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 Vol. 1, No. 163

       Wednesday evening,  October 10, 2007
 
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                              Today's Postings


Judy Lash Balint
in Jerusalem: "Creating facts on the ground in a new battle for Jerusalem"

Cynthia Citron
in Los Angeles: "Begin legacy stirs memories as L.A. crowd marks 30th anniversary of Egypt-Israel peace process"

Sheila Orysiek in San Diego: "Better editing would have benefited the memoir Hilda"


                              The week in Review
                            (
click on dates to see bac
k issues)


Tuesday, October 9

Aaron Demsky in Ramat Gan, Israel: "Biblical names, popular in America, fraught with meaning"

Charles Gadda
in New York: "Is Dead Sea Scrolls exhibit biased toward the Christian narrative?"

Gail Feinstein Forman in San Diego: "A Farewell to Marcel Marceau"



Monday, October 8

Sherry Berlin in San Diego: "Children's book author and illustrator Lori Mitchell will attend Book Fair's Family Day

Carol Ghitman
in San Diego: "
Hillel sandwich' helped former Mexican Catholic realize she could become a Jew"

Donald H. Harrison
in San Diego: "Foxman's book will prove valuable for American and Mideast historians"

David Meir-Levi
in San Jose, California: "
Hate crime suspected in torching of succah at San Jose State"


Sunday, October 7

Donald H. Harrison in San Diego: "Mision Trails reverie: Moses, Kumeyaay Indians, U.S. history."

Joe Naiman in Lakeside, California: "
Youkilis played part in Red Sox ALDS sweep over L.A. Angels"

Sheila Orysiek
in San Diego: "California Ballet dances Giselle"

Dorothea Shefer-Vanson
in Mevasseret Zion, Israel: "Life is returning to normal in Israel as it is finally 'after the holidays.'

 

Saturday, October 6

Donald H. Harrison in San Diego: "'Bubbie and Zadie,' who live in Taiwan, actually speak Yiddish"

Natasha Josefowitz
in La Jolla, California: "Thinning out the wardrobe closet."

Ira Sharkansky
in Jerusalem: "Are Abbas-Olmert negotiations diplomatic window-dressing?"

Isaac Yetiv in La Jolla, California: "Warming the North African winter with Maimonides"

Friday, October 5

Donald H. Harrison in San Diego: "Not the best of the Viorst"

Dov Burt Levy in Salem, Massachusetts:
 'Israel lobby' responses       

Larry Zeiger in San Diego: "A tzedakah project in Honduras"


Thursday, October 4
Shoshana Bryen in Washington, D.C: "World without Israel still would be unpleasant for the Arabs"

Donald H. Harrison
in San Diego: "Torah-chology: Mogel blends  psychology and Judaism"

Sheila Orysiek
in San Diego: "
Why Torah bears reading again and again"

Lynne Thrope in San Diego:
Sampling San Diego's best chefs' creations at annual Chef Celebration

San Diego Jewish World staff: Three photo combination shows march of Torahs followed by one's unrolling at Tifereth Israel Synagogue in San Diego



Archive of Previous Issues
 


  Jerusalem Diaries
        
Judy Lash Balint
 

Creating facts on the ground in a new battle for Jerusalem

JERUSALEM—When most tourists think of Jerusalem, they generally have in mind the Western Wall, the Israel Museum, the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, Ben Yehuda Mall and Yad Vashem. Sadly, tourists, like most Israeli Jews, don't spend much time in eastern Jerusalem--despite the fact that this part of the Holy City holds the most historical, spiritual and strategic significance for Jews and Christians.

But in the run-up to the Annapolis summit, as the Olmert and Bush administrations intone the old "two states for two peoples" mantra, and renewed declarations that a Palestinian state will have east Jerusalem as its capital go on, perhaps it's time to understand the dynamics of the eastern part of the city.

Until very recently, Israeli politicians both left and right cited "Jerusalem, the undivided capital of Israel" as the consensus mantra. Now, Deputy Prime Minister Haim Ramon, (the same Ramon who was convicted just six months ago on sexual harassment charges) is advancing the same unrealistic Camp David thinking on Jerusalem as that first raised by Ehud Barak in 2000. Let the Arabs have the Arab neighborhoods and the Jews will keep the Jewish areas, and the "Holy Basin" of Judaism and Christianity's holiest sites will be administered by joint international supervision, declares Ramon.

But, as anyone who has spent any time at all in Jerusalem's neighborhoods can attest, things on the ground are far more complex than that.

