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War News And Gefilte Fish – The Jewish Press – JewishPress.com

Posted By on July 31, 2022

An exciting find I had this week was a run of the Orthodox Youth (which eventually became the Orthodox Tribune) from December 1940 to January 1945. The periodical was a publication of Agudah, and contains a wealth of information regarding life for observant Jews in the United States at the time, as well as reports of the horrors of the war and world events. The issues dealt within may seem foreign to Orthodox Jews today, but they were on the forefront of the issues of the day.

One article implores married men in the armed forces to write up a divorce in advance of their deployment in the event that they are missing in action. In response to the destruction of the centers of Hebrew printing in Europe, notices appear of an intent to publish essential seforim in the United States. The first of these publications was the Chiddushim of Rabbi Akiva Eiger, followed by a set of Shitah Mekubetzet on the Talmud.

An open letter to the rabbis in one of the issues states: We Torah True Jews of the United States will still cling to the true ideals of our faith and follow the advice and decision set down by the Chofetz Chaim, Reb Chaim Oser Grodensky, Chordkover Rebbe, Reb Chaim Sonnenfeld and other great gedolim, and the still follow the authority of the Gerer Rebbe, Reb Elchanon Wasserman, Rabbi Dushinsky and others. All these great Gaonim and Zaddikkim have forbidden the Jewish people to support the Jewish National Fund.

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News from the soldiers in the field abound as well. One article reads, Somewhere in New Guinea a group of Jewish servicemen bitten with the journalist bug published the Island Glicken, a service newspaper distributed throughout the Southwest Pacific Area. One of their features is Yiddish in a Jiffy, subtitled The Five-Year Cheder Plan condensed in two lessons. The author is a Reb Chaim who calls himself, the Mome-Loshen expert. A can of gefilte fish is given as a prize for a correct translation of a Yiddish letter.

In response to receiving from the Agudah a copy of Machane Yisrael, a book authored by the Chofetz Chaim for Jewish Soldiers, a Jew in the army wrote, Every night before I go to sleep I read a chapter or a part in order to get some bit of learning. It comes in handy for any religious fellow in the service. In my opinion it is just as important for a soldier to carry this book which was written by the Chofetz Chaim as he carries the army handbook.

Some of the issues would feel current to many people today as well. One editorial wrote: With the advent of the summer a new set of standards usually is adopted. On June 21st a sudden revolution seems to take place in peoples minds, and styles, modes and practices that are frowned on during the other nine months of the year, suddenly become the proper way of life. There can be no uglier or more repressive sight, both aesthetically and Jewishly, than the scantily clad denizens of the beach and summer resort. And there can be nothing more reprehensible than the sight of men and women whiling away their days and nights with a deck of cards.

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War News And Gefilte Fish - The Jewish Press - JewishPress.com

Blinded by Hate | Michael Laitman | The Blogs – The Times of Israel

Posted By on July 31, 2022

There is a new weapon that Palestinians use against Israelis: blinding lasers. Every night, residents of a certain Palestinian village direct strong lasers into the eyes of Israeli drivers in order to blind them and hopefully cause them to make an accident. So far, there has been no response on the part of the Israeli army, other than stating that the army is working in a number of ways to uproot the phenomenon. When people are blinded by hate, there is no end to what they will do to hurt their hated ones. Israels response should therefore incorporate two elements: retaliating against the terror and mitigating the hatred.

The first element is relatively straightforward. The response should be one that will deter the perpetrators from repeating their actions. Therefore, the rule of thumb here is simple: When someone comes to kill you, kill him first. In practical terms, it means that the army should fire at the sources of the lasers.

Nevertheless, we should not hope that curbing one mode of terrorism will prevent terrorists from finding other ways to terrorize and hurt Israelis. As long as there is unbounded hatred, Palestinians will find countless ways to hurt us.

Here is where we can make the real difference. The Palestinians hatred toward us is not because of a territorial struggle or any other reason they proclaim, even if they believe what they are saying. The Palestinians hate us because we hate each other. Their aversion to us reflects our aversion to each other.

This is true not only for the Palestinians, but for every non-Jew who hates Jews. To the extent that we hate each other, the nations of the world hate us. The higher the mountain of hate between us, the stronger the hatred toward us that we bring down on the nations. In fact, the name Mt. Sinai comes from the Hebrew words Mount of Sinaa [hatred]. Our sages explain that it is called so because of the hatred that came down from it to the nations of the world (Babylonian Talmud, Masechet Shabbat, 89a).

In short, we are generating hatred towards us through our own hatred of each other. We must understand that if we want to defeat terrorism, and all the hatred toward Jews and Israelis, we must defeat the hatred within us for each other.

Interestingly, when I say this to non-Jews, they often agree. But when I say this to Jews, they often become aggressive and venomous. They argue that I am making this up, and all the quotes I bring from centuries of our sages writing these exact words do not help. Once, after a lecture in New York, a Jew who refused to accept my words tried to physically assault me.

I can understand the resistance. If we accept this statement, it puts the responsibility for antisemitism, terrorism, and millennia of abuse that our nation suffered in our lap, the lap of the Jewish people, rather than to pin it on the aggressors. Declaring that Jewish inner hatred incites Jew-hatred among the nations pulls the rug from under the arguments that attribute antisemitism to religious, racial, economic, and social causes. It creates one common cause for all the cataclysms that have ever struck the Jewish people, and that cause is our own responsibility. I understand why this would be impossible to accept.

However, it is not my idea, but the idea of all our sages throughout the ages. The people who engendered the Jewish nation, who solidified its peoplehood, and who gave it its unique values and manners, all advocated this exact message: Sinaat Hinam [baseless hatred] has been our curse since our inception as a nation, and the only thing we need to cure.

Since we are full of hatred, it is hard for us to agree that hatred is the cause of our misfortunes. We tend to blame our troubles on the side we hate. But it is not this or that side that causes our troubles, but the hatred itself. As the two books I have written about it show (see links below), our spiritual leaders throughout the ages tried to teach this to us, yet we refused. We coined the tenet Love your neighbor as yourself; it is time we tried it out.

Read these books for more information on the responsibility of the Jewish people for the hatred toward them: The Jewish Choice: Unity or Anti-Semitism, Historical facts on anti-Semitism as a reflection of Jewish social discord, and Like a Bundle of Reeds: Why unity and mutual guarantee are todays call of the hour.

Michael Laitman is a PhD in Philosophy and Kabbalah. MSc in Medical Bio-Cybernetics. Founder and president of Bnei Baruch Kabbalah Education & Research Institute. Author of over 40 books on spiritual, social and global transformation. His new book, The Jewish Choice: Unity or Anti-Semitism, is available on Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Jewish-Choice-Anti-Semitism-Historical-anti-Semitism/dp/1671872207/

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Blinded by Hate | Michael Laitman | The Blogs - The Times of Israel

Making sense of the sedra: Matot-Masei – Jewish News

Posted By on July 31, 2022

The modern penal system is under immense strain. Under-resourced, under-appreciated and overwhelmed, prisons not only fail to rehabilitate, but can perpetuate the underlying problems that lead to crime and propel those who have committed petty infractions into communities of criminals.

Of course, society needs to ensure that crime does not pay, and punishments such as compensation, fines, community service and custodial sentences are attempts to achieve this. Punishments are intended to serve as deterrents, to give a sense of justice to the aggrieved, to make a statement to society, to limit freedoms to remove someone who may be a potential threat, and to attempt to rehabilitate.

