Thursday, November 30, 2017

In Israel

Ultra-”Orthodox”
Want benefits
Sans obligations

ISRAEL IS INVOLVED, SADLY, IN A conflict between “Orthodox” extremists and all other Israeli citizens.

The conflict is the result of a Ben Gurion “compromise” that (a) exempted yeshiva “boys” from serving in the military or national service (equates to VISTA in the U.S.) and (b) exempts the extremists’ organizations from taxation.

Some in the current government are attempting to force the yeshiva “boys” to do SOMETHING for the country that protects their rights to sit on their posteriors, often while their wives work and raise large families.

Ben Gurion needed the “Orthodox” parties to get support for his new government, in particular to prevent Begin from becoming prime minister, ergo the “compromise”: the “Orthodox” would join the government aligned with Ben Gurion’s Labor party, in return they were exempt from everything the average Israeli had to do.

To be very clear, not every observant Jew in Israel dodges his duty to the State. There even are yeshivot – Hesder yeshivot – whose students serve in the army. Many observant young women perform national service rather then military service. National service is an option open to the “Orthodox” yeshiva “boys.”

When did the “Orthodox” decide that studying the talmuds – there are two: Bavli and Yerushalmi – was more important than protecting their right to do so? When did the “Orthodox” decide that studying the talmuds was more important than providing for their families?

It was not always this way.

Back in the day, when Israel was battling the Canaanites, etc., even the Cohen haGadol (chief priest) went to war with the fighters, The only people exempt from going to war were (a) those newly wed, (b) those with an as yet undedicated house, and (c) cowards.

We had the Torah then, but not the talmuds. (We need the talmuds to explain some parts of the Torah.)

Perhaps it was during the time that the rabbis were laying the groundwork for the talmuds that someone decided they were too good to participate in the county alongside “amai haaretz” – the common man. I have a book, Masters of the Talmud1 that provides mini-bios of many of the contributors to the talmuds; I don’t recall any of the luminaries having military experience. Most of the contributors had a source of income (other than begging); some were international diplomats when that job was riskier than today.

IN ANY EVENT, Jews – including Orthodox rabbis – have been “going to war” for generations. I’ve known a few (rabbis in the military) personally and even more non-rabbinical observant Jews in the U.S. military. These man had studied in yeshivot and they continued their independent studies in the field as well as haverut studies when they were on a base. The military was, for them at the time, a job, albeit a job for their country.

I’m a dual-national but because I’m in the States and not Israel, I know it is NOT my place to tell the Israelis what to do.

Still, it seems to me that if a person (or group of people) receives government benefits – aid to schools, welfare, etc. – the recipients of the government’s largess (some of which comes from outside Israel) there out to be some type quid pro quo.

Since the “Orthodox” extremists (both Ashkenazi and Sefardi) contend that it is the Torah (that, by them, means the talmuds) that defend Israel, not the military, the least these yeshiva “boys” could do would be to to to the fronts with the soldiers and study in mobile classrooms (trailers, caravans), clearly marked so the enemy won’t attack at them. Allotting space on a ship for three or four yeshiva “boys” probably is out of the question, but surely some arrangements could be made.

It is interesting that some of the “boys” graduate to be schnoorers; schnoorers who fly around the world begging for this cause or that … “My son, one of 17 children, needs money to get married.” (That’s exactly what one told me; chutzpah.)

I have no problem with yeshivot, but I do have a problem with yeshivot “boys” not giving anything back to the community.

Let the “boys” go out in teams to perform national service; when their job for the day is over, they can sit and study as late as they like – however not so late that they are unable to do their jobs the next day; even the talmuds demand that.


1. Masters of the Talmud, Alfred J. Kolatch, Jon. David Publishers, ISBN 0-8246-0434-2 ©2003


PLAGIARISM is the act of appropriating the literary composition of another, or parts or passages of his writings, or the ideas or language of the same, and passing them off as the product of one’s own mind.

Comments on Haridim

Monday, November 27, 2017

Opuscula

Everyone already
Knows the secret

According to Arutz 71 (a/k/a Israel National News), Israeli Ambassador to the United Nations Danny Danon says that Israel enjoys warm relations with many Arab countries despite the fact that these countries officially refuse to recognize Israel's existence.

That has to come as a surprise to the one or two people who didn’t already know.

Back in the day, c 1977, I worked for one of Israel’s electronics giants. (There were then two.)

I wandered to the production line on one occasion and I noticed there were product labels in what I (incorrectly) thought was Arabic. (The script was Farsi.) What’s this, I innocently asked. I was told that we had an Iranian partner that assembled Made in Israel components, under license to my employer. The Iranian partner put its name on the product.

It also was well known that Israeli-made air conditioners were popular in Saudia Arabia. The sheiks, being pragmatic, wanted ACs that could withstand Saudia’s environment. Both of the major Israeli electronics firms exported their products. All of the Made in Israel products arrived via intermediaries, but the products’ origin was obvious.

No one advertised the fact that, if one paid close attention, a number of Made in Israel products could be found in Muslum-dominated countries, including those of Israel’s neighbors who refused to recognize the State.

Danon’s “admission” that Israel has ties to several of its Muslim neighbors – to the best of my limited knowledge, Iran no longer is counted among those neighbors – uncovers a secret that has not been a secret for decades.

The trade with the Israel’s Muslim neighbors probably has played at least a small part in precenting another multi-national invasion by Muslim armies. Peace with Egypt – made by two former terrorists, Begin and Sadat -- and with Jordan also play a role; all three countries benefit from quiet borders (albeit Egypt is sufering at the hands – and bombs – of fellow Muslims).


