International
and National News |
U.N. Special Envoy to begin round of
Middle East discussions in Israel today
UNITED NATIONS. NY (Publicity
Release)—Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has dispatched his new Middle East envoy
Michael Williams to Israel and Palestine for consultations after a week of
deadly violence involving intra-Palestinian clashes, Palestinian rocket attacks
and Israeli military operations.
Williams was expected to start holding
meetings today with senior Israeli and Palestinian officials, UN spokesperson
Michele Montas told journalists. Williams is then scheduled to travel to the
Egyptian capital, Cairo, for further consultations.
Last week Ban announced that Williams
had been appointed as the UN Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace
Process, as well as the Secretary-General’s Personal Representative to the
Palestine Liberation Organization and the Palestinian Authority and his Envoy to
the Quartet, the international diplomatic grouping on the Middle East.
Williams – who replaced Alvaro de Soto of Peru – was previously Director of the
Asia and the Pacific Division in the UN Department of Political Affairs. He held
several senior UN posts during the early 1990s, including within the then UN
Transitional Administration in Cambodia (UNTAC) and the UN Protection Force in
the Former Yugoslavia (UNPROFOR).
Between 1999 and 2005, Williams served
as a special adviser to successive Foreign Secretaries in the British
Government, and he has also worked for Amnesty and as a journalist with the BBC.
In another development, Secretary General Ban said he would attend a meeting in
Berlin next Wednesday of the Middle East Quartet. The Berlin meeting is expected
to also be attended by Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, US Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rice, European Commission External Relations Commissioner
Benita Ferrero-Waldner, EU High Representative for Common Security and Foreign
Policy Javier Solana and Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier of Germany,
which currently holds the rotating presidency of the EU.
The foregoing article combined several
releases issued by the United Nations News Centre.
United Nations
Undersecretary Pascoe
outlines peacemaking problems of Mideast
UNITED
NATIONS, N.Y. (Publicity Release)—Recent events in the Middle East starkly
illustrate just how sizeable the obstacles were in the way of progress
towards peace, Lynn Pascoe, Under-Secretary-General for Political Affairs,
told the Security Council this morning, stressing that the immediate concern
must be ending the violence in the Gaza Strip and southern Israel.
In a briefing on the situation in the Middle East, including the Palestinian
question, he said that the longer the violence continued, the greater the
risk of escalation and the greater the threat to both the survival of the
Palestinian National Unity Government and to the prospects for any fruitful
Israeli-Palestinian dialogue.
He said the factional fighting that had erupted in Gaza soon after the
14 May resignation of Palestinian Interior Minister Hani Kawasameh had
pitted Hamas militants and Executive Force members against Palestinian
Authority security forces and Fatah armed gangs. Their brutal urban battles
in residential areas had left 68 Palestinians dead and more than 200 wounded
in the past month. Meanwhile, rocket fire against Israel had escalated
significantly, killing an Israeli woman and forcing the evacuation of many
residents.
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continuation)
_________________________________________
Freedom
at Issue
Bruce
Kesler
__________________________________________________________________
U.S. Senate should learn from
Mexico's example
ENCINITAS, Calif.—I see that Norm Coleman’s amendment to the Immigration
Bill, requiring local law enforcement to cooperate with federal authorities
and laws on illegal immigration, was defeated today 49 to 48. The amendment
didn’t require local law to engage in raids or such, just report findings in
their ordinary course of duties to federal enforcement. Two Republican
Senators didn’t show up to vote, which may have shifted the balance.
A
reader sends me this excerpt from the Mexican immigration law:
Check
out Mexico’s
Ley General de Población [“General Law of Population” – the body of law
governing Mexican immigration], Capitulo III, Articulo 73:
Ley General De Población
Capítulo III Inmigración
ARTÍCULO
73
Las
autoridades que por ley tengan a su mando fuerzas públicas federales,
locales o municipales, prestarán su colaboración a las autoridades de
migración cuando estas lo soliciten, para hacer cumplir las disposiciones de
esta ley.
For you
non-Spanish speakers, that means:
“The authorities who, by virtue of law, exercise a mandate for public
enforcement [the police] at federal, local or municipal level, shall provide
cooperation to immigration authorities when said immigration authorities
request it, to comply with the provisions of this law [the General Law of
Population].”
So Mexican police are required by law to
cooperate with immigration authorities - and they do. The standard
procedure: when Mexican police capture illegal aliens, they turn them over
to immigration authorities, where they are processed and
deported to countries of origin.
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_____________
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__________________________________________________________
U.S.
Capitol Roundup
What Jewish lawmakers are doing:
U.S. House of Representatives
-------------------------------------------------------------
Gary Ackerman opens hearings into U.S. aid to the Palestinians
WASHINGTON DC (Publicity Release)—
U.S. Rep. Gary Ackerman (D-NY), Chairman of the House Foreign Affairs
Subcommittee on the Middle East and South Asia, on Wednesday, May 23 made
the following opening statement during the panel’s hearing on U.S.
Assistance to the Palestinians. Witnesses are listed below.
“Where
do U.S. interests lie in the current chaos afflicting the Palestinians? It’s
a difficult question. Each answer comes with political dilemmas and moral
hazards. Although we are not responsible for the choices made by others,
there is no avoiding the fact that a good deal of responsibility for the
status quo lies at our feet.
Gary Ackerman
"The emergence of a new
Palestinian leadership committed to peace in January 2005 provoked little
response from the United States beyond rhetoric alone. We did not perceive
the fragility and significance of the moment, and within a year, it was
lost. By January 2006 the inability of the Palestinian Authority to deliver
political goods from Israel, to tackle internal corruption, or to produce
economic recovery or personal security left Palestinians angry and ready to
make changes. And thanks to the Bush Administration, which chose to ignore
both good sense and the specific terms of the Oslo agreements, when
Palestinians went to the polls, Hamas was on the ballot, providing a ready
outlet for the frustrations of the Palestinian people.