These priorities often conflict: the death penalty may give a sense of justice but obviates any sense of rehabilitation and seems to have little impact as a deterrent. The concept of open prisons or of non-custodial sentences, while better for rehabilitation, can leave victims or society feeling that justice has not been done.

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The Torahs system of justice, writes the Maharal, is predicated on God being the ultimate judge, and that punishments are not only limited to this world. Human justice plays a role, but it is partial, and judges and the courts must bear this in mind.

The Torah does advocate the death penalty, but the sages in the Mishnah maintain that it should be used only rarely. The High Court that kills once in every seven years is bloodthirsty. Rabbi Elazar Ben Azariah says (it should be) once in every 70. Rabbi Tarfon and Rabbi Akiva say, If we were in the High Court it would never have executed (anyone). Rabbi Shimon Ben Gamliel says, If so, this would increase blood spilt in Israel. (Makkot 1.10)

Incarceration, however, plays a much more limited role: there is no concept per se of prison in the Torah. Instead, in cases of negligent killing, and prior to an alleged murderer being tried, the perpetrators are to flee to cities of refuge, as stated in this weeks parsha Matot-Masei (Bemidbar 35.11). These cities six of which are set aside for this purpose, and 42 cities primarily for Levites were not prisons; the Talmud notes that the cities should be conducive to normal life.

The Chizkuni gives a fascinating explanation to one of the most curious details about this exile: that the refugee is to stay there until the death of the High Priest (35.28): All of the cities of refuge are under the auspices of the High Priest, and he enters his jurisdiction

Whilst limited in the number of cases, this model has much to teach us about the role of incarceration. Firstly, it should allow for normal life to be lived; while freedoms will be curtailed, ones should live among regular citizens, or, better, Levites those with a designated role for teaching Torah and assisting in the Temple. Secondly, one is not rejected from society, but cared for by the same person who has responsibility for the holiest matters.

Originally posted here:

Making sense of the sedra: Matot-Masei - Jewish News

Belief in Conspiracy Theories Is Probably Not Getting Worse Over Time – Office for Science and Society

Posted By on July 31, 2022

A question I am often asked by journalists is if more people believe in conspiracy theories now than before. Sometimes, the question is not even asked; the answer is simply inferred. Of course they are.

Even I often feel like it must be true. The COVID-19 pandemic has a twin, an infodemic, which often relies on grand conspiracy theories to be believable. We have all heard the stories that a shadowy they dont want you to know that ivermectin is miraculous and that the vaccines, funded by Bill Gates, are full of tracking devices.

But is conspiracy thinking really worse now than it has ever been?

A team of researchers put this hypothesis to the test and their results were recently published.

The surprising conclusion is that, no matter how the scientists looked at this question, the answer was invariably the same: for the most part, belief in specific conspiracy theories has been stable over time, as has the general predisposition to see conspiracies as valid explanations for world events.

Thus, what often feels true to many of us is not supported by the evidence.

Or maybe its all a conspiracy to hide the truth from the rest of us.

The authors of this paper conducted four different studies to look at this question.

In the first study, they focused on America, often portrayed as a hotbed for conspiratorial thinking. Americans themselves agree that their situation is dire: as reported by the authors of the paper, nearly three-quarters of Americans believe that conspiracy theories right now are out of control.

But the data reported here does not show escalation. In fact, the authors conclude that conspiracy theories tend to lose, rather than gain, believers over time, and that novel conspiracy theories do not seduce more people than older ones.

Americans have been polled on their beliefs in specific conspiracy theories as far back as 1966, so the authors compared these answers to those given by Americans to the same questions much more recently. Only six conspiracy theories gained adherents over time. Eleven lost steam. The rest, namely the vast majority, remained constant.

Here's a little quiz.

Between 2013 and 2021, what happened to the number of Americans who believe that the government uses mind-control technology in TV broadcasts? Has it gone up, down, or stayed the same?

Its roughly the same number: 15% then, 17% now.

What about the belief that global warming is a hoax, between 2013 and 2021?

It has significantly decreased, from 37% to 19%.

Contact with an alien race being hidden from us, between July 2019 and March 2020?

In this admittedly very short time span, the number of American believers dramatically increased from 23% to 33%, the largest increase reported in the study.

American believers in COVID-19 conspiracy theories did not grow in numbers from June 2020 to May 2021, with one exception: more people started believing that the number of deaths attributed to COVID-19 was inflated. But the Bill Gates plandemic myth and the idea of vaccines as surreptitious trackers? No change in belief over time. In fact, blaming COVID-19 on 5G technology and thinking disinfectant inside the body might cure or prevent the disease lost adherents from 2020 to 2021.

Even QAnon, the ber conspiracy theory involving a covert cabal of Satanic pedophiles and an anonymous tipster on a message board, did not accrue believers according to the polling data showed here. Whether the question was overt (are you a believer in QAnon?) or roundabout (asking about a deep state or about elites engaged in a massive child sex trafficking racket), the numbers did not significantly budge between 2019 and 2021.

These comparisons are limited, because we are only looking at two points in time for each theory, and these points may be as close as 7 months apart or as far as comparing 2021 to 1966. I definitely would have liked more time points to see clearer trends. Also, these are not the same people being polled over time, but different representative samples of the population.

I was surprised at how the belief in secret alien contact had, in the span of eight months, drawn in an additional 10% of the U.S. public. The increase might be explained by the leaked video of U.S. fighter pilots seeing unidentified aerial phenomena, which hit the news in between the two time points. Then again, a similar survey question, that the government is hiding evidence of alien visitation (not necessarily contact), remained stable at roughly 50% between 1996 and 2021. Did it not also rise in tandem with belief in alien contact? It might have if it dipped between 1996 and 2021, but we are missing that time point. I am left wondering what normal fluctuations in these beliefs look like.

Speaking of fluctuations, a 2017 comprehensive look at 104,803 published letters written by Americans to the New York Times and the Chicago Tribune between 1890 and 2010 and analyzed for their conspiratorial content shows rises and falls, but no clear increase in this content over time (as reported here). Two spikes in the data were found during periods of major societal change: just before 1900, during the second industrial revolution, and in the late 1940s and early 1950s, i.e. the beginning of the Cold War.

Leaving America behind, the authors of this new paper brought their attention to six European countries that differed based on GDP, population, income inequality and political systems: Germany, Great Britain, Italy, Poland, Portugal, and Sweden. They compared belief in six conspiracy theories in 2016 and in 2018, and again report that most change was not significant, but when it was, it was more likely to be a decrease. The only belief that went up was Holocaust denial in Sweden, which increased from 1% to 3%.

For their third study, they wondered if the number of malevolent groups accused of conspiring against the public had changed over time. While who gets blamed does vary, there was no overall increase in the number of groups being included in the shadowy cabal.

Finally, while looking at surveys of U.S. adults between 2012 and 2021, the researchers report no average increase in overall conspiracy thinking, which is measured by asking people if they agree with broader statements like the people who really run the country are not known to the voters and much of our lives are being controlled by plots hatched in secret places.

I found the paper to be very interesting (despite the paucity of time points) with regards to examining a question that many of us felt had already been answered. But thats the danger of using our personal experience of the world to make sweeping generalizations about the state of things. As someone who spends quite a bit of time tracking and reporting on scientific misinformation, which is often embedded within a larger conspiratorial frame, I am particularly susceptible to believing that conspiracy thinking has overtaken the world recently.

