At this time of the year, while many in our congregation are not in residence in the Hamptons, The Hampton Synagogue and Rabbi Marc Schneier are leading the way in a singular fashion, standing with the State of Israel in its war against Hamas.

IN THE NEWS

The Qatari Ambassador to the United States, Meshal bin Hamad Al-Thani, stated that his country is committed to securing the release of all the hostages held in the Gaza Strip. He made these remarks during a meeting he held this afternoon at the Qatari Embassy in D.C. with Rabbi Marc Schneier, who is close to the leaders of the Persian Gulf, in which the Ambassador informed Rabbi Schneier about the release of the two captives.”

Op-Ed by Rabbi Marc Schneier
“Is There A Paradigm Shift In The Muslim World?”

“I just returned from the Republic of Kazakhstan, a most prominent Muslim-majority country, a paradigm of interreligious cooperation, a nation that is supportive of the State of Israel and the plight of the Palestinian people.
While in its capital, Astana, I had the distinct honor to meet with Kazakhstan’s top leadership and discuss Israel’s response to the mass murders committed by Hamas inside southern Israel – the greatest massacre of Jews in a single day since the Holocaust, by an enemy bereft of humanity.
Furthermore, Hamas’s charter not only calls for the destruction of Israel but for the destruction of the Jewish people, the eradication of Judaism. The war against Hamas is also a war against global antisemitism.
The following morning, President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev issued a statement repudiating the October 7 massacre in Israel and his repulsion of such barbarism and savagery.”

U.S. developing plan to combat campus antisemitism. Rabbi Marc Schneier details whats being done.

U.S. developing plan to combat campus antisemitism. Rabbi Marc Schneier details whats being done.

Op-Ed by
Rabbi Marc Schneier
“Hamas unleashes the forces of antisemitism here and around the world”

“I just returned from the Republic of Kazakhstan, a most prominent Muslim-majority country, a paradigm of interreligious cooperation, a nation that is supportive of the State of Israel and the plight of the Palestinian people.
While in its capital, Astana, I had the distinct honor to meet with Kazakhstan’s top leadership and discuss Israel’s response to the mass murders committed by Hamas inside southern Israel – the greatest massacre of Jews in a single day since the Holocaust, by an enemy bereft of humanity.
Furthermore, Hamas’s charter not only calls for the destruction of Israel but for the destruction of the Jewish people, the eradication of Judaism. The war against Hamas is also a war against global antisemitism.
The following morning, President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev issued a statement repudiating the October 7 massacre in Israel and his repulsion of such barbarism and savagery.” Read more

STAND WITH ISRAEL CONCERT

The Southhampton Press

November 30, 2023

STAND WITH ISRAEL CONCERT

Dan’s Papers

December 8, 2023

Op-Ed by Rabbi Marc Schneier
“On Martin Luther King Jr day: What is the response to antisemitism? – opinion”

The challenge remains as to whether Black activists today will emulate Dr. King in unequivocally denouncing the rise of antisemitism in America and calling it out within their community.

The image is chilling in its overt and malevolent celebration of the brutal Hamas attack of last October 7, in which over 1,200 Israeli civilians died.

Released by the national office of Black Lives Matter (BLM) in Chicago and featured on X, with the slogan “I Stand With Palestine,” the meme portrays a Hamas fighter on a paraglider on his way to participate in the murderous mission of October 7.

Separately, The Movement for Black Lives, a coalition of more than 50 Black liberationist organizations – including BLM – released a statement condemning “the deadly, racist attacks against the Palestinian people by the Israeli state.”

Demanding a full cutoff of US military aid to Israel, the Movement for Black Lives also called on the Biden administration to impose sanctions until Israel “stops its apartheid practices and settler-colonial project.”

For a rabbi who has devoted close to 40 years to strengthening Black-Jewish relations in America, the bitterly antisemitic celebration by BLM of Hamas’s slaughter of Jews, including the unspeakable atrocities such as mass rapes, truly felt like a dagger to the heart.

An image of betrayal 

The image of the Hamas fighter on the paraglider is an obscene betrayal of the shared dreams of freedom and equality that led thousands of Jews to become Freedom Riders during the civil rights era, enduring beatings by white, racist police officers in places like Selma and Birmingham, alongside their African-American brothers and sisters.

If things weren’t bleak enough, December brought the contretemps over Claudine Gay, the first Black and female president of Harvard University. Testifying to a congressional committee on December 5, Gay, together with the presidents of the University of Pennsylvania and MIT, gave legalistic and nuanced responses during Congressional testimony as to whether it is acceptable to advocate on their campuses for the genocide of Jews. What was most dismaying was the number of Black activists who rallied in support of Gay, despite her inability to condemn these antisemitic protests, attacks, and diatribes.

Monday, January 15, marks Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Day and honors his legacy as the great civil rights activist. Having authored Shared Dreams: Martin Luther King Jr. and the Jewish Community, I can state unequivocally that Dr. King would never have used the word “context” in combating antisemitism. He had an abiding contempt for antisemitism and was color-blind on this issue. He publicly denounced purveyors of Jew-hatred, even  when they came from within his own African-American community.

During the last years of his life, Dr. King confronted and called out growing antisemitic rhetoric from radical leaders such as Stokely Carmichael in groups like the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee, with which his own Southern Christian Leadership Council (SCLC) had previously closely collaborated.

While some Black leaders sought to downplay the Jewish contribution to the Civil Rights Movement, Dr. King understood that the alliance was vital to the success of the movement.

In 1965, he remarked, “How could there be antisemitism among Negroes when our Jewish friends have demonstrated their commitment to the principle of tolerance and brotherhood, not only in the form of sizable contributions but in many other tangible ways and often at great personal sacrifice.

