November 18, 2008

Four Final Candidates For Beth Jacob Senior Rabbi Post


Rabbis Cohen, (Young Israel of the West Side) Topp (Young Israel of Woodmere) and Steinmetz (Tifereth Beth David Jerusalem 6519 Baily Road Cote St. Luc, Quebec) all of whom have confirmed that they will be candidates. The current schedule is Rabbi Steinmetz on January 31, Rabbi Topp on February 7 and Rabbi Cohen on February 21.

I believe Rabbi Shlomo Einhorn is the final candidate.

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‘I Can’t Think Straight’


This is a beautiful love story between a Christian Palestinian and an Muslim Indian.

It’s gorgeous to look at, like one of the two leads, Lisa Ray.

The other lead, Sheetal Sheth, is skinny and awkward, but at least she’s a writer.

True love blossoms in an Oxford hotel room, away from the persecuting patriarchal gaze.

There’s enough Jew hatred to keep things interesting.

Christian writes:

You would think that a cross-cultural, cross-religious lesbian romance should have enough built-in conflict to sustain an 80-minute feature, but Shamim Sarif’s "I Can’t Think Straight" slumps and stretches its way from its first uninspired set piece, an engagement party for Jordanian-Christian Tala (Lisa Ray), to its mildly embarrassing closing montage, cut to, natch, Jill Sobule’s "I Kissed a Girl" (hello, 1995!). As with her other feature, "The World Unseen" (released to theaters earlier this month), Sarif adapts and directs her own novel here, with Ray and Sheetal Sheth playing the lead roles. For "I Can’t Think Straight," she enlists the help of co-writer Kelly Moss, but to no avail: Sarif has crafted a movie with such paper-thin characterizations and so lacking in dramatic incident that it’s frankly surprising that she was working from a novel at all — much less one she wrote herself.









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Are Orthodox Jews ‘Rednecks’ In Their Attitude To Obama?


Canadian Orthodox rabbi Reuven Tradburks writes:

The point of my article was only tangentially about Obama. It was more about the tone and texture of differences.

Once a person is identified as not being on my team - because he is black or not frum or not jewish or is modern or is haredi - once he is not on my team, I check my civility at the door and proceed to level whatever types of criticisms i like. This is what i meant by redneck. Having lived in Alabama, there is a colloquial use of that term - people who lack subtlety, lack nuance, are heavily opinionated, and discriminate based on religion, color or “team” affiliation.

The “team” syndrome permeates political discussion. There is plenty to criticize Obama on in his platform - or in the paucity of his platform. But the discussion should be in the realm of ideas. Not in calling him evil or categorizing him into some box or other. I was not really that interested in an American political discussion, though we have 5 American voters in my family.

I would like to see a broadening of our ability to identify the goodness in the world that is beyond our “team”. The goodness in the haredi world, in the modern world, in the non frum Jewish world, in the non Jewish world. We must be vigilant in identifying things we disagree with, which we reject on principle. And we must be vigilant in acknowledging the goodness in the world beyond our team.

DAVID BERGER WRITES:

Regrettably, the phenomenon that Rabbi Tradburks laments can be supported by other evidence. He notes, to take but one example, the use of the term “shvartzer” by a significant number of English speaking Orthodox Jews. Let me add to this an account of an experience that I had at a wedding this week, which is the real stimulus for my writing this comment. A young man came to me in my capacity as a historian, and in the context of Obama’s victory, asked whether German Jews before the Nazi period were as confident of their security as American Jews are today. I told him that I would respond in the abstract, but that he needs to know that I consider the analogy completely misplaced.
A wedding was not the appropriate setting for an expression of my full concern about this question. But I wondered to myself if people who make this analogy ask themselves whether anyone expected Hitler to appoint a Jew who belongs to an Orthodox shul as his closest aide. I did not vote for Obama, and I worry about his position on Israel. But Rabbi Tradburks has ample reason to be concerned about bigotry toward blacks in particular and non-Jews in general in too large a segment of the Orthodox community.

DOVID WRITES: "As a pulpit rabbi, i think Rabbi Tradburks can appreciate the power of the position, as well as the impact a charismatic spiritual leader can have on his congregants over a long period of time. This alone is enough to cause great concern for any thinking Jew … for Barack Obama has been sitting in Pastor Wright’s congregation and listening to his vitriolic, hate-filled - and, yes, anti-semitic - “derashos” for many years. My only hope is that Mr. Obama was talking during the “davening” and speeches, and none of the Pastor’s “torah” sunk in. G-d help us."

