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June 17, 2009

Spies, Celebs, Classics and More — Good Reads are Coming Up

Among the most daunting questions I’m often confronted with is: “What should I read next?”

Recently, I traveled to the depths of the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center in New York for BookExpo 2009, the annual American Bookseller’s gathering, where I crisscrossed the convention floor, Indiana Jones-like, to gather publishers’ catalogues and advance-reader copies of so many books that when I headed back to Los Angeles, American Airlines threatened to make me check my so-called “carry-on luggage.”

Books

“These are books!” I told them — although they responded as they would to a drug dealer trying to make a home use defense. One day, I explained, these may all reside on an e-book reader, but until then, my motto is: Shlep, I must. They let me on.

So, bookwise, what’s hot?

As in the movies, brand names rule, and the big books of summer and fall include Dan Brown’s “The Lost Symbol” (Doubleday); “The Swan Thieves” (Little Brown) by Elizabeth Kustova of “The Historian” fame; Pat Conroy’s “South of Broad” (Doubleday) as well as “Sully,” (William Morrow) the story Capt. Chesley B. Sullenberger III, America’s hero pilot.

But what, you might ask, am I most excited about? For summer pleasure I am eager to read Alan Furst’s “The Spies of Warsaw” (Random House), just out in paperback, and Elmore Leonard’s “Road Dogs” (HarperCollins), just out in hardback.

The fall will bring new novels from Nick Hornby: “Juliet, Naked” (Riverhead), September; Jonathan Lethem: “Chronic City” (Doubleday), October; and Philip Roth: “The Humbling” (Houghton Mifflin), November — by the way, is there anything more humbling than Roth’s talent and output?

There’s good word on Lauren Grodstein’s novel, “A Friend of the Family” (Algonquin), about a father’s fall from grace, as well as a C.S. Lewis-style fantasy, “The Magicians” (Viking), August, by Lev Grossman, TIME’s book critic.

Betsy Carter (whom my wife once worked with) has a new novel, “The Puzzle King” (Algonquin), out in August that sounds right up my alley — a story of two German Jews who escape to New York and fall in love, only to become obsessed with rescuing the families they left behind.

But if you are looking for a sure thing, here’s a prediction: Mitch Albom will move us all to tears with “Have a Little Faith: The True Story of a Last Request” (Hyperion), September.

One of my favorite publishers, New York Review Books (NYRB), is celebrating its 10th anniversary by continuing to publish books that deserve to be called “classics.” Among them, “The Old Man and Me” by “Dud Avocado” author Elaine Dundy — the tale of American ingénue Honey Flood’s adventures in London’s swinging ’60s; Tibor Dery’s “Niki: The Story of a Dog;” and Alastair Reid’s “Ounce Dice Trice,” illustrated by Ben Shahn.

In November, NYRB will issue Jakov Lind’s novella and short stories, “Soul of Wood,” and a new edition of the great Soviet author Vasily Grossman’s last novel, “Everything Flows.”

Europa Editions, which I very much admire for its works in translation, has Lia Levi’s “The Jewish Husband” set in 1938 fascist Italy, which won the Moravia Prize for fiction.

Also of note is Tin House’s “Rasskazy,” a collection of “new fiction from a new Russia.”

This fall, The Other Press is publishing Miklos Vamos’ novel, “The Book of Fathers,” (fodder for yet another Hungarian-flavored Tommywood column), and Aly Gotz’s nonfiction account, “Fromms,” which tells the story of how German Jewish entrepreneur Julius Fromm’s condom empire fell to the Nazis.

Speaking of kinky, in October, Kinky Friedman will share his tales of celebrities and their pets in a still unnamed book (Simon & Schuster) — his book tour is going to four cities — all of them in Texas.

There are many forthcoming books of note by or about celebrities, including late-night talk-show host Craig Ferguson’s “American on Purpose” (HarperCollins); Shel Silverstein, “Silverstein and Me,” by Mary Gold (Ren Hen Press); and, in October, a bio of one of our favorite converts to Judaism, Elizabeth Taylor, by William J. Mann (Houghton Mifflin). At the same time, Susie Essman, of “Curb Your Enthusiasm” fame, has a self-help book, “What Would Susie Say” (Simon & Schuster) — I have a feeling that’s some tough love she’s offering.

America’s favorite Holocaust survivor, Haganah fighter and sexologist offers “Dr. Ruth’s Top 10 Secrets to Great Sex” (Wiley), which I haven’t read, but here’s my own advice for great sex: Put down the book!

Pop Culture quiz: Who hosts two shows, one of which is my daughter’s favorite and the other my wife’s? That would have to be Tom Bergeron, who hosts both “America’s Funniest Home Videos” and “Dancing With the Stars” and whose book is called, not surprisingly, “I’m Hosting as Fast I Can — Zen and the Art of Staying Sane in Hollywood” (HarperOne).

Another cute volume is Jerry Levitan’s “I Met the Walrus” (Collins Design) about how, as a teenager, he interviewed John Lennon and the impact that had on his life, with illustrations and a DVD of his interview (only later did I discover we share a literary agent).

Alyson Books has “My Red Blood,” Alix Dobkin’s memoir of growing up communist, of the Greenwich Village folk scene and of recording the first openly lesbian album, “Lavender Jane Loves Women.”

