Protocols
Protocols
A group of Jews endeavors towards total domination of the blogosphere.


Saturday, October 04, 2003  

In the "out with the new and in with the old" department:

Got a chance to check out the Jerusalem Post's new format this weekend. I must confess that it looks an awful lot like a bad college newspaper. Some extremely iffy layout and headline choices reinforce this perception ("Haredim Cry Fowl over Kapparot Chickens" is my personal favorite for NY Post-ism), and the complete lack of left wing voices on its staff seem to trumpet it as "The Commentator East." Come to think of it, even we had more lefties, what with Pinky on the masthead. You have to wonder, though, why "Israel's biggest Anglo Daily" has decided to change its format for the sole purpose of looking smaller and more wiedly (it's even the same size as the commie was) - is size everything? What about journalistic professionalism?

posted by Anonymous | 9:09 PM |


Friday, October 03, 2003  

CBN News - The Spiritual Road Map to Middle East Peace:

Hess believes today’s diplomatic efforts contradict the Bible. 'They're saying if they divide up the land of Israel and establish a Palestinian state, that this will bring peace. But the Bible says in the book of Joel, it says that God will bring judgment against those who divide up the land of Israel,' he said.
Yet Hess says the covenants also hold a blessing for the Palestinians. 'The Palestinians will find blessings coming to them like they can not imagine if the God of Israel… if they embrace the Jewish people and if they bless them and if they stop violence and start blessing,' Hess said.
Funny how there's no scriptural reference for his second assertion...

posted by Voice From The Hinterlands | 12:13 PM |
 

First Black Female Student Rabbi Leads Congregation. In most situations, I'd say "but how do they know?" But given that Reform and Conservative ordination is so tightly held by their central organizations, it's rather likely that they do know.

Stanton, who is 40, thought she was "too old and too poor," to switch careers and study to be a rabbi.
Given that Reform and Conservative rabbis often stand to really rake in the cash, and that she's probably a hot commodity, I wouldn't be surprised to see a sort of bidding war.

posted by Steven I. Weiss | 11:45 AM |
 

9 a.m. -- The Interreligious and International Federation for World Peace pushes for establishment of an interreligious council within the U.N. system; New Yorker Hotel, Eighth Avenue at 34th Street, Sutton Place Suite, third floor.
--2 p.m. to 4 p.m. _ March for peace and reconciliation; from Israeli Mission, Second Avenue between 43rd and 44th streets, to rally at Dag Hammarskjold Plaza, First Avenue and 47th Street.
Perhaps Elder Pinchas can provide some context?
Ephraims links to this press release and the list of sponsoring organizations seems pretty limp.

posted by Steven I. Weiss | 11:24 AM |
 

New York State Sen. Tom Duane gets pissed at Assmeblyman Dov Hikind for his comments about homosexuality & same-sex marriage. Hikind's semi-back-pedaling on the issue is particularly fun to watch.

posted by Steven I. Weiss | 10:07 AM |
 

New York 1 will cover live the installation of the new Brooklyn/Queens Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio beginning at 2 P.M.

posted by Steven I. Weiss | 9:33 AM |


Thursday, October 02, 2003  

Dr. Laura's in the news again. Oh dear.

posted by Voice From The Hinterlands | 8:56 PM |
 

7 p.m. -- Book signing with Anthony DeStefano, author of ``A Travel Guide to Heaven''; Barnes & Noble, 240 East 86th St.
Here's the website, where you'll find endorsements from Susan Lucci and Lee Iacocca. And, in what seems a necessary condition to become a prominent Christian these days, the author
was awarded the "Defender of Israel" medal from the International Jewish Center for Hope, in Jerusalem, given in recognition of his "longtime, enthusiastic, and vigorous support of the State of Israel and for Jewish causes throughout the world."

posted by Steven I. Weiss | 4:10 PM |
 

Yeah, talk about esoteric: an intruiging piece in Haaretz on Levinas' and Elie Wiesel's spiritual mentor - a bizarrely quixotic figure known only as: "Mr. Chouchani!"

