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July 14, 2014

Rocket launched from Lebanon strikes northern Israel, army says

At least one rocket fired from Lebanon slammed into northern Israel on Monday, the Israeli military said.

There were no immediate reports of casualties from the attack. It was the fourth time rockets have been fired from Lebanon since the start of a week-old Israeli offensive against Palestinian militants firing rockets at Israel from Gaza.

Reporting by Allyn Fisher-Ilan; Editing by Mark Trevelyan

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Calling and Conscience: Haftarat Mattot, Jeremiah 1:1-2:3

Rabbi Akiba said: All is foreseen, yet freedom of the will is given. Avot 3:18

Does God agree?  This week’s Haftarah suggests that Holy One takes a different view.  God tells Jeremiah:

Before I created you in the womb, I selected you;
Before you were born, I consecrated you;
I appointed you a prophet concerning the nations.

Gunther Plaut’s UAHC commentary interprets the phrase as raising the question of free will and predestination. I am not so sure.  It hardly constitutes a problem to state that God chooses people for prophecy, and yet free will exists. God also chose Jonah to be a prophet, but even a cursory examination of that book shows him to have a tremendous amount of free will.

Instead, God’s choosing of a prophet might be better interpreted through the notion of “conscience,” a concept not normally thought of as being reflected in scripture.  The Hebrew word for conscience, matzpan, did not even exist in Biblical and rabbinic times. It took time for the notion to appear in Jewish consciousness.

Yet conscience bridges the gap between free will and divine command. When our conscience rises up in us, it often feels as if we are being affected by another power, something outside ourselves. (It is no accident, then, that Haftarat Mattot comes on the heels of “>Beautiful Souls: Saying No, Breaking Ranks, and Heeding the Voice of Conscience in Dark Times attempts to solve the dilemma but can’t.

Press profiled (among others) Aleksander Jevtic, a Serbian army officer who saved Croats in the Balkan wars.  Press originally thinks that maybe Jevtic is educated and can rise above communal passions, but he is anything but. He is actually something of a misanthrope who couldn’t care less what other people think of him – not usually the profile of the morally courageous. Paul Grüninger, a Swiss police commander, had a simple explanation for why he broke the law to help Jewish refugees flee Austria in 1938. His daughter remembered that he would repeat the words “I could do nothing else.” (So much for free will.) As the New York Times reviewer remarked, “It is a humble answer, as if to say that anyone would have done the same” (except that the other Swiss police officers didn’t).  It cannot be explained.

Moral courage is not a virtue that gets much attention in modern American society. In a democracy, people rarely suffer simply for speaking out.  But that only comes at the level of grand politics. Intimidation, bullying and threats can be pervasive in the workplace, in school, and in social groupings. Peer pressure isn’t a cliché; it’s a way of life for teenagers. One of Press’ other profiles is of a financial-industry whistle-blower; certainly the US financial system will continue to provide these sorts of opportunities.

What might promote our own ability to be morally courageous? The question is unanswerable analytically, because we cannot provide a rational answer to something inexplicable like moral courage.  But if we are not content to just hope that we will be lucky enough to have moral courage when we need it (and I certainly lack that faith about myself), then we need to look at the realm of spirit and return to God.

The notion of a “calling” seems somewhat quaint, a relic of 18th century Protestantism. It is not. It expresses the idea that one’s life can have a coherent plan and goals, that a long-term life project and purpose is not some sort of fantasy but rather the very marrow of what it means to live excellently. It is the way of asking: why am I here? What is God’s purpose for me? What am I called to do?

If one can actually find her calling, then risk assumes less importance. If we know why we were put on earth, then ridicule, dishonor, and deprivation may seem more peripheral. Conversely, attachment to the signs of worldly success – money, prestige, power – become more important if there is no strong conviction about what makes life worth living. We are more willing to sacrifice these signs of worldly success if they are less important to us, and that comes from having a calling.

But finding a calling is not a rational process. It arrives – if it arrives – through a subtle, frustrating, mercurial process of discernment. A person must gaze deep into her soul and confront her strengths and weaknesses; then, she must reach out into the abyss and hope that Someone answers. That discernment process, at its best, is called prayer.

God, then, did not undermine Jeremiah’s will by choosing him.  Instead, God gave him the most precious gifts that the Holy One can bestow: knowledge of his own calling, and thus intimate relationship with his own conscience. He was not happy with it. But it enabled him both to suffer the outrages that came with it and continue his mission nonetheless.

With Haftarat Mattot, we enter the three weeks prior to Tisha B’Av, when we read the Book of Lamentations, or Eicha. Our tradition tells us that it was written by Jeremiah, in despair, as he overlooked the ruins of Jerusalem. But he knew, at least, that writing that book partially fulfilled what he was put on Earth to do. We should all be so lucky.