There is another take-home message, though, which might be overlooked given how surprising the main conclusion is. Just because conspiracy thinking has not significantly increased in recent years does not mean it wasnt already high. When asked in 2013 and again in 2021 if the Food and Drug Administration was deliberately hiding natural cures as a favour to the pharmaceutical industry (a myth we tapped into for our viral video a few years ago), roughly the same percentage of Americans said yes both times but that percentage was 36%. This is more than a third.

Similarly worrisome percentages are reported for Americans who, today, say that health officials know cell phones cause cancer but are keeping mum about it (20%), that the real dangers of GMOs are being hidden from us (40%), and that a single group of people secretly controls the world (35%).

The situation is bad, particularly in the United States, even if the data presented here shows it is not worsening. It looks like online conspiracy theories reinforce existing views more than they persuade people to make the jump, but if the proportion of people with existing conspiratorial views is already high, we have a big problem on our hands.

One element that was not looked at by the researchers? How much easier it is for conspiracy-minded folks to find each other online. This is how communities grow, reinforcing their beliefs and fuelling action. The Internet may not be converting masses of people to believing in grand conspiracies, but if it facilitates their assembly, the consequences in the real world can be considerable.

Take-home message:- A new paper provides evidence that the number of people who believe in conspiracy theories has, on average, remained stable over the years- The percentage of people who believe in conspiracy theories may not be going up, but it is already quite high

@CrackedScience

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Belief in Conspiracy Theories Is Probably Not Getting Worse Over Time - Office for Science and Society

The Hundred Year War on Palestine: A History of Settler Colonialism and Resistance, 1917-2017 – Palestine Chronicle

Posted By on July 31, 2022

The Hundred Year War on Palestine A History of Settler Colonialism and Resistance, 1917-2017, by Rashid Khalidi. (Book Cover)

By Jim Miles

(The Hundred Year War on Palestine A History of Settler Colonialism and Resistance, 1917-2017. Rashid Khalidi. Metropolitan Books, Henry Holt and Company, New York, 2020.)

With the writing of The Hundred Year War on Palestine A History of Settler Colonialism and Resistance, 1917-2017, Rashid Khalidi has created an interesting well-written overview of the Zionist colonial-settler enterprise in Palestine. One of the underlying features of the creation of Israel is how well it fits into the colonial-settler mindset that established the current Five Eyes scenario of the United States, Canada, New Zealand, and Australia within the global influence of the British empire. The indigenous people of each of those regions were effectively done away with, labelled savages and uncivilized, beneath contempt, and essentially to be eliminated through various means of genocide and ethnic cleansing.

In Palestine, those attempts at ethnic cleansing, a necessity for the Zionists in regard to their demographic fears of majority Arab/Palestinian population, came up against the post-WWII decolonization movements rising from the liberal rhetoric of the western powers and the Cold War conflict with the Soviet Union. It also came up against the will of the indigenous people, the Palestinians, who have shown unusual patience, perseverance, and steadfastness in defending their rights, which is the main reason that their cause I still alive.

While looking at the Hundred Years War, Khalidi divides it into six declarations of war as a means of highlighting the different eras and approaches to the Palestinian struggle: the Balfour pre-WWII era; the nakba; the 1967 war; Beirut; the first intifada; and the second intifada leading into the war on terror.

Several threads through Khalidis writing make it highly informative, accessible, and powerful in its honest forthright approach. The latter stands out significantly. While recognizing that targeted assassinations, imprisonment, and exile have eliminated many Palestinian leaders, he does not avoid criticizing past and current leaders for the mistakes they have made both with their internal divisions and with their conduct in relation to the rest of the world. The PLO/PA have lost all integrity and Khalidi highlights the path of that loss.

Another aspect creating an accessible read is Khalidis ties into the personal information of his own life lived within and on the edges of the ongoing war on Palestine. This came through most particularly with his descriptions of the Beirut invasion and the political and social aftermath not just in Palestine/Lebanon but in the greater region and globally.

The latter element rounds out the history. For each declaration of war, the war is discussed briefly and then branches off into all the ramifications of that era both domestically and geopolitically abroad, highlighting of course US involvement but also the timid fearful attitudes of the Arab states, none of them democracies and all of the governments intimidated not only by Israeli power, but also the ongoing threats and coercion from the US and its subordinate allies.

As I have found with most history books, the timeline at the end is tricky. Khalidi essentially sees Palestine as down and out other than the quote above on steadfastness with the final touches of Trumps obsequious actions eliminating several of the long-argued narratives, settling them definitively and unilaterally in Israels favor.

Yet two years after publication, there is hope that at least on the international scene, many more people, if not their governments, are aware of Israeli atrocities and crimes against human rights. In spite of and in some views because of Israels hasbara attempts, much more knowledge of how Israel is actually treating the indigenous Palestinian population has become known. The BDS movement, the arguments concerning the IHRA definition of anti-Semitism, and the declarations by BTselem, Amnesty International, and Human Rights Watch declaring Israel an apartheid state have all contributed to an increasing knowledge base about events in Palestine.

Perhaps more importantly, events in Ukraine/Russia and the broader implications of not just the actual war, but the tendency of many other countries in the world not to side with US/NATO while looking into and adhering to alternate global financial and political arrangements may have large effects on the Middle East in general and maybe then into Israel. Khalidi recognizes that the US will not necessarily maintain the near monopoly over the Palestine question, and indeed over the entire Middle East, that it has enjoyed for so long.

Regardless of either the knowledge gained from recent civilian actions or the influence of the larger geopolitical effects of the Ukraine/US/Russia war the path forward will require and undoubtedly will sustain the unusual patience, perseverance, and steadfastness in defending their rights of the Palestinian people themselves.

The Hundred Year War on Palestine A History of Settler Colonialism and Resistance, 1917-2017 is a valuable and timely addition to the Palestinian narrative. It provides an over-arching view of this one particular instance of colonial-settlerism that has significantly influenced global geopolitics for the past century and will continue to do so moving forward.

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The Hundred Year War on Palestine: A History of Settler Colonialism and Resistance, 1917-2017 - Palestine Chronicle

History Of Palestine And Israel Conflict And Where They Stand Now – Postoast

Posted By on July 31, 2022

The history of the Middle East has always been captivating especially if the talk is about Palestine and Israel conflict and their history. We all are in some way or the other aware of the disputation and wrangling that goes between both nations from time to time. Today the situation has worsened so much so that it has taken a shape of yet another war.

Rockets are being fired from both sides leading to confiscation of property and most importantly loss of lives, including the lives of civilians and children. Like any other international issue this one as well most countries of the world is fairly divided. While some stand in solidarity with Palestinians others are in support of the Jews of Israel.

To say with great certainty who is right and who is wrong is implausible as both Israelis and Palestinians have suffered in the past and because of their chaotic history, the conflict still continues. But is seeking the path of violence reasonable? To answer that lets dive into the history of Jewish people, the rupture of Palestine, and how the nation which is now known as Israel was born.

Saying that Jews have gone through a lot of cruelty in this world wouldnt be so wrong. They used to live in different parts of the world and never really had a piece of land that they could say was their own. In the late 1800s, Jews living around the world began feeling that no country accepts them as their own. Thus in the year 1897 Zionism, an ideology that aims at the protection and return of Jewish people to their homeland (an area corresponding to Canaan, the holy land, or Palestine) came into being.