FROM MY LIVE CAM CHAT:

palestine4ever:  Hey Luke
palestine4ever:  I need my daily dose of screeching yenta banshee hysterics, where’s the faux NJG?
palestine4ever:  Their fear is like sweet sweet nectar to me and my kind
palestine4ever:  Soon America will be a carmel-colored Brazil of miscegenation
palestine4ever:  even the Chosen will be a lil more cafe au lait
palestine4ever:  as old Hilda has grandchildren named Shaneequa and Carlo
palestine4ever:  The only ones immune to the darkening of America, naturally, will be the Mormons
palestine4ever:  I hope you keep your Utah connections lively
palestine4ever:  that’ll be the last patch of whiteness
palestine4ever:  but, of course, they’re mormons
palestine4ever:  Do you fear an Obamanation, Luke?
YourMoralLeader:  not sure
YourMoralLeader:  a bit
palestine4ever:  In reality it’ll mean a few pointless but short wars in godforsaken places
palestine4ever:  Liberals love short and righteous war
palestine4ever:  This of course is preferable to Sarah Palin making membership in your local PTA mandatory
palestine4ever:  and compulsory
palestine4ever:  I think you should balance your Life Artist portraits with Rebbe Gafni with some sit-downs with Prof. Kevin MacDonald
palestine4ever:  Naturally he walks a tightrope
palestine4ever:  but some of his comments about self-segregation are similar to what you’ve written
palestine4ever:  of course in his thinking it’s a subconscious plot to torture the gentiles
palestine4ever:  I read most of the Culture of Critique
palestine4ever:  It was pretty dreary to be honest with you
palestine4ever:  white power s**t is really only interesting when there’s some redneck fireworks
palestine4ever:  i’m more of a fan of Glenn Miller’s
palestine4ever:  http://www.whty.org/book/
palestine4ever:  that’s got peckerwoods marching in camouflage uniforms
palestine4ever:  guys getting drunk and declaring war on "ZOG"
palestine4ever:  riveting stuff for the genre
palestine4ever:  when the Feds caught up to Glenn
palestine4ever:  he was in a trailor, hung over, and without pants
palestine4ever:  that’s just good reading
palestine4ever:  david duke just burned crosses, this guy would piss on them for giggles

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The Flight Home


Joe emails: "I came back from a meeting in Chicago and behind me sat this overweight man with a mustache and a seventies haircut, covered in dandruff. Everyone around me was murmuring, and the air attendants (the male ones) starting taking pictures with him, every one talking very reverently to him. One person walked over and said in an awed voice, I really admire your work. That person informed me that the recipient of all this honor was Ron Jeremy, famed… reality show star. I suppose that’s how adulation is earned in our society."

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Interesting Lawsuits


Case Type: Civil Harassment (General Jurisdiction) Case#: BS117785 CASE NAME: JENNIFER GARNER AFFLECK VS STEVEN R BURKY Parties: BURKY STEVEN R. - PL/PET Attorneys: BERK BLAIR ESQ. - Attorney for PL/PET Date Filed: 11/07/2008

Case Type: Quiet Title (General Jurisdiction) Case#: SC100553 CASE NAME: NATIONAL COUNCIL OF YOUNG ISRAEL VS. SUE MISCHEL ET. AL. Parties: JEWISH RESOURCE CENTER INC. THE - Defendant,MISCHEL LAWRENCE - Defendant,MISCHEL SUE - Defendant,NATIONAL COUNCIL OF YOUNG ISRAEL - Plaintiff,YOUNG ISRAEL OF BEVERLY HILLS - Defendant Attorneys: SCHONDORF MARK - Attorney for Plaintiff Date Filed: 11/12/2008

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November 17, 2008

‘The First Basket’


I just watched this new documentary.

The Jewish population in America increased dramatically during the last decade of the 19th Century. As the immigrants poured in from Europe, they discovered that their new home was sports crazy and that athletic competition was a way to assimilate.

When I think about the value of a mitzvah and the value of a basket, well, there’s no comparison, so it makes me sad as I watch this film about Jews abandoning the shul and the Sabbath to follow the ways of the goyim.

The doc gets various Jewish scholars to talk about Jewish physicality in the Bible. Yeah, that’s all true, Samson did shtup a lot of Philistine sheilas, but sports plays no role in the Bible of the Jews. It’s the Christian scriptures, the so-called "New Testament" that keeps referring to sports. That’s because Christianity comes out of Hellenism more than Judaism.

