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Posted by Danny Groner
A roundup of the most talked about political and global stories in the Jewish world this week:
Romney vs. Obama
“Once again, Republicans are doing much better with Jewish contributors than with Jewish voters,” said Douglas Bloomfield in The New York Jewish Week. And Democrats are trying to figure out how to match their counterparts. Israel, as always, remains an important issue when it comes to courting the Jewish vote. “The president’s cynical Jewish charm offensive isn’t likely to win back many disenchanted voters who know the difference between conviction and an election-year conversion,” said Jonathan S. Tobin in Commentary. But others, like Rafael Medoff in the Baltimore Sun, are more secure in their support for Obama. “The president says he has Israel’s back,” and we should accept that as reality.”
The “60 Minutes” furor
On last week’s episode of “60 Minutes,” reporter Bob Simon had a confrontation with Michael Oren that left Oren contacting CBS to try to explain why the piece would hurt Israel. It centered on Arab Christians and their exit as a result of the Israeli occupation. “If CBS eventually issues an apology, or does a follow-up to the report, we can assume that (willful?) ignorance was to blame. (Funny how the mistakes, inaccuracies and bias all lead in the same, anti-Israel direction, isn’t it?) But to the extent CBS digs in after receiving a mountain of material debunking the piece, we will know that rank bias is at the heart of this,” said Jennifer Rubin in The Washington Post. It didn’t stop there. Simon “never develops for the listener/viewer the reality, in all its proportions and complexity,” said Yisrael Medad in The Jerusalem Post. “He ‘smoothes over’ all the politics, the history - flattening that out so the viewer is putty in his hands.”
Raese rage
West Virginia Senate candidate John Raese ran into some trouble with Jewish groups when he equated a smoking ban with Hitler’s policy of forcing Jews to wear the Star of David. Rases said, “But in Monongalia County now, I have to put a huge sticker on my buildings to say this is a smoke-free environment. This is brought to you by the government of Monongalia County. Okay?” He continued: “Remember Hitler used to put Star of David on everybody’s lapel, remember that? Same thing.” Let’s not go overboard, said a Huntington News editorial. “In reading the press accounts, we don’t see any intentional meanspiritedness here by Raese—just a politician trying too hard to make his point. We’ve seen that before by political leaders in both parties here over the years. Raese certainly isn’t alone in having an occasional case of foot-in-mouth disease.” No, this is a big deal, argued Leonard Pitts Jr. in the Miami Herald. “The crimes of the Nazi regime were singular, unprecedented in their sheer awfulness. Because of this, thoughtful observers draw Nazi parallels carefully and rarely if at all. And then there are the John Raeses of the world.”
What’s Israel mean at 64?
Israel celebrated its birthday this week. Where are we now? “Israel deserves applause for 64 years of its status as a stable, prosperous, multicultural state in a region where citizens still fight for their most basic human rights — even as critical threats to its sovereignty endure and its ‘partner in peace’ maintains an untrustworthy and anti-Jewish foundation,” said an Algemeiner editorial. “Israel is a military, economic, scientific and technological power to be reckoned with. But it faces an existential threat from Iran” that should scare us, said a New York Jewish Week editorial. “Even as we rejoice in Israel’s many achievements, and defend her against its political and military enemies, we must be aware that geula — redemption — can only come when Israel will achieve peace with her neighbors,” added Phil Horn in the New Jersey Jewish News.
Urban Outfitters shirt
The clothing chain pulled a T-shirt from its shelves amid a ruckus that its design too heavily resembled a yellow star. “Some fashion statements should not be made,” said The Examiner. It’s not the first time the retailer has come under fire for its designs. “Although Urban Outfitters makes us feel like we’re rebelling against some oppressive ‘man’ or system, the truth is that they have made a killing on mass producing a blend of trendy unconventionality,” said Ori J. Lenkinski at 972Mag.com. “While we buy their overpriced clothes to feel special, thousands of other special folks are picking out the exact same hip uniform, making it just as banal as a pair of khakis and a white t-shirt. And the kicker here is that the yellow tee that has ruffled so many feathers costs $100.”
