fbpx

January 1, 2015

This week in power: Saudi permission and Argentine werewolf rumor

A roundup of the most talked about political and global stories in the Jewish world this week:

Saudi law
Reports this week from Saudi Arabia indicate that the country has lightened restrictions against foreigners who practice the Jewish faith and will permit them to work there. “For example, if a worker has the Yemeni nationality and the Jewish faith, he is allowed to work in the kingdom because the ministry does not look at religions, but at nationalities,” ” target=”_blank”>added Middle East Eye.

“It is interesting that this is being publicized now. I wonder if Saudi Arabia is trying to engage in some PR,” ” target=”_blank”>as The Washington Post put it. Although Kirchner did take in an Israeli child, one of 700 children she's done the same for, rumors circulated that the seventh son of a family is doomed to turn into a werewolf, known as “el lobison” in Argentina, after his 13th birthday. This folklore led to some lofty and inaccurate headlines around the world. “But if it's surprising people believed in such a curse a century ago, it's downright bizarre that they're still entertaining the notion of it today,” This week in power: Saudi permission and Argentine werewolf rumor Read More »

Looking at my 2014 predictions and at 2015

A year ago, I posted a number of predictions. But these were not really predictions. As I explained in the introduction to my list, “I don't trust predictions. Not even ones made by the experts. They tend to be wrong when it counts and to be right when it doesn't – when the obvious happens”. Is this what happened with my predictions for 2014? You can be the judge.

I wrote:

The six months of negotiations will not be enough, and a decision will have to be made: is Iran serious enough for the west to keep negotiating? Trust Iran, it will be serious enough to make negotiations look like the more tempting option.

An easy one – and correct.

I wrote:

If the Syrian war can be contained without having much influence on neighboring countries, no one is going to invest too much in putting an end to it.

Easy – correct.

I wrote:

Israel will have to say yes to the American framework proposal. The Palestinians are less likely to say yes. But even if both sides agree to the framework, I don't quite see how this could be translated to a workable agreement. 

What “framework” agreement? I was right to assume that there will be no breakthrough, but the scenario I laid out did not materialize.

I wrote:

The coalition can change, elections can be scheduled (but this is not very likely to occur during 2014), parties can split. 

The not-very-likely is what actually happened.

I wrote:

2014 might be the quietest year in quite a while when it comes to Israel as an electoral issue [in the US].

Yes – this one I got right. 

Now – let’s turn to 2015:

Israel's elections: too soon to make a prediction, but I have to say that in recent days a number of political operatives told me that a unity government of Likud and Labor is much more likely than people tend to think. Netanyahu might have enough votes to establish a right-haredi coalition, but he knows that such a coalition is going to get Israel in trouble. He needs someone to his left, and the Herzog-Livni duo is not a bad possibility. The challenge facing both leaderships of both parties in such a case will be simple: how to control the party Huns.

The Palestinians: Another year of stalemate. I recently came to the conclusion – not that surprising – that the Palestinian leadership needs to change for this track to be viable again. Not that Abbas is such a terrible leader, but he is old, and not very popular, and seems tired, and does not have the stature with which to make a bold move. Possibly, 2015 will be his last year. But we wish him good health – and maybe it won't be his last year. The bottom line prediction is this: the next real opening is when Palestinian politics reshuffle.

Iran: more foot dragging? I think yes.

US-Israel: There are several issues besides Iran and the Palestinian issue that can be contentious and cloud US-Israel relations. The most serious of them: the 2015 NPT review conference. When disagreements over sensitive issues such as nuclear policy reveal themselves, Israel becomes very nervous. This is an issue that the public knows little about, and Israelis are hardly aware of its existence. But some Israelis in high office are worried about April, another testimony to the current low level of trust between Israel's government and the US administration.

US Jewry: as I wrote here recently, the rise of Chabad is going to be an issue of much discussion among US Jews in 2015. And of course, the never ending debate over intermarriage isn't going to end. Possibly, this is the year in which the Conservative movement is going to have to seriously consider changes to its policy of no-interfaith-ceremonies, as was proved in the last two weeks (see the stories of rabbi Gardenswartz and USY's dating ban – both covered aptly by Uriel Heilman).

