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September 25, 2007

City Building & Safety inspectors briefly interrupt Kol Nidrei services at Hancock Park shul


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For an 10/4/2007 update to this story, click here.
Rabbi Daniel Korobkin was conducting Kol Nidrei services for some 200 Orthodox worshippers at Yeshivas Yavneh last Friday, when shortly after 8 p.m. two inspectors from the Los Angeles City Department of Building and Safety walked into the lobby.One inspector told a startled congregant that the service had run past the 8 p.m. closing time and that therefore the premises had to be vacated immediately.

After the congregant told the inspectors that they would have to remove the worshippers by force, one by one, the city officials left after 15 minutes and the service continued at the 5353 W. 3rd St. facility.

As word of the strange incident spread through the closely knit Orthodox community in Hancock Park, tempers and outrage rose.

The yeshivaworld.com Web site declared that the incident was “reminiscent of the cowardly sneak attack on Israel during the Yom Kippur War,” and quoted one woman worshipper, a wheelchair-bound Holocaust survivor, “I was frightened. I started crying. I don’t want to go to jail. I want to pray.”Yeshivas Yavneh
By Sunday evening, top aides to Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa and City Councilman Tom LaBonge, joined by Councilman Jack Weiss, met with Orthodox community rabbis and officials of the offending department in City Hall for some hasty damage control.

On Monday evening, the mayor and two councilmen released a statement condemning the “outrageous intrusion” on erev Yom Kippur, “which caused great pain and anguish.”

The three political leaders promised a full investigation and initiated a cultural sensitivity training program for Department of Building and Safety employees.

“We are committed to making sure that an incident like this never repeats itself,” the statement concluded.

The roots of the potentially explosive incident lie in a bitter eight-year-old feud in the Hancock Park neighborhood, an upscale enclave of stately homes.

Once populated by WASPs, Hancock Park later became home to many Jewish secular, Reform and Conservative Jews. About a decade ago, a considerable number of strictly Orthodox families started to move in and now make up about 20 percent of the homeowners.

In 1999, the Orthodox community purchased a Tudor estate in a residential area and established the Yavneh Hebrew Academy for some 400 students, from preschool through eighth grade.

As part of the religious curriculum, Yavneh provided for prayer services during the week, and for Shabbat and holiday services for students and their families on the premises through Kehillah Yeshivas Yavneh.

Many longtime residents, including Jewish families, resented the intrusion and feared that the prayer services would expand into a full-fledged congregation. After considerable acrimony, Yavneh and the Hancock Park Homeowners Association agreed on a municipal conditional use permit.

One stipulation in the permit limited Friday activities, including religious services, to between the hours of 7:30 a.m. and 8 p.m.

However, some of the school’s neighbors were not mollified, and according to city officials, one neighbor, a persistent opponent whom officials would not identify, called the municipal complaint line a week before Yom Kippur.

The caller notified the city that on the eve of Yom Kippur the stipulated 8 p.m. closing time for services would likely be violated.

The complaint was handled at the lower levels of the building and safety department as a routine matter, according to spokesman David Keim, with the result that the two inspectors showed up during the Kol Nidrei service.

Was the incident an unfortunate bureaucratic foul-up or a malicious anti-Semitic act?

Korobkin labeled the incident “a religious sting operation” but declined to speculate on the motives.

Orthodox Rabbi Chaim Kolodny, who is not connected with Yavneh, had no doubts.

“Can you imagine something like this happening at a church on Christmas Eve or a mosque at Ramadan?” he asked. “This incident goes way beyond a zoning dispute, this is anti-Semitism, this is hitting below the belt.”

Weiss is also a skeptic.

“I am not saying this is necessarily anti-Semitism, but a city department made the intentional decision that the holiest day in the Jewish calendar would be the best time to catch worshippers in a minute violation,” he said.

Jolene Snet, a Jewish neighbor of the school and long active in the Hancock Park Homeowners Association, was not aware of the Friday incident and labeled it unfortunate.

