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When battling ‘progressive madness’ is more important than saving lives – Haaretz

Posted By on December 14, 2021

In the Israeli childrens book A Strange and Puzzling Story about a Small Island by Ephraim Sidon and Yossi Abulafia (run out and buy it) theres a small island, far far away, with a small minority that believes that man is descended from scarecrows. Spoiler: This minority manages to force the majority to walk around with onions in their noses and spinach in their ears.

Of course this is an amusing fable about the gray area between preserving the rights of the minority and forcing things on the majority. The plot of the book is as strange as it sounds, and it indicates quite clearly which robe-wearing Israeli minority is the real subject. But even stranger, far stranger, is the plot of the entirely true story, The big boycott of the yeshivas against blood donations.

It all began when in a small country in the Middle East, which every year brags about hosting the largest gay pride parade in the region, the Magen David Adom national emergency service was kind enough to acknowledge the existence of the countrys gay community: When Health Minister Nitzan Horowitz assumed his post, gay people were allowed to donate blood, and the wording on the registration form for donors was changed from the longstanding father and mother to say parent 1 and parent 2.

Because what can you do, not every Israeli has a father and mother at home thats a fact. That fact really doesnt prevent anyone who actually does have a father and a mother from noting that on the new form thats also a fact. And certainly these two facts dont force anyone to actually give up his father and mother, to start a family he doesnt want, or to shove onions up his nose and spinach into his ears. Its only a recognition of the fact that some people dont have a father and a mother.

In other words, the previous form was offensive to anyone who doesnt have a father and a mother, because thats not how their parents are classified, but the new form doesnt prevent anyone who does have a father and a mother from listing them. The new form includes everyone. And thats the ultimate test of democracy: Equality comes first, and no real harm is done to others.

Of course this logic escaped a group of extremist Hardali (ultra-Orthodox Zionist) yeshivas including Ateret Cohanim, Eli and Har Hamor. They decided to boycott blood donations, in revenge for what they call the progressive madness, until father and mother are immediately restored to the form. MDA panicked, and as a cowardly compromise removed the entire controversial section from the form.

And heres the really bizarre thing, which proves that the craziness is actually on the conservative side: Even that didnt appease the Hardalim. According to the Kippa website, which caters to the religious Jewish community, blood donations were cancelled in the settlement of Eli to protest this compromise. They are standing on principle: We wont donate blood until the hetero-familial unit is restored to the form.

It is therefore clear that the extremist Hardalim find the battle against the gay community more important than saving lives. Therefore, MDA must stop toadying to them. So they wont donate. They dont need to. Nor do they need to serve in the army, if the condition for that is the exclusion and humiliation of women.

Enough threatening us that dubious contributions to the general good will be halted every time we dont align ourselves with offensive values. During the Meron disaster, when many ultra-Orthodox Jews were injured, Rabin Square in Tel Aviv was flooded with secular Jews who came to donate blood, without presenting preconditions to the injured Haredim.

In a liberal democracy, as Israel purports to be, the attempt to reach a consensus is not at all costs. There are also values in the heart of the system that we must defend. Like equality. In this case, preserving the rights of the minority is reserved for the LGBTQs who were previously excluded and not for the Hardalim who were not effectively harmed at all. What needs to be fought is the conservative craziness. So we wont end up with onions in our ears.

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When battling 'progressive madness' is more important than saving lives - Haaretz

Antisemitic Professor Who Was Kept on at UNC Spreads More Jew Hatred Than Ever – Algemeiner

Posted By on December 14, 2021

This semester, Kylie Broderick taught the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC) course on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, despite her publicly promoting the view that Israel should not exist, declaring that Palestinians are the only legitimate side in the conflict, and urging everyone at UNC [to] boycott Israeli products.

She even scheduled a quiz on Yom Kippur the holiest day of Judaism.

Now a new video has emerged, in which Broderick declares, The concept of objectivity is a colonizers tool and one we must discard entirely, and that objectivity is neither desirable nor possible in teaching history.

In this new video, recorded at the end of November, Broderick spoke on a Teaching Palestine virtual panel, complaining, that the UNC administration spent a good deal of time examining my ability to be objective, whatever that means.

December 14, 2021 12:07 pm

Broderick states that instructors should aim to be activists who teach justice in the classroom.

She reports that UNC wanted her to meet with Jewish Studies faculty, calling it a nonsensical request, describing university leaders as either illiterate or more likely deliberately cowardly.

Her talk begins, I want to recognize I am also on stolen and unceded indigenous territory here in North Carolina, and went on to refer to the United States and Israel as twin settler colonies.

Broderick promoted the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions movement (BDS) during the panel, and earlier in 2021, she signed a letter affirming her commitment to promote BDS in the classroom and on campus.

And UNC still chose her to teach a course on Israel and the Palestinians.

In a series of conspiratorially bizarre statements, she refers to ABC News as part of the allegedly secular media, and asserts that there are efforts seeking to criminalize teaching about Palestine from a pro-Palestinian perspective or a truthful perspective.

In this new video, Broderick shared, All in all, the University [UNC] received thousands of emails about me demanding I be fired and they came from all echelons of society. But honestly, what was more troubling than the mobilization of the Hasbara network, was how the university wanted me to respond to their baseless accusations.

Brodericks presentation was steeped in antisemitism on what the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) describes as The myth of excessive Jewish power. She repeatedly complains that UNC the same university that chose her to teach a course on Israel is playing into a Zionist playbook, and that the university expected her to function under Israels rules.

She argues that it is crucial to dismantle the power that Hasbara and other pro-colonial causes have historically had over universities. She states that the pro-Israel media was able to dominate the airwaves.

After concluding her presentation, the moderator Jamila Ghaddar immediately responded, Thank you so much Kylie for that thorough presentation of this violent attack you faced.

In Brodericks upside-down academic world, espousing blatant antisemitism is normative, and those who call out her hatred and extreme anti-Israel bias are somehow violent.

Kylie Broderick has made it very clear that she views the college classroom as her own private playground a place where she feels free to indoctrinate students against Israel with no consequences. She disregards and disrespects other views. This extremely biased, antisemitic agenda has no place in academia.

Peter Reitzes writes about issues related to antisemitism and Israel.

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Antisemitic Professor Who Was Kept on at UNC Spreads More Jew Hatred Than Ever - Algemeiner

The best Jewish (and Jew-ish) films of 2021 – St. Louis Jewish Light

Posted By on December 14, 2021

This story was originally published on December 14, by the Forward. Sign uphereto get the latest stories fromthe Forwarddelivered to you each morning.

The cinematic year of 2021 felt like a time warp.

Lets put it this way. In March, the Grammys, a show known for its belated schedule, awarded Billie Eilish Best Song Written for Visual Media for the title track of the James Bond flick No Time to Die, a film that wouldnt even be released until October. The releases of highly anticipated films like Steven Spielbergs West Side Story and Scarlett Johanssons MCU swan song, Black Widow faced long delays while the world waited for it to be safe to return to cinemas.

The good news is, many of these films were well worth the wait and, since many festivals hosted their offerings online, some were more accessible than ever. Weve compiled a few of our favorites from this year, ranging from understated Israeli dramas to bombastic musical period pieces and a meditation on the artistic merits of Kenny G.

Here are the films we loved and where to watch them.

