Absolutely Disgusting

I can't find any other words for it.The new viral movie 180movie.com (I refuse to link to it. Watch it if you want. It's disgusting.) equates the cold blooded murder of more than 11 million men, women, and children with abortion. The indoctrination of an entire people (the Germans) to view grow adults as subhuman as the same as a personal choice to end a pregnancy.So I guess I have to espouse my own beliefs at this point. I am pro-choice but also a lover of life. Abortion needs to be legal and available in our society however, the widespread nature of abortion as a solution is not appropriate. It is important that this life altering procedure is undertaken with eyes wide open and not used as emergency birth control.But it is a completely different story than 6 million Jews who were starved and beaten and shot in cold blood. To show the corpses of my family, my people and the ignorance of today's youth (who couldn't identify who Hitler - yimach shemo: May his name be obliterated - is) and abortion in the same breath is disgusting and ignorant. I will NEVER stand for EXPLOITING the images of dead and dying Jews for other uses. It was a horrible time in history.I will leave the Anti-Defamation League to finish this. And I am turning off the comments. This is not a pro-choice vs pro-life forum. This is about 6 million murdered Jews.

"The film is a perverse attempt to make a case against abortion in America through the cynical abuse of the memory of those killed in the Holocaust," said Abraham H. Foxman, ADL National Director and a Holocaust survivor.  "Not only does the film try to assert a moral equivalency between the Holocaust and abortion, but it also brings Jews and Jewish history into the discussion and then calls on its viewers to repent and accept Jesus as their savior.  It is, quite frankly, one of the most offensive and outrageous abuses of the memory of the Holocaust we have seen in years."

Did We Do More Harm Than Good?

As we wrap up the marathon 24 hours of news coverage surrounding the tenth anniversary of September 11th, a question occurred to me.All day I have been watching on and off. DVRing some programs, watching others live. I went to the Colorado Rockies game today and it was full of symbolism and significance. Former military, current military, children, police officers, and firemen. Every conversation surrounded this significant day.As I wrapped up my day watching home videos and other citizen journalism, painstakingly chronically every second of the 102 minutes that changed our country, I found myself crying off and on... yelling at the dispatchers on tv who were telling people to "stay put" in the towers... cheering for the people running from the dust cloud.I finally peeled myself away from the tv to take a shower.In the shower I had a thought... have we done more harm than good? No, stop, don't jump to conclusions. Let me get this thought out.Today we packed every television station with wall to wall coverage of the tragedy ten years ago. Most stations replayed the reel from the day, ten years ago. The minute by minute discoveries. Was this an accident? Was it an explosion? Was it a small plane or a large one? Did a second plane just hit the other tower? Unconfirmed reports from DC and Pennsylvania. Explosion at the Pentagon. Targeting the White House? Terrorists? Accidents? Air Traffic Control problems? Is this war? This spells a change for our airport security.It sometimes felt like they were fortune tellers... I see a man, his name starts with an 'O' and he has a beard... Obadiah? Osama! Yes, that's it.I watched the coverage and remembered almost every word. The way the anchors interrupted each other. The footage of New Yorkers stricken.But did we do more harm than good by packing this day too full with the past images? I do not disagree that these are vitals pieces of our American history. I do not disagree that they should be archived and brought out to be seen often. But what struck me was that here we are, in the Hebrew month of Elul. A time to look back on our past, take stock of our present, and make adjustments for our future.We took time to look back. We have spent 24 hours looking at every angle of this tragedy... but what we haven't done is look at where we are today and what our future holds. Now I know Katie Couric is not a fortune teller and news anchors, no matter how hard they try, they cannot tell us the future... none of us can. But we sure can give ourselves a mantra for the upcoming year, a focal point, an ideal to live up to.One of the boat captains, who saved many lives (by the way, this was the largest water evacuation ever... larger than Dunkirk which was some 300,000 military men over the course of nine days... our tug boats and ferry men got over 500,000 New Yorkers out of Manhattan in less than nine hours), said "I have one theory in life. I never want to say 'I should have.'"This is what today should have been. Divided into three parts.

  1. The memorial of the events, the reMEMBERING (once again affirming our membership into this most difficult 'club') of those lost and the horror of the day.
  2. Taking stock of where we are today and noting our growth and the areas where we, as Americans, can still grow.
  3. Looking forward to the future, deciding who we want to be and how we want to live.

This is the Eluling process. It's a healing process, one that helps us all move forward and take our memories and lessons with us.I fear we lost an opportunity here, a time when so many eyes were trained on the television screens that could help convey this process.

  1. I remember those lost. I will never forget. The memory is seared into me. I wish all Americans still loved and helped each other like they did that day and for weeks after.
  2. The events of 9/11 shaped me today. I do not fear death nor destruction because I know when my day will come it will come, thus I must live every day to the fullest. I learned to care for all and not just the people in my circle.
  3. I never want to say 'I should have.' I want to do my best in this next year to care for all those around me.

10 Years Later.

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10 years. I can't believe it has been 10 years. It alternately shocks me and makes me feel old.

You don't realize how old you are until you get the reminders, the landmarks, the moments for which we measure our life.