“Need I remind anyone of the awful beating endured by Rabbi Arthur Lelyveld of Cleveland when he joined the civil rights workers…? And who can ever forget the sacrifice of two Jewish lives, Andrew Goodman and Michael Schwerner, in the swamps of Mississippi? It would be impossible to record the contribution that the Jewish people have made toward the Negro’s struggle for freedom – it has been so great.”

The challenge remains as to whether Black activists today will emulate Dr. King in unequivocally denouncing the rise of antisemitism in America and calling it out within their community.

The writer is president of the Foundation for Ethnic Understanding and author of Shared Dreams: Martin Luther King Jr. and the Jewish Community. 

SHABBAT SERMONS

“We Stand Together”
Shabbat, October 13/14

“Chamas v. Hamas”
Shabbat, October 20/21

“History Repeats Itself”
Shabbat, October 27/28

“The Binding of Isaac From Kristallnacht To Gaza”
Shabbat, November 3/4

“Biblical Reconciliation: Isaac & Ishmael”
Shabbat, November 10/11

“Reflections On The Rally”
Shabbat, November 17/18

“Giving Thanks in the Midst of War”
Shabbat, November 24/25

“An Uneasy Reflection”
Shabbat, December 1/2

“The Spinning of the Dreidel – The Miracle of Jewish Survival”
Shabbat, December 8/9

“”Three Tables, Three Campuses””
Shabbat, December 15/16

“Christmas Season & Its Challenges”
Shabbat, December 22/23

Jesus, A Palestinian?
Shabbat, December 29/30

“This Has Nothing To Do With Me”
January 5/6, 2024

“Blazing Stars of Inspiration”
January 12/13, 2024

“The Cynicism of Evil – The Evil of Cynicism”
January 19/20, 2024

DONATE

Rabbi Marc Schneier and Hampton Synagogue benefactor Tovah Feldshuh hosted a private reception at the offices of Hampton Synagogue Founding Supporter Ron Baron in honor of Hon. Nir Barkat, Israel’s Minister of Economy.

New York State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli announces at our “Music of Israel” Solidarity Concert a $20 Million purchase of Israel bonds in honor of The Hampton Synagogue

MUSIC

The Hampton Synagogue campaign We PRAY For Israel musical series has been shared and viewed by hundreds of thousands across the countryand is also featured on our nation-wide JBS and NBC-Comcast platform.

“While the entire Jewish people is expressing solidarity with the people of Israel in these dark and horrifying days, we want to give them a way to feel hope and strength.”

– RABBI MARC SCHNEIER

Prayer for
Members of the
Israel Defense Forces

Cantor Netanel Hershtik
Hampton Synagogue Choir

V’HAGEN BA’ADENU – Prayer For Protection

(Lewandowski)

Cantor Netanel Hershtik
Maestro Izchak Haimov

Hampton Synagogue Choir

HATIKVAH
 

Cantor Netanel Hershtik
Maestro Izchak Haimov

Hampton Synagogue Choir

Prayer for
Welfare of the
State of Israel

Cantor Netanel Hershtik
Hampton Synagogue Choir

Shomer Yisrael
“Guardian of Israel”

Cantor Netanel Hershtik
Maestro Izchak Haimov
Hampton Synagogue Choir

Play Video
SIM SHALOM 
“Release your imprisoned people”
 

Cantor Netanel Hershtik
Maestro Izchak Haimov

Hampton Synagogue Choir

Prayer for
Welfare of the
State of Israel

Cantor Netanel Hershtik
Composition: Meir Finkelstein

VHI SHE’AMDA – “In every generation they
rise up to destroy us, and the Holy One,
Blessed is He, saves us from their hands”

Cantor Netanel Hershtik
Yonatan Razel

MIMKOMO 
“Bring Them Home”
 

Cantor Netanel Hershtik
Maestro Izchak Haimov

Hampton Synagogue Choir

“MUSIC OF ISRAEL” SOLIDARITY CONCERT

Televised Nation-Wide

PUBLIC ADDRESSES & RALLIES

Rabbi Schneier’s Thunderous Address

Soroka NYC Benefit – November 1, 2023

IN THE HAMPTONS

Southampton Press: Rally In solidarity held in East Hampton addressed by Rabbi Avraham Bronstein

By Bart Jones

Jews, Muslims coexist at kosher, halal bakery in Westhampton Beach

Long Island / Suffolk – ONLY IN NEWSDAY,  December 17, 2023

War is raging in the Middle East, but in Westhampton Beach an example of peaceful coexistence between Muslims and Jews is thriving.

About five years ago, Rashid Sulehri, a Muslim immigrant from Pakistan, bought the only kosher bakery on the East End — and kept it kosher to serve the area’s Jewish population. He also made it halal, so Muslims can eat there, too.

While tensions between Muslims and Jews have increased throughout the United States and other parts of the world, the Beach Bakery & Grand Cafe has turned into a symbol of how the groups can get along despite differences.

The cafe “is a profound example as to ways that Muslims and Jews can celebrate the spirit of cooperation and not conflict,” said Rabbi Marc Schneier, who leads The Hampton Synagogue in Westhampton Beach.

WHAT TO KNOW

  • A bakery and cafe in Westhampton owned by a Muslim is the only kosher business on the East End.
  • The Beach Bakery & Grand Cafe serves a large Jewish population in the area and has become a symbol of Muslims and Jews living in peaceful coexistence.
  • One prominent local rabbi is using the cafe to host interfaith dialogue sessions between Jewish college students and Muslim leaders.

He is deeply involved in interfaith work both through the cafe and around the country and the world.

Read more