Archive for category Culture
Der Meistersingers of Athens
Posted by Yonason Goldson in Culture, Holidays, Philosophy on December 25, 2008
Moaz Tzur, the classic Chanukah poem, has been degraded not so much by the King Jamesian translation Rock of Ages but by the carol-like tune that has become as inescapable as shoppping mall Xmas music. It’s worse than you think… which is part of the problem.
Princes in Exile
Posted by Yonason Goldson in Culture, Holidays, Philosophy on December 22, 2008
More than any other holiday, Chanukah addresses the Jewish experience in exile.
The Candles and the Tree
Posted by Yonason Goldson in Culture, Holidays, Philosophy on December 22, 2008
Reflections on having grown up under the modern shadow of the ancient Greeks. And, as was pointed out to me a year or two ago, the term I used for the Hellenistic agenda of blending Jewish culture with Greek culture should have be new syncretism.
May this year be a year of light and wisdom for all of us.
Parshas Vayeishev — The Final Battlefield
Posted by Yonason Goldson in Culture, Philosophy, Weekly Parsha on December 18, 2008
The confrontation between Yaakov and Eisav plays itself out in the headlines of our times.
New car, caviar, four star daydream
Posted by Yonason Goldson in Culture on December 18, 2008
Money, its a gas.
Grab that cash with both hands and make a stash.
New car, caviar, four star daydream,
Think I’ll buy me a football team.
Yes, I know that most Torah posts don’t begin with lyrics from Pink Floyd. But what’s the advantage of coming from a secular background if you can’t resurrect some of the nonsense of your past life and use it to give your point a little more punch?
I heard a story only yesterday — one of the many sad stories of people whose feet were swept out from under them by the current financial collapse — about a fellow who had made millions buying up 800 numbers based on the names of big businesses and then selling the numbers to those same corporations. Then came the age of the website and his business evaporated. Now he’s deep in debt with huge obligations and no prospects.
Although my heart goes out to this person and his family, it’s difficult not to see in this story yet another symptom of the mentality that created the current economic crisis.
Torah law prohibits any Jew from either charging or paying any other Jew interest. Why? Although there is no prohibition against profiting through other business dealings, the charging of interest is in a class by itself, for it is neither investment, nor commerce, nor production. It is making money from someone else’s money by taking advantage of someone else’s need which, according to Jewish philosophy, is not profiting but profiteering.
The Torah wants us to acquire a sensitivity to the difference between business and opportunism. (It’s worth noting that once upon a time even the Christian world retained this sensitivity, and that Jews were forced to support themselves through moneylending because Christian society prohibited them from engaging in “respectable” professions.)
As I’ve written in connection with this week’s Torah portion, we have created an economy in which nothing is produced and nothing is created, in which business is increasingly defined by an insatiable appetite for quick profits through the manipulation of other people’s money. Such a system, as we discovered so unpleasantly, cannot sustain itself.
The most recent example is Bernard Madoff, who convinced some of the most respected and distinguished investors in the western world that he held the keys to the kingdom of inexhaustable riches, bilking them to the tune of 50 billion dollars. No one asked questions, no one noticed the telltale signs of inviability because no one wanted to look that hard.
About a dozen years ago, when I was living in Atlanta, a man won a $4 million lottery — an extraordinary amount for the time. He had been working a double-shift as a garbage collector. When asked what he intended to do with his new-found fortune, he replied:
“I’m going to quit one of my shifts.”
The astonished reporter then asked: “Only one of your shifts?”
The new millionaire answered back: “A man has to work.”
Wise words from a wise man, garbage collection aside. Today the conventional vision of success is wealth without effort. Or, paradoxically, pathological exertion devoted toward the goal of leisure and recreation. More on this in a later post.
For now, it’s worth recalling the deceptively simple words of the misha: Who is rich? The one who is happy with his portion. Those caught up in the relentless pursuit of ever greater wealth are anything but happy and anything but rich, no matter how much money they may have.
By Any Other Name
Posted by Yonason Goldson in Culture, Jewish Unity on December 14, 2008
There’s no joy in Mao-ville. Thousands have been rioting all over China as the economic tailspin of Western economies has left all those Chinese products with no buyers. Protest demonstrations seem to be directed against the Communist Party which, having long been seen as a source of corruption, is now being blamed for the looming specter of widespread unemployment. In Longnan, reported the NYT, residents said the disturbances were provoked by economic distress, rampant corruption and a lack of transparency in the local Communist Party.