Two years ago, on the eighth anniversary of 9/11, I wrote my story of the events that happened that day. My experiences. Oh my experiences in Jacksonville, Florida pale in comparison to my friends who were in NYC or the families who lost loved ones but it is my experience. A snapshot of what people across the country experienced. I won't recap it here but if you would like to read it, you are welcome to - 9/11 – 911 – Sept 11 – 11 Sept.

Today I am reflecting on the time that has passed, how the world has changed in the past 10 years. I am fortunate to be old enough to remember what travel was like before the terror attacks. I remember coming home from my trip to Israel in 1997 and being met by my mother, father, step-mother, brother, and grandmother at the gate. Standing there waiting for me to get off the plane. I ran into their arms, I was comforted by their presence. I remember how that all changed on September 12, 2001. I remember the terror in my friends' voices when they had to travel home that Thanksgiving, taking a plane for the first time since the attacks.

I really remember how we, as Americans came together in the days, weeks, months after the attacks. When people started caring about each other. When selfish Americans because caring and careFULL Americans. When we stopped thinking about money and success and grades and getting from point A to point B but ensured each other was safe, healthy, and cared for. Slowly that ebbed. Slowly, America came back to our middle point, our place where the Starbucks across the street is too far for me to travel, I need one right here. Or my sandwich isn't made right or you didn't answer the phone the way I like or your clothing isn't to my standards or I dislike you for no reason other than you are you and not me.We were still unique but we thought somewhat collectively. We all prayed for the safety of each other.

Today we face a different type of hardship. No one flew an airplane into an iconic building (baruch HaShem - thank G-d). The terrorist threat is minimal. We are vigilant and careful to protect our country. But financially and politically we are in a transitional space. A place where we have dueling priorities. Cut budgets, save money, but care for each other. We must recall that time when your first thought was to get your neighbor out of the burning building. We caring for each other trumped buying a new BMW.

I am thankful to have been alive and old enough to remember the lessons from 9/11. It was a scary and terrifying day... and weeks and months... But I learned so much that day. I learned how important the stranger, widow, orphan, and neighbor in our midst is. I learned that success isn't measured by the money I bring in or the car I drive or the clothes I wear... it's measured in the people I help, the goodwill I share with others, the gift of time I give to those who need it...

Deeper than reaching into your pocket is reaching into your heart.

This is the Kaddish, the mourner's prayer. The prayer we say everyday for one year after losing someone and then yearly on their anniversary of their death. Notice there is very little mention about death in this prayer. The Mourner's Kaddish is not for G-d but for us... a reminder of people and time long gone.

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We glorify and sanctify G-d's great name throughout the world which G-d has created according to G-d's will. May G-d establish G-d's kingdom in our lifetime and during our days, and within the life of the entire House of Israel, speedily and soon; Amen.

May G-d's great name be blessed forever and to all eternity.

Blessed and praised, glorified and exalted, extolled and honored, adored and lauded be the name of the Holy One, beyond all the blessings and hymns, praises and consolations that are ever spoken in the world; Amen.

May there be abundant peace from heaven, and life, for us and for all Israel; Amen.

G-d who creates peace in G-d's celestial heights, may G-d create peace for us and for all Israel; Amen.

Obama Got Osama... Baruch HaShem

Wow, it was quite a shock last night. I was cleaning up my house and getting ready for bed when I noticed Twitter was blowing up. I immediately turned on the news to find out that President Obama was speaking about the death of Osama Bin Laden. The most hated man, the most chased man, and as one friend put it the "World Hide & Seek Champion: 2001-2011."I never understood how hard it was to find a 6' 5" older man with diabetes, carrying around dialysis... Alas he proved elusive. In fact, one person on Twitter posted this - "10 years, 2 wars, 919,967 deaths, and $1,188,263,000,000 later, we managed to kill one person. I hope it was worth it..."The country erupted in cheers at the news he was dead... however, I could not miss some interesting similarities. May 1 was the date Hitler killed himself and his new wife Eva Braun. It is also the holiday of Yom HaShoah... the Holocaust remembrance day. But yesterday, we were all remembering the death of thousands of Americans at the hands of a different type of terrorist. And, unfortunately, unlike the swift downfall of the Nazi party upon the removal of it's head, this brand of terrorist is still with us. This branch has Medusa like qualities, for certainly once this man was struck down several others prepared to step forward.The death or capture of Osama Bin Laden was  very important to us. It was symbolic, necessary for the finality and peace for the victims family and friends left behind. Just as murder victims feel closure when the perpetrator is put in jail and sentenced... no longer free to enjoy their life as we do, this bring some sense of finality to these survivors... but it doesn't bring your loved on back. Nothing ever will. I just hope this helps them move forward.It should also help our country move forward. We were stuck in a seemingly non-ending war and couldn't even catch this one bad guy. It became a point of pride.However, there is one thing we need to remember. We just came out of Passover, where we escaped the evil tyrant and crossed the Sea of Reeds. then the sea closed in on the Egyptians, killing them. Miriam leads the people in Shir haYam (song of the sea). There is a story about this in the Talmud (Talmud Tractate Megillah 10b) that the angels above began to sing and dance as well. G-d chides them, "The works of my hands are drowning in the sea and you want to sing praises?" Another midrash highlights this: "On three occasions, the angels wanted to sing praises before God, and God would not permit them. What are these? The generation of the flood [in which only Noah and his family were saved]; the crossing of the Red Sea; and the destruction of the Temple in Jerusalem. . . God said, “These comforting words that you say to me are insults to me.” (Petichta 24 in Vilna edition)This reminds me of the story of Ishmael and Hagar when they are sent out from Avraham's home. They are dying of thirst in the desert and G-d hears Ishmael's prayers and saves him. Why? The angels ask G-d... you know what he will do, how his descendants will torture the Jewish people specifically through water, why do you save him? And G-d replies, because we judge people based on who they are today, not who they were or who they are to become.These are reality checks. Ishmael was to become a bad person and his descendants tortured many Jews but G-d did not judge him for his future actions. And we can not judge all Muslims for the actions of the few. G-d let the Israelites have their party and joyous celebration after their tormentors were killed at the Sea of Reeds but when the angels tried to celebrate G-d put the kibosh on it. Yes, these people suffered and have the right to relish the moment but people are still dead, people who were created by the same G-d as you and I... and that deserves a bit of respect.What I am trying to say here is relish this moment. Say Kadish for those lost on September 11, 2001 but then we move forward. To be stuck in a place of vindictiveness is not right.May 1, 2011 became not only Holocaust Remembrance Day but also a day to remember and honor those who lost their lives to madmen with flawed ideals.Lastly, I want to share an email I got this morning. My very dear friends, Esty and Dovi Scheiner were married on September 11, 2001. They have dedicated their married life to the financial district in NYC and giving the young Jews who live there a connection to their Judaism.