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continuation)
House Financial Services Committee
Approves
Iran Divestment Bill
WASHINGTON, D.C.
(Publicity Release)– The House Financial Services Committee on Wednesday,
May 23, overwhelmingly passed H.R. 2347, the Iran Sanctions Enabling Act of
2007, which will empower Americans to apply economic pressure on the Iranian
regime.
The federal government will establish a list of entities that invest in Iran
and allow for divestment. As Iran continues to threaten regional stability
and international security by pursuing a nuclear program, rattling sabers at
its neighbors – especially Israel – and supporting terrorist groups funded
by its energy sector, this
bill will protect investors and state and local governments that choose not
to invest in companies that support Iran’s oil and gas industry.
The
bill was introduced by Reps. Barney Frank (D-MA), Chairman of the House
Financial Services Committee, and Tom Lantos (D-CA), Chairman of the House
Foreign Affairs Committee. Senator Barack Obama has introduced a similar
bill in the U.S. Senate. “Time and again in recent history, divestment
has been used to
Barney Frank
Tom Lantos
persuade a balky political regime that its policies are out of synch with
world opinion,” said Lantos, who also is the founding co-chairman of the
Congressional Human Rights Caucus.
(Jump
to continuation)
.
U.S. Rep. Adam Schiff says 'no-confidence'
resolution against Gonzales gains sponsors
Washington, DC (Press
Release)—On Wednesday (May 23), Reps. Adam Schiff (D-CA) and Artur Davis
(D-AL) announced that a resolution they introduced Monday, expressing no
confidence in the performance of Attorney General Alberto Gonzales and
urging the President to request his resignation, has quickly gained support,
with over a hundred Members signing on as cosponsors in just two days. Reps.
Schiff and Davis, both former federal prosecutors, drafted the resolution in
response to the failures of Attorney General Gonzales to adequately and
properly manage the Department of Justice.
“The
extraordinary support for this House resolution so soon after introduction
reflects an emerging consensus in Congress and across the country: Mr.
Gonzales should step down,” said Rep. Schiff. “The Justice Department needs
a strong and independent voice, and someone of unimpeachable credibility. We
must reluctantly conclude that the current Attorney General does not fit the
bill.”
Adam Schiff
“I am encouraged that
a steadily rising number of our colleagues want the House to assert itself
in this debate, and I am pleased that they recognize that the institutional
crisis at the Department of Justice demands a no confidence resolution,”
said Rep. Davis.
At the close of
Tuesday's (May 22) business, the measure had 108 cosponsors.
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Jews
in the
News
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Like you, we're pleased when members of our
community are praiseworthy, and are disappointed when they are blameworthy.
Whether
it's good news or bad news, we'll try to keep track of what's being said in
general media about our fellow Jews.
Our news spotters are Dan Brin in Los Angeles, Donald H.
Harrison in San Diego, and you. Wherever you are, if you see a story of
interest, please send a summary and link to us
at sdheritage@cox.net. To see a
source story click on the link within the respective paragraph.
_______________________________________________________________________
*Frida Birnbaum of Hackensack,
N.J., has done what few other women of 60 would consider: with the help of
in-vitro fertilization, she gave birth to twins. A
photo from the Hackensack University Medical Center is in today's San
Diego Union-Tribune.
*Philanthropist Eli Broad donated $6.5 million to Alliance for
College-Ready Public Schools, a group promoting Charter Schools in Los Angeles.
The
story by Joel Rubin is in today's Los Angeles Times.
*U.S. Rep. Stephen Cohen (D-Tenn.) questioned Monica M. Goodling,
former Justice Department liaison to the White House, about the religious creed
of her law school founded by evangelist Pat Robertson. The
story by Maura Reynolds is in today's Los Angeles Times.
*A package of bills to benefit veterans—including one calling for closer
monitoring of possible brain injuries from bomb concussions—has been shepherded
through the House of Representatives by U.S. Rep. Bob Filner (D-San
Diego), chairman of the House Veteran Affairs Committee. The
story was in today's San Diego Union-Tribune.
*The family of murder victim Ronald Goldman is entitled to any money that
O.J. Simpson's attorney may be holding for him, a Superior Court judge has
ruled. The
story is in today's San Diego Union-Tribune.
*Former Federal Reserve Board Chairman Alan Greenspan says sharp
increases in the value of Chinese stocks are unsustainable and that a
contraction in their prices is likely. The Bloomberg News
story is in today's San Diego Union-Tribune.
*Israel Defense Force pilots kept up their retaliatory attacks on
Gaza in response to the missiles aimed at Sderot from inside the Palestinian
territory. Meanwhile Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and Prime
Minister Ismail Haniyeh met to see if they could agree on a cease fire with
Israel. The
story is in today's San Diego Union-Tribune.
*U.S. Sen. Herb Kohl (D-Wis.) has called for the Justice Department and
the Federal Communications Commission to block the acquisition of XM Satellite
Radio Holdings by Sirius Satellite Radio Inc. The Reuters
story is in today's Los Angeles Times.
*U.S. Sen. Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) pronounced himself disappointed
by the most recent trade talks between China and the United States. The
Associated Press
story is in today's Los Angeles Times.
*U.S. Sen. Arlen Specter (R-Penn.) is part of a bipartisan coalition
that meets regularly to steer the Immigration Reform bill through the Congress.
The Associated Press
story is in today's Los Angeles Times.
*In what may prove a key ruling, the judge in record producer Phil Spector's
murder trial said a forensic expert for the defense withheld evidence found
at the crime scene. The
story by Matt Krasnowski of Copley News Service is in today's San Diego
Union-Tribune.
*A recall campaign against Los Angeles City Councilman Jack Weiss got
off to a shaky start when City Clerk Frank Martinez ruled that the papers had
not been properly served. The
story is in today's Los Angeles Times.
*A controversial civil rights attorney,
Stephen Yagman, is a defendant in a high profile federal tax evasion case.
