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Yom Kippur

Oct5

by: on October 5th, 2011 | Comments Off

In the shiur regarding Rosh Hashana, we saw how the shofar connected us to a moment unlimited by, or outside of, time. This radicalization of the perception of time bears an even more immediate relationship to the concept of Yom Kippur and its central component, Teshuva, or repentance, as the word teshuva is roughly translated.

The unlinkage of our normal perception of the flow of time is made evident right in the initial textual ambiguity regarding the day of Yom Hakippurim. This ambiguity is nicely presented in BT Pesahim 68:

Mar son of Ravina would fast on all the days of the year except for Purim, Shavuout, and the eve of Yom Kippur,(the ninth of Tishrei, as opposed to the tenth, which is the date of Yom Kippur), since it says (Vayikra 23:32) “v’initem et nafshotayhem batisha’ lahodesh”- “and you shall deprive yourselves on the ninth of the month”- Is the fast actually on the ninth? No, the fast is on the tenth (Vayikra 23:26)! So this text comes to teach us, that one who eats and drinks on the ninth, it is as if one fasted for two days consecutively…

Essentially, the text provides, within the space of several verses, two different dates for the “soul deprivation”. To reconcile this contradiction, a special status was granted for the ninth, the day before the fast, in which the act of eating becomes consecrated. The noteworthy element is that the otherwise joyous act of eating is here considered an “innui”, a deprivation, an act related to suffering, the term usually reserved for fasting.

Well, if the act of eating is considered an “innui”, then what is the day in which we fast considered? The BT in Taanit 26: , in a passage which we analyzed in depth regarding the fifteenth of Av, explains:

There were no happier days for Israel than Yom Kippur and the 15th of Av, as a result the women would dance through the vineyards… “Bishlama”(This is obvious) regarding Yom Kippur, since it is the day of forgiveness, (“sliha and mehila”), …

In other words, here the Talmud considers the fast day, the day of “innui”, to be the holiday.

The passages brought above illustrate two points. First of all, they support our hypothesis about the out-of-time nature of Yom Kippur. I’d like to suggest a second message within these texts, a supplementary tangential point about the meaning of “innui”.

The term “innui” to which we’ve referred several times is usually rendered along the lines of “torment”, “suffering”, “affliction”, etc. How can this type of term be applied to activities usually considered enjoyable, such as eating? To reconcile these passages, I would suggest a reconsideration of what the goals of the day are. While commonly one views the fasting on Yom Kippur as a kind of suffering or punishment, but we will argue that the act of fasting on Yom Kippur is not meant to serve as scourge or torture, retribution or punishment, but rather it reflects a joyous act of liberation, a liberation from the suffering of the physical. The non-eating and non-drinking of Yom Kippur signifies and elevation of the totality of our being to a place where we do not require material sustenance. Rav Tzadok proposes many times in his writings that so many of the commandments are related to eating because it is both a flawed activity, at the root of flawed desires as seen at the very first sin, that of Adam and Hava, and at the same time a route of union with all things, a way to integrate all material being within our own spiritual activity. On Yom Kippur, however, we get to experience the consummation and transcendence of this world transforming endeavour. Moshe Haim Luzzatto in Daat Tevunot stresses that the “fall” of Adam and Hava as a result of sin was one of the spirit, symbolized by exile from the “garden”, meaning that what we experience as the “spiritual” in our current state was earlier the “material” for Adam and Hava, and their “spiritual” was some grander stated not normally within our consciousness. This level is potentially attained on Yom Kippur. This then explains why the act of eating, to those with greatly rarified souls, such as Mar, son of Ravina, on the day before the fast, this necessary eating to enable the subsequent fast, is recognition of the as-yet unperfected nature of human existence. When we eat, we recall our still unperfected nature, when we not-eat on Yom Kippur, we get the chance to experience a higher stage in our future development. Thus the eating is the “innui” and the non-eating is the “day of joy”.

