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June 26, 2015

The Dark and Bloody Ground of Neo-Confederate Mythology

There is an extraordinary back-and-forth in Commentary’s “Contentions” between military historian Max Boot—who, though a conservative, admits to a lifelong aversion to riding up and down Jefferson Davis Highway in Virginia—and defenders of “Southern heritage” who think otherwise, though many agree the Confederate battle flag must be removed from public places of honor.

I was stunned that anybody in this country really cared that passionately any longer about history. I still doubt that today’s younger generation, with tenuous family roots and personal identities no deeper than their Facebook pages, still do.

What we have here is the last or “in extremis” stage of the Neo-Confederate (not Neocon!) movement that traces back to the post-World War II backlash against the origins of the civil rights movement, to Southern massive resistance to integration during the 1950s and 1960s, to the “Emerging Republican Majority” thesis of Kevin Phillips, and to Pat Buchanan’s and Lee Atwater’s “Southern Strategy” for politically exploiting it.

Less well-known, at least in Jewish circles, is the cultural-intellectual dimension of this movement: a neo-Confederate revival that has become a cottage industry. I mean a ton of books arguing that that Johnny Rebs were not racist or at least no more racist than the Billy Yanks, that secession was really about Southern states rights constitutionalism and Northern “economic aggression” rather than about slavery, and that Lincoln was a “dictator” and no great liberal statesman. See, for example, James W. Loewen’s and Edward H. Sebasta’s The Confederate and Neo-Confederate Reader (2010). The neo-Confederates are right at least to the extent that Lincoln (who suspended habeas corpus during the war) was willing to whatever it took (though no more than it took) to save the Union. They are also right that simple moral double entry bookkeeping doesn’t explain Southerners (like Robert E. Lee) who were personally opposed to slavery yet fought for the South, or Northern War Democrats from the Upper South who owned slaves yet fought for the Union.

The problem is the Neo-Confederate or “Southern heritage” revival of recent decades is more rooted in politics than culture. Though the Democrats had their own Southern strategy (electing both Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton), it was conservative Republican politicians, some opportunistically, some sincerely,who were primarily responsible for exploiting the Southern mystique for partisan advantage during the Nixon-Reagan era. This for a while worked politically, but now we—and white Southerners—know that the whole thing was built on sand, a sort of Potemkin’s village that’s imploding hut by hut from reverberations of Dylann Root’s Charleston Church massacre. Root’s white supremacist Gotterdammerung was rooted in cyberage white supremacism, but also has an anti-Semitic flavor (he viewed Jews as “traitors” to the white race). Morally, there wasn’t enough “there there” (to borrow a phrase from Gertrude Stein) in the Southern heritage movement to sustain it. Despite the froth of books, it was intellectually more shallow than the politically less significant “Agrarian Movement” of Southern novelists and poets like Allen Tate from the 1930s to the 1950s.

To rephrase, “Southern heritage”—a lucrative tourist attraction from New Orleans to Charleston—is collapsing like a house of cards in response to a hurricane that is part justified moral outrage and part leftist media hype against stereotyped primitive southern whites right out of the movie Deliverance. Wal-Mart and Amazon may continue to sell Nazi memorabilia or board games, but regarding Confederatiana they have already joined the chorus to “The Night They Drove Dixie Down.”

The possibly politically incorrect thought occurs to me that white Southerners have something in common with the Palestinians whom Abba Eban said “never miss a chance to miss a chance.” In 1860, despite Lincoln’s election, the Slave South enjoyed a veto power in national politics that would have kept slavery alive within the Union indefinitely. Yet they bet on secession and the establishment of a slave Empire stretching from California to the Caribbean—and they lost. After World War II, they again had the opportunity to make their own peace with the civil rights movement which, as Reverend King shows, was at least as much Southern as they were. Instead, they chose massive resistance and then Southern cultural mystifications—and now, stripped of any pretense of moral authenticity—they are taking the cultural and political hit. Not only Confederate monuments, but even Aunt Jemima’s maple syrup and Uncle Ben’s rice may not survive in a de-Southernized national consumer culture.

