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Waters Calls Adelson ‘Puppet Master’ Behind Trump Administration, Says Zionism Is ‘Ugly Stain’

Former Pink Floyd bassist Roger Waters called philanthropist and casino mogul Sheldon Adelson a “puppet master” and Zionism “an ugly stain” in a June 20 interview with a Hamas-affiliated television network.

According to the Middle East Media Research Institute (MEMRI), Waters told Shehab News Agency, “Sheldon Adelson, who is the puppet master pulling the strings of Donald Trump, Mike Pompeo and what’s his name … the ambassador [to Israel], Greenberg [sic] I think his name is. Sheldon Adelson is the puppet master pulling all of the strings. And Sheldon Adelson is a right-wing fascist, racist bigot who doesn’t understand the first thing about the idea that human beings might have rights.”

The United States Ambassador to Israel is David Friedman. Waters went on to accuse Adelson of believing that Jews are superior to all other human beings.

“He has this strange – he thinks – biblical construct in his head, that somehow everything will be all right in the world if there is a Greater Israel, which takes up the whole historic Palestine and the Kingdom of Jordan — puts it all together and calls it Israel and gives it only to the Chosen People,” Waters said. “He is crazy.”

The musician then accused the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) of creating the knee-to-neck technique Officer Derek Chauvin used on George Floyd on May 25; Floyd later died after claiming he couldn’t breathe.

“That is an Israeli technique, taught to the militarized police forces of the U.S.A. by Israeli experts, who the Americans have been flying over to the United States to teach them how to murder the Blacks because they have seen how efficient the Israelis have been at murdering Palestinians in the occupied territories by using those techniques,” Waters said. “And they are proud of it. They are proud of it. The Israelis are proud of it.”

Israeli police spokesperson Micky Rosenfeld tweeted on June 9 that Israeli law enforcement has never used the knee-to-neck technique and has never taught the technique in any training programs with senior law enforcement officers from other countries.

Waters added, “Zionism is an ugly stain, and it needs to be gently removed by us.”

Various people on Twitter criticized Waters’ remarks as being anti-Semitic.

“Roger Waters, notorious for anti-Israel obsession and teaming up with antisemites around the world has done it again,” the Israeli Foreign Ministry’s Twitter account tweeted. “This time on a Hamas-affiliated news network, Waters spreads anti-Semitic tropes and falsely accuses Israelis of training US police to ‘murder blacks in America.’ ”

“Crazy @rogerwaters continues to drag the reputation of @pinkfloyd through the mud with an insane rant on Hamas-terrorist affiliated TV,” StandWithUs Israel executive director Michael Dickson tweeted.

Anti-Defamation League CEO Jonathan Greenblatt similarly told the Jewish Chronicle, “Waters’ comments mirror a number of classic and vile anti-Semitic stereotypes … . It’s highly unfortunate to see an individual whose early life was marked by important contributions to the world of music continue to devolve into a discredited propagator of anti-Semitism and anti-Zionism.”

Associate dean and director of Global Social Action Agenda at the Simon Wiesenthal Center Rabbi Abraham Cooper told the Journal in a phone interview that he was amazed at how many anti-Semitic tropes Waters squeezed into one interview, and called Waters’ “Zionism is an ugly stain” remarks “Nazi-like terminology.”

“We have every right to protest and see to it that he’s barred from every venue in the free world,” Cooper said. “Someone who goes around spouting that kind of hatred against a people, a nation, has no place in center stage of our culture.”

Creative Community for Peace director Ari Ingel similarly said in a statement to the Journal, “It is disturbing to see Roger Waters continue his cynical efforts to delegitimize the state of Israel by spreading incendiary lies about the country. Stating that Israel invented kneeling on someone’s neck as a police technique is not just outrageous but also dangerous, as is his claim that a wealthy Jew is pulling the world’s strings, which plays on the age-old anti-Semitic trope right out of The Protocols of the Elders of Zion. It is not surprising that he made these comments in an interview with a Hamas-affiliated TV network, as Hamas also calls for the destruction of Israel and is a United States and western designated terrorist organization.”

Israellycool blogger David Lange called Waters’ June 20 remarks his “craziest anti-Semitic rant ever.”

Waters is an ardent proponent of the boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) movement. He has responded to accusations of anti-Semitism through pointing out that his daughter-in-law is Jewish and that he’s only criticizing the Israeli government.

 

Read this article on Jewish Journal here.

