Category Archives: Current Events

Time Release

The Torah summarizes the very essence of our lives at the end of Parshat Nitzavim (Devarim 30:20): “…to love G-d, to listen to His voice and to cleave to Him, for He is your life and the length of your days…” What a magnificent statement – that requires definition. The Netziv (Rav Naphtali Zvi Yehuda Berlin) comments that to love G-d and to listen to His voice means to immerse ourselves in Torah – to toil in Torah – whereas to cleave to G-d means to support Torah – not everyone can sit and learn, but they can acquire a love and an intimate connection to G-d by supporting Torah.

And not only that – but “He is your life and the length of your days.”  What’s the difference between “your life” and “the length of your days”? Many explain that “your life” means life itself in this world and “length of days” refer to one’s quality of life. But others (the Sforno, for one) explain that “your life” means eternal life, which makes sense. “And you who cleave to G-d are all alive today” (ibid 4:4) – cleaving to G-d grants us eternal life. But what then is “length of days” in reference to eternity?

Not long ago, the Jewish world marked the shloshim of Zev Wolfson a”h. When he died, I did not know much about his remarkable life except that he was a great philanthropist of Jewish causes. One of the distinguished Rabbis in Yerushalayim eulogized him as “the pillar of loving-kindness in our generation,” just like the recently-departed Rav Yosef Shalom Elyashiv zt”l was the “pillar of Torah in our generation.” All this I learned in a remarkable column in the Israeli weekly Besheva (August 23, 2012 edition) that had an interesting twist to it, well-written as always by their esteemed columnist Yedidya Meir. (http://www.inn.co.il/Besheva/Article.aspx/12227)

The column framed a minimized page of obituaries from the Israeli Yated Neeman, right in the middle of the page, placed in Yated by some of the yeshivot that Zev Wolfson supported – in Beer Yaakov, in Yerushalayim – yeshivot I also never heard of. Then the article described him – his simplicity, directness, utter selflessness and dedication to the Jewish people, and especially his willingness to invest in a Jewish cause or organization if there was a plan and a definable objective. Each day he would implore everyone to do something for Klal Yisrael – the most important concern in life

He supported hundreds of organizations, and was obsessed in his later years with bridging the gap between secular Israeli youth and the Jewish people, not necessarily to bring them to observance in a traditional sense but to enhance their Jewish identity and give them a connection to the Jewish people. So, about a decade ago he started funding drop-in centers in Tel Aviv, for young people, called Nefesh Yehudi. Thousands have attended – and the columnist wrote about one of them, a young woman named Keren Svistov who worked as a planner at a major advertising firm in Tel Aviv.

Apparently, there was a buzz in Israel back in February when Keren Svistov updated her Facebook page, and columnist Meir decided to save it for a column in the month Elul. In February, she wrote on her Facebook page that “the time has come to speak about this teshuva (repentance) of mine. People keep sending me worrisome emails – ‘what’s happened to you? Are you freaking out? Such an intelligent girl. Is it because you haven’t found a husband, or because your father died of cancer?”

She was raised secular, and maintained a customary Tel Avivi lifestyle. Yet, for 3½ years, she had been learning at one center in Tel Aviv – once a week, for 4½ hours at a time. I paraphrase some selections (translation mine): “I’m touching the truth, understanding it and denying it, getting close to it and then fleeing from it. I don’t want the light to close me in. I don’t want to think my whole prior life was false. Yet, slowly, Torah enters.”

     “Where do I start? Sometimes I think my return was rational and logical, not spiritual. That my mind, trained to acquire degrees, to be analytical, sees that there must be logic in the universe – and Torah, science, our history, ending with the question: ‘why are we here? Why are we members of the Jewish people?’ And then I am told that such a repentance sounds like one is embarrassed about one’s Jewishness, which I am not. Repentance need not be purely logical.”

      “And each morning I thank G-d, for I believe I will be able to chip away some more of the shell and return to myself and to You. I gave up my immodest dress, and the cloak of sarcasm that I also wore. And sometimes it is a struggle – how do you nurture a princess when my entire essence still cries out for materialism? Pride, beauty, shopping, money, honor, and control. The instinctual drive always leads me on a more enjoyable, comfortable path… Sometimes the sins I think I had eradicated return with a vengeance. Master of the universe, what a long road it is to You! Yet another day of repentance begins.” It was posted at 2:41 AM in February 2012.

But that’s not the end of her story. This was in February. Meir filed it away for use in Elul – and then, he noticed in Yated, on that page of obituary notices for Zev Wolfson, there were engagement announcements in the upper corner of the same page –  and, lo and behold, Keren Svistov (now of Netiv Bina, a seminary in Givatayim) became engaged to be married to another Tel Avivian, Daniel Machnes, now learning at a yeshiva in Tel Aviv.