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The Audacity of Hope: Raising Little Messiahs.

“Seventy years ago these beautiful men would likely have been members of the Nazi party” emailed me a friend while watching Germany battle for the World Cup. 

I saw another perspective.  As I watched many fellow Jews cheer for Germany, I realized one day peace is possible.

Imagine Schindler telling the Jews he saved “In a few decades you will be proudly driving German cars, vacationing in Germany with your family, and one day soon you will be celebrating Germany’s win in the World Cup.”  How absurd.  And yet…

Growing up in Iran, my grandmother would always push me “Make sure you pray twice a day, when you wake up and before you go to sleep.  You know, you might be the one!  The Messiah will come from our little town of Shushan (Hamedan, Iran) the resting place of Ester and Mordechai.” 

My grandmother grew up at a time when women were not allowed to study.  She was never a Bat-Mitzvah.  She was not even allowed to touch the Torah.  Yet her faith was stronger than the men who bowed at the right phrase without conviction.

One of only four questions we are asked at the end of our lives, our tradition tells us, is “Did you despair?”  Paradoxically, at times, despair feels good.  Self-pity allows us to shrug off responsibility and unload ourselves of the plight of the world.  But we are here to heal, not to hide.

We are not allowed to give up; to despair is to make an idol of evil and forgo faith in God’s goodness and purpose in this world. 

“How do I become the one?”  I asked my grandmother.  “Become a doctor,” she urged.  “Each time you save a life,” she proclaimed like a Talmud scholar “is as if you saved the entire world.”

Each time my wife gave birth, I thought “could s/he be the one?” 

I am not sure I subscribe to a Messiah, but in our broken world, what if each of us raised a little Messiah?  What if each family raised a child to save a life?  What if The Messiah is the sum of all of our children, Jews, Christian, Muslim, or simply…human? 

In the end Love will win,
Light will pierce darkness.
Though the dust of hate settles in the night,
The morning dew will wash away your tears.
 

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How is this Gaza conflict different from other Gaza conflicts?

In the past week, Israel has endured a thousand rockets.

Yet not a single Israeli has died so far from a rocket strike during the week-long conflict.

In many ways, Israel’s Operation Protective Edge — its third Gaza operation in six years — is much like previous Israeli campaigns in the territory. Israel has used airstrikes to exact a toll on Hamas and has massed troops on the Gaza border, threatening a ground invasion.

So far, Israel has conducted nearly 1,500 airstrikes over Gaza, with some 175 Gazans having died as of Monday.

But in the absence of Israeli fatalities, this conflict has been like no other in the country’s history. Despite Hamas rockets that travel farther than ever, Israel’s Iron Dome missile defense system has intercepted 90 percent of the rockets heading toward population centers, and early-warning sirens and shelters have protected residents.

Iron Dome was first used during Israel’s 2012 conflict with Hamas, though the system has added batteries and been more fully developed since. In that conflict, six Israelis were killed, five of them from rocket fire.

Hamas’ total failure this time to kill Israelis — though several have been injured by rockets — has allowed most Israelis to continue their daily lives. And even amid discussion of a cease-fire, it has given the army breathing room to continue its mission.

“We are striking Hamas with increasing strength,” said Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at a Cabinet meeting Sunday, addressing Israeli citizens. “Regarding civil defense, one needs not only an Iron Dome but iron discipline as well. You have shown this up until now. This could yet take a long time, and we need both your support and your discipline.”

Israel’s goal in this conflict is to destroy Hamas’ rocket stocks and launchers while reasserting the Israel Defense Forces’ military deterrence. Meanwhile, the Israeli home front has been guarded by Iron Dome. Within seconds of when a rocket is launched, Iron Dome identifies the type of missile fired, maps where it came from and where it will land, and — if necessary — fires a missile to knock it out of the sky.

The missile defense system has managed to intercept about 90 percent of its targets.

“If anyone hit 9 of 10 in the majors, he would be cast in gold and sent to Cooperstown,” Eran Lerman, deputy chief of Israel’s National Security Council, told a Jewish Federations of North America delegation Monday, referring to America’s Baseball Hall of Fame.

Lerman hailed Israel’s “remarkable ability to defend ourselves technologically.”

Experiencing loss of life from war has been central to the Israeli experience. Yom Hazikaron, Israel’s memorial day, is a solemn occasion for the country. Civilian and military deaths have been a key part of the calculus of when to begin and end military campaigns.

With Protective Edge, Israel has so far experienced a new kind of conflict.

But Amichai Cohen, a research fellow at the Israel Democracy Institute, wrote that Iron Dome could lead to more blame being assigned to Israel because its civilians are less exposed to harm than is Gaza’s population.