However, she said, “I believe as a citizen that Yavneh should comply fully with the terms of the conditional use permit.”

For previous coverage on the Yavneh/Hancock Park zoning issues, click here.

Amy Klein explored the differences between the Orthodox neighborhoods of Hancock Park (“black hat”) and Pico-Robertson (“Modern Orthodox”) here.

City Building & Safety inspectors briefly interrupt Kol Nidrei services at Hancock Park shul Read More »

Photo essay: Local leaders praise AB 221 and Iranian Americans protest Ahmadinejad’s visit

With the visit of Iran’s President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to New York on Monday, local and state leaders as well as Iranian Americans living in Los Angeles voiced their opposition to his presence in the U.S. and the policies of Iran’s government. Earlier in the day California Assemblymembers Joel Anderson, Lloyd Levine, Mike Feuer as well as Jimmy Delshad, the Iranian Jewish Mayor of Beverly Hills held a press conference at Beverly Hills to praise California Governor Arnold for agreeing to sign California’s Iran Divestment Bill. The bill also known as AB 221 would require state pension funds to divest an estimated $24 billion in investments from nearly 300 companies doing business with Iran. Both the California State Assembly and Senate unanimously approved the bill which was authored by Anderson. “I am thrilled the Governor will sign this legislation to squeeze Iran,” said Anderson, who hails from San Diego county. “Money is the mother’s milk of terrorism. AB 221 will stop California’s investments from being used to fund Iran’s terror machine”. Anderson also said passage of the bill was only possible because of bi-partisan efforts in the California Legislature on the issue of divestment.

Also on hand at the Beverly Hills press conference were Persian language media outlets including the Voice of America television and KRSI “Radio Sedaye Iran” that broadcasts daily news reports into Iran from the U.S. Los Angeles area Jewish leaders were also in attendance including Sam Kermanian, Secretary General of the Iranian American Jewish Federation and Rabbi Abraham Cooper from the Simon Wiesenthal Center.

Nearly two dozen local Iranian Americans of various faiths protested in Westwood Boulevard against Ahmadinejad’s invitation to speak at Columbia University in New York. Cars passing by honked their horns in support for the protesters who held signs and displayed a female mannequin dressed in Islamic garb and hanging by a noose. “We are voicing our anger at Columbia University for allowing this insane man a forum to spout his hate—he’s does not represent the people of Iran who are suffering under this brutal regime!” said one Iranian American women protesting, who asked that her name be withheld because she travels back and forth to Iran to visit family.

(left to right; Beverly Hills Mayor Jimmy Delshad, Assemblymember Lloyd Levine, and Assemblymember Joel Anderson, photo by Karmel Melamed)

(Iranian American demonstrating for freedom at Beverly Hills City Hall press conference photo by Karmel Melamed)

(left to right; Mike Feuer, Rabbi Abraham Cooper, Lloyd Levine, and Joel Anderson, photo by Karmel Melamed)

(left to right; Sam Kermanian chatting with Ali-Reza Morvati, owner of KRSI Persian language radio in Beverly Hills, photo by Karmel Melamed)

(left to right; Afshin Gorgin reporter for Voice of America in Persian language interviewing Jimmy Delshad, photo by Karmel Melamed)

(Iranian Americans protesting against Ahmadinejad in Westwood)

(female mannequin dressed in Islamic garb and hanging by a noose to represent the human rights violations and brutality of the Iran’s regime against women)

Photo essay: Local leaders praise AB 221 and Iranian Americans protest Ahmadinejad’s visit Read More »

Survey says…

…that if you want to succeed in the world of Jewish dating, stop yakking on your cell phone, wait a couple of days to ask a girl out, and ladies: don’t act interested if you’re not. Guys don’t appreciate it.

JCafeLA’s “Jewish Family Feud” game, where everyone had to ask four members of the opposite sex to answer survey questions about dating, was a fun little ice breaker that gave people a good excuse to approach whoever they’d been eyeing all night. Besides stimulating connections, the game also generated some interesting results. Here they are:

WOMEN’S QUESTION 1

What’s the Most Annoying Thing a Man Can Do On a First Date?