Historically, I oversimplify in one respect. As David Blight shows in Race and Reunion (2002), cultural Southernism has pre-Civil War roots, but its real flowering was postwar as white Southerners rechanneled their sense of military prowess and regional pride into the national conversation. They gave their blood to fight on America’s overseas battlefields, from the Spanish American War to Vietnam. Yet they demanded as the price of regional reconciliation the acceptance of Neo-Confederate racist mythology. Hollywood was happy to pay in films ranging from the hard-core hate of Birth of a Nation (1915) to the soft-core prejudice of Gone With the Wind (1939).

Of course, Hollywood’s Jewish moguls have been arraigned at the bar of post hoc historical tribunals for these travesties, though D. W. Griffith, maker of Birth of a Nation, was every bit as much a Christian and a Southerner as Reverend King.

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Rosner’s Torah-Talk: Parashat Chukat with Rabbi Matt Carl

Our guest this week is Rabbi Matt Carl, leader of the East Midwood Jewish Center in Brooklyn. Rabbi Carl graduated from Vassar College in 2000 with a BA with honors, majoring in religion. In 2008 he was awarded an MA and Rabbinic ordination from the Jewish Theological Seminary and Machon Schechter, where he specialized in Talmud and Rabbinics. While at JTS he trained as a chaplain at Sloan Kettering Medical Center. For several years Carl was the day-to-day rabbi for 150 families at Brooklyn’s Congregation Mount Sinai, creating programs for the younger generation and unaffiliated Jews. He co-founded the Brooklyn United Jewish High School Program with several other local synagogue educators and created the Brooklyn Bridge Community Supported Agriculture program. He also served as rabbi of Battery Park Synagogue and as Director of Community Engagement at Hazon.

This week's Torah portion – Parashat Chukat (Numbers 19:1-22:1) – Features the death of Aaron and Miriam, brother and sister of Moses; the famous story of Moses striking the stone; and Israel’s battles against the Emorite kings Sichon and Og. Our conversation focuses on Moshe’s anger when hitting the rock, the reason for his severe punishment, and the idea of letting anger get to us.

Our previous discussions about Parashat Chukat:

Rabbi Daniel Korobkin on Israel’s use of the power of prayer in their military struggles

Rabbi Sharon Braus on Miriam and Aaron’s role in the story of Israel

 

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Speaking Through and Through

It is there that I will set My meetings with you, and I shall speak with you from atop the Cover, from between the two Cherubim that are on the Ark of the Testimonial-tablets, everything that I shall command you to the Children of Israel. (Exodus 25:22)

Atop the ark holding the tablets in the temple are two angels, Cherubim. It is said God speaks between them.   A Cherub is “like a young one,” says Rashi.

With childlike innocence, I sound out Your Name. With childlike innocence “cooing,” and whatever else, is fine. It is.
With childlike innocence, I hear your call. In hereing with my heart and brain. With childlike innocence, I face all; I spread my wings, open my gaze.

“Oh, God!” I think. “I can hold You through my wise handle on things, I can. I do.”

And I hear,
“Hahaha.
Your desire is playful. You’re only Our baby. You should open and say, ‘AH”

“Rattle, rattle! Slide, Yah!” Shaking through me, I let my wings be used as an amplifier—-
I'm awed!
Am I screaming? I am singing: 


I am one of many; all together we are One. 

I am one of many; all together we are One.

“Letting Me hold you,” God hummms under it all, rocking me.
“By letting Me hold you, you can hold Me too.”

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Over 50 killed in terrorist attacks on three continents

Terrorists have attacked sites in France, Tunisia and Kuwait, killing over 50 people according to preliminary reports.

At least one person was killed and several were injured in an attack on a gas factory in Grenoble, France in what French President Francois Hollande said was a “pure terrorist attack.”

At a beach in front of two hotels in Tunisia, multiple gunmen have killed 28 people and wounded at least 39, according to the Tunisian Health Ministry. French, Belgian, Russian, German and British tourists are among the dead. At least one of the attackers was killed by security forces, the New York Times reported. A security source in Tunisia told Reuters that one of the hotels targeted was the Imperial Marhaba.

