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July 8, 2011

The tabloidization of Britain

Ten years ago I tried to extract Michael Jackson from the hell of a tabloid life. Nothing hurt him more than being referred to as Wacko Jacko, something he always told me originated in the British tabloids. And it is worth mentioning, now that we have commemorated the second anniversary of his death, that the mountain of pills he regularly swallowed and which eventually killed him was an effort, more than anything else, to neuter the pain of being treated as a joke. Michael believed he had a serious message to share, that children were both special and innocent and the world had a responsibility to prioritize them and preserve their goodness. But he also understood that with the two boys alleging that he had acted indecently, though never convicted, his credibility had been irreversibly shattered. He was therefore doomed to a life of empty celebrity incarceration when, in truth, he so badly wished to use dedicate his renown to a cause larger than himself.

This lesson – that fame is nice but credibility is everything – has strong resonance for modern-day Britain, a country I arrived in at the tender age of 22, where I spent 11 years of my life and became a man, and where six of my nine children were born. Britain was once the most serious and influential nation on earth. It gave the world the Magna Carta and Parliamentary democracy. It produced William Shakespeare and Sir Isaac Newton. It peacefully freed its slaves decades before America and led the charge in saving the world from Hitler.

But those accomplishments seem a faint glimmer today as British society, once the most highly educated and sophisticated on earth, seems to have traded in seriousness and credibility for out-of-control celebrity. Having at times in my life made the mistake of prizing recognition over gravitas, I am not here to judge. Lord knows, I served as Michael Jackson’s Rabbi and revolved, at times, in constant celebrity society, I experienced how good it felt to feel famous. But having seen what the tabloid life did to Michael, I now run from it like the plague.

While living in Britain and serving as Rabbi to the students of Oxford University, I slowly noticed the change taking place in Britain. I still remember the day the Oxford Union – once the most celebrated debating society on earth – invited Kermit the Frog as one of their speakers. It was 1994 and the announcement still raised hackles. But this was before Britain became synonymous with the origin of reality TV like Big Brother, Project Catwalk, and many other programs that were imported into the US. It was before stories of John Terry, Wayne Rooney, Ashley Cole, and Ryan Giggs trumped by far the reporting on Britain’s laudable efforts in Libya. Serious newspapers were not yet published as tabloids and a strict line still seemed to separate thoughtful journalism from scandal saturation.

But all that seems to have changed now, with tabloid celebrity becoming the dominant headline in Britain. It is easy for me to bemoan the fall of British gravitas. Perhaps as an American who had the privilege of living in Britain’s most fabled university town for more than a decade I had too glamorized a view of Britain’s history. But still I have to ask, is it possible that the nation who was led, just half a century ago, by the world’s greatest statesman and orator is now reduced to no one who can strut the world’s stage aside from William and Kate?

As a lover of debate I used to sit in awe as I watched young Oxford students and British politicians at the Union eviscerate each other with a command of language that had little parallel in anything I had witnessed in the United States. It inspired me to speak and write better. But I was sadly not all that surprised when I asked a recent Oxford graduate who was the most memorable speaker he has heard at Oxford over the last few years and he responded, “Martin Sheen.”

Yes, we Americans have our trash TV and our celebrity scandals. We have politicians who self-destruct with disturbing scandals and supermarket tabloids who assure is that Elvis is still alive and is now married to Princess Diana. But that world still seems cordoned off – for the most part – from the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, Harvard, and Yale. The UK, however, has allowed some of its leading institutions to go tabloid and obsess over sensationalism.

Britain was once the most revered culture on earth. This was not merely due to the strength of its Navy or the fact that it was sovereign over one quarter of the earth’s surface, a fact of colonialism that rightly disturbs many in Britain today. Rather, it was primarily due to the high quality of its education, its world-renowned thinkers, and the striking quality of its ideas. And it is a tradition that Britain must once again reclaim if it is to significantly play on the world’s stage yet again.

Rabbi Shmuley Boteach, whom Newsweek calls ‘the most famous Rabbi in America,’ was the London Times Preacher of the Year in 1999 and is the international best-selling author of 25 books, including ‘An Intelligent Person’s Guide to Judaism.’ (Duckworth) Follow him on Twitter @RabbiShmuley.

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Bet Tzedek Has a Ball With Rapper Nelly

Surrounded by dancing bodies, a 20-something took off his shirt and waved it around his head, bare-chested, simply following the instructions of hip-hop artist Nelly, the performer on stage. “It’s getting hot in here, so take off all your clothes,” Nelly sang, the lyrics from his 2002 hit song, “Hot in Herre.”

The performance took place at Bet Tzedek’s 15th annual Justice Ball, held on June 25.

