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Rhode Island Jewish community reacts to chaos between Israel and Palestine

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Rhode Island Jewish community reacts to chaos between Israel and Palestine


Dozens are dead and hundreds injured after the Hamas militant group fired thousands of rockets at Israel near the Gaza Strip.

Members of the Jewish community in Southern New England are watching the chaos unfold at home.

“It’s a mix of shock and horror,” Adam Greenman, President of the Jewish Alliance of Greater Rhode Island said.

Many who have ties to the Middle Eastern country were heading to worship services on Saturday for the Sabbath.

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The local Jewish community is hoping to have a vigil in the coming days.

“This weekend we have two holidays Shemini Atzeret and Simchat Torah. They are supposed to be joyous holidays in Israel and here obviously. This has put such a tinge on this,” Greenman said.

Israel is fighting back, launching strikes on Gaza which killed dozens there.

Members of Congress were weighing in.

We asked Rep. Jake Auchincloss how the US should react.

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“To help make Israel victorious. That is our aim in this moment and that should be the aim of Congress as well. Congress has long appropriated $3.5 billion of security aid every year, exactly for moments like this. When the Israeli defense forces need to operate against nefarious enemies, who use tactics that are illegal under international law,” Rep. Jake Auchincloss, D-MA 4th District said.

Auchincloss added there’s no plan to send US troops to Israel.

Meanwhile, a Providence church group and their pastor are in Israel right now, staying in what they believe is a safe location in Galilee.

The Victory Church group was sharing their journey on social media.

“This is really a strategic moment in time. This is a critical moment and God has us here for a purpose,” Pastor Richard Sfameni, of Victory Church said.

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They were praying for peace and a safe return to the Ocean State in their posts.

Back in Providence, the church, located on Veazie Street, invited its members to a prayer service on Saturday night.

They’re supposed to come home later this week, but major airlines have canceled many flights out of Israel.



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Reported power outage in Pawtucket, Central Falls | ABC6

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Reported power outage in Pawtucket, Central Falls | ABC6


This is a file image of Pawtucket City Hall. (WLNE)

PAWTUCKET, R.I. (WLNE) — A power outage has been confirmed by Pawtucket officials.

Approximately 7,000 residents in Central Falls and Pawtucket are currently affected.

Officials could not confirm what the cause of the outage was.

ABC 6 will provide updates on the status of the outage.

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‘No kings in America’: Biden slams U.S. Supreme Court ruling granting Trump immunity • Rhode Island Current

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‘No kings in America’: Biden slams U.S. Supreme Court ruling granting Trump immunity • Rhode Island Current


Monday’s U.S. Supreme Court decision granting the presumption of criminal immunity for official actions taken by a president fundamentally altered U.S. democracy, President Joe Biden said from the White House Monday evening.

Speaking for less than five minutes, Biden said the 6-3 decision contradicted the spirit of the country’s founding — set to be celebrated nationwide this week on the Fourth of July — that no one is above the law.

Presidential immunity extends to some official acts, Supreme Court rules in Trump case

“This nation was founded on the principle that there are no kings in America,” Biden said. “Each of us is equal before the law. No one — no one — is above the law, not even the president of the United States.”

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The immunity decision, written by Chief Justice John Roberts for the court’s conservative majority, undermined that principle, Biden said.

Biden added that the decision would almost certainly mean a jury would not decide the criminal case accusing former President Donald Trump of conspiring to illegally overturn his 2020 loss before November’s election, which Biden called a “disservice to the American people.”

Roberts opinion

The ruling tasked a federal trial court with determining which actions then-President Trump took seeking to overturn the 2020 presidential election were conducted as “official” acts of the president. Those actions are entitled to “the presumption of immunity,” Roberts wrote.

The ruling protected the power of an office that itself makes up an entire branch of government, Roberts said, and was consistent with the constitutional framers’ view that the president has broad powers and responsibilities.

“Accounting for that reality — and ensuring that the President may exercise those powers forcefully, as the Framers anticipated he would — does not place him above the law,” Roberts wrote. “It preserves the basic structure of the Constitution.”

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But Biden called the decision “a dangerous precedent” that would give presidents nearly unrestrained power.

“The power of the president will no longer be constrained by the law, even by the Supreme Court of the United States,” he said. “The only limits will be self-imposed by the president alone.”

Biden invoked the example of George Washington, who he said restrained the power of the presidency, and pledged he would continue to “respect the limits of the presidential powers.”

But, he said, the ruling empowered future presidents, possibly including Trump, to ignore the law.

