israeli politics

Whatever it was that made me agree to read poems in a shopping center tonight, it didn’t do me good. What did me good was Simon Lichman by my side – looking at my poems andfixing a word here and there – with a magical touch that negated all the pathos of the event.

And the taste that came back to me for reading again. Watch out, I’m going to be doing readings if there is a demand.

Reading poems 4.3.25 Read Post »

israeli politics

real grief in Israel - 3.3.25

Because the film A Real Grief

didn’t seem to get much of a showing, we almost missed it.  Maybe we just didn’t read the ads closely enough.  But we found out it was playing in Dizengoff Center this afternoon, so we dropped everything and went.  

The theater was almost empty, and the woman next to me kept turning on her phone, so I kept comparing the people on the holocaust trip on screen to the people in the audience. How has Israel been affected by the holocaust – really?  We have connected the events of October 7 with the holocaust so intimately we can’t really absorb the “merely psychological” reactions to the trauma.  Perhaps we really need to discuss some of this internationally.  The pain on both sides is really great.

real grief in Israel 3.3.25 Read Post »

israeli politics

A Supermarket in Tel Aviv - 2.3.25

Hungry for images, as Ginsberg writes, we went to the supermarket.  As many of you know, I have avoided supermarkets years, primarily because of my back, and I prefer to order online, but lately I’ve become less efficient and wind up having to supplement my stores.  

As a holocaust-influenced shopper, and a survivor of many wars  like most people in Israel, I am constantly tempted to overbuy, fearful that even the shops will run out of products.  During the ’73 war, when we had no eggs, my mother sent us powdered eggs, along with cans of tuna, powdered milk, etc.  even though I was driving around the country and getting supplies for all my neighbors.  I went to TAdiran in Holon for batteries, one farm for eggs, another for milk, and so on.  Clearly it’s an obsession learned from my family and reinforced by my experience here.  

So I usually go to a supermarket and go wild. 

But today, the only thing that could ignite my interest was vegetables.  vegetables and fruit.  There just isn’t anything exciting. The products all seem to be brand x, brands I’ve never seen before.  It’s like a poor imitation of last year.  

Maybe it’s only me.  I mean there are all kinds of nice things I don’t remember from long ago.  The Russian checkout ladies used to be rigid and domineering, and now they are nice, even point out how we can save more money on sales we might not have noticed, provide recipes, find discounts.  

So I didn’t get images, but I did see a lot that told me about what’s going on in our economy.

 

a Supermarket in Tel Aviv – 2.3.25 Read Post »