Sounds like the tagline from a movie, no?

posted by Anonymous | 3:20 PM |
 

Answering my question of how R' Amnon was able to write unesaneh tokef if he had no arms or legs, Israeli scholar Hannanel Mack writes a fascinating piece in last week's Haaretz bringing up the prevalent theory among contemporary scholars of piyyut that R' Amnon did not write the poem - or even, in fact, exist. Instead, these scholars posit that the prayer dates from the 6th or 7th century Palestine - the schools of Kalir and Yannai (I identified Kalir as 8 or 9th century Byzantine) - based on geniza fragments and what Mack refers to as its "style and spirit."

Mack's own addition to the question, however, concerns the role of angels - are they judged on rosh hashana and yom kippur or not? The prayer seems to indicate that angels are judged - and Mack connects it with the appearance of an aggadic tradition at the same time as Kalir and Yannai lived that introduced the motif of angels being judged along with man on yom kippur. Consequently, he argues, kalir or someone in his cricle probably wrote the prayer.

While I'm all for shattering myths, I somewhat troubled by this argument. First off, nearly every kalir poem I've seen incorporates some form of acrostic scheme, extensive verse and midrashic citation, egregious grammar liberties for the sake of the use of these citations, and a regular rhyme scheme.

Unesanah Tokef, however, has none of these. It is limited to two or three direct citations (shofar gadol, kevakoras roeh edro, etc, and these are more allusions than citations), has an sporadic simple internal line rhyme scheme (yeichafezun/yochaizun, yitaka/yishama, etc.), a simple narrative structure, and NO detectable acrostic.

I don't see Kalir here at all, and I wonder how these (admittedly great scholars of piyyut as they are) people can argue that he wrote it.

If anything, its simple form reflects the work of a minor Ashkenaz leader (and he was minor precisely b/c he wrote no poetry - in Med. Germany, writing piyyut was the sine qua non of rabbinic reputation) who turned his hands to writing poetry after suffering a great deal. The basic, simple, gut-wrenching language and imagery reflects this era far more than it does the sophisticated and cerebral work of Kalir.


posted by Anonymous | 3:13 PM |
 

For those interested, the Food 911 episode where they make falafel with the JAP is on right now.

posted by Steven I. Weiss | 1:02 PM |
 

My post on religious pluralism and the "Judeo-Christian" tradition seems to have generated a good amount of comment and discussion. Just to add a bit more fuel to the fire, check out the 9.29.03 edition of Sightings, which also deals with Religious Pluralism:

Needless to say, the orthodox theologians in all these traditions are nervous, at best, and outraged at worst, since pluralist theology would undercut all claims that a faith, e.g., the Christian, is not only a distinctive, but an exclusive way to God. Pluralism, according to Allen, says that "all the world's great religions are valid paths of salvation." It contrasts itself both to "exclusivism" and even "inclusivism," the view that only one religion saves and followers of others can be included." (Post Vatican II Catholicism takes a measured and guarded inclusivist position.)
Questions raised at Birmingham: "Is it important to persuade religious institutions of the pluralist views, or it better to make the case from the outside, assuming that institutions will catch up?" "Are the pluralists on a frontier where the mainstream will eventually arrive, or is pluralism destined to remain on the margins?" "How far is too far?" Do pluralists want "dialogue" or do they want to "evangelize" people into pluralist views?
All good questions. As Yuter (who now hails from the same source as Sightings), Norman Lamm, and Richard Joel (over lunch last week) all basically agree "pluralism is the ability to respect someone else's right to be wrong" (the blunt formulation is Joel's).

posted by Voice From The Hinterlands | 12:23 PM |
 

RavGoldvicht.com:

We are glad to announce that tapes of Rav Goldvicht's Shiurim are now available. The Torah Learning Institute is a not-for-profit organization dedicated to "Hafatzas Torah" - assisting Rav Goldvicht in his tireless efforts to make the words of Torah available to as many of us as possible.
Weird. Very, very weird. Why this can't just be part of some other website like Shiur.net, I have no clue...probably because whoever made the site has some OCD-like approach to Goldvicht. Even weirder, it's actually advertising on OnlySimchas (Scroll to bottom left).
I was in his shiur once, and he really disliked the way I'd dress. One time he stopped me on the way out of class and asked me to tie my shoelaces and he was stunned when I refused. So one night I was wearing my Unabomber outfit at 186th & Amsterdam and nodded at him passing by. He stared at me for a moment and then, upon recognition, pronounced "Next semester, you go ozer shiur."

posted by Steven I. Weiss | 12:17 PM |
 

As EphShap notes, the Dhengah Roov has a Frumster ad.