A.  Show up late                               24%

B. Continuously talk on his cell phone   38%

C. Continuously bring up his ex             27%

D. Not offer to pay for date                   11%

MEN’S QUESTION 1

What’s the Most Annoying Thing a Woman Can Do On a First Date?

A.  Show up late                                 8%

B. Continuously talk on her cell phone     56%

C. Continuously bring up her ex             23%

D. Order a lot of food & eat nothing         15%

WOMEN’S QUESTION 2

How long should a guy wait to ask you out after getting your number?

A.  1 Day                     40%

B.  2 Days                       42% 

C. 3 days-1 week             12%

D. No set time                   6%

MEN’S QUESTION 2

How long do you normally wait to ask a girl out after getting your number?

A.  1 Day                     32%

B.  2 Days                       36%

C. 3 days-1 week             14%

D. No set time                   18%

WOMEN’S QUESTION 3

Have you ever given a guy “mixed signals” that you’re not interested, even when you really are?

A.  Yes, intentionally                     17%

B.  Never                                 32%

C. Perhaps, unintentionally               48%

D. Won’t Admit women actually do this 3%

MEN’S QUESTION 3

What do you do when you receive “mixed signals” from a woman?

A.  Laugh                                     10%

B.  Consider it cute & stay interested         27%

C. Say “next” & move on                 40%

D. Respond with my own mixed signals       23%

(Thanks to Dan and Alycia Witzling and Jewish Big Brothers/Big Sisters for counting 4800 answers)

MORE JCafeLA…

Jay Firestone, Jewish Journal Editorial Assistant and videographer, documented the evening.


                 

Survey says… Read More »

My interview with Sy Hersh goes global

So my interview with Seymour Hersh brought 3,000 visitors to JewishJournal.com yesterday. LAObserved, Romenesko, Huffington Post and War and Piece all linked to it. My Web editor just called to say he heard it quoted on Nick Madigan’s “Minding the Media” program on KCRW this afternoon. Here’s a link to the transcript:

What will the journalism of the future look like? Will it continue to obsess over absurd, half-in-the-bag teenybopper celebrities, and insist on making up silly headlines to describe criminal sports figures and tin-pot dictators?

With fewer and fewer jobs available in traditional journalism, will aspiring reporters and editors dedicate their energy to the fluid, often irresponsible blogosphere, where opinion is king?

(skip)

In an interview with the Jewish Journal, another veteran journalist, Seymour M. Hersh, who is 70 and writes for the New Yorker, said he has embraced the new order.

  “There is an enormous change taking place in this country in journalism, and it is online,” said Hersh, who received a Pulitzer Prize in 1970 for uncovering the My Lai massacre.

  “I hate to tell this to The New York Times or The Washington Post,” he said. “We are going to have online newspapers, and they are going to be spectacular. And they are really going to cut into daily journalism.”

“We have a vibrant, new way of communicating in America,” Hersh said. “We haven’t come to terms with it. I don’t think much of a lot of the stuff that is out there. But there are a lot of people doing very, very good stuff.”

 

When I was learning the difference between a nut graph and a set-up and why “lede” is spelled so oddly, Hersh was a journalistic hero of mine. (I think I always related because of the glasses he wore.) What I found most interesting from our conversation was this bit of honesty:

JJ: You turned 70 this year. Why keep working so hard?

SH: I don’t work that hard. I write four or five pieces a year. Secondly, what do you want me to do? Play professional golf? I can’t do that. You do what you can do. And I’m in a funny spot because I have an ability to communicate with people I have known for a number of years. They trust me, and I trust them, so I keep on doing these little marginal stories.

JJ: That’s all they are? Marginal?

SH: With these stories, if they slow down or make people take a deep breath before they bomb Iran, that is a plus. But they are not going to stop anybody. This is a government that is unreachable by us, and that is very depressing. In terms of adding to the public debate, the stories are important. But not in terms of changing policy. I have no delusions about that.