Jan. 6 attack

Biden said Trump was responsible for the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol that disrupted the certification of Biden’s defeat of Trump in the 2020 election. Trump’s efforts to undermine the election results, culminating in the Jan. 6 attack, are the subject of the federal indictment the former president challenged by asserting presidential immunity.

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“Four years ago, my predecessor sent a violent mob to the U.S. Capitol to stop the peaceful transfer of power,” Biden said. “We all saw with our own eyes. We saw what happened that day … I think it’s fair to say it’s one of the darkest days in U.S. history. Now, the man who sent that mob to the U.S. Capitol is facing potential criminal conviction.”

Biden, whose reelection campaign was still reeling Monday from a debate performance against Trump last week described even by Democrats as poor, called on voters to “do what the court should have been willing to do but would not,” and reject Trump, the presumptive Republican nominee for president, at the ballot box.

The president endorsed Justice Sonia Sotomayor’s forceful dissent in the case, quoting her phrase that the majority opinion fueled “fear for our democracy” and urging voters, too, to dissent.

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The U.S. Senior Open provided a special homecoming for three Rhode Islanders

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The U.S. Senior Open provided a special homecoming for three Rhode Islanders


NEWPORT — Three of the state’s emissaries to the golf world came home this weekend. 

Billy Andrade, Brad Faxon and Brett Quigley all spent the last few days on the grounds at Newport Country Club. Andrade and Quigley both played in the U.S. Senior Open and made the cut. Faxon served as lead analyst for the NBC coverage and was in the booth alongside the 18th green. 

More: The Newport Country Club could not have put on a better showing for the state of Rhode Island

More: Richard Bland wins US Senior Open in dramatic finish at Newport Country Club

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It made for some nostalgia on a gorgeous Monday morning here. Sunday’s storms gave way to bright sunshine and an ideal summer day. Andrade finished his tournament at even par and Quigley checked in at 2-over. That’s a long way down the road from playing junior golf together in the 1980s. 

“Simply amazing,” Andrade said. “Everything that I imagined. It was just an unbelievable course, setting. Rhode Island, Newport — it just makes me feel very proud.” 

“Just an incredible week,” Quigley said. “The show coming to town here and coming to Rhode Island was fantastic. I thought Rhode Island and the golf course showed incredibly well.” 

Andrade got up and down for par at the 18th, pitching onto the green from about 50 yards and coaxing home a quick downhill putt. He qualified for this tournament thanks to his place on last year’s PGA Tour Champions money list, and his appearance here kicked off three straight weeks at his Bristol home. Andrade has played in the Walker Cup, at the Masters, in 18 editions of The Players Championship but none of his previous weeks were like this one. 

“It’s pretty cool,” Andrade said. “At 60 years old I’ve been doing this my whole adult life. To have a tournament like this at this stage of my career is real special.” 

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Andrade came firing out of the gates with a 6-under 64 before the venue showed its teeth. Only 30 players broke par here this week, and only 20 finished within 10 shots of the pace set by winner Richard Bland and runner-up Hiroyuki Fujita. Varying winds and the rolling seaside landscape proved a challenge all the way into a dramatic finale. 

“I think this golf course stacked up great,” Andrade said. “I haven’t heard one complaint from one player, and that’s odd. Usually there’s somebody who’s not happy.  

“I think it would be awesome to come back here.” 

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Quigley shot par or better in each of his first three rounds before closing with a 74. A pair of bogeys in the challenging morning conditions cost him a higher finish, including into the wind at the uphill par-4 18th. The majority of the field that finished on this extra day needed something more than an iron approach to have a chance of reaching the putting surface. 

“It has to (come back), it absolutely has to,” Quigley said. “I think it showed well. I think the USGA had a great championship.” 

Quigley has won tournaments as far away as Morocco and posted top-10 finishes at each of his last two PGA Tour Champions majors in 2023. He planned to visit the beach with his family later on Monday and will remain on vacation away from his Florida home for a few days. Quigley played in the group behind Andrade during his fourth round and was stealing a glance or two at his old friend throughout both days. 

“We were kind of looking at each other and smiling,” Quigley said. “Just thrilled to be part of the whole thing.” 

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Newport hosted the U.S. Women’s Open in 2006 and waited 18 years to stage its next USGA event. It was the 1,001st for the organization — the first was the U.S. Amateur in 1895. Senior Open locations are currently booked through Spyglass Hill in 2030, but the USGA has openings to fill in 2031, 2033-37 and 2039-41. 

bkoch@providencejournal.com

On X: @BillKoch25 



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