posted by Voice From The Hinterlands | 9:04 AM |
 

In the "I guess I'd better start dating Jews" department:

Check out this piece by Avi Shafran on intermarriage and why opposing it is not racist - it's in this week's Forward. Having written yet another article that's decent to good in content and style (and he gets extra points for referencing the N. Korean Juche religion - shows he reads the New Yorker regularly, since they did a piece on N. Korea recently, and without it, no one west of Khazakhstan would ever have heard of Juche), Shafran shows why he's a much more legitimate Haredi voice than some other propagandists whose names I'll refrain from mentioning this week. The article avoids sounding preachy or strident, instead achieving earnest argumentation.

Kudos, Rabbi Avi.


posted by Anonymous | 1:16 AM |
 

Reader Ami sends in Shwarzenegger admitting it was wrong to toast Waldheim. The unspoken story here is how significantly the Jewish protest on this issue was obviously taken seriously. Shwarzenegger could've shrugged it off forever, hiding behind the Simon Wiesenthal Center. Jews could've reasonably expected him not to address the claims against him within the context of a campaign -- in fact many, including myself, did. Of course, he didn't bring it up on his own, Sean Hannity brought it up to him, but Hannity seems to be getting clearance from the campaign before these interviews anyway. Alternatively, this could just be a pander.

posted by Steven I. Weiss | 12:37 AM |


Wednesday, October 01, 2003  

The Jewish Press Letters Section for the week is up. Although there are many candidates for Stupid Letter Of the Week, I will refrain from spotlighting any of them. It is, after all, the middle of the aseret yemei teshuvah and Yom Kippur is right around the corner...

posted by Voice From The Hinterlands | 9:49 PM |
 

Rush defends...

All this has become the tempest that it is because I must have been right about something.
Dude, you are right about everything.
If I wasn't right there wouldn't be this cacophony of outrage that has sprung up in the sports writer community.
Right, sure, the cacophony had nothing to do with the fact that your comments were offensive to black people.

Incidentally, Rush could have made the same football related point – that the player in question was not as good as the media made him out to be – without mentioning race at all.

If ESPN knew what was good for them, they would relieve Mr. Rush of his duties and send him back to Fox News where he belongs.

posted by Anonymous | 5:57 PM |
 

Rush the Racist?

While giving his commentary on ESPN this weekend, Rush Limbaugh apparently made some comments that can be interpreted as racist. In downplaying the success of Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Donovan McNabb, the ever balanced Rush said,

I don't think he's been that good from the get-go… I think what we've had here is a little social concern in the NFL. The media has been very desirous that a black quarterback do well. There is a little hope invested in McNabb and he got a lot of credit for the performance of this team that he didn't deserve. The defense carried this team.
For those keeping score at home, McNabb was the No. 2 pick in the 1999 draft, and the Eagles are 36-22 when he starts. He has completed 987 of 1,750 passes for 10,341 yards, 71 TDs and 41 interceptions in 57 regular-season games. He also has run for 2,040 yards and 14 TDs. In seven playoff games, he has completed 150 of 248 passes for 1,459 yards, nine TDs and six interceptions. He also has 210 yards rushing and three TDs.

So it would seem that Rush uses the same kind of facts for his sports commentary that he does for his political commentary. I just cannot believe so many people in this country get their news from him.

But Rush defended himself to his automaton followers:
We supposedly have freedom of speech in this country… An opinion is an opinion.
That is right Rush, you are entitled to your opinions, however disturbing they may be. Just differentiate for all of us between your facts and your fiction.

posted by Anonymous | 2:55 PM |
 

This post is somewhat out of the blue, but who do you think are the best Disney Movie Villans of all time? My votes (in order) go to The Horned King, Maleficent, and Jafar. Scar is a close runner-up. The Horned King gets extra points for being so scary that The Black Cauldron was actually rated PG.

posted by Voice From The Hinterlands | 12:50 PM |
 

Doug Rushkoff's newest book is online as a free PDF file. Its called "Open Source Democracy" and the first chapter is entitled "From Moses to Modems: Demystifying the Storytelling and Taking Control". Sounds familiar, no?

posted by Voice From The Hinterlands | 12:40 PM |
 

USATODAY.com - Church-and-state standoffs spread over USA:

