israeli politics

So even though the turnout was really low, there were 2 comments you might really like. 

1. In Haifa, the mayor was turned out with an incredibly low number of votes – apparently the pigs didn’t bother to back her up.  2. Someone told me he wants to be buried in Bnai Brak, not that he has much connection to the place, but at least once every four years he gets taken out to vote.

Of course you have to know the context, but explaining a joke is so awful I’d rather not.

election humor – feb 28, 2024 Read Post »

israeli politics

i just realize that i didn’t put the humor into what i wrote yesterday, so I’m going to do something I’ve never allowed before – go back and revise.  So if you want the humor in the ugly face of racism, go back in a few minutes –

revision – check back – Read Post »

israeli politics

This was the most empty voting center I’ve been to for years.  We had no wait and there were few people after me.  Perhaps it is hard to turn our attention from the national situation to the municipal ones.  So many issues keep pouring out daily.  So much that reverses the image of the brilliant masterful Israelis.  

What we have instead is a new ideal – the interdependent society that operates outside official organizations.  It’s the old socialism emerging, and elections don’t matter to the society, just the security.

 

municipal Elections – feb 27, 2024 Read Post »

israeli politics

Sometimes when I partially disappear it’s because I have a life and it’s nobody’s business.  Today is election day, but before I talk about it, I want to kvetch a little.  Maybe you can help me.  For the moment there’s no zoommaster who can help me host a program scheduled for 12 days from now, so I got help from the friend who had been doing it for years.  But I could not follow his directions with the same results.   I am not sure I did it right.  I’ve been working at it since last evening – right after I finished a long interview with me about my Hebrew version of “Hanging Around the House.” (You can find the English version on Amazon here ) The interview was painful because once we think about things that have been lost in our lives, it can take us to terrible places.  But the search for linking one form to a sheet to a form has been even worse.  And I’m not finished yet.  Anyone want to help?

where have i been -feb 27, 2024 Read Post »

israeli politics

I was about to write a piece on the lack of humor in Israel since the war began, the sense of heaviness we all feel, when suddenly a friend offered me a Purim treat.  We call them Haman’s Ears in Hebrew, even though they come from a triangular German cookie that refers to the poppy seed pockets and have nothing to do with the holiday.  “Have one,” my friend said, “They’re Sinuar’s ears.” 

Yichi Sinuar does have these strange shaped ears, and the comparison to Haman seems quite just. And I laughed.

Actually I’ve been laughing a lot lately, but not much in public.  Here’s an example.  Yesterday my Arab neighbor wrote on the building’s whatsapp group that eggs had been thrown onto her balcony.  I met her on the stairs, and called out, “I heard you’re inviting everyone for omelettes” (She always laughs at my feeble attempts at humor, and I’m not sure it’s not just respect for her elders, especially those near dementia).  In any case we went upstairs together with another neighbor to check out the scene of the smelly crime.  We evaluated the situation like professionals, figured out the angles and vectors where the eggs had been thrown, what kind of strength it would need to get to the second floor.  I told our neighbor that he should have been there at the shooting of Kennedy to figure out all the angles.  He looked at me as if I were totally mad as my poor victim giggled.  Then we decided on two possible suspects – one a racist and one a schizophrenic.  Then we discussed involving the police, and promised to help if anything else happens.  Neighbors stick together.  We felt very self-righteous.

Today we discovered that lots of neighbors all over have been egged – that the caught 3 kids on film doing it – for fun.  

We didn’t offer to help clean up.

homentaschen, today – feb 2 Read Post »

israeli politics

Yes my 80 year old friends were at the front last night.  Demonstrating against the Prime Minister, they were attacked with horses, water hoses, and, basically everything but the kitchen sink.  They weren’t blocking the roads, they weren’t holding up traffic, they were demonstrating.  And they were joined by the families of hostages, and even released hostages who also got hit.  

I had been thinking of going but felt a bit too weak, to vulnerable.  Yet I went to sleep feeling guilty that I was doing my poetry workshop (and with a bad poem about a picture of myself, yet) instead of my public duty.  


tel aviv – the front – feb 25, 2024 Read Post »

israeli politics

Every city sees a different war. Just as each city in Gaza is different right now, depending on how much has been destroyed, how much danger the Israelis perceive there is in the placed, how organized their families and leaders have been, how much they focus on protection and survival, how much of a neighborhood feeling each area has. In Tel Aviv, for instance, when we’re not thinking of demonstrations (and the horses and the hoses), we concentrate on keeping our families and neighbors safe and protected and ready for the next war. Every where I went today I noted the signs for public shelters – more than ever, whereas in Jerusalem people are more worried about terrorists attacking individuals in the streets and on the roads.

Here and there Read Post »

israeli politics

We wait every minute for news from Paris.  Will a few hostages be let go in exchange for a cease-fire for 6 weeks and a few hundred Hamas prisoners?  

Every life matters.  Especially those of children and pregnant women.  

baby steps – feb 24, 2024 Read Post »