Joe Mozingo has the
story in today's Los Angeles Times.
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__________________________________________
The Jewish Grapevine
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CYBER-REFERRALS—Cantor Emeritus Sheldon Merel
of Congegation Beth Israel passes along this link to a
video essay by Aish.org
showing how war photos get faked by anti-Israel media in the Middle East....
Winners—Randy McGeough and Carolyn LaFrance are
joined by Ted Mintz at
San Diego Historical Resources Board after receiving awards for the renovation
of
the Irving
Salomon/ Henry Hester Apartment Building.
Karla Shiminski, joined by
HRB Chairman Robert Vacchi, displays her award for history education as
principal
of the San Diego Unified School Districts Program for 4th Graders at Old Town.
— Historical Resource Board photos
by Ginger Weatherford
HISTORIC PRESERVATION—The modernistic apartment building at 3200 6th Avenue
built in 1958 for Col. Irving Salomon was the subject of an Architectural
Rehabilitation Award presented by the San Diego Historical Resources Board today
to McGeogh/La France Architects, Ted Mintz and Del Mar Heritage.
Salomon, whose daughter Abbe Wolfsheimer Stutz, many years later
served on the San Diego City Council, had been appointed by President Dwight D.
Eisenhower to the U.S. delegation to the United Nations. Salomon regularly
entertained famous visitors in San Diego, among them Eleanor Roosevelt. A
philanthropist, one of Salomon's gifts to the city was literally outside the
window of his condominium: the small playground across 6th Street on the edge of
Balboa Park... Another award of specific Jewish interest went to Karla Shiminski,
who is the San Diego Unified School District principal for the week-long
programs for fourth-grade students at Old Town San Diego State Park. In
accepting her award, she made a point to thank San Diego Jewish World
editor Don Harrison, who serves on the HRB board, for nominating her.
The two worked together at the celebration in March at Old Town of the 200th
birthday of Louis Rose, San Diego's first Jewish settler.
Curriculum that San Diego State University History Prof. Joellyn Zollman
created for the occasion about Rose is now used to teach every class that comes
through Old Town, Shiminski said.
REMEMBER THE JEWISH CANDIDATE?—Herb Klein, former editor-in-chief of the San
Diego Union-Tribune and also a former communications director for President
Richard M. Nixon, wrote a
commentary in today's San Diego Union-Tribune about how religion
shouldn't matter in presidential races. He mentioned Al Smith, John Kennedy, and
John Kerry as examples of Catholic nominees, and discussed George Romney and
Mitt Romney as Mormon hopefuls. Somehow he forgot to mention that
Joseph Lieberman, a Jew, was nominated for vice president by the Democrats
in 2000.
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CBI plans Balboa Park history walk
SAN DIEGO (Publicity Release)—Yasher Koach, the seniors group of Congregation
Beth Israel, conducts a walk in historical Balboa Park with a veteran park
ranger on the park on Thursday, June 14 at 10:30am.
The day will begin with a talk given by Kim Duclo, who has been a Park Ranger
for the City of San Diego, stationed primarily in Balboa Park for the past 11
years. During the walking tour visitors will examine historical, architectural
and botanical features in the heart of the park. Our guests will also be
treated to some “hidden treasures” not often seen by the general public.
Please RSVP by Monday, June 11 to Bonnie Graff, Program Director at
bgraff@cbisd.org or (858) 535-1111, ext. 3800.
Be sure to check Congregation Beth Israel’s web site at
www.cbisd.org for information on this and all other Yasher Koach Programs.
Yasher Koach (meaning from strength to strength) presents creative, dynamic
programming for mature, active adults. Participants enjoy a variety of
programming that includes musical entertainment, guest speakers, and chocolate
tasting.
The foregoing article was
provided by Congregation Beth Israel
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________________________________________________________________________
Doing
It Better
Natasha
Josefowitz
______________________________________________________________________________
Here are ten
conversation-starters
to learn about your adult grandchildren
LA JOLLA, Calif
—Our three adult grandsons visited us recently at separate times at our
retirement community of White Sands. Having visited us yearly since
infancy—at first with their parents and now alone—they have “done” San
Diego. By this I mean that the zoo, SeaWorld, Wild Animal Park, the climbing
wall, Rubin H. Fleet Science Center, the Midway, the Star of India, as well
as the various museums, held little interest.
The weather was cold and rainy, so the usual outdoor activities were out.
And so, reading, movies, the computer, TV and dinners out were the only
acceptable entertainments. All three boys were tethered to their cell
phones, either talking to their friends or text messaging.
To make these trips more meaningful, something else needed to be done. Since
we took all meals together, this was the ideal opportunity to get to know
these young people in their new twenty-something skins, as well as help them
know their elderly grandparents beyond the talk of sports and politics.
So I devised a list of ten questions we all had to answer in turn. A “Yes”
or “No” or “I don’t know” would not do. As each answer was pondered, we
could ask questions to clarify and expand as well as use personal
examples—all of which led to discussion at a deeper level than previously
achieved. This list includes the following which worked well with our
grandsons. This works also well for your dinner parties or whenever you wish
to deepen a relationship.
There is no special order to these, choose the ones you are most comfortable
with; it is important that you talk first as it becomes the model of
how to be personal and revealing.
1.
What is (was) your favorite place/book/movie/food?
2.
What surprises you most about your life?
3.
If you could change one thing in your life so far, what would it be?
4.
What decision(s) are you currently wrestling with?
5.
Is there one memory you would like to hold onto forever?
6.
If you could choose any profession, without further study, what would it be?
7.
In whose shoes would you like to walk for a day?
8.
What topic gets you the most excited or most upset?
9.
What is the one thing you are most proud of?
and finally…
10.What are you
most grateful for?
Obviously not all the topics can be covered during a visit, one must choose
the few most appropriate for the particular grandchild’s circumstances. Some
are easy to answer for the non-talkative kid, some are more complex.