In select theaters now, everywhere on Dec. 25

While most discourse around Andersons latest involves its central romance the male lead, a 15-year-old; the leading woman, 25 the film itself is concerned with many other questions, among them: what makes a Jew Jewish?A Shabbat dinner sequenceinvolving Alana Haims character, Alana Kane, and her boyfriend tersely encapsulates the nature of Jewish identity by way of ahem the sign of the covenant. The theme strikes again when a talent agent comments on Alanas fashionable Jewish nose. With Haim and her entire family Anderson revels in one of his greatest gifts as a director, casting. The auteur who saw the nervy dramatic power in Adam Sandler has once again struck gold with Haim.

If youre going to watch one indie film of 2021, make it this one. Based on a David Bezmozgis short story and set on the moody gray boardwalk of 1980s Brighton Beach, Minyan follows David, a closeted gay teenager, as he attempts to navigate a hardscrabble Russian Jewish community hostile to boys like him. Bullied at school and awkward with girls, David takes refuge in his grandfathers old-folks home, where he endears himself by showing up for Shabbat minyan and befriends Herschel and Itzik, an elderly gay couple whom the neighbors choose to consider roommates. In an unglamorous and often harsh world, director Eric Steel finds a lush cinematic experience thats well worth your time.

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Erudite, wry, meticulous. Each adjective slots neatly into any of Wes Andersons movies, The French Dispatch being no exception. But what the film, inspired by in-depth literary reportage from The New Yorker (and one Talk of the Town) gives us is a director at the top of his game. Juggling aspect ratios, black and white and color film, animation and impossible stagings, Anderson is showing off but never for no reason. The true marvel, though, may be the script itself. Anderson and his co-writers, whose dialogue is typically laconic, here channels the gleefully finicky if sometimes soaring prose pioneered by Harold Ross and William Shawn. Anderson once invoked one of the New Yorkers short story contributors (some Jewish kid named Jerome). In The French Dispatch hes delivered a whole magazine.

Mustafa, a young Palestinian father, lives in Tulkarm, a city in the West Bank. Meanwhile, his wife and children are Israeli citizens on the other side of the separation wall. In a gesture of resistance against the occupation, Mustafa refuses to apply for Israeli residency, instead using work permits to travel and visit his family. Its a situation that, Mustafa thinks, seems to work until Israeli soldiers deny his permit on the same day his son is the victim of a car accident. Desperate to get to the hospital, Mustafa boards a smugglers minivan to cross the short but dangerous distance 200 meters between him and his family. Director Ameen Nayfehdrew on his own experience growing up in the West Bank for this impressive directorial debut.

A treyf title, but a kosher cast with Adam Arkin and Alex Wolff. This gem was hidden like a truffle amid the dirt of theater-going anxiety when it came out in July. It deserves another look. Nicolas Cage plays an ex-celebrity chef who left the spotlight after the death of his wife. When his one companion a truffle pig is stolen, hes forced to reenter society and the landmarks of his past life on a rescue mission. Its kind of like an arthouse John Wick with way fewer guns and far more agonizing monologues. Its a refreshing reminder that Nicolas Cage is a very strong actor when he chooses to be.

Before there was Pen15s bat mitzvah scene, there was Tahara, a deliciously awkward and disarmingly earnest coming-of-age drama that takes place in that most evocative of teenage refuges: the synagogue ladies lounge. The film follows two teenage friends Carrie (Madeline Grey DeFreece), who is Black and queer, and Hannah (Rachel Sennott), who is white and straight over the course of a single day, as they attend the funeral of a Hebrew school classmate who died by suicide. As Hannah concocts an ill-advised romance to boost her floundering self-esteem, Carrie grapples with the burden of being the only Black teen in their cohort. Tahara was filmed in the childhood synagogue of its writer, Jess Zeidman, lending it an extra layer of poignant realness.

Watch this moody Israeli drama when youre in the mood to cry. The titular character (played by Alena Yiv) is a Russian immigrant to Jerusalem, struggling to make ends meet as a nurse while caring for her teenage daughter Vika (Shira Haas, of Shtisel and Unorthodox fame), who is slowly dying of an unnamed degenerative disease. A film like Asia could easily devolve into voyeurism, but first-time director Ruthy Pribar makes it a meditation on the labor of caring for others: labor Asia performs while ministering to the elderly people in her charge, labor she pays other people to do for her own daughter. What do we gain or lose when we pay others to do work thats emotional as well as physical? This film asks questions without pretending to have all the answers.

A movie about Kenny G, the most reviled and successful instrumentalist of all time, was destined to inflame passions. (My review certainly ignited my inbox!) But what Penny Lane accomplished with her documentary is a miracle of dispassionate filmmaking, examining not just the springy-haired saxophonist but the intersections of art and subjectivity. Speaking not just to G who I found obnoxious in his artlessness, and many other viewers found delightful but fans, critics and his mentor, Lane arrives at a simple, but worthwhile conclusion: people like what they like and hate what they hate. Sometimes the reasons are cerebral and well-reasoned, sometimes emotional. Both are valid.

With their West Side Story, Spielberg, screenwriter Tony Kushner and choreographer Justin Peck have found new life in timeless if flawed source material, deconstructing some of the most indelible images in movie musicals, creating new ones and paying deference wherever possible to the original. The task of deconstruction is literal. The world of the film takes its cue from the real-world rubble of 1957s Upper West Side, when Robert Moses dream of an arts center evicted working class families by way of the eminent domain wrecking ball. The storys life and death stakes, always bubbling with socio-structural subtext, become tangible as Sharks and Jets vie for an ever-dwindling territory. Under Spielberg, directing an incandescent cast and a surprisingly capable Ansel Elgort Leonard Bernstein, Jerome Robbins, Arthur Laurents and Stephen Sondheims magnum opus is a grimy, glorious and socially aware work that bespeaks the dual violence of 50s street gangs and gentrification and doing it with more Spanish dialogue than In the Heights. Seeing it at the AMC near Lincoln Center leaves a queasy feeling, especially knowing Robbins archives are housed just down the road, on the graves of old tenements. Im not an easy cry; I sobbed.

The Forwardis an independent, nonprofit news organization dedicated to providing incisive coverage of the issues, ideas and institutions that matter to American Jews.

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The best Jewish (and Jew-ish) films of 2021 - St. Louis Jewish Light

Third Annual Kyiv Jewish Forum Expected to Reach Half a Million Viewers Worldwide – Algemeiner

Posted By on December 14, 2021

JNS.org Celebrating 30 years of official diplomatic relations between Israel and Ukraine, the third annual Kyiv Jewish Forumset to take place over two days starting this Wednesdaywill be held online due to ongoing coronavirus restrictions.

The purpose of the event is to foster dialogue among leaders from around the globe that will help bring about much-needed solutions to challenges such as rising antisemitism, the growth of the anti-Israel boycott movement and the effects of the ongoing pandemic. Discussions will also center on pressing issues facing Jewish communities worldwide, and relations between Ukraine, Israel and the global Jewish community.

The two-day virtual forum will be co-hosted by the Jewish Confederation of Ukraine in partnership with the Combat Antisemitism Movement (CAM), the Center for Jewish Impact and Euro-Asian Jewish Congress. Last year, 83,000 people participated in the forum online, including 500 leaders from Ukraine, Israel, the United States and Europe.

Jews and Ukrainians are united by more than a 1,000-year history, and this history has a lot to teach us about the challenges we face today, said Boris Lozhkin, president of the Jewish Confederation of Ukraine. The increasing cooperation and ties between Ukraine and Israel are to be celebrated and, together with our partners from around the world, we will discuss how to further increase collaboration and discuss solutions to antisemitism and the Jewish community living under COVID-19.