Returning to our central thesis, regarding the outside-of-time nature of Yom Kippur, we have other, more literal prooftexts. Stating this proposition directly, the Tana D’vei Eliyahu, an early midrash, begins with the teaching based on a verse in Tehillim: (139:16) “my unformed body was forseen by You, for in your book all are written, the days they will be made, and one of them was for it as well”. The important clause for us is the last one, ambiguous enough in terms of meaning, but rendered more confusing due to the textual variant preserved by the Masora- the Hebrew phrase reads: yamim yutzaru, v’lo echad bahem. The word “v’lo” can be read with the letter vav at the end, meaning “and for it”, a third person possessive, but can also be read, with an aleph at the end “and it is not”. The Tana D’vei Eliyahu opts for the negating version, reading the verse as: “days were fashioned but this day is not one of them”, and explains that this verse is referring to Yom Kippur, which is a day that is not a “day”, rather it is a day outside of the normal flow of time.

A second prooftext is found in BT Yoma 20. The Talmud narrates a conversation between R. Yehuda and the prophet Eliyahu. This R. Yehuda, brother of R. Sela Hassida, apparently asked Eliyahu on Yom Kippur, while in some lofty spiritual state, how it is that despite it being Yom Kippur and everyone is in a state of repentance, that the Messiah hasn’t come (for after all, if the whole world is rectified, the Messiah ought to appear). Eliyahu reportedly answered that despite it being Yom Kippur, sexual violations were occurring even in Neharda’a, the big yeshiva town. Gd is willing to be more lenient, blaming it on the evil impulse, the “satan”, but the “satan” defends himself, stating that he isn’t the cause of people sinning, he has off on Yom Kippur- the word “hasatan” has the mathematical equivalent of 364, which means, the Talmud explains, that for 364 days the “satan” tempts the soul, but on Yom Kippur, it’s the soul’s own fault. In other words, the Talmud is saying, 1. Yom Kippur is a day outside of the normal flow of time, and 2. sin is not an externally mediated phenomenon alone; there is the potential within every person which can lead them astray, perhaps the physicality of being is inextricably burdened with drives and desires, without the need for external “tempting”.

Returning to the the issue of stepping outside of temporality, why is the necessary requirement for self-correction linked to a day outside of time? To answer this, we can uncover a deep insight into the core of the experience of teshuva, of the unique Jewish approach to self-correction.

Rav Kook, in Orot Hateshuva 6:5, writes:

The resulting reality, the choices the person makes, and their underlying will, are links in a great big chain, which are never disconnected. The will of a man is linked to his actions. Even the actions of the past are not disconnected from the ongoing being and the will at the root of the person. Since nothing comes loose, the person has the ability to place a new color even upon actions of the past. This is the secret meaning of Teshuva, which Gd created prior to creating the world, in other words, He extended the human spiritual creativity to encompass the past as well. The bad action rolls on forward, snowballing into more degradation and contempt, until this creative will transforms it into a new shade of meaning, that of the good, at which point it itself spins out of itself the positive, the grace of Gd and His light. (my translation).

This conception, that actions of the past can actually be changed by teshuva in the present, is not unique to R. Kook. Earlier support for this can be found in Takanat Hashavin of R. Zadok Hacohen of Lublin, who states at the beginning of Siman 5 that teshuva is the transformation in the present of sins that have already transpired in the past. This is not simply some kind of Hassidic innovation, in fact the prooftexts for these teachings are found in the Talmud, in BT Yoma 86: -Resh Lakish is quoted in two alternate citations:

1. “Great is Teshuva in that intentional misdeeds are reckoned as though they were unintentional misdeeds”, while the alternate version is even more radical:

2. Great is Teshuva in that intentional misdeeds are reckoned as though they were meritorious actions.

So how does this all work? We can understand the concept of forgiveness, or pardon, but what does it mean to say that one can reach back into the past and transform actions that have already transpired, to remake intentional violations into unintentional or even meritorious actions?