Under the Ottoman Empire all Muslims, Christian, and Jews more or less used to live peacefully in Palestine. But with the end of the 1st World War Palestine fell off the hands of the Ottoman Empire and came under the colonization of Britain (1918-1948).

Palestine was a country that was closest to what the Jews could say home. Still, the maximum population that used to live in Palestine was the Muslims.

During 1933-1945, Adolf Hitler was making Europe a living hell for all the Jews, the holocaust is one big example. A lot of Jews tried to flee to Palestine but Britain limited their immigration which further ignited them. Jews just wished to have a piece of land that they could say was their own.

The colonization of Britain in Palestine was still going on. Eventually, a feeling of Palestinian nation came over the Palestinian Arabs and that growing sense of chauvinism exploded in 1936 when Palestine revolted against the British giving birth to the Palestine National movement.

It was in 1948 that Englishmen decided its about time to leave the chaos of Palestine and handed the issues of Palestine to the newly created United Nations. It was via United Nations that the land of Palestine was fairly divided between the non-contiguous Arabs and the Jews to form their own country. About 55% of Palestine was given to Jews and 45% to the non-contiguous Arabs. Gaza Strip and the West Bank were originally being given to the Palestinians. Meanwhile, Jerusalem the holy land of Jews, Muslims, and Christians came under international control.

Jews accepted this division of land by the United Nations and hence this is how in the year 1948, the nation which today is known as Israel came into being. But this is not the end of the story. As a new non-Arab country was formed from the land of Palestine all the Arab nations around the middle-east refused to accept it as a country. They wanted to remove Israel from the world map and take the land back.

The first Arab-Israel war takes place in the same year when the nation Israel was established. To everyones surprise, the newly formed nation Israel won the battle against all the five Arab nations, thus capturing more of Palestines area that actually was given to them by the U.N.

To seek shelter maximum of the Palestinians from the seized land had to flee to the neighboring Arab nations. This is what was regarded as the 1948 Palestinian exodus.

Another six-day war broke out between both nations in the year 1967, where yet again Israel emerged as the victorious one occupying major areas of Palestine that as the Gaza Strip and the West Bank. Maximum of the Israelis started making permanent settlements in the West Bank region where already the Palestinians were living. Thus in the eyes of Palestinians, this was pure colonization by the Israelis.

In 1964 (PLO) Palestine Liberation Organization led by Yasser Arafat was founded with the aim to fight for the liberation of their land from Israelis who came and settled in the West Bank. Unlike most extremist Jews, Yitzhak Rabin, the Prime Minister of Israel in 1992 never considered PLO a terrorist organization.

That was the year when the situation seems to have gotten a little better between the nations. The path of tranquility was taken in order to establish peace and to come to a consensual conclusion on how to divide the land of the West Bank between both nations.

In 1994 the Palestinian government for the first time was established and came to be known as Palestinian National Authority.

With harmony and solidarity, the governance of the West Bank was fairly divided between both nations. Finally, Palestine got the Gaza strip and parts of the West Bank as their own where they could govern themselves and live freely.

But with the assassination of Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin by the extremist Jews of Israel the situation yet again went downhill between the countries and since then has been deteriorating. Extremists on both ends were responsible for the demise of the newly established peace.

Extremist Islamic individuals came together to form an organization called Hamas in the year 1987. Their motto since the beginning was not to follow the path of peace like the PLO and to get back the land of Israel that in their eyes was looted by the Jews.

With the occasional suicide bombing of Hamas on Israeli land, the estrangement between both nations seems to have gotten worse. In 2007 a civil war broke out in Palestine and in the battle of Gaza the extremist Hamas got control over the Gaza Strip and the distorted lands of Palestine in the West Bank came under the governance of PLO.

Today it is the Gaza Strip area under Hamas that does the bombing and the Israeli in response do the same. There is nothing left but a feeling of hatred and disparity. It should not be like that considering the fact that there was a time when both Jews and Arabs used to live peacefully on the same land.

Palestinians, have been denied a state of their own for a long time, be it under the Ottoman Empire or the British Colonization and even today most of them live under a military organization. As for the Jews, they also had the hardest times in history until the formation of Israel. The Israeli that live in the West Bank are indeed more or less illegal settlers and that is the reason that has intensified the rupture between the countries.

Both nations should understand and respect each other because they both have gone through a lot in the past. They should think about the civilians, the children who are dying because of the rocket fire and bombing. For good, its about time for a ceasefire.

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History Of Palestine And Israel Conflict And Where They Stand Now - Postoast

We Could Have Been Friends, My Father and I: A Palestinian Memoir by Raja Shehadeh – The Irish Times

Posted By on July 31, 2022

We Could Have Been Friends, My Father and I, A Palestinian Memoir

Author: Raja Shehadeh

ISBN-13: 978-1788169974

Publisher: Profile Books

Guideline Price: 14.99

The Palestinian lawyer, author and human rights activist Raja Shehadeh resembles his late father, Aziz. Both men believed in the power of the law to mitigate the enormous injustice done to their people, and both found a form of salvation, if not happiness, in work.

Each was naive in his way. Aziz initially believed in Arab solidarity. Raja confesses to having underestimated Israel. I, who lived through the settlement-building project, never imagined that Israel would get away with this systematic illegal scheme and end up taking most of the land in eastern Jerusalem and the West Bank, he writes in his new memoir.

Shehadeh feels remorse for not having recognised Azizs heroism until after his fathers death, mainly because he could not dissociate his fathers struggle from the hardships it imposed on the family.

This is a tragedy within a tragedy, of a father and son who, despite their similarities, failed to understand one another, against the backdrop of dispossession of the Palestinian people.

The Shehadeh family, affluent Christians from the port city of Jaffa, were among 750,000 Palestinians driven from their homes when the state of Israel was established in 1948. The family were so confident of returning rapidly to their comfortable apartment, to Azizs books and his wife Widads stylish dresses, that it did not even occur to them to take winter clothing.

Many years later, Aziz takes his family to a plot of land overlooking the Mediterranean, south of Jaffa, which he had purchased before the Nakba, as the Arabs call the loss of Palestine. He had planned to build his dream house on the promontory. His silence was heavy and seemed to weigh him down He didnt utter a single word or betray any emotion. No one spoke on the long drive back to Ramallah.

UN General Assembly resolution 194 dictated that Palestinians be allowed to return to their homes, or receive compensation. Aziz and other leaders planned a mass return to Jaffa. The Jordanians, who ruled the West Bank for 19 years, foiled the plan.

Israel froze the bank accounts of Palestinians, rendering many of the exiles destitute. Some of their money was given to the Custodian of Absentee Property which used it to irrigate orchards that had been taken from Palestinians.

Aziz Shehadeh sued for restoration of the frozen funds. He lost in a London court because Britains recognition of the state of Israel meant it complied with Israeli banking laws. Shehadeh then took the case to a Jordanian court, which ordered Barclays to restore the Palestinians assets, with interest.