Dear Talia,It is with deep emotion that Esty and I learned of the assassination of Osama Bin Laden.Our wedding day was September 11, 2001, and we moved to lower Manhattan shortly thereafter, committed to doing our small part to help rebuild a community devastated by the worst attack on American civilians.In a very real sense, the evil act committed at the behest of Osama Bin Laden was the impetus for the founding of SoHo Synagogue, with a mission of spreading light in the face of darkness.Today, Monday, May 2, we encourage you to perform a dedicated act of goodness and kindness in honor of the 3000 innocent men and women who lost their lives on September 11, 2001.Warmly, Dovi & Esty

A Memory of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising

My dear friend Rucheli posted this letter on her blog and I just had to share it. It is from the Warsaw Ghetto uprising. On this day of remembrance, here is something to jog your memory and touch your soul...In one of the ruins of the Warsaw Ghetto, preserved in a little bottle and concealed amongst heaps of charred stone and human bones, the following testament was found, written in the last hours of the ghetto by a Jew named Yosl Rakover.Warsaw, 28 April 1943I, Yosl, son of David Rakover of Tarnopol, a follower of the Rabbi of Ger and descendant of the righteous, learned, and holy ones of the families Rakover and Maysels, am writing these lines as the houses of the Warsaw Ghetto are in flames, and the house I am in is one of the last that has not yet caught fire. For several hours now we have been under raging artillery fire and all around me walls are exploding and shattering in the hail of shells. It will not be long before this house I’m in, like almost all the houses in the ghetto, will become the grave of its inhabitants and defenders.Fiery red bolts of sunlight piercing through the little half-walled-up window in my room, out of which we’ve been shooting at the enemy day and night, tell me that it must be almost evening, just before sundown. The sun probably has no idea how little I regret that I shall never see it again.A strange thing has happened to us: all our ideas and feelings have changed. Death, quick death that comes in an instant, is to us a deliverer, a liberator who breaks our chains. The animals of the forest seem so dear and precious to me that it pains my heart to hear the criminals who are now masters of Europe likened to them. It is not true that there is something of the animal in Hitler. He is — I am utterly convinced of it — a typical child of modern man. Mankind has borne him and raised him and he is the direct, unfeigned expression of mankind’s innermost, deepest-hidden urges.In a forest where I was hiding, I met a dog one night, a sick, starving, crazed dog, his tail between his legs. Immediately we felt our common situation, for no dog’s situation is a whit better than our own. He rubbed up against me, buried his head in my lap, and licked my hands. I don’t know if I have ever wept the way I wept that night; I wrapped myself around his neck and cried like a child. If I stress the fact that I envied the animals then, no one should be surprised. But what I felt back then was more than envy; it was shame. I was ashamed be-fore the dog, for being not a dog but a man. That is how it is, and such is the spiritual condition we have reached: life is a calamity — death, a liberator — man, a plague — beast, an ideal — day, an abomination — night, a comfort.Millions of people in the great, wide world, in love with the day, the sun, and the light, neither know nor have the slightest intimation of the darkness and calamity the sun brings us. The criminals have made of it an instrument in their hands; they have used the sun as a searchlight to reveal the footprints of the fugitives trying to escape them. When I hid myself in the forests with my wife and my children — there were six of them then — it was the night, only the night, that concealed us in her heart. The day delivered us to our pursuers, who were hunting our souls. How can I ever forget the day of that German firestorm that raged over thousands of refugees on the road from Grodno to Warsaw? Their planes rose in the early dawn with the sun, and all day long they slaughtered us unceasingly. In this massacre that came down from the skies my wife died with our youngest child, seven months old, in her arms, and two of my surviving five children vanished that same day without a trace. David and Jehuda were their names, the one was four years old, the other six.When the sun went down the handful of survivors moved on again toward Warsaw. But I combed through the woods and fields with my three remaining children, searching for the other two on the slaughterground. “David! — Jehuda!” — all night long our cries slashed like knives through the deadly silence that surrounded us, and all that answered us from the woods was an echo, helpless, heartrending, suffering as we suffered, a distant voice of lamentation. I never saw the two boys again, and I was told in a dream not to worry over them any more: they were in the hands of the Lord of Heaven and Earth. My other three children died in the Warsaw Ghetto within a year.Rachel, my little daughter, ten years old, had heard that there were scraps of bread to be found in the city garbage cans on the other side of the walls of the ghetto. The ghetto was starving, and the starving lay like rags in the streets. People were prepared to die any death, but not death by starvation. This is probably because in a time when systematic persecution gradually destroys every other human need, the will to eat is the last one that endures, even in the presence of a longing for death. I was told of a Jew, half-starved, who said to someone, “Ah, how happy I would be to die if one last time I could sit down to a meal like a mentsh!”Rachel had said nothing to me about her plan to steal out of the ghetto — a crime that carried the death penalty. She went off on her dangerous journey with a friend, another girl of the same age.In the dark of night she left home and at dawn she was discovered with her little friend outside the gates of the ghetto. The Nazi sentries and dozens of their Polish helpers immediately went in pursuit of the Jewish children who had dared to hunt in the garbage for a lump of bread so as not to die of hunger. People who had experienced this human hunt at first hand could not believe what they were seeing. Even for the ghetto this was new. You might have thought that dangerous escaped criminals were being chased as this terrifying pack ran amok after the two half-starved ten-year-old children. They couldn’t keep up this race for long before one of them, my daughter, having expended the last of her strength, collapsed on the ground in exhaustion. The Nazis drove holes through her skull. The other girl escaped their clutches, but she died two weeks later. She had lost her mind.Jacob, our