How is that for coincidence? The death of the benefactor mourned, and the lives of his beneficiaries celebrated, on the same page. Blessed is the Judge of Truth, and Mazal Tov, in the same corner.

“For He is your life and the length of your days.” G-d not only gives us eternal life but also “length of our days” What is “length of days”? The capacity to live beyond our sojourn on earth, certainly to leave behind children and families, but especially good deeds and acts of kindness that render us immortal, that continue to take effect years beyond our lifespan.

We are able to touch people in such a way that long after we are gone, they can say about us “but for him or her, my life would have been lost, or different, or unfulfilled.” We can make each day count – not only when we are alive but by doing something virtuous that will pay dividends in generations yet to come.

That we can do even if we are not multi-millionaires; and that we can try to do every day, for “He is your life and the length of your days.” Then we too will have a share in the flourishing of repentance, the national renaissance that is prophesied for the end of days; then, our enemies will tremble before us, and we will again be called “G-d’s holy nation, redeemed.”

Shana tova to all !

 

The Good News

    A New Year has dawned, and as always we put the difficulties of the old year behind us and look forward to the blessings of the new. And there are many blessings, all coming to us by way of polls and surveys of Israeli Jews that are as ubiquitous this time of year as are apples and honey.

    The population of Judea and Samaria now exceeds 350,000 Jews, which, added to the 300,000 Jews already residing in Jerusalem neighborhoods built after the Six-Day War, consist of well over 10% of the Jewish population of Israel. If the “yishuvim” were one city, they would constitute Israel’s third-largest city. This news led Yossi Sarid, die-hard peacenik and committed leftist, to lament the irreversibility of Jewish settlement, concede defeat, and mourn what he feels to be the end of the peace movement and Israel’s forthcoming disappearance, r”l.

     Facts on the ground do matter and have made a difference in forging Israel’s destiny. If the two-state solution was always a chimera, today it is a flight into Wonderland – a lingering part of the politician’s rhetoric but not a living part of anyone’s reality. Credit to Mitt Romney for articulating the futility of the two-state solution and the need for a new paradigm for Middle East diplomacy. Thinking Jews: take heed.

    That news supplements – in fact, likely shapes – the findings of the annual Peace Index. Only 25% of Israel’s population believes at all in the possibility of “peace” with the Arabs in coming years; a full 72% do not believe it is realistic. The better news is that almost 60% of the population is optimistic about the coming year; since Jews are generally a pessimistic people – usually grounded in reality – this is an encouraging figure. About half feel secure about their personal safety and economic health – although 35% find the government’s role in assuring security somewhat lacking. (Compared to what? There were fewer terrorist-caused murders in 5772 than in many years, less than ten; of course, each soul lost is precious and a world in itself.)

More than 89% of Arabs fear an Iranian nuclear attack!

Almost 78% rate the government as generally unresponsive to people’s concerns – and yet most would vote that same government back into power. That reminds of a poll from years’ past when almost 80% of the population was pessimistic about Israel’s future, less than 5% would consider leaving the country, but more than 70% rated themselves as generally happy in life. Perhaps the dissatisfaction with the government is not as surprising as it first sounds, given that polls predict a Netanyahu-led coalition government after the next election but he struggles to garner even 25% of the votes, and given that anyone with a grievance finds it easy to blame the government.

Yet, with all the problems unresolved and challenges looming, it is appropriate to appreciate the blessings we have been given and the glorious opportunities our generation has been afforded. Jews in other centuries would have died – did die – to have the problems and challenges we have: build Torah amid prosperity, safeguard the Jewish state and the Jewish people around the world from a position of strength, not weakness, and bring all Jews closer to their Torah.

How fortunate are we, how goodly is our portion, how compassionate is our Benefactor, the Creator of the universe who gave us the Torah.

May the coming year find some of our problems solved, new opportunities presented – the opportunities of redemption and the Messianic era.

Obama=Carter

     The narrative sounds eerily familiar. A Democratic president presiding over a weak economy, prone to a foreign policy that distances allies and coddles enemies and who thinks he’s the smartest person on the planet, witnesses the assault on American diplomatic missions in the Muslim world.

      Barack Obama, meet Jimmy Carter, if you haven’t already.