Most answers were quite illuminating and some helped us uncover whole sides
of personality we knew nothing about. Since we as grandparents also answered
these questions, the kids heard about parts of our lives they had never
known, as well as our own hopes, fears and dreams.
A different question and one that can only be asked after trust has been
built and confidentiality respected is “What is the one thing you have said
or done and should not have, or not said or done and should have—and still
feel badly about?” Be sure to share your own feelings of guilt first. This
may turn out to be quite cathartic.
Allow the conversation to go off topic and to any direction that seems
meaningful. The questions you choose to ask are also the ones you are
willing to answer and in the process, your new, increased and deepened
knowledge of each other will result in a new, increased and deepened
intimacy and that, after all, is the most wonderful thing we an ever offer
our grandchildren.
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A
special Shavuot study session: Poring
over Dead Sea Scroll texts with curator
By Sandy
Golden
SAN DIEGO—What better
night to study the Dead Sea Scrolls, than on the first night of Shavuot, the
holiday that commemorates our receiving the Torah on Mt. Sinai thousands years
ago, and also celebrates our tradition of study?
That being the
motivation, after a brief service in the Ohr Shalom Synagogue, approximately 50
people gathered around a horseshoe-shaped table in the synagogue’s social hall,
to listen and learn from the expert responsible for bringing this
once-in-a-lifetime exhibit to San Diego, one of Ohr Shalom’s own members, Dr.
Risa Levitt Kohn.
Kohn, director of the
Jewish Studies Program at San Diego State University, is an Associate Professor
of Hebrew Bible and Judaism in SDSU’s Religious Studies Department, and a Dead
Sea Scrolls scholar. As curator for this extraordinary exhibit, which will be on
display at San Diego’s Natural History Museum for six months, from June 29
through December 31, Dr. Kohn personally selected all the scrolls which will be
displayed, scrolls which are different from those which have been displayed at
other museums. In fact, ten of the scrolls will be displayed for the very first
time.
The professor pointed
out that more than 100,000 fragments of text, both biblical and non-biblical,
were discovered in the Qumran caves, and scholars have now pieced them together
into over 900 separate documents.
In order to better
explain and describe one of the texts, Kohn first distributed copies of a
non-biblical text, known as “Songs of the Sage”, to participants. This text,
which dated back to the first century B.C.E., had been found in one of the caves
in 1952, and was one of those which had been written in Hebrew. The Professor
also displayed large photographic copies of the original text, which showed
clearly the fragmentation of this text. She then asked participants to read
aloud sections of the texts in both the English and the Hebrew, noting the
brackets which had been inserted, to show where missing words must have once
been. As the study session continued, she engaged participants and Ohr Shalom’s
Rabbi Scott Meltzer in a discussion of the meaning of the texts read.
What did the text
really mean? In what context had this document been written? What kind of people
had written it? How had they lived?
Because of the
missing letters and words, participants could not be certain of the complete
meaning of the text. Various interpretations of the document were discussed, in
order to gain a better understanding of the writers of the text.
The depth of study
and interpretations rendered reminded this writer of the generations of scholars
who have, and still are, interpreting our biblical texts—still another aspect of
what made this Shavuot study session particularly fascinating.
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___________
Rabbinic Insights
God's video camera never turns off
By Rabbi
Wayne Dosick
CARLSBAD, Calif. — Some of you will remember that back in the fall of 1996, our
house - along with more than 100 other houses in the neighborhood - burned to
the ground in what was later dubbed the “Harmony Grove Fire.”
When we rebuilt he house, we decided that, rather than putting the kitchen floor
directly on the slab, we would set in on a kind of sling, to give it a
trampoline effect. That way, standing in the kitchen would be easier on feet
and backs. So, the workmen dug down about six inches from the slab, poured the
concrete, and, then, built a kind of trampoline on criss-crossing 2 by 4s, and
then laid three-quarter inch plywood over the 2 by 4s. The flooring material -
in this case Pergo - was put on top of the plywood. Thus, the finished floor
had a little bounce to it, making walking and standing easier than if the
flooring has just been put on top of concrete slab.
The plan worked perfectly - until about a month ago.
Somehow, water got into the house (most likely from a garden faucet that had,
somehow, been turned on and not turned off) and flooded under the flooring. We
became aware of this because instead of slightly bouncing on the kitchen floor,
we began to sink in.
We called our handy handyman, a wonderful fellow named Tim, who had been part of
the construction crew for the house and has helped us out ever since. He tore
up the flooring, and instead of heavy 3-quarter inch plywood and sturdy 2 by 4s,
we had toothpick-like wood splinters. In only two or three weeks, heavy, heavy
wood had been rotted away by the force of garden-faucet water, and the flooring
on top of it had collapsed.
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Arts,
Entertainment & Dining |
Arts
in Review
by
Carol Davis
___________________________________________
Trippin' through literature with Bunbury
If
you were surprised when you heard that the Bush White House called former
President Jimmy Carter irrelevant, imaging how Bunbury, felt when he found out
he wasn’t even a real person. Oh! But I’m getting ahead of myself.
Diversionary Theatre in Hillcrest on Park Blvd. is currently mounting Tom
Jacobson’s Bunbury, a serious play for trivial people. It’s so much fun
that it defies reality and almost makes you wonder what you would do if you
could travel through time. It’s clever enough to test anyone’s literary recall
and not so trivial as to make one think aloud, “What if?” Bunbury is the
final show of the 2006-‘07 season through June 17 (with an added Mon. June 4
performance) and it‘s a fantastically fun way to spend two hours of your time.
Jacobson’s
story takes off right at the starting gate when a proper Bunbury (a perfect fit
for David McBean), is reading Romeo and Juliet and commenting aloud to
his rather snooty butler, Hartley, (a talented Tom Zohar) about how Romeo’s life
would have turned out differently had he kept with his Rosaline and never met
Juliet at the ball. He insists she is simply a fictional character, or less than
fiction and
David McBean, Aaron Marcotte
falls off the radar screen after Romeo meets Juliet. Before we know it, he gets
a visit from Rosaline (Melissa Fernandes is right on target) telling him that
she may be a ‘blob’ on paper, but lest he forget, both she and he are mere
characters in plays; he right out of Oscar Wilde’s The Importance of Being
Earnest, and she straight out of Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet.