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April 19, 2012 | 4:38 am
Posted by Danny Groner
A roundup of the most talked about political and global stories in the Jewish world this week:
Iran lingers
Moshe Kantor, president of the European Jewish Congress, warned on Wednesday that anti-Semitic violence would escalate if Israel targets Iran. “If Israel attacks Iran, it will be a dramatic increase of anti-Semitic, very violent attacks against Jews,” Kantor said. “And the vehicle for the realization of the attacks will be these enclave communities, where the level of hatred is very high and they are prepared to attack enemies inside their countries.” The topic came front and center during Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu’s speech at a Holocaust Remembrance Day ceremony at Yad Vashem when Netanyahu suggested that Iran must be stopped in this generation. Tension continues to escalate as the world watches.
Soldier dismissed
Israel dismissed “on moral grounds” an officer who was the unwanted star of a YouTube video in which he struck an unarmed Danish activist with his gun, according to reports. The incident took place last weekend near Jericho, and Lieutenant Colonel Shalom Eisner had been suspended immediately afterward for the attack. Despite there being no evidence that the attack was warranted, some on internet message boards defended the soldier’s actions. Israel reaffirmed that its soldiers mostly act with restraint and this was just an exception.
Beinart’s war
Writer and author Peter Beinart has caused a firestorm with the reception of his new book, The Crisis of Zionism. “Beinart is definitely on the left side of this debate, the side that emphasizes human rights and living in peace with one’s neighbours. He consistently empathizes with the plight of Palestinians in the West Bank who have no citizenship rights,” said Donald Benham in the Winnepeg Free Press. “For liberal Jews such as Beinart, what is happening now is the worst of all possible worlds.” Some praised him for his stance. “Peter Beinart should be commended for a valiant and courageous project, continuing to do what he and many of us have been doing for the past twenty years,” said Shaul Magid at Religion Dispatches. But Jonathan Miller at the Times of Israel disagreed. “Where Beinart has succeeded most thoroughly is in his manipulation of a legitimate crisis — not in Israel, but within our American democracy. It’s a crisis in which nuance and rational debate have been drowned out by polarized, uniformly-lockstep polemics from hyper-partisan politicians, ultra-ideological cable TV screaming heads, and political correctness-enforcing mullahs on our nation’s campuses,” he wrote.
Gibson’s back…or not
Remember that Judah Maccabee movie that Mel Gibson was working on? It might be tabled, indefinitely. This is as a result of a rift between producer Gibson and screenwriter Joe Eszterhas. “Now, given his past history, I see no reason to criticize people who might feel uncomfortable with Mel Gibson’s involvement in a movie about a Jewish war hero. That is most certainly not at issue here. But isn’t this exactly the sort of situation left-wingers scold conservatives for? asked Warner Todd Huston at Chicago Now. “Separating from the entertainment the real-life actions of a moviemaker is exactly what the left claims is a desirable trait in a movie fan. Yet here they are condemning a movie precisely because of who is involved with it.” If they decide to go in a new direction, here are some other Biblical stories that could be adapted for the big screen.
Drake’s Bar Mitzvah
In his video for “HYFR,” Drake “stages a second Bar Mitzvah to re-establish his commitment to the Jewish faith,” as an MTV blogger put it. It even includes real footage for his fans to revel in. “While I am not yet ready to add Drake to my Jewish celebrity role model list, Drake is playing his role in the orchestra. Now it’s up to the rest of us in the Jewish community to do our part,” said Ronn Torossian at the Algemeiner. Others weren’t as thrilled. “The complete video is certainly not consistent with Temple Israel’s longstanding history and reputation as a progressive voice in the Jewish Reform movement,” said the synagogue president who lent his bimah for the fiasco. “Temple Israel does not adopt, condone, or sponsor any aspect of the Drake video, and was not involved in its production.”
April 12, 2012 | 5:09 am
Posted by Danny Groner
A roundup of the most talked about political and global stories in the Jewish world this week:
Romney’s race
With Rick Santorum bowing out of the GOP race this week, it appears that the nomination is now going to go to Mitt Romney. “If he can allay Jewish concerns about the influence of Christian conservatives on his social agenda, Romney might convert enough Jewish votes in places where it could theoretically make a very big difference,” said Chemi Shalev at Haaretz. However, there’s no evidence that Jews will go Republican, warned Gershom Gorenberg in The American Prospect: “If the GOP is even less popular among Jews than it was a generation ago, the reason is apparent: The party has become ever more rigid and homogenous in its economic and social conservatism, and its tests of ideological purity send none-too-coded messages to Jewish voters.” And, after all, Romney’s Mormonism might be an asset for him.