I propose that teshuva operates as does memory, outside of time. We have seen earlier that in order to recognize a melody, or to understand any event that unfolds in time, we must have the ability for cognitive activity outside of time. Some aspect of our being, that which Husserl couldn’t really define although he stated it must exist, that which we would call the neshama, the soul, has the capacity to reach to that place which is outside of time.This “place”, transcendent to normal time and space, is the place where Teshuva takes place. The Kabbalists, following the Talmudic teaching that Teshuva is prior to the creation of the world, gave this “place” a name, sefirat Binah. According to the Luzzatto, in his commentary to “Arimat Yadi b’tzlothun”, time itself is only a transient creation, created along with the universe, and reflecting only the lower aspects of creation (in kabbalistic terms: zeman is the numerical equivalent of ma”h and be”n, which are the divine names reflecting the lower aspects of creation), thus time is not operative at the spiritual place at which teshuva operates. Yom Kippur, Teshuva, the human:divine dialogue expedited by the shofar, itself outside of time – all these things work because they operate transtemporally. Thus, in a sense, the person reorienting his or her life is given the opportunity to reach beyond time allowing the past to be read in an entirely different fashion.This is not a merely fanciful, “spiritual” use of words to describe a religious experience, I believe that this makes sense on a literary and philosophical place as well. Here is Nietzche, talking of the route in which historical research operates:

Historia abscondita- Every great human being exerts a retroactive force: for his sake all of history is placed in the balance again, and a thousand secrets of the past crawl out of their hiding places- into his sunshine. There is no way of telling what may yet become part of history. Perhaps the past is still essentially undiscovered! So many retroactive forces are still needed! (The Gay Science 34, tr. Walter Kauffman)

Nietzsche recognizes that our constructs of history are subjectively determined; the outcome in essence determines what is worth studying retrospectively. PhD’s study the social and economic development of little towns in Europe because important people were born there, and not the reverse. The past is still “undiscovered”, because it is our actions in the present that will determine what will enter “History”. History in this sense shares many operations with the literary- when at the end of a novel the identity of the criminal is finally revealed, suddenly in one moment all the odd facts and seemingly irrelevant episodes narrated earlier take on new meaning. Only at the end of the book can we attribute sense to all that transpired earlier.

These then, as R. Kook explains, are the retroactive forces by which we are enabled to transform sins into merits. They are all links in a chain, as R. Kook put it, the full implications to which they connect are only understood later, at the end. Resh Lakish was originally a criminal, and so he would have been judged as such by anyone who knew him at that point in his life. Later, when he became a major Talmudic figure, the meaning of his earlier life becomes entirely reread into an entirely different narrative. This rerouting of our own narratives is what is made possible by the transtemporal nature of teshuva.

Thus, perhaps the sages were not merely being figurative when they talked about teshuva and this period of the year in terms of books:

R. Cruspedai taught in the name of R. Yohanan: Three books are opened on Rosh Hashana…the righteous are immediately inscribed in the book of life… (BT Rosh Hashana 16: ).

Perhaps they are alluding to this narrative function of teshuva. Note that the reflexive form of the verb is used (nechtavim, nechtamim) for the act of inscribing. These books, the books of our lives, are written by us, the actions inscribed in them are the result of our own choice; we are the authors who get to determine the outcome of the episodes narrated in the early sections of this “book”. Will there be happy ending? A tragic ending? The author who gets to decide how the ending turns out is revealed as none other than the major character about whom the book revolves.

Gmar Hatima Tova to all of you.

(Two postscripts: One, is that this recognition of the transtemporal nature of the shofar experience is also noted in R. Hutner’s Pahad Yitzchak, Rosh Hashana section 24. The other thing I’ve been thinking about, is how we’ve noted before that the “innui” is related by these texts specifically to eating. Could it be that eating is linked to memoire involuntaire, to the triggering of unanalyzed and unrectified past events, much as in the case of Proust’s madeleines?)

A thought for those not facing the holidays eagerly,  based on the above texts… Part 2- Yom Kippur

In the previous Rosh Hashana essay, we contemplated the position of one who feels lost and in despair , not in a space for the moment of joy or soul searching simply because such activities are mandated by the calendar (let us say that it was not a remarkable leap of novelistic imagination for me to sympathize with that situation). In that essay, using classic texts to highlight the alternative nature of time as it pertains to these holidays, we were able to construct using reading from the Sefat Emet a path towards an initial awakening possible for the individual made possible by the idea of judgment, where judgment is defined as an encounter, a desire to take seriously the meaning of the events of one’s own life and present them, as it were, for analysis, to perhaps have them reread in a different context, one of tovah, of the good.

