israeli politics

I took time off from protests – not because i thought it was over but because it is an enormous effort.  

And it needs much more effort now.  Efforts at discussion have proved useless – As T. Carmi once wrote – It is hard for two conch shells to have a conversation.  But, as he end in the poem, once you listen, you hear the same sea.

back to protests, june 19, 2023 Read Post »

israeli politics

My book club tonight is discussing the murder of Chaim Arlozoroff whose murder in June 16, 1933, was never solved.  But what interests me is more than the murder but the social and politicial upheaval that it discloses and the upheaval that it created.

Also, since my father-in-law told me his story about taking Arlozoroff to the hospital, and I saw that the information he provided in the inquiry was not included in the trial, I need to know more.  And since my friends are incredibly wise and well-informed, I should learn much. 

Murder of Arlozoroff – June 18, 2023 Read Post »

israeli politics

when my poetry group asked me why I wrote a poem about being jealous of a friend who visited her great grandmother’s grave, I went back to see the material that so frightened me in Yiddish.  It was now in English, and frightened me even more.

 

[Page 381]

Liquidation of the Jewish cemetery

By I. Rubinovitch

Translated by Zeev Sharon

Right after the occupation of the city of Lida by the Germans, the liquidation of the Jewish Cemetery began. Farmers from the neighborhood began to pasture their cows and later began to the smash gravestones and take stones for their private use. It went on like that also after the war with no interference.

In the mid-1950s, the city council forbade the few Jewish families that resided in Lida to bury their dead there. With no other alternative, they had to carry them to the cemetery in the town Ivye. The fast liquidation of the cemetery in Lida started at the beginning of the 60s. First, they destroyed the section closest to the shore of Lidzhika River with digging machinery. They dug [foundations] and built warehouses and various constructions for boats, speedboats and services for the artificial lake that was made with the waters of the Lidzhika River at the end of Postovska Street. After that, they also destroyed the section of the cemetery bordered on Postovska Street and broke the gravestones that still remained. All of this was done despite the protest of the Jews who still lived in the city. Many human bones were scattered on the surface of the ground. The Jews picked them up into a sack and buried them in the cemetery section that still survived at that time. At the end of January 1966, only a few gravestones were left at the center of the cemetery and even those were destroyed later.

Thus, the last remaining sign that evidenced the existence of a large and flourishing Jewish community in the city Lida was destroyed and obliterated

lida Read Post »

israeli politics

At 7:00 a.m. on Shabbat morning, we show up at the hospital for Ezi’s pet scan.  By 9:00 a.m. we’ve home.  Why exhausted from the week, exhausted from the tension, and ready now to take shabbat as a  day of rest.  Shabbat is good.  

 

pet scan – June 17, 2023 Read Post »

israeli politics

We went to synagogue at Beit Schechter last night.  On the way we crossed the bridge over the “lowline,” the path that follows the old train route to jaffa on the long-extinct Hijaz railroad – built by the turks. For some reason I can’t get the photos up at the moment but the whole area is so amazing with the smell of jasmine strong in the air.

But what you want to know is what religion is like in Tel Aviv nowadays – well, the Rabbi had been very optimistic about building a congregation because he really spoke to the youth.  I hadn’t seen him for years and now I don’t see that excitement any more.  It isn’t working – 1. because the community around the synagogue is artsy 2. because the artsy community is pissed off with religion at the moment.

But Omer did the kiddish with such simplicity and aplomb –  I’m kvelling.


 

 

 

shul – june 16, 2023 Read Post »

israeli politics

My great-nephew married last night – two very different kinds of families. While their’s danced and whooped and sang all evening, ours sat and discussed the health of those unable to be there…

But it is certain to be a great marriage because they are such giving people.

weddings – june 16, 2023 Read Post »

israeli politics

 Forget for a moment that today is a critical day in the political composition of the government.  My trials today are based on the problems of shopping for clothes in Israel.  

When I was in need of beautiful clothes, there were numerous local designers whose creations were suited to life in this country and for whom flexibility was imperative.  The sense was one of variety and availability.  The seamstress was part of the content of the shop.  She made the dress fit.  All this industry has disappeared and has been replaced by imported chain stores with limited styles, sizes and imagination.  

Until now I blamed the fact that I am picky and have a strange body and style.  Today I took my grandson to buy bar mitzvah clothes and discovered that he faced the same disappointment.  He is long and thin and had already endured two fruitless expeditions with his mother before I took the challenge.  Not that he is picky but that there is nothing in his size and no one to offer alternatives.  So Ezi and I went to the local high end shopping center to check out the possibilities last night.  We actually found some possibilities and were eager to get this chore behind us this morning.  In Tommy Hilfiger a very nice tattooed grey-haired salesman asked to help us.  I told him I was looking for some dressy clothes for a tall boy.  “Oh, Bar Mitzvah Boy!” he exclaimed, and directed us to some possible shops in the mall.  “Don’t forget!” he said, “You want him to look classy, but you don’t want to spend too much out of something he’ll grow out of in a year.”  

One of the places he recommended was Zara and we found a few items that really might work, so this morning I brought the boy to the shop.  His lanky body – perfect for modelling – was too thin for even the smallest size in the men’s department and too large for anything in the children’s department, and we went on.  After a few shops we got to the point when I just asked at the entrance if they had anything in his size.  And after we had gone through an entire mall without a single possible choice, we made the decision – over a pepperoni pizza – to go the Bnai Brak.  Surely the reisdents there wear elegant clothes every day and would have some trousers in his slim size. 

And indeed after much laboring, we came away with a pair of black trousers.  And in a mall not too far away we ever found an extra small shirt that suited him. 

But we also came home with two social lessons.

  1.  While Omer tried on trousers, I was searching for alternatives when a story unfolded next to me.  A young man with sidelocks brought a heavy wooden bench next to me and set it down on the wooden floor with a loud bang.  I startled, said, “You frightened me!”  “Oh, dear, I beg your forgiveness! (Michila)”  More surprised by the strength of his apology than the noise itself, I began to keep an eye on him as I looked for clothing.  He seemed to be having a very hard time straightening things up.  “It isn’t Gemorra!”  the boss shouted at him as he struggled to arrange the dry goods.  “Listen, ” a fellow worker tried to explain to him, “All you have to do is pile the pants neatly in order of size.  The numbers are on the side of the pants.  It’s easy.”  No luck.  “You have to make a pyramid,” another worker said, trying to help.  But the boy drew a blank.  I looked at the boy more carefully.  Confused though he was, his eyes were intelligent.  What does this inability to make sense of simple forms and/or numbers mean?   To my mind he was not trained in anything to do with life.  The morality he injected into a chance encounter indicated his orientation in a rigid approach to life that cannot function in reality.  My heart was broken for this fine young man who cannot exist in a real world.
  2. Later that day, after having been brushed off by at least twenty salespeople who made no effort to help us to solve our problem, I found a misshapen clerk in a local chain whose chest width matched my grandson’s, and asked for his help.  Within seconds the perfect shirt was laid before us on the counter.  The bar mitzvah boy is exceedingly beautiful, and the man who found the shirt that made him look perfect is so unpleasing to look at that he was kept in the storeroom and only chanced to be in the front room because he was bringing out stock.  He took one long look at the boy and evaluated his body exactly.  We who do not fit into standard shapes and sizes know how to measure what we see and not what the standard permutations tell us.   

 

slim pickings – june 14, 2023 Read Post »