Gunter Grass fracas
Israel banned Nobel-winning author Gunter Grass from the country this week over a poem of his published last Wednesday that suggested Israel is as big a threat as Iran. “The poem is, to put it bluntly, morally obtuse and politically embarrassing,” said Jeffrey Herf in The New Republic. A Jerusalem Post editorial tore into Grass. “We hope he regains his moral bearings and issues a complete retraction. Anything less will cast a shadow on Grass’s reputation as a moral voice for Germans who came of age in the generation after the Shoah.” But not everyone thinks the punishment fit the crime. “The entire nation suffers when a poet is barred from its land. That is not the democratic response to bad speech. Nor is it the response of the Jewish tradition, which thrives on debate and dissent. It should not be the Israeli response,” wrote Alan Dershowitz in The Huffington Post.
Sparks fly in Connecticut
A candidate for Senate in Connecticut called Rep. Chris Murphy a “whore” for his support of Israel during a local debate last week. Lee Whitnum is “obsessed with AIPAC and Zionism and spends a great deal of space on her campaign website trying unsuccessfully to assert that she is not an anti-Semite. But at least she comes by her bias honestly,” said Jonathan S. Tobin at Commentary. “Ms. Whitnum’s threadbare debate manners did not advance her arguments a whit, and Mr. Murphy emerged from the verbal fisticuffs with his pro-Israeli halo undented. Not a bad showing, on the whole, for Israel, Mr. Murphy, AIPAC and neo-conservatives, all of whom should remember Ms. Whitnum in their prayers,” said Don Pesci in the Providence Journal. Organizers requested more decorum at the next debate.
Passover message
Each year at this time rabbis and thinkers and, yes, even bloggers hope to convey a succinct message for what we should take away from the Passover story. Here are a few of the suggestions: “Today the flow of information is so rapid that in order to have a real impact, conveying an idea only once is no longer enough. Messages must be passed on through constant repetition, utilizing many different channels both overt and discreet,” said Dovid Efune at The Huffington Post. “Even as Egypt’s political transition remains murky, all Americans have a moral stake in its outcome,” and we should connect with the country today, said Ari Ratner at SavannahHow.com. Isi Leibler in the Jerusalem Post, on the other hand, encouraged sticking to tradition. “The Haggada carries a universal theme of human rights that apply to all people. But the trendy Jewish modernists who seek to transform the seder into a universal freedom-fest should be resisted.”
Lovitz’s stand
After some teenage girls left anti-Semitic graffiti on a neighbor’s front walk as a prank, comedian Jon Lovitz fought back via Twitter and got the girls expelled from their school, according to reports. He tweeted: “Thanks for all your support on the hate crime. No one should be bullied for any reason. We’re all people who should be treated w/ respect.” Many people saluted Lovitz for his aggressive response. I am proud of Mr. Lovitz for not being afraid to stand up for his friend, for what was right, and for Jews. His actions matter. We live in a world where kids are shot while out to get Skittles, and you can commit a hate crime and not be held accountable. It’s sad, wrong, and scary. Jon Lovitz stood up for all of us, and loudly proclaimed that we must keep the faith,” said Ilana Angel in the Jewish Journal.
April 5, 2012 | 6:03 am
Posted by Danny Groner
A roundup of the most talked about political and global stories in the Jewish world this week:
Obama’s soaring
According to a Public Religion Research Institute poll of 1,004 Jewish adults, Obama is doing just fine and want to see him get reelected. “While much of the political debate within the Jewish community has centered in recent months on the issue of Israel and on President Obama’s relations with the Jewish state, the survey reinforces previous poll data that shows Jewish voters do not view Israel as a deciding factor when voting for president,” explained The Jewish Daily Forward. This might indicate something about Jewish voters. “Americans — and especially Jewish Americans — are long overdue for a serious consideration about what it means for religion to influence the values that our society should reflect,” wrote Yehuda Kurtzer in The Jewish Week. Only then we can vote rationally and confidently.
Wasserman Schultz’s questionable appointee
A Jewish outreach liaison for Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz is under fire fora Facebook picture Gilbert posted in 2006 of herself and her friends tagged as “Jewbags” and the “Jew cash money team.” Cue the defenses and the outrage: “The photograph’s caption is admittedly inflammatory, but it is six years old. People make mistakes when they are young. This should not be an impediment to Ms. Gilbert’s budding career today,” said Noah Rothman at Mediaite. On the other side is Javier Manjarres at Shark Tank: “Oy Veh! Can you imagine if a Republican Jewish Outreach staffer were to have posted similar pictures with these same comments? His/her head would be asked to be served on some type of Seder platter or something.” Does it really matter? You have to wonder.