Respondents were generally tolerant of other, unspecified faiths — but less so of Islam. Though most approve of Ten Commandments monuments in public areas, 64% oppose a monument to Islam's Koran.
The discrepancy is partly residue from the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, says Muslim scholar Muqtedar Khan, director of international studies at Adrian College in Adrian, Mich., and a visiting scholar at the Brookings Institution in Washington. But it is more attributable to evangelical Christians distorting the religion and to widespread ignorance of Islam, he says.
'Most Americans do not realize that all the Ten Commandments are in the Koran,' Khan says. 'As a Muslim, I'm offended by court orders to remove the Ten Commandments. This would be true of 98% of Muslims.'
So much for "Judeo-Christian", whatever that meant?

posted by Voice From The Hinterlands | 12:20 PM |
 

The guy who had sex in St. Patrick's Cathedral for the Opie & Anthony radio show, which subsequently brought his arrest and their cancellation, is dead, having had a heart attack before trial. A martyr to his cause, he'll meet 72 virgins in heaven.

posted by Steven I. Weiss | 9:58 AM |
 

I just made my first stop at Out of Step Jew, to find out that Emil Fackenheim's been dead for a week. I'm surprised I haven't seen more about this -- I thought he was already dead, actually. His philosophy was crap, but he was influential anyway.

posted by Steven I. Weiss | 9:56 AM |
 

Rabbi Styx discusses the reaction to his Rosh HaShanah sermon:

That is, I am blaming my listeners for not actually listening. I imagine them sitting there, thinking of cheese, and perking up only intermittently when a strange word hits their ear (or they run out of cheese). If what I say sounds like something they already know about, they assume that I said the familiar and not actually what I said.
But can I blame them for thinking that I'm stupid when I think that they are stupid? I need to be clearer in my sermons. I had a good excuse on Rosh Hashanah - some idiots were making a commotion in the front row (and eventually left the room) which thoroughly threw me off. I had to curtail my talk and I couldn't say what I wanted to say. But when someone misunderstands my sermon, I need to blame myself first.
Bottom line is still the same: tragedy is hitting us all around, do teshuva. Gmar Tov.
Why Cheese? I suppose that the people who would've been thinking about booze or herring were all already at the Kiddush Club...

posted by Voice From The Hinterlands | 8:57 AM |
 

Said Slichot tonite. Was not inspired. I still stand by my last post.

Tomorrow nite is Shlosh Esrei Middos. Maybe that'll be more moving.

posted by Anonymous | 12:34 AM |


Tuesday, September 30, 2003  

Reader/Blogger David sends in an Ebay link appropriate to the season - Maftir Yona for Dhengah Roov Shlit"a:

I put this in for a friend that doesn't have a computer.Don't ask me what it says. Mir farkoift Maftir Yona tzu m'chabbed zein der Roov Yoim Hakodesh in Dhengah Bais Medresh. Er vos koift es ken arein kimmen far a presenlecha ba'gegenish mitten Reb'n Shlit'a erev Yoim Hakadosh far a bracha un lekach. Dee oilum zul minadav zein S'chumim hegoinim in a bakovidiga oifen un nisht areinlegin a bid the lasteh regeh (sniping bla'z) Der vos koift es muz baztalen erev Yoim Hakodesh fahr er vet treffen zich mitten Roov, uder dorch paypal, uder money order, uder cash. Fahr dey groisser mitzvah mir hubben bakommen a heter from der Rabonim Shlita vos huben ge'asart de shmutzidiga internet. Fahr mer pruttim shick an e-mail tzu der Gabbai at: gabbai@dhengah.org Shkoiach un gamar chasimah toiva. I reserve the option to cancel this auction at any time due to prior local sale.
For further research, check out the Roov's homepage. If you speak Yiddish, I'd really appreciate translations, especially since I'm honestly not sure if this is all a big joke or not. Either way, a Rebbe with an internet presence is a shocking discovery, and surely testament to the depravity that pervades even the frum world these days. As David notes, "it's things like this auction that led the girls to run away." Indeed.
UPDATE: Even more shocking, the top bid's gone from $9.90 to $1,524.00, and there's still 3 days to go. Wow.

posted by Voice From The Hinterlands | 11:04 PM |
 

Joe Kashnow, a former NCSYer from Baltimore and now a soldier with the US forces in Iraq, was hurt last week in an ambush on the road to Baghdad.