Chelsea Handler finally deletes Farrakhan video after days of outrage

June 17, 2020

Comedian Chelsea Handler posted and then deleted a video of Louis Farrakhan on Instagram this week — but only after two days of doubling down amid a wave of criticism.

Before Handler deleted the video, it had reportedly been shared and liked by a wide range of other Hollywood celebrities, despite Farrakhan’s well-documented history of virulent antisemitism and homophobia.

Handler, who has close to four million followers on Instagram, posted the 10-minute video of Farrakhan on a 1990 talk show on Sunday, calling it “powerful.” Handler, who is Jewish, at first doubled down on her decision to post the video even when called out by commenters. “Perhaps Farrakhan’s anti-Semitic views took form during his own oppression,” she added in a comment. Responding to one person who asked if she would post a video of a message she agreed with from Adolf Hitler, Handler wrote: “no, because Hitler was responsible for killing millions of lives. Farrakhan is just responsible for his own promotion of anti-Semitic beliefs. They are very different.” Handler did not offer any public explanation for deleting the video.

Farrakhan has long compared Jews to termites, called them Satanic and accused Jews of controlling the slave trade, Hollywood, the banks and the media. And while Handler’s post drew negative attention in some media outlets, few celebrity voices publicly called her out for sharing the video.

Former Fox News host Megyn Kelly tweeted that it was “stunning” to see how many celebrities “are either too stupid to know what Farrakhan has said publicly about Jews or — worse — do not care.” Actor Josh Malina issued a “Friendly reminder: Louis Farrakhan is a virulent jew-hater. He is trash. Don’t tweet out his greatest hits.”

Ari Ingel, director of the nonprofit Creative Community For Peace, which works to counter antisemitism and anti-Israel sentiment in the entertainment industry, told Jewish Insider that he wasn’t shocked by the radio silence.

“It’s not surprising other celebrities didn’t speak out against the post,” said Ingel. “Unfortunately, many Jews in Hollywood and in the entertainment industry have a long history of not speaking up about antisemitism.”

Ingel suggested that the silence “has to do with the traumatic past Jewish people have been through, and many try to simply blend in and assimilate in America. They don’t want to make waves when it comes to their own community, even though they are usually very vocal in defending the rights of other minority groups.”

Israeli actress Noa Tishby told JI it was “disheartening” that more celebrities had not spoken out against Handler’s decision to share the video.

“One can not be against one form of racism or discrimination and not another,” Tishby added. “If we stand against hate, we stand against all hate, not just some of it.” Nobody would quote Stalin or Hitler or Mussolini’s “inspirational moments” today, Tishby said, and suggest they be “given a pass” on their other actions. “I think Chelsea Handler should take a good look at this guy, and take the appropriate actions,” she said. “He can not be accepted into the mainstream.”

Handler’s post came less than a week after the rapper Ice Cube tweeted a series of antisemitic posts to his 5.4 million followers, including praise of Farrakhan. He, too, faced little pushback from mainstream Hollywood voices.

“It’s disturbing to see a cultural icon who is such a powerful voice for social justice in the black community fail to understand the impact his words and the images he shares have on the Jewish community,” Ingel said of the rapper. “We stand with the black community in their fight for justice and change in America, but fighting racism with antisemitism is unacceptable.”

Ingel said that CCFP “has been in touch with members of his team,” but “as Ice Cube has clarified on social media, he stands by his posts, which is unfortunate.”

You can read the article on Jewish Insider here.

Chelsea Handler Calls Farrakhan Video ‘Powerful’

Actress Chelsea Handler shared a video of Louis Farrakhan discussing racism on her Instagram page on June 14 and called it “powerful.”

The video is a clip of the nation of Islam leader taking questions from the audience during an appearance on “The Phil Donahue Show” on an unspecified date. During the clip, Farrakhan discusses issues of racism and white supremacy.

“I learned a lot from watching this powerful video,” Handler wrote on her Instagram page.

One Instagram user responded in the comments section, “Based on this logic, if you find a video of Hitler saying something positive and powerful, will you feel equally compelled to share it? You gave hate credibility and a large platform today.”

In the comments section, Handler defended posting the video.

“Hitler was responsible for killing millions of lives,” she replied. “Farrakhan is just responsible for his own promotion of anti-Semitic beliefs. They are very different.”

Another commenter praised Handler for posting the video, stating: “Truth is truth, regardless of who it comes from and whether you like them.”

