?️ More than 90 United Nations member-states signed a letter condemning Israel’s new sanctions on the Palestinian Authority. The new Israeli government implemented the sanctions after the U.N. voted in late December to seek an opinion from the Hague’s International Court of Justice on Israel’s ongoing occupation in the West Bank. (Haaretz)
? About half of Jewish Israelis think they should have more rights than Arab citizens, a new study suggests. The Israel Democracy Institute’s annual survey of some 20,000 Israelis also found that 60% of Jewish respondents felt that the relationships of Jews and Arabs in Israel was “bad or very bad” — a stunning 33% increase since 2018. (Haaretz)
? Russian forces have plundered Ukrainian museums and cultural heritage sites since invading last February. Now, experts say that Russia’s theft has reached a scale not seen since World War II, when the Nazis made cultural theft a key aspect of their military campaigns. (New York Times)
?️ Speaking of Nazi cultural theft, Christie’s Auction House will next week begin a global initiative highlighting the world’s efforts to restitute Nazi-looted art. The yearlong program has been organized around the 25th anniversary of the Washington Principles, which established rigorous new expectations for how countries should work to identify and return artworks stolen under the Third Reich. (Christie’s)
? Yep, still speaking of the Third Reich — sorry! — a Jewish contestant on the United Kingdom’s iteration of “The Apprentice” apologized after it was revealed that his online antique shop had sold Nazi memorabilia. The 25-year-old contestant, Gregory Ebbs, said “the item in question was sold by a third-party vendor,” adding: “I in no way condone or wish to be looking to be celebrating this abhorrent and shameful part of history.” (Metro)
? A fallen tree in a Queens park was vandalized with swastikas. “Hatred against Jews is a growing issue and we cannot allow this to keep happening,” a New York City Council member wrote. (Twitter)
✡️ A Denver synagogue that has hosted an interfaith celebration around Martin Luther King Jr. Day for more than half a century was back in person for the first time since 2020. And in Boston, Jews marched to Boston Common from a nearby synagogue as the city unveiled a new monument to King and his wife, Coretta Scott King. (CBS Colorado, Jewish Exponent)
? Back to Nazis and art: A bullet-ridden bronze horse that Hitler commissioned as a symbol of Nazi power went on display in Berlin. The sculpture, one of Josef Thorak’s two “Striding Horses,” is housed at the Spandau Citadel, part of a long-running exhibit of “toxic” German monuments. “The horses are a reminder of Germany’s devastating history in the Nazi dictatorship, which despised people and values, and they can now make a valuable contribution to democratic education,” said one minister who pushed for their display. (The Times)
What else we’re reading ➤ Inside a groundbreaking new Tel Aviv school seeking privileges for secular scholars … The profound Jewishness of a new translation of Franz Kafka’s diaries … How Modi, a beloved Jewish comedian, manifests “Moshiach energy.”