Ang Lee’s August film, “Taking Woodstock,” starring Demetri Martin and Emile Hirsch, is based on Elliot Tiber’s charming and funny memoir (Square One Publishers) being released in paperback to celebrate the 40th anniversary of the three-day festival that rocked the world.

If you are hungering for a little nosh, David Sax’s “Save the Deli” (McClellan & Stewart) shares his journey into the heart of … well, heartburn. By contrast, if you want to lose your carnivorous appetite, in November, Jonathan Safran Foer will make the case against “Eating Animals” for Little Brown, no doubt in his own illuminating, loud and incredibly close way.

As for serious nonfiction, Daniel Goldhagen returns this fall with “Worse Than War” (Public Affairs), his first book since “Hitler’s Willing Executioners,” this one an investigation into political mass murder the world over in modern times. Goldhagen wrote the book in conjunction with a WNET-TV documentary, in which he visits killing fields and speaks with some of the murderers to develop his own theories of what he calls “eliminationism” and postulates what the international community can do to intervene.

If it’s politics you are interested in, California Congressman Henry Waxman (D-Los Angeles) issues “The Waxman Report: How Congress Really Works” (Twelve) in July, while Frank Luntz of “The Contract With America” fame lets us know “What Americans Really Want,” (Hyperion), at the end of September.

What do you want in business books: good news or bad? Ace Greenberg tells his version of the fall of Bear Sterns, while Dan Senor and Saul Singer offer “Start Up Nation: The Story of Israel’s Economic Miracle” (Twelve).

In the ever-growing world of graphic novels, prize-winning children’s author David Small’s memoir, “Stitches” (Norton), has been getting a lot of good word of mouth. Judge Sonia Sotomayor will be happy to know Nancy Drew is also available in graphic novel form — issue No. 17 features “Night of the Living Chatchke” (their spelling, not mine).

I can’t wait to see “The Book of Genesis” (Norton) as illustrated by R. Crumb, who promises “Nothing left out!” — but if that concept seems not safe for work or for home, you can always hide Crumb behind a copy of The Jewish Publication Society’s “JPS Illustrated Children’s Bible” — the word of God as retold by Ellen Frankel and illustrated by Avi Katz.

Janet Peer, author of “Yiddish for Dogs,” now offers up “Yiddish for Babies” (Simon & Schuster), to which I can only say vey iz mir.  One of our favorite children’s dogs, Mo, who last year starred in the scent- enhanced “Mo’s Nose” returns with “Mo Smells the Holidays,” by Margaret Hyde and Amanda Giacomini, complete with scent-filled stickers.

Finally, Rebecca Rubin, the newest American Girl Doll and a child of Jewish immigrants, is accompanied by “Meet Rebecca,” which will surely be on many Jewish New Year’s lists (if you can hold out that long).

What to read next? You decide. New or old, serious or slight, fiction or non, just follow the dictum of the late Jack Lord and “book ‘em.”

Tom Teicholz is a film producer in Los Angeles. Everywhere else, he’s an author and journalist who has written for The New York Times Sunday Magazine, Interview and The Forward. His column appears every other week and his Tommywood (the blog) appears daily, pretty much.

Spies, Celebs, Classics and More — Good Reads are Coming Up Read More »

“Enough With the Howard!”

Warning: No matter what your opinion of Howard Stern, this blog will offend you.

If you’re not a Howard Stern fan, you’ll wonder why anybody is wasting time writing about someone the media often portrays simply as a foul-mouthed shock jock.

Or, as my wife said last night, “You think that guy is way more important than he is. Enough with the Howard.”

I mean, what kind of show celebrates Father’s Day by giving away a free double “date” with what I’ll euphemistically call a working mom and her equally working daughter. (I got the impression, as I often do, that even some cast members, like Fred Norris, like Howard, didn’t approve. It was wrong. It was bizarre. It was compelling.).

And if you are a Stern fan, you’ll wonder why this blog veers so often toward the serious. Howard’s about giggles and strippers and midgets, right?  If the show were meant to be taken seriously, it wouldn’t offer up mom and daughter hooker teams to married dads.  Who dares to say something serious about that?

Well, I do. And you’re welcome to chime in.

The truth about Howard is that he’s right: he is still, despite his enormous financial success and fame, underrated and neglected as major cultural force.  He is heir of a tradition of outsider satiric comedy that stretches back beyond the shtetl. He is on a pantheon of culture-changers that includes Lenny Bruce, Mort Sahl, Woody Allen and Larry David. As I wrote back in 2004, when the Federal Communications Copmmission was threatening to sue the Stern Show into oblivion:

It isn’t surprising that Stern is caught up in the kind of cultural and political battle in which Jewish comedians and commentators like Mort Sahl and Lenny Bruce once found themselves.

He is heir to the Jewish tradition of the badchen, or shtetl entertainer. “They were scandalous, filled with gossip,” comedian and frequent Stern guest Richard Belzer has said. “Their essence was to expose and make fun of things in their society. The badchen’s society was the shtetl. We expand it to include the whole society.”