fifth child, a boy of thirteen, died of tuberculosis on the day of his bar mitzvah. His death was a release for him. The last child, my daughter Eva, lost her life at the age of fifteen in a “roundup of children” that began at sunrise on the final Rosh Hashanah and lasted till sundown.On that first day of the New Year, hundreds of Jewish families lost their children before evening came.Now my hour has come, and like Job I can say of myself — naked shall I return unto the earth, naked as the day I was born. My years are forty-three, and when I look back on the years that have gone by, I can say with certainty — insofar as any man may be certain of himself — that I have lived an honorable life. My heart has been filled with the love of God. I have been blessed with success, but the success never went to my head. My portion was ample. But though it was mine, I treated it not as mine: following the counsel of my rabbi, I considered my possessions to have no possessor. Should they lure someone to take some part of them, this should not be counted as theft, but as though that person had taken unclaimed goods. My house stood open for all who were needy, and I was happy when I was given the opportunity to perform a good deed for others. I served God with devotion, and my only petition of Him was that He allow me to serve Him “with all my heart and with all my soul and with all my strength.”I cannot say, after all I have lived through, that my relation to God is unchanged. But with absolute certainty I can say that my faith in Him has not altered by a hairsbreadth. In earlier times, when my life was good, my relation to Him was as if to one who gave me gifts without end, and to whom I was therefore always somewhat in debt. Now my relation to Him is as to one who is also in my debt — greatly in my debt. And because I feel that He too is in my debt, I consider that I have the right to admonish Him. I do not say, like Job, that God should lay His finger on my sins so that I may know how I have earned this. For greater and better men than I are convinced that it is no longer a question of punishment for sins and transgressions. On the contrary, something unique is happening in the world: hastoras ponim— God has hidden His face.God has hidden His face from the world and delivered mankind over to its own savage urges and instincts. This is why I believe that when the forces of evil dominate the world, it is, alas, completely natural that the first victims will be those who represent the holy and the pure. To each of us as individuals, perhaps this brings no comfort. Yet as the destiny of our people is determined not by worldly but by otherworldly laws, not material and physical but spiritual and godly, so must the true believer see in these events a part of God’s great leveling of the scales, in which even human tragedies weigh little. But this does not mean that the devout among my people must simply approve what is ordained and say, “The Lord is just and His decrees are just.” To say that we have earned the blows we have received is to slander ourselves. It is a defamation of the Shem Hameforash, a profanation of His Holy Name — a desecration of the name “Jew,” a desecration of the name “God.” It is one and the same. God is blasphemed when we blaspheme ourselves.In such a circumstance I have, naturally, no expectation of a miracle and do not beg of Him, my Lord, that He should take pity on me. Let Him veil His face in indifference to me as He has veiled it to millions of others of His people. I am no exception to the rule. I expect no preference. I will no longer try to save myself, and I will not flee again from here. I will lighten the work of the fire and pour gasoline over my clothes. I still have three bottles of gasoline in reserve, after pouring several dozen over the heads of the murderers.That was a great moment in my life, and I was convulsed with laughter. I could never have imagined that the death of people, even enemies — even enemies such as these — could fill me with such joy. Foolish humanists may say what they will, revenge and the longing for retribution have always fueled the resistance of the oppressed to the very last, and will always do so. Nothing else brings such solace to their souls. Until now I had never really understood the passage in the Talmud that says, “Vengeance is holy, for it is mentioned between two names of God, as it is written: A God of vengeance is the Lord!” Now I understand it. Now I feel it, and now I know why my heart rejoices when I remember how for thousands of years we have called upon our God: “God of Vengeance!” El Nekamot Adonoi.And now, when I am in a position to view life and the world from this clearest of perspectives, such as is rarely granted a man before death, I realize that there is this exclusive and characteristic difference between our God and the God in whom the peoples of Europe believe: while our God is the God of vengeance and our Torah threatens death for the smallest of transgressions, it is also told in the Talmud how in ancient times, when the Sanhedrin was our people’s highest court — when we were still a free people in our own land — a single death sentence from the High Council in seventy years was enough to make people call “You murderers” after the judges. The God of the other peoples, however, whom they call “the God of Love,” has offered to love every creature created in His image, and yet they have been murdering us without pity in His name day in, day out, for almost two thousand years.Yes, I speak of vengeance. Only rarely have we seen true vengeance, but when we have experienced it, it was so comforting, and so sweet, such deep solace and intense happiness, that to me it was as if a new life had opened up. A tank suddenly broke through into our alley and was bombarded from every fortified house around it with bottles of burning gasoline. But not one of them found its mark the way it was supposed to. The tank continued to advance undamaged. I waited with my friends until the tank was rumbling past, literally right under our noses, then we all attacked it at the same moment through the half-walled-up windows. The tank immediately burst into flames and six burning Nazis leapt out of it. Yes, they burned! They burned like the Jews whom they burned, but they screamed more than the Jews. The Jews do not scream. They embrace death as their deliverer. The Warsaw Ghetto is dying in battle, it is going down in gunfire, in fighting, and in flames — but there is no screaming.I still have three bottles of gasoline left, and they are as precious to me as wine to a drinker. When not long from now I empty one of them over me, I will put the sheets of paper on which I am writing these lines into the empty bottle and hide it here between the bricks in the wall beneath the window. If anyone should ever find them and read them, he will perhaps understand the feeling of a Jew — one of millions — who died