And no matter how hard he tries to convince her that he is, in fact, the real
friend of Algernon Moncrieff, who unbeknownst to Bunbury has invented him for
his own pleasure, she knows better. In a one upsmanship, he relates to her, that
even though she is spoken of in Romeo and Juliet, no one ever sees her.
After they finally accept that they are who they are, they conspire to travel
back and forth through the looking glass of literature to change the outcome of
many of the classics that end in tragedy. It’s a romp that takes us to the death
scene in Romeo and Juliet and imagines that the lovers both live; to
Beckett’s Godot;( yes we get to see Godot, the waiting is over) to
the young gay, alcoholic husband, Allan (Aaron Marcotte) of Blanche DuBois in
Streetcar (Interestingly enough they save Blanche from the likes
of Stanley Kowalski when Blanche finally sees the light and forgives her
husband for all he’s done); to Albee’s Virginia Woolf and the
talked about son we never see but who is always at the center of their hate, to
Faust being a saint? to Edgar Allan Poe sans the Raven and oh, so many
more that it’s fun to not only see the resulting changes and what they bring,
but to guess the plays from whence they come.
Alas, however, reality sets in for the two and even though they are now more
than discarded characters and they know they can influence the world of
literature, they also appreciate that by changing the outcome of the stories, or
life for that matter, where would the drama, the tragedy, the reality, the fear,
the disappointment be? “Fiction would become so damned boring." And so they go
back to the literary drawing boards and correct what they have done realizing
that they can, as we all can, make a difference. Jacobson’s play poses so many
questions for us, the audience (up to and including the present condition) to
ponder, that just the exercise alone will conjure many pictures.
Director Esther Emery has surrounded herself with a talented (overall) cast who
under her deft direction, are a pleasure to watch and try to match wits with.
David McBean, long remembered for his outstanding one man show at Cygnet’s
Fully Committed, is no less committed to being the quintessential character
straight out of Oscar Wilde’s wicked imagination. Dressed the perfect dandy in a
butterscotch checkered, vested suit (Jennifer Brawn Gittings costumes were a
mixed bag) he prances, paces, cajoles and is in just about every scene. Catch
his body language, it’s classic David McBean. In other words, this is Bunbury/McBean’s
shining hour.
Melissa Fernandes, back after giving birth to her beautiful Isabella, is right
on track and sharp as a tack as Rosaline, Romeo’s spurned love. Tom Zohar, who
not only plays the piano (He composed the original music for Subject to
Change, a play in which he appeared) while playing the butler to McBean’s
Bunbury, he never misses a beat in his multiple roles. As a side bar, he is also
fluent in Hebrew. I happened to overhear him chatting away with friends in that
ancient language one afternoon while waiting to see a play in Carlsbad. It took
me by surprise because it was so out of context. In his credits, he does claim
to be proficient in many accents and speak Hebrew fluently. I can attest to
both. One never knows when one will happen upon a find like this.
John Rosen, last seen in Paula Vogel’s The Long Christmas Ride Home at
Diversionary recently, plays several characters including the Friar in Romeo
and Juliet, George in Virginia Woolf and an older, more
disillusioned Algernon. Rosen is a versatile actor who is most convincing.
Wendy Waddell who also plays multiple roles along with Aaron Marcotte and Chris
Buess and Diane Addis add to the overall taste of the production.
Nick Fouch’s simple set design with curtains separating scenes and places makes
it easy for the characters to move about. His lily lamps set on either end of
the wide stage are a curiosity only until we see McBean carrying a lily around
as a prop, and Christian DeAngelis’ takes credit for the lighting design which
works well. All in all, this final production of Diversionary Theatre’s season
is surely going to leave patrons with a willingness to see what they have to
offer in the coming seasons.
For information about it’s season; tickets and prices call 619-220-0097 or log
on to www.diversionary.org
See you at the theatre.
Saudi missiles...
(Continued from above)
In the past two years,
an estimated 2,500 Saudi Arabian youths eager to wage jihad have slipped into Iraq
and 70% of the most-wanted international terrorists are Saudi Arabians.
“We need to send a crystal clear message to the Saudi Arabian government that
their tacit approval of terrorism can’t go unpunished,” said Rep. Weiner. “Saudi
Arabia should not get an ounce of military
support from the U.S until they unequivocally denounce terrorism and take
tangible steps to prevent it.”
“It is critical that Congress block the sale of these high tech weapons to Saudi
Arabia given its abysmal record in combating terrorism and unwillingness to
crack down on extremists,” said Rep. Wexler. “America’s
national security interest must come first, and I urge President Bush to
immediately cancel this controversial sale of weapons to Saudi Arabia.”
For each of the last
three years, Rep. Weiner has passed amendments in the House of Representatives
banning U.S aid to Saudi Arabia.
The foregoing article was obtained from
the website of Congressman Anthony Weiner
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United Nations...
(Continued from above)
In response, Israeli tanks had entered the Gaza Strip for the first time since
last November’s ceasefire, he said. Israeli air strikes aimed at militants and
facilities had resulted in civilian casualties, including six family members of
a Hamas Legislative Council member killed in a single strike on their home. All
told, militant rocket fire had killed one Israeli and injured 16, while Israeli
air strikes and ground incursions had killed 57 Palestinians, including six
children, and injured at least 175.
With rocket fire continuing, militants threatening to resume suicide bombings
and the Israeli Government announcing its determination to intensify its
actions, there was a great danger of escalation, he said. United Nations
operations and personnel faced also real dangers. On 7 May, an internal
Palestinian clash outside a school run by the United Nations Relief and Works
Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) in Rafah had left one
person dead and eight injured, including two children.