The ideal Jewish man is a Torah scholar and a blogger, not a practicioner of narishkeit such as basketball (unless it is used a brief diversion from one’s studies so one can return refreshed to the sacred text).

My favorite parts of the movie are the naughty bits. No, I’m not talking about the sturdy application of the Hebrew Hammer to the vulnerable regions of the shiksa.

In the 1930s, basketball was often called "Jew Ball." It was known as the "Jewish game."

Two main sports came out of the Jewish ghetto — boxing and basketball. The latter triumphed.

Paul Gallico from the New York Daily News argued that Jews made good basketball players because Jews are basically sneaky, conniving people.

Gallico wrote: "Curiously, above all others, [basketball] appeals to the temperament of the Jews. While a good Jewish football player is a rarity. . . Jews flock to basketball by the thousands, because it places a premium on an alert, scheming mind. . . flashy trickiness, artful dodging and general smart aleckness."

A Jewish sports editor wrote: "No other sport so required the characteristics inherent in the Jew; mental agility, perception, imagination and subtlety."

And as the Reverend Reggie White would say, "Whites are good at making money and Indians are good at sneaking up on people."

Later, the documentary discusses the role of Jewish players accepting bribes to manipulate college basketball scores vis-a-vis the point spread (such as at City College of New York). This practice was widespread in the Catskills aka the Jewish Alps.

Teams "with Jews and negroes" were regarded as particularly susceptible to bribery.

When he was at Brooklyn College, Dennis Prager reports in his essay on "Jews and Cheating" that Jewish students were regarded as more likely to cheat.

I spent nine of my first eleven years in Australia (the other two in England). I wasn’t much into sports. I liked playing them but I didn’t follow them professionally. We didn’t have a TV in the house and we didn’t follow sports or entertainment on the radio. Occasionally at school, the teacher would put on the tele and we’d have the test cricket playing. But it didn’t mean much.

I guess my family was isolated from the larger Australian culture. Seventh-Day Adventism was a more rigorous, more Ellen White driven thing down under.

We moved to Pacific Union College (a Seventh-Day Adventist institution) in California’s Napa Valley in May 1977. I spent most of the next four months in the PUC library reading serious adult books of history.

Then I entered sixth grade at the PUC Elementary School. I was weird and socially isolated. I’ve been like a lost puppy all my life.

After my mom got sick in 1967 (she died of cancer in 1970), my home fractured and was not a happy place. I longed to be adopted by the happy families I met (though when I thought it through rationally, I was convinced that my parents were best for me).

My teachers and school librarian wanted me to fit in better. They wanted me to read books of interest to kids my age. So I started reading kids books and most of them were on sports. I devoured dozens and was particularly impressed by the stories of Roger Staubach and Tom Landry, good Christians and leaders of the Dallas Cowboys.

Then I went up to the PUC library and read all the back issues of Sports Illustrated, Time, Newsweek and Life. I became sports mad and crazed about sex. I got a radio and stuck it under my pillow and listened to sporting contests late at night when my parents weren’t around.

My dad said that being a sports fan was a form of idolatry. I didn’t care. I loved sports. I wanted to love girls but none of the cute ones let me.

My fanatacism about sports surpassed that of kids my age. I became closer to some parents who read as much about sports as I did. "I never met a kid who knows as much about sports as you do," said one.

I guess I could’ve used sports to bond with my schoolmates but instead I ran away from them. I finished five marathons in 1978 and dreamed I’d become world champ one day.

Didn’t happen. My knees went bum and I had to stop running.

Once again, I had the chance to bond, but instead I used my brain to accumulate information and put others down. Surprisingly, this did not make for popularity. Chicks didn’t want to kiss me because I could recite all the Super Bowl winners.

In 1985, I covered a couple of San Francisco 49er games at Candlestick park. We sportswriters were allowed on to the sideline for the last few minutes of the contest. The game looks completely different from ground level. The players no longer look so super-human, so machine-like. The game doesn’t appeared as organized. It’s deglamorized.

I’d look around the stadium at tens of thousands of people going nuts. They’d love to be where I am. I’d stare at the cheerleaders and became particularly enamored of these Asian hardbodies. Then I’d go into the lockerrooms to interview the players. Most of the time they were naked. Many of them were shorter than I was.

Sports no longer seemed like such a big deal.

Sex was, however.

I spent years in the PUC library looking for the naughty pictures in Sports Illustrated and Life magazines. The 1960s boasted the topless swimming suit and it got generous coverage in Life. Unfortunately, most of the good stuff got ripped out before I could feast my eyes on it. The S.I. bathing suit issue never even made it out to general circulation.

