The FBI s fraught history with Judaism looms today FBI Director Christopher Wray in 2017, FBI
Nashville bomber was not a terrorist, but motivated by suicide: FBI
The FBI wants to hear from Hasidim, or âultra-Orthodox Jews. The Hate Crimes Unit said as much when it issued announcements â in both Yiddish and Hebrew â asking Jews to report antisemitic incidents in an outreach campaign launched in April 2021.
The campaign follows highly visible antisemitic incidents in the U.S. in recent years, including the 2018 shooting at the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh, which left 11 people dead.
Hasidic Jews make up the overwhelming majority of Yiddish speakers in the U.S. They number about 320,000 adults, according to Matt Williams, director of the Orthodox Union for Communal Research. Outreach to this community poses distinctive challenges because Hasidic communities can be insular, often seeking to address issues from education to sexual assault with
The FBI wants to hear from Hasidim, or “ultra-Orthodox” Jews. The Hate Crimes Unit said as much when it issued announcements – in both Yiddish and Hebrew – asking Jews to report antisemitic incidents in an outreach campaign launched in April 2021.
The campaign follows highly visible antisemitic incidents in the U.S. in recent years, including the 2018 shooting at the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh, which left 11 people dead.
Hasidic Jews make up the overwhelming majority of Yiddish speakers in the U.S. They number about 320,000 adults, according to Matt Williams, director of the Orthodox Union for Communal Research. Outreach to this community poses distinctive challenges because Hasidic communities can be insular, often seeking to address issues from education to sexual assault without involving outsiders.
Virtual author visit to wrap up town-wide library program in Wallingford
Virtual author visit to wrap up town-wide library program in Wallingford
The Wallingford Public Library, Mon., Jan. 4, 2021. The Wallingford Public Library is eliminating most late fines on overdue materials. Dave Zajac, Record-Journal
March 02, 2021 05:09PM By Lauren Takores, Record-Journal staff
WALLINGFORD â The libraryâs annual town-wide reading program, âOne Book, One Wallingford,â was interrupted last year due to the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic.
It cut short a series of events related to the book selection and cancelled a visit by the author.
âWe were almost to the finish,â Leah Farrell, adult programming librarian, said Tuesday. âWe just had this one program left, and the book discussions and the author visit â¦Â It just all happened so close to the date that everything was supposed to culminate.â
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