Categories: NY / Politics / Local
Albany Beat - November 2, 2018

The Jewish Angle Upstate
It appears everyone running in New York’s 19th Congressional district wants to claim Jewish roots. The massive district encompasses five counties in the Catskills region and two counties in the mid-Hudson Valley (namely, Columbia, Greene, Ulster, Otsego, Delaware, Schoharie, and Sullivan counties), as well as parts of four other counties west and south of Albany (Broome, Montgomery, Dutchess, and Rensselaer counties). The contenders include incumbent Rep. John Faso (R – Kinderhook, Columbia County), Antonio Delgado (D – Rhinebeck, Dutchess County), Steven Greenfield (G – New Paltz, Ulster County), and Diane Neal (I – Hurley, Ulster County). Faso, 66, claims no Jewish heritage but is aligned with the Chabad Lubavitch chapters in Dutchess, Ulster and Sullivan counties, which mainly includes the venerable Hecht, Zajac, Chanowitz, Deren, Hurwitz, Sandhaus, and Plotkin families. Delgado, 41, touts that he’s married to a Jewish woman. He and the former Lacey Alexandra Schwartz tied the knot in 2011. The Rev. Leonard Comithier, a Baptist minister, officiated. Delgado says he now attends services at Congregation Emanuel, a Reform synagogue in Kingston, NY. On his website, Delgado writes, “Growing up (in Schenectady) the rules were simple: work hard, do your homework and go to church. The values my parents instilled in me growing up here are the same values that drive me to run for Congress.” While she grew up as a Christian, Diane Neal, 41, claims Jewish roots on her mother’s side and maintains that her maternal family members are Holocaust survivors from two generations ago. Known for playing the character Casey Novak, a prosecutor on the hit television series “Law and Order: Special Victims Unit,” Neal quit the lucrative gig in 1999 to try her hand at studying biblical archaeology in Egypt and Israel. Greenfield, 57, is the only one of the four candidates who was born and raised in a Jewish household. “When people ask me if I’m Jewish, I respond by saying there is nothing ‘-ish’ about it. I’m a 100 percent Jew. There’s no ‘-ish’ involved.” When it comes to his current religious feelings, Greenfield says he went from attending Talmud Torah in an Orthodox shul in the Bronx, and becoming a bar mitzvah in an Orthodox shul, to living a secular Jewish lifestyle in New Paltz. “We observe some rituals, many of the holidays. I educated my three children and had them bat mitzvahed,” Greenfield told The Jewish Press. “Living walking distance to a synagogue was not an option because of the financial burden of property taxes on land near Orthodox synagogues. It’s just not affordable.” Greenfield, a volunteer firefighter, says “being Jewish forms my civil rights and social justice perspective because we bring with us a couple of thousand years of injustice, suppression, and being held behind ghetto walls.” During a debate among the four candidates hosted by Albany-based media outlets WAMC public radio and NBC-affiliate WNYT NewsChannel 13, the four candidates were asked what they thought about moving the United States Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. Three of the four hopefuls opposed the move. Greenfield argues: “Israel is a political entity that was founded by Zionist people in particular in response to the ultimate need for haven for our people. Until such time when Mashiach arrives, we need to treat contemporary Israel as the political entity that it is and not a form of prophecy fulfillment, which it clearly is not. “As long as that is the case, then keeping the peace so that Israel can remain a haven for us worldwide and a place of safety and sanctuary and intellectual development of the Jewish people who have chosen to live permanently in Israel as their nation is entirely dependent on protecting Israel from international warfare. This move is of deliberate inflammatory intent.” Delgado said moving the embassy unilaterally sends the wrong signal to that region. “Being pro-Israel and being pro-peace is critical but I’m also pro-democracy and as currently constructed, Israel is not a Jewish democracy,” Delgado stated, followed by gasps from the audience.