He said the Secretary-General, while recognizing its right to defend itself, had
called on Israel to ensure its actions did not target civilians or put them at
undue risk, while stressing that all parties must abide by the basic tenets of
applicable international law. The Secretary-General had urged Palestinian
Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni to
calm the situation and exercise control and restraint, respectively.
Turning to other Israeli-Palestinian issues, he said there had been no action
towards freezing the construction of settlements or dismantling outposts, and
neither had the settlers mentioned in last month’s briefing been evicted from
central Hebron, despite an order by the Defence Minister. In early May, a plan
to build three further settlements in East Jerusalem, comprising another
20,000 housing units, had received preliminary approval. The Secretary-General
had expressed his concern about those plans, noting that halting settlement
expansion was one of the basic obligations of the Quartet’s “Road Map” and that,
as occupied territory, East Jerusalem’s final status was subject to negotiations
between the parties. Meanwhile, construction of the wall had continued
throughout the reporting period, contrary to the advisory opinion of the
International Court of Justice.
With respect to access and movement, he said there had been a slight increase in
physical obstacles from last month, and closure levels had doubled since the
Agreement on Movement and Access 18 months ago. The Karni crossing had been
closed between 15 and 20 May, and the Rafah crossing had been open for only five
days during the month. However, it was good that the European Union Border
Assistance Mission there was being renewed. Meanwhile, United Nations staff
members and humanitarian workers crossing into Israel continued to face
arbitrary arrest and humiliating treatment by Israeli authorities.
Regarding financing for the Palestinian Authority, he said the recent decision
by the United States not to block bank transfers to its accounts, the
re-establishment of the single treasury account, and ongoing efforts by Finance
Minister Salaam Fayyad to restart a transparent and accountable budget process
should be welcomed and supported by all. However, the major step required was
the resumption of the transfer of tax revenues withheld by Israel, now amounting
to approximately $1 billion.
As for efforts to promote the Arab Peace Initiative, he said a dialogue had
taken place between Foreign Minister Livni and her Jordanian and Egyptian
counterparts, and Prime Minister Olmert and King Abdullah of Jordan on 15 May.
A ministerial-level meeting was anticipated in the coming weeks. Quartet
members, for their part, had held an informal exchange of views at Sharm
el-Sheikh, Egypt, with members of the Committee of the Arab League tasked with
implementing the Initiative. The Secretary-General planned to convey to his
fellow Quartet members, in Berlin next week, the importance of using the
Initiative as a framework to establish a comprehensive settlement.
On Israeli political developments, he said the Winograd Report criticizing the
conduct of last year’s conflict with Hizbullah had dominated the country’s
politics during the reporting period. It noted that inadequate efforts had been
made to reach peace agreements with Israel’s neighbours. As for efforts to
advance political dialogue, there had been no further bilateral meetings between
Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and President Abbas since 15 April. Their next
meeting was tentatively scheduled for 11 June.
Turning to events in Lebanon, he said a dangerous outbreak of violence,
featuring armed clashes between the Lebanese Armed Forces and Fatah al-Islam
gunmen in and around a Palestinian refugee camp had added a new and explosive
element to an already tense situation. The heavy fighting that had erupted on
20 May, between the Lebanese Armed Forces and Fatah al-Islam gunmen around a
Palestinian refugee camp in the northern port city of Tripoli had continued
through Monday and Tuesday, resulting in the deaths of 32 Lebanese soldiers and
22 Fatah al-Islam members.
He said at least 27 civilians had been killed and approximately 70 wounded,
since the fighting had erupted, though those reports had not been independently
confirmed. Initially, thousands had fled their homes to shelter inside the Nahr
el-Bared camp, but during a truce on Tuesday and Wednesday, 15,000 refugees had
then fled the camp. Homes had been destroyed, and the camp’s medicine, water
and electricity supplies had reportedly been interrupted. Major Palestinian
factions in Lebanon had disassociated themselves from Fatah al-Islam, and the
Lebanese Government had expressed its determination to confront the group.
However, there were “real concerns” that the instability might spread to other
camps.
The Secretary-General had deplored an attack that had destroyed or damaged half
of a six-truck UNRWA humanitarian convoy, calling on all sides to protect
civilians, he said. The Secretary-General had been in close contact with Prime
Minister Siniora of Lebanon and had talked on the phone with King Abdullah of
Jordan; the Foreign Ministers of Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Iran and Syria; and Amre
Moussa, Secretary-General of the League of Arab States.
In addition to the events in northern Lebanon, a large explosion had occurred in
Beirut on 20 May, killing one person and injuring 18, he said. On 21 May,
another “powerful terror attack” had taken place in a second Beirut
neighbourhood, and on 23 May, 16 more people had been injured in a third
explosion. In the south, meanwhile, the overall situation along the Blue Line
was calm, although there had been a number of tense stand-offs between the
Israel Defence Forces and the Lebanese Armed Forces at various points. The
presence of the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) had helped
de-escalate tensions.
Ongoing tensions were also reflected in provocative billboards erected by
Hizbollah, while Israeli aerial violations of the Blue Line continued on a
regular basis, he said. Meanwhile, an independent mission to assess the
monitoring of the Lebanese-Syrian border would be dispatched to Lebanon next
week, security circumstances permitting.
The foregoing article was provided by the United
Nations News Centre
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Iran Divestment...
(Continued from above)
“The Apartheid system of South Africa crumbled under the pressure of
international disapproval, as expressed in the successful divestment
campaign. Divestment is now slowly sending a message today to China about
its involvement with the Sudanese regime as long as the genocide continues
in Darfur. This new legislation puts the power of the purse to use so that
Tehran might be deterred from its headlong pursuit of nuclear weapons.”