“Stern’s is an unleashed id unrepressed by socially approved feelings,” writes Lawrence Epstein in his seminal study of Jewish comedy, “The Haunted Smile.” “He is an attack on society’s right to censor the honest feels of the individual. He is a safety valve, a release.” In as free and democratic medium that exists, 18 million Americans vote for Stern each morning.

The badchen is what Thomas Cahill might call a “Gift of the Jews,” an outsider who exposes society’s foibles, pokes fun at its hypocrisies, makes people laugh and makes people think…

 

But I digress.  I digress because I get defensive talking about Stern—in polite society people who enjoy his show always have to explain themselves.  After many, many years of starting my morning with Stern, I’m up to the task.  Let the blogs begin.

 

 

“Enough With the Howard!” Read More »

At least 10 teens contract swine flu during ‘Birthright Israel’ trip

Around a dozen participants on a ‘Birthright Israel’ trip contracted swine flu during their tour of Israel and were put under quarantine, Israeli media reported on Tuesday.

The teens reportedly infected 18 Israel Defense Forces troops who participated in the trip with them.  Read the full story at HAARETZ.com.

At least 10 teens contract swine flu during ‘Birthright Israel’ trip Read More »

Three Speeches

OK, let’s tally up the historic Middle East speeches this month. First, there was President Barack Obama’s June 4 address at Cairo University, where he charted a new course for U.S. policy in the Middle East.

Then there was Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s game-changing June 14 address at Bar-Ilan University’s Begin-Sadat Center, where he embraced — well, begrudgingly accepted — the idea of a Palestinian state.

Then there was the remarkable address by the Arab leader of…. Oh, right, there wasn’t one.

Why is it the critics of Netanyahu’s speech never stopped to ask the simple question: Where was the Arab counterpart? If June is now Middle East Landmark Speech Month, why are only the United States and Israel celebrating?

The reason is twofold: When America whistles, Israel is compelled to come. The American president’s call for a Palestinian state side-by-side with Israel and for a freeze to settlement expansion demanded a response from a prime minister who had, over the years, opposed those things.

There are some Israelis who think that Israel can go its own way if its primary friend and supporter disagrees with it. Sure, and the Lakers could have clinched the championship against Orlando without Kobe and Fisher.

“The reason for giving the speech was what the prime minister called the ‘international situation’ — a delicate way of referring to U.S. diplomatic pressure,” blogged Gershom Gorenberg, author of “The Accidental Empire.”

But it goes beyond just U.S. pressure. The democratically elected leader of Israel had to answer to his own people, he had to explain where he stood in relation to their most important ally.

So Netanyahu strove mightily to soften his hard line. His advisers pushed him to include the two words that they knew would be magic to Obama’s — and the world’s — ears, “Palestinian state,” even if doing so would infuriate his hard-line supporters, even if the Arabs would call him disingenuous, even if he himself had major reservations. The European Union said it was a step in the right direction.

“There were a lot of conditions,” Obama said of the speech this week, “But what we’re seeing is at least the possibility that we can restart serious talks.”

The Arab leaders didn’t respond with speeches, but with criticism and nitpicking.

No major policy speech from Cairo — other than Obama’s. And not one from any other Muslim capital.

If any single fact should reveal what Israel is up against, it’s the fact of that silence — of leaders who don’t need to answer to their people, of leaders who are afraid to confront their extremists, of people who are afraid to demand answers of their leaders.

That explains why the world heard from the American president and the Israeli prime minister, but not from any other Arab or Muslim leader.

So allow me.

Netanyahu’s speech was the perfect opportunity for a major address from Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas.

Petrified of Hamas, weakened among his own people, Abbas dared not speak out, other than to let his spokesmen summarily dismiss the speech as “meaningless and worthless.”

But what if he had seized the opportunity presented by Netanyahu’s speech? What if Abbas felt compelled to answer to his people, to offer something new as Obama and Netanyahu did?

Here’s what he could have said:

“My fellow Palestinians: Yesterday the Israeli prime minister stood before his people and the world and declared his vision for a Palestinian state living side-by-side with Israel in peace. Today I stand before you and the world and say one word: Yes.

“Yes, we look forward to living in our own state side-by-side with Israel. Yes, we look forward to negotiations that will work out our many very deep differences over the issues of borders, settlements, Jerusalem, water and security.

“Yes, we understand that our security is tied to Israel’s, our prosperity to Israel’s prosperity, our children’s peace to Israel’s children’s peace.

“Many have criticized the prime minister for his list of preconditions and conditions. I have ears. I heard those too.

“But like the American president I also heard something bigger from him, something new and different, and that is what I, too, am offering my proud, patient people: a chance to seize the new moment and leap forward. So I say: Yes.

“The Israeli prime minister said he wants a demilitarized Palestine. I say: Yes. We want to spend our money on schools, health care and business investment. We want to be Costa Rica, not Sudan. In fact, we think every state should be demilitarized.

“The prime minister said he wants us to recognize Israel as a Jewish state, to which I say: Yes. We accept Israel as a Jewish democratic state, and we expect it to live up to the promise of true democracy.
“The prime minister said he wants us to defeat our rejectionists and extremists, and I say: Yes. We urge the United States and other allies to put a large peacekeeping force in Gaza and the West Bank, as they did in Sinai, and help keep missiles and terrorism out of Palestinian and Israeli lives.