Israel's most urgent issue: Not Iran, not peace, not Gaza (unless you know what). After the election, any government assembled will have to go back to the drawing board and deal with housing prices. There are no magic tricks here, but something needs to be done, and quickly. The challenge for the next government will be that of bettering the atmosphere and giving young Israelis a stronger sense of hope. The outgoing government had an opportunity to do that – and the opportunity was lost.

Looking at my 2014 predictions and at 2015 Read More »

The Difference Between an Optimist and a Pessimist – D’var Torah Vayechi

The optimist says, “This is the best of all worlds.”

The pessimist says, “You’re right!”

As we enter 2015 there is much for which we can be thankful: our lives, our health (hopefully), our families, friends, and community, the people of Israel, and our friendships with peoples of all faith, ethnic and national traditions.

Of course, there’s much about which to worry as well: hard-heartedness, selfishness, alienation, polarization, poverty, inequality, injustice, violence, and war.

A thousand mourners  filled the Sanctuary of Leo Baeck Temple in Los Angeles last Sunday to memorialize the congregation’s founding Rabbi Leonard I. Beerman, which they did with uncommon love and respect for his brilliance, wisdom, kindness, love for Jews, the state of Israel, all people, and a higher moral order.

Throughout his life, Leonard’s dogged determination to keep the fires of love, compassion and justice burning elevated the rest of us by virtue of the nobility of his spirit. So many people from a variety of religious communities depended upon Leonard to help them set the direction of their moral compass. He was a spiritual and moral “north star” that pointed his community in the direction he thought it ought to be traveling.

Surely, Rabbi Leonard Beerman was a unique human being and an exceptional rabbi, and I for one feel lonelier in our world now that he is gone. As I indicated in my remembrance last week, I didn’t see Leonard all that frequently (much more in recent years than before), but I knew he was there holding a moral and spiritual torch high for so many of his chassidim, who may not always have agreed with him on this position or that, or who thought about ethics a bit differently than he did, but who took him and what he once called his “notions” very seriously indeed.

Leonard was laid to rest during this week in which we are reading Parashat Vayechi, the final portion in the book of Genesis when Jacob blessed his sons and grandsons.

The portion opens while Jacob’s family is in Egypt, a constricted place defined by injustice, slavery, brutality, insensitivity, and exile. Among the darkest of Torah portions, it begins unlike any other portion in all of Torah.

Rashi asked, “Why is this section completely closed? Why isn’t there a space of nine letters between the end of the preceding parashah and the beginning of this one, as it is in every other Torah portion?”

Rashi says: “When Jacob our father died, the eyes and hearts of Israel were closed because of the affliction of the bondage with which the Egyptians began to enslave them.”

The Midrash explains that “Jacob desired to reveal the end (i.e. the time of the final redemption) to his sons, but it was closed from him.” (B’reishit Rabbah)

This suggests that the hardship, distress and violence of Egypt (or any constricted life) blind the eye, harden the heart and oppress the soul. Torah reminds us that we can never become resigned to a world of dog-eat-dog. Rather, because we were created “b’tzelem Elohim – in the divine image” every human being is infused with infinite value and worth. As such, we are meant to dream big dreams, to climb Jacob’s stairway to heaven, to reclaim our best angels, and to remember who we are and what is our purpose on earth as Jews – namely, to sanctify life, to walk humbly before God, and to care with compassion for all of God’s creatures.

Parshat Veyechi is a story about opposites – impending hardship vs blessing, despair vs hope, hard-heartedness vs elevated dreams. Tradition teaches us Jews to embrace both extremes, but to reach higher than what circumstances seem to allow.

Such was the nature of Jacob’s times. Such is the nature of our times. Such was the nature of Rabbi Leonard Beerman’s life.

Jacob wanted so badly to reveal the end of days to his children, but “nistam mimenu – it was closed to him.” Sadly, It remains closed to us as well.

Lamrot hakol – despite everything” Leonard sought the light as we Jews seek the light, and he prayed for the peace of Jerusalem and for justice and security for Israel and the Palestinians, for common decency for all humankind, as we Jews must also pray.

Next week begins the reading of the book of Exodus when we witness the beginnings of the spiritual nationhood of the Jewish people at Mount Sinai as we entered into a sacred covenant with God.

Because we see reflected sparks of divinity in the human condition, we Jews are essentially optimists who regard the half-full glass and seek to fill that which is empty.

May this secular New Year 2015 be a time when we continue the work to help facilitate greater kindness, compassion, justice, healing, and peace for us in our own lives, families and communities, for the Jewish people and for all of God’s children.