Lieut Gen Sir John Bagot Glubb, known to Arabs as Glubb Pasha, was a British officer who virtually ran Jordan. Glubb is the minence grise of Shehadehs book. It was he who designed the harsh prison in the desert at Al Jafr, 256km south of Amman, where King Hussein sent political prisoners, including Aziz Shehadeh. When Glubbs Bedouin soldiers came to Ramallah to arrest Shehadeh, they shackled the lawyers right foot to his left wrist and his left foot to his right hand. In this painful position, he was thrown into a lorry and driven many hours through the desert.

After Israel seized the West Bank from Jordan in the 1967 war, Aziz Shehadeh became one of the first to advocate a two-state solution along the lines of the 1947 UN peace plan. For this, he was attacked by Arabs and Palestinians, who considered Azizs willingness to settle for less than all British mandate Palestine to be a betrayal. One cannot help thinking of present-day Ukrainians who insist there can be no peace with Russia until they regain all Ukrainian territory.

When Raja finally has the courage to go through his fathers personal archives, years after Aziz was murdered by a Palestinian whom Raja suspects to have been an Israeli collaborator, he happens upon a striking coincidence. His father signed an undated lament about the perfidy of Britain, Jordan and Israel with the Arabic name Samed, meaning one who perseveres. Raja had unknowingly chosen the same pen name for himself.

The perseverance of the Shehadehs was admirable but sadly futile. Today, the Palestinians are all but forgotten. Since 1967, Israel has built 500 settlements in the West Bank for 750,000 Israelis. The continuing theft of Palestinian land by Israel is met with indifference.

Dont speak to me of justice, law, rights, an Israeli cabinet minister told Aziz Shehadeh at a UN-sponsored conference in Lausanne. These words have no place in our dictionary. It is power that determines the destiny of nations.

Link:

We Could Have Been Friends, My Father and I: A Palestinian Memoir by Raja Shehadeh - The Irish Times

Two Palestinian Christians, and a visit with one of the most interesting of Latter-day Saint historians – Patheos

Posted By on July 31, 2022

Were just back from attending a performance, with friends, of Singing in the Rain at the Hale Centre Theatre in Sandy, Utah. It was extremely well done. The whole cast was good. The leads were strong. David Paul Smith did remarkably well with both the singing and the dancing of Gene Kellys famous Singing in the Rain number, which he performed under a real shower falling from the theater ceiling above him. And we were all absolutely smitten with Debra Weed Hahn, who played Kathy Selden (the character depicted in the movie version by Debbie Reynolds.)

Earlier today, I enjoyed lunch and a long and leisurely conversation with Don Bradley. (Finally, too, I was able to get a copy to him of the docudrama Undaunted: Witnesses of the Book of Mormon, in which he appears. [Hes even, briefly, in the minute-long trailer for the film.] We had mailed a copy of Undaunted to him some time ago, but its apparently still floating out there somewhere in the Wood Between the Worlds.) The author of the significant 2019 volume I really enjoyed hearing about his upcoming articles and research projects, including a forthcoming BYU Studies piece on the small plates of Nephi that hes recently shared with me thats actually connected to the story of Mary Musselman Whitmers encounter with the plates and the mysterious messenger.

After hearing about Dons recent work, I told him about an experience that I had while I was in graduate school at UCLA. Taking a break from my Arabic studies for a few moments, I read an article about Brigham Young that Id found in a journal in the library stacks. It was by Jan Shipps, and I recall thinking that it was one of the few academic articles about Brigham Young that Id ever read that treated him primarily as a religious leader, and that it was ironic that such an article was written by a Methodist rather than by a Latter-day Saint. Perhaps at least partially because of the pivotal and formative role played by the late Leonard Arrington an economic historian in the emergence of modern Latter-day Saint historiography, much biographical and historical writing thats focused on the Church has, umm, historically emphasized economic and political approaches to our story. And, obviously, those are important aspects of Utah, Great Basin, and Latter-day Saint history. But the Church was never primarily a beet sugar firm or an overland trail company, and Brigham Young, great colonizer and organizer that he was, was motivated principally by spiritual and religious commitments. I told Don that one of the reasons that I really like his work is that he focuses on the specifically religious history of the Restoration.

Incidentally, at Dons suggestion we ate at La Carreta Peruvian Restaurant, which is located in south Orem. I had never eaten there before, but I really liked the food. (I mention this not so much because mentioning good restaurants in which Ive eaten really drives some of my hyper-focused critics crazy though it manifestly does drive them crazy but because I hope to give at least some slight attention on my humble blog to places that, I think, deserve to succeed.)

(Wikimedia Commons public domain photograph)

Finally, this topic interests me quite a bit both because I am, by both training and former trade, an Islamicist and because, more particularly, I was among a small group of academics who filed a 2017 amicus brief with the Supreme Court of the United States regarding the matter:

Cato Lawsuit to Discover if Trump Lied to SCOTUS about the Muslim Ban

See also Amici Curiae Brief of Scholars of Mormon History & Law in Support of Neither Party.

When I was a young man, many centuries ago when Earth was still new, Latter-day Saints were far more reflexively and uncritically pro-Israeli than they are today. I think that the change has been for the good.

Shortly after my wife and I were married, we attended somebody elses wedding reception. As we were going through the line, a man standing there, a relative of the groom (as I recall), asked me about what our plans were. I indicated that we would soon be leaving for Egypt, where I was going to be studying Arabic. Well, he said in response, Im on the Lords side.

That nave and uninformed assumption that the Israelis represent the Lords side, simpliciter, irked me then and it irks me now. But I encounter it far less commonly now than I once did.

Latter-day Saints are scripturally obligated, in my judgment, to believe in and to support the gathering of Israel, which plainly includes the gathering of the Jews to Palestine. But we are not obligated, in my view, to support any particular policy of the United States toward Israel, let alone any particular policy of Israel itself.

During my first stint of living in Israel, which occurred just before I came back to the States to marry my wife, I ran into a group of American visitors on the streets in the Sheikh Jarrah section of East Jerusalem. We got into a conversation, and they told me that they were part of a group who were there to assure then Prime Minister Menachem Begin that all true Christians in America supported him 100%.

I remember that 100% very clearly.

I dont support my own governments policies 100%. I never have, even under presidents for whom I voted. (Its been a while since weve had one of those.) And the thought that it is somehow a true Christians obligation to support any governments policies fully, completely, and without any dissent or reservation strikes me as idolatrous.

Besides which, my feelings about Menachem Begin, of all people, representing the Christian ideal and deserving unlimited Christian loyalty were shall we say less than completely enthusiastic.

I wont for a moment attempt to whitewash the various evils visited upon innocent Jewish people and others by Palestinian terrorism, but, unfortunately, Jewish hands are also not entirely clean in the ugliness that has afflicted Palestine for more than a century now.

And Im especially bothered when I see some Evangelical Protestants, especially, treat the Arab-Israeli conflict as a battle of obvious good (represented by the righteous Jews who simply want to regain their ancestral land) against obvious evil (the heathen Muslims who seek to steal Jewish land from the Holocaust survivors who have settled upon it and made it to blossom as the rose).

I wish the situation were so simple and clear-cut.

Unfortunately, many of the Jews arent pious or even righteous. And, although I dont concede that Muslims deserve to be oppressed in the first place, many of the Palestinian Arabs arent even Muslims. Theyre Christians. And they have been for many centuries Christianity, after all, didnt begin in Canterbury, or Wittenberg, or even Rome, but in Palestine and their roots in Palestine go back to far before the founding of the State of Israel. Accordingly, theyre mystified when their ostensible Christian brothers and sisters in the West seem to support the alleged biblical right of the Jews to take their land.