      Muslims, the people of perpetual grievance, have found yet another pretext to kill innocent people – the production by an American of a film biography of Muhammad. From excerpts aired on the radio, the dialogue was so pedestrian as to be laughable. No matter. Muslims, who are forbidden to depict Muhammad in any image, assume that their strictures must apply to every person on the planet, and so have attacked the US embassy in Cairo and the mission in Libya – desecrating the American flag in Cairo (where embassy personnel had been sent home earlier in the day) and murdering innocents (including the US Ambassador to Libya) in Benghazi.

     That tolerance is unknown in the Muslim world is by now a given, so accepted that it is neither sought nor expected. The US embassy’s initial reaction to the Cairo rioters (so far, the only reaction) was to apologize for the film, as if “Americans,” rather than an American exercising his freedom of speech, were responsible. Instead of defending the embassy – which, after all, is considered as sovereign US territory – and/or denouncing the rioters and the Muslim government that allowed the attack to occur, the Obama administration chose, yet again, to apologize to Muslims. The apology, apparently, was for putting Muslims in a position where they have no choice but to kill you. Poor dears, with their uncontrollable rage that is stoked by fecklessness and weakness.

     The irony of the Cairo attack is twofold. Less than a decade ago, Egyptian television aired a fictional series based on the “Protocols of the Elders of Zion” that was replete with Jew hatred, offensive stereotypes and caricatures of Jews. Clearly, Muslims somehow rationalize repugnant attacks on other religions – Judaism, Christianity, and recall the destruction of ancient Buddhist shrines by the Taliban – but fly into a riotous rage when Islam is portrayed negatively. They reserve the right to destroy shuls and churches, but insist that mosques remain sacrosanct. This obvious double standard is abetted by the world – especially the United States – when the victims apologize to the Muslims for unleashing their primitive Muslim wrath. What happened yesterday is just the continuation of the Danish “Muhammad-cartoon” controversy in another form, with Muslims again insisting that rights cherished in the Western world have to be vitiated in order to accommodate Muslim special sensitivities. Of course, no other religion or nation is allowed to insist on a similar claim, and especially not from Muslims. Such weakness only engenders more attacks, as does the coddling of any bully.

     Certainly, good taste and elementary decency would insist that no faith’s cherished icons, edifices, personalities or tenets be ridiculed at all – but taste and decency are not hallmarks of the Western world, nor are they considered limitations on the freedoms extant in the West. More importantly, Muslims have no moral right to insist on good taste and decency from anyone as long as they don’t practice it themselves. Mutual respect, the foundation of the civilized world, begins with mutuality.

     The second irony of the Cairo embassy attack is that Cairo, in June 2009, was the locus for one of President Obama’s most famous apology speeches, where he sought to assuage the hurt feelings of the Muslim world from the years of US imperialism and domination, as Obama saw it. It was intended to be America’s reset button with Islam, especially after the US actions “forced” Muslims to hijack US airliners, fly them into US skyscrapers and murder thousands of American civilians – a crime celebrated in the Muslim world at the time with wild cheering, and a crime commemorated yesterday in Egypt and Libya with assaults on American diplomatic missions and the murder of yet more Americans.

     It is fascinating that what generates fury in the Muslim world is a bad movie, but not the ongoing massacre of upwards of 23,000 Muslims in Syria. Syria’s diplomatic posts are safe from Muslim frenzy, and the carnage continues apace. Why doesn’t any nation intervene? Why is the slaughter being observed with Western detachment, except for periodic and perfunctory denunciations accompanied by empty threats?

    One possibility presents, as indelicate as it sounds. The Western world has tired of Muslims and their irrational passions, and simply does not care if they kill each other – as long as they don’t kill us. The Western world is tired of intervening – with the loss of blood and treasure – to prevent Muslims from killing each other. Let them blow each other up, in their mosques, streets and wedding halls. Yet another 100 people were killed in Iraq this past Sunday without evincing the slightest reaction from Americans or other Westerners. Another 10,000 will be killed in Syria in the coming months? Great, knock yourselves out, have a good time. We extend our sympathies to the victims and their families, feel bad about the children, and hope it ends soon. But if Muslims are troubled by Muslims killing Muslims, let Muslims do something about it.

     When savagery becomes routine, even acceptable, and when today’s victims were yesterday’s murderers, it is difficult to muster even crocodile tears, much less genuine sympathy for their plight. The Muslim world has coerced a hardening of Western hearts. It is one of the few places in the world where dictators are overthrown in popular uprisings only to be succeeded by even more brutal dictators; it is the only place in the world were random violence against innocent civilians is considered normal, and even sacred. And Muslim attacks on American diplomats preceded even the Carter feebleness; in March, 1973, the US Ambassador to Sudan Cleo Noel was kidnapped and killed (along with his deputy) in a Palestinian attack on the Saudi embassy in Khartoum, an attack orchestrated and masterminded by Yasser Arafat who (it’s on tape) personally ordered their murders. That didn’t stop Bill Clinton from feting Arafat at the White House twenty years later, when he should have been incarcerating him.

