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The seeds of the protest began last month when Teaneck resident Rich Siegel — a Jewish man and outspoken critic of the Israeli government — criticized the event at a Township Council meeting ...
A complaint was filed about the meetings in question, where the board removed the high school's principal. ... served on the township council from 2016 to 2022, but was defeated for a new term by ...
Two arrests were made at a Teaneck protest Sunday after police said demonstrators threw objects and sprayed red paint at pedestrians and vehicles approaching a synagogue that was hosting a company ...
[20] [21] Residents of Teaneck and Englewood, each in southeastern Bergen County and home to large communities of Orthodox Jews, had gone to Mahwah and Upper Saddle River to make known their views at council meetings. Council members from Teaneck and Englewood had spoken there in support of the eruv's retention, only to meet a hostile reception.
Teaneck (/ ˈ t iː n ɛ k /) is a township in Bergen County, in the U.S. state of New Jersey.It is a bedroom community in the New York metropolitan area. [21] As of the 2020 United States census, the township's population was 41,246, [11] [12] an increase of 1,470 (+3.7%) from the 2010 census count of 39,776, [22] [23] which in turn reflected an increase of 516 (+1.3%) from the 39,260 counted ...
This was her first term. She was the first female Mayor of Teaneck, New Jersey and the first woman elected to the township council. Eleanor Manning Kieliszek (1925 – May 16, 2017) was also an elected member of the Teaneck Township Council for 30 years from 1970 until 2000. [21] [25] Frank White Burr: 1970: 1974
The Rabbinical Council of Bergen County said in a statement: "We demand that the Superintendent and Board of Education prevent this grotesque and overt antisemitism in public school."
Katz was born on July 16, 1974, in Teaneck, New Jersey. He attended Torah Academy of Bergen County and graduated from Touro College. Katz was elected to the Teaneck Township Council in 1997. [4] He was elected Mayor of Teaneck in 2006, making him the youngest person to serve in that office as well as the first Orthodox Jew.