posted by Steven I. Weiss | 7:57 PM |
 

Reader HK sends in a link to "Jews and Christians Join to Support the Ten Commandments" a story on Toward Tradition, a group that will "oppose secular fundamentalists' attempts to ban the Ten Commandments from public display." And who's our man on the scene? Rabbi Daniel Lapin, of course, alongside neo-Confederate booster Georgia Governor Sonny Perdue.
Great.

posted by Steven I. Weiss | 7:11 PM |
 

Jason Maoz of the Jewish Press maintains a weekly item called "Media Monitor," which, not-so-curiously, is rarely about media or monitoring it. Last week he came pretty close, endorsing a number of websites. What I found cute was the fact that it is impossible he hasn't come across Protocols, given the sites he does list (which he presumably reads). So either he chooses not to read (and subsequently list) Protocols -- unlike his colleagues at the Forward and Jewish Week, among other Jewish media types and leaders -- or he reads it but doesn't want to mention it in his column. Neither would be at all surprising. Of course, our readership is more than 20 times that of sites he does list, but that's obviously not a criterion.

posted by Steven I. Weiss | 6:18 PM |
 

In the Jason Cyrulnik Doesn't Blog Department, we have Gil finding this great resemblance of a young Shimon Peres with Michael Richards:

posted by Steven I. Weiss | 6:10 PM |
 

Bush Wants to 'Know the Truth' About Iraq Leak
I am afraid that he can't handle the truth in this case
CHICAGO (Reuters) - President Bush called on Tuesday for anyone with information about those who disclosed the identity of a CIA official to come forward, saying: "I want to know the truth."

"If anybody's got any information inside our administration or outside our administration, it would be helpful if they came forward," Bush told reporters...
Ah, the ol' O.J. method of catching the real criminal...

Here's a little bit of unrelated news:
In 1992, Rove was fired as a consultant for the Bush-Quayle Texas campaign, after officials suspected that he was the source for a column by Novak and Roland Evans that portrayed the Texas presidential operation as in disarray. Rove was accused of making up the story because of a feud with the campaign's chairman, Rob Mosbacher Jr., whom the column reported, erroneously, was to be dumped.

At the time Rove denied he was the source, and he said the column was false.
And Bill Clinton denied having sexual relations with the woman.

But, Novak clarified yesterday on Crossfire
"According to a confidential source at the CIA, Mrs. Wilson was an analyst, not a spy, not a covert operative. And not in charge of undercover operatives."
I think if Novak had his way, the rest of that sentence would have gone something like this: So, it was okay to publish her name in my column and the senior administration officials did nothing wrong when they leaked the information to me because this is in no way affected the war on terror which we are now fighting - four more years!
The FBI began a full-scale criminal investigation Tuesday into whether White House officials illegally leaked the identity of an undercover CIA officer
And to this, president Bush said,
"I don't know of anyone in my administration who has leaked,"
Seriously, that is what WAPO printed, I don't make this stuff up.

But in characteristic fashion there was good ol' Scott to clarify what the president really meant to say
"No one wants to get to the bottom of this more than the president of the United States."
Something tells me however, that the Democrats want to "get to the bottom of this more than the president..."
Democrats say a criminal probe isn't good enough.
They want a special prosecutor named to find out who blew the cover of a CIA operative whose husband questioned a key rationale for the Iraq War.

House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi says the Justice Department is part of the same Bush administration that, according to published reports, was behind the leak.
And there is our good friend Chuck
Democrats demanded an independent counsel investigate the leak allegations...

They drafted a nonbinding sense of the Senate resolution on Tuesday in support of an independent probe. But Republicans who control the chamber prevented them from bringing it up for an immediate vote.
No surprise there...
...Sen. Charles Schumer, a New York Democrat, said the resolution would send "a message to the president that we need a thorough, complete and fearless investigation, and that only a special counsel can do that for us."
John Ashcroft defends his department in the same article
"The prosecutors and agents who are and will be handling this investigation are career professionals with extensive experience in handling matters involving sensitive national security information,"
An argument that worked wonders for Janet Reno as she attempted to defend her Justice Department investigation into Whitewater.

And again comes Scott to clarify W's position
"The president believes that the leaking of classified information is a serious matter. He has always expressed that concern,"
When Scott, when? On what previous occasion did the president have the chance to lament the leaking of confidential information to the press? When Scott, when?