“Years ago in Khartoum, Arab leaders issued three nos to Israel. Today I have offered three yesses. Mr. Obama has offered us a future, Mr. Netanyahu has touched it, and I have embraced it.”

This, my friends, is the missing speech.

Three Speeches Read More »

Hard Truths, Soft Lies, Mr. Mayor

Hard Truths
Bravo to Caroline Glick for telling the “Hard Truth” about the real President Obama (“‘Hard Truths’ Just Political Convenience,” June 12). Her courageous exposé of President Obama’s false friendship with Israel is a shofar call to all American Jewry and friends of Israel, to open our eyes to the fact that Obama is ready to sacrifice Israel for the sake of being loved by the Arabs and Muslims.
Hershey Gold, Los Angeles

There was a time not too long ago that I enjoyed reading The Jewish Journal to learn about local Jewish stuff going on, events concerning Israel, kosher restaurants, etc. However, your newspaper seems to have taken a radical turn to the left, with articles supporting nationalized health care, L.A.’s mayor (who is responsible for our impending 9.75 percent sales tax), and of course, our president (who sees fit to tell Israel to stop building houses even as he gives the green light to Iran’s nuclear ambitions).

Therefore, even though I don’t consider myself to be especially religious, I will turn to more Orthodox-leaning newspapers to get the Jewish news I seek.
Miriam Jannol, via e-mail


Soft Lies
As a congregant of Pasadena Jewish Temple & Center, my friendship and respect for Rabbi Grater remain intact (“Obama’s Hard Truths Can Help Bridge Gap,” June 12). But I have no way to understand his position in regard to the president’s speech to the Muslims given in Cairo.

I don’t mind the “hard truths” my rabbi and the president are so bold to proclaim, but what about all the “soft lies” that the president’s speech also promulgates?

— Is the United States one of the largest Muslim countries in the world? Its position is 52.

— Is the viability of the “Jewish homeland” dependent on the Holocaust? Partially, but only so very partially.

— Is the Palestinian issue at all comparable to the Civil Rights struggle in America? I throw up my hands in despair.

Although I can easily imagine that our young president is ignorant of much of Israel’s history, but what is Rabbi Grater’s excuse? I have to assume he thinks it doesn’t matter. Unfortunately I think it does matter terribly. Time will tell.
Carolyn Kunin, via e-mail


Mr. Mayor
I want to commend The Jewish Journal on an excellent cover story on our mayor (“Judging Mr. Mayor,” June 12). The story was rather comprehensive, but I would add that Mayor Villaraigosa has been a terrific friend to Israel in so many ways. He has worked very hard to bring our city together. He has been a real profile in courage as he tackled the toughest and yet most important problems facing our society, such as education.
Howard Welinsky, Toluca Lake


Saul’s Children
I was delighted to see Rob Eshman’s column on “Saul’s Children” (June 12) because, here in Los Angeles, a growing number of local synagogues and churches are joining Alinsky’s Industrial Areas Foundation (IAF) to pursue justice more effectively.

Over a year ago, Temple Israel of Hollywood (TIOH) joined One LA/IAF, the congregation-based community organization that is a local descendent of “Saul’s Children.” Since then we, as part of an 1800-person assembly, met with local, state and federal elected officials to initiate legislation to fight foreclosures in the San Fernando Valley and to provide for job development in green industries and health care.

We encourage Jewish Journal readers to join us on July 12 from 3 to 5 p.m. at Wilshire Boulevard Temple (also an One-LA member congregation) as we seek assurances from elected officials that federal stimulus dollars will be used to affect meaningful, sustained change and to provide trained health care workers in our community.
Marjorie B. Green, Chair Dorot Tzedek/Generations of Justice at TIOH, Los Angeles

Thank you for your article celebrating Saul Alinsky’s work. I’m proud that Temple Judea, through our Judean’s for Justice, is involved in exactly the type of community organizing that Saul Alinsky taught. Working together with One LA, many Reform congregations in Los Angeles are involved in broad-based community organizing focusing on important issues ranging from health care to education, to the mortgage crisis. The Union for Reform Judaism, through its Just Congregations Initiative, is encouraging congregations nationwide to join this important work. Rob Eshman suggests that Alinsky be taught in Hebrew schools. Rob, you’ll be pleased to know that at Temple Judea our 11th- and 12th-graders have a class on social justice based on Alinsky’s work. 
Rabbi Don Goor, Temple Judea, Tarzana

[Saul] Alinsky’s son, David, just forwarded me your excellent piece. It was great to read for a number of reasons, not least of which is that we’re bringing David, as well as several organizers connected with Saul, to Whitman College this October for a three-day Symposium called “Alinsky at 100.”
Our local community foundation here in WW just dropped a very large chunk of change to training congregations (i.e., churches and us) in Alinsky’s IAF organizing skills.
Noah Leavitt, President, Congregation Beth Israel, Walla Walla, WA


United Front
Really appreciated your column calling on a united Jewish response to Iran (“Iran First,” June 5). And so did many of my friends. I contacted my rabbi, Laura Geller, and am hoping that our religious leaders will work together toward this goal. Since Iran brings back the Holocaust to our collective memories, we need to also remember that the divisiveness of the Jewish community is always cited as one of the contributing factors to our greatest tragedy.
Irina Bragin, via e-mail


Renaissance Teens
I read the article about the exceptional high school seniors with admiration and awe, but couldn’t help immediately notice that your “sampling” of 11 students included nine from private high schools, and only two from public high schools (“Renaissance Teens With Purpose,” June 5). Not to mention that 10 of the 11 seniors were going on to private colleges.

