them.â đ Religious Reflection: Tablet held a roundtable with 11 baalei teshuvah, Jews who grew up non-Orthodox and later chose to live an observant lifestyle, about why they made the life change, what they have gained from it and what challenges they faced. đ Shabbat Speaker: Israeli MK and former Defense Minister Benny Gantz addressed New Yorkâs Hampton Synagogue congregation on Saturday. đșđŠ Modeled on Israel: Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said he believes that Kyiv and Washington will âprobably have a model like [the U.S. and] Israel, where we have weapons and technology and training and finances and so on.â đšđł Beijing Bid: Riyadh is contemplating whether to move forward with a bid from China to construct a nuclear power plant in the Gulf nation. đŹ Diplomatic Dust-up: Libyan Foreign Minister Najla Mangoush was suspended and referred for investigation â and has since reportedly fled the country â after Israeli Foreign Minister Eli Cohen said the two had met last week in Italy despite the absence of formal relations between the countries. đ”đŹ Coming Soon: Papua New Guinea is expected to open an embassy in Jerusalem next week, according to Israeli officials. đŹ Airport Attack: Aleppo International Airport is out of service after an airstrike that Syriaâs defense ministry attributed to Israel. đ Prisoner Swap: Voice of America explores which Iranians held by the U.S. could be released in a potential prisoner exchange with Tehran. đŻïž Remembering: âDallasâ and âKnots Landingâ creator David Jacobs died at 84. | JOSE JORDAN/AFP via Getty Images Israelâs rhythmic gymnastics team celebrates on the podium yesterday after winning the countryâs first-ever gold medal at the Rhythmic Gymnastics World Championships in Valencia, Spain. | Mathew Tsang/Getty Images Founder and CEO of retail chain Indigo Books & Music and co-founder and past chair of Kobo, Heather Reisman turns 75... Artist and chemist, he survived the Holocaust by living in a hole in the ground for seven months, Tibor Spitz turns 94... Independent international trade and development professional, Bernard Kupferschmid turns 92... Professor emeritus of quantum physics at Tel Aviv University, Yakir Aharonov turns 91... Filmmaker and the founder of Brave New Films, Robert Greenwald turns 78... Retired general counsel of Queens College of the City University of New York, Jane Denkensohn... Psychoanalyst and author of a 2019 memoir about her father, Norman Mailer, Susan Mailer turns 74... Former chancellor of the New York State Board of Regents, Merryl H. Tisch turns 68... CEO of the Consumer Technology Association and author of the New York Times best-seller Ninja Innovation, Gary J. Shapiro turns 67... Senior rabbi of B'nai Jeshurun on the Upper West Side of Manhattan, Jose Rolando Matalon... Actor, artist, director and screenwriter, best known for his roles in two âHome Aloneâ films and two âCity Slickersâ films, Daniel Jacob Stern turns 66... British actress best known for her soap opera roles and known professionally as Emma Samms, Emma Elizabeth Wylie Samuelson turns 63... Professor at The George Washington University, he was deputy White House counsel and National Security Council legal advisor in the Biden administration, Jonathan G. Cedarbaum turns 62... Television writer and producer, he is best known as the original showrunner and executive producer of the animated comedy series âFamily Guy,â David J. Zuckerman turns 61... CEO and founder of PharmStars and managing partner and co-founder of Ambit Health Ventures, Naomi Fried, Ph.D.... Former COO of Meta / Facebook, Sheryl Sandberg turns 54... Early pioneer of contemporary Jewish rock music, Richard Samuel "Rick" Recht turns 53... General counsel of G/O Media, Kai Falkenberg... First VP at Newmark Valuation & Advisory and board member of The Associated: Jewish Federation of Baltimore, Daniel âDoniâ Greenwald turns 45... Olympic gold medalist in Four-man Bobsleigh in 2010, he is the co-founder and CEO of Classroom Champions, Steven Michael Mesler turns 45... Israeli soldier held captive for more than five years by Hamas, released in 2011, Gilad Shalit turns 37... Offensive lineman for the NFL's Cleveland Browns, Michael Dunn turns 29... Ari Willner... | | | | |