fbpx

December 30, 2012

Give My Heart

I do not want to control anything i give my heart to Gd

I want to know what happens when I lay my heart down.

he allows me to pick it up again saying wear this crown.

 

There are tears that have been shed when something says they are not yours

that they don't belong to you

what is loving for?

 

your Love is soft and being kept for you as the clouds.

Your love is like a rainbow.

colorful and I am wowed.

and your love is good for everyone

your love is only This . . .

 

 

 

it expands in your love. 

Give My Heart Read More »

Tribute and Legacy: Being Present

Sitting between my parents at the temple where I grew up, I felt lucky. It seemed odd at a funeral, but that is how I felt. After years of traveling by land and sea, I was home and sharing in an ancient tradition to commemorate the life of our temple's matriarch, Florence Zeldin (August 13, 1919 – May 20, 2012).

My parents joined Stephen S. Wise Temple when at age 9, I said, “I want a Bat Mitzvah,” Neither of my parents had been raised with much formal knowledge of the Jewish religion. Ready to share in my zeal, they took a class together and became B'nai Mitzvot, making lifelong friends in the process. To me, my parent's partnership of nearly fifty years of marriage has been a fine role model by example. While Rabbi Zeldin is seen as the creator of the Temple (the largest reform congregation in Los Angeles, this City on the Hill or Mount Shay-anai), he does owe much to his wife and partner, who also led by example during their 68-year marriage and seventy years together. She lived like the Thoreau quote, “Advance confidently in the direction of your dreams, and endeavor to live the life you imagine.”

During the memorial commemorating her life, I thought about tributes and legacies. Florence Zeldin's first priority was her family and she also created a community, published many books, games and Shabbat service prayer books. As I listened to stories from her children, grandchildren, colleagues and Rabbis, each mentioned her commitment to family, partnership and community, her work as a parent and a teacher and her ability to think the best and hope all would come up to her expectations.

She was warm, funny, academic and full of passion. An average life is 960 months, or 29,000 days.

Florence lived far beyond the averages and used them all well. I remember traveling with her and Rabbi Zeldin for his 85th birthday when he brought 85 people to Israel in 2004. They have been at three of our family B'nai Mitzvot, two weddings, many services and have always been an inspiration with their aspirations for excellence.

While I am traveling in Asia this sabbatical year, I have wandered among great archeological wonders like the temples of “>www.wesaidgotravel.com Lisa and George Rajna are on a career break in Asia and are celebrating Chanukah 2012 and New Year's Eve in Southern India!

Tribute and Legacy: Being Present Read More »

December 30, 2012

In-depth

Actions, Not Words

The Obama administration needs to take a tougher stance with Middle Eastern rulers, writes Dov S. Zakheim in the National Interest

Apart from threatening action if Assad uses chemical weapons, as well as reportedly some training of opposition fighters outside Syria, Washington has not provided what the opposition has long sought: the arms it needs to fight off Assad’s thuggish supporters and his regular army. The rebels are managing to do so anyway; even Farouk al Sharaa, the long-time Assad lackey who now serves as vice president, has all but admitted that the regime’s days finally are numbered. But Washington can expect little by way of thanks from whoever comes to power in Damascus, nor does it deserve any.

 

What It Means To Be “Pro-Israel”

Writing for the Daily Beast's Open Zion section, Brent E. Sasley argues that the nature of Israel advocacy in the American Jewish community has changed. 

…mainstream U.S. Jewish groups are facing pressure from both the right-wing government in Israel (which may become even more rightist after the January election) and the right-wing groups and individuals in the U.S., who run on a single issue and are less concerned with developing ties and ideas across the political spectrum. Left-wing groups like J Street are also beginning to pose a challenge—though, because most leftist Jewish groups are either anti- or non-Zionist, the centrist organizations can more easily fend them off or ignore them.

 

Daily Digest

 

Follow Shmuel Rosner on Twitter and Facebook for facts and figures, analysis and opinion on Israel and the U.S., the Jewish World and the Middle East

December 30, 2012 Read More »

Why (some) Jews switched their vote from Dem to GOP, and vice versa

There are no earth-shattering revelations in “What’s the Matter with Palm Beach County?” – a paper about the 2012 Jewish vote prepared by Eric Uslaner, a professor of the Department of Government and Politics at the University of Maryland. But it's a coherent and interesting paper. Uslaner is scheduled to present the paper at a conference in Herzliya two weeks from now, but you can read it online. I'm not going to go through the many details included in the paper – it basically says that Jews are Jews are Democratic voters are Jews – I'll just highlight one part that I thought was one of the better parts. 

