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nation / world
French Prosecutors Indict Two Men for Assaulting
a Jew Who Died While Fleeing
French prosecutors indicted two men for assaulting a Jewish man seconds before
he ran under the wheels of a tram and was fatally wounded, JTA reported.

One of the suspects, 27, is accused of “intentional violence in public.” The other,
23, is being charged with “intentional violence which led to involuntary man-
slaughter,” according to a statement issued April 15 by the prosecutor’s office of
Bobigny, a Paris suburb where the incident occurred.

The indictment does not mention any antisemitic motive, according to the
CNews television channel. The family of Jérémie Cohen, 31, has said it does
not know whether he had been targeted because he was Jewish. Cohen’s father,
Gerald, has said that his son often wore a kippah on the street though the family
does not know whether he was wearing one when he was assaulted on Feb. 16.

The media initially reported the incident as a straightforward vehicular acci-
dent until the victim’s family found footage of the assault following a two-week
investigation they conducted on their own.

Jewish Approval of Biden Drops to 63% from 80% Last Year
The good news for President Joe Biden is that a majority of U.S. Jews approve of
the job he is doing, JTA reported. The bad news is that the number in a new poll,
63%, is a sharp drop from a year ago.

A poll released April 13 by the Jewish Electorate Institute, a group led by prom-
inent Jewish Democrats, showed Biden’s approval rating down from 80%.

The institute put a positive spin on the numbers.

“Jewish Americans continue to support President Biden and the Democratic Party
at levels higher than the general American voting population, a trend that appears on
track to continue in this year’s midterm elections and in the future,” said the group’s
chairman, Martin Frost, a former Jewish Democratic congressman from Texas.

Biden’s approval numbers generally have dropped in the last year, a result of a
botched exit from Afghanistan, a persistent pandemic and inflation that his gov-
ernment can’t stem, JTA said.

German-Israeli Singer Charged With Lying About Alleged
Antisemitic Incident
A public prosecutor’s office charged the German-Israeli singer who said he was
denied service at a hotel in Leipzig for wearing a Star of David pendant with false
accusation and slander, JTA said.

Ofarim, 39, was indicted on March 31 by the Leipzig public prosecutor’s office. It
is now up to the Leipzig Regional Court to decide whether to proceed with a trial.

At issue are Ofarim’s claims that an employee of Leipzig’s Westin Hotel insulted him
on Oct. 4, 2021, refusing to give him a room because he was wearing a visibly Jewish
symbol. Ofarim posted video footage to social media purporting to show the incident.

The accusation went viral, and Jews and others protested outside the hotel on
his behalf. The employee was temporarily suspended.

It wasn’t long before doubts were raised about Ofarim’s account. The hotel
shared its security camera footage with German news media: In it, there was no
Star of David pendant to be seen around Ofarim’s neck.

Israeli Universities to Offer Returning Academics Up to $186K
Israel will enable its universities to offer lecturers in high-demand disciplines
benefits worth up to the equivalent of $186,272 to return to the country to teach
after completing post-doctoral work overseas, Globes reported.

Israeli academic institutions suffer from a shortage of hundreds of senior
faculty members in computer sciences, engineering, mathematics and physics.

While there are enough Israeli professors and Ph.D. holders to fill those positions,
about 1,600 of the best Israeli lecturers work at universities in the United States,
Globes reported.

Globes noted that an Israeli lecturer at a top academic institution overseas
can earn as much as four times more than what they would earn in Israel and
command larger research budgets — making returning to Israel an unattractive
prospect. JE
— Compiled by Andy Gotlieb