israeli politics

well, I’ve done it, killed another computer.  This is the fourth Asus in 6 years.  Always with a different presentation.  So until I buy a new one, I’ve got to sit by my desktop – and I’m never as spontaneous on my desktop.  You’ll notice the difference when you see it.

death of another computer – Jan 25, 2023 Read Post »

israeli politics

Every little new law forbidding one thing or another gives me appetite to ‘sin’.  I’ve never thought of bringing in leavened bread to the hospital when visiting someone on Passover, but suddenly I have an incredible urge to bake a cake for anyone hospitalized on the holidays.  On the other hand, when my grandson was born, on the fast day of the 9th of Av, my daughter had nothing to eat and we were sent home for our dinner.  It was a big mistake – she should have given birth in those hours when we weren’t there, but no one paid attention until it became an emergency.  Religion should never enter into health considerations.

theocracy here we come – jan 24, 2023 Read Post »

israeli politics

Since it was a hectic day – the junk deposited before our house finally cleared away, exercise, air conditioners delivered,  post office again, return at last the faulty disk drive in herzlia, buy yellow paint to fix the wall, I really felt we deserved mousaka at Al Greco.

But when the waitress offered beer, we refused.  No, we aren’t that desperate.  But ouzo…

So we wound up sharing a bottle of ouzo and the coffee did nothing to dispel our inability to finish the preparations for dismantling our house for the proposed replacement of the airconditioners.  

And tonight I have to make another attempt to change my server before it’s too late.  So I’ll have to sober up.  My occasional helper, Baruch (aka Barry) having returned to his religious roots, no longer appreciates the kind of raunchy humor I exhibit when the stops are pulled out.  

So I take it out on you.

 

 

The only thing possible to do is write a diary entry,

 

   

nothing better – jan 24, 2023 Read Post »

israeli politics

My favorite house ever was across the street from me.  I’d never been inside. even though I knew the neighbors who died at least 6 years ago.  The house has been empty except for occasional student rentals, and I used to hear Ramadan prayers from the balcony. 

It’s a Frank Lloyd Wright-type house, and now as they have cut down all the trees around it I can see how absolutely gorgeous it was.  It keeps reminding me of that  poem by Howard Nemerov,

 

“Learning by Doing”
(1967)

 

They’re taking down a tree at the front door,
The power saw is snarling at some nerves,
Whining at others. Now and then it grunts,
And sawdust falls like snow or a drift of seeds.

Rotten, they tell us, at the fork, and one
Big wind would bring it down. So what they do
They do, as usual, to do us good.
Whatever cannot carry its own weight
Has got to go, and so on; you expect
To hear them talking next about survival
And the values of a free society.
For in the explanations people give
On these occasions there is generally some
Mean-spirited moral point, and everyone
Privately wonders if his neighbors plan
To saw him up before he falls on them.

Maybe a hundred years in sun and shower
Dismantled in a morning and let down
Out of itself a finger at a time
And then an arm, and so down to the trunk,
Until there’s nothing left to hold on to
Or snub the splintery holding rope around,
And where those big green divagations were
So loftily with shadows interleaved
The absent-minded blue rains in on us.
Now that they’ve got it sectioned on the ground

It looks as though somebody made a plain
Error in diagnosis, for the wood
Looks sweet and sound throughout. You couldn’t know,
Of course, until you took it down. That’s what
Experts are for, and these experts stand round
The giant pieces of tree as though expecting
An instruction booklet from the factory
Before they try to put it back together.

Anyhow, there it isn’t, on the ground.
Next come the tractor and the crowbar crew
To extirpate what’s left and fill the grave.
Maybe tomorrow grass seed will be sown.
There’s some mean-spirited moral point in that
As well: you learn to bury your mistakes,
Though for a while at dusk the darkening air
Will be with many shadows interleaved,
And pierced with a bewilderment of birds.

A bewilderment of birds – that’s how I feel all my friends are feeling about this country right now.”There it isn’t”

learning by doing – jan 23, 2023 Read Post »

israeli politics

One of the less noticed aspects of the new government is the facts that the ruling politicians now seem to be having a contest of ‘more Jewish than you,’  proposing more and more policies that show their devotion to the Jewish religion as practiced now.  So there are calls to ensure there is no public transportation on the Sabbath, that funding will not be given to places that play soccer on the sabbath, etc. etc.  We’ll probably get no tv on the sabbath next….

jewisher – jan 22, 2023 Read Post »

israeli politics

We’ve been planning to go to the demonstration tonight all week.  We worked out the times, the route, where we would park and how we would walk to get to Habima.  

And we thought to have our lunch with the kids early so we’d have time to clean up and rest.

But after our luncheon conversations and the clean-up I decided it was not a good idea.  1.  I worked too hard cooking and cleaning and can’t walk the miles I thought we’d transverse with ease.  2.  I’m not clear any more that we are not just deepening the gap between the sides.  We’re certainly not opening any dialogues.

I have to rethink my approach to contemporary politics, as well as my approach to my children and cooking for them.  

As if it will make a difference.

 

revolution at home – jan 21, 2023 Read Post »

israeli politics

in this case, it is post-sabbath we are preparing for – getting to the heart of the city before the traffic makes it essential to have a strategy, to leave early enough, and to plan an escape route.  Our energies are limited and our standing ability is even more limited.  And yet the hostile takeover of the courts makes opposition imperative.  Even the university administration has sanctioned political opposition.

we usually entertain the vast family for lunch on Saturday – a lunch that lasts from 1-5,  So then we’ll wait in town until it’s completely all over and we can get back.  

Unless we chicken out.

We plan and we plan but we fear to enact our plans. 

 

Time to cook.

 

 

preparing for the sabbath – jan 20, 2023 Read Post »