It became clear to me, as I dealt with this set of feelings in my own life, that there was implicit in the texts of the Hassidic masters an arc that carries this approach through the set of holidays of this month, from Rosh Hashana to Yom Kippur and, contrary to the usual preconceptions, reaching an apogee at Sukkot.  Building upon the texts presented in the above Yom Kippur essay, which emphasized the day being one that stands outside of time and how that relates to the creation of personal narrative.  Tying these essays together I suggest that we can conceptualize a second step in the rebuilding of the individual. If the first step translates the term mishpat, judgment, into a therapeutic category of analysis, on Yom Kippur we might advocate a redefinition of the concept of tahara, purity, into one of individuation. For this we will follow a reading of the Tiferet Shlomo (TS).

TS begins with the Mishna in Talmud Yoma 85:, which begins with a statement  that the day of Yom Kippur itself produces atonement for certain types of sins, and provides two attempts to suggest prooftexts for this idea. The first is that of Rabbi Elazer ben Azariah, who cites the verse in Vayikra 16:30 that

…on this day, from all your sins you shall be atoned, lifnei Hashem titharu, you will be purified before Gd.

The mishna then cites a second supporting reading, that of  Rabbi Akiva who taught:

Fortunate are you O Israel, lifnei mi, before whom are you purified, and who purifies you? Your father in heaven as it says (Ezekiel 36:25) “I will sprinkle pure water upon you and you shall be purified of all you sins” and as it says (Jeremiah 17),” mikvah yisrael hashem- G-d is the mikvah (ritual purification waters) of Israel- for as the mikvah purifies the impure, so too does Gd purify the people of Israel”.

TS wonders what supplemental information is transmitted in the second proof text quoted by Rabbi Akiva. Rabbi Elazar in the first prooftext established a connection to purification and the day of Yom Kippur, and the text from Ezekiel supports a connection to ritual ablution, so why the third text relating to mikvah?

TS derives two central ideas from the flow of the Mishna’s reading. The first point R. Akiva makes  is a riff on the verse in Vayikra, where the word lifnei is used, and according to TS Rabbi Akiva is making a statement, rather than asking a question-  not lifnei mi, before whom are you purified?, but rather lifnei mi, beyond “mi” is where purification is accomplished.  The term mi in classical Kabbala represents the divine aspect of Binah, Wisdom (mi numerically equals 50, the 50 gates of wisdom). Thus “beyond binah” would be the space of the emanation of Keter, which is the highest spiritual level in the sephirotic tree, but important for our purposes, it is an area in which there is not yet any intermixture of evil, it is a space of pure Good (evil only emerges from binah). This, to TS, explains why we so frequently use the “higher” Kedusha prayer that begins with Keter (in the Nusach Sefard prayerbook favored by Chassidim) during Yom Kippur, also, conveniently, the word titharu, purified, has the same numerical value as keter, 420. In short, Rabbi Akiva first teaches that the moment of Yom Kippur transpires at a level which is shielded from the intrusion of evil, conflict, and despair.

The second text Rabbi Akiva brings, while again relating purification to water, changes the situational relationship to this water. In the earlier prooftext, the metaphor is one of water being sprinkled above, but this was inadequate a representation of Yom Kippur. Yom Kippur, in this reading, is not trickled from above like rain, but is rather an immersion. The mikvah requires total immersion of the body, it is a space that one enters with one’s totality. With this the metaphor is complete. On Yom Kippur we enter a safe zone, one that is devoid of conflict, a place where the despair that is the result of conflicted feelings within the individual can be resolved, and our true nature “purified” as it were, a protected temporal space for healing. He provides an interesting explanation for a curious line in the Sabbath prayer with this approach, that makes much sense. It states that “Gd’s mercy is eternal for splitting the Red Sea”, and then that   “Gd’s mercy is eternal  for leading the people of Israel through those split waters”, which appears redundant. The point according to TS is that the second phrase points to an important concept in the relation of Gd and humanity- that in the entering of that protected space within the split waters, the experience of an existential safe zone, entirely encompassing and immersing the individual and shielding one from all torment and strife, is possible and real.

In summary, we have two stages of psychological progress. The first moment, that of “judgment” on Rosh Hashana, is one of encounter with one’s own issues and conflicts, which alone can accomplish a level of personal transformation. The next step, of “purification”, of healing and resolution of internal conflict, doubt and the resulting harm to personal integrity, is accomplished by the withdrawal outside of the normal flow of time and the interpersonal processes that impact upon the individual; immersion in the protected space of Yom Kippur. The third stage we will discuss more at length in an essay on Sukkot, which will symbolize “joy”,  a protected space for the newly healed to achieve reinsertion into the social sphere.

