Block named after Israel's Holocaust museum and memorial at ceremony attended by local and Israeli officials: 'This is a reminder, a memory' The post New York City names street ‘Yad Vashem Way’ amid rampant antisemitism appeared first on The Times of Israel.
Yad Vashem Way is the initiative of Mayor Eric Adams and Council Member Keith Powers, with the City Council’s endorsement.
The union representing professors at the City University of New York approved a resolution last week in support of the boycott, divestment and sanctions movement against Israel.
The art exhibit is one of two Holocaust-related events Yad Vashem organized in New York this week. The second is the dedication of a street on East 67th Street and 3rd Avenue as Yad Vashem Way. The Jan. 30 street naming ceremony marks the first time a street in the US honors the Israeli institution dedicated to memorializing the Holocaust.
President Trump is expected to sign an executive order Wednesday instructing all federal agencies to identify civil and criminal authorities available to combat antisemitism.
This institution of Yad Vashem, which is more necessary than ever, is now going to have a rightful place on the streets of New York,” Keith Powers, a New York
Most of NYU’s revenue came from patient services. The health system increased its patient revenue by 12% year-over-year to $2.8 billion, the financial statement shows. Hospital management attributed the growth to rising discharges, more outpatient surgeries and an 8% bump in emergency room visits, said hospital spokesman Steve Ritea.
The new street sign, named for the Jerusalem museum built in 1953 as a memorial to victims of the Holocaust, is just a few steps from Park East Synagogue, the stately Orthodox congregation at 163 East 67th St. that’s been led for more than six decades by Rabbi Arthur Schneier, himself a 94-year-old Holocaust survivor.
The Park Slope eatery was was vandalized early Sunday with red lettering that said “GENOCIDE CUISINE” and “ISRAEL STEALS CULTURE.” By brunch, the place was packed.
A group of protesters clogged the sewage system of Columbia’s international affairs school, and spray painted the business school with an antisemitic slur
Jonathan Harounoff, Israel's spokesman to the United Nations, observes that anti-Israel agitators have taken their cause to "sickening" new lows in New York City.