Meanwhile, ISIS claimed responsibility for a bomb explosion at a Shiite mosque in Kuwait which has killed at least 25 people, according to Sky News.

Although there is no concrete indication that the attacks were jointly coordinated, they occurred at roughly the same time on Friday morning across the three continents. Earlier this week, ISIS urged its followers to increase its attacks during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.

In France, the decapitated body of a man was found on the premises of the factory near Lyon, and an attacker brandishing an Islamic State flag was arrested, according to the website of the Le Point magazine. Two other people were shown being detained on French television, one of whom is the attacker’s wife.

The victim was reportedly a local business man and the employer of a second suspect detained by police. French reports said the victim’s head was pinned to the factory gate and covered with Arabic writing.

There were explosions. It’s not clear whether they were caused by devices or by the ramming of a car into gas tanks.

French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve said he would “immediately” head to the site. Hollande cut short his attendance at a summit of European leaders in Brussels in order to return to Paris.

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Flowers on the Mountain: In Honor of Shavuot

I am glad to have written this

poem of Petunias that are ladies’ names
and Israel inside,
of singing bowls
that are past their songs– riding on the wakes completely still.

If some sort of language were being created as they say– a foreign one known and received
on the top of some mountain with a world
at your feet– sand as alive– people below
as alive as each letter
met in your hands and head– the shapes being
Mathematical and heart felt
Embedded somehow and completely already on the Scribe's slab.

I am a petunia– a higher range of plant medicine
some things unwrap us.

Some things are bigger than We so that I do not have to fit myself smaller
squeezing tears out in order to know That is me. Being born now– discovering the ancient or making the new.

Pink and flat on the surface that it laid upon—
I think it is quite obvious where I lie–
How I can go without

to an over-pouring of an experiential mystery.

A woman returned from Israel, fresh and she asks—“did you do it?
Ever go there?” I- yes- I 

a mystery that is Thine, Israel. Yours, Unique.

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Vatican signs first treaty with ‘State of Palestine’, Israel angered

The Vatican signed its first treaty with the “State of Palestine” on Friday, calling for “courageous decisions” to end the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and backing a two-state solution.

The treaty, which made official the Vatican's de facto recognition of Palestine since 2012, angered Israel, which called it “a hasty step (that) damages the prospects for advancing a peace agreement”.

Israel also said it could have implications on its future diplomatic relations with the Vatican.

The accord, which concerns the Catholic Church's activities in areas controlled by the Palestinian Authority, also confirmed the Vatican's increasingly proactive role in foreign policy under Pope Francis. Last year, it brokered the historic resumption of ties between the United States and Cuba.

Archbishop Paul Gallagher, the Vatican's foreign minister, said at the signing that he hoped it could be a “stimulus to bringing a definitive end to the long-standing Israeli-Palestinian conflict, which continues to cause suffering for both parties”.

He called for peace negotiations held directly between Israelis and Palestinians to resume and lead to a two-state solution. “This certainly requires courageous decisions, but it will also offer a major contribution to peace and stability in the region,” he said.

Palestinian Foreign Minister Riad Al-Malki said he hoped it would help “recognition of the right of the Palestinian people to self-determination, freedom and dignity in an independent state of their own, free from the shackles of occupation”.

The Vatican is particularly keen to have a greater diplomatic role in the Middle East, from where many Christians have fled because of conflicts in Syria, Iraq and other countries.

There are about 100,000 Catholics of the Roman and Greek Melkite rites in Israel and the Palestinian territories, most of them Palestinians.

Gallagher said the agreement “may serve as a model for other Arab and Muslim majority countries” with regard to freedom of religion and conscience.

The U.N. General Assembly adopted a resolution in 2012 recognizing Palestine as an observer non-member state. This was welcomed at the time by the Vatican, which has the same observer non-member status at the United Nations.

Since then the Vatican has de facto recognized a “State of Palestine” and the pope referred to it by that name when he visited the Holy Land last year.