abandoned by God, in Whom he so deeply believes. I will explode the two other bottles over the heads of the thugs when my last moment is come.We were twelve people in this room when the uprising began, and we have fought the enemy for nine days. All of my eleven comrades have fallen. They died silently. Even the little boy — God only knows where he came from, he was all of five years old — now lies dead beside me. His beautiful face is smiling, the way children smile when they are peacefully dreaming. Even this little boy died as calmly as his older comrades. It was early this morning. Most of us were already no longer alive. The boy clambered up the pile of corpses to catch a glimpse through the window slit of the world outside. He stood beside me that way for several minutes. Then he suddenly fell backwards, rolled down over the bodies of the dead, and lay there like a stone. A drop of blood appeared between two locks of black hair on his small, pale forehead. A bullet in the head.Our house is one of the last bastions of the ghetto. Until early yesterday morning, when the enemy opened concentrated fire on this building with the first light of dawn, everyone here was still alive. Five had been wounded, but they kept fighting. Yesterday and today, one after the other, they all fell. One after the other, one on top of the other, each standing guard for the other and shooting until they themselves were shot.Apart from the three bottles of gasoline, I have no more ammunition. There is still heavy gunfire coming from the three floors above me, but it seems they cannot send me help any more. The staircase appears to have been destroyed by shells, and I think the whole house may soon collapse. I am lying on the floor as I write these lines. All around me, my dead friends. I look into their faces and it is as if irony had washed over them, peaceful and gently mocking. As if they wanted to say: “Have a little patience, you foolish man, another minute or two and everything will become clear to you, too.” The same expression hovers about the lips of the child, who is stretched out as if asleep by my right hand. His little mouth is smiling, as if he were laughing to himself. And to me — still breathing and feeling and thinking like a living creature made of flesh and blood — to me it seems as if he’s laughing at me. As if he sees through me. He’s laughing at me, with the quiet, meaningful laugh of one who knows much yet must endure talking with people who know nothing but think they know it all. He knows it all now, this little boy, it’s all clear to him now. He even knows why he was born if he had to die so soon, and why he had to die now — and this in just five years. And even if he doesn’t know why, he knows that knowing why or not knowing why is utterly irrelevant and unimportant in the light of the revelation of God’s majesty in that better world where he is now — perhaps in the arms of his murdered parents, to whom he has found his way back.In an hour or two I shall know it, too. And if the fire does not consume my face, perhaps there will be a similar smile on it when I am dead. But I am still alive. And before I die I want to speak to my God once more as a living man, an ordinary living man who had the great but terrible honor of being a Jew.I am proud to be a Jew — not despite of the world’s relation to us, but precisely because of it.I would be ashamed to belong to the peoples who have borne and raised the criminals responsible for the deeds that have been perpetrated against us.I am proud of my Jewishness. Because being a Jew is an art. Being a Jew is hard. There is no art in being an Englishman, an American, or a Frenchman. It is perhaps easier and more comfortable to be one of them, but it is not more honorable. Yes, it is an honor to be a Jew.I believe that to be a Jew is to be a fighter, an eternal swimmer against the roiling, evil current of humanity. The Jew is a hero, a martyr, a saint. You, our enemies, say that we are bad? I believe we are better than you, finer. But even if we were worse — I’d like to have seen how you would have looked in our place.I am happy to belong to the unhappiest of all peoples in the world, whose Torah embodies the highest law and the most beautiful morality. Now this Torah is the more sanctified and immortalized by the manner of its rape and violation by the enemies of God.Being a Jew is an inborn virtue, I believe. One is born a Jew as one is born an artist. One cannot free oneself of being a Jew. That is God’s mark upon us, which sets us apart as His chosen people. Those who do not understand this will never grasp the higher meaning of our martyrdom. “There is nothing more whole than a broken heart,” a great rabbi once said; and there is also no people more chosen than a permanently maligned one. If I were unable to believe that God had marked us for His chosen people, I would still believe that we were chosen to be so by our sufferings.I believe in the God of Israel, even when He has done everything to make me cease to believe in Him. I believe in His laws even when I cannot justify His deeds. My relationship to Him is no longer that of a servant to his master, but of a student to his rabbi. I bow my head before His greatness, but I will not kiss the rod with which He chastises me.I love Him. But I love His Torah more. Even if I were disappointed in Him, I would still cherish His Torah. God commands religion, but His Torah commands a way of life — and the more we die for this way of life, the more immortal it is!And so, my God, before I die, freed from all fear, beyond terror, in a state of absolute inner peace and trust, I will allow myself to call You to account one last time in my life.You say that we have sinned? We surely have! And for this shall we be punished? This, too, I understand. But I want You to tell me if there is any sin in the world that deserves the punishment we have received.You say that You will yet take revenge on our enemies? I am convinced that you will revenge yourself on them without mercy, of this I have no doubt either. But I want You to tell me if there is any punishment in the world sufficient to atone for the crimes that have been perpetrated against us.Perhaps You are saying that it is not a question of sin and punishment now, but that it is always so when You veil Your face and leave mankind to its inner drives? But then, God, I wish to ask You, and this question burns in me like a consuming fire: What more, O tell us, what more must happen before You reveal Your face to the world again?I wish to speak to You clearly and frankly, to say that now, more than at any previous stage on our endless road of suffering — we, the tormented, the reviled, the suffocated, the buried alive and burned alive, we, the humiliated, the mocked, the ridiculed, the slaughtered in our millions — now more than ever do we have the right to know: Where are the limits of Your patience?And I wish to say