How to make Thanksgiving Really Meaningful This Year

No matter how difficult it may be in a world filled with pain and cruelty, in a world just partially recovering from the latest terrorist attacks (and mourning also all those killed not only by those the media defines as terrorists but also those who have been killed by the drones and the bombings from the militarism of many many national armies and air forces, and all those tortured by “intelligence” operatives, and all those unjustly imprisoned in the US and around the world) there are moments when it is important to stop looking only at all the problems and to dedicate some serious time to focus on all the good. And that’s part of what Thanksgiving could be about for you this year. Life is so amazing, and our universe so awesome, filled with realities that transcend our capacity to comprehend, and inviting us to awe and wonder and radical amazement! Give yourself and your friends a day dedicated to truly feeling those kinds of feelings! I don’t mean only a moment of sharing “something we all appreciate” during the traditional meal.

A word about how to make your Thanksgiving spiritually meaningful and deep from Rabbi Michael Lerner

No matter how difficult it may be in a world filled with pain and cruelty, in a world just partially recovering from the latest terrorist attacks (and mourning also all those killed not only by those the media defines as terrorists but also those who have been killed by the drones and the bombings from the militarism of many many national armies and air forces, and all those tortured by “intelligence” operatives, and all those unjustly imprisoned in the US and around the world) there are moments when it is important to stop looking only at all the problems and to dedicate some serious time to focus on all the good. And that’s part of what Thanksgiving could be about for you this year. Life is so amazing, and our universe so awesome, filled with realities that transcend our capacity to comprehend, and inviting us to awe and wonder and radical amazement! Give yourself and your friends a day dedicated to truly feeling those kinds of feelings! I don’t mean only a moment of sharing “something we all appreciate” during the traditional meal.

Syrian Refugees and the Holocaust: a discussion to enliven your Thanksgiving celebration

Editor’s Note: Want to energize the discussion at whatever Thanksgiving celebration you are having or are attending? here’s a conversation piece you could read or send out in advance along with the piece I sent you Tuesday evening about how to make your Thanksgiving more meaningful spiritually.And I can’t help but feeling proud of American Jews who seem to be overwhelmingly rallying against the xenophobia that has swept much of America in the form of wanting to block Syrian refugees from coming to the U.S. From the Holocasut Museum and the Orthodox Union to Tikkun and the Jewish Renewal movement, Jews are strongly lining up against the xenophobes and supporting the opening of our doors ot Syrian refugees. Here is an important discussion piece for Thanksgiving by Elizabeth Heineman that shows the complexities involved in invoking the Holocaust to make one’s points about any particular contemporary reality. –Rabbi Michael Lerner

 
When Holocaust Memory Misfires
                                                                      by Elizabeth Heineman

They splash up on my Facebook feed with predictable regularity: reminders of the link between anti-refugee sentiment and the Holocaust. The story of the MS St. Louis, which carried Jewish refugees across the Atlantic only to be turned back to Europe, where many of its passengers were slaughtered.

How YOU Could Help the Syrian Refugees

Please call your Senators to tell them you Welcome Syrian Refugees and urge them to vote “NO” if a bill comes to the Senate for a vote to make it more stringent to accept refugees from Syria and Iraq to the US.  You can call the Capitol Switchboard but do it soon at 202 224-3121. If you do not know the names of your two senators, just give the Capitol operator your state and you will be connected. You can also call their state offices by googling them to get the phone number. Many of them will be in their home states over Thanksgiving and might be in their state offices on the Friday after Thanksgiving. 

 Refugees coming to the US are already subject to lengthy, stringent clearance requirements.  In the busyness of preparing for the holidays, let us not forget these are people who have lost everything.  Imagine being bombed  and having no place to go, and one after another country saying “we do not want you.”  It is winter, it is cold, and many are sleeping outside, waiting at the borders of several European countries.

Challenging a Neo-Con Foreign Policy for the Middle East

Challenge a Neo-Con Foreign Policy for the Middle East

November 23, 2015
By Robert Parry

As the Islamic State and al Qaeda enter a grim competition to see who can kill more civilians around the world, the fate of Western Civilization as we’ve known it arguably hangs in the balance. It will not take much more terror for the European Union to begin cracking up and for the United States to transform itself into a full-scale surveillance state. Yet, in the face of this crisis, many of the same people who set us on this road to destruction continue to dominate – and indeed frame – the public debate. For instance, Official Washington’s neocons still insist on their recipe for “regime change” in countries that they targeted 20 years ago [ https://consortiumnews.com/2015/11/09/how-israel-out-foxed-us-presidents-4/ ]. They also demand a new Cold War with Russia [ https://consortiumnews.com/2014/03/02/what-neocons-want-from-ukraine-crisis/ ] in defense of a corrupt right-wing regime in Ukraine [ https://consortiumnews.com/2015/11/13/carpetbagging-crony-capitalism-in-ukraine/ ], further destabilizing Europe and disrupting U.S.-Russian cooperation in Syria.