Some 135 members of the United Nations recognize Palestine, nearly 70 percent of the total. By comparison, 160 of the UN's 193 members recognize Israel.

Last October, Sweden became the first major European country to acknowledge Palestine, a decision that drew condemnation from Israel and has since led to tense relations between the two.

The European Union as a whole does not recognize Palestine, taking the same view as the United States that an independent country can emerge only via negotiations with Israel, not through a process of unilateral recognition.

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Palestinian gunman killed after firing on IDF checkpoint

Israeli soldiers shot and killed a Palestinian gunman in the West Bank on Friday after he opened fire on them at a checkpoint, the Israeli military said.

It was the third such violent incident in eight days.

On Sunday a Palestinian stabbed and wounded an Israeli paramilitary policeman outside the walled Old City of Jerusalem. The policeman shot back and wounded him. Last Friday a suspected Palestinian gunman shot at two Israeli hikers near a Jewish settlement in the West Bank and killed one. The assailant escaped.

There were no Israeli casualties in the latest incident.

Palestinians seek a state in East Jerusalem, the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, territories Israel captured in the 1967 Middle East war. The last round of peace talks between the sides broke down in April 2014.

Palestinian militants this month fired rockets into Israel from Gaza, drawing Israeli return fire. That frontier has been largely quiet since the Gaza war last year.

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Supreme Court rules in favor of gay marriage nationwide

The Supreme Court ruled on Friday that the U.S. Constitution provides same-sex couples the right to marry, handing a historic triumph to the American gay rights movement.

The court ruled 5-4 that the Constitution's guarantees of due process and equal protection under the law mean that states cannot ban same-sex marriages. With the landmark ruling, gay marriage becomes legal in all 50 states.

Immediately after the decision, same-sex couples in many of states where gay marriage had been banned headed to county clerks' offices for marriage licenses as state officials issued statements saying they would respect the ruling.

President Barack Obama, appearing in the White House Rose Garden, hailed the ruling as a milestone in American justice that arrived “like a thunderbolt.”

“This ruling is a victory for America,” said Obama, the first sitting president to support gay marriage. “This decision affirms what millions of Americans already believe in their hearts. When all Americans are treated as equal, we are all more free.”

Justice Anthony Kennedy, writing on behalf of the court, said the hope of gay people intending to marry “is not to be condemned to live in loneliness, excluded from one of civilization's oldest institutions. They ask for equal dignity in the eyes of the law. The Constitution grants them that right.”

Kennedy, a conservative who often casts the deciding vote in close cases, was joined in the majority by the court's four liberal justices.

Kennedy, appointed by Republican President Ronald Reagan in 1988, has now authored all four of the court's major gay rights rulings, with the first coming in 1996. As with his 2013 opinion when the court struck down a federal law that denied benefits to same-sex couples, Kennedy stressed the dignity of marriage.

“Without the recognition, stability and predictability marriage offers, their children suffer the stigma of knowing their families are somehow lesser,” Kennedy wrote.

In a blistering dissenting opinion, conservative Justice Antonin Scalia said the decision shows the court is a “threat to American democracy.” The ruling “says that my ruler and the ruler of 320 million Americans coast-to-coast is a majority of the nine lawyers on the Supreme Court,” Scalia added.

Conservative Chief Justice John Roberts read a summary of his dissent from the bench, the first time he has done so in his 10 years on the court. Roberts said although there are strong policy arguments in same-sex marriage, it was not the court's role to force states to change their marriage laws.

“Five lawyers have closed the debate and enacted their own vision of marriage as a matter of constitutional law,” Roberts wrote.

The dissenters raised concerns about the impact of the case on people opposed to same-sex marriage on religious grounds.

Although the ruling only affects state laws and religious institutions can still choose whether to marry same-sex couples, Roberts predicted future legal conflicts.

“Hard questions arise when people of faith exercise religion in ways that may be seen to conflict with the new right to same-sex marriage,” Roberts said. Roberts gave as an example a religious college that provides married student housing only to opposite-sex couples.