I hope that many Latter-day Saints have read or will yet read Sahar Qumsiyehs 2018 Deseret Book volume, Peace for a Palestinian: One Womans Story of Faith Amidst War in the Holy Land. Dr.Qumsiyeh, who teaches mathematics at Brigham Young Universitys campus in Idaho, was born in Jerusalem and raised in Beit Sahour, Palestine. A convert to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, she also served a mission in England. Peace for a Palestinianwill give its readers a different perspective on a sad historical situation and a painful continuing reality that is a great deal more complex than many Americans realize. Another significant book from a Palestinian Christian, this one a prominent Melkite Greek Catholic clergyman, is Elias Chacours

More here:

Two Palestinian Christians, and a visit with one of the most interesting of Latter-day Saint historians - Patheos

‘Tova the Poet’ provides Jewish affirmation on Instagram J. – The Jewish News of Northern California

Posted By on July 28, 2022

Like most 23-year-olds, Tova Ricardo has an Instagram account. Yet she never posts pictures of herself partying, drinking or lounging on the beach. Instead, she posts poetic declarations of pride in her Judaism.

It doesnt stop there. Ricardo is African American, Jewish, religiously observant, an in-your-face Zionist and a nationally recognized youth poet. The East Bay native, who was a summer intern in J.s newsroom in 2019, exalts all of these intersecting identities on Instagram and TikTok.

Im a very nuanced and layered person, says Ricardo, whose online handle is @tovathepoet. Im trying to communicate my experiences as a Black, American Jewish woman, and a lot of folks dont know that people with those identities exist.

More and more are finding out. After eight months on Instagram, she has amassed nearly 10,000 followers.

Her typical posts have an epigrammatic quality, offering affirmation in a short piece of text that packs a punch. One recent entry: Im Black, Louisiana Creole & Jewish. From the bayous of the American South to the Land of Israel, I love all my cultures.

And: Listen to Jews the first time we call out antisemitism. We shouldnt have to beg to be heard. And: You dont need to be Black to stand up for Black lives. You dont need to be Jewish to stand up for Jewish lives.

Ricardo has been preparing for this role since her teens. In 2015, at age 16, she was named Oaklands Youth Poet Laureate, and in 2017, she wrote a personal essay published in this newspaper that discussed her heritage her kippa, Yiddish tongue and Black Panther hoodie as an inspiration to battle against injustice and end the warfare on marginalized people. The piece ended up winning a Rockower Award from the American Jewish Press Association.

And in 2019, while at Columbia University, she was part of a team that won the silver medal in a prestigious poetry slam tournament for college students. (Two years later, she graduated from Columbia, an education she partially paid for with a scholarship grant she was awarded by the S.F.-based Jewish Community Federation.)

After graduation, she was recruited by the Tel Aviv Institute (TVI), a nonprofit that draws on the power of social media to combat antisemitism and to promote Jewish and Zionist perspectives.

Sometimes her posts take on a cheerleading tone (You have an opportunity to love the life your ancestors could only dream of. Keep going). Other times, shes more defiant (I will not undermine my Jewish heritage, customs & covenant with Hashem to be accepted by the non-Jewish world).

I simply cant fit everything about myself into one post, she says. There are times when I will speak about being a Black Jewish person. Or on exclusively Black topics. I want people to see that I have many different layers, and a lot of different opinions and perspectives. I have a lot of opinions about the importance of Torah in your life, Israel in your life and how African Americans have been treated in our history.

Ricardo says her best-performing posts assert a refusal to forget or sideline her Jewish heritage, and ones that speak boldly rather than being tempered by a fear of antisemitic pushback.

Posts that speak to that sentiment have been doing the best, she says. For a lot of Jews in America and the West, we are constantly trying to reconcile our Jewish identities and our [Western] identities. Were trying to find where our Judaism can be safe, and how we can continue our heritage.

TVI was founded in 2019 by Israeli writer, speaker and activist Hen Mazzig and UC Berkeley professor Ron Katz, who serves as the organizations president. Through various bloggers and social media users with big followings Mazzig, for example, has more than 146,000 combined followers on Twitter and Instagram TVI claims on its website to reach more than 7 million people per month.

Through Ricardos friendship with Mazzig, she was invited to participate in an 2021 TVI conference called Jews Talk Justice.

She had such a strong voice, said Ari Solomon, TVI director of communications and projects. We often look for people who are Jewish and can build inroads to other communities. We invited her to our first Jews Talk Justice lab, and then asked her to join us as a digital producer.

Solomon aided Ricardo in designing the look and feel of the Instagram page, and helped her refine the messaging. Last November, Ricardo uploaded her first post, in which she said, Stop telling Jews to shut down their Judaism to make non-Jews comfortable. In her second post, she introduced herself: I am an observant Jew, a college graduate, and a proud Black Jewish woman I am always learning to be more unapologetic every day because who I am and my peoples are worth fighting for.

In some way, large or small, many of Ricardos sentiments date back to a Birthright trip to Israel in 2020 that galvanized her dedication to her Jewish heritage.

My mother always told me I would love Israel, she says. It was such a beautiful experience. I felt so connected to the land. It truly solidified for me why I have to continue to speak up as a Zionist. There are so many Jews in the world being made to feel we cant be proud of our identity and homeland. Im not going to do that.

Since launching her Instagram account, Ricardo has enjoyed seeing her audience grow. Solomon of TVI says that such visibility can alter the conversation about Jews, antisemitism and Zionism.

Tova has made the decision to stand up for what she believes in, Solomon says. Shes very results driven, but always leads with her values. Ive been in Israel and have had people tell me, Oh, you guys work with Tova, and that makes me feel so good.

TVI does not pay Ricardo or any of its influencers, and Ricardo, who is still active as a poet and writer, does not see this as her sole career. But for now, shes happy to be taking strong, public stands on Jewish and African American issues.

I want to push people out of their comfort zone, she says, but I also want [my page] to be a safe space. Were all learning how to be better versions of ourselves every day, whether thats deepening Jewish practice or understanding the history of American society, racism or antisemitism. I hope my page will continue to be a place where people can say I learned a lot or I finally felt validated.

Continue reading here:

'Tova the Poet' provides Jewish affirmation on Instagram J. - The Jewish News of Northern California

Funny Girls, Money Men: The Complications of Jewishness on Broadway – American Theatre

Posted By on July 28, 2022

Top: Beanie Feldstein and the company of "Funny Girl." (Photo by Matthew Murphy) Bottom: Adam Godley, Simon Russell Beale, and Adrian Lester in "The Lehman Trilogy." (Photo by Julieta Cervantes)

Just 24 hours after Beanie Feldstein announced her departure from Funny Girl, American Jewish theatremakers Emma Jude Harris and Gabrielle Hoyt met in person for the first time. 3,000 words, 10 oat milk lattes, and one last-minute Broadway trip later, their resultant dialogue touches on questions of Jewish identity, race, gender, American stories abroad, and the power of Barbra.

GABRIELLE HOYT: Hello, gorgeous.

EMMA JUDE HARRIS: Were kibitzing!

GABRIELLE: Today were discussing Jewish bodies in theatre.

EMMA: And our own Jewish bodies have intersectedfinally!just in time for Funny Girl to explode the internet.