The Burden of Precedence: From Lyndon Johnson to Obama

Oct5

by: on October 5th, 2011 | 1 Comment »

President Lyndon Johnson meets with Israeli Ambassador Abba Eban on May 26, 1967. / White House Press Office

Obama sincerely engaged the Israeli-Palestinian peace process early in his term, but his latest speech at the United Nations suggests that he is acquiescing to Israeli interests. There is rich precedence for Obama’s behavior starting in June 1967, when Israel took its current form.

In declassified recordings throughout the 1967 Israeli-Arab conflict, President Johnson balances contradictory foreign and domestic pressures. This struggle is reflected in his five principles for peace introduced at the United Nations. The first is recognizing Israel. The fifth principal, territorial integrity, receives particular attention from Arab leaders, but Israeli interests force Johnson to allow for a Jerusalem exception. He suggests that Israel is not after Egyptian and Syrian territory, but “on Jordan, they hope that’s negotiable. This little area [Jerusalem]….I think that we have some chance on it.” Dean Rusk warned Abba Eban that mishandling Jerusalem could create “strong anti-Israel feeling in the United States,” but Johnson seemed more concerned about a pro-Israel backlash and didn’t press the issue.
Johnson ultimately succumbed to congressional pressure by authorizing the largest arms deal to Israel at that time, initiating what has become emblematic of the U.S.-Israeli relationship. Obama must deconstruct this historic dynamic and ask himself: is this really in our best interest?

Source: David Johnson, Robert. “Lyndon Johnson and Israel: The Secret Presidential Recordings.” Tel Aviv University, July 2008.

Answering Obama’s UN Address

Oct4

by: on October 4th, 2011 | 4 Comments »

by Stephen Zunes

During the Bush administration, I wrote more than a dozen annotated critiques of presidential speeches. I have refrained from doing so under President Barack Obama, however, because – despite a number of disappointments with his administration’s policies — I found his speeches to be relatively reasonable. Although his September 21 address before the UN General Assembly contained a number of positive elements, in many ways it also contained many of the same kind of duplicitous and misleading statements one would have expected from his predecessor. Below are some excerpts, followed by my comments.

On Palestinian Statehood and Middle East Peace:

Obama at the U.N.

One year ago, I stood at this podium and I called for an independent Palestine. I believed then, and I believe now, that the Palestinian people deserve a state of their own. But what I also said is that a genuine peace can only be realized between the Israelis and the Palestinians themselves. One year later, despite extensive efforts by America and others, the parties have not bridged their differences… It’s well known to all of us here. Israelis must know that any agreement provides assurances for their security. Palestinians deserve to know the territorial basis of their state.

Obama’s stated support for the establishment of a Palestinian state based roughly on Israel’s pre-1967 borders is far more explicit than that of any previous president, subjecting him to harsh criticism from both Republicans as well as a number of Congressional Democrats. However, given that the Palestine Authority has already “provided assurances” for Israel’s security by agreeing to, as part of a final peace settlement,an internationally supervised disarming of any and all irregular militias, a demilitarization of their state, and the banning of hostile forces from their territories, only to be met by Netanyahu’s continued refusal to withdraw from the occupied territories, it raises questions as to why Obama implied that both sides needed to “bridge their differences.”

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The Truth About “Class War” in America

Oct4

by: on October 4th, 2011 | Comments Off

by Richard Wolf

Congressman Paul Ryan (R-Wisconsin) speaking at the Conservative Political Action Conference 2011 in Washington, DC. Ryan, among other Republicans, has described Obama's deficit reduction plan as "class warfare." (Photo: Gage Skidmore)

Republicans and conservatives have done us a service by describing federal policies in terms of “class war.” But by applying the term only to Obama’s latest proposals to raise taxes on the rich, they have it all backward and upside down. The last 50 years have indeed seen continuous class warfare in and over federal economic policies.

But it was a war waged chiefly by business and conservatives. They won, as we show below, and the mass of middle-income and poor Americans lost. Obama’s modest proposal for tax increases on the rich does not begin a class war. On the contrary, it is a small, modest effort to reduce the other side’s class war victories.

