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Ruth Pearl s Life Story in Her Own Words

Judea Pearl is a professor of computer science at UCLA and president of the Daniel Pearl Foundation, named after his son. He is co-editor of “I am Jewish: Personal Reflections Inspired by the Last Words of Daniel Pearl” (Jewish Lights, 2004), winner of the National Jewish Book Award. In 2003, when my wife Ruth and I were editing the book “I Am Jewish: Personal Reflections Inspired by the Last Words of Daniel Pearl,” we were extremely careful to include only essays that reflected direct and honest answers to the question asked: “What does being Jewish mean to you?” Ruth’s own essay in the book is a model of honesty and directness. It encapsulates in fact her entire life story, and the very essence of what being Jewish meant to her and to so many of us.

Untreated trauma in arrested juveniles linger 15 years past incarceration, Northwestern study finds

Untreated trauma in arrested juveniles linger 15 years past incarceration, Northwestern study finds Darcel Rockett, Chicago Tribune © E. Jason Wambsgans/Chicago Tribune Michael Penny, from left, Willie Hobson and Renaldo Hudson, three formerly incarcerated men, are pictured April 21, 2021. Last year their sentences were commuted, and they shared their stories of reentry since leaving prison. Michael Penny had his first run-in with police at age 11 after he broke into a car near the old Chicago Stadium. He said police “beat him up, tossed him around and left him in the dirt.” Willie Hobson was 10 or 11 when, he said, police handcuffed him and beat him in a patrol car on the way to the police station after he was hanging out with the “wrong crowd” on the West Side.

Untreated traumas in arrested juveniles linger 15 years past incarceration, Northwestern study finds

Michael Penny, 60, had his first run-in with police at age 11 after he broke into a car near the old Chicago Stadium. He said police “beat him up, tossed him around and left him in the dirt.” Willie Hobson, now 69, was 10 or 11 when, he said, police handcuffed him and beat him in a patrol car on the way to the police station after he was hanging out with the “wrong crowd” on the West Side. .

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