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Daily Kickoff: North Carolina s lieutenant governor has Jewish community alarmed + Barak Ravid joins JI s podcast, predicts a 5th Israeli election

 Defense Cooperation: Israel and the U.S. are jointly developing a new ballistic missile shield, the Arrow-4, aimed at countering threats from Iran. ️  Vax Vote: Mohammed Dahlan, a rival to Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, announced that the UAE would send 20,000 COVID-19 vaccine doses to Gaza. ⚕️  One Shot: A new Israeli study shows that a single dose of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine is 85% effective within 15-28 days following injection.    On the Mat: Iranian-born judoka Saeid Mollaei, who fled Iran after refusing pressure to withdraw rather than face an Israeli opponent, is slated to compete today at a judo tournament in Tel Aviv.

The Nazis looted Europe s treasures A Supreme Court ruling casts doubt on their return

The Nazis looted Europe s treasures. A Supreme Court ruling casts doubt on their return. Yasmine Salam and Carlo Angerer and The Associated Press It was no ordinary art deal. The sale of a precious medieval collection by a group of tradesmen to the Prussian government in 1935 was notable not only for its treasured contents, but also for its participants. The sellers were Jewish, a fact that defined their fate in Nazi Germany and hangs over the transaction to this day. “They know they re under the gun,” Marc Masurovsky, a historian who specializes in plundered art during the Holocaust, said from his home in Washington. “The average position of Jews in Germany as of 1933 is nothing short of dangerous, perilous, fragile and precarious.”

A Nazi-era art deal, a Supreme Court ruling and the bitter fight for restitution

The Nazis looted Europe s treasures. A Supreme Court ruling casts doubt on their return. Yasmine Salam and Carlo Angerer and The Associated Press It was no ordinary art deal. The sale of a precious medieval collection by a group of tradesmen to the Prussian government in 1935 was notable not only for its treasured contents, but also for its participants. The sellers were Jewish, a fact that defined their fate in Nazi Germany and hangs over the transaction to this day. “They know they re under the gun,” Marc Masurovsky, a historian who specializes in plundered art during the Holocaust, said from his home in Washington. “The average position of Jews in Germany as of 1933 is nothing short of dangerous, perilous, fragile and precarious.”

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