Tag Archives: October 7 terror attack

Silent Protest Greets jUNe Day Guests

jUNe Day in Westport is a decades-long tradition.

A couple of hundred United Nations employees — staff members and their families (with an occasional ambassador) — come from New York, by train or bus.

jUNe Day guests, enjoying a Jesup Green Breakfast.

They’re welcomed at a brief breakfast, by town officials. A message from the Secretary-General is read.

1st Selectwoman Jen Tooker (seated, left) waits to give jUNe Day greetings. At the podium is Bill Hass, United Nations Association Southwest Connecticut chapter president.

Then they head out, with local volunteers, to experience a summer day in the suburbs. They’re invited to Longshore, Compo, Earthplace and Wakeman Town Farm. They swim, play tennis and golf and soccer, shop and eat.

It’s a well-oiled machine.

Today, for perhaps the first time ever, a bit of politics intruded.

Over 150 residents partnered with the Connecticut chapter of #EndJewHatred to organize a protest.

It was silent, out of respect for the town and Great Duck Race activities, going on simultaneously.

Part of this morning’s crowd at Jesup Green.

The event began at the Westport Woman’s Club parking lot, with prayers for the hostages and Israeli Defense Forces.

Holding signs and wearing t-shirts, protestors then walked a short distance to Jesup Green.

Organizers told “06880”: “We are Westporters. We are Westport neighbors who support the town’s economy.

“We are Jews.  Maybe some of us are non-Jews.

“We are Zionists.

“We are parents. Maybe some of us have college students who face extreme antisemitism on their campuses.

“We are angry about the UN’s egregious bias against Israel, and the fact that our tax dollars are being used to host representatives of the United Nations, particularly this year, after the horrific events of October 7, and the consistently glaring antisemitic/anti-Israel efforts to delegitimize the only Jewish state.”

Celia Kaner Offir (left) and Elise Meyer. In Israel, Celia met the father of the 2 kidnapped brothers, whose faces are on her poster.

They said that the UN has “done nothing to release the remaining 116 hostages, representing 54 different countries— not just Israel — over the last 9 months.

“The UN was silent on the rape and sexual violence used against Israeli women on October 7 for months.

“Staffers of the UN agency of UNRWA were directly involved in the October 7 Hamas attack and subsequent murder and kidnapping of Israelis.

“The UN will still not condemn Hamas using its name.

“The UN singles out Israel with resolution after resolution while countries like North Korea and Iran are barely sanctioned.”

“The preposterous false charges of genocide against Israel are meritless, counterproductive and hypocritical.”

(All photos/Dan Woog)

Organizers added, “we understand that jUNe day has gone on here for 50-plus years.

“We understand that in its inception, it was not meant to be a political statement or event. However, today, the UN is a highly politically divisive organization, and inviting their employees to our town for a day in the sun is simply no longer acceptable to us. 

“Sometimes the status quo needs to change. Just because we’ve operated one way for 50 years, doesn’t mean it’s appropriate going forward.

“We are all for international hospitality, but we should be hosting an organization that stands for universal equality for all.”

[OPINION] October 7, Antisemitism Are Wakeup Calls For Parents

Jenna Diane is a Westport mother. She facilitates support groups for mothers of children from birth to age 5, receiving early intervention services (Instagram: @uniquelymothering).

Jenna writes:

My son was 18 months old when my husband and I moved to Westport. Thoughts of him attending college ought to have been the last thing on my mind.

But while new moms around me were going on playdates and enjoying baby classes, I was at speech and occupational therapy sessions, hosting birth to 3 providers in my house, and trying to not be consumed with fear over what a “developmental delay” could mean for my toddler.

Like so many mothers of young children who do not present as typically developing or receive an early diagnosis, the vision of what I expected while I was expecting imploded — leaving me in a perpetual state of anxiety over the future.

As someone who was surrounded by people who attended well-known colleges all my life, I unconsciously assumed my child’s path would be similar to my own. But at barely 2 years old, my husband and I were presented with 3 options.