Big business and conservatives have worked to undo the regulations and taxes imposed on them in the wake of the Great Depression of the 1930s. Then, an upsurge in labor union organization (the Congress of Industrial Organizations sweep across basic US industries) and in membership in both the socialist and communist parties gave Franklin Delano Roosevelt the support and the pressure to tax business and the rich. He took their money to pay for the massive federal hiring program (11 million federal jobs filled between 1934 and 1941) and to start the Social Security Administration etc. He regulated their business activities to try to prevent devastating capitalist depressions from recurring in the nation’s future.

Since the end of the Great Depression – and especially since the 1970s – the class warfare waged by business and its allies (most conservatives in both parties) was successful. For example, at the end of World War II, for every dollar Washington raised in taxes on individuals, it raised $1.50 in taxes on business profits. In contrast, today, for every dollar Washington gets in taxes on individuals, it gets 25 cents in taxes on business. Business and its allies successfully shifted most of its federal tax burden onto individuals.


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Prof. Mearsheimer endorses anti-Jewish book

Oct4

by: on October 4th, 2011 | 1 Comment »

When Profs. John Mearsheimer and Stephen Walt co-authored their book on the “Israel Lobby,” they drew back from their original formulation that it had manipulated the US to invade Iraq on behalf of Israel. Their more carefully worded thesis was that it was a “necessary but insufficient cause” for the Iraq war.

Gilad Atzmon

Still, many (including myself) took this amiss because:

1. It discounts a fuller explanation for the US warring on Iraq, e.g.: W. Bush’s animus at Saddam Hussein for attempting to assassinate his family while visiting Kuwait after the first Iraq war, the importance of oil (Noam Chomsky’s view), frustration that Saddam Hussein continued to oppress his people and to bluster against the US — even though he could have been easily overthrown in 1991, and finally the influence of neocons and some liberals who saw Saddam’s rule as both a threat to peace in the region and the source of an ongoing human rights crisis.
2. Their notion of an “Israel Lobby” was poorly defined, as if it were monolithic, despite identifiably liberal elements (e.g., Americans for Peace Now) and is conflated with a small but influential group of policy intellectuals, opinion journalists and national security professionals known as neo-conseratives.
3. Whether intentionally or not, Mearsheimer and Walt were insensitive to the fact that their thesis, in according an inordinate amount of behind-the-scenes power to Jews, strongly resembles an anti-Semitic conspiratorial argument.

What seems especially galling and tone-deaf to me is that M & W continue to ride this horse of the Israel Lobby, with a critics-be-damned attitude. One thing they are wont to do is to ally with others who are vitriolic in their views of Israel (Norman Finkelstein comes to mind). This apparently reached a new level of baseness with Mearsheimer’s blurb praising a book by Gilad Atzmon, an ex-patriate Israeli musician who not only writes and speaks with vehemence against Israel (not awful in itself) but also has renounced his own Jewish identity in terms that clearly seem anti-Semitic.

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Protest Tent Cities Demolished in Israel as Social Justice Activists Vow a Return to the Streets

Oct3

by: on October 3rd, 2011 | 1 Comment »

Social justice protesters chant in anger as police and city officials tear down tents on Rothschild Boulevard in Tel Aviv.

Tel Aviv’s iconic tent city on Rothschild Boulevard – where Israel’s social justice protest movement was born three months ago – was demolished today by municipal authorities and police amidst the anguished cries of those being evacuated and the angered chants of activists.

Many of the evicted, who were homeless and have nowhere else to go, had found refuge in the tent city. They had also taken solace in the movement’s efforts to fight for economic justice on their behalf and on behalf of millions of lower- and middle-class Israelis struggling to survive as the gaps between the rich and the poor grow.

Oren Ziv, a photojournalist for Activestills – a collective of independent photographers in Israel – witnessed the eviction of protesters and the homeless from their tents, and captured these powerful images:


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Rosh Hashanah in Quetzaltenango

Oct3

by: on October 3rd, 2011 | 1 Comment »

Mount Tajumulco, Guatemala.


tonight i gather with my tribe
to welcomea new year with life & laughter
&the biggest bottle of cheapwine
we could find in Guatemala.

we are not at shul
in Crown Heights or Skokie.
we are at socialist,
Spanish-language school
in the reddest heart of this highland city
called Quetzaltenango.

