There are so many things to write about this week, how government that
is not responsive to the people it serves is not only useless, but
destructive (that means you Senator Reid and Speaker Pelosi---the
public wants national health care insurance, even if campaign
contributors don't) and newspaper and television people who believe
that every opinion, no matter how daft, is entitled to equal weight,
but it has been decided that this is the wek that we become obsessed
with popular music. I don't want to be a stick in the mud even though
the person "the world is mourning" (as the New York Times website
proclaimed for a few hours Friday until somebody realized that it did
not) is not anyone whose music, dancing, or other things were never of
interest to me.
So what does this have to do with being Jewish
as my current headline announces? Stick with me for a second or two, below the fold, and
see if I can keep you interested.
In the few years since these
posts started appearing, it has been necessary on several occasions.to
admit that Barth's alter ego is Jewish. One time
was to explain why the continued presentation of the United States as a
Christian nation is not only wrong, but a rude attempt by people who
know nothing, and have no right to do so, to invite me to leave the
nation where I was born and love for what it means around the world.
Other
posts require an identification as a Jew because the subject is Israel.
Barth, nor his alter ego, can determine how much of his (my) viewsabout that nation
are related to being Jewish. I have never been there but would very
much love to go someday. In the meantime, I admire those people who
have settled there with all that that entails. I do not have the
courage to do so but that's another story.
The story I want to
tell today is about Regina Spektor. Not about her as much as a new
"album" (CD?, "group of songs"? I don't know the proper nomencalture
anymore) and less about the record as about one of its songs.
To
write about the song requires that you know this. This young woman, now
about 29, came to the United States from the Soviet Union, as Russian
Jewish emigres. She was enrolled in Orthodox Jewish day schools, but
ultimately attended and graduated Fair Lawn High School in New Jersey
(near where I grew up many centuries earlier).
She became a
musician, after years of studying classical piano, but now singing her
own music, best described, using the names used today, as "alternative"
as useless a description as there can be. If Nellie McKay and maybe
Norah Jones, Feist, KT Tunstall, Eilen Jewell or even Aimee Mann and
Dar Williams mean anything to you, that's probably where she fits.
Her first albums were, to put it mildly, quirky and not completely "produced" but now has had "professional help" to come up with Far which is, in my opinion,a great album from start to finish.
But
though the greatness of some other musician seems to be the subject of
the day, so important that no other news is worthy of reporting
anymore, it is not my intention to waste precious space waxing poetic
about how much I enjoy this album but to talk about one of its songs
which has many layers of meaning for me.
One, and the irony that
a young woman raised as an Orthodox Jew has brought this to my
attention is inescapable, is that it reminds me that my version of
being Jewish, and Reform Jewish, is as real and legitimate as anyone
else's, something Orthodox Jews generally contest. I have for years
used the expression that I am not particularly religious because I
rarely attend a synagogue or temple except for family events, I married
someone who is not a Jew, and my daughter, who considers herself
Jewish, I think, was neither bat mitzvahed, nor did she attend formal
religious school on Sundays or any other day.
But I am Jewish,
and being Jewish is an important part of who I am, and I am also a
father, a public servant, a native of New England, an American and, of
course, a serious fan of the Boston Red Sox. Nobody can take any of
that from me as much as they try to with a sueriority to which they are
not entitled.
So it is that this song, Laughing With,
written and performed by a woman born in Russia and raised Orthodox,
exactly describes what being Jewish means to me:
The song reminds many, me included, of the Eric Bazilian song, One of Us, made famous by Joan Osborne
but also covered, I think, by the great Alanis Morissette, but aside
from being about how to consider God, without the trappings of
organized religion, they are almost radically different songs. One is a
bit scary, the other hopeful. Or maybe both are both scary and hopeful.
Maybe Eric and Regina can work that out.
If none of this means
anything to you: you believe, for instance, that science and religion
cannot occupy the same space, I understand that. I have worked this out
for myself as have many others. But if you see it otherwise, I am okay
with that, so long as you don't elevate "what you believe" over
scientific truths and then try to impose your beliefs on me. I have
friends and family afflicted with serious illness and disease that
embryonic stem cell research could cure and wish you would keep your
religious obligations away from my non-religious government.
For
this Jew, though, the experience of hearing this song, considering what
it says and how it has impacted on me is very meaningful. Which brings
me, I guess, to this: an essay the same Regina Spektor posted on her own webpage last January
which says a few other things that have crossed my mind, and perhaps my
tongue and electronic pen, but maybe not as well put as by this 29 year
old with a better appreciation of all that is st stake when she says:
To
me it seems that the Palestinians and the Israelis are both being used
by the World. They are both simultaneously scapegoats and decoys. And
the World needs them that way. Because if they were gone, and the
conflict was over, who would be the next target of the extremists.
I
imagine this is the scenario that the World has in its sleepy mind: The
World has just left the office. The World is walking home and taking
its usual short cut. The alley it cuts through always makes its heart
pound a little faster, but time saved is time saved, so it takes the
shortcut every night on the way home to dinner. Over the course of its
many walks home through the alley, the World has seen all kinds of
muggings...The World has seen Israel get mugged, too. Sometimes harder,
sometimes less. When this happens the World chooses one of three
options... Option 1. Cross the street, pick up the pace, don't make eye
contact, and get out of range of danger... Option 2. Go over to Israel
and help fight the mugger off. But no. Those options are not what the
World is choosing.