Christie’s Israel trip
New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie is in Israel this week on a trip cosponsored by the Republican Jewish Coalition. The “Jersey to Jerusalem” tour could serve some good, though. “Christie is looking to strengthen the state’s economic ties to Israel and to bolster his political résumé with a taste of foreign policy,” reported NorthJersey.com. But some had a little fun at the governor’s expense. “Christie, wearing a yarmulke with his name and title embroidered on it, brought his political heft to the holiest Jewish site in Jerusalem,” wrote The New York Post.
Foer’s Haggadah
In an op-ed in The New York Times, writer Jonathan Safran Foer outlined why he felt the need to compile a new Seder book that has everyone talking. “Our grandparents were immigrants to America, but natives to Judaism. We are the opposite: fluent in ‘American Idol,’ but unschooled in Jewish heroes. And so we act like immigrants around Judaism: cautious, rejecting, self-conscious, and feigning (or achieving) indifference. In the foreign country of our faith, our need for a good guidebook is urgent,” he said. How are the reviews so far? “It’s that deep respect, even in the midst of playful or challenging comments, that comes across with the New American Haggadah,” said a Philadelphia Inquirer reviewer. “Considering the competing pile of Haggadahs at my seder table, there’s a chance it could be. But then again, when considering the illuminated nature of this Haggadah’s text, there’s a better chance I may use it two years in a row,” said Arwe Dworken at Heeb.
Who’s the top rabbi?
Newsweek once again ranked and left up for debate the top rabbis with David Wolpe taking the top spot. “In a series of disclaimers, they seek to head off the standard criticism engendered by such lists. They acknowledge that there are more than 50 worthy rabbis in the US and explain that most of the rabbis they recognized reside on the two coasts because that’s where the major Jewish seminaries and communities are located,” said Ari Ben Goldberg at The Times of Israel. Others were equally critical. Eric Herschthal at The Jewish Week argued, “To be sure, the problem isn’t with Wolpe — a contributor to this paper, and an extremely thoughtful rabbi. It’s with the increasing insignificance of a list made every year. Here’s one suggestion on how to change that: do it every other year, or maybe every five, even ten.” Do it that way, and people will really care about it.
March 29, 2012 | 5:03 am
Posted by Danny Groner
A roundup of the most talked about political and global stories in the Jewish world this week:
France looks ahead
France is still reeling from last week’s shooting attack that took the lives of three children and a rabbi at a Jewish school in Toulouse, and now attention is going toward how the attack might impact the upcoming election. “It enabled Sarkozy to show his capacity to manage crises and put the themes of security and immigration back in the center of the political debate,” said one political operator. But there was already some concern over Sarkozy’s tilt to the right, reported the Jewish Journal. It’s too early to tell, though, said Joseph Strich in The Jerusalem Post. “Now the dice are recast and the cards reshuffled. Toulouse presents Sarkozy as presidential again, putting the other candidates in the shade. More than ever, his campaign slogan, “La France Forte” (Strong France) fits him like a glove.”
Germany’s Jewish mayor
In perhaps as symbolic a move as a political one, a major German city, Frankfurt, has elected a Jewish mayor, the first since WWII. Peter Feldmann of the Social Democratic Party got 57 percent of the vote. He insisted that he didn’t run as the Jewish candidate. “The fact that this issue did not come up in my campaign is a testament to the strength of our open and liberal city.” he said. Another Jew, Ludwig Landmann, held the position from 1924 to 1933. “Germany and myself would appreciate it if you didn’t bring up the Holocaust EVERY time Germany is uttered. Maybe like 1 out of every 2 times? Is that fair?” asked Hipster Jew.
Furor over outposts
Israel’s supreme court dismissed Prime Minister Netanyahu’s “compromise” to keep a West Bank settler outpost intact. “The problem is that to circumvent the court decision by legislation, it must apply to the West Bank. Israeli legislation does not apply to the West Bank! Israel has never annexed or applied Israeli law to the West Bank,” Michael Sfard told Tablet. The New York Times wondered in an editorial what this decision means for the peace process. “Palestinians are despairing that the number of settlements and outposts are expanding so fast that they could soon preclude any chance of a two-state solution. If that is the point, Israel’s own hopes for a peaceful and secure future are seriously at risk.”