For some American and European politicians, Jewish development in eastern Jerusalem is a provocation and a threat to the 'peace process.' Thus, the idea that Jews have the right to build and live wherever they wish in Jerusalem, under Israeli sovereignty, is an unacceptable concept.

But without the strategic assets of pockets of Jewish settlement in eastern Jerusalem, the city would indeed be divided, de facto. Jews would continue to work and live in the western section, and Arabs would predominate in the eastern part of the city where so much of Jewish history took place.

The idea of surrounding the inner core of Jerusalem with areas of Jewish settlement is not new. Successive Israeli governments since 1967 have consistently carried out this policy--developing the neighborhoods of Maaleh Adumim, Pisgat Zeev, Givat Zeev, East Talpiot and the re-established Neve Yaakov (founded in 1924). Even a cursory look at a map of greater Jerusalem will reveal that these communities play a crucial role in forming a buffer against Palestine Authority efforts to achieve territorial contiguity between the Old City and the two nearby areas already under PA control--Ramallah to the north and Bethlehem to the south.

Abu Dis, bordering the Mt of Olives cemetery, remains under Israeli security control, but Palestinian civil control. If this contiguity were to be achieved, the PA will have created a viable capital within shouting distance of the Temple Mount.

Jewish efforts to establish institutions and neighborhoods in eastern Jerusalem include Beit Orot, sitting on the northernmost ridge of the Mt of Olives. Beit Orot encompasses a hesder yeshiva (where students study and serve in the IDF) and development initiative. Located just below the Mt Scopus campus of Hebrew University, the yeshiva, founded by MK Rabbi Benny Elon and former MK Hanan Porat, educates and houses more than 100 students every year. In addition, the Beit Orot site now includes the homes of a number of young families who are waiting for building to start at the site for the first Jewish neighborhood on the Mt of Olives in two thousand years. Just across the road are Beit Orot's neighbors, the Arabs of A-Tur and the Augusta Victoria Hospital.

Down the hill and to the west of Beit Orot lies the newly reclaimed neighborhood of Shimon Hatzaddik (established in 1891). Less than half a mile from Meah Shearim. just north of the Old City, the area is named after the nearby tomb of Shimon Hatzaddik, a sage from the Great Assembly, active in the time of Alexander the Great.. Israeli flags now fly proudly over the complex of small houses and a synagogue/study house that make up the neighborhood that is part of the Sheikh Jarrah area that houses various foreign consulates and Palestinian institutions.

Ownership of the six dunam Shimon Hatzaddik site lies in the hands of the Vaad Sephardi Haredit--a Sephardic communal body whose members populated the area until the Arab riots of the 1920s and 30s drove them out. Jewish organizations have been quietly acquiring the "protected tenancy rights" of the Arab tenants who had squatted there for many years and young Jewish families are now reclaiming the property.

Behind the neighborhood synagogue is a flight of stairs leading to Derekh Har HaZeitim, the road where 77 doctors and nurses trying to reach Hadassah Hospital on Mt Scopus were murdered in 1948. A simple monument marks the spot.

A few years ago, a group of Jewish investors from Israel and abroad signed a deal to purchase 18 dunams of land surrounding the ancient Tomb and plans call for 80 apartment units to be built over the next few years, re-establishing the important Jewish neighborhood.

A larger area of Jewish renewal is Ir David (the City of David), the original biblical city of Jerusalem. Older than the Old City, it is the Ancient City. It lies right below Dung Gate in the southern wall of the old City, the traditional entrance to the Western Wall. Ir David is where King David created his capital and it is there that 3,000 years ago he united Israel and Judea politically, religiously, and economically.

One hundred years ago, Silwan, the area just across the Kidron Valley from Ir David, was home to a Jewish community consisting primarily of Yemenite Jewish immigrants. But it was here that Jerusalem was founded. Not in the old city nor where the Western Wall stands today. So it's not surprising that young Jewish families want to live there today. Dozens of families now make their homes in Ir David surrounded by dozens more Arab residents. Extensive archaeological excavations have been taking place in recent years, and a new visitors center entices people to learn more about Jewish history and has made the site one of the most popular tourist attractions in Jerusalem.

Strategically, strengthening Jewish presence in Ir David is important, since the area lies on the only access route to the Western Wall from the south. Another important strategic asset directly faces Ir David from the opposite side of Silwan, atop the Kidron valley. Maale Hazeitim is another link along the Mt of Olives ridge, and creates a buffer between Abu Dis and the Temple Mount.