“As Jews, we love hip hop,” said Serena Zeise, southwest regional director for J Street, who was at the event.

Bet Tzedek Legal Services, a pro bono law firm in Los Angeles that offers counsel to low-income, elderly and disabled clients — “bet tzedek” means “house of justice” in Hebrew — hosts the Justice Ball every year, attracting young professionals from the community and raising money for Bet Tzedek. The firm tackles consumer fraud, employment rights and Holocaust reparations, among other issues.

Organizers said the event raised approximately $300,000, in line with their fundraising goal. To date, Bet Tzedek has raised more than $4 million from tickets sold at the Justice Ball every year.

Approximately 2,500 people attended the Justice Ball, according to Amy Peckner, senior development officer at Bet Tzedek, including fresh-out-of-school lawyers and young staff from various nonprofits in the community.

Wearing sunglasses and bling and joined on stage by his brother, also a rapper, and a DJ, Nelly’s set list included “E.I.,” “County Grammar,” “Ride With Me” and his latest single, “Just a Dream” — a reminder of how many hit songs the Southern rapper has had since his debut album, “Country Grammar,” was released in 2000 and became a chart-topping crossover success, embraced by the pop world. He won a Grammy in 2003 and has sold millions of records.

The selection of Nelly as the event’s headliner continues Bet Tzedek’s streak of booking contemporary, nonreligious talent for its big, annual event.

“That’s what they’re into,” Peckner said of young professionals. “It’s not a matter [of] if someone is Jewish or not Jewish. We’re looking at people who reach a wider audience.” Previous years have featured such acts as Macy Gray, The Go-Go’s and DJ AM.


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A Flotilla of Fools

Sometime before the end of this month, and barring some fortunate happening, a motley collection of about ten boats is set to sail from a port in Greece, bound for Gaza, despite a long-standing Israeli naval blockade.

On board the flotilla will be an equally motley collection of leftists, Pro-Palestinian activists, and self-styled peace advocates carrying placards with messages like “free Gaza” and “end the siege.”  The lead boat will be called “The Audacity of Hope.”

This attempt to evade the Israeli navy’s blockade of Gaza is being described as a “relief operation,” and is a carbon-copy of last year’s similar attempt that was also a transparently political effort.

That attempt ended with nine dead activists when Israeli commandos fought back after boarding one of the boats – only to be greeted by armed and violent “peace” activists.

This year, about thirty Americans – including a number of American Jews – are scheduled to sail with the flotilla, and the U.S. State Department has warned the band of Americans that they may face “arrest, prosecution, and deportation by the government of Israel.”

Who are these Americans?

Among them are hard-core left activists like Medea Benjamin, retired lieutenant colonel Ann Wright-turned activist, and the Pulitzer Prize-winning author Alice Walker.  Of course, she’s best-known for her book

The Color Purple

.  Walker” title=”Slate” target=”_blank”>Slate that – beyond being the Palestinian wing of the Muslim Brotherhood – Hamas has endorsed the

Protocols of the Elders of Zion

, one of the oldest anti-Semitic screeds in existence that was used by Hitler as a rationale for his attempts to exterminate Jews.

Hamas was also the world’s only government body to officially express sympathy to – and outrage – over the killing of Osama bin Laden.

The Americans on board these boats won’t be able to claim ignorance if the Israeli military decides to put the “smack down” on this so-called flotilla.  If they set sail for Gaza they do so in support of Hamas – a political movement with blood on its hands.  Hamas has glorified suicide bombings and the random killings of innocent Israeli men, women and children.

Alice Walker and her comrades deserve whatever fate awaits them. 

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Spiral CT Scans Save Lives from Lung Cancer

In November I wrote about preliminary data from the National Lung Screening Trial, a large study funded by the National Cancer Institute that attempted to find out if catching lung cancer early with spiral CT scans made a difference. (See link 1 below for my November post.) Last week, the New England Journal of Medicine published the trial results (2) and an accompanying editorial (3).

The study randomized over 50,000 people who were

  • aged 55 to 74,
  • were either current smokers or had quit in the last 15 years,
  • had not been diagnosed with lung cancer, and
  • had a lifetime history of smoking at least 10,000 packs of cigarettes (the equivalent of smoking one pack per day for 30 years).

The study subjects were randomized to two groups. One group received annual chest X rays for three years. Chest X rays have already been proven not to save lives as a test for early lung cancer. The second group received annual spiral CT scans of their chest for three years. Both groups were followed for another three and a half years after the tests to assess for the development of lung cancer and death due to lung cancer.

The results were remarkably positive. The group receiving the CTs had a 20% lower rate of death from lung cancer. For every 320 patients screened by CT, one life was saved. That’s a number that compares favorably with other cancer screening tests, like mammography.