1. Arutz 7: http://tinyurl.com/y7cxzu8s


PLAGIARISM is the act of appropriating the literary composition of another, or parts or passages of his writings, or the ideas or language of the same, and passing them off as the product of one’s own mind.

Comments on Danon’s “secret”

Sunday, November 26, 2017

Opuscula

Hotovely is right:
U.S. Jews don’t
Know Israeli life

THERE’S A BIG FLAP in Israel and in the U.S. over a remark Israel’s deputy Foreign Minister made about American Jews.
According to two news sites, she said that U.S. Jews have "convenient lives. They don't know how it feels to be attacked by rockets." 

Unless an American Jew has lived – not just visited, but LIVED – in Israel, her remarks are 100 percent accurate.

Meanwhile, wishy-washy Bebe Natanyahu severely admonished Deputy Foreign Minister Tzipi Hotovely for making offensive and trivializing remarks about U.S. Jews in a television interview.

IT SEEMS THE JEWS Ms. Hotovely so insulted are non-observant Conservative and Reform. Admittedly, while the so-called “Orthodox” population is growing, non-observant Jews far outnumber those who are observant. These people, collectively, provide Israel with a large percentage of its foreign currency.

Hotovely does have support among at least one U.S. Jewish organization.
The Coalition for Jewish Values on Thursday expressed support for Deputy Foreign Minister Tzipi Hotovely (Likud), following a backlash against statements she made during an interview on i24 Wednesday about the relationship between Israel and the American Jewish community.

In Israel, the unrealists harangue Hotovely even in the one Israeli newspaper that is not solidly liberal/left.

Israel HaYom’s Sunday (26 Nov 17) e-edition includes an opinion piece by Yoav Limor who opines that
Hotovely's remarks displayed a combination of ignorance and lack of judgment. A quick review of the subject would have made Hotovely aware that many American Jews have served and continue to serve in the U.S. military, and that quite a few have been decorated. Over half a million American Jews served in the military in World War II. Today, over 100,000 Jews do so, some in senior positions. Thousands of American Jews have been killed in active service.

Hotovely also did direct damage to Israel with her comments. This is not just because thousands of Americans serve in the Israel Defense Forces at any given time, but because those who want the support, financial and otherwise, of American Jews should be willing to listen to their opinions on every subject. And as for Hotovely's claim that American Jews do not understand the situation in Israel because they do not have missiles falling on them, one could say the same about Hotovely. As someone who lives in Rehovot, she has no idea what the children in the Gaza border communities and near Israel's northern border must endure.

The “American Jews” who Hotovely criticized (a) don’t serve in the U.S. military and (b) don’t send their sons and daughters to live in Israel and certainly do not send their sons and daughters to the IDF.

Limor’s remark that As someone who lives in Rehovot, she has no idea what the children in the Gaza border communities and near Israel's northern border must endure. That is an assumption based on his own opinion of the minister; unless he lives with her and knows her every thought, how COULD he know what she thinks.

Hotovely's opinion of American Jews – and it was NOT a blanket statement despite what her detractors would have everyone think – is based on the American Jews’ statements to the media. Altough not all Conservative and Reform Jews are leftists, a majority are, and the majority DOES rule. Observant Jews, among the European Jews this translates to “Orthodox” Jews, largely support Israel, even if they have second thoughts about its prime minister and his knesset, a knesset that tolerates members who actively work to destroy Israel.

Limor contends that Hotovely (and by extension, all Israels in and out of government) should be willing to listen to their (American Jews’) opinions on every subject. Listening is one thing, kow-towing to American Jews who have zero first hand knowledge of life in Israel other than perhaps a brief visit to Tel Aviv – and not South Tel Aviv, mind you. This willingness to listen applies as well to the U.S. government; listening never should be considered doing what America wants at Israel’s expense. (Should the U.S. government listen to Israelis and do as Israelis tell them? That makes as much sense as the other way around.)

Limor remarked that Hotovely said American Jews do not understand the situation in Israel because they do not have missiles falling on them. I wonder, how many American Jews have had rockets fall on or near them except those of us who have lived and worked in Israel. (I had that “pleasure” when I lived in Zefat.) Has anyone heard of rockets falling on Jews in Manhattan, Los Angeles, or even south Florida? Terrorists’ bombs, certainly; that we share with Israelis, but the last rockets to fall on Americans fired by a foreign power where during the War of 1814 (when Francis Scott Key wrote the impossible-to-sing song that became the U.S.’ national anthem).

Limor is entitled to his opinion, but in typical liberal fashion, he missed the mark on reality. It is unfortunate that the editors of Israel HaYom’s e-edition failed to include any credentials for Limor. Is/was he an American? Is he an observant Jew? What are the sources for his claims about American Jews.

Finally, I’d like to know what relevance the number of Jews fighting against the Axis in World Wars 1 and 2 has to do with Jews today. Today, most Jews, even observant ones, are discouraged from joining the U.S. military, although there are those of us to did join and serve. (In times of danger, not before … thus it has been since at least the 1600s; see http://www.bartleby.com/73/1731.html .)

Finally, Limor ends up his misguided opinion piece with Hotovely's comments indicate she is not fit for the role of deputy foreign minister. While most of those involved in Israeli politics are pyromaniacs, it would be wise to keep them as far away as possible from the tinderbox. Apparently he has never heard Henry Kissinger or John Kerry, U.S. secretaries of state who never had a problem chastising Israel for defending itself.

I suppose even an allegedly right-wing publication needs to have at least one leftist’s opinion to show balance – or in Limor’’s case, ignorance of reality.


PLAGIARISM is the act of appropriating the literary composition of another, or parts or passages of his writings, or the ideas or language of the same, and passing them off as the product of one’s own mind.

Comments on Hotovely is right<>