December 14, 2021 2:46 pm

Ukraines President Volodymyr Zelensky is expected to attend the online event, as well as its Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal, Minister of Foreign Affairs Dmytro Kuleba and Minister of Health Viktor Liashko. Also in attendance will be Israels Minister of Jerusalem Affairs and Housing and Construction Zeev Elkin, Minister of Diaspora Affairs Nachman Shai and Minister of Tourism Yoel Razvozov, among other senior leaders and officials from Europe, Israel and the United States.

Other speakers at this years event include Sen. Ben Cardin (D-Md.); Rep. Doug Lamborn (R-Colo.); European Commission Coordinator on Combating Antisemitism and Fostering Jewish Life Katharina von Schnurbein; Canadas Special Envoy on Preserving Holocaust Remembrance and Combating Antisemitism Irwin Cotler; chairman of the Directorate of Yad Vashem in Jerusalem Dani Dayan; and Natan Sharansky, chairman of the Supervisory Board of the Babyn Yar Foundation and Holocaust Memorial Center.

Sonia Gomes de Mesquita, executive director of the Center for Jewish Impact, told JNS, After three decades, our countries continue to collaborate in fields of national security, tourism, economics, public health and more. Throughout the Jewish state, Ukrainian Jews have made crucial contributions in technology, medicine and culture. This forum provides a platform to memorialize the intricate role Jews played throughout Ukrainian history and the great conciliatory lengths that Ukraine has undergone since 1991.

We are facing a consolidation of several social trends

The first day of the event will explore how Ukraines storied Jewish history has shaped its contemporary relations with Israel, and celebrate the pivotal ties connecting Ukraine, Israel, Europe and the United States.

The second day will focus on the most-pressing issues facing the Jewish people and Israel, including challenges arising from the ongoing pandemic, the growth of antisemitism worldwide and the need for expanded Jewish education, among other issues. It will also look to the future of Israels global role as a startup nation and highlight the lessons that Jewish communities worldwide can learn from Israeli expertise.

Sima Vaknin, founder of Strategic Impact and senior advisor to CAM, told JNS: Antisemitism, the most ancient and complex form of hatred, is an intellectual and social illness that poses an imminent challenge and a pressing danger to Jewish life and well-being.

Antisemitism is rampant across Europe and the United States, and has entered the mainstream media, academia and sometimes politics, she said. Unfortunately, this is not new news anymore.

Vaknin said she is alarmed that in the last two year, we are facing a consolidation of several social trends, global challenges, political ideologies and technological capabilities that enable antisemitism to spike, touch a variety of audiences and reach new peaks.

Medieval conspiracy theories and blood libels are coming to life with 21st Century cloaks. The defamation of the Jewish state replaced the politically incorrect Jew-hatred, she added.

Lozhkin, who is also vice president of the World Jewish Congress, said that while the event is taking place 30 years after the advent of relations between Israel and Ukraine, we want to take a broader look at this date.

The bond between Jews and Ukrainians has existed much longerfor centuriesand there were different periods in this time, as happens between any neighbors, he noted, pointing to thetragic eventsthat took place at Babi Yar as one such example.

In the span of just two days Sept. 29-30, 1941 the Nazis and their Ukrainian collaborators committed one of the Holocausts largest (and quickest) massacres when they murdered, one by one, a staggering 33,771 Jews in Babi Yara massive ravine situated on the outskirts of the countrys capital of Kiev (Kyiv), Ukraine.

Lozhkin recently presented toDayan a new book titled Righteous Among the Nations, Ukraine.

Among the Jews and residents of Israel, it is probably difficult to find someone who has not heard about Yad Vashem and the Righteous Among the Nations, said Lozhkin. As for the representatives of other peoples and residents of other countries, for them, these are not entirely obvious concepts.

The book contains salvation stories that detail the enemies, victims and heroes of Ukraine during World War II.

We decided that it would be right to tell a wider audience about the events of 80 years ago and placed 2,674 stories of the salvation of Jews by Ukrainians in the book, said Lozhkin. It is difficult to find a better and more correct way of communicating the truth about the Holocaust and, in general, preserving the memory of it, than by telling the specific stories.

Lozhkin pointed out that there are likely many more stories of Ukrainians who saved Jews but their names have been lost.

Nevertheless, he said, I think we are simply obliged to talk about each righteous person. By telling these stories, we are, at the same time, telling about the Holocaust. Truth and education are the tools that, better than others, knock the ground from under the feet of antisemitism. If such a book is not yet available in other countries where they officially recognize righteous people, I recommend that it be published.

Lozhkin added that because the issue of antisemitism is not only about Jews, I am happy that not only Jews will be among the guests and speakers.

Antisemitism is like a litmus test for determining the mental health of a given society, he said. If there is a bad attitude towards Jews, then there will almost certainly also be serious remarks in relation to other peoples, religions, cultures and to human rights in general, in a broad sense. I dont want to say that everything begins with antisemitism, but it almost always ends with it.

The root of evil is ignorance, he noted. This is the third time we will be discussing this issue and, unfortunately, most likely it will not be the last. I hope that our esteemed speakers will be able to take a fresh look at the problem and suggest effective ways to neutralize or even reduce it.

A reminder of how far we have come

Another panel will highlight Israel as the No. 1 startup nation in the world.

The time has come to learn from Israel today, and not only for Ukraine, but for the whole world, said Lozhkin. Being small in size and also young in comparison with [other] countries, Israel can teach a lot to everyone who wants to learn. Ukraine will definitely benefit from the Israeli experience.

Guests and speakers of the forum will also include president of the World Jewish Congress Ronald S. Lauder; the ambassadors of Israel to Ukraine and of Ukraine to Israel Michael Brodsky and Yevgen Korniychuk; the heads of the health authorities of both countries; the UN and European Commission antisemitism commissioners; CEO of the American Jewish Committee David Harris; Euro-Asian Jewish Congress President Mikhail Mirilashvili, CEO of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations William Daroff; National President and CEO of the Anti-Defamation League Jonathan Greenblatt; and many others.

Robert Singer, chairman of the Center for Jewish Impact, said: As a Ukrainian-born Jew whose family was among the first that emigrated from Ukraine to Israel in the 1970s, I am honored to co-organize the event. I had the pleasure of being among the organizers of the 75th anniversary ceremony of the Babyn Yar massacre. This tragic history is a reminder of how far we have come in all aspects, and Im sure that our countries will continue to enhance these important relations in the upcoming years.

Lozhkin said he expects the forum to reach half a million viewers around the world.

Representation of speakers at the Kyiv Jewish Forum is growing every year, and interest in the topics discussed on our forums is also growing, he said. Lets not forget about the importance of Ukraine for the Jewish world. Until the beginning of the 20th Century, a quarter of all Jews in the world lived on the territory of current Ukraine. Today, descendants or immigrants from Ukraine can be found among Jews almost everywhere. In Israel alone, there are about 500,000 of them. This, among other things, can explain the increased interest in the global discussion platform, organized by us.