“Given the real, yet much smaller threat that rockets pose to Israeli civilian lives after the invention of Iron Dome, there is a real question of whether the IDF’s freedom of action has been curtailed,” Cohen wrote in an email sent out Monday by his institute. “Is the IDF, in effect, penalized for this life-saving technology?”

One place that doesn’t benefit from Iron Dome is Sderot, a city in the western Negev that has been absorbing Qassam rockets from Gaza since 2000. Because Sderot is only about a half-mile from the Gaza border, Iron Dome doesn’t have time to intercept the rockets. Residents have 15 seconds from the time of a warning siren to run for shelter.

Speaking to leaders of North American Jewish community federations who came to show solidarity with the city, Sderot’s mayor, Alon Davidi, encouraged the Israeli army to fight until it eliminates Hamas’ offensive capabilities. He said that the long-range rockets now being fired into the rest of the country have made millions of Israelis understand what Sderot has had to endure.

“All of the country feels what it means to want to save your life,” Davidi said. “In Tel Aviv they have two minutes. We have 15 seconds. We have a joke: If we lived in Tel Aviv we could take a shower and make coffee” before seeking shelter.

“We pray the army can do the job and succeed with the operation,” he added.

Many Israelis would likely welcome the respite from running to bomb shelters that a cease-fire would provide. But Talia Levanon, head of the Israel Trauma Coalition, said that if this operation ends like Israel’s last in 2012, there will hardly be a break in the conflict for Sderot.

Whether “it’s called an operation or it’s called a war, we need to seek shelter with my children and grandchildren, “ Levanon said. “Right now we speak of a cease-fire. We’ll wait a year or two years for it to happen again. We’re always licking the wounds of the previous operation and preparing for next time.”

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How to shrink your day school tuition bill by $163,000

When the parents of three school-age children sat down with their financial adviser to try to figure out how to minimize their anticipated private school tuition bill of $810,000 through high school, they came up with a plan that shrunk the bill by $163,000.

How’d they do it?

Well, mostly by pre-paying, according to The Wall Street Journal.

Here’s how they worked it: With tuition averaging $30,000 per year for each of their children, ages 11, 9 and 7, they figured their total bill would be $810,000 if they factored in average annual increases of 5 percent per year.

If they pre-paid, however, they’d lock in the $30,000 rate. Their adviser, Kevin Stophel, suggested they lock in only 11 years of tuition payments. For the remaining payments, they could set aside the money and out-pace the expected tuition increases with smart investments.

Stophel also had the parents establish a 2503(c) minor’s trust for each of the youngest children to allow that money to grow tax free inside those trusts.

This could be a model for day school tuition savings — for those parents who have hundreds of thousands of dollars of cash lying around to pre-pay tuition, of course.

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Rockets strike southern Israeli port of Eilat

Three rockets exploded in and near the Israeli Red Sea resort of Eilat on Tuesday, and rescue teams were investigating reports that several people were injured, a military spokesman said.

They were the first rockets to strike Eilat since a week-old Israeli-Palestinian conflict in Gaza, though rockets fired from Egypt have struck in the city previously in the past few years.

Two rockets struck inside the city that borders both Egypt and Jordan and which is filled with hotels and tourist attractions. A third landed in an open area, the spokesman said.

The spokesman could not say from where the rocket was fired. Israel Radio said officials suspected it was fired from Egypt.

Hundreds of rockets have been fired at Israel from Gaza in the past week, during an Israeli offensive against militants that has killed 180 people, though no rockets have been shot from Gaza as far south as Eilat.

Writing by Allyn Fisher-Ilan; Editing by Ken Wills

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DIY: Make a succulent terrarium for your indoor garden

Hello lovely readers! I'm back with my newest DIY post. Today, we're making terrariums. Why terrariums? Well…

As much as I love my new apartment, the biggest issue I have with it is that it lacks a balcony or patio–so there's no place for a real garden.

Because I love gardening (and just being around plants) I decided to try my hand at indoor gardening. I know succulents are pretty hard to kill, so they seemed like a good first plant. Who knows? If they survive more than a week, I might also get a philodendron! Or create an herb garden! THE POSSIBILITIES!!!

But back to the terrarium. Terrariums are great because 1) they're cheap and easy to make 2) they handle neglect relatively well and 3) they give you a little plant life and greenery in your otherwise plant-free living quarters.

So without further babbling…the instructions!

Supplies:

a succulent

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Rocket from Syria lands in Golan, Bedouin sisters injured near Beersheba

A rocket fired from Syria landed in the Golan Heights, and a rocket near Beersheba injured two Bedouin sisters.

The rocket that landed near Kibbutz El Rom in the Golan Heights on Monday evening started a fire. The Israel Defense Forces reportedly believes it was launched at Israel deliberately and not as part of the fallout from Syria’s three-year civil war. A separate rocket was fired early Monday morning from Lebanon.