Uslaner looked specifically at the data gathered in the J Street survey of Jewish voters. It is a survey about which I wrote at some length in the past, and also the one I was discussing with Jim Gerstein (Jim, we're still awaiting your response to our second question!). And more specifically, he analyzed the positions of the “only 40 voters” who shifted between 2008 to 2012 from voting for Obama to voting for Romney, and the 19 voters who switched from voting McCain in 2008 to voting Obama in 2012 – that is, all the voters in this poll who changed their vote from Democratic to Republican or vice versa.

“With just 59 switchers, analyzing vote change is imprecise”, Uslaner writes. “Recognizing the hazards involved, I present some data on the roots of switching”. Table number 7 of the study is the one in which one can find the available reasons for the “shift”. But one has to be careful with the numbers presented in this table as “only two of the measures I used in the model… reach statistical significance”. The two measures: “Jewish voters who shifted to Romney were more negative on the direction of the country and more positively disposed to the Tea Party”. Take a look at the table followed by some more of the things Uslaner says about it:

 

Variable

Shifters to Romney

Shifters to Obama

Number

Direction of US

22.0

56.3

59

Tea Party thermometer

40.2

16.0

52

Favor Palestinian state

70.5

86.4

52

Favor US role in talks

82.8

85.0

59

UN treats Israel fairly

56.7

51.7

59

Saw anti-Obama Israel ads

51.3

50.3

52

Health 1st or 2nd most important

20.0

30.2

59

Israel 1st or 2nd most important

11.5

19.9

59

 

Here's Uslaner with the inevitable conclusion:

None of the issues relating to Israel or the Middle East even approached significance, nor did the importance of the health care issue. Obama lost some support among Jewish voters upset over the state of the economy. This is consistent with the cross-sectional results of the exit polls (see Table 2 for the source) showing that 84 percent of respondents who saw the country moving in the wrong direction voted for Romney, and that 93 percent who believed that the country was going in the right direction supported the president. Neither party’s candidates lost many supporters: 52 percent of the switchers were Independents, compared to 27 percent of the full sample. Two thirds of Jewish voters defecting to Romney were either Independents or Republicans. Despite all of the efforts of Republicans and outside groups to persuade Jewish voters that Obama was not a supporter of Israel, there is little evidence that even the small number of switchers were motivated by Middle East policy.

However: “Voters who said that Israel was one of the two most important problems were more likely to shift to Obama”. How many such cases are there? Uslaner (in Table 4) shows that there were eight cases (out of 720) of respondents saying that “Israel [is the] first or second most important problem, oppose Palestinian state, see the UN as unfair to Israel, oppose US role in Israeli-Palestinian peace process”. Of these eight, six supported Romney. That's not surprising. As you can see in J Street's cross tabs, 17% of the Jewish Romney voters put Israel as the number one or number two issue for them as they went to the polls, compared to 7% of the Jewish Obama vote.

Why (some) Jews switched their vote from Dem to GOP, and vice versa Read More »

A Community Frozen in Time Demographically

I just got back from the annual meeting of the Association for Jewish Studies.  One session was on Jewish diversity within the Jewish community. There were two papers on New York  and one on Chicago.  Which community is missing here? 

That’s right…Los Angeles!  New York and Chicago both did Jewish population surveys recently, and Los Angeles was conspicuously absent from this session because our last study is close to 16 years old. My colleagues in Jewish demography are astonished that LA does not even have a survey on the radar. 

I could only refer to Jay Sanderson’s, the Jewish Federation's President, Jewish Journal interview from this past summer: “While Sanderson agrees that a study could help refine and guide programs, he believes Federation already has a good read on the community.” I wonder how Mr. Sanderson would have to say to a Jewish educator at a large synagogue who called me the other day to ask why religious school enrollment has been steadily falling over the past few years. Was it the economy?  Were Jews leaving the area from which the synagogue has drawn students in the past? Was the number of Jews in that denomination shrinking? I gave him my best guess and emphasized it was only a guess. Jay Sanderson and the Federation leadership apparently know the answer but haven’t told the rest of us.  Or maybe they don’t know why and actually don’t care why enrollment was declining at this synagogue (and maybe others). 

Sanderson’s quote is telling: “I don’t think we’ll learn anything that will dramatically change the work we’re already doing. I think it will validate things we’re doing.” Apparently what Federation does matters, but not what other institutions do. In future posts I’ll try to address this question. In the meantime, you can party like it’s 1997 and look forward to 2000 when Joe Lieberman will be our first Jewish Vice President.