Handler responded, “Agreed. The message should stand alone.”

The Simon Wiesenthal Center condemned Handler for posting the video.

“@chelseahandler what exactly were you + other Americans supposed to learn from a leader who is a life-long anti-Semite who called Hitler a great man who refers to Jews as insects who spews hatred of LGBTQ people, whose Research Group luridly links Israel to deadly Coronavirus?” the Jewish group tweeted.

Creative Community for Peace co-founder David Renzer similarly said in a statement to the Journal, “While CCFP supports the Black community in their efforts, it is important that we not confuse the message with the messenger. In a time of rising anti-Semitism, unless and until Minister Farrakhan completely disavows himself from his previous anti-Semitic comments, he remains a problematic figure who should cause entertainers to hesitate before looking to him for inspiration.”

Writer Hazel Cills noted on the feminist website Jezebel that actor Sean Hayes and actress Lisa Rinna also praised the video, and that actress Jessica Chastain may have posted it to her Instagram page before deleting it.

“While he has denied being anti-Semitic, Farrakhan has previously called Judaism a ‘gutter religion,’ has referred to Adolf Hitler as a ‘great man,’ and has spoken about ‘powerful’ and ‘Satanic’ Jews as being his enemy, among many other statements condemning Jewish people,” Cills wrote.

She later added: “I know many celebrities right now are desperately trying to prove they have an activist streak, but hopefully they can do a little research before they post things to social media. It must be so hard not having a manager around to help you Google things!”

 

Read the entire article on Jewish Journal here.

Ice Cube Tweets Out Star of David With Apparent Occult Reference

PHOTO: DALLAS, TEXAS – AUGUST 17: BIG3 founder Ice Cube reacts during week nine of the BIG3 three on three basketball league at American Airlines Center on August 17, 2019 in Dallas, Texas. (Photo by Ron Jenkins/BIG3 via Getty Images)

Also on June 10, the rapper tweeted an image stating, “Hebrew Israelities [were] slaves in Ancient Egypt. Clearly they are a black people.” The Forward noted that the image “may be a reference to the idea, shared among some members of the Hebrew Israelite religion, that black people — not present-day Jews — are the true descendants of biblical Israelites.”

View image on Twitter

 

Creative Community for Peace Director Ari Ingel said in a statement to the Journal, “It’s disturbing to see a cultural icon who is a such a powerful voice for social justice in the Black community fail to understand the impact his words and the images he shares have on the Jewish community, especially when anti-Semitism is on a steady rise in America where it has turned increasingly violent. We stand with the Black community in their fight for justice and change in America, but fighting racism with anti-Semitism is unacceptable.”

Others in the Jewish community condemned the memes on Twitter.

“This is not fighting racism — this is inciting it,” British pro-Israel researcher David Collier tweeted to Ice Cube. “You are vile.”

 

Adam Serwer, a writer for The Atlantic, tweeted, “Conspiracy theories allow their proponents to flatter themselves into thinking base prejudices are but marks of intellectual sophistication. Even so, ‘cubes are symbols of Jewish control’ reaches a new frontier of stupid when offered by a guy best known as … Ice Cube.”

 

Tablet senior writer Yair Rosenberg quipped, “I told the conspiracy we should have used septagons instead, but they didn’t listen and now we’re busted.”

Ice Cube had previously come under fire for a June 6 tweet of an image showing six old white men with hook noses playing a board game over several black and brown men. One of the white men is counting cash. The image had been painted as a mural in London, but was subsequently taken down because of complaints about the image being anti-Semitic.

The Simon Wiesenthal Center tweeted, “Shame, two years ago we met with @icecube to turn a new page. Now when it counts, instead of using his notoriety to promote peace in a fractured America he regresses to classic #antiSemitic tropes.”

Pro-Israel activist and human rights lawyer Arsen Ostrovsky tweeted, “Hi @icecube. I have tremendous respect for you as an artist and champion for peace & tolerance. But the image you shared, even as cropped, is strongly anti-Semitic. As a role model fighting racism today, would strongly urge you to please withdraw.”

According to Jewish Telegraphic Agency (JTA), Ice Cube expressed concern about the table in the tweet; he has not taken down the tweet.

Additionally, in May, Ice Cube tweeted out a photo of himself with Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan; Ice Cube wished Farrakhan a happy birthday. Farrakhan’s past statements include “I’m not an anti-Semite, I’m anti-termite” and that “Jews are part of ‘the Synagogue of Satan.”