     Obama’s reset with Russia has worked out as well as his reset with Muslims. Each has only grown in contempt for America’s weak leader and the helplessness of the country he leads. Obama’s foreign policy successes (e.g., the withdrawal of US forces from Iraq, on something close to the Bush timetable, it is worth adding) has not made America stronger or the world safer. On the contrary: the incompetence and spinelessness (literally: Obama’s bowing to the Saudi king made a deep impression in Islam) of the Obama administration set the stage for this latest attack on Americans and American interests in the Muslim world, and a new round of apologies.

     Add to that another snub of Israel’s prime minister by this president, and it is Jimmy Carter-time once again.

     Fortunately, Jimmy Carter was a one-term president.

The Case for Obama

Oh, there is no case for Obama, rational or otherwise. That is not to say that he doesn’t have a formula that will attract many votes – he does – but one is hard pressed to formulate cogent arguments why his failed presidency should be carried forward for another four years. He himself seems to realize this, and focuses his speeches on vitriolic distortions of his opponent’s personality and record and scant references to his own achievements in office. It is a strategy dependent on casting so much mud that Mitt Romney looks entirely soiled, and as filthy as the incumbent, in which case the incumbent wins by default.

There is an irony in the agonizing and hypocritical lament about “negative campaigning.” A clear distinction should be made between an accusation that “Romney killed a woman!” who got cancer after her husband lost his job when his business closed (long after Romney left Bain, but what does it matter, and what real relevance does that have anyway) and the contention that unemployment has been over 8% for 42 straight months, that almost 50,000,000 Americans receive food stamps (an increase of more than 20,000,000 since Obama took office), or that the poverty rate in America is the highest since the Depression. Those facts are “negative,” but they go to the heart of the Obama incompetence that is the reason for his failures. Obama’s attack ads are personal; Romney’s attack ads are about business – the business of government.

The failures are evident, and many Obama assertions are markedly laughable. The persistent claim that “we have created 4.2 million private sector jobs” does not withstand scrutiny, and not only because more private sector jobs have still been lost under Obama than found. It is risible primarily because the federal government – i.e., Obama – has not created even one private sector job. If a law firm hires another lawyer, if our shul hires a secretary, did Obama create that job ? If a person opens a store and hires workers, did the federal government create that job? Of course not. The federal government creates public sector jobs by hiring more employees at taxpayer expense, whether or not they are productive, and facilitates the creation of private sector jobs by offering tax incentives to businesses to expand and hire more people. Has that been done? Not to any great extent, and even those tax incentives have been offset by the concern among private businesses of the long term economic impact of Obamacare.

That is why the ludicrous category of “jobs saved” was invented. All that meant is that the federal government borrowed or printed money to supply to municipalities to pay public employees that those communities could no longer afford or did not need, just in order to keep them on the payroll. Thus, “jobs saved.” Of course, those same jobs were then lost a year or so later when the federal money dried up, but nonetheless, the statistic remains on the books: a “job saved”.

Indeed, almost any assertion of success by this administration should be analyzed carefully and skeptically. Take the claim that oil and gas production has increased under Obama. All true, even notwithstanding the denial of permits in the Gulf of Mexico or Alaska and the reluctance to approve the Keystone pipeline that would create jobs and lower the price of gasoline (which has doubled under Obama’s watch). It is true but misleading. Production has increased despite Obama, not because of Obama. The increase is entirely due to the increased capacity and investment of private business, and drilling where federal permits are not required. Wherever federal permits have been required, Obama has mostly rejected them. Yet, he claims credit for the success of private enterprise that he has failed to smother. Shameless.

This brazen boastfulness is a consistent pattern. Liberal Jews who would rather eat on Yom Kippur than vote for a Republican (actually, they probably eat on Yom Kippur too) are contorting themselves like Olympic gymnasts to find reasons to support Obama and to prettify his record on Israel. One note constantly sounded is Obama’s record financial support for Iron Dome, the missile shield that offers partial protection against Arab rockets. Again, all true, in a sense. The full truth is that Obama administration has for the last two years suggested cuts in Iron Dome funding – drastic cuts that would have gutted the program. The money was restored by Congress – on a bi-partisan basis, with large credit due to our outgoing Congressman Steve Rothman (D). Yes, Obama eventually signed that bill – but to claim credit for record funding of a program that you tried to cut and were coerced into supporting?  It is shameless.

