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6 APRIL 29, 2021
Quebec Court Upholds Workplace Ban on Yarmulkes
The Quebec Superior Court on April 20 mostly upheld a provin-
cial law banning Jews and other religious minorities who work in
public from wearing religious symbols such as yarmulkes in the
workplace, JTA reported.

The court said that Bill 21 — known as the “secularism” or
“laicity” law — doesn’t conflict with Canadian human rights
charters. The court did say the controversial law doesn’t apply to
the English-language school board that brought the case to court.

The Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs said in a statement
that it was “deeply disappointed.”
“[T]he provisions of Bill 21 ... severely restrict religious
freedom and the ability of Jewish Quebecers and other faith-
based communities to freely pursue careers in the public sector,”
the Toronto-based center said.

Virginia GOP to Allow Shabbat Voting Exemption
The Virginia Republican Party reversed a previous decision, to
allow Jews to vote for a gubernatorial nominee before Shabbat
starts, JTA reported.

On April 25, the party’s State Central Committee unani-
mously agreed to allow Orthodox Jews to vote during the day on
Friday, May 7, the day before the party’s May 8 convention.

Several days earlier, a majority of the same committee voted
to accommodate Orthodox Jewish voters and who don’t vote on
Saturday, but the vote didn’t meet the 75% passage threshold.

The Republican Jewish Coalition asked the party to reconsider.

Majority of House Opposes Conditions on Aid to Israel
More than 75% of House of Representative members signed a
letter opposing conditions on aid to Israel, JTA reported.

The letter to Reps. Rosa DeLauro, D-Conn., the chairwoman
of the Appropriations Committee, and Kay Granger, R-Texas, the
committee’s ranking member, was signed by 331 members of the
House and was split nearly between Republicans and Democrats.

Pro-Israel lobby AIPAC backed the letter.

“This is a very strong bipartisan statement that full security
assistance to Israel — without additional conditions — is in
the national security interest of the United States,” AIPAC
spokesman Marshall Wittmann said. l
— Compiled by Andy Gotlieb
Tam Cummings, Ph.D., Gerontologist
Author, Untangling Alzheimer’s: The Guide
for Families and Professionals
14026_Warminster-Yardley_5.5x11.indd 1
Germany Won’t Prosecute 95-year-old Deported
Concentration Camp Guard
GERMAN PROSECUTORS SAID they won’t prosecute a
95-year-old concentration camp guard deported from the United
States in February because they had insufficient evidence against
him, JTA reported.

All charges were dropped against Friedrich Karl Berger, who
was deported after a U.S. Immigration judge determined that he
served at a subcamp of the Neuengamme concentration camp
system near Hamburg, Germany.

Berger admitted to “guarding prisoners in a concentration camp
which was not used for the systematic killing of the prisoners,” the
prosecutors said. This “is not sufficient as such to prove the crime.”
Berger arrived in the U.S. in 1959 through Canada, living
in Tennessee for many years and receiving a military service
pension from Germany.

He was deported under the Holtzman Amendment a 1978
law. It prohibits anyone who participated in Nazi-sponsored
persecution from entering or living in the U.S.

3/25/21 10:44 AM
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