something more to You: You should not pull the rope too tight, because it might, heaven forbid, yet snap. The temptation into which You have led us is so grievous, so unbearably grievous, that You should, You must, forgive those of Your people who in their misery and anger have turned away from You.Forgive those who have turned away from You in their misery, but also those of Your people who have turned away from You for their own comfort. You have made our life such an unending and unbearable struggle that the weaklings among us were compelled to try to elude it. To flee wherever they saw a line of escape. Do not strike them down for this! Weaklings are not to be struck down, weaklings call forth mercy. Lord, have mercy on them — more than on us!Forgive also those who have taken Your name in vain, who have followed other gods, who have become indifferent to You. You have tested them so severely that they no longer believe You are their father, that they have any father at all.I am saying all this to You in plain words because I believe in You, because I believe in You more than ever before, because I know now that You are my God. For You are not, You cannot be the God of those whose deeds are the most horrific proof of their militant godlessness.For if You are not my God — whose God are You? The God of the murderers?If those who hate me, who murder me, are so dark, so evil, who, then, am I if not one who embodies some spark of Your light and Your goodness?I cannot praise You for the deeds You tolerate. But I bless and praise Your very existence, Your terrible majesty. How mighty it must be if even what is taking place now makes no impression on You!But because You are so great and I so small, I beg You — I warn You — for Your name’s sake: Stop crowning Your greatness by veiling Your face from the scourging of the wretched!Nor do I beg You to scourge the guilty. It is part of the terrible logic of the inexorable decrees that they will come face to face with themselves at the end, because in our death dies the conscience of the world, because a world has been murdered in the murder of Israel.The world will consume itself in its own evil, it will drown in its own blood.The murderers have already pronounced judgment on themselves, and they will not escape it. But You, I beg You, pronounce Your guilty verdict, a doubly harsh verdict, on those who witness murder and remain silent!On those who condemn murder with their lips while they rejoice over it in their hearts.On those who say in their wicked hearts: Yes, it is true that the tyrant is evil, but he is also doing a job for which we will always be grateful to Him.It is written in Your Torah that the thief must be punished more severely than the robber, although the thief does not attack his victim and threaten him, life and limb, but merely tries to deprive him of his property by stealth.The robber attacks his victim in the broad light of day. He has as little fear of men as he does of God.The thief, on the other hand, fears men, but not God. This is why his punishment should be more severe than the punishment of the robber.So I do not mind if You treat the murderers as robbers, because their behavior to You and to us is the same. They make no secret of their murders and of their hatred of You and us.Those, however, who remain silent in the face of murder, those who do not fear You but fear what people will say (Idiots! They don’t know that people will say nothing!), those who express their sympathy for the drowning man but refuse to save him, those — oh, those, I swear to You, my God, are the ones You should punish like the thief!Death cannot wait any longer, and I must finish what I am writing. The gunfire from the floors above me is diminishing by the minute. The last defenders of our fortress are falling, and with them Warsaw, the great, the beautiful, the God-fearing Jewish Warsaw, falls and dies. The sun is going down now, and thanks be to God I shall never see it again. The glow of the inferno flickers through the window, and the little piece of sky I can see is flooded in flaming red like a waterfall of blood. Another hour at most and I will be with my family, and with the millions of the dead among my people in that better world where there is no more doubt and God’s hand rules supreme.I die at peace, but not pacified, conquered and beaten but not enslaved, bitter but not disappointed, a believer but not a supplicant, a lover of God but not His blind Amen-sayer.I have followed Him, even when He pushed me away. I have obeyed His commandments, even when He scourged me for it. I have loved Him, I have been in love with Him and remained so, even when He made me lower than the dust, tormented me to death, abandoned me to shame and mockery.My rabbi used to tell me, again and again, the story of a Jew who escaped the Spanish Inquisition with his wife and child and made his way in a small boat across the stormy sea to a stony island. A flash of lightning exploded and killed his wife. A whirlwind arose and hurled his child into the sea. Alone, wretched, discarded like a stone, naked and barefoot, lashed by the storm, terrified by thunder and lightning, his hair disheveled and his hands raised to God, the Jew made his way up onto the rocky desert island and turned thus to God:“God of Israel,” he said, “I have fled to this place so that I may serve You in peace, to follow Your commandments and glorify Your name. You, however, are doing everything to make me cease believing in You. But if You think that You will succeed with these trials in deflecting me from the true path, then I cry to You, my God and the God of my parents, that none of it will help You. You may insult me, You may chastise me, You may take from me the dearest and the best that I have in the world, You may torture me to death — I will always believe in You. I will love You always and forever — even despite You.”Here, then, are my last words to You, my angry God: None of this will avail You in the least! You have done everything to make me lose my faith in You, to make me cease to believe in You. But I die exactly as I have lived, an unshakeable believer in You.Praised be forever the God of the dead, the God of vengeance, of truth and judgment, who will soon unveil His face to the world again and shake its foundations with His almighty voice.“Sh’ma Yisroel! Hear, Israel! The Lord is our God, the Lord is one. Into Your hands, O Lord, I commend my soul.”——————————————————————————————————-The above was actually written by Zvi Kolitz in 1946 as a tribute to the millions of people that died while he escaped from Lithuania. Hes now a professor at Yeshiva University. The story of Yosl Rakover took on a life of its own for many years because no one could believe that anyone could write such a memoir without actually being there. No matter what the context, Yosl Rakover will forever remain a story of what it means to have true faith.NEVER AGAIN.