The way to Maale Hazeitim is along the old Jericho Road that cuts through the Mt of Olives cemetery, the oldest Jewish burial ground in the world. The site commands a magnificent and unusual view of the Temple Mount, and makes property there most desirable. Construction of the first phase has been completed and some 70 families make their homes there, living peacefully amongst a hundred Arab families in the area they know as Ras el Amud. The project is a private initiative of Florida based philanthropist, Dr. Irving Moskowitz who purchased the property more than 20 years ago.

The site is continually referred to in the international press as being in "traditionally Arab east Jerusalem." Standing on the roof of the site, it's difficult to understand what is traditionally Arab about this area. To the north lies the ancient Mt of Olives Jewish burial ground. Behind the site, to the east is the Israeli police headquarters for Judea and Samaria. Look west and you'll see the City of David and the Temple Mount surrounded by the walls of the Old City; just to the south lies the Christian Monastery of Abraham. The majority of residents living in the neighborhood today are Arab, but that hardly justifies the "traditionally Arab" appellation.

One more area of Jewish development in eastern Jerusalem that is of enormous strategic significance is Har Homa. Located within Jerusalem's municipal boundaries, Har Homa is in the southern part of Jerusalem near Kibbutz Ramat Rachel and Gilo, bordering on PA controlled Bethlehem on one side and the Jerusalem Arab village of Sur Baher to the north. The 1,850 dunam site is on a previously desolate, uncultivated and barren hill.

The building project at Har Homa will ultimately include 6,500 housing units, and already features schools, parks, public buildings, commercial and industrial zones. After years of stalling under the threat of Arab violence, construction on the first stage of 2,456 housing unit finally began on election day, 1999 and hundreds of families have already moved into the neighborhood.

Eastern Jerusalem today is a polyglot of Jews and Arabs that defies simplistic solutions. The days are short before the battle for control of Jerusalem will be decided. Efforts to establish Jewish strategic assets remain the best hope of ensuring that "a united Jerusalem" will mean more than just a slogan.

Judy Lash Balint is author most recently of Jerusalem Diaries II: What's Really Happening in Israel (Xulon Press) . www.jerusalemdiaries.com
.  The preceding story originally appeared on the website of Front Page magazine.


 


 

 
 
 

People of the Books


Better editing would have benefited the memoir Hilda

Reviewed by Sheila Orysiek 

Hilda: A true story of Terror, Tears and Triumph by Hilda Pierce, 2007, self published, book on demand: iUniverse, Inc.

SAN DIEGO—This is a life story written by a woman in her 80’s who is obviously still vigorous in her attachment to the world around her and in touch with the memories which formed her.  It is an engaging story, with a good pace, doesn’t falter, and ends up endearing the author to the reader. 

Beginning her life in a Europe falling into the Nazi horror, she lives through the early days of the Austrian Anschluss.  She and her family escape mostly due to her truly clever and tireless efforts, eventually bringing them all to the United States where she finds safety, satisfaction, love, tears, and a degree of success.  

Her experiences as a refugee in England at war and her subsequent journey to the United States takes us into the world of “what happened after” to many of those who escaped the full thrust of the horror. She reminds us that escape to a free country did not automatically mean freedom or success; there was still a lot of effort and perseverance necessary for ultimate survival.  Her story is interesting because of her ability to survive the many obstacles and challenges life sent her way.

I have learned that the manuscript I was given to review was not the final product therefore some of the stylistic problems therein may already have been corrected.  I do believe this is not quite fair to the author - only a finished product should be critiqued.

Included in the manuscript, but, alas, not in the book, were a number of plates of the author’s art work, and it is as an artist that she shines.  Her paintings, glowing with color, exhibit organized form and structure - even the abstract work comes through as the result of intelligent design - never haphazard.  Some of those assets, however, are missing from her written composition. 

A quick trip through Spell-Check could have cleaned up the most blatant problems.  At times there is a jarring confusion of “voice” and “person.” Capable editing would have coalesced a continuous stream of one sentence paragraphing (each short sentence treated as a paragraph), and reformulated sequential declarative sentences into a much more interesting structure, without losing the freshness of the author’s voice.  This was not evident throughout the book, but appeared in spurts. 

An example from the manuscript: 

“The rain did not let up.  My feet were soaked.  I was shivering, but it was getting light and ten or more people were behind me in line.  At least the rain kept the hecklers away. I calculated that by noon we would be able to get inside.  As the downpour became more intense, we stopped talking, so miserable and chilled did we feel.  My feet felt numb and I tried walking in place.  I ate the roll I had in my pocket.”