Israel vs. skinny models
The dieting craze on the runways has caught some people’s eyes, and Israel is doing something about it. Under a new law, underweight models in advertising will be banned, and they must provide documentation of a BMI of at least 18.5 to gain admission to the industry. “This is a big step in the right direction for advertisements that are more ‘real’ and other countries should start listening to their citizens and following Israel’s lead in banning too-thin models and preventing digitally altered images from attempting to portray to young people that these unrealistic body types represent the world population,” said Dhyana Estephan on the Ad Nauseum blog. But some are skeptical. “Even though it’s great that Israel is taking a stand, one government’s regulations will not impact the global culture that is fashion,” said Jazebel writer Dodai Stewart.
Park Slope vote
Late Tuesday night, the Park Slope Food Co-op in Brooklyn, New York, voted against a motion that would have boycotted against products made in Israel, according to reports. It took place at the group’s monthly meeting, one that got a great deal more attention than their typical gatherings. The controversy had been the topic of some derision in past weeks. “Hummus: beloved by hippies, ultimate-Frisbee players, broke college students. Believed by scientists to diminish aggressiveness, alleviate minor depression, and aid growth. Good with pita bread and baby carrots. What makes it stick in so many craws?” asked Matthew Shaer in New York magazine. And it was also the subject of a Daily Show piece on Tuesday night, leading up to the vote. James Poniewozik wrote at TIME: “Did the show take some cheap shots for laughs? Did it play up a vocal minority over us members who just want to buy our damn organic beets and lamb shanks? Did it reinforce a broad stereotype of NPR liberals re-enacting college politics as grown-ups? Yes, yes, and yes. Was it funny? Hell, yes!”
March 22, 2012 | 5:33 am
Posted by Danny Groner
A roundup of the most talked about political and global stories in the Jewish world this week:
France shooting
During a shootout Thursday, French police killed the suspect accused of being the gunman who reportedly filmed his attack of a Jewish school in Toulouse, France, that left three children and a rabbi dead. French Jews are scared that another attack might be on the horizon. “There can be no copycats of Toulouse here in this country. Attacks that specifically target and kill Jewish children are so abhorrent and unthinkable that they paralyze a community’s ability to function and thrive,” said Paul Goldenberg at JTA. It has left Europe and the entire world on high alert that another terrorist may strike elsewhere, said Heather Horn in The Atlantic. And with evidence that the man was Muslim, said Marc Tracy at Tablet, Israel may have to get involved. “I find it extraordinarily distasteful to alter my calculus for the whims of anti-Semitic murderers, but on the other hand, Israel was created in part to deny anti-Semitic murderers, and if the potential for anti-Semitic murder is allowed to factor in favor of a strike, I don’t see why it shouldn’t also be allowed to factor against one.”
Axelrod’s comments
Obama adviser David Axelrod caught flak for his choice of words this week after he called Mitt Romney’s ad campaign in Illinois as “the Mittzkrieg” on Twitter. The comment insinuated a comparison between Romney’s efforts to distance himself from Rick Santorum and the blitzkrieg, a military strategy used by the Nazis during WWII. “It’s just worth pointing out: a) two can play at that game; b) you know who else had a neatly combed moustache and a dangling forelock; and b) with a little trimming and a slight darkening of Axelrod’s care-grayed whiskers, the truth really comes out,” said Tim Cavanaugh at Reason. But not everyone thought it was such a big deal. “Referring to it is not referring to the Holocaust. This is a bit like taking offense to someone mentioning ‘the Desert Fox’—too soon!” joked Slate’s Dave Weigel.
Sandra Fluke’s Jewish boyfriend
Sandra Fluke, the Georgetown grad student who burst onto the political scene earlier this year over the birth control debate, has a Jewish boyfriend. And his ties have some conservatives wondering about whether the whole controversy was set up. “Those who participate in these smears cannot stand anyone from a group that isn’t white, Christian and male asserting him or herself, being successful, or standing up to oppression,” said Sarah Seltzer in The Jewish Daily Forward. “Oh my god! Not only are these rich, socialist, college-lovin’ Jewish Jews rich, socialist and college-lovin’, but they’re actually concerned with helping others? You are so busted, Ms. Fluke! Gotcha!” mused Kalli Joy Gray at Daily Kos.