When Did I Grow Up?

I was listening to NPR on my way home today and they were talking about the passing of Nate Dogg and MP3s (not the same story... just the same broadcast). First they played the song "Regulate" by Warren G featuring Nate Dogg and the broadcaster said, "If you came of age in the 90's... you know Warren G's song Regulate. It's part of the sound track of your life." Yup.[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/v/1plPyJdXKIY&hl]I remember dancing to this at school dances and at parties in the 90's. Then I realized... these kids in college today... they were born in early 90's. My nephew was born in the late 90's... they don't know this stuff. This is the music I will say to my kids, "Mommy used to rock out to this!" And they will say... "Eww mom! Turn on ___ (insert popular musician 10 years from now) and turn off that old stuff." And then I will think, "Kids these days, they don't know the classics... the foundation of hip hop. Back when I was in high school..." Just like my dad did with me and his music from the 60's... I can only hope that my kids enjoy my music as much as I have come to enjoy my dad's (who doesn't love the Beatles!).Then the next story was about MP3's and how hard they worked to get the music quality the same... but it never was... and it was the first revolution in music recording driven by the consumer. The transition from vinyl to tape to cd was driven by the record companies. I started to reminisce about when I was in middle school and high school when I would buy cassette tapes... Like Michael Jackson's Bad and Beastie Boys and Red Hot Chili Peppers... (I still have those) and the CD revolution, when they were charging $19.99 for a cd and man I was desperate for a diskman. Walkmans weren't cool anymore... and I had to get some cool.I sat in my car remembering the record shops in Vero Beach and buying concert tickets there (no online TicketMaster). It was just such a different time. Music for me, back then, was about community and interaction. You saw your friends at the record shop. You could still buy vinyl at thrift shops.But somewhere along the lines I grew up. Saturday I will turn 30. I never felt very old (only when my brother hit milestones did I really feel it) and I kinda always thought that I was hip. But the more I think about it, the more I realize that inevitably there is a gap between my generation and this current one. And that is okay. I think I am going to enjoy embracing my status as older and wiser and memory holder of cassette tapes.

