"The Time Has Come to Say These Things.."
Outgoing Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert gave a much talked about interview in Yedhiot Ahronoth. Read it here.
Outgoing Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert gave a much talked about interview in Yedhiot Ahronoth. Read it here.
It is not always so easy in our hectic schedules to keep abreast of the Parshat Hashavua. I keep my pocket sized Torah by my bed for those moments of nocturnal lucidity brought on by parenting. Here is another way - Lech Lecha (Genesis 12:1 - 17:27) brought to you by G-DCAST. It's quite entrancing.
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You can subscribe to the G-DCAST site and receive the Parsha everyweek here.
Late at night by the side of my computer I am sitting with my daughter Noa - she is very awake. On the screen courtesy of You-Tube a speech by Barack Obama was playing that I hadn't seen. Noa turns to me and says "That is Barack Obama !" with the special emphasis an endorsement from a three your child brings. It is a spine tingling moment when your children join you for the grand unfolding story "out there".
Without wishing to reveal my sympathies too clearly please enjoy this video.
The chagim are over, and I return to occasional blogging. Adam Gopnik of the New Yorker attended the preview screening of a movie based on the extraordinary story of the Jewish partisans - the Bielski partisans who fought the Nazis from the Belorussian woods. The scale of the valour shown is hard to imagine. Gopnik does well when he explains that the director:
Read the rest of the piece here. The trailer for the movie can be seen here.
Shana Tova to you and your families..
One of the many rewards of congregational life at Temple Emanu-El is the collective learning of my ever-probing congregation. An example: here is a link to an article on the ongoing Israel/Palestine conflict that was recently forwarded to me. Probably on my own I would not have come across it.
The piece is by Shlomo Ben-Ami, the former Foreign Minister in the Ehud Barak government. It is a review (in the magazine Foreign Affairs) of the new Benny Morris book about the 1948 War of Independence. Ben-Ami outlines in his review, what was achieved, but also the grisly and ongoing cost of Israeli independence for both Jews and Palestinians.
Looking clearly at events shrouded in national myth is hard but vitally necessary. To engage young Jews who are skeptical of any national narrative in today's less credulous age, I must be prepared to talk tachlis, as it were. The facts of Israel's founding do not undermine my love of Israel nor my Zionism, but they do impact how I speak; my Zionism is grounded in a harder, more nuanced world of power and painful compromise than the softer and simpler world of myth. Instead of myth, I offer young Emanu-Elniks (together with us older ones) a relationship with Israel unafraid of fact and grounded in a Zionist commitment, that can love the Jewish nation in Israel and beyond "warts and all" .
So, for your copy of Foreign Affairs left in outside my study door: thanks, Phil!
I have been so engrossed in the US election and the preparation for the chagim, that I confess I have not been as diligent as I should be in following events in the wider Jewish world. Now as I play catch up on the events of the last few weeks, I am stumbling on pieces that I want to share.
Here is an article from the New York Times magazine from a couple weeks ago entitled Evening in Jerusalem. It is a bittersweet recollection of a grandson (now living in Los Angeles) of an Iraqi Jewish woman in Jerusalem. Savta (the Hebrew for "grandmother") is from a world away, both metaphorically and literally.
According to my husband, his savta was not dissimilar in circumstance and manner from the savta described here. She came from Basra Iraq and moved to Abadan Iran as a small child (from where later on she would make aliya on the creation of Israel). She died some months before I met Adam, but I like to imagine we would have enjoyed sharing some Nana tea as we spoke in broken Hebrew.
For any Jew raised in the U.S., this phrase needs no explanation. For all others: it refers to the voting habits of US Jews, who refute class based explanations of voting patterns (i.e., with above average incomes but wedded to the Democratic party). Now as the U.S. November elections approach, my attention has returned to developments south of the border. There have been a spate of articles about how Jews will vote this cycle. For one example, read this piece about the Democratic primary in Florida: "As Obama Heads to Florida, Many of Its Jews Have doubts"
I have always fought the easy syllogism that says: Jews tend to be politically progressive, therefore Judaism is progressivism. There is much wrong with that position, not least that it is increasingly untrue for a vocal section of the U.S. [and Canadian] Jewish community. More importantly, however, the civilization of the Jews is something so expansive it can respectably support almost any political stance. To reduce the Covenant to politics is a transgression.
That said, I still read about the likely voting intentions of US Jews this November. M J Rosenberg of the Israel Policy Forum writes:
"American Jews are, for the most part, well-off. But they vote as if they still were poor ghetto dwellers, somehow understanding that their fate is connected to the fate of those who have little or nothing."
For more read here.

This phone is stamped with the seal of approval of "the rabbinical committee for communication affairs". It has internet access and is possibly text messaging disabled.
The photo is from Gideon Lichfield, the departing Israel and Palestine correspondent for The Economist. Apart from Mr Lichfield's incisive coverage and reportage he is also an exquisite photographer. To continue the photographic theme started Wednesday, explore his photos here on Flickr.
You can read more of Gideon Litchfield here where he brings us up to speed on the latest developments of Israel's haute bourgeois in his blog Fugitive Peace .Michelle and Hillary (and yes, I am watching the Democratic National Convention all too intensely and yes--though it is rather late at night--we have been allowing the children to watch with us). Admittedly, the link below has nothing whatsoever to do with Mrs. Obama or Sentor Clinton, but I first wanted to acknowledge them as my inspiration for this post today.
Rachel Papo, a U.S. born Israeli photographer, has a compelling series of photos of young women in the IDF, entitled "Serial No. 3817131" In her description of the photos, she speaks of her her motivation behind this project:
Almost fifteen years after my mandatory military duty ended, I went back...Serial No. 3817131 represents my effort to come to terms with the experiences of being a soldier from the perspective of an adult. My service had been a period of utter loneliness, mixed with apathy and pensiveness, and at the time I was too young to understand it all. Through the camera’s lens, I tried to reconstruct facets of my military life, hopeful to reconcile matters that had been left unresolved.
I find the photos challenging--mostly for their true otherness of experience. As a Jewish woman in North America, I have not faced military service nor had to look ahead to it for my daughter from her first moment of life. The chasm between my life as a Jew here rather than in Israel is real. It makes me need to eschew any notion of using "we" when speaking about Jews here and Jews in Israel.
Yes, "we" do claim each other--we claim history and relationship. But "we"--when speaking about Israel and its citizen soldiers--is claiming something too easily. Until my daughter's life is on the line, I will talk of "here" and "there". I will talk of "Jews" only when I do mean Jews everywhere and reserve "Israelis" for those bearing the peculiar burdens of citizenship there. And I will identify for Noa, my daugther, Israeli women who should inspire her, and there are many...and the American Jewish Woman that I am will hope that she remembers the first time she saw Michelle and Hillary.
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