“One of the advantages of this approach is that it makes it very clear that
the actions taken under this bill will be actions taken by the American
people: by elected state governments, by elected state officials, and by
individuals acting on their own convictions, with their own money,” said
Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney Frank. “It also makes a very
important political point. It gives Americans the ability to speak out
about their understandable revulsion to the actions of the Iranian
government.”
Rep. Brad Sherman (D-CA), Chairman of the Subcommittee on Terrorism,
Nonproliferation and Trade, said, “I was proud to cosponsor this bill and to
work with Chairman Frank on its passage through the Financial Services
Committee. My amendment will make it clear that state and local divestment
efforts targeting Iran are fully authorized, whether they focus on
corporations investing in Iran’s oil sector or target Iran more broadly.
This will insulate Missouri and others from possible law suits, and
encourage California, Ohio and many other states to move forward.”
"I am grateful the Financial Services Committee acted so quickly to pass
this legislation. I believe Americans want choice in divesting from
companies that support a regime in Iran that sponsors terrorism and is an
avowed enemy of American interests. Because I believe military action
against Iran, while not off the table, must be an absolute last resort, it
is critical our government utilize the tools at our disposal including
economic sanctions and a divestment campaign to deter the threat Iran poses
to global security,” said Rep. Christopher Shays (R-CT), the lead Republican
co-sponsor of the bill, and Ranking Member of the Subcommittee on National
Security and Foreign Affairs. “It is also appropriate for us to impose
pressure on the other nations of the world who prop up the Iranian
government and the extremists at its helm by investing heavily in that
nation."
“Iran poses a grave and growing threat to both the United States and the
Middle East, and in order to pressure Iran into being a more responsible
regime, the United States and the international community must exhaust every
economic, diplomatic and political tool available. This is why I’m proud to
join Chairman Frank in introducing legislation that would serve as our first
line of defense in holding Iran accountable for the decisions it is making
on the international stage,” said Rep. Ron Klein (D-FL), a co-sponsor of the
bill.
The Iran Sanctions Enabling Act of 2007
will:
-
Require the U.S.
government to publish a list every six months of those companies that have
an investment of more than $20 million in Iran’s energy sector. This
comprehensive list will provide investors with the knowledge to make
informed investment decisions as well as a powerful disincentive for foreign
companies to engage with Iran.
-
Authorize state and
local governments to divest the assets of their pension funds and other
funds under their control from any company on the list.
-
Provide a safe harbor
to fund managers, managers of mutual funds and corporate pension funds who
divest from companies on this list from actions by shareholders.
-
Establishes a Sense of
the Congress that urges the Thrift Savings Plan to offer a terror-free
investment option for government workers.
The foregoing article was taken
from Congressman Barney Frank's website
(return to top)
Aid to Palestinians...
(continued from above)
"When the Palestinian people chose to
empower Hamas, they implicitly, and perhaps unknowingly, sent a number of
messages to the rest of the world: messages about the acceptability of
terrorists and terrorism, about the durability of past commitments, and about
their relationship with the world. Most Palestinians had more narrow objectives
in their votes, but elections have consequences no less for Palestinians than
for ourselves in the United States. A legitimate election doesn’t absolve
candidates of their crimes, and there is more to democracy than a fair counting
of ballots. Elected terrorists are still terrorists.
"The consequences of the Palestinian elections have been dire. Israel stopped
transferring tax revenues and the movement of goods in and out of Palestinians
areas has slowed to a stagnant crawl. The United States acted to prevent bank
transfers to the Hamas-led PA, and Congress has required that U.S. assistance be
given only through non-governmental organizations, or to the Office of President
Mahmoud Abbas. To provide humanitarian assistance to the Palestinian people,
together with our Quartet partners, we have established a Temporary
International Mechanism to deliver aid. The TIM, initially established in June
2006, allowed approximately $900 million in emergency assistance to be spent in
the West Bank and Gaza by the end of last year. By comparison, in 2005, total PA
revenue from taxes, transferred customs duties and foreign aid amounted to $1.3
billion, with another $700 million coming from commercial loans and proceeds
from the Palestine Investment Fund.
"So today, instead of an economy, the Palestinians have a TIM cup. Instead of a
unity government, they have warlords and clan leaders. They’ve replaced
negotiations with Israel with fighting amongst themselves. Palestinians who once
rightfully boasted of their high-levels of education and cultural
sophistication, are now commonly compared to the hapless residents of
Afghanistan and Somalia. Instead of being schooled in co-existence and peace,
Palestinian children now get instruction in genocide and the joy of
suicide-bombing from Mickey Mouse’s evil cousin, 'Farfur,' the Hamas-T.V. Terror
Mouse—another generation lost.
"For the ordinary Palestinian, nothing is better and almost everything is worse.
Yet who do they blame? The United States. Bush. Olmert. Abu Mazen. The PA. The
Arabs. The Quartet. The weather. The N.Y. Yankees. Anyone and everyone except
Hamas.
"And how is Hamas responding to this crisis? The same way they always do. Hamas
may have emerged as a political actor but they still have only one strategy:
“Don’t just stand there! Kill some Jews!” Not surprisingly, scarcely a day has
gone by during the so-called “cease-fire” when the 40,000 Israelis living in
Sderot have not had to flee Palestinian rocket fire from Gaza. Instead of
baiting the IDF to invade, Hamas has only cleared the way for the IDF to resume
targeted killings–richly deserved, probably necessary, but ultimately sterile.
"Into this maelstrom of chaos and bloodletting the Bush Administration has
proposed a set of benchmarks to facilitate greater Palestinian freedom of
movement. The plan is heavy on administrative details and light on political
reality. Variously described as 'informal,' 'flexible,' and 'iterative,' the
benchmarks overwhelmingly focus on specific and often risky action items for
Israel, and on fuzzy, notional aspirations for the forces under the control of
President Abbas. Yet again, I’m afraid we have slaughtered more trees for paper
that will fill the graveyard of still-born American security plans.