Free Leonard Peltier

Editor’s note: President Obama, you freed Jonathan Pollard, as we at Tikkun had been calling for for several decades though we oppose his politics and worry that he may someday turn violent against us in the peace movement. There is no such danger from Leonard Peltier. Please free him now as a Thanksgiving gift to the world–Rabbi Michael Lerner

Free Leonard Peltier
by  John Iverson

This Thanksgiving Day there will be prayers and a rally at the White House for Leonard Peltier.  We ask Obama review the case for clemency of Anishinabe-Lakota political prisoner Leonard Peltier. If the President can pardon a turkey he can surely look at facts and free Leonard
In 1973 I participated in the Wounded Knee occupation for seven weeks.

Selective Empathy

SELECTIVE EMPATHY
by Rabbi Zalman Kastel
National Director
Together for Humanity Foundation\
zalman@togetherforhumanity.org.au
www.togetherforhumanity.org.au

Selective empathy and relationships with ‘others’ – Vayetzei

Terror has struck ’us’ again. I write ’us’ referring to Westerners who identify with the Paris victims. I feel angry about this attack against ordinary people in a Western city. A terrible destruction of life perpetrated against people who live in a ’normal’ city like I do. I am surrounded by outrage and solidarity expressed in French flags, on Sydney’s Harbour Bridge, the Opera House and all over Facebook. But surely, every life of a non-combatant taken violently is an utterly unacceptable violation of the sanctity of life?

A Post-Paris Reflection on the Clash of Civilizations

A Post-Paris “Clash of Civilizations”? 
It’s the Islamic State’s Dream and Marco Rubio Agrees
By Tom Engelhardt

Honestly, I don’t know whether to rant or weep, neither of which are usual impulses for me.  In the wake of the slaughter in Paris, I have the urge to write one of two sentences here: Paris changed everything; Paris changes nothing.  Each is, in its own way, undoubtedly true.  And here’s a third sentence I know to be true: This can’t end well. Other than my hometown, New York, Paris is perhaps the city where I’ve felt most at ease.  I’ve never been to Baghdad (where Paris-style Islamic State terror events are relatively commonplace); or Beirut, where they just began; or Syria’s ravaged Aleppo (thank you, Bashar al-Assad of barrel-bomb terror fame); or Mumbai (which experienced an early version of such a terror attack); or Sana’a, the capital of Yemen, now partly destroyed by the U.S.-backed Saudi air force; or Kabul, where Taliban attacks on restaurants have become the norm; or Turkey’s capital, Ankara, where Islamic State suicide bombers recently killed 97 demonstrators at a peace rally.  But I have spent time in Paris.  And so, as with my own burning, acrid city on September 11, 2001, I find myself particularly repulsed by the barbaric acts of civilian slaughter carried out by three well-trained, well-organized, well-armed suicide teams evidently organized as a first strike force from the hell of the Islamic State (IS) in Syria and Iraq. The Paris attacks should not, however, be seen primarily as acts of revenge from a distinctly twisted crew, even though one of the murderers reportedly shouted, “You killed our brothers in Syria and now we are here.”  Instead, they were clearly acts of calculated provocation meant to reshape our world in grim ways.  Worse yet, their effectiveness was pre-guaranteed because, as has been true since 9/11, the leaders of such terror groups, starting with Osama bin Laden, have grasped the dynamics of our world, of what makes us tick and especially what provokes us into our own barbarous acts, so much better than our leaders, our militaries, or our national security states have understood them (or, for that matter, themselves). Here in a nutshell is what bin Laden grasped before 9/11: with modest millions of dollars and a relatively small number of followers, he and his movement couldn’t hope to create the world of their fervid dreams.  If, however, he could lure the planet’s “sole superpower” into stepping into his universe, military first, it would change everything and so do his work for him.  And indeed (see: invasion of Afghanistan, invasion of Iraq), an operation mounted for an estimated $400,000 to $500,000, using 19 dedicated (mostly Saudi) followers armed only with paper cutters, did just that. And it’s never stopped since because, just as bin Laden dreamed, Washington helped loose al-Qaeda and its successor outfits from the constraints of a more organized, controlled world.  In these last 14 years of failed wars and conflicts of every sort, American military power, aided and abetted by the Saudis, the British, the French, and other countries on a case-by-case basis, essentially fractured the Greater Middle East.  It helped create five failed states (Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, Syria, and Yemen), worlds in which terror groups could thrive and in the chaos of which they could attract ever more recruits.