The great irony, of course, is that modern China, the most aggressive capitalist economy in the world, is now suffering from the dark side of the free market, all the while laboring to preserve the illusion of its communist roots. Naturally, such a charade cannot hold up indefinitely.
Increasingly, words and labels are not used to communicate meaning but to obscure meaning. Political correctness has cast a fog of calculated confusion over language and expression. The Jewish world has not escaped the effects.
It’s easy to excuse as misguided those Jews who identify themselves as adherents to Judaism, even as they simultaneously reject the Divine Word with wholesale abandon in their quest for egalitarianism, open-mindedness, and political correctness. It’s only slightly more difficult to dismiss those dangerous and disingenuous practitioners of Torah revisionism who continue to proclaim their commitment to Orthodoxy even as they emasculate the philosophy of sincere passion and diligent observance that has preserved Jewish tradition and society for 33 centuries. These sad but persistent creatures discredit and dishonor the movement to which they claim fealty.
But it is not these who are most responsible for prolonging and deepening our interment in exile. It is the Jews who know better, the 100%, dyed-in-the-wool, sincere and passionately observant Torah Jews who are preventing the dawn of the messianic era.
The Torah community can genuinely boast so many examples of mesiras nefesh: self-sacrifice for Torah study, for Torah institutions, for charity, for all kinds of community activism. But where is the self-sacrifice for achdus — JEWISH UNITY — within the Torah observant community itself?
Where is the willingness to set aside political agendas built upon nuances in Torah philosophy that represent the 3% or 5% of differences that separate us and focus upon the 95% or 97% that we have in common? Why must our communities stretch themselves thinner and thinner, creating new institutions that are increasingly in danger of financial collapse because we fear exposing ourselves and our children to other Torah Jews who may wear different colored yarmulkes or have different notions concerning the value of secular education or harbor different feelings about the intrinsic sanctity of the State of Israel?
How do we justify our self-destructive divisiveness when we sit on the floor on Tisha B’Av mourning the Temple that was destroyed on account of senseless hatred? To whom are we speakingIs anybody listening as we remind ourselves that any generation that does not rebuild the Temple is considered to have destroyed it — for the very same reasons it was destroyed 2000 years ago?
Perhaps we ought to ask ourselves if the current crisis of the global economy has not been engineered solely for our benefit, to force us to confront our own failure to rise above our petty differences and find the strength and courage to work together. When will we recognize that cooperating with other Torah Jews who may differ from us in their ideological perspectives is not the equivalent of compromising our values? Just the opposite: it is refocusing on the common value that should override all others. Gadol shalom teach the sages — Great is peace. When will enough voices cry out to make a difference?
The Master of the World called us His chosen people. How many more lessons will we have to endure before we are willing to choose one another? When will we finally live up to our name?
Sanctifying God’s Name
Posted by Yonason Goldson in Culture on December 8, 2008
I’m quite certain my colleague and editor Benyamin Jolkovsky won’t mind my posting this letter. It should be a source of true hope for all of us.
Dear Mr. Jolkovsky:
You have my permission to print and edit this letter (I’m sure there are a lot of mistakes in it.), but under no circumstances may you reveal my identity. You will soon see why.
You may not remember me. I am a Pakistani college student who first started reading Jewish World Review while doing research for a paper that I was writing on how the Internet is enabling Jews/Zionists to help their cause. In various Islamic sites I have bookmarked, I would see references to Jewish World Review. It was often described as “hateful”. You were named as an “enemy of Islam”. For my paper, you were the perfect subject.
I wrote to you with the hope of engaging you in a debate. You responded politely saying that you didn’t have the time but disagreed with how you were being labeled. You challenged me to read Jewish World Review for 6 months and predicted that if I did that I would find myself changed.
The six months ended a number of months ago. My paper was written and I’m still reading your site. Not because I am required to because of research, but because it tells the truth and it inspires me.
That’s not an easy thing to admit. But it is the truth.
Your site has, as you predicted, changed my view of the West and, particularly, of Jews. I only wish that more Muslims could see and feel what I now do.
I was taught that America is the “Great Satan” and the Jews and Israel are the “little Satan”. We see America as exporting filth and atheism to the world; ruining the world. After reading Jewish World Review, I have begun to understand that my understanding of America is very limited. On your site, I see your writers denouncing immorality and immodesty. I also read the articles by rabbis encouraging people to treat each other better no matter what their faith. Your articles often teach concepts about Judaism that are the same as in Islam. But my teachers never were able to make the teachings meaningful. They seemed so stale. On Jewish World Review there is no hatred. I also read hurtful but truthful articles about Islam.