It's time for Option 3. Go over to
Israel, and hold its arms back, hold it steady in place, and let the
mugger beat it up good. Because the World thinks, innocently, of
course, and full of fear in its beating heart, that if the mugger beats
up Israel real good, good enough for a last breath, good enough so that
when the World is making a short cut from the office, back home for
dinner, there is no more Israel, and the mugger won't be there anymore,
and the shortcut will be safe, and save time, and all will be great. So
this is what happens. And the World walks home again. This time more
relaxed, more at ease... A spring in its step.
And then the
World feels a hand on its shoulder. Its the mugger. The World smiles.
It makes a little bow. It tips its hat. Then the mugger starts mugging
the World. "But I'm your friend, remember? I was the loudest denouncing
Israel in public, remember? I helped you hold its arms back a little
while ago, remember? Many times i helped you holding its arms back?..."
"But
I'm a mugger." the mugger says."And I mug." the mugger says. "And you
are next." the mugger says. And the mugger waits for someone else to
take a short cut, to help out with the mugging in the hopes that they
will be spared, and then they will be next... and so on, and so forth,
and that's how it works...
Sometimes it feels that if there were
no more Jews, or Israel (for the two are synonymous- Israel is the
geographic embodiment of the nation) all of this would stop. Even some
Jews feel that way. Many of us try to un-Jew ourselves all the time. It
comes from a mixture of fear, guilt of surviving while others didn't,
and embarrassment. We are the root of our and the World's problems, it
seems. It is the Jews themselves that you will hear speak out most
strongly against Israel. The instinct that drives them is the same
instinct that drove them to blend in, and then be very surprised when
they were put in the ghetto, too. The were surprised when they were put
on the train, too. They were surprised when they were put in the gas
chamber, too. They were surprised all the way till Death. Because "they
weren't like those OTHER Jews"... Well. A Jew is a Jew is a Jew is a
Jew.
And if anyone thinks that speaking out against Israel
is anything other than thinly veiled anti-semitism, they are deeply
mistaken.
"Maybe if i am quiet and at the back of the class
and look down they won't notice." That should not be the motto of the
World. Nor should "Maybe if I'm the loudest to condemn Israel, they'll
remember me as a friend later." Because eventually, when there is only
you left in the class, you will get noticed. We all will.
And
I don't believe in good and evil. I believe that we cultivate fractions
of qualities within ourselves like a delicate chemistry experiment,
with droppers of human traits into a beaker or a test tube. And all
those properties are ever changing. And the good ones stem from our
love of self, and understanding of self. And the bad ones stem from
fear. There is nothing that makes one a better person than realizing
what you fear, why you fear it, and how that makes you closed off to
others, and blame others...
I believe in God, and am a Jew,
and yet i love all people of other faiths, and people of no faith, with
my whole heart, so i know that it is possible. I love America, and
Israel, and my mother country Russia, and all the countries i have had
the honor and privilege to visit, and the countries that i have yet to
visit in the future, and the countries i will never have the chance to
visit in my lifetime, and so i know that it is possible. I love Humans
and I love Nature, though from the beginning of time they have been
destroying each other, and i love them both, and so i know that it is
possible. And I feel that love without paradox. Without feeling for one
at the expense of another. And so i know that it is possible.
The intra-Palestinian meeting in Moscow has precedent
Russia's hosted such meetings in the past, most recently Feb 2019
Russia has long lamented the US' "monopolization" of the peace process & tried to carve out a niche for itself: mediating among the disunited Palestinians/2
Events: Heavy gunfire is occuring around the area of the U.S. Embassy and residential compounds adjacent to the Trutier area of Tabarre. All Embassy personnel have been instructed to remain indoors and shelter-in-place until further notice. All others should avoid the area.
Actions to take:
Avoid the area;
Avoid demonstrations and any large gatherings of people;
Do not attempt to drive through roadblocks; and
If you encounter a roadblock, turn around and get to a safe area.
All eyes on #Chad right now
Chad has two internet trunks coming into the country: One from the Red Sea via Sudan; the other from Cameroon. Not possible for the totality of the country's internet network to be shut unless done centrally. A lot of rumors swirling; few facts. https://t.co/N6bDJZ2ixO
BREAKING: Three loss prevention employees in Macy’s across the street from Philadelphia City Hall stabbed, one of them has died from stab wounds, @PhillyPolice sources tell me. Police converged on the store as the three workers were rushed to Jefferson Hospital. pic.twitter.com/4U1eKycL4W
You don’t get it.
It’s not about an UNRWA teacher who held an Israeli kid hostage in his house.
It’s all about how for 75 years you have destroyed the future of generations of Palestinians, including my family.
My cousins in Arab countries are still not citizens - not even the… https://t.co/nv6anubGhc
It's wild that Venezuela is now holding a vote on whether 2/3 of Guyana actually belongs to them! Analysts suggest that Modoru may want military action to pump up his sinking popularity.
The lack of a cohesive delegation has allowed attention-seeking lawmakers to act on their own.
McCarthy: “You have [Rep. Matt] Gaetz, who belongs in jail…”
Gaetz: “Tough words from a guy who sucker punches people in the back. The only assault I committed was against Kevin’s fragile ego.”https://t.co/LctPuz6Pcf
"Both the AU and the intl community place more weight on whether elections are held than whether they are free and fair. Sanctions/expulsions occur when there is a coup but not necessarily when elections are rigged or if an “institutional coup” occurs." https://t.co/m9dNimJP0D