On American Racism

Race, Racism, & The Spirit:

Our Lives in American Society

By Rabbi Mordechai Liebling

[This exploration of the nature of race and racism in American society, as seen in the context of personal experience, social science, and  spiritual tradition, was given as a talk to students and some faculty of the Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion in New York City, by Rabbi Mordechai Liebling. Rabbi Liebling is director of the Social Justice Organizing Program at the Reconstructionist Rabbinical College, and a member of the Board of The Shalom Center. This was reprinted from the Shalom Center’s email with permission from Rabbi Liebling);

Shalom, thank you

It is an honor and privilege to address you Jewish leaders and Jewish leaders in formation.  I appreciate the opportunity and feel humbled by the responsibility. Responsibility because racism has been called variously the core wound of American society, the cancer at our core, our original sin, deepest shadow, fundamental contradiction – choose your language- they all convey the same message that the United States can not and will not be a spiritually healthy just society unless and until we put an end to all forms of racism. I will address today some of the different aspects of racism, the process of racialization, how racism and its corollary white privilege constrict the spiritual growth of each one of us and some suggestions of what we can do, in between you will have opportunity to speak with each other and at the end there will be time for some questions.

Hospitality: Everyone’s right and everyone’s duty

Editor’s note: In light of the Obama Administration’s 7 years of aggressive searches to find “undocumented” workers and arrest and expel them (more expulsions than the last three presidential administrations combined) and in light of the failure of the U.S. and most of the world community to open its doors more generously to the refugees from countries terrorized by Al Queda and the ISIL–Islamic State or by the drone attacks and bombings by those countries waging war against ISIL or Al Queda or against the Syrian dictatorship of Assad, I thought it appropriate for us to reread Catholic liberation theologian Leonrdo Boff’s recent statement about the moral obligations to hospitality (an obligation deeply embedded in Jewish law and embodied in the Biblical figure of Abraham who is said to have opened his tent in all four directions so he could spot anyone passing by who might need hospitality which he generously offered). In this regard, the decision of many U.S. politicians, including Republican governors of many states, to close their doors to Syrian refugees is a particularly offensive response to the ISIS terrorist acts in Paris, since the refugees are themselves fleeing these same terrorists.–Rabbi Michael Lerner
Hospitality: everyone’s right and everyone’s duty 
Leonardo Boff
      Theologian-Philosopher
   As always, the global refugee problem presents an ethical imperative of hospitality at both the national and international levels. We are witnessing a human migration much as occurred during the decay of the Roman Empire. Millions of people seek new homelands so as to survive, or simply to escape the wars and to find a modicum of peace. Hospitality is the right of all and the duty of all. Immanuel Kant, (1724-1804), clearly saw that the interdependence between the rights and duties and hospitality, were necessary in order to construct what he called “perpetual peace” (Zum ewigen Frieden, 1795; see Jacob Ginsburg, Perpetual Peace,La paz perpetua, 2004).

After Paris: A World That Has Lost Its Ethical Direction

AFTER PARIS: A World That Has Lost Its Ethical Direction & Spiritual Foundation and a Media that Cheerleads for Fear and Militarism

