H eadlines
NEWSBRIEFS Jews Win Several Awards at Golden Globes
JEWISH PERFORMERS PLAYED a key role at the
2019 Golden Globes on Jan. 6, JTA reported.

From Jewish co-host Andy Samberg to actress
Regina King sporting a tattoo made up of
three Hebrew letters, there was a decidedly
Jewish inf luence.

For example, Michael Douglas won the best
actor award for a TV musical or comedy for his
role as aging acting coach Sandy Kominsky in The
Kominsky Method. In his acceptance speech, he gave
shoutouts to Jewish co-star Alan Arkin and Jewish
show creator Chuck Lorre, and paid tribute to his
102-year-old father, Kirk Douglas, by shouting “alter
kockers rule!”
Joe Weisberg, the creator, writer and executive
director of The Americans, accepted the best drama
series award.

Songwriter Mark Ronson was part of a team of
four winning best song for “Shallow” from A Star
is Born.

In addition, Rachel Brosnahan — who is not
Jewish but plays a Jewish woman in The Marvelous
Mrs. Maisel — won best actress in a comedy show for
a second consecutive year, defeating Jewish nominees
Alison Brie and Debra Messing.

Chasidic N.Y. Community First Official
Haredi Orthodox Town in U.S.

A New York village of more than 20,000 Yiddish-
speaking Jews called Kiryas Joel split from the town
of Monroe on Jan. 1 to become the town of Palm Tree
— believed to be the United States’ first official haredi
Orthodox town, JTA reported.

More than 80 percent of Monroe voters supported
a 2017 measure to create the new town.

Kiryas Joel dates to the mid-1970s, when Chasidic
Jews began settling there. The new town includes 164
acres annexed from Monroe and 56 other acres.

N.J. Synagogue Receives $2.5M in
Religious Discrimination Case
Congregation Shomrei Torah/Tiferes Boruch of
Clifton, N.J., will receive $2.5 million in a mediation
settlement stemming from alleged religious discrimi-
nation, JNS.org reported.

Synagogue leadership said construction plans
were illegally discriminated against in a number of
ways, including arbitrary zoning code interpretations
and planning board requirements, numerous public
appearances and having to spend large sums to hire
outside engineers for consultations.

Synagogue attorney Yehudah Buchweitz said
Shomrei Torah appeared before the Clifton Planning
Board 25 times between March 2013 and October
2015, before the zoning board seven times between
November 2008 and January 2013, as well as four
times in state court.

The settlement is one of the largest ever under the
Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act
(RLUIPA). Aside from paying $2.5 million, Clifton will build
sidewalks in front of the building.

Canadian Company Fined for Forged
Kosher Certification on Cake Mix
Adee Flour Mills was fined $25,000 by the
Kashruth Council of Canada for using its logo
on products that haven’t been certified kosher,
Forward reported.

The company was decertified in 2017 by the
Council of Orthodox Rabbis (COR), which is run by
the Kasruth Council. However, its Easy Bake Devil’s
Food Cake mix still contained the COR logo. COR
issued an alert to warn kosher shoppers because the
judge couldn’t legally have the cake mix removed
from grocery stores.

In small claims court, Adee was accused of causing
“spiritual trauma” to Jews. l
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H eadlines
ISRAELBRIEFS Former Israeli Minister Sentenced to 11 Years
FORMER ISRAELI MINISTER Gonen Segev — who gave sen-
sitive information to Iranian intelligence officials for six years
— received an 11-year prison term as part of a plea bargain with
the Jerusalem District Court, JNS.org reported.

The former minister of energy and infrastructure had a
charge of assisting an enemy in wartime stricken in exchange for
reduced charges concerning security-related offenses.

“The defendant gave the Iranians secret information with
the intention of harming state security,” the charge sheet said.

“Among other things, the information included the location of
security installations, the names of security personnel and more.

The accused also gave the Iranians dozens of pieces of informa-
tion in order to harm state security.”
Segev was extradited to Israel from Equatorial Guinea. He had been
living in Nigeria since serving time in 2007 for drug smuggling.

The official sentencing is set for Feb. 11.

Record Amount Raised by Israel High-Tech
Companies for Sixth Consecutive Year
Israeli high-tech companies recorded a sixth consecutive year
of record growth in 2018, raising $6.47 billion via 623 finan-
cial deals, The Jerusalem Post reported, citing data from IVC
Research Center and ZAG S&W Zysman, Aharoni, Gayer & Co.

The number of deals declined from 661 in 2017, but the
amount of capital raised increased 17 percent from $5.52 billion.

Annual funding has climbed by about 120 percent since 2013.

“Most of the capital was raised by well-established software
companies with annual revenues of up to $10 million in the
verticals of AI [artificial intelligence] and cybersecurity,” said
Marianna Shapira, research director at IVC Research Center.

“The term ‘wealth attracts money’ describes the continued
investment trend in Israel, as in the U.S.”
Six in 10 Israelis Worry About Hacked Elections
A Pew Research Center poll showed that 62 percent of Israelis
surveyed are worried that the country’s upcoming elections
could be tampered by hacking, The Times of Israel reported.

That said, 73 percent said the country can handle a major
cyberattack, the highest among the 26 countries surveyed by
Pew. But 59 percent are concerned hackers could access national
security information, while 67 percent believe an attack could
damage the nation’s infrastructure.

On Jan. 7, Shin Bet head Nadav Argaman said a foreign nation
“intends to intervene” in the April election, but didn’t specify
which one.

Population Growth Slows in Judea and Samaria
Population growth in Judea and Samaria continued a 10-year
decline in 2018, JNS.org reported, citing data from the Council
of Jewish Communities in Judea and Samaria.

The 2018 population growth was 3 percent in 2018, compared
to 3.4 percent a year earlier and 3.9 percent in 2016. There were
12,964 new residents in 2018, compared to 14,299 in 2017.

Settlement leaders attributed the decline to the government not
building enough new settlement homes. The Jewish growth rate in
Judea and Samaria began dropping in 2009 when Israel agreed to
President Barack Obama’s demand to freeze construction. A year
earlier, population growth reached an all-time high of 5.6 percent.

At the end of 2018, there were 448,672 Jewish residents of
Judea and Samaria. l
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