The ruling is the Supreme Court's most important expansion of marriage rights in the United States since its landmark 1967 ruling in the case Loving v. Virginia that struck down state laws barring interracial marriages.

There were 13 state bans in place, while another state, Alabama, had contested a court ruling that lifted the ban there.

The ruling is the latest milestone in the gay rights movement in recent years. In 2010, Obama signed a law allowing gays to serve openly in the U.S. military. In 2013, the high court ruled unconstitutional a 1996 U.S. law that declared for the purposes of federal benefits marriage was defined as between one man and one woman.

Reaction came swiftly. James Obergefell, the lead plaintiff in the case, told a cheering crowd outside the Supreme Court, “Today's ruling from the Supreme Court affirms what millions across this country already know to be true in our hearts – our love is equal, that the four words etched onto the front of the Supreme Court – equal justice under law – apply to us, too.”

Hundreds of gay rights supporters celebrated outside the courthouse with whoops and cries of “U-S-A!” and “Love is love” as the decision came down.

'JUDICIAL TYRANNY'

Conservatives denounced the ruling. Republican presidential candidate Mike Huckabee said, “This flawed, failed decision is an out-of-control act of unconstitutional judicial tyranny.” Republican presidential candidate Rick Santorum lamented that five “unelected judges redefined the foundational unit of society.”

Opponents say same-sex marriage legality should be decided by states, not judges. Some opponents argue it is an affront to traditional marriage between a man and a woman and that the Bible condemns homosexuality.

Hillary Clinton, the front-runner for the 2016 Democratic presidential nomination, wrote on Twitter she was “proud to celebrate a historic victory for marriage equality.”

The decision follows rapid changes in attitudes and policies toward gay marriage in America. It was not until 2003 that the Supreme Court threw out state laws banning gay sex. And it was not until 2004 that the Massachusetts became the first state to legalize same-sex marriage. Gay marriage has gained increasing acceptance in opinion polls in recent years, particularly among younger Americans.

Gay marriage also is gaining acceptance in other Western countries. Last month in Ireland, voters backed same-sex marriage by a landslide in a referendum that marked a dramatic social shift in the traditionally Roman Catholic country.

Ireland followed several Western European countries including Britain, France and Spain in allowing gay marriage, which is also legal in South Africa, Brazil and Canada. But homosexuality remains taboo and often illegal in many parts of Africa and Asia.

The Supreme Court's ruling came in a consolidated case pulling together challenges filed by same-sex couples to gay marriage bans in Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio and Tennessee.

The Obama administration argued on the side of the same-sex marriage advocates.

The legal repercussions for same-sex couples are broad, affecting not just their right to marry but also their right to be recognized as a spouse or parent on birth and death certificates and other legal papers.

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Turkey summons Israeli diplomat after journalists, NGO workers refused entry

Turkey's Foreign Ministry said on Friday it summoned the highest-ranking Israeli diplomat in Ankara to explain why a group of Turkish journalists and civil society workers were refused entry at Ben Gurion Airport.

The incident occurred three days after diplomats from Israel and Turkey, both U.S. allies, held talks to explore prospects of repairing their relationship after a Turkish election earlier this month.

Ties between the erstwhile allies were wrecked after Israeli commandoes killed 10 Turkish activists trying to break the blockade on Gaza in 2010. Turkey soon after recalled its ambassador and ejected Israel's.

A group of nine Turks had traveled to Israel on Thursday to attend an event marking the Islamic holy month of Ramadan in Jerusalem, the Foreign Ministry said in an e-mailed statement.

They were questioned for nine hours and, despite having the required visas, seven of them were sent back. Two journalists with the state TRT broadcaster were allowed in, it said, condemning the decision to eject the group.

“To show our reaction to the treatment of our citizens and to receive an explanation, the Israeli charge d'affaires has been summoned to the Foreign Ministry,” it said. The charge d'affaires is Israel's most senior official at the embassy.

Israel's Foreign Ministry confirmed that the Israeli charge d'affaires was summoned in Ankara over the incident and said seven Turkish citizens were denied entry for security reasons.

