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Couldn’t be any verse

 
 
 

An ode to a year gone bye-bye

Each year, the editor of our neighboring publication, The New Jersey Jewish News, waxes poetic, so to speak, as he summarizes the year gone by. With rhyme, if not reason, we offer his ode to 2011.

From Irene’s winds to autumn’s snow,

The past year put on quite a show.

An earthquake made us all lose focus.

What’s next? A plague of swarming locusts?

Or maybe just a rain of frogs.

Like Sarkozy, if that name jogs

A memory of public gaffes

When he and POTUS shared some laughs

And said what everybody knew

About Binyamin You Know Who.

A tip for parents and for tykes:

Don’t tell the truth near open mics.

In truth it was a rocky year

Between Barack and the premier.

We wondered how the prez could let a

Trusted aide like Leon Panetta

Lecture Israel while on a visit.

A “family feud,” they said, or is it?

At least when my folks disagree

They try to keep it off TV.

In Tel Aviv there were events

That showed its people were in tents,

With protests that would soon inspire

Many a foreign Occupier.

With pressure building, Bibi found

A need to speak on friendly ground.

After looking hard and long, res-

cue came from the U.S. Congress.

From Tripoli to Tahrir Square

The Arab Spring was in the air;

Said every emir, king, and sultan:

“Look, our people are revoltin’.”

The West looked on with fear and glee

Rooting for democracy

And worried that the ballots would

Benefit the Brotherhood

(And not the kind you find in shuls

But those who love Sharia’s rules.

Our guys — or at least my hunch is —

Much prefer their bagel brunches).

The news was twisty, dark, and weird,

And that’s just Matisyahu’s beard.

When he announced his plans to shave it,

Millions called on him to save it.

Had this chasidic king of reggae

Become a secular shmeggegge?

“God forbid,” he told his buffs.

“And don’t forget to buy my stuff.”

The year just past was tough on ritual

And customs that we find habitual.

In San Fran it was hit or miss

Whether they would ban the bris,

While Holland’s folk rose up in order

To ban the right to kosher slaughter.

It’s not the Jews, opponents said;

It’s just the things they do instead.

Our enemies loomed far and nearier,

From Lebanon to Assad’s Syria,

To Tehran, where Islamic moms

Have visions of atomic bombs.

But no foe, never mind his crimes,

Scared us like The New York Times,

As if Tom Friedman and his advice is

Israel’s single biggest crisis.

But let’s not end with disagreement.

Instead consider the achievement

Of folks like Gabby Giffords who

Beat the odds and soldiered through.

Or Debbie Friedman, rest in peace,

Whose music gave us sweet release.

Greet the year with fresh demeanor,

And never mention Tony Weiner.

 

Andrew Silow-Carroll
When not up to his ears in iambic pantameter, Andrew Silow-Carroll is editor of The New Jersey Jewish News (/www.njjewishnews.com).
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Learning the lessons of history

We are all too familiar with the rhetorical currency of anti-Semites. Jews control the human and material resources of every society in which they are found, the anti-Semites say, no matter how few in number we may be in said society. They maintain an international conspiracy. They meet secretly, presenting a pleasant and cooperative face to the world, but using hidden teachings of their sacred books to plot the overthrow of societies they consider hostile. They say one thing publicly and the opposite in private. They have learned how to “pass” in society, but even the most “assimilated” Jew may be an operative in disguise. They are quick to cry bigotry, but ignore the teachings of contempt within their own synagogues, schools, and sacred books. They never criticize each other. And, of course, they wish to frustrate the public expression of faith by non-Jews.

 

 

The correct use of Title VI

 

Benzion Netanyahu: An appreciation

Benzion Netanyahu — historian, one-time political activist and father of Binyamin Netanyahu, Israel’s prime minister — died Monday in Jerusalem at 102. An accomplished scholar and the patriarch of one of Israel’s most important political families, he also played a surprising and little-known role in United States political history.

Netanyahu was born in Poland in 1910 to a family deeply immersed in the world of religious Zionism. His father, Rabbi Nathan Mileikowsky, a popular Zionist preacher, brought the family to British-ruled Palestine in 1920. He Hebraicized the family name to Netanyahu.

 

 

RECENTLYADDED

In time for Shavuot…

Observing my children playing, I notice how the same toy, no matter how many times they play with it, can reveal the most remarkable things. My daughter, with the vocabulary befitting a 1 1/2-year-old, will bring her ball over to me and point to a mark on it with a delighted grunt.

“How remarkable!” I will say with (feigned) enthusiasm. To her, however, it is remarkable; she had never noticed it before.

 

 

The real-life Avenger

As moviegoers continue to flock to see Marvel’s new superhero ensemble, they would understandably associate the idea of Nazi-fighting avengers with Captain America, Iron Man, Thor, Hulk, and Black Widow. In fact, however, there was also a real-life band of Jewish freedom fighters with the same name who were bent on sticking it to Adolf Hitler’s henchmen.

Let us start with the new film. Without giving away anything, let us just say it goes there. And, of course, Captain America was launched in 1941 with the iconic image of him punching Hitler in the face, knocking him for a loop. That is no surprise — Cap (like Superman, Batman, X-Men and so many other superheroes) was created by two Jews: Joe Simon (born Hymie Simon) and Jack Kirby (born Jacob Kurtzberg).

 

 

Israel must overhaul education system

The teacher stands in front of the sparse classroom, its walls bare and paint peeling.

“This school looks like a prison,” one of my fellow travelers whispers.

Many of the children are huddled in coats; schools in this neighborhood do not have heat, and the unexpected rain and cool air chill the room.

Overcrowded classrooms, minimal instruction hours in core subjects, and a shortage of qualified teachers have taken a toll on the country’s education system. These children must study in an NGO-funded afterschool program to gain the basic academic foundation they need to break the cycle of poverty.

 

 
 
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