Bruce Phillips is a Professor of Jewish Communal Service in the School of Non-Profit Management, HUC-JIR/Los Angeles and USC. Bruce is among the leading sociologists studying the contemporary Jewish community, specializing in the sociology and demography of American Jewry.  Bruce can be found playing banjo, mandolin and other stringed instruments in the Temple Emanuel of Beverly Hills Shabbat Unplugged live Bayit (House) Band on many Friday nights.To email Bruce: pini00003@gmail.com

A Community Frozen in Time Demographically Read More »

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton hospitalized with blood clot

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was sent to the hospital on Sunday with a blood clot stemming from a concussion she suffered earlier this month and was being assessed by doctors, a State Department spokesman said.

“In the course of a follow-up exam today, Secretary Clinton's doctors discovered a blood clot had formed, stemming from the concussion she sustained several weeks ago,” spokesman Philippe Reines said in a statement.

“She is being treated with anti-coagulants and is at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital so that they can monitor the medication over the next 48 hours,” Reines said, adding that doctors would continue to assess her condition.

“They will determine if any further action is required,” he said.

U.S. officials said on Dec. 15 that Clinton, who earlier canceled an overseas trip because of a stomach virus, suffered a concussion after fainting due to dehydration.

They have since described her condition as improving and played down suggestions it was more serious.

Clinton's illness forced her to cancel planned testimony to Congress on Dec. 20 in connection with a report on the deadly attack on the U.S. diplomatic post in Benghazi, Libya, in September that killed the U.S. ambassador and three other Americans and raised questions about security at far-flung posts..

Clinton, 65, has said she remains ready to testify and was expected to appear before congressional committees this month before she steps down, as planned, around the time of U.S. President Barack Obama's inauguration in late January.

Clinton, who narrowly lost the Democratic presidential nomination to Obama in 2008, is consistently rated as the most popular of his cabinet members and is often mentioned as a potential presidential candidate in 2016.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton hospitalized with blood clot Read More »

Avigdor Lieberman formally charged in Jerusalem court

Former Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman was formally charged with fraud and breach of trust.

The indictment, which reportedly includes new and stronger evidence against Lieberman, was filed with the Jerusalem Magistrate's Court on Sunday morning. Lieberman is charged with advancing the position of Zeev Ben Aryeh, Israel's former ambassador to Belarus, in exchange for information on an investigation against him.

An abuse of authority accusation could mean the court will add moral turpitude to any conviction. Those convicted of moral turpitude cannot seek public office for at least seven years.

Lieberman had waived his parliamentary immunity, seeking a speedy trial that he hoped would be over before the Jan. 22 elections. That no longer appears possible.

The indictment followed questioning of members of a Foreign Ministry appointments panel who previously had not been questioned, as well as further questioning of Lieberman.

Lieberman resigned last week as foreign minister, although he remains a member of the Knesset and the head of the Yisrael Beiteinu party.

His resignation came days after Attorney General Yehuda Weinstein on Dec. 13 closed a 12-year investigation of Lieberman, dismissing most of the charges but saying he would file the indictment for fraud and breach of trust. Last spring, Ben Aryeh confessed that he had received and passed documents to Lieberman in 2008.

The filing of the indictment had been postponed in order to question the additional members of the appointments panel.

New evidence includes a conversation between Deputy Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon that reportedly shows Lieberman actively lobbying for Ben Aryeh's appointment as ambassador to Belarus. Ayalon reportedly will testify against Lieberman during the trial.

Lieberman announced recently that Ayalon would not be included on the Yisrael Beiteinu Knesset list for the January elections. The party is running on a joint candidates' list with the ruling Likud Party. Ayalon has stayed on at the Foreign Ministry despite Lieberman stepping down.

Avigdor Lieberman formally charged in Jerusalem court Read More »

Fear of fun

Some day not all that far in the future, a new kind of entertainment is going to be perfected that will either be the coolest video game ever, or the media equivalent of a lethal man-made super-virus.

You can predict what that entertainment might be like just by extrapolating from technology that already exists.

Start by imagining CGI on steroids, a future version of the computer-generated imaging that today enables battalions of post-production wizards working for movie-makers like James Cameron and Peter Jackson to put up on the screen real- seeming 3D renderings of anything that anyone can dream up.

Add to that the successor to the virtual reality technology now used in Google goggles, which relocates those digital fantasies from the screen into the real space all around us, but swap the goggles for contact lenses or neural implants.

Combine that with the power to convincingly simulate the feel of touching objects that don't exist, which haptic gloves can currently approximate, and extend that capacity to your whole body, whose entire anatomy will become an exquisitely sensitive, interactive input device, the nth gen of game controllers like Wii and Kinect.

Throw in superb 360-degree sound, plus a way to trigger micro-spurts of the molecules that cause the sensations of smell and taste.

Miniaturize everything down to the atomic scale, which is where computing is already going, so that the gizmos that do all this are featherweight and forgettable.