An official from Shin Bet, Israel's internal security service, said those denied entry were suspected of having links to Hamas, the Palestinian Islamist group which controls the Gaza Strip.

“In light of a connection found between them and activists from the Hamas terrorist organization and the risk created by their entrance to Israel, it was decided not to let them in,” the official said.

President Tayyip Erdogan is one of Israel's most vocal critics. The June 7 election deprived his Islamist-rooted AK Party of its majority in parliament for the first time since 2002, which may pave the way for reconciliation with Israel.

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Obama to deliver eulogy Friday for slain South Carolina pastor

South Carolina will take a step forward in healing the wounds of last week's mass shooting when President Barack Obama arrives on Friday to deliver the eulogy for the pastor of the historic church where the attack took place.

Reverend Clementa Pinckney, a widely admired state senator and pastor of Charleston's Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church, was among the nine people who died when a gunman opened fire during Bible study.

The massacre has sparked an intense dialogue across the southern United States over the legacy of slavery and its symbols, centering on the Civil War-era battle flag of the Confederacy.

Addressing the shooting last week, Obama said it raised questions “about a dark part of our history.”

Nicknamed “Mother Emanuel,” the Gothic Revival-style house of worship is the oldest A.M.E. church in the southeastern United States, and was founded by slaves.

Obama will be accompanied by both First Lady Michelle Obama and Vice President Joe Biden for the funeral in a Charleston college arena where he arrives at 1:45 pm ET (1745 GMT). All three knew Pinckney personally.

Thousands of mourners began gathering outside the indoor arena before dawn. Many never made it inside the 5,400-capacity venue where seating was set aside for Pinckney's church members and the entire state legislature who arrived on buses from Columbia.

“It's all about Jesus, thank you Lord,” sang a group of 60 Baptist women who drove through the night from Atlanta. “This is a monumental moment for us to come together as one and live peacefully as a community and a nation.” said model Niki Nicole McClain, 45.

During his presidency, Obama has spoken at half a dozen memorial services for victims of mass shootings in Texas, Arizona, Colorado and Connecticut.

“I’ve had to make statements like this too many times,” a visibly upset Obama said from the White House last week. “Communities like this have had to endure tragedies like this too many times.”

Obama repeated previous calls he has made for tougher gun laws, a politically thorny issue in the United States where the constitution guarantees the right to own guns.

PINCKNEY MOURNED

Married with two children, Pinckney was a talented orator with a baritone voice and began preaching at 13. A Democrat, at 23 he became the youngest African-American in South Carolina history to be elected to the state legislature.

Several thousand turned out on Thursday evening for Pinckney's wake at Emanuel, the line of mourners stretching for three blocks, including 200 college fraternity brothers, friends, politicians and members of the public, both black and white.

“I cried when I got here,” said Katharine Moseley, a Texas bus driver who drove 20 hours from Austin. “I was raised in the A.M.E. church.”

Lutheran bishop Mike Rhyne also drove down with his wife and three children from central Pennsylvania to pay tribute to his friend and fellow seminary student. “He was one of the best men I have ever met,” he said.

Pinckney's high school friends Kevin Riley, 41, and Lachandra Colbert, 42, traveled from Maryland for the funeral. “We wouldn't miss this. He was our classmate,” said Riley. “He was on track to be someone really important,” Riley added.

Mourners universally echoed the words of forgiveness by relatives of their slain churchgoers for the white man, Dylann Roof, accused of the murders.

“We are not the ones to judge, we leave that to God,” said Maxine Frasier Riley, 65, a retired school guidance counselor.

The Department of Justice has opened a hate crime investigation into the shooting.

Roof posed with the Confederate flag in photos posted online and allegedly made racist remarks to his victims as he opened fire.

In the aftermath of the slayings, South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley and other Republicans have called for the flag's removal from the State House grounds, saying it is divisive.

The controversy has spread across the country, with politicians adding to voices clamoring for the removal of Confederate symbols and names, and major retailers removing merchandise with Confederate images from stores and websites.

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