Read this article on Jewish Journal here.

Israeli-Arab singer criticizes Roger Waters for supporting BDS

During the interview, Awad urged Waters to visit Israel and perform in the country as means for encouraging Israeli-Palestinian dialogue.

Read the article on JPost here.

Jeremy Piven on Performing Stand-Up Comedy in Israel: ‘It Was the Best Set I Ever Had’

MAY 28, 2020 12:14 PM

Jeremy Piven on Performing Stand-Up Comedy in Israel: ‘It Was the Best Set I Ever Had’

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By Shiryn Ghermezian

Jeremy Piven participating in a Zoom call with other comics organized by Creative Community for Peace. Photo: Screenshot.

Jewish American comic and actor Jeremy Piven performed his best stand-up act ever when he was in Israel last year, he said on Wednesday.

The “Entourage” star participated in a panel of comedians who discussed their past trips to the Jewish state and the comedy industry in a Zoom call and Facebook Live event organized by the non-profit group Creative Community for Peace.

Piven traveled to Israel for the first time in 2016 on a trip sponsored by the Omri Casspi Foundation. He was part of a delegation of NBA players and celebrities and during the trip he had his “second bar mitzvah” celebration in Jerusalem.

He went back to Israel in 2019 and performed as a stand-up comic. He said on Wednesday about the experience, “It was the best set I ever. I’m not just saying that. I don’t know what it was…for some reason it kind of felt really incredible, and I had a great time and so did they [the audience].”

He added, “I think because they are so incredibly present, and they’re dealing with danger on another level, as an audience I’ve never seen an audience that was more present than that.”

Piven — who currently does over 200 stand-up shows a year — also cited Jewish-American comedian and actor Elan Gold as a mentor.

Piven additionally elaborated on his bar mitzvah at the age of 13, which he said took place in a church. He explained that he was comfortable being on stage during his Torah reading, but that his Hebrew was “viciously mediocre.”

Regarding his “second bar mitzvah” in Jerusalem in 2016, he said it “was the greatest time of my life.”

He added, “it was incredible to also share this experience to all these pro athletes that had never been to a bar mitzvah. They were using the yarmulkes as frisbees, no one knew what to do with them.”

Read the entire store here.

The boycott Israel movement and anti-Semitism during the COVID-19 crisis

At a time when the world needs to put political differences aside, BDS activists prefer to sow division and corrode civility.

The pandemic has brought with it a wave of anti-Semitism that stretches the globe. Dubbed “coronasemitism,” anti-Semitic incidents related to the virus have been reported in the United States, the United KingdomAustraliaFrance and throughout the Middle East. These incidents reinforced the systemic anti-Semitism found in countries such as Iran and Turkey, and evidences the broader history of Jews being scapegoated in times of trouble, whether it was plagues and epidemicsfinancial crises or tragic events like 9/11.

While the BDS campaign brands itself as a peaceful social-justice movement, it’s really a political movement whose members often peddle in anti-Semitism. Recent social-media posts from BDS supporters during the coronavirus crisis are virtually indistinguishable from those of white supremacists and others who subscribe to Jewish conspiracy theories. Merely replace the word “Jew” for “Zionist” or “Israel,” and it becomes evident that the BDS movement traffics in classic anti-Semitic tropes, whether modern-day blood libels, ritual murder accusations or happy merchant characterizations. We see BDS supporters depicting Jewish Israelis as viruses and diseases, and pushing conspiracy theories of Israel and Jews profiting from the crisis, while rejoicing in Jewish Israeli deaths.

In the same spirit of Hitler’s 1920 Salzburg speech, which spoke of “Jewish contamination” and Jews “poisoning the nation,” Abbas Hamideh, co-founder of the BDS organization Al-Awda, released a series of tweets characterizing Israel as a “zionavirus” citing “Jewish complicity in the coronavirus pandemic,” and celebrating the closure of The Jewish Chronicle, the oldest Jewish newspaper in the world that recently went into liquidation—before it was saved by a donor—due to the pandemic.

Another proponent of BDS absurdly accused Israel of “faking cases,” claiming that “the Zionists are behind spreading covid19.”

When white-supremacist leader David Duke tweeted, “Does President Donald Trump have coronavirus? Are Israeli and the Global Zionist elite up to their old tricks?” a BDS supporter responded, “Israel itself is more dangerous for human species than corona virus.”