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Third Annual Kyiv Jewish Forum Expected to Reach Half a Million Viewers Worldwide - Algemeiner

‘Human life is sacred for Jews’: Why Israel killed the death penalty, and will it be resurrected soon – Haaretz

Posted By on December 14, 2021

Last week, the subject of the death penalty was put back on the Israeli agenda. Members of Knesset (the Israeli parliament) Itamar Ben Gvir (Religious Zionism) and May Golan (Likud) were the latest to present legislation to impose the death sentence on terrorists. By complete coincidence, that same week, the State Archive declassified a portion of the 72-year-old minutes of the hearings on abolishing the penalty.

In the six years that passed between the establishment of Israel and its abolition of the death penalty, it set a new norm. The courts might hand the sentence to a convicted murderer, but the authorities would not act on the verdict. The legal statute of the British Mandate obligated the courts to pass down a death sentence, but so long as the public debate continued on getting rid of the death sentence, the parties entrusted with carrying out the sentence chose not to do so until new legislation could be put into effect.

And so, the lives of Mufleh Zaarour and Ali Hussein of Haifa, among others, were saved. The two men had been convicted of murder and were sentenced to death, but the sentence was never carried out. In 1948, the two men robbed Ephraim Kosher, a Jewish cigarette merchant from Tel Aviv, and then murdered him. They severed his head and threw his body into a well, where they buried it under a pile of rags.

Thus, Zaarour and Hussein entered the history books: First death sentence issued in the State of Israel, read a Haaretz headline. Other media reports from the time indicated that the Prison Service was not at all prepared to receive the sentenced convicts. There were no red uniforms available at the time of their incarceration the customary color of prison uniforms assigned to death row inmates. Neither were they assigned a special prison cell.

The sensitive government discussion was initiated in 1949. Attendees debated the bill to abolish the death sentence for murder, a statute that had been inherited from the period of British rule. Members of the government quoted Jewish scriptures, cited the philosophy of Maimonides and cautioned against vigilantism.

Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion presented a complex picture, the uncensored minutes show. On the one hand, he supported abolishing the death sentence. He brought up the death of Meir Tobianski, an IDF officer who had been executed by firing squad the previous year, after having been given a field trial for espionage charges. It later came to light that he was innocent. A very upsetting occurrence, Ben-Gurion laconically commented.

On the other hand, the then-prime minister also expressed concern that getting rid of the death penalty would lead to an increase in murders, because people would take the law into their own hands. As he put it, There will be people who will commit murder because they know that even if they are caught, they will not be killed. Furthermore, he told the meeting, In our country, there is a matter of reprisals and blood vengeance We are liable to cause people to be murdered not by the court, but by people who would take the law into their own hands.

Ben-Gurion stressed that he had not come to terms with his decision, and that he would vote in favor of abolishing the death penalty, not lightheartedly, and out of uncertainty. Among other things, he said: If I were living in Scandinavia, I would easily vote in favor of abolishing the death penalty.

'A king can kill'

In the course of the hearings, the minutes of which were revealed at the request of the Akevot Institute for Israeli-Palestinian Conflict Research, the participants delved into philosophical concepts, the Torah and the way in which the Jewish people should define themselves.

Religious Services Minister Rabbi Yehuda Leib Maimon, for instance, also supported abolishing the death penalty, and cautioned against the execution of innocent people. I know that there have been thousands of cases throughout history where people were executed after being wanted and investigated, but it later turned out that [the charges] did not have a leg to stand on, he said.

I think that the reborn state should show the entire world that we are a people that reviles murder, and that human life is sacred for us, he added. There are Arabs in the country of whom I am not so fond, but at a time when we have to decide to kill them, I would not raise a hand, because they are human beings as well.

Foreign Minister Moshe Sharett said that he believes that the human race should aspire to a moral level at which it would be forbidden to take human life.

Police Minister Bechor-Shalom Sheetrit, though, voiced dissent. Abolishing the death penalty in a country signals complacency in its internal security," he said. In terms of Jewish law, the death penalty existed for things that we [now] see as trivial." He quoted from the book of Exodus: He who trikes his father or his mother shall be put to death" and "He who insults his father or his mother shall be put to death.

Ben-Gurion noted that according to Maimonides, A king can kill. And who is a king? The state.

Sheetrit stated that in the six months leading up to the debate, 20 murders had been committed in the country. He expressed concern that abolishing the death penalty would only encourage this phenomenon to grow. Ben-Gurion emphasized that Israel is different from Denmark, where only those at the margins of society were liable to kill people. There are Arabs here," he warned, "and there are also Jews who, as far as that is concerned, are Arabs. He did not elaborate.

Demjanjuk was spared, Eichmann wasn't

The debate continued for several years. It was not until 1954 that the Knesset voted to abolish the death sentence. That same day, Haaretz reported, several inmates who had been sentenced to death were ushered into the office of the director of Tel Mond Prison, dressed in red uniforms. I am here to inform you that the death penalty has been abolished. I am hoping that you will properly appreciate this important step taken by the Knesset, he told them.

The lead editorial that appeared in Haaretz that day, under the headline Sanctity of human life, took issue with the abolition of the death penalty. The most horrific crime necessitates the most horrific punishment in light of the sanctity of human life, it read.

Besides Zaarour and Hussein, other Israelis who had been sentenced to death but were then saved from the hangmans noose included David Yakobovich, who in 1950 was convicted of a murder in Meir Park in Tel Aviv, but the Supreme Court reduced his murder conviction to that of manslaughter.

A year later, Yehezkel Ingster was sentenced to death; he had been convicted of crimes against humanity as a kapo serving in concentration camps. Ingster was the first person sentenced to death on the basis of the Knessets 1950 law punishing Nazis and their collaborators, but his sentence was reduced to jail time following an appeal to the Supreme Court. A decade later, Adolf Eichmann was sentenced to death on the basis of the same law. He was the first and, to date, only individual to be executed by the State of Israel (the killing of Tobianski was later considered as murder, not execution).

At present, the law permits the state to sentence someone to death for treason in wartime or for Nazi crimes, subject to a hearing with a panel of two district court judges and one Supreme Court justice. The latter clause was the basis for the death sentence handed to John Demjanjuk in 1988, but he was acquitted on grounds of reasonable doubt on an appeal to the Supreme Court. He was later convicted in a German court as an accessory to mass murder, but died while awaiting his appeal.

And as for Zaarour, he found himself back in the headlines 40 years after the 1948 murder. Doron Leitner, a historical researcher who specializes in people who have died or been murdered, recently delved into the historic Jewish media archives and investigated his story. It turns out that he was convicted of the murder of another Jew from Haifa, whom he had also robbed just beforehand, in 1986.

Elderly man of 70 suspected of murder, the headlines read. Violent pensioner, one newspaper called him. The indictment charged that Zaarour had committed the robbery as an emissary of the murder victims son-in-law; the victims daughter had told her husband that her father had U.S. dollars and jewelry in his apartment. While preparing for the trial, Zaarours defense attorney was stunned to realize that the man sitting across from him was the same defendant in a case that he himself had prosecuted 40 years earlier.

Zaarour died in prison in 2011, at the age of 96 the oldest convict, as he was known in the Prison Service. I am sorry for everything that I have done in my life, but what can I do?" he said in an interview with Yedioth Ahronoth. "It is impossible to restore what once was. Sometimes I cry to myself and ask why. The answer that I give myself is that everything is from Allah."