Coming on the heels of her front page sexual encounter with the French Premier, First Lady Laura Bush put everything into proper perspective
Laura Bush chided U.S. parents for letting their children watch too much television... "American children, I'm afraid, are addicted to television," she told the first ladies of Russia, Armenia and Bulgaria on Tuesday.

posted by Anonymous | 5:46 PM |
 

Gawker quoting MegaStyles:

Fashion maven Meghan Stier has the lowdown from the high holy days: "Apparently temple is just one big fashion show this Rosh Hashana. A Yiddish style spy noticed an overwhelming amount of pleated skirts, mod turtlenecks, and one enterprising young woman in 'a yarmulke-sized mini.' Hey, it's New Year, not your birthday. Cover up or we'll send the nuns after you."
Get me a ticket to those services. Maybe a press pass?

posted by Steven I. Weiss | 5:20 PM |
 

Noon -- Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver attends grand opening of Noah's Ark Deli, 399 Grand St., between Essex and Clinton streets.
My parents had been waiting for that all summer...and now they're in Florida. Sucks for them. By the way, the pizza shop down the street from this place is pretty good.
Meanwhile, tonight:
5:30 p.m. -- The Jewish Community Relations Council of New York hosts a Memorial Tribute to Daniel Patrick Moynihan; speakers include Alfonse D'Amato, Bill Bradley, Bob Kerry and Maura Moynihan; The Sylvia and Danny Kaye Playhouse, Hunter College, 695 Park Ave., at 68th Street.
Why the JCRC is honoring an Irish-Catholic senator six months after he dies by hosting a group of non-Jewish speakers is completely beyond me.

posted by Steven I. Weiss | 4:42 PM |
 

Reader Hershel888 brought to my attention this post on hyde park regarding a new minor brouhaha (reported on in Makor Rishon) developing in the Haredi world over work being done by Rabbi Moshe Yechiel Halevi Zuriel, a Haredi resident of Bnei Brak, on the ideas and writings of the "maskil" and pal of Mendelssohn Naftali Herz Weisel. Apparently, Zuriel's publication of new editions of two of Weisel's books has drawn the ire of Haredi rabbis, including one who wrote a negative article in the Yosed Nemon. If Zuriel goes unopposed, we are told, then the next step will be the study of Mendelssohn's Biur (chas veshalom), and we all know that the Biur caused thousands of Jews to go astray.

The post on Hyde Park brings some data to light about the level of Zuriel's scholarship and torah knowledge, and attests to his good character and pedigree (though I confess to not having any idea what an "extinguishing bird" might be).

Though I'm not (by any means) a student of Haskala or Modern JHI (at least as far as it exists outside the realm of Hasidism), it seems that Mendelssohn's Biur is not the spiritual pitfall that these rabbis are making it out to be. If anything, its dry and rather uninspiring content may serve to turn people off to torah study altogether, though I personally doubt it. I've been assured (this is admittedly second hand, so take it as you will) that Mendelssohn's peirush is not all that different from Hirsch's. A prime complaint against it was its publication in German, which Hirsch was guilty of as well.

What's amusing is the knee-jerk response of the Haredim towards Haskala ideas in general. The label "maskil" is anaethema to them, despite the fact that most of the Maskilim were kicking around ideas that seem, quaint, hopelessly outdated or even completely incomprehensible to the modern reader.

This seems to be a less virulent form of the same book-banning strain that infected the Haredi world following the publication of Making of a Godol: the attack of a respectable talmid chacham for publishing a book that smacks of some kind of heresy, even though no one can really point to specific examples.

posted by Anonymous | 2:58 PM |
 

I raise a contest to Elder Avraham's entry for most immediately blogable moment of Rosh Hashanah. Mine came during I believe the Chazan's Repitition of the Morning Amidah, where the Artscroll machzor I had translated "barak" as "flashing fires." I turned the page expecting to see a translation of "eitz" as "leafy woody things." All other translations of "barak" that I took notice of translated it as "lightning." What seemed to be the difference in this one was that the passage was saying that angels are created by "barak," so I'd guess that the Artscroll folks had a problem with discussing that kind of concrete old-world cosmology, which opens up some interesting avenues for further discussion regarding this topic. Hopefully, we'll soon start our much-delayed discussion of James Kugel's The God of Old.