This same user posited, in a reply to a tweet by conspiracy-theorist and Holocaust-denier David Icke that Israel is spreading the virus. The BDS supporter stated, “Isn’t it interesting that Israel is the only place they haven’t found even one single case of this virus,” despite the thousands of confirmed coronavirus cases in the country and hundreds of deaths.

Singling out the Israel, the world’s only Jewish state, for condemnation, Ariel Gold, national co-director of leading BDS organization CodePink tweeted: “Israel is culpable for every coronavirus death in Gaza,” deliberately ignoring the border that Gaza shares with Egypt and the restrictions Egypt imposes on the enclave as well.

Maria Cristina Gutierrez, another supporter of the boycott movement, posted on Facebook that in addition to being behind 9/11, “zionista and the united states […] created this coronavirus in a lab.”

“There is a coronavirus killing babies in Palestine, the virus is called the Zionist state of Israel,” she added.

BDS activist Ratiba “Tibou” Abdessemed similarly labeled Israel a “lethal” virus and accused Israel of facilitating the spread of COVID-19.

Resurrecting the medieval Jewish blood libel, Ratiba has referred to Jews as “bloodsuckers,” questioned the number of Jews killed in the Holocaust, retweeted an article from a notorious anti-Semite and Holocaust-denier blaming Orthodox Jews for the spread of the virus, and claimed that “world Jewry was the boss” of Washington, D.C.

Finally, Ratiba charged Israel with creating genetically modifying viruses designed to attack non-Jews.

On Facebook, BDS supporter Sabrina Porras blamed the “United Zionist snakes” for COVID-19. Ms. Porras had previously employed the classic conspiracy theory about the Rothchilds (i.e., “Jews”) controlling the world, claiming in 2016 that they rigged the American presidential elections.

BDS supporter and English teacher Ramez Alashqar called Israeli soldiers the “worst virus in the world.”

And even though Israel’s synagogues have closed its doors in light of the pandemic, proud BDS activist Saskia Whitfield—a member of a Facebook group called “Did the Holocaust Really Happen?”—peddled the falsehood that “the entire west is banned from meeting with more than 5-10 people, UK is only two! Yet I read yesterday that the synagogues in Zitrael are exempt from this rule … could speed things up there.”

Just as we have seen white supremacists rejoice in the number of Israeli cases and deaths in response to news of the first Israeli death due to COVID-19—that of 88-year-old Holocaust survivor Aryeh Even—BDS supporters took to twitter to either celebrate or express their indifference.

“Finally good news,” wrote one BDS advocate.

The boycott movement’s nefarious attempt to hide their true motives by merely replacing the word “Jew” with “Zionist” in some of these instances is not only troubling, but also a form of gas-lighting, when 95 percent of American Jews support Israel and thus Zionism.

Members of the BDS movement have a long documented history of anti-Semitism, which is why the German Parliament, the French National Assembly, the American Congress and a U.N. Special Rapporteur have all condemned the movement. Yet boycott activists continue to spread their vitriol during this global crisis. At a time when the world needs to join together and put political differences aside, they prefer to sow division and corrode civility.

Earlier this month, the U.N. Special Rapporteur on freedom of religion or belief, Ahmed Shaheed, admirably declared that “we must collectively reject anti-Semitism and other forms of intolerance and discrimination now.” Now, more than ever, we need to hold those to account who do not heed his call.

Ari Ingel is the director of Creative Community for Peace, a nonprofit entertainment industry organization that represents a cross-section of the creative world dedicated to promoting the arts as a means to peace. Karys R. Oschin is the organization’s manager of strategic research and writing.

Read this article on JNS here.

Creative Community for Peace Honors Industry Execs, Ziggy Marley at Second Annual Ambassadors of Peace Gala

Michael Tran/Getty Images
Walter Kolm, Ziggy Marley, Jacqueline Saturn, Aaron Bay-Schuck and Troy Carter attend the Creative Community for Peace’s 2nd Annual “Celebrating Ambassadors of Peace” event held at a Private Residence on Sept. 26, 2019 in Los Angeles.

The Creative Community for Peace (CCFP) honored Warner Records CEO/co-chairman Aaron Bay-Schuck, Caroline Music/CMG president Jacqueline Saturn, Q&A and Atom Factory founder Troy Carter; Latin music manager Walter Kolm and singer-songwriter Ziggy Marley at its second annual Ambassadors of Peace gala on Thursday (Sept. 26).