For many reasons, including the current economic situation, it would have been inspiring to have seen a more diverse sampling of where the students were educated.

If you took the time to dig a little deeper, you would have found just as many outstanding public high school Jewish seniors that may have even paved their high school path with a little less administrative TLC.
Beth Rowan Fiance, Westlake Village, Agoura High School Parent


Graduation Ads
While flipping through the recent Jewish Journal, numerous advertisements congratulated Classes of 2009 (June 5). These were Jewish schools and I was curious as to the point of a “Jewish school” when a fundamental of Jewish culture, the Hebrew calendar, wasn’t acknowledged. Thankfully, as I proceeded YULA, Brawerman Elementary and Valley Beth Shalom did acknowledge the Hebrew calendar.

As a public school teacher I understand how the Gregorian calendar and pagan culture and holidays associated with it hold a virtual monopoly in America and in much of the world. This did not happen by itself. Non-pagans, especially and including Jews, have allowed this. While trying to counter this, I am virtually alone.

In my classroom I display the Hebrew, Chinese and Muslim month, day and year along with the Gregorian. I encourage students to date their work with one of the “other” calendars. I am also trying to see my school and other schools use more than the Gregorian calendar when pronouncing the Class of ________. This can and should be done regardless of the school’s particular ethnic or religious majority.
Richard S. Levik, Mar Vista


Remembering Si Frumkin
One may not know or remember the effects of his words or actions but the ones who have been affected by them will remember (“Si Frumkin, Soviet Jewry and Human Rights Activist, 78,” May 22).

The Iranian Jewish Community was affected in historical ways by our beloved friend and mentor who had suffered like us not just from persecution of anti-Semitic regimes but also from age-old traditions which tended to tie our hands and prevent us from speaking out loud, proclaiming our pain and regaining our dignity without senseless fear and [feelings of] inferiority.

Ten years ago, when 13 Jews were arrested and accused of crimes that in those days carried certain death penalties, when the future and the dignity of the whole Jewish population in Iran was seriously threatened, Si Frumkin was one of the few who reminded us that breaking the silence and confronting our own self-anointed so-called leadership was the only path to take and if not, then denouncement and pain was the price to pay.

As we succeeded to break the silence, bring public world pressure on our persecutors in Iran and save the lives of our 13 captives and as we avoided loss of dignity and perpetuation of the feeble Jewish image in the eyes of the arrogant Islamic authorities while doing so, we always looked up to Si Frumkin and were thankful for his much-needed encouragement and guidance.

We in the leadership of the Shiraz 13 campaign, within the Jewish community, are proud to have felt some of the pain that Frumkin felt during his struggle and are thankful to have had him to share in the joy of our victory.

He was a hero who shall be remembered for generations.
George Haroonian, Past President, Council of Iranian American Jewish Organizations
Frank Nikbakht Director, Committee for Religious Minority Rights in Iran
Pooya Dayanim Director, Iranian Jewish Public Affairs Committee
via e-mail


Social Workers
If the New Republic article quoted by Mr. Eshman is the same article that I read it also stated that President Obama came to differ from Alinsky’s teaching that community organizing as social worker operates from the ground up (“Saul’s Children,” June 12). President Obama came to believe that effective social work must start at the top. And the social worker has so started.
Harold F. Powell, Sherman Oaks


Future of American Jews
It was my good fortune to attend the Young Israel of Century City (YICC) sessions that Susan Freudenheim describes (“Three Stops and a Chart,” May 22). Yes, the distinguished panel all discussed “charting the Jewish future” aptly and accurately reported by Freudenheim. Their common theme [was] “we need to get out more, to care more, to be curious, and to be sensitive.” The four panelists and Rabbi Penner, a scholar-in-residence, all did a wonderful job on their topics. However, what was not discussed, which I believe I brought up in a question-and-answer session after, is that we are not addressing the “main issue,” that there is no future for the Jewish people in this wonderful country of the U.S.A. Because of the great assimilation taking place and high rate of intermarriage between Jews and non-Jews (60% and growing), no one can guarantee that our children and grandchildren will remain Jewish.

I and others maintain that only in Israel, which has already surpassed America as to the number of Jews, can our future be bright and continuous. Therefore it behooves us to begin planning in earnest to make aliyah to Israel at the earliest possible time, no matter how comfortable we believe we are here.
Bernard Nichols, via e-mail


Rev. Wright Remark
As your paper correctly noted, Rev. Jeremiah Wright has recently resurrected himself from the selective oblivion of American politics (“Rev. Wright: ‘Them Jews’ keeping him from Obama,” online only).