By Rabbi Michael Lerner

For many years, we at Tikkun and the Network of Spiritual Progressives have warned that the domination and power-over strategies to achieve “homeland security” have been tried for over 7,000 years and all they have produced is more wars and violence, interspersed with short periods of peace that have, with the help of the sensationalist and natioanlist  media and professional apologists for the existing inequalities, managed to hide from public view the degree of covert structural violence that every system of inequality and domination embodies. (Please read Cynthia Moe-Lobeda’s important study Resisting Structural Evil–Love as Ecological-Economic Vocation published by Fortress Press to get a full understanding of how deeply our own daily lives in Western societies are built on the exploitation and impoverishment of people around the world). We  have called for a new approach to “homeland security”—the Strategy of Generosity, as manifested in part in our proposed Global Marshall Plan (please download the full version and read it at www.tikkun.org/gmp). Until the powerful countries of the world are seen as mainly driven by a desire to care for the well-being of everyone else on the planet and the wellbeing of the planet itself, and care not only out of self-interest but also out of a new consciousness in which we all come to truly understand our mutual interdependence and oneness, what we saw in Paris this past week is destined to be an increasing reality in the coming decades. The Global Marshall Plan we support would have the U.S. take the leadership with the advanced industrial countries of the world in working with local communities throughout the developing world, donating 1-2% of our Gross Domestic Product each year for the next twenty to once and for all end (not must ameliorate) global poverty, hunger, homelessness, inadequate education, and inadequate health care–and repair the damage done to the environment of 150 years of irresponsible forms of economic development sponsored by colonial and imperialist and materialist oriented capitalist, socialist and communist societies alike.

The New Abnormal–Reflections on Paris

 

The New Abnormal–Reflections on Paris

Posted on November 14, 2015by Prof. Michael Nagler

 

We are hearing expressions of shock and sympathy for Paris on all sides, which is appropriate as far as it goes – but it’s not nearly enough. It is clear now that instead of lurching from crisis to crisis, we need to get off this disastrous path. After expressing our condolences we should be saying, “Let us now pledge ourselves to get to the root of this problem” – and have the courage to follow that inquiry wherever it leads. When Mahatma Gandhi wrote Hind Swaraj or Indian Home Rule in 1909, as it were firing his first shot across the bow of the empire that he would finally sink, he addressed the now classic essay not to the British (the original was published in Gujarati; only when the British banned it did he bring out the English translation, ironically, and reach a vastly greater audience) but to his own countrymen. And he told them, “The British did not take India; we gave it to them.” His purpose was not to offend but to awaken them, namely to the fact that they were not helpless, as they supposed.

Cosmological Wisdom & Planetary Madness

Editor’s Note: Sean Kelly presents a brief overview of the evolution of the consciousness of the universe and its current crisis as humanity continues to destroy the life-support system of Earth. It is a deep and profound article worthy of reading fully to the end. –Rabbi Michael Lerner

 Cosmological Wisdom and Planetary Madness

Sean Kelly

 

Introduction:

It is a bitter irony of our times that, just as the collaborative effort of natural scientists and other researchers have revealed the outlines, at least, of a comprehensive cosmology,[i] we should find ourselves plunged into a maelstrom of unparalleled planetary madness. The madness: runaway catastrophic climate change, an accelerating mass extinction of species and generalized ecological deterioration, and a brutal, empire-driven regime of planetary apartheid. The wisdom: among the proposals for “Big History” type grand narratives[ii], Swimme and Berry’s The Universe Story (1992) that I will draw from in these pages.

Jay Janson says: Veterans Day: Honor Capitalism’s Genociders Assassins Invaders Bombers of Children? Hell No!

​J​
Jay Janson says: Veterans Day: Honor Capitalism’s Genociders Assassins Invaders Bombers of Children? Hell No! November 10, 2015

 
​[​
Editor’s Note: In sharing articles in Tikkun, we often print articles with which we don’t agree
​ to make Tikkun a lively forum for ideas​
. This
​article ​
is a classic case. Though Jay Janson has a very strong point in critiquing the way that veterans lives have been sacrificed to serve the imperial goals of America’s elites (as has been true for veterans in almost every war in history as people died to serve their own country’s elites), it is not true when thinking about the veterans who served the North in the Civil War nor those who fought the Second World War.

Kissinger the War Criminal

Editor’s Note: From time to time I will be posting articles here from TomDispatch. http://www.tomdispatch.com,  a very wonderful website run by Tom Engelhardt who works with The Nation magazine. Sometimes I will include commentary from Tom Engelhnardt about the piece he has chosen to highlight, sometimes just the article itself. In the article on Kissinger below, you will first find Engelhardt’s comment, then the article about Kissinger by Greg Grandin. This piece seemed particularly appropirate to put on our Tikkun website on Kristallnacht annviersary–the anniversarly of the 1938 assault on Jews by Nazis that moved the fascist attack from racist discrimination to widespread violence against Jews in Germany on November 9-10 1938. Henry Kissinger wears his Jewish identity proudly, yet played an important role in the genocidal war against the Vietnamese, a war that I personally struggled aginst (eventually ending up in federal penitentiary for my non-violent role the anti-war movement).