Store the content – the entertaining stories and experiences that this technology delivers – in the cloud, which is where more and more software is heading now, so that it's ubiquitous, available (for a price) to anyone in any place at any time.

And just as advances in processing power have turned laptops into animation and recording studios, imagine that this new entertainment content will be produced not only by the Comcasts and NewsCorps and Activisions, but also by scrappy startups, and kids in dorm rooms.

Think of the porn that will make possible.

And the first-person shooters.

And the trips to the rain forest, the Sistine Chapel, the moon, the gates of heaven and of hell.

It's not a question of whether the technology to confect and convey this digital dream, or nightmare, will one day exist; it's only a matter of when.

In 1975, as molecular biologists were recognizing the potential dangers of the recombinant DNA technology then becoming widespread, ” target=”_hplink”>no scientific evidence connecting the dots between exposure to video game violence and actual violent behavior.

But there's plenty of ” target=”_hplink”>debate ” target=”_hplink”>depicts torture as an ” target=”_hplink”>intelligence. ” target=”_hplink”>Jane Mayer reported, the dean of West Point flew to Hollywood to meet with 24's writers and producers to explain that real U.S. soldiers – instead of paying attention to their teachers and their textbooks; instead of learning that torture is wrong, counterproductive, inefficient and produces false intelligence – were instead trusting the instruction about interrogation methods that they were tacitly getting from a fictional, made up TV show.

The NRA is obscenely wrong about the relation between gun regulation and gun violence. But before we dismiss its case about popular culture out of hand, we might want to take seriously the way that entertainment thrills, enthralls, enrages, instructs and inspires us, all of us, no matter how sophisticated and media- savvy we may think we are. One fine day, awesome technology will enable the pleasure industry to pretty much erase the line between simulation and reality. I wonder whether we'll arrive at that point without first having wrestled with the consequences that might follow from that fun.

Marty Kaplan is the ” target=”_hplink”>USC Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism. Reach him at martyk@jewishjournal.com.

Fear of fun Read More »

Mormons react to the closing of Junior’s Deli

”Mark, did you hear about this? Heartbreaking! Going to Junior's after the temple was tradition for a lot of us in La Crescenta. Funny how many Mormons have a connection to this fab deli!”

This Facebook message from my friend Christa Woodall was how I first learned of tomorrow’s unexpected closing of Junior’s Deli, a Westside LA fixture for decades. Christa used to blog on Mormon-Jewish relations for a Jewish newspaper in San Francisco, and suggested this as a blog topic. As usual, she was inspired.

Soon after sending email and Facebook requests to current and former LA Mormons for their reaction, I received the following note from Aaron Roberts:  ”With the proximity of Junior's to the Temple, meeting places and our homes, I think lots of us have celebrated special moments at Junior's. My home teacher went with me to Junior's the evening after being ordained an Elder, shortly before leaving on my mission. It was also the first Jewish deli that I remember my Jewish family members taking me to as a child. Because of that it was the first deli I took my [Uruguayan] wife, who hasn't participated in Jewish culture, to experience that part of my heritage.”

Cherie Schlierman followed with her best wishes: ”My oldest son and daughter-in-law love their cheesecake. Hopefully they will end up at a new location.”

Finally, the inevitable Utah connection was made by Dave Mills: ”When I learned that the Jewish founder of Junior’s had been a uranium miner in Utah, just like my grandfather, I knew that I had to try the place. Their turkey pot pie was my favorite.”  

Best wishes to the owners of Junior’s in their search for a new location. Many Mormons, as well as Jews, will be praying for you.

Mormons react to the closing of Junior’s Deli Read More »

New Years Resolutions for Israel

Countries should not be immune to self-reflection and resolving to make some positive changes. So, on occassion of 2013, I'm not going to make resolutions for myself, but for the country I love, Israel.

1. I resolve not to be so hung up on world opinion and instead be concerned for what is right and what keeps my people safe.

2. I resolve to fight my enemies with valor until my children can sleep safely at night, forever.

3. I resolve to give a good and free life to my citizens and to listen to their cries, not the cries of world leaders and even some American Jewish organizations who care more for themselves than for me and my people.

4. I resolve to stop paying lip service to the scam called the “Two State Solution” which will gradually yet surely lead to my destruction.

5. I resolve to build many new homes in Judea and Samaria.

6. I resolve to gain more self-esteem and confidence in what I am as a country so that I can realize my full potential.

7. I resolve to take back the conversation about my destiny.

A Happy New Year to Israel and the Middle East!

Now, if only Israel's neigbhors took it upon themselves to make some resolutions, too. I can think of more than a few they should make….

New Years Resolutions for Israel Read More »