The super-natural intellect that is attributed to President Obama has been at the centerpiece of his hype in the minds of his enthusiastic supporters, including many in the Jewish community. But his pick of Rev. Wright — a boorish, anti-Semite idiot, a racist who supports Jew-murderers — as his religious leader, should have cast doubt on his much-revered intellect.

Obama is a golem whose maker is Rev. Wright. The fact that he was Obama’s spiritual mentor for 20 years should have been very distressing to all of us — not just for his outlandish views, but the sheer stupidity. Still, most of us accepted Obama’s feeble explanations and looked the other way.

Obama needs peace and quiet to focus on his magic show: disarming Israel from its nuclear arsenal, making Netanyahu disappear into a little black hat and surrendering Israel to the Arabs. Trouble is, old Uncle Jeremiah keeps running around exposing the true nature of his creation.

But our own pride and joy Rahm [Emanuel] understands that a trick doesn’t work when everything is revealed, and thus he has been trying hard to keep the crazy old irritant away from the stage. Uncle Jeremiah must be locked back in the closet.

Meanwhile, Iran, which also threatens to interrupt the show, should be issued a stern warning to refrain from using its future nuclear arsenal on Israel, or else, what do you know, President Obama might give another strong (I mean, really strong) speech.

Many American Jews are awestruck with this amazing President’s acumen. Some of us who can see through it do not any longer fall for such cheap tricks.
Avi Zirler, La Canada Flintridge


Arab-Israeli War
In response to Michael Several’s letter, I’ll start with: I agree that it is essential that an Israeli-Arab peace be found for the sake of both American and Israeli interests (“Letters,” June 12).

However, it is entirely untrue that “the settlements prevent the creation of a viable Palestinian state,” and therefore that there is some kind of linkage between the settlements and coercing Iran to drop its nuclear weapons development.

Israel has given up land (security strip in south Lebanon and Gaza) — and dismantled settlements in the process — for peace. Instead, Israel got terrorist attacks and war.

The Arab-Israeli war is not about details and finding a compromise. It is about Arabs refusing to resign themselves to a Jewish state in their neighborhood, so steadfastly choosing endless war over peace. When they accept Israel, details, like settlements, can be worked out effortlessly. Indeed, Barak in 2000 and Olmert repeatedly over the past few years negotiated the settlement issue.

In the meantime, let Palestinians uphold their commitments under the Roadmap and Israel will happily cease all but natural growth settlements in return.
Steve Blumer, Calgary, Alberta


Banding Together
I could not agree more with Rob Eshman’s excellent and poignant column (“Iran First, June 5). I have not always agreed with Eshman on his position on the Arab-Israeli peace issue, as he has not always agreed with mine, and it is his prerogative as the editor-in-chief of The Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles.

However, at this most crucial time in Israel’s existence, I would be pleased to join Eshman’s “draft of the text” to President Barack Obama. Eshman is right on the mark to advocate that all of us Jews and other friends of Israel set aside our differences at least temporarily, to join all our collective voices for the important goal of preventing the existential threat on Israel coming from Iran.

Furthermore I believe that President Obama, although he means well, is making a grave mistake linking progress on Israeli-Arab peace prospects with the looming Iranian nuclear threat.

How can Israel in good conscience negotiate with the so-called Palestinians on a peace agreement with the cloud of a nuclear nightmare hanging over their heads? It is as the old adage says, “What comes first, the chicken or the egg?” Additionally Iran trains, equips, and financially supports terrorist organizations like Hamas, Hezbollah and others to obstruct legitimate Arab-Israeli negotiations from taking place. Iran is also causing havoc with American and allied forces in Iraq and Afghanistan, causing many casualties with their I.E.D. explosives.

I would venture to say had there been the spirit of cooperation between the various Jewish groups, as Eshman calls for now, during the Holocaust era, there might have been many more heroic episodes as depicted in the movie (true story) “Defiance,” with similar favorable results. God bless America and God bless Israel.
Bernard Nichols, via e-mail


My Favorite J.J. Columnist
“Leaning” on the “hood” of my purple truck, the one with the license plate “JOY, “with Hebrew words of Torah surrounding the frame, I had my elbow bent on the hood, with arm and hand propping up my chin supporting me for the ‘read ride,’ just like David Suissa’s photo (“Found Tribe,” June 12). I had spread open his column, “Live In The Hood” (that I’d picked up at the Israeli Film Festival). (Why read my favorite J.J. columnist in my driveway? Because I know that once it gets into my home, it has too much competition.)

Finally reading David’s last sentence, leaning, I laughed with his thought, if “you don’t have a ‘hood’ to lean on, you have to find … a fellow Jew.” My spirit responds to the “leaning” and “hood” concepts that David uses (“Leaning Sideways,” April 17).

Reading David Suissa’s story about life outside of the “hood,” my adrenaline quickened noticing an important factual omission. In his list of “denominations,” David left out ALEPH, the joyous Torah-loving, Renewal movement. Aleph serves Orange County (OC) through its official affiliated minyans, Eliyah and Shira HaYam. (In L.A. I’m involved with Aleph’s B’nai Horin, Makom Ohr Shalom and Sarah’s Tent.) OC Renewal members are going, June 28, to our temporary “hood,” the international Kallah (www.aleph.org). David, come join us. Some of our members were the original Reb Shlomo Carlebach, z’l, disciples from the House of Love and Prayer.