posted by Steven I. Weiss | 1:54 PM |
 

I've got my laptop back. More to come.

posted by Steven I. Weiss | 1:38 PM |
 

The Material Girl Gets Immaterial - The social nuances of The English Roses. By Polly Shulman:

Madonna says she drew her inspiration for The English Roses not just from her daughter's experience, but from the "spiritual wisdom" she found studying the Cabala. "My creativity was not motivated by ego or greed for the first time in my life," she writes in the book's publicity material. Royalties from those million copies will go to a foundation that teaches children spirituality, which covers the greed part of Madonna's statement. The ego part seems more complex—however you read it, the book still revolves around Madonna. If Binah is meant to represent Lourdes, then Madonna avoids taking responsibility for her daughter's trouble by making Binah's problem be the absence of a mother rather than her overwhelming presence. On the other hand, if Binah represents the author (who lost her own mother at an early age), then she's glorifying herself all over again, this time with an air of virtue instead of transgression.
But what does any of this have to do with Kabbalah?

posted by Voice From The Hinterlands | 12:21 PM |
 

WorldNetDaily: WND probe reveals worldwide explosion of anti-Semitism

"This Whistleblower issue will shock many readers who still think in terms of the 'old anti-Semitism,'" said Farah. "Writers like Phyllis Chesler and Fiamma Nirenstein will show, however, how there is now a 'new anti-Semitism' sweeping the globe, one which is fashionable and politically correct. That's why it's so prevalent on college campuses, even in the U.S."
Calling it "one of the most important issues we've published yet," Farah added, "I also truly believe we get closer to laying out the core reasons for anti-Semitism, and revealing what the real cure is, than any other news organization has up till now."
Any takers?

posted by Voice From The Hinterlands | 12:15 PM |
 

Just in case you've been wondering how I spend my time: We had our first Kavvanah meeting last night (the website's really bad, true, but I had nothing to do with it, and maybe I can do something about it over Sukkot if I can find the time). We discussed the roles of ritual and community in Hullin 109b-110a (I'll post it in English later), and then, after a break, we discussed Ram Dass' Be Here Now ("an excellent mussar sefer"). The food was good too, and all in all I had lots of fun. Most intellectual break-fast ever. I'll probably have more to say on the subject(s) later, but I have to be in the Beit Midrash in 2 minutes...
Update: check out Bryan's reaction.

posted by Voice From The Hinterlands | 8:59 AM |
 

So Ari Schick's comment about slichot resonated with me. As he mentioned, we had discussed the topic of "good" slichot vs. the trite and derivative ones (I'm going to hell for even making this distinction, aren't I?) a while back, but this year's recitation got me thinking about it even more.
First off, his mention of Ibn Ezra's attack on Kalir reminds me of a selection in Agnon's Yomim Noraim (this is what I do in shul on the high holy days - I read my father's little red 1973 cleverly-disguised-as-an-arcane-sefer edition of Agnon - how krum is that????) where he quotes Pinchas of Korecz (a follower of the Baal Shem Tov, and the person whom Elder Pinchas is named after) as saying that Ibn Ezra just couldn't appreciate Kalir's greatness, since having lived further away in time from the glorious radiance of the Beit Hamikdash than Kalir, his spiritual "eyes" were unable to appreciate the "spiritual glow" radiating from Kalir's words (this assumes, or at least implies, that Kalir lived in classical times in Israel, which I find less than compelling - I'm more convinced that he wrote in Byzantium in c. 10th or 11th Century).
OK. Or maybe Ibn Ezra liked grammar more than normal people.

This said, my impression of slichot thus far is that the quality of the poetry, imagery and metaphor in the Pizmons is uniformly high, while the other stuff ranges in both creativity and talent (tonight, for example, one of my favorites was a stanza in the pizmon that cleverly plays on the Aron and Aharon as symbols of the renewal of the temple service. Or there's another creative one - the arba avot nezikin one, which plays on the torts mishna in bava kama with the archetypal 4 subjugating nations.). But this begs the question of what "good" liturgical poetry is. Should it be judged on the merits of the poetry alone? Is techincally good piyut that uses fresh metaphor and tight rhyme but does not uplift or inspire the reader good piyut?

Ari is right in noting that the simple but poignant Aramaic paragraphs at the end - not poetically impressive by any stretch of the imagination - are powerful. But are there elaborate and intricate piyutim that can achieve both technical virtuosity and spiritual power?