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'Human life is sacred for Jews': Why Israel killed the death penalty, and will it be resurrected soon - Haaretz

Memoirs of an Irish Jew: One of the best personal accounts of Cork ever – The Irish Times

Posted By on December 14, 2021

Book Title:Memoirs of an Irish Jew

ISBN-13:0000000000000

Author:Lionel Cohen

Publisher:Cork City Libraries

Guideline Price:10.00

And here I will digress a little and tell you my opinions of drapers in general. With a few exceptions, I considered them to be the meanest money-grabbing types it has ever been my misfortune to come across, writes the exasperated Lionel Cohen in this thrilling, trenchant and hilarious Cork memoir.

He had just turned down a sudden offer from the new Israeli government, an offer that would have made him chief officer of the first Israeli Coastal Radio Station. He was longing for the sea, for his salty Sparks cabin aboard the 6,000-tonne Kedmah as she plied between Marseilles and Haifa under the Star of David.

Trained at the old Cork Radio School, the style of his morse-code signalling had become an instantly recognised personal signature from Tilbury Docks to Parramatta Docks. In 1940 he had run away from home and joined the Irish Army in response to de Valeras appeal for men to defend their country against invasion. It was the first of his many responses to appeals for help, a character trait that would determine the course of his entire life.

As army recruit No. 213032 he was present to enjoy Major General Costellos pithy speech to the Coastal Artillery unit: His message was that if there was an invasion of Ireland, we would never get off Spike Island alive, so make sure we died like soldiers. This part of his memoir must constitute the best personal record of Cork Harbours Coastal Defence units ever written, or ever likely to be written. After the Emergency he set sail on various tramp steamers and cargo vessels, eventually serving on a homeward voyage as Radio Officer aboard a luxury P&O liner. Then the foundation of Israel intervened.

Then his Uncle Dave died and his father needed him to come back to Cork to run the business, a life he dreaded. He was soon shackled to the family garment factory, a business surviving on a pitiful margin of five per cent while selling to Munster drapers who demanded 40 per cent discount. The business was viable only as long as Lemasss import tariffs protected the little enterprise. Lionels consolation was motor-cycle racing and he became a crack scrambler and, for twenty-five years, secretary of the Munster Cycle and Car Club.

But running a business with 60 employees was no easy task, especially after he ended up in Sarsfield Court hospital with TB. By the time he recovered the Cohen business was doomed: The bank overdraft was creeping up again. I knew I had to make some decision or else I would be back in hospital... This was really one hell of a time and I walked and walked the streets trying to reason it all out.

The fact was he had no head for business, no instinct for profit. What happened next was as extraordinary as any other unexpected turn in his life. He took a job with the Brothers of Charity at their boys care-home in Lota, Cork. This inspired him to attend the Kilkenny Diploma Course in Residential Childcare, run by his hero, Sr Stan. The knowledge gained in Kilkenny transformed his life, bringing joy and fulfilment as he now worked with empathy and renewed stamina. Even his morse-code skills came into their own as he learned the special sign-language Lmh that was used to communicate with deaf special needs children.

Inspired by Eunice Kennedy Shriver, he became involved in the Special Olympics and he would meet her in Dublin in 1985. Those late years were wonderful years; and this memoir, written only for family reading, is one of the best Cork memoirs ever, a worthy companion to OConnors An Only Child, Galvins Song for a Poor Boy and O Murchs Black Cat at the Window. The book is enhanced by marvellous photographs: Lionel in uniform at his sisters wedding, Lionel with his beloved May at the Victoria Hospital dance in 1952, Lionel with his granddaughter Ruth walking by the sea at Ballinskelligs all of it part of one of the most colourful lives ever lived by a member of that serious and mainly literary community of mid-century Cork Jews.

Thomas McCarthy is a Waterford-born poet. His prose book, Poetry, Memory and the Party, is published by The Gallery Press this December

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Memoirs of an Irish Jew: One of the best personal accounts of Cork ever - The Irish Times

The original West Side Story was Jewish would it have been a better musical? – Forward

Posted By on December 14, 2021

It starts in an alley. An angsty Italian gang creeps onstage in a stylized prologue showing the restlessness of the youths. Its New York City in the Fifties, and, as the plot progresses, warring ethnic groups articulate their frustrations via song and dance. Children die preventable deaths; everyone sings; the audience thinks soberly about prejudice and peace.

I am referring to a musical called GANG BANG! (working title). It will, of course, eventually become one of the most popular musicals of all time, known by a much sleeker name. But for now, its merely a fuzzy sketch of an unwritten production about two gangs: one gentile, and one Jewish.

Before Leonard Bernstein composed any music, before Jerome Robbins choreographed a step, before Arthur Laurents completed a single draft of a full book, before Stephen Sondheim would even join the team before West Side Story was the production it became this group of Jewish men initially conceived of a musical that meditated on religious intolerance, specifically centered around antisemitism.

This Jewish version of West Side Story didnt get very far: by the time the first draft of the musical was complete, the Jewish characters had become Puerto Rican. But evidence remains in the form of anecdotes, and, more materially, two treatments (scene-by-scene summaries of the action, including occasional suggestions for song, dance, character, or style choices).

These documents, created by Arthur Laurents and accessible at the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts, provide a peek at a version of this musical that might have been. In this pair of treatments, Italian Romeo and Jewish Juliet meet at a street festival.

Its Easter and Passover, Laurents writes; holiday time when the boys are free and have too much free time. As in the original Shakespeare, the teenagers do not initially recognize the threat presented by the others background, because religion, like family names and unlike race, is not always visually apparent. The innocence of the initial meeting ends when the lovers each learn the other belongs to an enemy clan.

Unlike Maria, who lives permanently in the eponymous West Side, Jewish Juliet has traveled to the Lower East Side to join family for Passover. The creators reportedly planned to make Juliet a Holocaust survivor. In the eyes of a young reader, who has only ever encountered Holocaust survivors as paragons of elderly wisdom, it is jarring to imagine one so young and nave. This Juliet might be haunted by the atrocities of a genocidal war, but she remains somehow able to believe that, despite the sectarian violence afflicting her community, her romance will succeed.

The most conspicuously Jewish segment in the story is the Passover Seder, set early in the shows final act. In the second draft mercifully retitled ROMEO instead of GANG BANG the holiday becomes the setting for a turbulent musical scene. Romeo, having killed Tybalt in a previous scene, is on the run; the action cuts between the Seder and Romeos flight from police.

As the scene reaches a climax, biblical high drama undergirds the intensity of the onstage action: The Jewish family, unaware that their son has died, discusses the tenth plague death of the first born. Romeo hides while the Capulets search for matzoh, an activity that is gay and joyous and done with much laughing and squealing. As the jubilation reaches its peak, the police enter to announce Tybalts murder.

Perhaps the concept for the musical was, at this early stage, too embryonic; or perhaps the choice to make the musical religious meant it would inevitably invoke the melodrama of faith in a way that seemed sort of hokey. In either case, this scene seems destined for bathos. The premise is overwrought, obvious and clunky.

In the subsequent scenes, the fighting escalates; both gangs seek vengeance, display prejudice. The gang members trade insults: Dirty wop is followed by dirty kike. When a character called Tante (Shakespeares nurse; mush this word around in your mouth enough and it becomes Anita) attempts to interfere with the lethal trajectory of fate, the Italian gang finally make a crack about Tante and her being Jewish.

By the end of the musical, as in Shakespeares original, both lovers lie dead. The lights dim, the scenery disappears except for the pallet with the two lovers and, if we want to use Easter Sunday, we can have church bells, Laurents muses. On second thought, he adds, this might be a little bit too much.