This is a very important discovery. Though lung cancer incidence has been declining with the decreasing number of smokers, it remains the number one cause of cancer death in the US. Use of CT screening in the appropriate groups of patients promises to significantly decrease lung cancer mortality.

So if you meet every point in the above list, talk to your doctor about a spiral CT of your chest. More importantly, if you smoke, stop. If you want to stop smoking and can’t, ask your doctor for help.

[Medical news posting resumes in two weeks.]

Learn more:

(1) My previous post about the National Lung Screening Trial: ” target=”_blank”>Reduced Lung-Cancer Mortality with Low-Dose Computed Tomographic Screening

(3) New England Journal of Medicine perspective article: ” target=”_blank”>Study bolsters evidence that screening reduces lung cancer deaths

Wall Street Journal Health Blog: Spiral CT Scans Save Lives from Lung Cancer Read More »

Obama administration, Jewish groups, to U.N.: Sack Falk

The Obama administration, joined by U.S. Jewish groups, called for the United Nations to dismiss Richard Falk, its rapporteur on Palestinian rights, after he posted an anti-Semitic cartoon on his blog.

“I am deeply disturbed that once again U.N. Special Rapporteur Richard Falk has used his personal blog to publish abhorrent material,” Joseph Torsella, the U.S. representative for management and reform to the United Nations, said in a statement on Friday. “His shameful and outrageous behavior is an embarrassment to the United Nations. Someone who publishes such vicious images has no place in the U.N. system.”

The cartoon, posted by Falk, depicts a dog wearing a shirt labeled “USA” and a yarmulke marked with a Star of David devouring a bloody human carcass. Lady Justice stands by blindfolded, holding the dog’s leash as it urinates on her foot.

In the apology posted July 6 on his blog, Falk said the cartoon “had strongly anti-semitic symbolism that I had not detected before it was pointed out to me.” Jewish groups, including the Anti-Defamation League, B’nai B’rith International, the American Jewish Committee-affiliated U.N. Watch, and the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations, called on senior officials to remove Falk or at least to condemn his actions.

“This latest action compounds the long existing problem of Mr. Falk’s blatant biases and repugnant behavior,” the Presidents’ Conference said in a statement.  “His history of hateful provocations, including the spread of 9/11 conspiracy theories blaming the United States for self-inflicted terrorism, and comparison of Israelis to Nazis are evidence that he cannot fulfill his responsibilities consistent with the U.N.’s mission and standards.”

Joining in the calls was Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-Fla.), the chairwoman of the U.S. House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee.

“The U.N. cannot function as a credible and effective institution when it employs faux experts who ignore real human rights abuses and demonize democracies,” she said in a statement.

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Quartet to convene in DC on Monday

The “Quartet” of entities guiding the Israeli-Arab peace processes is meeting next week amid signs that the Obama administration is pressing the Israelis and Palestinians back to peace talks.

Representatives of the “Quartet,” comprising the United States, Russia, the European Union and the United Nations, will convene in Washington on Monday.

Top U.S. peace brokers have in recent weeks made frequent visits to the region, reciprocated by visits to Washington by top Israeli and Palestinian negotiators.

The Obama administration wants to head off a Palestinian effort to secure U.N. recognition of statehood absent a renewal of peace talks with Israel.

Palestinian negotiators refuse to return to talks unless Israel freezes settlement; Israel will not consider talks with the Palestinians unless the P.A. breaks off its talks with Hamas, and unless the framework of the talks includes recognition of Israel as a Jewish state, an end to refugee claims and a longterm Israeli presence in the Jordan Valley.

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Top 10 signs you’re stuck in Carmageddon

Hundreds of vehicles around you, the incessant sound of car horns filling the air, and that overwhelming feeling that maybe you shouldn’t have left the house this morning…

Confused? You’re probably in the thick of…

CARMAGEDDON

And if you are still in complete and utter shock, here are 10 signs that may help bring you back to reality:




” title=”Harold Camping” target=”_blank”>Harold Camping was just a few months off.





“>Translation)


” title=”I AM QUEENS BLVD.” target=”_blank”>I AM QUEENS BLVD.”



Honorable Mention:



 

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So an undocumented Jew immigrates to the United States …

If you feel like you’ve read before The Forward story about the unspoken of illegal immigrant—undocumented Jews—that’s probably because you saw a similar story in ” title=”The Forward’s” target=”_blank”>The Forward’s story, which focuses on living “in the shadows of U.S. society.”

Yamzi Rosen has been living in the United States for nearly nine years. Rosen said she and her family moved to Brooklyn from Israel after she lost her son to a violent murder in her hometown of Netanya. The family hoped the distance would help them overcome the tragedy. The seven family members crammed into a one-bedroom apartment, and began working odd jobs for which papers were not required.