GABRIELLE: We originally wanted to address (via transatlantic dialogue) an op-ed published last month in The New York Times by Pamela Paul titled Let Actors Act. In the piecewhich also set theatre Twitter aflamePaul cites Adrian Lesters performance in the critically acclaimed U.K. import The Lehman Trilogy. Praising the performance of Lester, a Black British actor, in a series of Jewish roles, Paul attempts to argue that actors should be allowed to portray people who are not like themselves. The article implies (in classic bad-faith-free-speech-screed fashion) that actors have, in 2022, been discouraged from or even lambasted for doing so. Of course, using the agency-free passive voice (whos doing the lambasting, Pamela?), Paul avoids assigning her strawman an identity. Instead, as she is wont to do (Id cite her recent columns but I dont want to give her the clicks), Paul implies that the art of acting is under attack from a faceless menace, ending her article with a horrendously condescending (and wrong), Bravo to Adrian Lester, who makes you forget the color of his skin, his nationality and his religionand gives himself over entirely to his performance. Oy!

EMMA: Its both bizarre and highly indicative of Pauls trademark lack of rigor that she picked The Lehman Trilogy as her non-problematic supposed problem play. Given the U.K. theatre industrys egregious track record of erasing Jewish cast and creatives from Jewish stories, Lehman Trilogy has actually been fairly diligent about Jewish representation: The production has a Jewish director (Sam Mendes) and a rabbinical consultant, and Jewish actor Adam Godley playing one of the three titular German Jewish immigrant brothers both on the West End and on Broadway. As an American Jew living in London who has been involved in calling out several antisemitism scandals in UK theatre, I think these stats pass muster.

The play does have an issue regarding identity and representation, but it is not the casting of gentile actors as Jewish characters that is problematic (or non-problematic, as Paul would have it), but rather how the piece profoundly underplays the Lehman brothers relationship to and complicity in slavery in their financial beginnings in the antebellum South. Questions created by Lesters casting coalesce not around his non-Jewishness but around his Blacknessthe very quality that, according to Paul, Lesters acting prowess supposedly negates. (Its worth noting, too, that while Lester happens not to be Jewish, Pauls argument effectively erases the existence of Black Jews.) Lesters onstage presence Hamilton-s the text (I use Hamilton as a verb here to refer to the practice of erasing a history of anti-Blackness, specifically chattel slavery, using Black and brown cast members bodies revisionistically). The casting choice, at best, nods to the fact that the Lehman brothers enslaved Black people, gesturing to this part of their narrative without bothering to build a nuanced interrogation into the playtext. At worst, it offers theatrical cover for historical crime.

GABRIELLE: One reason for the creators reluctance to address this issue seems pretty clear to me. The Lehman Trilogy centers a Jewish family amassing power and influence within the U.S., a tricky subject, and one that automatically invites accusations of antisemitism. Its creative team, composed of Stefano Massini, Ben Power, and Sam Mendes (of the three, only Mendes is Jewish), has not shied away from that portrayal, characterizing the play as a parable of American capitalism. Unfortunatelyas is so often the case with such origin storiesThe Lehman Trilogy doesnt account for the fact that enslavement provided the foundation for said American capitalism. The original Lehmans were Jewish; they also enslaved people. Casting Lester means that a Black British man plays a German American Jewish man who enslaved Black people and profited from that enslavement. But the play, originally cast with three white British actors playing multiple roles, makes no move to address this issue, despite the resonances of Lesters casting.

EMMA: The creative team has seemed overly eager to prove they are qualified to tell this Jewish story. In interviews, adaptor and translator Ben Power has described feeling like an outsider in the rehearsal room as a non-Jew, non-American (apparently being an Anglican white English man helped him understand the Lehman brothers experiences as German Jewish emigrants to America?). Playwright Stefano Massini often refers obliquely to his own background in the Jewish faith, rarely bothering to specify that he is not, in fact, Jewish, but rather an Italian Roman Catholic whose father saved a Jewish worker at his factory, earning the young Massini free admission to a Jewish school as a result. Clearly, these artists want to combat any charges of appropriating Jewish narratives, but theyve failed to examine the historical erasure theyre perpetrating within their work.

GABRIELLE: I cant believe that were putting this piece in conversation with Funny Girl, given how tonally and stylistically different they arebut similar issues arise! And theyre both U.K. importswhich I didnt even know until you told me.

EMMA: Yes! Producer Sonia Friedman and director Michael Mayer (both Jewish, but whos counting?) transferred their London revival of Funny Girl to Broadway this year, but the production originally premiered at the Menier Chocolate Factory in 2015. It starred Sheridan Smith, who is decidedly not Jewish, was well known for her West End turn as Elle Woods, another powerhouse role written by men for women to ruin their voices on. Her similarly non-Jewish understudy Natasha J. Barnes infamously went on regularly due to Smiths frequent indispositions, and the two formally shared the role on the national UK tour in 2017.

The announcement of Beanie Feldsteins casting for the Broadway transfer was met with jubilant, expectant discourse about the significance of a fat, queer, Jewish woman playing Fanny (along with wannabe Streisand heir Lea Micheles name trending, due to the perceived snub). But less than a year later, Feldstein shared via Instagram that she was leaving the production months earlier than planned. The time between these two events was characterized by gossip about Beanies voice; a mixture of tepid, scathing, and sexist reviews; declining sales and frequent unexplained Beanie absences.

This mishigas is in keeping with Funny Girls grand tradition of rumors, flops, near misses, and perennial casting drama. The unofficial U.K./U.S. Fanny Parade that led to this moment consists of the following women, some of whom are Jewish, some of whom are vocally qualified, some of whom are actually funny, some of whom are the right age for the casting, and none of whom are all of the above (excepting OG Barbra, of coursemore on her later). The Fanny Parade is as follows: Lauren Ambrose (neither Jewish nor vocally appropriate), who was rumored to be attached to a 2011 Bartlet Sher Broadway production that was scrapped entirely after losing its funding; in the U.K., the aforementioned Sheridan Smith and understudy Natasha J Barnes; Idina Menzel, who in 2020 was reportedly in talks to star in Mayers Broadway transfer despite being 28 years older than Barbra when she originated the role; Beanie Feldstein, a funny, lovable Jewish actor and sophomore Broadway performer who got the part, despite not being able to sing it; Julie Benko (also Jewish), her acclaimed standby; and finally Lea Michele, an unfunny practicing Catholic with Jewish heritage, initially spurned from the Broadway transfer despite seven years of cosplaying as Fanny Brice fanatic Rachel Berry on Glee, who has now, despite serial allegations of horrible behavior, emerged as the one Fanny to rule them all, proving that the Ryan Murphy Cinematic Universe is in fact our reality.

GABRIELLE: What hits me hardesthaving just seen the show, and of course having obsessively followed the drama weeks nowis how tremendously disempowering this feels. Barbra Streisand famously took on the role of Fanny Brice at 21. Jule Styne, who had considered Mary Martin and Carol Burnett for the role, described her as looking like a Cossack in her audition. But by age 26 shed delivered an iconic performance onstage and on screen, conducted an affair with co-star Omar Sharif that became an international incident, and accepted an Academy Award while wearing a see-through matching pants set. Though much of the coverage she received at the time contained misogyny and antisemitism, both covert and overt, theres no denying the power she gained from the role or the control she exerted over her own image.