David includes in his list of “top speakers of the Jewish world,” “Rabbi Zalman Schachter-Shalomi,” known to us as ‘Reb Zalman’, our Aleph spiritual founder (six decades ago), and leader. David may not know Reb Zalman’s Renewal disciples are organized in OC. (David, did you know that B’nai Horin’s Rabbi Stan Levy, ordained by Reb Zalman, founded The Academy of Jewish Religion/CA?) For L.A Renewal activities, read my blog, www.joyouschailights.blogspot.com .

Rabbi Elie Spitz’ shul “doesn’t know this yet,” but I believe, B’ezrat Hashem / G*d willing, that they may bring in a little “Open To Wonder” minyan joy to spark the flame of Shabbat in Orange County. We are Shlomo disciples. (I am also a founding member of the Happy Minyan, was in their house band, and I had the blesSing to serve as Reb Shlomo’s percussionist.)

After Reb Shlomo died (1994), I sponsored a “wild Carlebach Shabbaton” in his zechut / merit, at my daughter, Aviva’s, UCSB Hillel. The “decibels were on a whole other level” when the “Happy Minyan” showed up to daven. The students loved our Malavah Malkah’s Moshav Band. The gevalt/awesome traditional Carlebach minyan created for that UCSB Shabbat mamash continued to exist. (I don’t know if the Carlebach Shabbaton’s tie dyed mechitzah still exists.) Also, a decade ago to “raise up the flame,” I helped arrange for Shlomo Katz (now Israeli rabbi) and Happy Minyan to lead, with “soulful melodies,” a Young Israel of Northridge Shabbaton.

“To keep the Jewish flame alive”you have to share it. Reb Shlomo and The Ba’al Shem Tov said, “The flame (our Torah) when shared is never diminished.” As we learned in this week’s Parshat BaHa’alotecha, “raise up to the flame,” the six flames ‘leaned’ toward the center flame of the Menorah in the holy Temple. David, thanks for your flames, leanings and my gleanings.

True, when we live outside the “hood”and “you don’t have a ‘hood’ to lean on, you have to find … a fellow Jew.”

(ArtScroll’s Chumash Parshat BaHa’alotecha 8:10 commentary reads: “Leaning upon a human being denotes that the person leaned upon is elevated to a position of distinction, as when Moses leaned upon Joshua 27:23.)
Joy Krauthammer, Northridge


Cairo Speech
My questions for Rabbi Grater and President Obama:

If a 20 percent Arab minority in Israel is no obstacle to peace, why is a 13 percent Jewish minority in the “Palestinian” area an obstacle? (“Obama’s Hard Truths Can Help Bridge Gap,” June 12).

By “two-state solution” do you mean one Jewish state in which Arabs are citizens and one Arab state where no Jew may set foot? Would you agree to a peace treaty with Mexico barring Americans from living there? Have Mexicans a right to live in America?

Is there any people on Earth whom you would forbid to live somewhere (other than Jews)? Is there any place you would forbid Jews to live other than Judea and Samaria, the heart of the Jewish homeland?   

During their fFall campaign critics were castigated for emphasizing Obama’s middle name, Mohammed. Where is the apology now that he has emphasized it in Cairo? Was he falsely accused of being a closet Moslem? He said several things there to so identify himself; things no Christian would say, like HOLY Koran, or “Jesus, may he rest in peace.”

He said that our alliance with Israel is firm, and proceeded to press Israel for the concessions its enemies demand. This is not the act of an ally!
Louis Richter, Encino


Mayor’s Weak Points
Well, isn’t our mayor a failure, for all practical purposes?

What has he accomplished during his four years in office? Our roads are getting worse; our taxes are higher; our schools have an unbelievable dropout rate (50 percent by some estimates); traffic is definitely getting worse … and the city has a huge budget deficit to boot. While he and the police chief claim crime is down, many of us don’t believe them. Gang activity seems to be just as great as ever. One thing he did accomplish: He has added approximately 30 percent to the number of city employees.

I think he did try. But he just doesn’t have what it takes. He’s the wrong guy for the job of Mayor of Los Angeles. We need leaders, not politicians, to serve the public’s needs.

I think Los Angeles Magazine has the right viewpoint: Failure … 
George Epstein, via e-mail

 

Hard Truths, Soft Lies, Mr. Mayor Read More »

Sixty-year-old gives birth in Israel

And you thought Sarah was old when she gave birth to Isaac.

Sure, she was a nonagenarian, but they lived a lot longer in those days. And God had foretold her pregnancy. Not sure if there was a divine hand working nine months ago when an Israeli couple got pregnant. What makes it so surprising is that the woman, who just gave birth to her first child, is 60.

As Debra Nussbaum-Cohen writes, “Oy.”

She continues:

Now, this couple had been trying to conceive, and undergoing fertility treatments, for 40 years. That’s a long time to put your body and soul through such procedures. They apparently had this baby boy with the help of a donor egg.

Fertility treatments raise some interesting halachic issues, an introduction to which can be read here.

