San Francisco, CA
San Francisco Jewish community marks final night of Hanukkah in Union Square
On Wednesday night at Union Square in San Francisco, many from the Jewish community gathered to celebrate the final night of Hanukkah.
As the last candle was lit, the message of this holiday to overcome darkness with light had a special significance.
The Aisenberg family is not at the grand menorah lighting to just celebrate Hanukkah.
“This little boy and his baby brother were taken on October 7th 2023,” said Jackie Aisenberg.
The events of October 7th have left Jackie Aisenberg with a heavy heart. A pediatrician and a mother, she has fought to keep these children’s names in the spotlight, praying for their safe return.
“This is part of our luggage, everyday luggage,” said Jackie Aisenberg. “We need to be strong, we need to be proud and we need to speak out for them.”
Children have a special place in Jackie’s heart but she has also been impacted by the deadly New Year’s Day attack in New Orleans. The hope for 2025 is for peace and safety for everyone.
“As part of humanity, I don’t think this is pertaining in particular to necessarily to any ethnicity, or to any religion or to any people,” she said. “This is a matter of human values.”
“We never lose the hope, lost the hope or will lose the hope for a better world,” her husband Sergio Aisenberg added.
So as Hanukkah comes to an end, the Aisenberg family wants the message of standing strong and of light to resonate with people of all religions and beliefs.
“We need to stand together,” she said. “We’re Jewish people but it’s not just the Jewish people. It’s everybody who believes in humanity in open societies where we are free to stand for our values.”
San Francisco, CA
San Francisco non-alcoholic bar seeing shift in drinking culture
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.
San Francisco, CA
Excitement and expectations as preparations are underway for the inauguration of SF Mayor-elect Daniel Lurie
Preparations are underway for the inauguration of San Francisco Mayor-elect Daniel Lurie at Civic Center Plaza and the festivities to follow in Chinatown. Community leaders talk about their support and hope for the future.
Posted
San Francisco, CA
San Francisco supervisor presses city departments to clean up Sixth Street
Over the last few months, San Francisco has been cracking down on open-air drug markets that have taken root on several street corners in the city’s South of Market and Tenderloin neighborhoods.
Some progress has been made, but Supervisor Matt Dorsey, who represents South of Market, is fed up with what’s happening on one particular street in his district: Sixth Street.
On Sixth Street on any given day, one can see some of the city’s issues with drug use, drug dealing and mental health all out in the open.
Dorsey is pressing city departments to take swift action.
“Just on the Sixth Street corridor, if we were to affect 100 arrests per night with an eye toward making those life-saving, medically-appropriate interventions, getting people into detox and drug treatment,” he said.
Dorsey has sent a formal letter of inquiry to all city departments that are responsible for law enforcement, public safety and public health to ask what they would need to make his 100-arrests-per-night proposal a reality.
He acknowledges there has been improvement on drug use and sales on several street corners in SoMa and the neighboring Tenderloin, but not on Sixth Street.
He said the issues on Sixth Street have not just remained the same. He said they’ve gotten worse
“This is not COVID-19 or something that we can expect to get better once we get over the hump,” he said. “The reality is that we are now in the era of synthetic drugs.”
For that reason, he believes mandated treatment after an arrest is needed.
But not everyone agrees, in part, because right now there is a lack of treatment available in the city.
“We have very little treatment for women, for example,” Coalition on Homelessness Executive Director Jennifer Friedenbach said. “We have very little for the Spanish-speaking population. We have literally no free trauma therapy that’s extensive. These are the places that have been identified as what we really need to do to address the crisis. Criminalization isn’t even on the list.”
Freidenbach said the city also needs some kind of detox facility.
She and Dorsey seldom agree on many issues, but they both said they have high hopes for Mayor-elect Daniel Lurie. Dorsey said he’s on the same page as a lot of Lurie’s public safety proposals, and Friedenbach said Lurie has a long history of funding projects aimed as solving the root causes of problems in the city.
-
Health7 days ago
New Year life lessons from country star: 'Never forget where you came from'
-
Technology7 days ago
Meta’s ‘software update issue’ has been breaking Quest headsets for weeks
-
Business3 days ago
These are the top 7 issues facing the struggling restaurant industry in 2025
-
Politics1 week ago
'Politics is bad for business.' Why Disney's Bob Iger is trying to avoid hot buttons
-
Culture3 days ago
The 25 worst losses in college football history, including Baylor’s 2024 entry at Colorado
-
Sports3 days ago
The top out-of-contract players available as free transfers: Kimmich, De Bruyne, Van Dijk…
-
Politics2 days ago
New Orleans attacker had 'remote detonator' for explosives in French Quarter, Biden says
-
Politics1 day ago
Carter's judicial picks reshaped the federal bench across the country