I loved books about 1920s Weimar Germany. There were usually lots of breasts in these books that made it past the Adventist censors. I resolved that when I’d get big, I’d watch sports on the tele and look at the all the breasts I wanted.

I fulfilled my ambition. I grew up to report on the porn industry. But it left me empty inside.

There’s no happy ending to this story. Sports and porn never helped me assimilate. At age 42, I’m still a lost puppy. I wasted thousands of hours of my life following narishkeit, time I could’ve better devoted to more serious pursuits and to hotter chicks.

Jason Maoz writes:

Finally, no look back at the Jewish contribution to pro basketball would be complete without acknowledging the pioneering radio voices of Marty Glickman with the Knicks (when the home team scored Glickman would famously exult - plugging the chain of hot dog and orange drink outlets that sponsored the broadcasts - "It’s good, like Nedicks!") and Johnny Most (originally Moskowitz) with the Boston Celtics. Glickman and Most led the way for Bill Mazer, Marv Albert (followed by brothers Steve and Al), Spencer Ross, and other Jews who would achieve national prominence in pro basketball broadcast booths.
 
After all these years the NBA still has a considerable Jewish presence, but more than ever it’s one found almost exclusively among writers, broadcasters and owners - the latter category including, but hardly limited to, Micky Arison (Miami Heat), Steve Belkin (Atlanta Hawks), Mark Cuban (Dallas Mavericks), William Davidson (Detroit Pistons), Abe Pollin (Washington Wizards), Bruce Ratner (New Jersey Nets) and Jerry Reinsdorf (Chicago Bulls).
 
As we’ve seen, however, the story could not be more different when it comes to those who actually play the game. The time when basketball was, in the words of historian Peter Levine, "so dominated by Jews that some called it the Jewish game" has all but vanished into the misty province of faded photographs and grainy newsreels, as the sepia-toned memories die one by one along with those who lived them.

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Persian Jewish Leader Ezri Namvar Under A Slew Of Lawsuits


A Beverly Hills resident, Namvar’s huge in the Persian community and is a major investor in Israel. He’s the chairman of the Namwest investment company and Namco Capital.

There are a number of people who are already under the government and litigation microscope. Like Bob Rechnitz. He is Ezri Namvar’s front man in numerous deals on La Brea, in downtown LA and in Israel.

Both Rechnitz and Namvar are excellent shmoozers.

Here’s a complete list of the lawsuits against Namvar: SC100259, SC100292, SC100349, SC100354, BC398619, BC400090, BC400091, BC400204, BC400561, BC400587, BC400744, BC401698, BC401927, BC401802, BC401927.

Ezri Namvar walks around with a kipa on his head. He’s mishpacha (a member of the tribe). His persona is, "I’m a great guy. I’m a Jew. Lend me your money."

His public response to his inability to repay these loans is, "The real estate market sank. Life’s a bitch."

About 400 people have lent Namco Capital about $300 million. Namca can’t pay people back so they are suing on mass. One by one, they are going after Ezri and his four brothers (who are also in real estate).

There have been various types of loans to Ezri Namvar. There have been unsecred loans, loans secured by Ezri’s signature, and loans secured by Ezri’s brothers, and loans secured by real estate.

Do you know what a 1031 Exchange is? "A 1031 exchange, otherwise known as a tax deferred exchange is a simple strategy and method for selling one property, that’s qualified, and then proceeding with an acquisition of another property (also qualified) within a specific time frame. The logistics and process of selling a property and then buying another property are practically identical to any standardized sale and buying situation, a "1031 exchange" is unique because the entire transaction is treated as an exchange and not just as a simple sale. It is this difference between "exchanging" and not simply buying and selling which, in the end, allows the taxpayer(s) to qualify for a deferred gain treatment. So to say it in simple terms, sales are taxable with the IRS and 1031 exchanges are not."

If Ezri Namvar can’t repay these loans, many of the people who’ve lent him money will owe a lot of money in taxes.

A lot of people who lent him money were living off the interest to pay their expenses.

I don’t know if Ezri Namvar mismanaged his real estate business or if he did anything wrong or if it was just bad luck, such as with Rabbi Daniel Lapin’s real estate trust 17 years ago when the thing imploded during the 1991 recession.

Something smells bad about this Namco Capital. It sounds like a giant ponzi scheme. It sounds like the Rabbi Joseph Shereshevsky case.

