israeli politics

Since everyone has been writing to me about how wonderful the inauguration was, and some even praised all the Jewish elements in it, I have to put in my two cents  Let me begin with Leonard Cohen’s Halleluja.  Recently Rolling Stone Magazine published an article about the text and how Cohen was including holiness into every aspect of life.  It was a good analysis and may even have shown how someone introduced an element into the ceremony that way beyond the intention.  First off, that art isn’t all that mysterious – but just a measure of putting the right things together.  Secondly, that being a king puts a human being in danger of being greedy and hurting his people.  Third, that only when you’ve been betrayed by a woman and are totally demeaned do you say Halleluja. And fourth, that everything is worthy of rejoicing, whether the divine exists or not.  So even though the phrase Halleluja in Hebrew means “Praise the Lord,” it doesn’t matter what you’re praising.  It’s like what my Rebbe told me when I asked him in the middle of a lession if we’re doing all this work and there’s no God, he thought a while and then said, “Whether there is a God or not, a Jew has to study Torah.”

january 21, 2021 – halleluja Read Post »

my life in tel aviv

just a few words about my health.  Turns out I haven’t been able to walk because I have sciatica.  Who cares about the minor consequences of the vaccine? From a knee that wouldn’t bend, I moved to the big nerve pain from the back all the way down.  As soon as I realized that yesterday afternoon I called the orthopedist who saw me immediately and gave me all the medications possible.  But it was only after i spoke to Oren who reminded me of physiotherapy that things began to improve.  So I may be able to do more than kvetch very soon.

 

january 21, 2021 – a personal medical account Read Post »

blog, poetry

i read Keats’ “The Eve of St. Agnes” last night, since today is the saint’s day, and the last verse made me cry. Being able to transcend life through love – especially in these difficult times – is such a romantic concept.  precisely because it is impossible in real life.  that’s why we have cellphones…

january 21, 2021 – St. Agnes eve Read Post »

blog, my life in tel aviv

No one could hope for a more fun vaccination than we had.  At the entrance to the site we got asked – very quickly – if we had fever, have been abroad, had a sense of taste, and as we were getting used to saying no, switched to positive questions like “do you have an appointment?  are you here for the vaccine? …Ha! fooled you! Just checking to see if you were paying attention…”   Then they brought us together to a very cheery nurse – a heavy-set, braided, black man, who picked up on my strange sense of humor and realized that humor relaxes the muscles.  We joked about our respective ages, our health, our reactions… and …we were out… cut our waiting time short and off to bed.  To watch the departure of Trump from the white house.

what a delight – to keep switching channels and hearing the antithetical takes of CNN and FOX on the political games people play….  

 

january 20, 2021 – vaccine and inauguration Read Post »

blog, my life in tel aviv

one of the few things I argue with my husband about is the fact that he doesn’t record his family history, especially the stories of his grandfather, Arpad Gut.  Many of the buildings and bridges and water towers he built in Israel and Hungary are well known, but nothing has ever been written about the Kazinczy Street Synagogue in Budapest.    Arpad built this synagogue in 1913 – before the war – and it was one of the last things he built in the city before he was sent to the Front as an engineer, wound up in a Prisoner of War camp in Kajkstan and walked home after the war.  Once home in Budapest he was uninvited (as a Jew) to the opening of a building he built just before the war, and decided to move to Israel.  The synagogue, to my mind, has great symbolic value to the history of the Jews in Europe in the story I want Ezi to write.

of course he doesn’t read my blog, so he won’t be influenced by my plea…

january 19, 2021 – The Kazinczy Street Synagogue Read Post »

israeli politics, my life in tel aviv

First thing in the morning we will be getting our second vaccine.  Because I seem to react to everything with force, I’m not planning any activity.  But I will be glued to CNN and FOX, my eyes on the football bags. 

Israeli politics is much less dramatic.  We were not even told that all our info has been shared with Pfizer. If the whole debate in the US in recent years has been about the right to privacy, we aren’t in the discussion.  

january 19, 2021 – tomorrow – inauguration Read Post »

blog, poetry

Here in Israel we have no idea what the political parties will be running in the coming, untimely, election.  As a member of the Labor party (I know, it sounds ridiculous but I’ve been a member since I was 10) I keep getting polls about who i would chose for the head of the party.  And the possibilities keep changing.  What if Ehud Barak decides to come back?  So many enemies, so many supporters.   

And of course, what difference will it make?  Will the government alter in any way?  At the moment even our medical decisions are so strongly influenced by blocks in the government, is it possible to create a government that treats the plague objectively, practically?  At the moment – after two weeks of ‘lockdown’ the numbers continue to remain steady – because no one believes the government – and do their best to get around the laws.  We need faith, trust, honesty, and we can’t pull together to beat this virus until we get it. 

The same is true for the US of course.    

So will Biden change the atmosphere?  I think so.  There is such a mess that any order will improve the outlook.

january 18, 2021 – politics: everything up in the air Read Post »