Seatte cancels event
The Israeli-Palestinian conflict landed in Seattle this week as the city’s commission that represents gays canceled a City Hall visit for a visiting delegation of Israeli gay leaders, according to reports. The delegation is traveling to other West Coast cities this week, but only Seattle cut them out of the agenda. It came amid pressure from protesters who cite Israel’s poor treatment of Palestinians based on its positive record on gay rights, known as “pinkwashing.” “This is absolutely absurd from any perspective. Israel is one of the most gay-friendly countries in the world,” said Ben Shapiro at Breitbart.com. “They deserve as much contempt, opprobrium and rotten fruit as one might toss at those who congratulate themselves for boycotting Jews,” said one blogger. “No word from the religious fundamentalist Sunni radicals at Hamas or Islamic Jihad on whether they appreciated the show of solidarity from Seattle’s gays,” said another.
Backstreet Boy tour
Backstreet Boys singer Howie Dorough is headed to Israel soon and he’s inviting his fans to come along with him. He will perform at the Sea of Galilee, go clubbing with the group, and join them for some tours of famous sites during the 10-day trip. “What could be better than enjoying homemade hummus with Howie?” asked Amber Katz at MTV.com. But it might not be all that it’s cracked up to be, worried one blogger. “The last reason why I’d be hesitant to do this trip is that it seems very Christian-focused and I’m not Christian. I’m afraid I wouldn’t really be able to get nearly as much out of it.”
March 15, 2012 | 5:06 am
Posted by Danny Groner
A roundup of the most talked about political and global stories in the Jewish world this week:
Obama post-AIPAC
“I categorically reject the idea persistently and irrationally advanced by far too may in the Jewish community that President Obama is an ‘enemy of Israel,’ or ‘anti-Israel.’ I find that attitude to be despicable and unwarranted by facts on the ground,” said Rabbi Gerald Skolnick in The Jewish Week. Others aren’t so sure. “He has officially thrown Israel under the bus; for we all know, if Obama wins a second term, during which he will no longer need the money and votes of the American people, he will turn on Israel definitively without reproach,” said Lauri B. Regan at American Thinker. And the whole debate may be bad for American Jews, argued Gil Troy in The Jerusalem Post. “Asking whether Obama is pro-Israel or anti-Israel is immature and reductionist.” Maybe we’ll have to just wait for a Jewish president...
Romney support
Presidential candidate Mitt Romney may have had some setbacks at primaries this week, but he’s picking up steam when it comes to the Republican Jewish vote. “Top Jewish donors account for more than 10% of the $36 million raised by Romney’s super PAC,” reported the Jewish Daily Forward. But he may have to tread carefully, warned Jennifer Rubin in The Washington Post. “Certainly Romney’s strong support or Israel may strike a chord with these voters; But just as important for evangelical, pro-Israel voters is the mistreatment of their religious brethren in the Middle East,” she said. “I’m not suggesting Romney take up the cause of Middle East Christians just to get votes. But this is one where doing the right thing, smart foreign policy and good electoral strategy all coincide. And that doesn’t happen very often.” There’s also always the chance that if Romney gets the nomination, Jews might stay home form the polls.
Florida’s contriversial vote
Florida last month made a bold stand with a resolution that proclaims Israel’s “God-given right of self-governance and self-defense upon the entirety of its own lands” and says that the Jewish state is not “an occupier of the lands of others,” according to JTA. Some worry that this language makes it appear that the state is advocating a one-state solution. “These Florida resolutions are good examples of what it looks like to hug a friend so tightly that you unintentionally suffocate him,” said a JStreet blogger. Others worry about larger issues at hand. “Resolutions such as those in Florida will only succeed in setting off a firestorm of criticism, inviting charges of discrimination against Palestinians, and undermining the position of Israel’s government, which supports a two-state solution. The way to support Israel and to counter the one-state campaign is embrace the two-state solution and enthusiastically advocate for it in every forum,” said Rabbi Eric H. Yoffe in The Jerusalem Post.
Jew Pond renamed
The small New Hampshire town of Mont Vernon agreed Tuesday to change the name of Jew Pond to something less controversial. The new name hasn’t been reported yet. It was originally called Spring Pond when it was dug in the 1920s but it had adopted the new name shortly thereafter. “It’s too bad it’s gotten to be such an issue when it’s never even referred to or portrayed in a negative way. It’s more like, ‘It’s the Jew’s Pond. The new man in town,’” said one resident. Others made light of the issue. “Let’s just call this thing Freedom Fry Pond and move on, New Hampshire,” joked Emma Carmichael at Gawker.