By Getty Images

Back Stage Story: Dancers from the original cast of West Side Story horse around after the show.

Would West Side Story have been a better musical if it had stuck with the Jewish plot? Certainly the musicals Jewish creators, in writing about a Jewish community instead of a Puerto Rican one, could have crafted a more accurate, respectful depiction of the culture they sought to dramatize. Others have pointed out the ineptitude of their attempts to write authentically about a demographic they were not part of, and in fact knew barely anything about.

But theres something about the attitude the early drafts take toward religion that, I suspect, may have fundamentally impeded the musicals ability to land so compellingly with audiences.

Jewish West Side Story suggests that religion of any kind makes its adherents inherently susceptible to prejudice. Juliets Jewish family members who, perhaps due to the creators own backgrounds, are more focal than Romeos Italian kin oppose ethnic mixing, and seem to subscribe to stereotypically essentializing ideas. At one point, the Capulets tell Juliet she must return home, and anyway, that love is doomed because Romeo is an Italian. (Though, to be fair, they add and a murderer, which seems a more reasonable grievance.)

It is difficult, given the identities of the creators, not to read a slightly personal element to the depiction of the Jewish families. Its as though these men harbor a grudge against their own communities, resenting a pre-war generations retrograde attachment to demarcations they felt separated Jews from the rest of white America. The creators draft a fantasy of escaping from the confines of this upbringing, and then place that attempt within a plot that dramatizes the violent consequences of such escape. Tradition, in this framing, is bad, but flouting it is dangerous.

Unlike the tradition-bound families and insular gangs, the voices of morality in the musical have divested from their factions entirely. The romantic leads are purely in love and therefore able to see past hate: The difference in religion, notes Laurents in a description of what he has titled BALCONY SCENE (FIRE ESCAPE), should not matter to either of them. And the wise Doc, who functions as the mediator between the two gangs, is described as having no religion. This choice seems to imply a moral superiority in abstaining from faith. The takeaway: Religious difference separates, and so to remove that rift, remove the religion.

That the Jewish version did not allow for a particularly capacious commentary on identity might also be symptomatic of the precarity of Jewish identity at the time. Jewish theater historian Warren Hoffman writes in his book The Great White Way: Race and the Broadway Musical that during the development of this musical, The racial and ethnic landscape of the United States, particularly the countrys white landscape, was quickly changing as the team was writing.

As American anti-Black racism accelerated, Ashkenazi Jews and other previously non-white groups with European lineage were permitted an unprecedented entree into whiteness. Around this time, in other words, European Jews may have recently become too white to serve as prototypes of the racially oppressed.

In replacing the Jews, then, West Side Story became an explosive allegory about race, with a more modern, appealingly liberal, and neatly universalizable message. The West Side Story that eventually met its audience tried to say something along the lines of: Do not eradicate difference; tolerate it, admire it, celebrate it. However shoddy its depiction of the populations it centered, what it tried to say about their differences evidently felt electric at least to some audiences at the time. For the purposes of creating a broadly appealing musical, the kind that met the kind of success West Side Story did, the decision to remove the Jews was likely crucial.

By Getty Images

Celebration: Jerome Robbins, Chita Rivera and others celebrate the premiere of West Side Story at Sardis.

By the next of Laurents treatments, the Jewish gang has been quietly swapped out for a Puerto Rican one. Some of the names have begun to shift, too: Benvolio becomes Benny, Tybalt becomes Bernardo. Juliet is still Juliet, but Tante is Anita. The musical is creeping toward its final form.

When the violence accelerates, Doc now, interestingly, described as possibly a Jew tries vainly to stop the coming rumble. Doc isnt white enough to be a gentile, meaning he is sympathetic to the experiences of prejudice the Puerto Rican characters face. But he is just white enough to garner acceptance from the white characters. When the musical centered around religion, Doc had none; now that it focuses on race, none is no longer a possibility. Jewishness, in its midcentury position of liminal whiteness, has become the ethnicity of mediation.

Its easy to feel that consequential choices like these in the story of the development of a hit are made with full awareness of their impact. That the creators had a canny intuition for the zeitgeist, and could sense that a message of racial tolerance would resonate with audiences better than one about religious difference. But according to Laurents biography, the creators abandoned the Jewish plot simply because they realized someone else had already written it: Abies Irish Rose, a play from the 1920s, dealt similarly with Jewish-gentile intermarriage.

Paging through these drafts some of them photocopies, some the actual paper Laurents typed into in a silent reading room in Lincoln Center, I was overcome, more than anything else, by a sense of the documents vitality. At the time these treatments were created, the musical was so far from complete it seemed to be visibly evolving between drafts, even within them. The pages are littered with little typos, misspellings, and punctuation errors.

Often, Laurents types faster than he thinks lacking a modern backspace bar, he revises his vision mid-sentence. In one addendum, Laurents broods, directionless, over the characters names. I think we should not try to get names reminiscent of the originals. I do not like Judy for Juliet anymore than I like Ricki for Romeo. I think both are too flip-sounding and lack poetic softness. He suggests Ruth or Ruthanna for the female lead, but worries that they begin with R which is inverting for no apparent reason. This, he decides, could be dangerous, because people might think there was a definite reason.

Not all artistic choices, however successfully implemented, are deliberate. Sometimes, people simply want to make something new. After all, these drafts are unpolished and intimate, intended for internal circulation among the other creators. At one point, Laurents writes, playfully: The indication of musical numbers is, in places, the roughest of the above. I would like suggestions from the musical genius dept. on this as soon as possible.

These documents provide only a glimpse of an early version of what would become a fixture of the musical theater canon. Just some Jewish artists jotting down passing thoughts that would shape, eventually, into one of the most successful and culturally indelible musicals in American history.

Originally posted here:

The original West Side Story was Jewish would it have been a better musical? - Forward

South Park’s Cartman converted to Judaism, but can he move to Israel? – The Times of Israel

Posted By on December 13, 2021

In South Park: Post-Covid, a special episode of the irreverent TV cartoon that aired onThanksgiving, Eric Cartman has converted to Judaism. He is a tallit-wearing Orthodox rabbi who studied Talmud, married a woman named Yentel, and named his children Moishe, Menorah, and Hakham.

Will Cartman take the next step and apply to make aliyah to Israel? The Law of Return, the law which established who has the right to claim citizenship in Israel, states, Every Jew has the right to come to this country as an oleh. For the purposes of this law, Jew is defined as a person who was born of a Jewish mother or has converted to Judaism and who is not a member of another religion. So Cartman should be approved for aliyah, right? Not so fast.

For the moment, let us assume that Cartman can produce a document indicating he has no serious criminal record. Let us also assume he went through the conversion process with rabbis who were affiliated with one of the major streams of Judaism and has a certificate of conversion. Now what?

Cartman may apply through a representative of the Jewish Agency (a shaliach aliyah). He will be asked to present letters from the converting rabbi describing the preparation and study that led up to his conversion. In addition, he will be asked to provide a letter stating that he has continued to be affiliated with a synagogue. Cartman will then have to undergo an interview with a representative of the Jewish Agencys Aliyah Department.

But Cartman should not pack up for his big move quite so quickly. The Jewish Agency may not act as quickly as he would hope. They may ask, in the name of Israels Interior Ministry, for additional documents. They may then go back and again ask for yet additional documents that had not initially been requested.