My interview with Sy Hersh goes global Read More »

God’s not dead, but is religion?

My copy of UCLA Magazine, with my story about the intersection of God and grades on the cover, finally arrived in the mail today. Flipping through my story—the first thing all journalists do is turn to their story—I noticed a nugget from a sidebar that was worth discussion.

“The prediction made by some intellectuals at the end of the Second World War that by the year 2000 religion will have withered and only be a matter of personal interest to some folks—like some folks are Dodger fans and others are Orthodox Jews—that hypothesis has been thoroughly falsified,” claims Scott Bartchy, UCLA history professor and director of the College of Letters & Science’s interdepartmental Center for the Study of Religion. “The role of religion is enormous in current events.”

Forty-plus years ago, Time magazine asked whether God is dead? As Sun-Times religion columnist Cathleen Falsani noted three years ago in an award-winning story that pre-dated the divine presidential election of 2004, the answer has been a resounding no.

Standing around the watercooler or in line at Starbucks these days, conversation is just as likely to turn to early Christianity and whether the apostles spoke “street Aramaic” or a more formal version of the near-dead language, as it is to whether Tony and Carmella Soprano can repair their failing marriage.

A few channels away from HBO—on CNN, FoxNews or even Comedy Central’s “The Daily Show”—and in the newspaper each morning, competing factions wrestle with some of life’s most basic questions, including what a family is, what marriage is, what it means to be “under God,”  and whether life may be manufactured artificially.  In one way or another, God’s name is invoked in the battle to answer each of those questions.

God is in high-demand—in politics, music, court, film, books, even to a certain extent in fashion with “What Would Jesus Wear?” accessories, and the increasingly popular “Jesus is My Homeboy” T-shirts. About 40 percent of Americans today say they have attended services at a house of worship in the last week.

Well, I’ll forgive her for neglecting to mention the popularity and influence of The God Blog (three years before it went live) but, certainly, it seems that Nietzsche was wrong. Do you agree?

God’s not dead, but is religion? Read More »

An ‘oasis of peace’ in Israel

NEVE SHALOM, ISRAEL—The music blared in Arabic as a knot of women twirled slowly around the bride-to-be. Well-dressed onlookers, some in traditional Muslim head scarves, clapped and swayed.

On this evening of celebration, the fireworks sizzled, sweets beckoned and jubilant guests congratulated the Arab bride’s parents with a double kiss and hearty “Mazel tov!”

Mazel tov?

“It’s very normal,” said Nava Sonnenschein, one of the Jews clapping at the edge of the dance circle. “For here.”

The usual rules of the Middle East often don’t apply in Neve Shalom, founded in the 1970s as a utopian village on a hilltop in Israel’s midsection. For nearly three decades, its inhabitants have sought to defy the polarizing tugs of politics and nationalism.

Though most Jews and Arabs in Israel are kept apart by segregated communities and long years of mutual mistrust, Neve Shalom and its 250 residents—half Jews, half Arab citizens of Israel—represent a living experiment in integration.

This was the lede of the Column One in today’s LA Times.

Neve Shalom’s residents, mostly left-leaning professionals and academics, have been tested by two Palestinian uprisings, war in Lebanon and a steep deterioration in relations between Jews and Arabs in Israel. At times, the two groups here triumphed over those divisive pressures. At others, they fell prey.

To much of the rest of Israel, Neve Shalom is a harmless if worthy novelty. But Jewish extremists once declared the Jews here traitors and sprinkled nails on the road to pop tires. The village’s Arab residents, who refer to themselves as Palestinian citizens of Israel, often are asked by fellow Arabs if they really believe that Jews can accept them as equals.

Neve Shalom, though, is not a novelty. There are many villages and towns in the north near Lebanon, like Acre (Akko), where Arab Israelis and Jewish Israelis live side by side.