The organization, founded by EA music executive Steve Schnur and veteran industry publishing exec David Renzer in 2012, works to promote music and the arts as a means to peace, to support artists and to counter the BDS boycott of Israel.

More than 400 entertainment industry execs attended the gala, held at the Los Angeles home of entertainment attorney and CCFP Advisory Board member Gary Stiffelman.

Ziggy Marley performs during the 2019 New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival 50th Anniversary at Fair Grounds Race Course on May 2, 2019 in New Orleans.

“CCFP is about the power of music and art and culture to bridge bridges of peace,” said Renzer in his opening remarks.  “We believe in co-existence…We support the power of music to bring people together.”

The first award of the evening was presented to Carter by his Q&A partners, Suzy Ryoo and J. Erving. Carter recalled his first visit to Israel when former client Lady Gaga played Tel Aviv and the misperceptions he brought with him. “I had a bias. You see on the news, you think it’s going to be war torn, dangerous. We took the Navy Seals with us, we went over with all this security, and when we landed it was better then Miami Beach,” he said with a laugh. “We were swimming in the Mediterranean, floating in the Dead Sea, I [bought] fake Gucci on the street where Jesus walked.”

Like most of the honorees, he made a call for the industry to help break down barriers.  “We’re lucky to get up every day and work on art that heals people,” he said. “Music is the one thing that brings people together and we have to continue to champion that.”

The Rolling Stones perform on stage at Hayarkon Park in Tel Aviv on June 4, 2014. 

Israeli-American billionaire businessman Haim Saban introduced the next honoree, but before bringing Saturn to stage, he matched the $400,000 Renzer had announced the evening had raised, bringing the total to more than $800,000.  “We should make an effort to educate people who are against going to Israel, we should learn how to educate Roger Waters, “ he said, name checking the rocker who has been extremely vocal in his opposition to Israel and refuses to play there. “Help them see the light. If we fail, we fail, [but] the misinformation is the fuel that pushes BDS forward.” BDS stands for the Boycott, Divestment,Sanctions Movement, which protests Israel’s treatment of Palestinians through several actions including demanding western artists boycott performing in the country.

Saturn, the first female honored by the organization, noted she has visited Israel annually for the past 17 years and has found “there’s no better place to witness unity than Jerusalem,” she said. “Artists should always have the opportunity to connect with their [audiences] anywhere in the world…music has the ability to pierce through cultural barriers.”

Saban then introduced Kolm, noting he has taken many of his artists to play in Israel to build a bridge between Latin music and the country. Kolm talked about starting an indie hard rock label when he was 17. “My days of being a metal head are behind me, but something I believe then and now: music belongs everywhere. It’s important for us to defend art in all its shapes and forms. Music should remain independent of other issues.”

Ruben Cabrera

Bay-Schuck, who brought his mother with him to the event, humorously detailed his first visit to Israel when he was 12, which wasn’t an undiluted success.  “My palette was limited. If it wasn’t pizza or a cheeseburger, I wasn’t eating it,” he said. “My family picked Passover to go. Imagine my surprise when I’m told there was no break for 1000 miles.”  On a more serious note, he said early in his career, he worked in the international department at Interscope and he saw how the Black Eyed Peas’ “Where Is The Love”  “hit every corner of the the world. It was clear music had more than enough power to change the world.”

He went on to praise CCFP. “This organization is not political. It understands that music is a force for change and that artists should not be threatened or silenced whether they choose to perform…When an artist chooses not to perform in Isreal—or anywhere in the world for that matter—we all suffer.”

Marley, whom Schnur introduced as a “Rasta man and a real mensch,” was presented with CCFP’s inaugural special artist’s award for peace. He was able to address the issue from a performer’s perspective. “I’ve been going to Israel since I was a teenager…Israel was a storybook place for us. We felt a connection to it through our father, through our beliefs,” he said. “I’ve been going back ever since. We don’t play in Israel for political reason,  we play for the people [to] spread our message of justice, love and peace for all people… Going to Israel for me is no problem because we go for the people, not the politics.”

Among the industry executives supporting the CCFP were Warner Records’ Tom Corson, Chris Atlas, Lenny Waronker and Eesean Bolden, Atlantic’s Kevin Weaver, RCA’s Joe Riccitelli, Epic’s Melissa Victor and Darren Baber, attorneys Eric Greenspan and Aaron Rosenberg, Primary Wave’s Larry Mestel and Justin Shukat , Universal Music Publishing Group’s Evan Lamberg, Pulse Music Group’s Josh Abraham and songwriters Justin Tranter and Diane Warren.