EMMA: The great commercial hits of the Broadway canon rarely intersect with explicit Jewishness, and even more rarely do we find positive portrayals of explicitly Jewish women. Babs arc as she became the greatest star mirrored that of the figure she was embodying, Jewish comic Fanny Brice, portrayed in the musical as an impossibly talented Jewish woman who succeeded against the odds because of her talent. Funny Girl became a success because Babs extraordinary talent was a direct mirror for Fannys. The meta-arc of the show celebrated the impossible success of not one but two genius Jewish women.

Id like to don my specialty embroidered American Reform Jew living in the U.K. yarmulke once more to point out that the plot and themes of Funny Girl are fundamentally anathema to British society: piercing ambition; cultural assimilation; the commercial success of Yiddishkeit; sexual and professional desire; and Jewish contributions to vaudeville, burlesque, and variety shows. In the U.K., the striving that is at the heart of the American dream, the American immigrant experience, and the American musical is viewed as dclass. Why the producers decided to start the productions journey in England continues to baffle me, and feels indicative of their lack of actual care for the story they were telling.

GABRIELLE: These points get at the heart of both Funny Girl and Barbras success: that striving can be sexy. Brice, as portrayed in Funny Girl, is a try-hard, a workaholic, and a control freak. So, by all accounts, is Streisand. In the show, these traits earn Fanny professional success, personal fulfillment, and (for a while) a smokin hot husband. And as for Streisandagain, did I mention the affair with Omar Sharif and the see-through pants set?

Contrast Streisands initial success to the fates of Fanny Brice onstage and Beanie Feldstein offstage in 2022. Beanie has been pushed out of the rolehumiliatingly soand even while performing, I would argue that she is never granted the control that Barbra exerted. Part of this is because she cant sing the part, a fatal blow in a musical where belting chops equal narrative power. But even within the staging, shes so frequently swallowed by sets, swathed in voluminous costumes, or towered over by her fellow cast members. Shes rarely given the chance to take space and just be funnya task at which she would have excelled, and in which she would have been able to exert some control over the theatrical world around her.

EMMA: Ironically, given the lack of space that Beanie is afforded in this production, much of the buzz around her casting was predicated on how supposedly empowering the concept of fat Jewish Fanny was. This girl-power-fueled hot take ignores the inconvenient truth that Funny Girl is a fundamentally sexist musical about a Jewish woman who can be funny or gorgeous but certainly not both. Furthermore, the show makes clear that, for funny girls, domestic bliss cant coexist with stardom. Fanny ends the show successful but alone, bereft of the gorgeous Nicky Arnstein, who made her feel sort of beautiful until he didnt (not to mention absconding with her money). Sure, Fanny ends the show with a spirited reprise of Dont Rain On My Parade, but even this moment of supposed empowerment cant undo the shows corrosive, misogynistic messageif youre good for a laugh, youre wrong for the guyblasted out for nearly 3 hours at $100 a pop.

GABRIELLE: In actuality, many of the issues within Funny Girl have nothing to do with Beanie, or with Barbra, for that matter. They have to do with Brice. The shows book largely glosses over her actual act, and its easy to see why. She often performed in blackface and redface, and her Jewish humor contained wildly offensive stereotyping that would never fly today. Even in 1964, the book of Funny Girl softened Fannys jagged edges. The 2022 production goes further: In the original Broadway cast, Fannys maid, Emma, was played by renowned Black actress Royce Wallace. In the current revival, shes played by Ephie Aardema, a Fanny understudy who is herself white and Jewish. Meanwhile, the role of Fannys Black confidante is taken by the character of Eddie, enlivened by a virtuosic, Tony-nominated performance from Jared Grimes. In the musical, Eddie is not only Fannys friend and choreographer; he also pines after her both romantically and professionally, lamenting that I taught her everything she knows while she goes onto bigger and better things. Given the complex and troubled legacy of Jewish and Black performers in musical theatrea legacy that Brice herself embodies!I found the shows treatment of Eddies race disconcerting, to say the least.

EMMA: In addition to erasing Fannys complicity in anti-Blackness, the piece never really deals with her Jewishness beyond the most flippant smattering of additional Yiddish (thanks, Harvey). A Mazel Tov Fanny banner written in transliterated English feels like an indicator of this productions superficial engagement with diasporic 20th-century Ashkenazi Jewish immigrant identity. Funny Girl doesnt unpack the antisemitism Brice faced, nor does it address the internalized antisemitism she presumably felt: In 1923, sick of being a sight gag, she underwent a nose bobbing(rhinoplasty) from a quack doctor in a Baltimore hotel room. Unlike Brice, Babs defiantly refused a nose job, but insisted on being filmed only from the left side.

Beanie, meanwhile, has been the recipient of fatphobic critiques her whole career. Clearly, based on reviews and how shes been treated, her unruly Jewish body is still not accepted on a Broadway stage. One of the tragedies of this debacle, for me, is how portraying an unconventional-looking, talented, hilarious Jewish character has exposed the unconventional-looking, talented, hilarious Jewish Feldstein to such mistreatment. Regardless of whether or not she can sing the role, her body has been devalued, and neither the producers of Funny Girl nor the script itself reckon with that harm.

GABRIELLE: The common problem in both The Lehman Trilogy and Funny Girl (and again, I cannot believe that I just typed this sentence) is one of silence. They both, at heart, deal with the status of Jews in America. Thats a complex story! Yet the idea seems to be that if you get the right kind of people together in a room, youve absolved yourself of addressing such complexity. In the case of Lehman, this magical thinking leads to Jewish and Jewish-adjacent creatives deciding not to discuss the Lehman Brothers enslavement of Black peoplewhile casting a Black actor in a starring role. As for Funny Girl, a similar mentality leads to casting Beanie Feldsteina fat, queer, Jewish, wildly appealing performer who cannot sing her rolein a dated piece with a problematic plot, rife with its own elisions. Of course she couldnt carry the show!

EMMA: In 2022, who could? And why am I positive its not going to be Lea Michele?

GABRIELLE: For me, our discussion of these two shows has crystallized why, so often, questions of casting Jewish roles become massive firestorms. With its status as religion-but-also-ethnicity, ethnicity-but-not-quite-race, often-privileged-yet-frequently-persecuted, over-and-under-represented-in-entertainment, Judaism often does not fit within the reductive language and thought processes we use to discuss representation in theatre. Theres a desire, I think, for performers with marginalized experiences to fix problematic works and narratives with their mere presence. Because the very concept of a marginalized experience gets complex when attached to Judaismwho gets to claim it, who does not, and what that even means within a specifically American Jewish contextthe moral framework frequently attached to representation begins to fall apart. Such a framework relies on the belief that performance, authenticity, identity, and ethics are one and the samewhich is false. These concepts are related, but they are not the same. And telling Jewish stories and casting Jewish roles really brings that problem into sharpprofile, lets say.

EMMA: What youre really talking about is casting as absolution. And maybe its a bit Christian to be aiming for absolution.

Gabrielle Hoyt is a dramaturg, writer, and director. She is pursuing her MFA at Yale. @gabhoyt

Emma Jude Harris is a director and dramaturg who works across forms in opera, new writing, and early modern theatre. She is currently based in London. @HeyEmJude

Ephie Aardemas name was initially misspelled in this piece.

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Funny Girls, Money Men: The Complications of Jewishness on Broadway - American Theatre


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