The problem of the jihadists is a growing danger. As long as it is, nobody is safe. Not the West and not us who are just trying to live our lives but are scared into silence. The jihadists are winning. Your articles are showing how they are doing so. What you report sickens me because it is all true. Not enough people understand the danger. You do. And your readers do. It is important that you continue to tell the truth but also publish articles that encourage warmth and friendship, not just hurtful but true words as some other sites do. Those were the other sites I used as examples in my paper.
I know of other Muslims like me who are reading Jewish World Review. By keeping your site free and open to all without registration, you are helping people like me.
I’m writing you this letter because, for obvious reasons, I cannot send in a donation.. Before you wrote that you wanted to make a difference. I can tell you that you are. Your readers in the West who are free, have the ability and should be supporting you. It is sad that somebody who works as hard as you do doesn’t get the help that he needs.
Mr. Jolkovsky, you are changing lives. You certainly have changed mine and I know of others as well. There are most likely many, many more that you are not aware of.
There’s not much that I can add. All I can say is: Thank you so much! — BLJ
You can make a tax deductible charitable contribution of ANY amount — and given the financial situation, we do mean ANY amount — through our secure online form or by making out a check and mailing it to the sponsoring organization at:
Keren Yehoshua V’Yisroel/JWR
125 Carey St .
Lakewood , New Jersey 08701
Tax ID: 22-3209160
Please note on the “memo line” of your check it is for the Internet educational project.
In SINCERE gratitude and friendship,
Binyamin L. Jolkovsky,
Editor in Chief
Friday Flashback — The Public Face of God
Posted by Yonason Goldson in Culture, Politics on December 4, 2008
“There are no gods, no devils, no angels, no heaven or hell. There is only our natural world. Religion is but myth and superstition that hardens hearts and enslaves minds.”
This is the wording upon a sign allowed by Washington State Governor Christine Gregoire to grace the state capitol building in Olympia. The sign rests along side the traditional Xmas season nativity scene.
I find it a little awkward defending public Christian symbolism as a Jew in a country famous for its separation of church and state, but Bill O’Reilly has it right when he brands this kind of moral equivalence (masquerading as respect for the First Amendment) as an attack not upon Christianity but upon the foundations of morality.
It’s with this in mind that I offer a look back on what I wrote concerning the name of God in the Pledge of Allegiance and the heart of a matter that transcends religious sectarianism.
Kashrus and Ethics Presentation at YU
Posted by Yonason Goldson in Culture on December 2, 2008
From: YESHIVA UNIVERSITY
Contact: publicaffairs@yu.edu
RABBIS OF ALL MAJOR ORTHODOX ORGANIZATIONS TO ADDRESS THE “KOSHER QUANDRY: ETHICS AND KASHRUT” IN LIGHT OF AGRIPROCESSORS SCANDAL TUESDAY, DEC. 9 AT YESHIVA UNIVERSITY
In light of the ongoing Agriprocessors scandal that has rocked the kosher meat industry and the Orthodox community, Rabbi Avi Shafran, director of public affairs for Agudath Israel of America, Rabbi Menachem Genack, rabbinic administrator and CEO of the Orthodox Union’s Kashrut Division, Rabbi Basil Herring, executive vice president of the Rabbinical Council of America, and Shmuly Yanklowitz, co-founder and director of Uri L’Tzedek, will engage in a candid conversation on the interplay between ethics and kashrut at a program on Tuesday, December 9, at 7 p.m. in Weissberg Commons on Yeshiva University’s main campus, 2495 Amsterdam Ave. at 184th St., New York.
The program – “The Kosher Quandary: Ethics and Kashrut” – serves as the launch event for the new student-run organization at YU called TEIQU, A Torah Exploration of Ideas, Questions, and Understanding. The organization is devoted to nurturing intellectual dialogue on campus surrounding Jewish matters of import.
The panelists will explain their views and insights on the kosher quandary, address recent developments and share their prescriptions for action.
Who: Rabbis of All Major Orthodox Organizations
What: “The Kosher Quandary: Ethics and Kashrut”
When: Tuesday, December 9, 2008; 7 p.m.
Where: Weissberg Commons, Yeshiva University
2495 Amsterdam Ave. at 184th St.
A message for us all
Posted by Yonason Goldson in Culture, Philosophy on December 2, 2008
Kudos to Rabbi Yitzchok Adlerstein for posting the complete text of the remarks made by British Chief Rabbi Jonathan Sacks before the European Parliament. It’s an eloquent expression of Kiddush HaShem, whether we speak it or say it … or both.
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