With editing, this might become:

“The rain did not let up, my feet were soaked and I was shivering, but at least the rain kept the hecklers away.  It was getting light and ten or more people were behind me in line and I calculated that by noon we would be able to get inside.  As the downpour became more intense, we were so miserable and chilled, we stopped talking.  My feet were numb so I tried walking in place and at the same time ate the roll I had in my pocket.”

The author’s art work shows sensitivity to the placement of light and shadow, negative and positive space - how things come together visually.  In writing composition that same sensitivity is not visual - but becomes an inner aural voice - the sound of the words.  In her sentence within the paragraph (given above as an example from the book)  the proximity of the words “feel,” “feet” and “felt” especially “feel” and “felt” is simplistic and aurally repetitive.  It’s the difference between the spoken language and the written language and while not a damning fault, it exhibits a want of editing polish.

There are a number of instances in which important characters are not described, but simply appear, whilst others of only casual importance to the narrative are given more than their just share of introduction.  This is also true of events.  Though early on the author mentions an interest in visiting museums, she doesn’t impress on the reader any real desire to actually take up a paint brush herself.  Suddenly, in midlife, she describes in detail her splendid experience of studying abroad with a great painter, but fails to provide the reader with any information about her earlier studies and activities that would lead the reader to understand and share her joy in the opportunity to study with this artist. 

Occasionally she will allude to a trip or event which she had never before described or mentioned.  Events pop in and out, people described as special friends briefly appear and disappear - the reader just learns to accept this, with regrets - wanting to know more.

Organizing a written composition is quite different than planning out the composition of a painting.  When one looks at a painting it is not necessary to know what came before; preparation of paints, prior sketched studies of the subject, why the medium (oils, water, etc.) was chosen.  The observer sees only the finished product.  However, in writing there is a distinct progression - a mapped road - which leads from the first page to the last; thought by thought, event by event.  Even when flashback is used - that is simply organization of another sort and while going from one segment to another the reader learns to trust the writer: “This author is taking me somewhere I need to go because he/she has lead me to a meaningful harbor before.”

In a painting, the creator does indeed take the observer “somewhere” - but the entire trip is laid out in plain view and the observer can readily make the trip again and again with little investment in actual time and effort. Not so in a written composition. Additionally, a painting doesn’t have to make sense, it can be enjoyed (or not) in a totally sensuous manner while written composition is a series of coherent steps with the author taking the reader by the hand to ascend that staircase of understanding, one step at a time.  The steps themselves have to be of an understandable elevation. We have all experienced the discomfort of walking up stairs in which the elevation of the risers was either too long or too short - it interrupts our natural stride and becomes disruptive and we tend to stumble.

This is not to say the book is unworthy - but the version I saw could have certainly done with a clean up and polish and become even more worthy. 

Hilda Pierce will address the San Diego Jewish Book Fair at 2 p.m., Tuesday, Nov. 6, and hold a book signing following her lecture. Pierce's art work along with those of Israeli-born Gila Uziel will be exhibited in the Gotthelf Art Gallery throughout the fair.  More information about the Jewish Book Fair may be obtained by clicking the logo to the left.


 




 


MEMORIES— Panelits from left who reminisced about the legacy of Menachem Begin were Knesset Member Gilad Erdan; Rabbi Eli Herscher, Stephen  S. Wise Temple; Yechiel Kadishai, former chief of staff to Prime  Minister Begin; Herzl Makov, director of the Menachem Begin Heritage  Center, Jerusalem; Consul General of Israel Ehud Danoch.  (Cynthia Citron photo)

Begin legacy stirs memories as L.A. crowd marks 30th anniversary of Egypt-Israel peace process

By Cynthia Citron

LOS ANGELES — In a nationwide poll conducted by the newspaper Ma’ariv it was determined that the Prime Minister most beloved by the people of Israel was the highly controversial Menachem Begin.

In Los Angeles this week a large contingent of the local Jewish and Israeli communities gathered at the Sephardic Temple Tifereth Israel on Wilshire Blvd. to commemorate the man, Menachem Begin, and his legacy.  The event was timed to celebrate the 30th anniversary of his most daring exploit: his meeting with Egyptian President Anwar Sadat in Jerusalem, which resulted in both men being awarded the Nobel Peace Prize the following year.

Rabbi Daniel Bouskila of the Sephardic Temple served as Master of Ceremonies for the Los Angeles event, delivering opening remarks and introducing a collection of photographs illustrating Prime Minister Begin’s eventful life.  These included photos of him as a sober little boy and earnest young man, hardly recognizable as the precursor of the intense guerilla fighter he was to become.