The evening concluded with performances by Donna Missile and JoJo, who brought out PJ Morton to perform their R&B hit, “Say So.”

See article here.

Creative Community for Peace Urges ‘Interaction and Co-Existence’ at Gala Fundraiser

Ziggy Marley, Troy Carter, Aaron Bay-Schuck, Jacqueline Saturn and Walter Kolm were honored as Ambassadors of Peace at the Sept. 26 event.

On a warm fall evening at the sprawling Holmby Hills home of top music business attorney Gary Stiffelman and wife Carmen, an overflow crowd gathered to express its collective commitment to creative freedom and to battling the prevailing propaganda of the Palestinian BDS (Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions) movement against Israel.The occasion was the Creative Community for Peace’s second annual Ambassadors of Peace celebration honoring Ziggy Marley, Atom Factory/Q&A founder Troy Carter, Warner Records co-chairman/CEO Aaron Bay-Schuck, Caroline/Harvest Records president Jacqueline Saturn and former Universal Music Latin president and founder of WK Entertainment Management Walter Kolm.“This is not a political or religious organization,” said Electronic Arts’ music president Steve Schnur, who co-founded the organization seven years ago with former Universal Music Group Publishing and Spirit Music Group Chairman/CEO David Renzer. “We have access to educate people as to what Israel is and what it’s not. Don’t base your decision on what you read or hear until you actually visit there and experience it for yourself.”

Schnur, who has been to Israel dozens of time to visit family, came up with the idea during a 2010 Elton John show in Tel Aviv, after acts like Elvis Costello and the Pixies canceled planned tours following incidents like the Gaza Flotilla incident, an Israeli military operation against six civilian ships in the Mediterranean. “Musicians shouldn’t have to cherry-pick their conscience.”

“We believe in the power of music, the arts and culture to build bridges between people,” added Renzer. “Singling out Israel for a cultural boycott certainly doesn’t help matters. We want to encourage interaction and co-existence. For some DJ shows in Israel, 50% of those who attend could be non-Jewish, either Arabs, Muslims or Palestinians.”

Steve Schnur and Ziggy MarleyCreative Community for Peace Ambassadors of Peace, Inside, Los Angeles, USA - 26 Sep 2019
CREDIT: MICHAEL BUCKNER/VARIETY/SHUTTERS

Said Schnur (pictured above with Marley): “We feel the one thing an Israeli and Palestinian might have in common is Rihanna.”

Noted Israel supporter Haim Saban, the founder of Saban Entertainment, was born in Egypt but moved to Israel with his family at the age of 12. “The BDS movement is not only anti-Israel, but anti-Semitic, trying to convince people not to go there,” he says. “CCFP is exactly the opposite, showing the beauty of Israel.  Music has no boundaries, no borders, it is the bridge between people, countries and cultures.”

Saban was on hand to honor Jacqueline Saturn as an ambassador of peace. Growing up in Nashville in a Jewish family, Saturn confessed a fear of traveling to Israel, until she met her Israeli husband Yigal Dakar. With their two daughters, the family now travels to Israel yearly. “There’s not a better place to witness unity than in Jerusalem,” Saturn observed. “Everyone there lives together. It’s really an eye-opener. It brings tears whenever I see it. I wonder why there’s such bad energy about the place. Why can’t we all just get along?”

Haim Saban and Jacqueline SaturnCreative Community for Peace Ambassadors of Peace, Inside, Los Angeles, USA - 26 Sep 2019
CREDIT: MICHAEL BUCKNER/VARIETY/SHUTTERS

Music attorney Aaron Rosenberg introduced Warner Records’ Bay-Schuck, who recalled a trip to Israel age age 13, laughing that his parents picked passover as the time to vacation. Bay-Schuck described CCFP as an organization which “understands that music is a force for change, and artists should not be threatened or silenced whenever or wherever they choose to perform.” He added emphatically that “the BDS movement is cowardly, hypocritical and bullying in its purest form. It’s the responsibility of all of us in this room to educate the rest of the music community, particularly artists, with the facts.”

Troy Carter’s experience with Israel came via Lady Gaga, who performed in the country twice. “When we landed at the airport, it was better than Miami Beach,” Carter marveled. “Swimming in the Mediterranean, floating in the Dead Sea, buying fake Gucci in the place where Jesus walked, thinking I was on Canal Street.”