Thus, on the economy, Obama is left with two basic assertions: one, he “inherited a mess, the worst… blah, blah, blah.” As I recall, Ronald Reagan inherited a misery index of more than 20% (inflation plus interest rates) and unemployment near 10%. President Bush (Jr.) inherited a recession as well. They ran for office successfully to overcome their predecessors’ shortcomings, or at least to solve leftover problems. Every president is in a similar position. There are always problems to solve. But none of them embraced “blame the prior president” as a permanent mode of governance. In some respects – unemployment, real personal income and poverty – things are worse now than under Bush, and due entirely to Obama’s policies. Which leads to the second assertion: “we averted a catastrophe…things would have been worse but for Obama’s leadership.” Really? How do we know that? What is the metric used to determine what would have happened – if some auto companies were allowed to enter bankruptcy, if some banks were allowed to fail? Maybe the economy would be better today – if not for Obamacare, or the five trillion (!) dollars of federal debt accumulated in just under four years, if not for regulations that are stifling business and creativity.

Neither assertion holds any substance, but not that it matters. The Obama re-election strategy is focused on class warfare – the appeals to different and disparate groups. This is classic Democrat strategy going back to FDR’s time. The hope is that a coalition of blacks, Jews, public employees, liberal women, environmentalists, and now Hispanics will be sufficient to give an electoral majority, even if – especially since – there is no coherent policy that united those groups. Every small group gets what it wants, in the hope that provides a majority that wins – even if the winners cannot then govern or lead in any meaningful or successful way. Add to that group the tens of millions of people now nourished by government money – sadly embracing a life of permanent dependence – and that might be enough, although I sense that it will fall short.

The most critical component in such a plan is to keep each group angry – blacks (against the rich white man who exploits and doesn’t pay his “fair share;” expect the racist card to be played in October and liberal white guilt to be stoked accordingly); federal employees (jobs lost); liberal women (birth control will be taken away and abortion banned); environmentalists (the evil conservatives want to ruin nature and are atheists in the religion of “global warming);” and Hispanics (Republicans want to send you all back to Mexico, even if you’re from Puerto Rico). And Jews? There is no logical reason for Jews to vote for Obama, nor for Democrats even to overtly make an appeal to the Jewish vote. Sadly, it is what Jews do, unthinkingly, since FDR’s time, because, I suppose, Roosevelt was such a god friend of the Jews and made the rescue of Jews during the Holocaust his priority. Sure. Since there is no rational reason for Jews to vote for Obama, there is no necessity to reason with them to vote against Obama. Voting Democrat is a passion, and not subject to reasoned discourse.

It is the appeal to anger that is the most disheartening aspect of the Obama campaign and the primary reason for the negative tone in the campaign. People who are angry go out to vote, but their anger is not assuaged after the election. Was there an angry word even uttered at the Republican Convention ? Not that I heard. Mitt Romney’s essential cheerfulness must grate on the Obamanikim.

In foreign affairs, Obama’s primary failing is that America’s role as leader of the free world has been diminished. This has grave ramifications across the globe. US troops left Iraq, still the locus of weekly massacres, but a Republican president would have done the same in a matter of months. The war in Afghanistan (Obama’s good war) does not appear to be headed for a happy ending. The Taliban is re-asserting control (even murdering 17 people last week for attending a musical concert) and the date of US departure is fast approaching. (Certainly credit is due President Obama for personally executing bin Laden, dumping his body at sea, and returning to DC in time to pose for pictures and reveal classified information about it.) Russia and China are ascendant, and more powerful and influential than in decades.

The deference to the UN has marked America’s retreat from global leadership, the Arab world is rapidly radicalizing with no US response noticeable, Iran laughs at talk of sanctions and merrily nears its nuclear bomb – and Romney’s reference to Israel being thrown “under the bus” chides Obama for forcing Israel to deal with Iran on its own. America’s foes are derisive of Obama, and America’s traditional allies feel abandoned. Foreign policy has been a parade of failures because Obama sees success in the accomplishment of certain definable acts (e.g., withdrawal) but not in the projection of US power, interests, or values.  Short term goals have replaced long term interests.

Obama entered office less prepared for the presidency than any president in history – less accomplished, less skilled, and less able. It shows. A presidency that has failed domestically and abroad is a failure; its continuation will be a calamity. It might happen because the electoral strategy is logical, if repugnant – the cultivation of anger, the shifting of blame, the resort to innuendo, diversions, race, guilt and class warfare.

Of course, there is another side – the virtues of Mitt Romney. That is for another time.