blog, israeli politics, my life in tel aviv

The lecturer at the opening of the Tel Aviv Museum pointed out that we are not the same people that we were when we planned this exhibit four years ago.  Our needs are different, our goals are different.  The sense of reconsidering and rebuilding the identity of the country underlies many considerations about exhibits now.  Not that the artists have changed, but their relationships to society have been re-examined and re-emphasized. 

I admit I like it.  The self-satisfaction and superciliousness of the art world in the past has really bothered me in the past years.  

museums – dec 17, 2023 Read Post »

blog, israeli politics, my life in tel aviv

The exhibit at the Muza museum was crowded.  Everyone I could see was fascinated by most of the photographs of the events of the past year.  So much has happened and it is terrible to see it recorded all together in one room.  

here is the linkhttps://www.eretzmuseum.org.il/en/exhibitions/local-testimony-2023/

There was little relief from the tragedies we have gone through recently – but the fact that so many could see this exhibit shows that we are becoming just a bit innured.  Not because we don’t care, but we are learning to live with horror. 

That fact alone is terrifying.  

local testimony – Dec 16, 2023 Read Post »

blog, israeli politics, my life in tel aviv

The tension of the war has brought out the worst and the best in people.  Some of us are short-tempered, some (like me) are forgetful, some (like me) get confused more easily, some (like me) get smarter.  My mad neighbor for example seems to me to be more mad than usual – and I can understand some of her rantings, but there are others are off the wall.  As the daughter of a schizophrenic auschwitz graduate, she has some of the genes, and has learned a lot of the behavior of her mother.  But she’s more violent and scary.  She likes to slam her door shut repeatedly, for example, because it really irritates the guy upstairs.  Obviously he did something to irritate her because she was slamming the door over and over all morning.

And then when I opened the door to go down to the local grocery, she screamed at me about something that kept her inside for weeks and it was my fault.  She did seem more pale that usual. 

But she ran ahead of me before I could try to speak to her.

Once inside the grocery, she rushed to the back of the store, where the vegetables are kept, and then began ranting about being poisoned, warning me about being murdered.  There was another person beside the grocer in the shop, an old man who had come on his motorized cart.  He looked totally confused and the grocer immediately told her she is not allowed to shout in his store.  When she left, the old man asked what was going on, and the grocer explained that she is second generation holocaust survivor.  “I was in Auschwitz too,” said the old man, “and of the thousand children in my group, only three survived.”  then he turned to me “and you see, I don’t shout.”  He paid for his purchases and the grocer walked him out to his cart.  As I waited for the grocer to return, I found myself in tears.  The local grocery – once thriving – has been in dire straits since the building has been under renovations.  The renovations stopped with the war, since all the workers were from Gaza (who at least bought their provisions from the grocer), leaving the grocery almost buried in construction, and inaccessible.  

And yet he has remained as alert and kind as ever – to the mad woman, the old man, the Gazan workers.  Yes, this will all pass, and the building will be gorgeous, and the crowds will throng to the little grocery, but no one can tell me that he will be less kind when the celebrities in the neighborhood come back to him than he was today.  

 

 

a mensch – dec 15, 2023 Read Post »

blog, israeli politics, my life in tel aviv, poetry

Oren sent me a piece of a poem by Amichai today and it sticks so much in my mind I had to translate it for you:

 

“Where was he injured” you don’t  know

if the intention is a part of his body

or a place in the country.

 

Sometimes a bullet passes through

a person’s body and injures

the land as well.

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.

amichai – a piece of poem Read Post »

blog, israeli politics, my life in tel aviv

Because of an article Ezi pointed me to in Haaretz in English about Unrwa, I started poking around on the web.  You can find the article here: but if you’re not subscribed or you don’t believe in believing a source from Israel about Gaza, just look at their site:

https://www.unrwa.org/sites/default/files/unrwa_in_action_2023_eng.pdf

You don’t have to do the math to observe the arcs on the circles.  Gaza is getting the greatest percentage of the help – food, supplies, education, etc.  So where is it going?

The article in Haaretz by Ronny Linder that explodes UNRWA almost made me lose faith in the possibility of peace.  I’ve known this before – and so have you.  

UNbelievable Read Post »

blog, israeli politics, my life in tel aviv, poetry

“ooshkut

Emily

This is a day of enormous joy and relief for Emily Hand and her family. An innocent child who was lost has now been found and returned, and we breathe a massive sigh of relief.  Our prayers have been answered.

 

 

“Ooshkut,” she whispers. “Silence.”

The only word she has learned

In the long weeks of captivity.

A tiny child, the kind

that fairies would lure

with stolen berries in the woods

to dance all night

in their magic ring.                              

 

But she was wakened in her cot

and dragged to places

she dare not tell,

redeemed by chance

from a world more full of weeping

Than she can understand

to her father’s trembling arms

and whispers still

“Ooshkut.”  

 

 

ooshkut – december 12, 2023 Read Post »

blog, israeli politics, my life in tel aviv

All right, I don’t gossip with the neighbors, and I barely look at the neighborhood websight.  So maybe I was the last to know.  But when I went into the neighborhood drugstore today and most of the medications weren’t there, I was shocked.  The pharmacist explained that they were tearing down the building on thursday so they were getting rid of stuff and I suddenly realized that since this place was next to the dorms and most of the people who live in the dorms were Arab students, the entire staff is Arab.  Now what will they do?  

So many memories of this drugstore:  The night after Ezi’s second chemo when we went to buy condoms for the first time in our lives, and we spent hours trying to figure out what the difference is and what could be done with each.  And when we took the craziest selection to the counter, the voice of the pharmacist rang out.  “Brofessor!” 

 

 

 

 

the pharmacy – dec 12, 2023 Read Post »