But the American dream turned out to be hard to achieve. A lawyer dealing with their request for obtaining a green card, which grants legal residence in the United States, was arrested for fraud. Meanwhile, a temporary work visa expired, and Rosen was diagnosed with cancer and underwent surgery and chemotherapy. …

The Rosen family is reluctant to request any kind of welfare assistance, fearing that it will hamper their hopes to achieve a green card in the future. But most difficult, Rosen said in a recent phone conversation with the Forward, is not being able to leave the United States and visit Israel, since being undocumented ensures that she would not be allowed back in. “I just want to see my son’s grave,” she said. “Is there anything worse in life than a mother who cannot visit her son’s grave?”

It’s a good read, and always an interesting story, even five years later. So an undocumented Jew immigrates to the United States … Read More »

The Head Jew

Shalom and welcome to my blog.  This is my blog where I speak my mind on current issues and events in the Jewish and Israeli world and in our community.  I am an out of the box thinker and look at life differently than most.  Some of my views are controversial.  You may find yourself nodding your head and agreeing with me or yelling, screaming and throwing voodoo pins at me.  Either way you will be challenged and inspired in a thought provoking manner.  Enjoy and feel free to comment.

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Physical beauty transformed: From Anthony Weiner to Sara of the Bible

I recently came across a fascinating blog.  It is authored by an anonymous single mother in San Francisco who suffered horrendous sexual abuse as a child at the hands of her own father and contains some of the deepest spiritual insights I have read.  In a post entitled “Does your grandmother look good naked?” she writes:

“In our culture today, we seem to have allowed the porn industry to define female beauty for us. …I thought my grandmother was a beautiful woman. Actually – I know she was a beautiful woman. I remember the day I chose to name my only child after her: she was eighty-two years old, visiting her forty-three year old son in a nursing home (a horrible accident left him brain-dead). But she didn’t just visit him. She also brought gifts and smiles and attention to the other residents of that nursing home. Every one she touched could see how beautiful she was…I know what you’re thinking – my grandmother had spiritual beauty, not necessarily physical beauty.  But how have we come to separate the two? They are not separate….My grandmother’s laugh lines, her arthritic hands, her dowager’s hump, her aged and tender skin-all of that was beautiful to me. Her body was beautiful because she lived in it.  Your body is beautiful because you live in it…When we separate a body from its spirit; we turn that body into a corpse….Let’s stop treating our bodies as sex objects, and start embracing ourselves as sexual subjects. Only then will we have a shot at genuine beauty.”

I think she is talking here about an entirely new way of seeing beauty, sexuality, and attraction.  That physical beauty must not be separate from emotional, relational, and spiritual beauty but that the two can be seen as deeply connected, as actually the same.  Not jettisoning the physical for something deeper but seeing it in a new light, illuminated by the person themselves. 

What would it mean to see each other in this way?  How can we reframe when we feel attracted to someone due to their physical beauty alone?  How do we see beauty as still beautiful and attractive but at the same time emerging from who someone is, the real person that inhabits that body, not from their skin?  Is it even possible to see emotional and values driven beauty as inseparable from physical beauty?  Not as many do, to see the soul and self in place of the body, but to see bodily beauty and sexuality as a manifestation of the soul?  To see ourselves and others as beautiful, as sexy, but not because our skin is taught, not because we are an ideal figure, but as the “us” that inhabits our bodies. 

It is interesting in this vain to reread the Bible’s description of the first Jewish woman, – Sara, who at 66 years old is described as physically, not spiritually beautiful.  Shouldn’t the bible be more concerned with the spiritual or emotional beauty of Sara rather than her physical beauty?  Is a 66 year old woman really the Bible’s image of physical beauty?  Indeed the Bible does not describe many younger women this way. 

Even stranger is that the context is one in which Abraham is afraid that due to Sara’s incredible beauty she will be taken by Pharaoh for a liaison.  Pharaohs typically had access to all the young beautiful women their hearts desired, so why would Pharaoh notice Sara at 66 years old and take her?  Is it possible that the blogger is right?  That were we not inundated with media indoctrinating us to believe that beauty is only a manifestation of certain kinds of skin, certain weights, certain breast and leg formations, that beauty would be a wholly different type of experience for us?  One in which the person and body were not separate, one in which the person themselves manifested their physical beauty?

In an age of Anthony Weiners who wish to be known only by their skin, in an age inundated by pornography and sexually oriented advertising, of television that only encourages us to see others and ourselves as objects, how can w cultivate the instruction of the anonymous but wise San Franciscan blogger?  How do we move toward an appreciation of Biblical Sara whose physical beauty is her spiritual beauty and vice versa?

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