Begin was born in 1913 in Brest-Litovsk, one of those border towns that habitually changed identities, one year being part of Russia and the next a part of Poland.  (Today it’s part of Belarus.)  His parents were killed in the Holocaust, but he managed to complete his education to become a lawyer, although he never worked in that profession.

Instead, he became an ardent disciple of Ze’ev Jabotinsky,  the founder of the Revisionist Zionism movement, and by 1937 Begin had become the head of Betar, the youth wing of that movement, in Czechoslovakia and Poland.  Fleeing the Nazis, he escaped to the Soviet Union where, ironically, he was accused of being an “agent of British imperialism” and sentenced to eight years in a Siberian gulag.  Released after two years, he joined the Polish Army and later joined the Jewish national movement in the British Mandate of Palestine.

Begin quickly made a name for himself as a fierce critic of mainstream Zionist leadership and as a proponent of guerrilla tactics against the British as a necessary means to achieve independence. In 1942 he joined the Irgun, an underground militant Zionist group which had split from the Jewish military organization, the Haganah, and two years later he assumed the organization's leadership, determined to force the British government to remove its troops entirely from Palestine.

Soon after he assumed command, a formal “Declaration of Revolt” was published and armed attacks against British forces were initiated.  His influence weakened, however, after an Irgun attack on the King David Hotel killed 91 people and the British put a bounty of 10,000 pounds on his capture, dead or alive. 

When the State of Israel was finally declared in May 1948, Begin ordered his men to lay down their arms and join with the Haganah to form the Israel Defense Forces  (IDF).  Shortly afterwards, however, a cargo ship named the Altalena that was bringing secret weapons to the Irgun was apprehended and David Ben Gurion, in a move to establish his government’s authority, ordered the Irgun to hand over the weapons.  When the Irgun refused, Ben Gurion ordered the  IDF to sink the boat.  That action also sank Begin, who was kept out of Israeli politics for the next 30 years.

He was down, but not out, however.  He founded a political party, the Herut, which eventually evolved into the Likud Party, and provided the main opposition to the ruling Labor Party.  But the Herut and its partners never managed to obtain more than 17 seats in the Knesset until Begin and his cohorts joined a “national unity” government in 1967, during the Six Day War.  At that time, Begin became a Minister Without Portfolio, his first Cabinet post. 

Finally, in 1977, the Likud Party won a massive victory in the elections and Begin became the first Likud Prime Minister and the sixth Prime Minister of Israel.  In 1979, with the Peace Accord with Egypt, he was personally vindicated and his image as an irresponsible radical changed practically overnight to that of a wise statesman.  And it was that wise statesman whose memory was honored at Los Angeles’ Sephardic Temple. 

The Consul General of Israel, Ehud Danoch, whose three-year term in Los Angeles is ending in two weeks, spoke eloquently about the “peace that comes out of strength and out of pride” and talked of Begin’s three major concerns: avoiding internal conflict in Israel; maintaining a Jewish Jerusalem.


Consul General and Mrs Ehud Danoch

 (“Questioning our right to Jerusalem is an unforgivable sin,” Begin said); and ensuring that countries surrounding Israel do not acquire nuclear weapons (in 1981, on Begin’s orders, the Israeli Air Force destroyed the Tammuz nuclear reactor in neighboring Iraq). 

MK Gilad Erdan, chairman of the Knesset Committee on Economic Affairs, read a moving excerpt from the Prime Minister’s address during President Sadat’s visit to Jerusalem.  Erdan’s presentation was followed by a panel consisting of Rabbi Eli Herscher of the Stephen S. Wise Temple; Yechiel Kadishai, Begin’s former chief of staff;  Herzl Makov, director of the Menachem Begin Heritage Center in Jerusalem; Erdan, and Danoch. 

 

These gentlemen, who had known  Begin throughout his career, reminisced about his personal humility, the respect he earned from the many ethnic groups in Israel, his insistence that Israel be considered an ally of the United States, but not “under United States protection.”  They also noted that throughout his life Menachem Begin sent a personal handwritten reply to every letter he received. 

And finally, vocalist Noa Dori and guitarists Freddie Schiftan and David Kontesz performed “Lalechet Shevi Acharaych” and “Hayom”, and the evening was concluded with Shira Bouskila leading the audience (which included Mr. Begin’s daughter, granddaughter and great grandson) in a stirring rendition of Hatikva.