If Cartman converted through an Orthodox Beit Din, he may have a problem obtaining approval. There are surprisingly few Orthodox rabbis in North America who are acceptable to the Interior Ministry. This owes to an agreement made over a decade ago between Israels Chief Rabbinate and the RCA (Rabbinical Council of America), the mainstream Modern Orthodox rabbinic association.

When a candidate for aliyah has undergone conversion through the Conservative/Masorti movement, the Masorti Rabbinical Assembly in Israel is asked if we stand behind the conversion. This occurs when there may be a question in the mind of the shaliach. The same applies to those who convert through the Reform movement. The Reform movement will be asked if they stand behind the conversion.

With regard to an Orthodox convert wishing to make aliyah, even if the process had been sincere, and the converting rabbis are respected, approval of the converting Beit Din must come from the official Chief Rabbinate. Many, perhaps most, Orthodox rabbis in North America are not acceptable to the Chief Rabbinate.

Should it be that Cartman had been converted by rabbis who were not affiliated with any of the major rabbinic organizations and who daven (pray) at a synagogue that is not affiliated with a major association of synagogues, his right to make aliyah will likely be challenged. This can take months and even years.

Should Cartman seek to understand the cause of the delay in processing his aliyah application, chances are that he would contact his shaliach or officials at the Jewish Agency. If that shaliach bothers to reply, Cartman is likely to be told that there is nothing to be done as his file is under consideration in the Interior Ministry.

He may be told that there are issues that are being investigated. Which issues? That information is often not supplied to the applicant. At other times, the information provided by the authorities is just inaccurate. The sincerity of the conversion may even be questioned by bureaucrats within the Interior Ministry.

It certainly should be the role of the Aliyah Department (which has some very devoted and hardworking people) to advocate on behalf of Diaspora Jews who have applied for aliyah and who have seemingly met all of the demands spelled out in the Interior Ministrys criteria for aliyah. But sadly, in far too many cases this does not happen. Rather than pressure the Interior Ministry to act in keeping with the criteria for aliyah by a convert to Judaism (which, oddly, have never officially been published), the Jewish Agency, and/or the Interior Ministry, will allow the applicant to twist in the wind without providing full information as to what issues may be causing the delay. Or they may simply say that the matter is out of their hands.

Efforts to make the system a bit more user-friendly have gone nowhere. The Interior Ministry, obligated under their own criteria to provide an answer to the applicant within sixty days, rarely does so. Efficiency improvements promised by high-ranking Jewish Agency officials have gone nowhere.

Cartman has one advantage: he is a Caucasian from North America. Converts from less affluent countries, in particular applicants of color, will often find the aliyah application process nothing short of hellish. Too often the only way to obtain a just result requires turning to the courts. But this process is costly and lengthy.

It seems that officials at the Jewish Agency are reluctant to challenge the Interior Ministrys actions. They appear uninterested in rocking the boat. Perhaps they fear losing their aliyah mandate to Nefesh BNefesh, which years ago largely supplanted the Jewish Agencys role in encouraging and assisting North American aliyah. Perhaps they are stuck in a way of thinking created by the decades of ministry control by the Haredi Shas political party.

Cartman is just a TV caricature, but given the severe deficiencies at both the Interior Ministry and the Jewish Agency, the aliyah process can all too often be just as cartoonish.

Rabbi Andrew Sacks is the director of the Rabbinical Assembly of Israel and the Religious Affairs Bureau.

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South Park's Cartman converted to Judaism, but can he move to Israel? - The Times of Israel

Is this good for Judaism? Tis the season for lots of Hanukkah stuff – Times Record News

Posted By on December 13, 2021

Terry Mattingly| Wichita Falls Times Record News

It's hard to do justice to ancient holy days in throw-pillow slogans.

Consider the Zazzle item offering a menorah with an un-orthodox number of candles, along with: "Imagine if your cellphone was at 10% but lasted 8 days. Now you understand Hanukkah."

Maybe not. Or how about the Bed, Bath & Beyond pillow stating: "Why is this night different from all other nights? Happy Hanukkah."

Actually, that's the most famous question from rites during a Passover Seder dinner.

"There's no quality control with any of this stuff. No one's being careful with decisions about what's good and what's bad," said journalist Mira Fox of the Forward, a progressive Jewish website. "The point is to sell stuff. It doesn't need to be good stuff. It's just stuff.

"Basically, it's a lot of people saying, 'We can find a way to sell stuff to Jews during the holidays, along with selling lots of stuff to everybody else.' "

Hanukkah began rather early this year, starting at sundown this past Sunday (November 28) and extending for eight days. This placed the "Festival of Lights" closer to Thanksgiving near the start of the merchandizing frenzy known as The Holidays.

The story at the heart of this home-centered season dates to 165 B.C., when Jews, led by the Maccabee family, defeated Greek and Syrian oppressors. When the victors reentered their temple, only one container of ritually pure oil could be found for its eternal flame. Tradition says this one-day supply burned for eight days. Thus, Jews light menorah candles during Hanukkah, one on the first night, increasing to eight.

"It's not a biblical holiday. Hanukkah is not in the Hebrew Bible. … God is not a huge part of this story," said Fox. "Honestly, I don't think a lot of people understand what this holiday is about."

That's certainly true in the American marketplace.

Just before Thanksgiving, friends sent veteranreligion writer Mark Pinsky an ironic photo taken in a high-end grocery store. At the end of one aisle was a Hanukkah display featuring boxes of matzoh. The unintentional joke is that matzoh is the humble flatbread eaten during Passover. The food traditionally associated with Hanukkah is a fried potato pancake called a "latke."

"It's like they went to the international-food aisle and grabbed whatever was there," said Pinsky, author of books ranging from "The Gospel According to The Simpsons" to "A Jew among the Evangelicals: A Guide for the Perplexed."

"It's like they're saying, 'Anything Jewish will do, because we need another holiday display. So, happy Hanukkah! With matzoh! … Everything ends up being mushed together, no matter what it means which is kind of the point of American capitalism."

This year, with Hanukkah slotted earlier in the cultural calendar, it seemed like the powers that be in American commerce went out of their way for better and for worse to crank out extra gifts and advertisements targeting Jewish consumers, noted Mira, in a deep-dive Forward feature. It was entitled "Cheesy Hanukkah merch is everywhere now -- um, that's good for the Jews, right?"

The goal, apparently, is to treat Hanukkah like Christmas, and that's Christmas the tentpole event of the national economy, not Christmas the ancient Christian holy day.

"There's a menorah here and a candle set there, but it's mostly wine glasses etched with 'Oy Vey!' and platters reading 'Knish me, I'm Jewish!'," wrote Fox. "If there weren't any Hanukkah options, people would be upset because of the lack of representation. But is any of this really representation? Is Walmart selling menorah-print pajamas really a sign that we've found acceptance in mainstream American culture?"

All of this is evidence of Jews being assimilated into the norms of American life, she said, in a telephone interview. Many of the motives that turned Hanukkah, a relatively minor Jewish holy day, into a landmark event on the American cultural calendar were completely logical. Jewish parents and community leaders were trying to find a way to fit in.