‘People of the Facebook’
During a visit to California, Israeli President Shimon Peres wanted to show off his new social media page and joked that Jews are “People of the Facebook.” “You have to speak the language of the young people,” he said. “Within the first 24 hours of the launch, Peres received the ‘Like’ thumbs-up from some 30,000 people – some of whom, in all likelihood, think they could do a better job than the politicians as partners for peace,” said Greer Fay Cashman in The Jerusalem Post. Others were a bit more cynical about the enterprise. “So basically it’s just one big advertisement for Zuckerberg and Co.—but admittedly, Facebook has become less of a brand and more a way of life. One which the Jewish state apparently embraces, with absolute sincerity!” said Simone Wilson at LA Weekly.
March 8, 2012 | 5:10 am
Posted by Danny Groner
Billboard written in Hebrew and English sponsored by the American Atheists in the Brooklyn borough, NY, Mar. 7. Photo by REUTERS/Shannon StapletonA roundup of the most talked about political and global stories in the Jewish world this week:
Obama-Netanyahu summit
The two world leaders sat down on Monday amid much anticipation. To no one’s surprise, the topic of Iran dominated headlines. “Mr. Obama is right that military action should only be the last resort, but Israel should not doubt this president’s mettle. Neither should Iran,” said a New York Times editorial. “Understandably, Netanyahu is jittery over the prospect of Iran getting a nuclear bomb. After all, he bears a great responsibility for safeguarding his country,” said DeWayne Wickham in USA Today. “But Netanyahu should neither doubt the public assurances Obama has given Israel, nor try to use the president’s political adversaries to pressure him into letting Israel dictate when the U.S. sends its servicemembers to war.”
Obama’s AIPAC speech
“Barack Obama’s speech before AIPAC was an important political speech for him, both in terms of defending his record before a Jewish audience as well as an attempt to clarify the administration’s position on Iran after weeks of confusion,” said Israel National News. So what good did it serve? “His speech today was aimed at giving Israelis good reason to trust him based on past supportive deeds - while promising very little,” said Shmuel Rosner in the Jewish Journal. “If Mr. Obama wants a pat on the back, he should make it clear that he will do everything in his power to prevent Iran from developing a nuclear weapons capability, and that he will stand by Israel if it must act. He came one step closer to that stance on Sunday,” said Dan Senor in The Wall Street Journal. “Let’s hope this is the beginning of a policy change and not just election year rhetoric.”
New York Times ad
A combative ad in the New York Times ahead of the AIPAC conference had many people crying foul. “Because they did not call me, I have now become associated, in the public mind, with positions I do not believe in. That is neither effective advocacy, nor fair use of my name and words. The Emergency Committee for Israel may have had the right to use my name and words that I have spoken in the past, but it was not right for them to do so without my approval,” said Alan Dershowitz. Others called it was just an intimidation tactic to go after people who don’t support Netanyahu.
Billboard nixed
A billboard bought by an atheist group won’t get to go up in Brooklyn, New York, after all after the owner of the building inside of a Jewish neighborhood refused to put it up. “You know it’s a myth … and you have a choice,” it said in Arabic and Hebrew. “The in-your-face billboard seems a strange — and highly ineffective — way to make a point. Atheists esteem the idea of rational man. Using a billboard — like any other huckster selling a product — undermines their core argument,” said a Star-Ledger editorial. It’s time to change the way we treat each other, said Andrew Silow-Carroll in the New Jersey Jewish Times. “it’s always easy to find instances of religiously inspired malfeasance. What’s harder is creating the ideas, institutions, and communities that offer the ends and means of being fully human.”
Purim message
What should we be focused on this holiday? “The primary lesson of Purim for today’s Jewish leaders is that just as in the original Purim story the Jews had to ultimately defend themselves so too today the Jews cannot pin their national survival on vague promises of support as the Iranian nuclear clock continues to tick,” said Yedidya Atlas at the Algemeiner. “This Purim, as we learn about the dangers of tyranny, may we learn to convert our gratitude for living in modern democracy into action that helps to make others free,” said Rabbi Shmuly Yanklowitz in The Jewish Week. Forget your worries: Kick back and have some fun.
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