But I understand the deep desire to have a child (we have three of our own and, if we could have afforded more day school tuition and larger housing, might have had more). Added to the internal, one might say biological drive that most of us feel, this fervently Orthodox couple had the religious imperative to “be fruitful and multiply” driving their effort.

Sixty-year-old gives birth in Israel Read More »

One in a Million

There are certain stories that are difficult for me to write about. I sit there on the phone, and I have no clue what to ask. I meet the person, and I small-talk nervously.

This is one of those stories.

It’s the story of a family trying to save a life — for a second time.

I met the matriarch, Dr. Aviva Beiderman, in her office at Cedars-Sinai. I knew about her son-in-law, Jon Galinson, 38, who had been diagnosed 15 months ago with chronic lymphocyctic leukemia, or CCL, a cancer of the blood and bone marrow.

Jon lives in Berkeley with his wife, Yael, and their two young daughters, Gaby, 4, and Luli, 1, and is recovering from his eighth round of chemotherapy, which hasn’t succeeded in eradicating his cancer. His best hope now is a bone marrow transplant — but the chances of two unrelated people having matching bone marrow tissue is about one in a million.

That hasn’t stopped the Beidermans — Aviva, her husband Leon and their daughter Yael — and their friends from doing everything they can to find that match.

Unfortunately, the Beidermans have plenty of experience with “doing everything they can.”

They fought for 10 years to save the life of their only son, Ilan, who passed away from a rare form of bone cancer seven years ago, at the age of 31. Along with their daughter Yael, they went to hospitals and experts around the country. They spent countless nights sleeping in hospital rooms as Ilan underwent numerous treatments and 19 surgeries.

Through it all, Dr. Biederman, a popular pediatrician in the local community, had to manage her thriving practice and care for hundreds of patients.

Now a similar struggle is repeating itself with her son-in-law.

So what do you ask a woman who’s gone through all this?

Thankfully, she made it easy on me. I got a mini-tutorial on different types of bone cancers and treatments and immune systems and DNA matches. But no matter how much we talked about Jon’s cancer and his prognosis, the painful echoes of her son Ilan kept entering the picture.

It was the same thing when I spoke with the daughter, Yael. She went back and forth between talking about her husband and talking about her brother.

She was so close to her brother that she took off her second year at Berkeley to come back to Los Angeles and care for him every day, bringing him to all his medical appointments and keeping him company.

It was Ilan who introduced her to her future husband, Jon, his best friend. And the story gets even more interconnected: Anna, Ilan’s widow and beloved “angel” who has since remarried, is a good friend of Yael.

So when Dr. Beiderman tells me they have a “very close-knit family,” I can see what she means.

In speaking to the mother and the daughter, the thing that got to me the most was their total absence of self-pity. It’s as if they channel their pain and love by focusing on getting more information and answering the same question over and over again: What is the best thing to do now?

Because so much of the medical research is in early stages, the answers often come down to judgment calls. So, the more information they get and the more questions they ask, the better.

The latest question: Will they be able to find a match for Jon for a bone marrow transplant?

Their “search coordinator” at Stanford University has been going through data banks throughout the country and the world. Yael has already arranged two registry drives in her area, which have netted more than 500 samples that they will be testing. A third drive will be held on Sunday, June 28, at Dr. Beiderman’s house in Los Angeles, sponsored by City of Hope and co-hosted by Sara and Dr. David Aftergood.

If you want to help, you can e-mail inquiries to Project.Judah@gmail.com or sign up at join.marrow.org.

Although a Jewish DNA has a higher probability of matching a Jewish DNA, this is by no means a rule. Yael impressed on me that “anybody can save anybody.” She told me of an Indian man saved by a German woman, a Jew saved by a Korean and so on.

She’s now hoping that a “somebody” will have at least nine of the 10 genetic markers required for a match. She heard recently that they found a seven, so she is encouraged.

Dealing with cancer, she says, is “like a full-time job.” But that doesn’t stop her from living. The registry drive she just arranged had so many people that it “felt like a party.”

“When you see our family walking down the street,” she told me, “you’d never know what we’re going through. We have fear and sadness, but we’re always mindful of our blessings.”

Maybe that’s why this story is so difficult to write. The hardships are so loud they seem to overpower the blessings.

But Yael sees blessings everywhere, like in the memories of the many concerts she attended with her brother Ilan, who loved life and music. She even sees blessings in the DNA samples that aren’t a match for her husband Jon.

As she reminded me, “You never know whose life might be saved by that particular match.”

David Suissa, an advertising executive, is founder of OLAM magazine, Meals4Israel.com and Ads4Israel.com. He can be reached at {encode=”dsuissa@olam.org” title=”dsuissa@olam.org”}.


Dear Editor,

David Suissa wrote a moving and thoughtful article about my family and our search for a marrow donor match for my husband in this week’s Jewish Journal. I wanted to let your readers and the wider Jewish community know how they can participate in our drive, even if they are unable to attend the event at the Biederman’s on June 28th. People can register online by going to www.bethematch.com and using the promo code JonGalinson for a reduced (tax-deductible) online registration rate of $25. For more information or to find answers to any questions, they can also call 1-800-MARROW2.
Thank you for your support in this urgent matter and for helping us spreading the word far and wide.

With gratitude,
Yael

One in a Million Read More »