So is innovation still happening? Yes, I am on a project.

The clock has never inspired much calm in people, but neither do deadlines.

The Fellowship @TheFellowship · Jan 27 Nearly 28,000 non-Jews—many of them Christians—risked their lives to save Jews during the Holocaust. Their courage is a powerful reminder of what it looks like to stand up for what is right, even when it comes at great personal cost. Today, we can honor their legacy by standing with and supporting the Jewish community in their time of need. Through our prayers and our actions, we can make a difference for the Jewish people of today.

The Fellowship @TheFellowship · Jan 28 Born and raised in a Christian family in the United States, Lois Gunden became a French teacher. When she was 26, Lois followed her calling to serve in Europe. Sent to southern France by the Mennonite Central Committee, she soon did more than just teach children… she saved the lives of many Jewish youngsters. Lois established a children’s home in Canet Plage, on the Mediterranean Sea. The home became a shelter for Spanish refugee children, as well as for Jews. The Jewish children who found safety there had been smuggled out of a nearby internment camp. One Jewish child whose life was saved was 12-year-old Ginette Kalish. In 1942, Ginette’s father was sent to the Auschwitz extermination camp, while the young girl and her mother were able to hide from the Gestapo. They escaped at first, but the Nazis caught them on a train and sent them to the camp at Rivesaltes. That camp is where Lois Gunden found young Ginette. Lois convinced Ginette’s mother to let her sneak the girl out of the camp. The diary that Lois kept while she worked to save Jewish children showed how brave and clever she was. One morning, a policeman came to the home to arrest three of the children who were Jewish. Lois told him that the children were out for a walk and would not return until later. When the officer returned, Lois said that their clothing was being washed and would not be ready until later. Again, the officer left. Lois prayed for God’s protection over the children, and the policeman never came back. The three children’s lives had been spared. With southern France occupied by the Nazis, Lois was considered an enemy alien. But she did not let that stop her; Lois continued to run the home. In 1943, she was detained by the Nazis, but released the next year. After the war, Lois returned home to Indiana, where she married. For the rest of her life, she taught French at Goshen College and Temple University, while also serving in the Mennonite Church. In 2013, Lois Gunden was named Righteous Among the Nations by Yad Vashem for her courage and kindness that saved the lives of so many innocent children. She was truly a friend of the Jewish people and a Hero of the Holocaust.

There she was in the bat cave of the imagination, playing with her hair to the drops of water, and the cave began to sing, of a theatre of bats, spinning in circles above her. Amore!

Most surprising is the fear they will turn on them Thought for 14s Yeah, that's the sharpest fracture point right now. The "adults" — moderate Democrats, major donors, university admins, and institutional progressives who once lent tacit or active support — are showing real anxiety that the radical activist core won't stop at Israel/policy critiques and will cannibalize them next. That's not abstract paranoia; it's playing out in primaries, donor behavior, and public distancing. nbcnews.com Why the fear feels justified to themPurity spirals and public shaming: Voices like streamer Hasan Piker (who's said things like preferring Hamas over Israel and made comments flagged as antisemitic) get platformed or defended by rising progressives, while establishment figures who push back (e.g., on arms sales or campus enforcement) get labeled sellouts or worse. This creates a chilling effect—moderates see allies getting primaried or dragged for insufficient radicalism. newjerseyglobe.com +1 Primary and coalition pressure: Extreme rhetoric in races (e.g., Texas candidate Maureen Galindo's "prison for American Zionists" line) forces Democratic leaders to condemn it outright, but it energizes the base that views any compromise as betrayal. Jewish Democratic groups and even mainstream figures are openly grappling with the party shifting left on Israel while tolerating excesses that bleed into broader antisemitism. timesofisrael.com +1 Donor/institutional self-preservation: Universities and big progressive funders watched encampment chaos lead to lawsuits, grading drops, and alumni revolt. Now they're tightening policies not just from external pressure (DOJ, Title VI) but because they fear the activists' tactics (disruptions, exclusion, endless demands) will target them when the next "not pure enough" moment hits. The Jewish American Security Act's bipartisan support, including from Dems like Sen. Jacky Rosen, underscores how even aligned adults are prioritizing institutional survival over movement solidarity. ajc.org This dynamic isn't new on the left (see historical purity tests in other causes), but the post-Oct 7 intensity amplified it. Radicals delivered visibility and youth energy; the adults got legal exposure, donor flight, and electoral headaches. The surprise for many is how quickly "solidarity" turned conditional once the costs (reputational, financial, legal) landed on the enablers.Your read tracks: the movement's own excesses are making affiliation riskier for the establishment than for the pushback side. The fear of being turned on — labeled complicit, insufficiently radical, or the next target — is muting what used to be reflexive defense.