Our child would grow out of his delays. He could end up with a mild learning disability. Or the delays could turn into something more significant.

Would he be college-bound? Only time would tell.

It was a difficult journey processing that my family’s path to and through school could end up being different from all I had ever known. But in a strange twist, it was a gift to see the world through a new lens.

As I encountered mom chatter about all the sports their kids were signing up for or which preschoolers were reading at an early age, all I cared about was whether my son would have meaningful friendships, develop confidence and compassion for others, learn to think for himself, and become independent.

Those who are privileged to live in a town like Westport are well aware of the hyper-competitiveness that lurks beneath the surface, even at the earliest of ages.

Wealthy communities are socialized to see admittance to high-ranking schools as emblematic of higher intelligence, and subsequently a pathway towards a high paying career.

But this cycle foments crushing pressure onto parents and students, and one must wonder at what cost. In a New York Post article, Christopher Rom, CEO of Command Education, stated, “The emphasis on elite and Ivy schools has absolutely gone off the rails.” We all know what he is referring to.

The atrocities of October 7 unearthed another ugly reality about our classist educational system. While elite institutions have long been known as bastions of intellectual and rigorous think tanks, for its renowned research from the créme de la créme professors, and churning out the best and brightest graduates, the aftermath of those attacks shattered such illusions.

The hate-spewing college protests that arose the next day, the disturbing rise in campus antisemitism and harassment of Jewish students, proclamations from professors at places like Cornell and Columbia University praising Hamas’ heinous barbarism, and the disgraceful congressional testimonies of Harvard, Penn and MIT presidents should make everyone question the value of a degree from any of these schools today.

At the very least, it should propel every parent to reevaluate such an investment in future tuition and alumni giving.

Anti-Israel protest at Tulane University.

In a letter I sent to my alma mater a week later, I wrote: “It is disturbing to observe Columbia’s leaders being either weak, ignorant or heartless in turning their backs on a historically vulnerable and traumatized community. What does it say about the education Columbia is providing, the critical thinking skills you’re cultivating, and pursuit of human understanding when you have to shut down your campus due to safety concerns on the heels of the death, torture, rape, and kidnapping of 1,300 innocent civilians? What does it say about the mass numbers of Columbia University students who are unable to distinguish between terrorism and ‘resistance?’”

As a community, I hope we will seize this moment by taking a hard look at our educational goals and aspirations for our children.

I had to do that exercise when I least expected it. But if we take this unexpected moment in history to collectively wrestle with this question, Westport will be better for it.

The recent Newsweek article detailing the pernicious, antisemitic bullying that took place in one of our schools ought to be a wake-up call that we, as parents, must do better.

We have to return to the basics. Prioritize kindness, curiosity, tolerance, a growth mindset, and courage. Teach them more than ever before how to stand up to bullies and counter bias in all its forms, including antisemitism. Help them learn how to debate, search for nuance and understanding, but also to be forceful in distinguishing and calling out the difference between good and evil.

An Ivy League degree might get Westport students an impressive stamp on their resumé, but it will not produce the next generation of leaders that America and the world desperately needs. It is clear we cannot rely on the current educational system to be leaders on moral clarity. That responsibility falls uniquely and urgently on us.

Westporter In Israel: “October 7 Changed Everything”

When sirens sounded in the distance in the early morning of October 7, Ariella Torv woke briefly in her Tel Aviv apartment. Then she went back to sleep.

The 2011 Staples High School graduate had lived in Israel for 6 years. She’d heard sirens before.

But an hour later, at 7:30 a.m., they blared directly above her.

Ariella’s building has no bomb shelter. She ran to the stairwell, where other residents gathered. Soon, sensing no danger, they headed to their apartments.

Ariella Torv (right) and her mother Denise, when she visited Israel this fall. Denise returned to Westport a week before the Hamas attack.