The two Bedouin sisters, ages 11 and 13, were injured Monday evening by a rocket that landed in Lakiya, near Beersheba, according to the IDF. One is in serious condition and one is in moderate condition at Soroka Medical Center in Beersheba.

At least two rockets were shot down over the heavily populated Tel Aviv at the start of the Monday evening rush hour and one reportedly landed in an open area. Sirens were heard in Tel Aviv as well as in the surrounding cities of Herzliya, Ramat Gan, Bnei Brak, Givatayim, Kfar Shmaryahu and Ramat Hasharon. Hamas claimed responsibility for the rockets fired toward Tel Aviv.

Meanwhile, Gaza terrorists fired an anti-tank missile at an Israeli tank near the border with the northern Gaza Strip. The anti-tank missile was deflected by the tank’s protection system, causing no injuries. Despite this, Hamas’ military wing announced that it had destroyed an Israeli tank with anti-tank missile fire.

Also Monday evening, Hamas sent a text message to hundreds of Israelis warning that it will continue to rain rockets down on Israel until Israel agrees to its terms for a ceasefire.

“The stupidity of your leaders has placed all of Israel under fire and forced all Israelis to enter shelters. We will continue to shoot at every place in Israel until all our legitimate demands are met fully,” reads the text.

The demands include lifting the blockade on Gaza, releasing Palestinian prisoners freed in the Shalit deal that were rearrested in recent weeks and opening the Rafah border crossing with Egypt.

Six Palestinians were killed Monday through the evening by Israeli airstrikes, according to the Palestinian Maan news agency.

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Reports: Israel ready to accept Egypt-proffered cease-fire

Israel is ready to accept an Egyptian-brokered cease-fire, multiple media reports said, although it is unclear whether Hamas also has agreed.

The cease-fire that would end the eight-day Gaza conflict was first posted Monday on Twitter by Yossi Melman, a veteran Israeli journalist, who cited Palestinian sources and who confirmed with Israeli officials that Israel would accept the terms.

Other journalists soon posted the text as well, citing various sources, including Egyptian officials.

A de-escalation of violence is to start at 9 a.m. local time to be followed by a full truce within 12 hours, according to the full text, which Melman provided JTA via email.

“Israel shall cease all hostilities against the Gaza Strip via land, sea, and air, and shall commit to refrain from conducting any ground raids against Gaza and targeting civilians,” the text said.

“All Palestinian factions in Gaza shall cease all hostilities from the Gaza Strip against Israel via land, sea, air, and underground, and shall commit to refrain from firing all types of rockets, and from attacks on the borders or targeting civilians,” it said.

Following the cease-fire, talks about opening crossings between Gaza and Israel to allow more goods into the coastal strip would take place in Cairo, the text said. Cease-fire talks would be held by Egypt separately with both Israel and Hamas and other Palestinian factions.

The proposal comes hours before U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry is scheduled to arrive in Egypt to work to end the fighting between the two sides and two days after the U.N. Security Council called for a cease-fire in a non-binding statement.

“The Security Council members expressed serious concern regarding the crisis related to Gaza and the protection and welfare of civilians on both sides,” the statement said. “The Security Council members called for de-escalation of the situation, restoration of calm, and reinstitution of the November 2012 ceasefire. The Security Council members further called for respect for international humanitarian law, including the protection of civilians.”

A U.S. official told JTA that the U.S. delegation consulted closely with Israel while conducting negotiations over the Security Council statement.

“In those discussions we supported Israel’s right to defend itself and worked with Israel on diplomatic efforts to resolve the ongoing crisis.” said the official who was authorized to speak only on background.

“No country should have to live under the constant threat of indiscriminate violence against innocent civilians,” the official said. “We support Israel’s right to defend itself against these attacks. That said, we remain concerned about the risk of further escalation and reiterate the need for all sides to do everything they can to protect the lives of civilians and restore calm.”

The foreign ministers of the Arab League also are scheduled to arrive in Cairo to discuss the hostilities between Israel and the Palestinians.

Israel launched airstrikes a week ago after an intensification of rocket fire from the Gaza Strip.

Close to 200 Palestinians, mostly civilians, have died in attacks on what Israel says are rocket launching and storage sites, as well as attacks on tunnels, military camps and Hamas officials.

No Israelis have been killed. Over 700 rockets have landed in Israel, reaching unprecedented distances as far north as Haifa’s southern suburbs and as far east as Jerusalem.

Egypt helped broker cease-fires in 2009 and 2012, but the current president, Abdel al-Sisi has poor relations with Hamas, and it is not clear he has the leverage to impose a cease-fire.

Melman said Sisi’s proposal came over “Hamas objections.” It is not clear yet whether the group will abide by it.

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