Totoro Goes to School, Part 2

I know you saw my video from last week of me dancing with my friend Ze'ev. We took a few pictures together (again, thank you Talia) in class that day. Here are a few:
I really learned a lot that day in Ze'ev's class. Not to mention that we got to watch Matisyahu's new music video for his Chanukah song and it was awesome. But really, Ze'ev is helping us understand the land conflict in Israel and how to speak about it as educated Jews. We were talking about rights to the land. I don't want to get too political here but we talked about six different types of rights the Jews have for the land of Israel. Those are - divine rights, aboriginal rights, legal rights, pioneering rights, internationally granted rights, and rights of war. One thing we focused on in this recent class is internationally granted rights. A lot of people don't realize that there have been several times in modern history where the Jews were granted this land. There was the Balfour Declaration in 1917 which was like a suggestion of rights. It happened because some of the Brits were sympathetic to the Jews but mainly because they wanted us on their side when the war ended. Then they changed their mind. They were setting up puppet governments all over the Middle East and figured it would be easier to control the area if it was all Arab. The League of Nations, Mandate for Palestine in 1920 was a lot more clear and legally sound. The preamble to the Mandate stated - "Recognition Has Been Given to the Historical Connection of the Jewish People with Palestine and to the Grounds for Reconstituting their National Home in that Country."Notice the use of the word reconstituting. They weren't giving the Jewish people something because they felt sorry for them, they were just making sure that they had their land back. In fact, all 51 member countries voted for this. This mandate was actually huge, including what was subsequently called TransJordan. Under this mandate, the Jews had religious, civil, and political rights and the other inhabitants of the land had religious and civil rights. The thought was that since there was a huge amount of land available to the other inhabitants where they have political rights, that would be reserved only for the Jews in this area. "At no point in the entire document is there any granting of political rights to non-Jewish entities (i.e., Arabs) because political rights to self-determination as a polity for Arabs were guaranteed in three other mandates for: Lebanon, Syria and Iraq" - Eli Hertz. This is not to say that today we don't want equal rights for all Israeli citizens, rather that within this mandate, the idea was to create a safe haven for the Jewish people while also providing huge tracts of land to other groups. Thus by ensuring political rights to the main inhabitants of the land and not others who may decide to come in and usurp the land, the integrity of the mandate would hold. Today, this is not a feasible option, nor would many people want it this way. I've included it here to point out context and thought process.The League of Nations was officially dissolved in 1946 while the UN officially began in 1945. While Article 80 of the UN Charter has been created to implicitly recognize the Mandate for Palestine of the League of Nations, they UN General Assembly made a recommendation in 1947 that Israel be established. This was UN Resolution 181 and it was a recommendation and not a legally binding resolution, which would have had to be passed down from the Security Council. UN resolution 181 has little significance in comparison to the League of Nations mandate which was legally binding.What a history! And a special thanks to Ze'ev for putting up with all the girls twice a month to teach them this history. It is so helpful and informative!Totoro out.

Great Dectective Radio Shows Online

I think we know by now that I am obsessive about Sherlock Holmes and the classic versions of them on the radio.Well, since I have been in Israel, I have found a really great podcast on iTunes that offers a huge selection of the best detective stories from old radio online. Great Detectives of Old Time Radio has a knowledgeable host and extensive archives. I have listened to most of his Holmes podcasts and have started enjoying others, like Let George Do It and The Thin Man. I definitely recommend checking it out on iTunes or his blog. He even has an iPhone app.One of my favorite parts of the old shows is the old commercials. Petri wine, Clipper Craft Clothes, Kreml Hair Tonic for Men, Bromo Quinine, Washington Coffee... It is so cool and to hear their calls for war bonds and victory gardens... it transports you to the past. Very cool.

Lesson # 102 – Cut the roots, don’t make the wall fall down or “I’m ready for my close up, Mr. DeMille.”

Hey, even walls need to look pretty for pictures. Today we were cleaning the site to make it ready for some aerial pictures tomorrow. So we were sweeping (yup... dirt on dirt, I know), pulling up rocks, and trimming the roots. But if you pull or cut too much the wall will fall in. Our dig supervisor, Marcela joked that if I cut too much and made one fall on top of me and I was hurt, she would be sure to tell the paper that it was Talia Davis who knocked over a priceless 1st century wall... Thanks Marcela!So we set about cleaning. We were each given a room/quadrant. My room was a really nice square. I had a ‘bench’ of un-cleared area and a trench where they had gone down further to see what they could find. I went about my merry way, snipping roots and brushing the loose rocks and dirt to the floor. That took all morning, from 6 until our breakfast at 10. Then after breakfast, I started sweeping the floor... I was sweeping dirt up on a dirt floor. And brushing dirt off the dirt wall onto the dirt floor... sometimes it was hard to tell when to stop brushing or sweeping... but I had to be sure to stop before the wall started crumbling and on the floor... well, I just had to stop at some point.The whole team set about cleaning the site. Juan and Elias were clearing one area where we had found an arch. We weren’t sure what it was or why it was there. It was a freestanding arch that backed up almost to a wall. Then Juan found a small square in one of the bricks in his area. It could have been for water. I just can’t wait for this site to be fully excavated. I really want to come back in three years when it is cleared. It will be amazing to learn exactly what each of these areas are for.All in all, it was an amazing experience. I was so honored to work with such an amazing group of people. These volunteers are so dedicated and amazing. Many of them will be here for three years to fully excavate the site. Wow!Well, my experience on the dig is at a close. I head to Tzfat tomorrow for shabbis with my wonderful friend Chani and her family. I am looking forward to going back to Mayanot energized and ready to learn... with one more thing checked off the bucket list. I played a part in history and that is so exciting, especially for a history nerd like me. :)