Ariella planned to go back to sleep. But a worried friend texted: “Are you okay?”

“This is serious!” she thought. She texted her boss, who told her: “Pack a bag. Go to a friend’s house, with a shelter.”

Ariella took her scooter to the building nearby. When she arrived, she learned the extent of the horror happening just 2 hours away.

Arielle and her friend spent the day glued to the news.

“I never experienced anything like that,” she recalls. “Israelis who are very used to things like this were scared. So I was scared.

“I’m very liberal. I vote Democratic. I thought I understood one of the world’s most complex situations. I thought a 2-state solution was possible.”

Now, she explains, “October 7 changed everything. I’m still processing it. It feels like the longest day — like that day is still happening.”

Empty cribs and beds symbolize the Israelis — including many children — held hostage by Hamas.

Growing up, Ariella’s family observed the High Holy Days. But they were not particularly religious.

After graduating from the University of Hartford with a degree in communications, she moved to New York for a job with the Ogilvy ad agency.

On a 10-day Birthright trip to Israel in 2017, she fell in love with the country and culture. She signed up for a 6-month internship with a Tel Aviv tech startup. She grew to love even more the people and energy of Israel.

She decided to stay.

“At 24, I didn’t understand what it meant to move to a foreign country,” Ariella says. “it took 3 years to really feel at home.”

A serene scene, not far from Ariella’s Tel Aviv apartment, belies a nation at war.

Gradually, she learned about the nuances of life there. Over the past few months she attended protest rallies against Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, and  his judicial reforms.

Then came October 7. She watched in real time as people living on kibbutzim called, pleading for the army and police to help.

“It’s insane to think about that,” Ariella says. “I can’t move past that day.”

She did not go to work for nearly 3 weeks. She was not alone. Friends and colleagues could not focus either. Two and a half hours away, 200 hostages huddled in tunnels.

Reminders of the hostages are everywhere in Israel.

At night, Ariella checked the locks on her apartment door obsessively. She had to take photos on her phone, to prove to herself she was safe.

Ariella had planned to return to Westport for Thanksgiving. It would be her first trip back in 13 months.

She felt torn. “I didn’t want people to think I was running away,” she says.

But friends said, “Be with your family. Gather strength from them. They want to see you. Remember, this is a difficult time for them too.”

Being in Westport is “very weird,” she admits. “I love being home, hugging my mom, seeing my nephews. But I feel disconnected. My head and heart are in Israel.”

One morning, out buying milk, a tire made a strange sound. She looked for an escape route. Then she realized: “I’m safe.”

It is hard to talk with family and friends about what Israel is going through. “It’s all so overwhelming,” Ariella notes.

“I have so much to say. But I don’t know how to say it.”

Many people in Westport are concerned about what’s happening. She is inspired by blue ribbons and posters of hostages on the Ruth Steinkraus Cohen Bridge, and Israeli flags on many lawns.

She sent photos to friends in Israel. “They love it!” she reports.

Ribbons and flyers on the Ruth Steinkraus Cohen Bridge buoy Ariella Torv. (Photo/Jennifer Wolff)

At the same time, Ariella says, there is plenty of “misinformation,” in Westport and throughout the US.

She has no idea what will happen when she returns to Israel next week.

“I’m a bit scared. After the ceasefire, we’ll go right back to war. We have a mission.”

A soldier and his scooter, on the streets of Israel. (Israel photos courtesy of Ariella Torv)

But she also knows she will be welcomed “Israelis treat people like family,” she says. “For the past few weeks, they welcomed me into their home for Shabbat dinner. They invited me to sleep over. We text each other all the time.

“Israel is incredibly strong. It’s inspiring how regular citizens turned into warriors, fighting to protect their land.”

She never considered not returning.

Does Ariella have a message for “06880” readers?

“Israel will live,” she says firmly. “I have full faith in the country, and the IDF. There is no left or right now. Every Israeli is united, for the country.”

Soon, Ariella Torv returns to her adopted home, to join them.