"To be clear, I am not opposed to benchmarks, or security plans, and I certainly
agree that both Israelis and Palestinians have to take responsibility for
improving their shared misfortune. Reciprocity is the only way out of this mire.
If the past year has shown nothing else, it has demonstrated clearly the perils
of unilateralism. Given the level of the PA’s disfunctionality, unilateralism
was an experiment worth trying. But the results are now clear, and they are
overwhelmingly negative.
"Politically, diplomatically, and militarily, unilateralism has strengthened
radicals, weakened moderates, undercut Israeli deterrence, and contributed
little to Israeli security. Getting out of Gaza was worth doing, but in the long
term, I see little prospect for Israel to achieve durable improvements in
security without the cooperation of an effective Palestinian partner, and here
we come to the heart of the matter.
"There is no such effective Palestinian partner. By virtue of the decisions and
missed chances of the past years–American, Israeli, Arab and Palestinian–the
Palestinian Authority is in danger of complete collapse. It may be just a shell
today, but even that shell is now in danger of disintegration. It is this fact
more than any other that gives an air of unreality to the so-called 'access and
movement benchmarks.
"In their totality, whether they are 'informal,' 'flexible,' or 'iterative,'
they are built on a flawed premise, they confuse symptoms with causes. The lack
of access and movement is a problem, but it’s not the problem. The problem is a
Palestinian Authority without a singular and exclusive authority. The problem is
a political void that is being relentlessly expanded and filled by Hamas.
"Unless and until we can propose a plan that will address the problem, I fear
our waste-paper graveyard is going to keep pace with real ones.”
Witnesses for the hearing included The Honorable C. David Welch, Assistant
Secretary, Bureau of Near Eastern Affairs, U.S. Department of State; Lieutenant
General Keith W. Dayton, United States Security Coordinator and Mr. Mark Ward,
Senior Deputy Assistant Administrator, Bureau for Asia and the Near East, U.S.
Agency for International Development.
(return to top)
Rabbinic Insights...
(continued from above)
The prescription
was clear - and expensive: rent industrial strength fans to dry the water from
the floor and the surviving wood, replace the 2 by 4s and the plywood, buy new
flooring, and have it installed. All this, of course is, as they say, easier
said than done, particularly because the original flooring is no longer
manufactured, so we cannot get a good color match (and, even if we could, the
sun has faded the color on the remaining floor), and the material that comes
closest is a quarter of an inch thicker than the old material, this,
necessitating a delicate sloping of the floor so that old and new can co-exist.
Inconvenience. Time. Money. All the “joys” of being a homeowner. Where, oh,
where is the “super” when you need him?
Now, I would not bother you with this tale of all our domestic woes, except for
a fascinating thing we saw when we tore up the old flooring.
Remember that I told you that Tim was part of the original crew that built the
house. He worked for a fellow (now I begin using made names) Dane, who also
employed two others workers, Dan and Sam.
When Tim pulled up the flooring, right there written on the concrete of the slab
were the words, “Tim is an *******.” Seeing this curse against himself, Tim
immediately called out, “Dan.” He surmised - and, knowing this crew, most
likely rightly so - that when the original concrete was wet, his co-worker, Dan,
had written in this derogatory, nasty epitaph about him.
Dan, of course, assumed that his words would never, ever be seen. For, who
expected that there would be water damage that would necessitate tearing up the
flooring, and exposing the unpleasant words he had written almost a decade
before?
The “incident of the floor” reminds us that nothing, nothing, we ever say or do
can hidden - not matter how hard we try to keep it from view.
Do you remember the Rodney King saga in Los Angeles? A “hidden” camera recorded
the police viciously beating him. We assume that the police assumed that their
actions would never be known, but the video tape exposed them.
If we think that we can hide away our words or actions under a floor that will
never be lifted, or in front of a camera that we never see, we are wrong. For,
we may fool our fellow human beings for a while - until the floor is lifted, or
the camera's red light blinks - but, in the words of the Talmud, there is “An
Eye that sees, and an Ear that hears.”
God's video camera never goes off. God records all our words and deeds, and
they all go on our “permanent record.”
There is an old story about a man going through a cafeteria line. He sees a
plate of freshly baked chocolate chip cookies. They smell so good and look so
tasty that he puts two of them on his plate.Then he sees a sign: “Please take
only one chocolate chip cookie.” He figures that no one will ever know that he
has taken two cookies ' until the sees a second sign: “God is
watching.” So, he puts back one of the cookies. He goes further on in the
line, and he sees a bowl of big, shiny, red apples. He remembers the warning
about the cookies, so he takes only one apple. Then, he sees the sign: “Take
as many apples as you like. God is watching the chocolate chip cookies.”
So, ask yourself: What if my every word and deed of today is being recorded by
a hidden video camera. And the tape will be played on tonight's national news.
And I have to call my parents and my children to tell them that I will be on the
6pm news. Will my words and actions make me happy and proud, or will they
embarrass and humiliate me?
Now, the truth is that none of us is perfect. We have all said and done things
of which we are not very proud. We have all erred, and failed, and
transgressed. And, hopefully, we have grown, and healed, and changed, and
transformed through our mistakes.
And, sometimes, because of changing situation, or mores, what was acceptable
once is no longer. For, except for some very firm absolutes, circumstance and
time leave some words or actions to subjective judgment. What was acceptable
and right in the 1960s, may not be all right today. How we behaved and what we
said when we were 20 or 30, may not be acceptable when we are 50 or 60. Or,
conversely, what society rejected then may be perfectly acceptable now. All
this, too, is part of growth and transformation - ours and the society in which
we live.
Yet, though ten years have passed, Tim was just as hurt by Dan's words today
and he would have been then.
So, be careful of the words you speak. Be very aware of the consequences of
each of your deeds.
The floor may flood and be torn up at any moment. Discovery is always
possible.
And, even if another human eye never sees what you do, and another human ear
never hears what you say, there is an Eye; there is an Ear.
God is always
watching; God always hears - even underneath the kitchen floor.
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