Generally, effective prayer seems to rely on emotional - and not cerebral - response. Unesanah tokef is moving b/c it is surrounded by the pomp and ceremony of the center of the service, b/c of the associated R' Amnon story, b/c of the immediacy and personal nature of the "mi yichyeh umi yamus...etc..." parallelisms, and even due to the power of its imagery - the angels rushing, the shofar blowing a still, thin sound, the people passing before god like sheep (all unabashedly biblical and Talmudic motifs, by the way) and not b/c it is particularly technically well-written (hell, he didn't have arms or legs, how on earth could he write well??).

Most powerful prayers (especially in other ceremony-driven religions) are accompanied by grand choruses singing imposing music, or perhaps Elli Kranzler on the guitar. But most slichot (especially the everyday ones that make up the bulk of my artscroll selchot) are said, and not sung, and while the shouting of them in the Mir, the YU bais or a chassidishe shtiebel somewhere may contribute to a sense of awe, most of us have to find it on our own without the extrinsic factors helping us.

So perhaps the intricate 6-fold acrostics, triple rhyme schemes and fourfold repetitions of key words in alternating lines of 6 and 8 syllables are techincal masterpieces, or maybe they are grammatical perversions worthy of Ibn Ezra's wrath, or contrived artifices deserving of Ari's scorn.
What makes slichot worthwhile, however (aside from the unquantifiable ritual aspect - I have no idea what makes God forgive us, but I hope it's not just waking up early and saying stuff in loud voices) are the images and metaphors. The well placed "Kaleh Seir Vechosno", the repeated metaphors of persecution (perhaps more relevant this year than in the past? I think so....I definitely have people in mind when I say some of the more "god save us from the wicked" lines), the appeal to more human attributes of mercy or God himself, in all his anthropomorphic glory coming down to forgive, cleanse and save us.
They may not all be good poetry (though some might argue that the only good poetry is image and metaphor driven, and not technical but dry stuff), but they do a lot more towards getting us (or me, at least) into some kind of high holy day mindset.


Comments? Please.

posted by Anonymous | 1:13 AM |


Monday, September 29, 2003  

Wow. More or less my first time poking my head above the med school waters into the blog air in ten days - no one warned me that this school thing would be so hard...I'm actually STUDYING (AS IF...).

First off, gmar tov to everyone out there.
I read some (a lot really) interesting stuff over yom tov (if you study on Rosh Hashana afternoon, do you have a studydik mazal all year? I didn't want to chance it, so I read some Jewish press (Not THE Jewish Press)), and I thought I'd post some of it for your reading pleasure.

Amazing piece by Avrum Burg in the Forward (originally published in Al Quds). Both powerfully written and dead-on accurate.
Of course, he has even deafer ears over there to talk to than he did with his last oped in the Forward aimed at our side, but I guess someone has to say it, even if there's no one to hear it.

More posts a little later. Gotta go do the Mincha thing.

posted by Anonymous | 6:06 PM |
 

News Brief from The Onion :

Church, State Joyfully Reunite After 230-Year Trial Separation
WASHINGTON, DC—Following a two-and-a-quarter-century-long trial separation, Church and State reunited in the U.S. Department of Justice press room Monday. 'Even through all the bad times, I knew there had to be a way to get these two old friends back together,' Attorney General John Ashcroft said. 'With a little counseling and faith-based intervention, I knew Church and State would work it out. It was meant to be.' Effective Oct. 15, prayer will be mandatory in public schools and congressional sessions will open with Holy Communion.
Worth a chuckle, no?

posted by Voice From The Hinterlands | 2:41 PM |


Sunday, September 28, 2003  

Most immediately bloggable moment of Rosh HaShanah: opening the Jewish Press and seeing this picture captioned:

Changing of the guard: Dr. Norman Lamm (center right) handed over the presidency of Yeshiva University on Sunday to Dr. Richard L. Joel (center left).
I obviously immediately flipped to page 48 (no link available) to read a whole article about Dr. Richard L. Joel's ascension to the YU Presidency. What made this even funnier was seeing the ad for the final events in the investiture of Mr. Richard M. Joel on the facing page. Classic Jewish Press moment.

posted by Voice From The Hinterlands | 8:07 PM |
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