Day: July 13, 2023

Categories Mary Phagan

Broadway’s ‘Parade’ will leave you in tears – review – The Jerusalem Post

Parade, winner of the 2023 Tony Award for Best Musical Revival, is an absolute must-see Broadway hit. Starring Jewish performers Ben Platt and Micaela Diamond and supported by a colorful and passionate cast at New Yorks Bernard B. Jacobs Theater, the revival of this show is not only timely but an absolute necessity for theater enthusiasts and history buffs alike.

Parade tells the story of a community shaken by tragedy and in search of answers, turning to scapegoat local minorities because the pain of an unsolved case is too unbearable and of course, because of the engrained mindset of post-Civil War Georgia.

The show starts out with a symbolic love scene between a Confederate soldier and a woman of the era. Although not graphic, it is clear what they were doing. What is unclear is just what this detail does for the show, but it certainly catches the attention of the audience.

The productions historical context humanizes the creative version of real-life events. This is aided by the presence of historical portraits of the real-life characters each player depicts. Every character has a historical connection in the story and their photo and name are illuminated at the back of the stage. They are key figures in the story and prosecution of Leo Frank, a Jewish man falsely accused of the murder of 14-year-old Mary Phagan, found dead in the basement of her place of work, the National Pencil Company, on Confederate Memorial Day in April 1913.

Platt plays Leo, the superintendent of the company and an easy scapegoat for a grieving community in search of answers not as much because of his place of work as because of his heritage.

Leo, from Brooklyn, married to a southern Jewish woman from Marietta, Georgia, part of the greater Atlanta area. He runs the National Pencil Company in Atlanta because his in-laws have afforded him the opportunity and he attends work on a state holiday to earn extra money, trying to save up so that he and his wife can have a baby.

On that particular day, his employee, Mary Phagan, comes to collect her pay, neither of them aware that it will be her last. She is found, deceased, in the basement of the factory that night by the night watchman, a Black man named Newt Lee.

A trial ensues with trusted neighbors, colleagues, and employees attacking Leo and his character. Their house cleaner, the boy who flirted endlessly with Mary, as well as many factory workers, come forward to give testimony that not only appears false but is also suspiciously similar to the testimonies of others.

In an interview with Playbill, Platt discussed the overlap in his own Jewish heritage and playing a role at such a time.

Its a way I can pay homage to Leo nightly. Its a very ritualistic thing for me, he said. He has become this symbol and martyr, but that 15 minutes is the moment every night where I can remember that this was a man who was, for the last two years of his life, stuck in a room by himself, then wrongfully murdered. It just personifies him for me, and never lets his story get too big or too far in my head.

In its multiple runs from Broadway and back again, audiences do not stray from their overwhelming love of the production.

Ben Platt and Michaela Diamond were Tony-worthy, [plus] the score was fantastic, said Melissa Solomon, a resident of Roslyn Estates, New York. Its never been more timely to have a show about antisemitism back on Broadway.

Her mother, Eileen Adler of Atlantic Beach, New York, added, Its an important play in this day and age. I actually saw it in 1998. I truly didnt appreciate a play with this topic back then, especially as a musical. However, I read a book about the case and I see things through a more enlightened lens [now.],

Parade leaves its mark on the hearts of audience members. Whether you are looking for true crime, songs to belt out with passion, history, or an equal amount of laughter and intense tears, this is the show for you.

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Broadway's 'Parade' will leave you in tears - review - The Jerusalem Post

Categories Leo Frank

The Tree of Life shooter will likely receive the death penalty. Only one question remains – Forward

A child stands at a memorial outside the Tree of Life synagogue after a shooting there left 11 people dead in the Squirrel Hill neighborhood of Pittsburgh. Photo by Brendan Smialowski/AFP via Getty Images

Senior Contributing Editor Rob Eshman July 13, 2023

The man who committed the deadliest crime against Jews in American history was just found eligible to receive the death penalty.

On Oct. 27, 2018, he walked into the Tree of Life synagogues in Pittsburgh carrying three handguns and an AR-15. He opened fire, killing 11 worshipers and wounding six others. On June 16, a jury found him guilty on all 63 counts.

Justice has finally been served. But five years after the gunman told officers All Jews had to die, are American Jews really any safer?

Many of the biggest threats to American Jewish safety have only gotten worse. But still, I see a few reasons for optimism.

The only person to blame for the Pittsburgh massacre is the shooter himself. But hate doesnt happen in a vacuum. The killer was ostensibly enraged because American Jews were hosting Shabbat dinners to support refugees. And at the time, Trump had spent months whipping up his base with anti-immigrant rhetoric.