An ‘oasis of peace’ in Israel Read More »

“Older, Wiser Ex-Gay Movement’

Discussion of the “ex-gay” movement made some appearances on The God Blog this summer. Here’s a longer piece about the maturation of the movement from Christianity Today.

Since its beginnings in the 1970s, the ex-gay movement has engaged gay advocates in a battle of testimonies. Transformed ex-gay leaders are the best argument for their movement. Likewise, those who’ve left the ex-gay movement in despair and disgust are the best counterargument. The debate continued this June, when Exodus International held its 32nd annual conference in Irvine, California, featuring dozens of speakers and seminar leaders who have quit homosexuality. Down the road outside the Los Angeles Gay and Lesbian Center, a news conference featured three former Exodus leaders saying “ex-gay” is a delusion.

(skip)

An older, wiser ex-gay movement is certainly clearer about what it has to offer. Early hopes for instant healing have given way to belief that transformation occurs through a lifetime of discipleship.

Tanya Erzen, a professor at Ohio State University, spent 18 months studying New Hope Ministry, a live-in program led by the Worthens in San Rafael, California. Though unsympathetic to ex-gay goals, Erzen came to empathize with the people she met. In Straight to Jesus: Sexual and Christian Conversions in the Ex-Gay Movement, she describes their view of change.

“Ex-gays undergo a conversion process that has no endpoint, and they acknowledge that change encompasses desires, behavior, and identities that do not always align neatly or remain fixed,” she writes. “Ex-gay men and women are born-again religiously, and as part of that process, they consider themselves reconstituted sexually. … In the words of Curtis [one of the program’s participants], ‘Heterosexuality isn’t the goal; giving our hearts and being obedient to God is the goal.’ … Desires and attractions might linger for years, but they would emerge with new religious identities and the promise that faith and their relationships with one another and God would eventually transform them.”

Erzen’s point, I believe, is a valid one. It’s the reason scientists don’t believe in “ex-gay” therapy. If homosexuality is a genetic predisposition—and the Rev. Al Mohler is willing to admit that possibility—then how could Christian counseling affect it? Instead, working with the premise that God doesn’t approve of homosexuality (despite the perceived contradiction that he would have given people a desire he prohibits), the mission of these therapists should be to train their patients hearts more fervently on what they believe to be God’s desire for man.

I’m sure there are plenty of people who disagree with this.

“Older, Wiser Ex-Gay Movement’ Read More »

Anti-Semitic Patriot Dames

Sometimes, the best blog posts I could write are those I don’t because I keep waiting for the perfect moment when all my thoughts and the clutter on my desk will be aligned. Because that never happens, some of these stories fall by the wayside, which is what happened with the Patriot Dames.

These two Ohio sisters have a Web site where they like to propagate bigotry, and last month one of the sisters, Susan Purtee, got in trouble with her employer, the Columbus Police Department. It turned out city officials didn’t think it was appropriate for their employees to be attacking blacks and blaming Jews for the world’s problems. (Of course, the ADL agreed.)

There video ranting against Jews has been taken down from YouTube, which is too bad because it’s really a hoot. You can still see it at their Web site: Just click on the “download” button and then click on “Jews.” Here’s a sampling of what they say:

“We are going to investigate to see if the Jews are the problem in the United States, as they were in other countries. So if your feelings are going to get hurt, it’s best not to watch.”

The sisters than praise Sen. Joseph McCarthy as the greatest American from the 20th Century. They blame immoral Jews for the “filth” in the media that “pollutes” Americans.

“They started to tell us, the Gentiles, how to live. Because if we lived that way they would make a lot of money. … It’s all about money.”

Not all Jews. Just those who follow Torah.

“We’re not talking about the Jews that live like normal regular people. But as long as you are a Jew, you have that thinking that everybody else is beneath you. … We are nothing. We are dirt. We are people they can suck off of, the Gentiles. … Mel Gibson was right. The fact this man can say what was on his mind, whether he was drunk or was straight. … The Jews cause problems.”

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