The Difference Between an Optimist and a Pessimist – D’var Torah Vayechi Read More »

Shame on HarperCollins Publishers

Shame on HarperCollins for publishing an atlas of the Middle East and deliberately omitting Israel from the map. Tablet Magazine reported (December 31):

“Collins Bartholomew, the subsidiary of HarperCollins that specializes in maps, told The Tablet that including Israel would have been ‘unacceptable’ to their customers in the Gulf and the amendment incorporated ‘local preferences’.”

Tablet also reported:

“The publishers HarperCollins is withdrawing from sale an atlas that omitted Israel from its maps after the Bishops' Conference of England and Wales said it was harmful to peace efforts in the Middle East.

The Tablet's story about the Middle East Atlas which shows Jordan and Syria extending all the way to the Mediterranean Sea was widely reported and caused an international outcry. Collins Middle East Atlases, were sold to English-speaking schools in the Muslim-majority Gulf and publicity about their existence has embarrassed the publishing giant.”

While HarperCollins deserves a huge helping of New Year’s shame for its unconscionable deed, the Bishop’s Conference of England and Wales deserves our gratitude, though the omission was far more than simply being “harmful to peace efforts in the Middle East.”

This omission constitutes a denial of the historical record, the delegitimization of the state of Israel and the creating of an alliance of the book publisher with those who would deny the right of the Jewish people to a state of our own. This constitutes anti-Semitism, pure and simple, or at the most it indicates the catering to classic anti-Semitism. The omission was also a denial of the United Nation’s charter and Israel’s membership in that august body representing the family of nations.

See http://www.thetablet.co.uk/news/1579/0/publisher-harpercollins-omits-israel-from-school-atlas-to-meet-local-preferences-

See http://www.powerlineblog.com/archives/2014/12/living-in-a-world-gone-mad-2.php

Shame on HarperCollins Publishers Read More »

Weirdest Jewish News of 2014? Werewolf Bar Mitzvah

It appeared to be a case of life imitating art, or at least life imitating Tracy Morgan’s “>Buzzfeed, “>The Independent, and “>The Guardian debunked it, or at least its ridiculous parts. According to The Guardian, although Argentina has both a tradition of making seventh sons eligible to become the president’s godson, and a local myth of a 7th child becoming a lobizon, the two are not connected. Rather, The Guardian reported, the custom actually began in 1907, when an immigrant couple asked the then Argentinian president to become godfather to their 7th son to maintain the custom from Czarist Russia. The practice then became tradition and was passed into law by Isabel Peron in 1974.

The Guardian also noted that Tawil was not a boy but a 21 year old man. However, it did acknowledge that he was the first Jewish person upon whom this honor has been bestowed. According to the “>blogged and Weirdest Jewish News of 2014? Werewolf Bar Mitzvah Read More »

About

Born in New York City (in the shadow of the old Yankee Stadium) and raised in the Los Angeles’ suburbs, Harold Brackman received his doctorate in from UCLA in 1977 for a dissertation on the history of Black-Jewish relations. After a decade in academic teaching, he joined the Simon Wiesenthal and its Museum of Tolerance as a senior consultant. Dr. Brackman’s longstanding interest in the history of African Americans and Jews produced an award-winning study of Jackie Robinson, Hank Greenberg, and the Jewish role in the integration of major league baseball (Journal of Sports History, 1999, coauthored with Steven H. Norwood), and an influential essay exploring in the context of the Holocaust W. E. B. Du Bois’ evolving views of Jews (American Jewish History, 2000). In the early 1990s, his scholarly and polemical pursuits converged when he authored the first book-length account, Ministry of Lies (Simon Wiesenthal Center 1992; Four Wall Eight Windows Publishers, 1994) to debunk the Nation of Islam’s anonymously-written tract, The Secret Relationship Between Blacks and Jews (1991), alleging “Jewish domination” of the slave trade. Over the decades working with the Wiesenthal Center and the MOT, Dr. Brackman has broadened his interests to include research and writing on Los Angeles’ intergroup  “parallelogram” (African Americans, Jews, Latinos, and Asian Pacifics) as well as global racism and anti-Semitism.  His new book—coauthored with Ephraim Isaac—is From Abraham to Obama: A History of Jews, Africans, and African Americans (Africa World Press). 

About Read More »