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The Regurgitating Pragerhead


They’re like the Deadheads!

Dianne Mueller writes:

I can see why this sharing of the "Dennis Prager experience" is analogous to the Deadhead one, and why we are then drawn to communing with each other every month at our Dennis Prager Group meetings.

But I think my most memorable and perhaps profound "Wow!" moment last night came when Dennis spoke of the minister who surprised his congregation one Sunday when he told them, "God isn’t enough." From our human beginning God knew that He wasn’t going to be enough for us, that we were going to need other people. It just so happened that Adam needed a wife (don’t they all!) but more importantly God knew that Adam needed someone other than God Himself. Who would have thought! Even Will Rogers would have appreciated that revelation!

Pragerheads come from very diverse experiences, some religious, some secular and some combination of secu-religious ones, but Dennis reminded us last night where happiness needs to come from and that we owe it to other people to at least act happy even if we’re not feeling it at the moment.

Dennis also spent a good bit of time on how the Chronically Unhappy and ‘Moody’ people can have an adverse effect on children, too. I felt empathy for the young father in the audience, the one who was looking for advice on how to keep a three-year-old from becoming a chronic complainer. (I’m not sure if the young father ever heard someone say, "If you don’t stop that crying I’m going to give you something to REALLY cry about!" The line worked on me as a child so I used it on my kids.) Dennis did his best to offer advice but in the end he fell back on the one staple and really ancient tenet: You’ll figure it out.

Like most important experiences I will regurgitate pieces of the evening over time and it will be as though I am just tasting these morsels for the first time.

From Zipline:

Dear God, is this Camelot all over again. Dennis Prager always mentions the Liberals are so attuned to feelings and rarely principles…any expressed principles really are about feelings. Go to Gawker and then watch the ‘cute’ vid then read the comments…one malcontent ruined the flow talking about policy. The rest is just so sweet and you know gushy. Thank God the country is finally in the hands of this gushy couple. Are the Khalidi’s’ Said’s and Ayers’ gushy too?  

I am still recovering from that tele-orgasm. I wept when he talked about his mother-in-law seriously at first. I oohed and aahed over Michelle and how smart she is. I tittered when they were giggly and flirty and cute with one another when discussing going for walks.

I am so deeply, deeply in love with everything about this family. They are so ___ing normal. Can you recall the last time we saw a normal, loving couple in the White House? Some might argue Bill and Hill but I never saw the chemistry like what seems to exist between these two.

http://gawker.com/5089926/im-not-stupid-man?autoplay=true

Motto: “Feelings First! — one-stop solutions for the self-absorbed.”

Columnist Dennis Prager writes this week about the “decline of the authority” (moral authority) in the West. Prager argues religious guidelines have been supplanted by –yup– feelings.

The entire edifice of moral relativism, a foundation of leftist ideology, is built on the notion of feelings deciding right and wrong. One man’s terrorist is another man’s freedom fighter.

http://austinbay.net/blog/?p=82

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What Jewish Writers Need


I found this essay provoking:

I knew that serious Jewish-American writers were in trouble several decades ago when I began giving my classes in “Jewish-American Fiction” a chance to vote on their favorite text in a survey course that included a catholic variety of Jewish authors, from Abraham Cahan to Pearl Abraham. The novel that won, hands down, every semester, every year, was Chaim Potok’s The Chosen, a perfectly good novel for junior high school readers but not especially challenging, I thought, for college students. Why, I kept wondering, didn’t they choose Henry Roth’s Call It Sleep or Saul Bellow’s Herzog? After mulling this question over for a couple of years, I decided (a) that estimations about art should never be put to a democratic vote; and (b) that I had to discontinue my end-of-semester questionnaire.

Curiously, I experienced something of the same disappointment when, as one of the judges nominating books for a prestigious Koret prize, I watched as Jonathan Safran Foer mowed down competition that included Bellow, Cynthia Ozick, and Steve Stern. A friend of mine tried to console me that pointing out that Foer’s post-modernism appealed to contemporary readers as Bellow and Ozick’s old-fashioned modernism did not. Perhaps, but I think the explanation is simpler: the bulk of those who sent in email votes had read Everything is Illuminated but not Ravelstein.

Here are some of my interviews and opinions on American-Jewish literature.

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Our Fearless Leaders


Here we go: (Kishke writes: "Dumkopf! The joke is worthless without explaining that the yiddish for “white president” is pronounced as “vice president,” which Joe Biden is. What a dope." "Shvartze" is Yiddish for "black.")

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