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Tribute to Palestinian Poet Taha Muhammad Ali

Oct3

by: on October 3rd, 2011 | 1 Comment »

Courtesy of Copper Canyon Press

Self-taught, internationally acclaimed Palestinian poet Taha Muhammad Ali passed away today at the age of 80. I encourage Tikkun readers to watch this video of Ali reading his poem called “Revenge,” which carries a message that you wouldn’t expect from its title. (The poem is read in Arabic, then in English.) The text of the poem can be found here.

A bit of background on Ali: The Israeli army deported his family from a village in the Galilee during the 1948 War, when he was 17 years old. This trauma and the ongoing plight of Palestinian refugees is a theme that colors his evocative writings. Ali himself was one of the lucky ones. He resettled in Nazareth, Israel one year after the war and spent much of his adult life running a souvenir shop with his children. Despite having received only a fourth grade education, Ali studied Arabic, Hebrew, and American authors and devoted his free time to developing his own writing skills. He began publishing poetry books and short stories in the 1980s. A Jewish American writer published a moving biography of him in 2010.

While Ali’s poetry is written in Arabic and focuses on the Palestinian community, it also vividly humanizes Israelis. Ali once said of his work, “There is no Palestine, no Israel, but in my poetry is suffering, sadness, longing, fear. And this, together, make the results: Palestine and Israel.”

May his words live on.

Healthy Rebellion: The Uninsured Step Forward

Oct3

by: on October 3rd, 2011 | 2 Comments »

by Paul Glover

For ninety-nine years the campaign for universal health coverage has relied on conferences, panel discussions, petitions, and rallies. These vent moral indignation but lack power.  Today, 51 million Americans without medical insurance and 30 million Americans paying for inadequate coverage will not get prompt affordable health care through polite legal means.

LUVThat’s because Congress and insurance companies are now significantly owned by multinational investment firms. Thus policy is made in remote boardrooms that maximize profit and minimize people. These stuffed suits and their puppets have no concern for suffering Americans, slick advertisements notwithstanding.

Therefore, to take effective control of medical care, the uninsured and our allies have begun organizing to damage the profitability of insurance investments, while building a new American health system.

The League of Uninsured Voters (LUV) embraces the American tradition of rowdy confrontation that ended slavery, gained votes for women, won the eight-hour workday, pressed for social security, demanded civil rights, secured AIDS funding, and established the nation.

Through LUV, we uninsured take leadership to expand Medicare to all. Liberal campaigns need our initiative, because moral indignation is less powerful than desperation. Richard Kirsch, director of Health Care for America Now said, “We would never want to organize the uninsured by themselves because Americans see the problem as affordability,” according to an AP news article. We 50 million uninsured, though, see the problem as life-or-death.

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Speakers for the “Values Voter Summit” 2011

Oct2

by: on October 2nd, 2011 | 2 Comments »

The Values Voter Summit will be held this week in Washington (October 7-9, 2011). For only $99, plus housing, food, and transportation costs, summit attendees will have the opportunity to hear a wide array of right-wing speakers, including not only the usual suspects but also the leaders of some up and coming organizations. Since I believe it is important to know what is being said on the Right, I thought it might be useful to compile a list of Summit speakers with links to some of the interesting websites.

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U.S. Freezes $200 Million in Humanitarian Aid to Palestinians Over U.N. Statehood Bid

Oct1

by: on October 1st, 2011 | 2 Comments »

Israeli activists march in favor of Palestinian statehood in Tel Aviv on September 24, 2011.

As the Obama administration aggressively works behind the scenes to derail Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas’ statehood bid at the U.N., The Independent is reporting that Congress has been involved in its own secret, targeted assault on the Palestinians.

In what can only be described as a form of collective punishment against the Palestinian people for the PA’s multilateral efforts at the U.N., Congress has blocked nearly $200 million earmarked for USAID by the Obama administration. The funding was designated for a multitude of humanitarian, educational and infrastructure projects in the West Bank and Gaza, including food aid programs for the poor, health care initiatives and pre-school Sesame Street workshops.


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