For years, Trump has been an accelerant for hate and extremism in general and there is a strong correlation between the former presidents hateful leadership and real-world consequences.

In 2015, the number of antisemitic acts in the United States had been in decline for almost 15 years. But in 2016, the year Trump ran for office and won, they increased by 37%, according to the Anti-Defamation League. The numbers have stayed high since.

By 2020, most Americans had seen enough. Two-thirds of voters, Republicans and Democrats, said they turned out because they were excited to vote against Trump. Joe Biden said he only made up his mind to run for president after witnessing the Unite the Right protest in Charlottesville. He framed his campaign as a battle for the soul of the nation.

The good news is the nation took Bidens side in that battle.

The bad news is that, while Americans overwhelmingly spurned Trump in 2020, a large percentage of the country is ready to vote for him again. In the latest YouGov poll, Trump and Biden are in a dead heat.

For his part, Trump seems not to have learned the lessons of 2018. Last November, he dined with the rapper Ye and Nick Fuentes, a white supremacist propagandist, despite both having a history of antisemitic remarks and actions.

Trump has surrounded himself with even more fringe characters. The so-called moderating influences in his administration his Jewish daughter and son-in-law, Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner, have both since stepped back from politics.

In 2024, who around him will step on the brakes?

The Pittsburgh shooter actively participated in the social media site Gab, where he found validation for his hateful views. Civil rights groups, including the ADL, correctly point fingers at social media companies for providing platforms for hate speech and communities for haters.

That problem is far from solved. While Twitters former owners deplatformed users who engaged in hate speech, the new owner, Elon Musk, has invited many of them back. And hate and disinformation continue to proliferate on virtually every social network, mainstream or not.

Meanwhile, its not clear deplatforming hate speech even works. A Stanford study found that following the Jan. 6 riots, when social media companies kicked thousands of users off for inciting violence, many just migrated to Gab, swelling its user base by 40%.

Technology has marched ahead in the past five years in even more challenging ways. AI now can produce deep fake stories and videos that promote extremist agendas at scale. We are still very much coming to terms with technology that can empower the best and worst of humanity.

The Biden administration treated Pittsburgh like a national wake-up call. It tapped first gentleman Doug Emhoff, who is Jewish, to chair the first national strategy to counter antisemitism.

The plan, released in May, called for a mix of the concrete, like increased security grants to Jewish institutions and better cybersecurity monitoring, and the aspirational encouraging leaders to speak out against prejudice and institutions to be on guard against antisemitic comments and images.

There arent many instances in history when a government mobilized so many resources, at such a high level, to protect its Jewish citizens.

But by other measures, we are no better able to prevent what happened in Pittsburgh from happening again.

The shooters defenders claimed he struggled with mental illness. Whether or not this is true and it certainly doesnt justify his actions America still fails miserably to treat people whose illness sends them into dark and hateful places.

In five years, Congress has passed no significant legislation that would prevent a man like the Pittsburgh shooter from arming himself to the teeth. And the networks of hate groups that amplified the killers conspiracy theories still attract their damaged souls.

But despite all this, we have one major reason for optimism: American Jews have not been bystanders to their fate.

Weve organized, lobbied, nurtured allies, formed coalitions and donated to Jewish defense and civil rights groups. Weve spoken out, often using the very social media channels that have so often been used against us.

Will it work? Will there be a time when antisemitism is eradicated, when well be able to enter a guardless synagogue without taking a quick, nervous glance around us?

I take strange comfort in thinking back on a much earlier antisemitic trauma in American history, the 1915 lynching of Leo Frank and how very different things are this time.

After Frank was wrongly convicted of murder, dozens of men, whipped up by vicious antisemitic press and politicians, dragged Frank from his prison cell and hung him from a tree. Many of those men boasted of their involvement and posed for pictures beside Franks body. Not one was ever arrested, much less prosecuted.

Though we have a long way to go until hate is eradicated, the aftermath of Pittsburgh looked very different. Politicians flocked to Pittsburgh to express their condolences. The country united around American Jews.

And finally, after a protracted legal process that gave ample opportunity for survivors and the loved ones of those killed to be heard, justice was served in Pittsburgh today.

We still have a long way to go. But today, American Jews are not alone. Our place in this country has gotten better. And it can, working together with others, always get better still.

Rob Eshman is Senior Contributing Editor of the Forward. Follow him on Instagram @foodaism and Twitter @foodaism or email [emailprotected].

The views and opinions expressed in this article are the authors own and do not necessarily reflect those of the Forward. Discover more perspective in Opinion.

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The Tree of Life shooter will likely receive the death penalty. Only one question remains - Forward