"What happened to Christmas happened organically" over decades or even centuries, she said. "But what happened to Hanukkah was a very conscious choice. Rabbis and other people decided to turn Hanukkah into this big celebration. Basically, they were saying, 'Let's let our children have fun, too.' "

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Is this good for Judaism? Tis the season for lots of Hanukkah stuff - Times Record News

Where biblical criticism goes wrong – The Jewish Standard

Posted By on December 13, 2021

In just over a weeks time, the Torah reading on Shabbat (Parashat Va-yechi) ends both the long-running story of Joseph and the entire Book of Genesis (Sefer Breishit). That affords us the opportunity for another look at the narrow-minded view of most scholarsboth non-Jewish and Jewishwho study biblical texts critically to determine how they came to be, and the damage that has done to Judaism.

Most of these critics insist that there never was a Joseph, and so he could not have risen to any high government position in Egypt, much less to the position of viceroy. They note that no evidence of a Joseph has been found in any Egyptian records. Besides, it is laughable to assume that a Semitic prisoner accused of attempted rape would emerge from confinement and be given such exalted status, with almost unlimited power over Egypt. (That Joseph was imprisoned rather than executed suggests that his imprisonment was a face-saving gesture on the part of Potiphar, the womans husband, who actually did not believe his wife.)

What these critics ignore are the clues buried in the Torahs text itself, such as the intimate knowledge of the pre-Exodus Egyptian court and its practices that permeates the Joseph sagaknowledge not available to an author several hundred years later.

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As the late biblical scholar Nahum Sarna, who accepts Josephs existence, noted in his book Understanding Genesis: The World of the Bible in the Light of History (see pages 219ff), the Joseph saga exhibits an extraordinary degree of familiarity with Egyptian customs. The multiplicity of titles and functions assigned to Joseph corresponds fully to the known Egyptian penchant for the generous distribution of honors and titles to officials of the great bureaucracy. We do not know beyond the shadow of a doubt that Joseph was actually appointed Grand Vizier of Egypt, although he certainly was one of the most important officials in the government.

A Christian scholar, James K. Hoffmeier, also defends Josephs existence. As he wrote, There is really nothing unbelievable or incredible about the narrative. The absence of direct evidence for Joseph, of course, does not disprove his existence because negative evidence proves nothing, while the indirect evidence supports the historicity of the story and its protagonist. (See his Israel in Egypt, page 97.)

Not only does the lack of direct evidence prove nothing, but its lack is not surprising. The story of Joseph, based on the textual clues we are given, could have occurred only somewhere between the end of Egypts 12th dynasty, on or about 1785 B.C.E. For the next 225 years, until the rise of the Pharaoh Ahmose and the start of the 18th dynasty circa 1560 B.C.E., no one person ever held sway over the entire nation. Between these two dates was a period, the first half of which is so poorly documented that knowledge of it hardly extends further than the names of rulers in the king-lists. (See Nicolas Grimal, A History of Ancient Egypt, page 182.)

What the biblical critics hang on to, other than the lack of evidence in Egyptian sources, are such things as textual anachronisms and even a form of plagiarism.

Towards the end of this weeks Torah portion (Parashat Vayigash), for example, we are told that Joseph settled his family in the land of Rameses (see Genesis 47:11). Because there was no land of Rameses in Josephs time, the phrase indeed is an anachronism, and it is also usedwronglyas yet another proof that Moses had nothing to do with writing the Torah that bears his name.

No consideration is given that Moses might have edited the text of the Joseph story to make it intelligible to his immediate audience, for whom Rameses was not an anachronism. Assuming Moses had anything to do with that Genesis narrative, in the land of Rameses is precisely the designation he or someone in his time would have used because it was an identifiable reference point for his readers, the Israelites whom Moses was leading out of Egypt.

In fact, the only time in the land of Rameses is not an anachronism is in the time of Moses; rather than disputing his authorship of the Torah, it makes it more likely. The land of Rameses did not exist much before Moses, and after him it ceases to be an instantly recognizable reference to people who never lived there, never visited there, and likely never heard of such a place existing in their day.

Then there is the plagiarism claim. According to the critics, the Joseph cycle is filled with ancient tales adapted to create the story. The one most often cited is the Egyptian Tale of Two Brothers, which the critics suggest was reworked into the tale of Joseph and Potiphars wife that is recounted in Genesis 39.

At the heart of both stories is the attempted seduction of a handsome young man by a married woman; in both, the young man resists and is then accused of attempted rape. It is there, however, that the similarity ends. All the magical and mystical elements of the Brothers tale are missing from Josephs story. The critics get around this by insisting that the Brothers tale provided the theme for the Torahs version. It is as if the critics were saying that it is otherwise virtually unheard-of for a married woman of power to attempt to seduce a handsome young man over whom she has some control.

There is much more to be said about this, but not enough space here to say it. Joseph existed. Most likely, he did rise to the highest Egyptian heights. As I contend, he also most likely wrote most of the patriarchal narratives we read from Genesis 12 on. It was customary in Egypt for scribes to keep the court records and histories of high officials. Why, then, should Joseph not write his own?

The structure of the patriarchal narratives points directly to Joseph as author. The narratives begin with Abraham. His story, however, is episodic, not a continuous thread. It is as if the author were reporting tales told to him about Abraham, but otherwise knew nothing about the patriarchs life, including what happened during the 13 years between the birth of Ishmael and the birth of Isaac (a period about which the Torah is silent).

With Isaac, the author reports very little at all and much of that is somewhat negative. In this case, it is as if the author was reporting only what he was told, and what he was told was biased. As to why, see further on.

From the time Jacob leaves home, the focus is more on him than on his father. Isaacs story virtually ends with the appearance of Jacob. Rebekah, too, disappears; her death and burial go unrecorded, but her childhood nurses death is mentioned because she was with Jacob at the time. Except for Isaacs sojourn in Gerar, which has relevance to Jacobs story, we never return to Isaac or his life; we encounter him again only at his funeral. It is as if the reportermeaning Jacobleft Isaacs home at the same time.

It is unlikely that Isaac would have talked much to his sons about his father, probably because theirs was a strained relationship, as Jacobs was with Isaac. Abraham, however, very likely would have recounted his adventures to his grandchildren. Despite the order in which things are presented in Genesis, Jacob and Esau were 15 years old when Abraham died.

Jacobs story is more of a continuous narrative, but it too is spotty, at least before Joseph is born. Only with Josephs arrival does the narrative take on the veneer of a complete saga and it is Joseph, not Jacob, who is the central figure from then on, as the opening verse of last weeks Torah reading (Parashat Miketz) makes clear (see Genesis 37:2). When Joseph is taken to Egypt, Jacobs story actually comes to an end; his subsequent appearances all are Joseph-related in some way, some perhaps told to Joseph by his brothers or by Jacob himself.

The Joseph saga, on the other hand, is a complete novella, from birth to death, at which point the Genesis narrative itself ends. The inference is obvious: Joseph was author of the whole, incorporating some of what Jacob told him about Abraham and Isaac. (That would account for the scant and somewhat negative view of Isaac in the text, because Jacob held his father in low esteem.)

The biblical critics would rather pick out words and phrases on which to hang their theories than look at the complete narrative. In so doing, they do a disservice to biblical scholarship, and whatever their motives, they cast doubt on the legitimacy of the Torah itself, thereby casting doubt on the legitimacy of the Judaism that flows from it and to its detriment, as attested to by survey after survey regarding Jewish identity.

Shammai Engelmayer is a rabbi-emeritus of Congregation Beth Israel of the Palisades and an adult education teacher in Bergen County. He is the author of eight books and the winner of 10 awards for his commentaries. His website is http://www.shammai.org.

Continued here:

Where biblical criticism goes wrong - The Jewish Standard


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