In reminiscing, he noted Madonna was in the country performing at the same time. Cracked Carter: “If there wasn’t a war at that point, we truly were in a Holy Land.”

For former Universal Music Latin head Kolm, whose WK Management handles Wisin, Carlos Vives and Maluma, the organization represents artistic and creative freedom for his talent. “It is vital the artist get to perform their music for everybody in every nation, without limitations,” he said. “Most of the Latin music community has no idea about this organization, which is why we have to promote it.  As a manager, it’s my duty to support my clients’ ability to perform anywhere they choose.”

The evening’s “special artist honoree,” reggae star Ziggy Marley, shared that he has been visiting family in Israel since he was a teenager, and has performed there many times. For him, this is an issue that transcends politics and religion. “We’re all here for peace, ya know?” he said with an ear-to-ear grin. “Peace is what it’s all about.”

When David Renzer announced that the organization had raised $400,000, Haim Saban took the podium to say his daughter insisted he match the total, brining the evening’s tally to $800,000, which will go, according to Renzer to “programs that promote co-existence.”

Scores of notable music executives attended the event including award-winning songwriter Diane Warren, hitmaker Justin Tranter, Pulse Music Group co-CEO Josh Abraham, Warner Records evp A&R Nate Albert and svp urban marketing Chris Atlas, WMG creative officer Mike Caren, global VP A&R Aton Ben-Horin, Reservoir evp A&R Donna Caseine, Warner Records CEO/co-chairman Tom Corson, manager Andy Gould, attorney Eric Greenspan, Capitol Music Group COO Michelle Jubelirer, Geffen Records svp A&R Neil Jacobson, Raised in Space CEO Zach Katz, Milk & Honey president/manager Lucas Keller, UMPG president North America Evan Lamberg, RCA co-president Joe Riccitelli, artists Bonnie and Anita Pointer (Pointer Sisters), Donna Missal and JoJo, who performed.

Variety was the media sponsor for the event.

See article here.

Creative Community for Peace to Honor Ziggy Marley, Aaron Bay-Schuck, Troy Carter & More at Annual Gala

Creative Community for Peace to Honor Ziggy Marley, Aaron Bay-Schuck, Troy Carter & More at Annual Gala

The organization seeks to counter the cultural boycott of Israel.

The Creative Community for Peace (CCFP) will honor Warner Records CEO/co-chairman Aaron Bay-Schuck, Caroline Music/CMG president Jacqueline Saturn, Q&A and Atom Factory founder Troy Carter; Latin music manager Walter Kolm and singer-songwriter Ziggy Marley at its second annual Celebrating Ambassadors of Peace (AOP) gala on Sept. 26

CCFP’s members established the organization to “promote the arts as a means to peace, support artistic freedom and counter the cultural boycott of Israel,” according to a press release. This year’s honorees were chosen for their dedication to those causes.

“I am honored to be recognized as an ‘Ambassador of Peace’ by Creative Community for Peace and humbled to be receiving it alongside such accomplished industry executives and friends,” said Bay-Schuck in a statement. “The cultural boycott movement is detrimental to prospects for peace between Israelis and Palestinians, as well as to artistic freedom around the world, and I will continue to stand with my friends and colleagues who are dedicated to using music and the arts to bring people together.”

Over 200 entertainment industry leaders are expected at this year’s gala, which will be held at the Los Angeles home of entertainment attorney and CCFP Advisory Board member Gary Stiffelman. Sponsors include Sony/ATV, EA Music, BMI, Epic Records, Atlantic Records and Warner Records.

“It’s an honor for me to receive an Ambassadors of Peace award this year,” added Kolm. “I’ve always been a firm believer in the power of music to bring people together, which is why I support CCFP and their mission. The fact that so many incredible Latin artists I’ve worked with over the years, like Maluma, Carlos Vives and Wisin, have performed in Israel is a testament to this.”

Madonna, performs live on stage after the 64th annual Eurovision Song Contest held at Tel Aviv Fairgrounds on May 18, 2019 in Tel Aviv, Israel.

Last year’s event honored Scooter Braun, Geffen Records president Neil Jacobsonand Warner Music Group executive Aton Ben-Horin.

Limited tickets for this year’s gala, along with sponsorship opportunities, are available for purchase at the event’s official website.

*See article here.

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