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Changing Englewood’s house of terror into a home of Jewish values

 
 
 

Press reports this week stated that I was seeking to buy the Libyan compound next door to me in order to establish an international center for Jewish values. These reports are accurate.

Truth regardless of consequences

Aside from wanting to push the Libyans out of New Jersey, which has 39 families that still grieve over loved ones lost over Lockerbie, I have long wished to establish a permanent institute for the identification and dissemination of Judaism’s core values. A place where scholars and students can publish Judaism’s answers to the great social challenges facing our nation. A values-based institute that will do for Judaism what, say, the Heritage Foundation has done for Conservatism, spreading Judaism’s unique wisdom on the great issues of our time.

America faces four great social crises. The first is growing materialism and an addiction to greed. The second is the collapse of the family, skyrocketing divorce rates, and singles who date recreationally but do not commit. The third is the dominance of celebrity culture and an obsession with fame, rendering non-showy achievement almost irrelevant by comparison. And the fourth is the depression and unhappiness that is becoming endemic in American society, with the United States consuming three quarters of the earth’s anti-depressants and one out of three American women on Prozac, Zoloft, or Paxil.

These four challenges will only be addressed through a new set of American values. No longer can the Forbes 400 determine who matters. And there must be some stigma attached to men who make a buck and immediately drop a wife of 25 years in favor of some hot young thing. Likewise must teenagers learn that helping their parents with household chores and volunteering to raise money for Haiti is more noble than winning “American Idol.” And happiness? Well, that can only come from a life that has purpose. Narcissism is a prison that breeds loneliness and depression.

Never before has Judaism been so much in need for its values. While Christianity speaks of getting into heaven, Judaism says that paradise is found around a functional family that gathers for Friday night Shabbat dinners. While Islam seems obsessed with its humiliation at the hands of Western power and progress, Judaism says real shame stems from taking a noble world religion and treading on God’s greatest teaching, to love one’s fellow man as oneself, and to treat others as we ourselves wish to be treated, as Hillel declared.

Pat Robertson may have indicted all of Haiti for having, as he says, been in league with the devil. But Judaism cites the example of Abraham who lifted his fists to the heavens when notified of the coming destruction of Sodom, crying out to God, “Shall the Judge of the entire earth not Himself practice justice?” It speaks of Moses challenging God that if He were indeed to destroy the Jews after the sin of the Golden calf, then, “Blot my name out of your Torah.” Where Christian leaders indict man and exonerate God in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, Jews have always accused God and exonerated man whenever innocents have perished. God does not need defense attorneys. But vulnerable and powerless humans do.

How is it that we have kept all these treasures to ourselves? Yes, we are not a proselytizing people, believing that one need not become a Jew in order to draw close to God. Each of His children may have a relationship with Him by living a righteous life, however they were born and whatever they believe.

But there is so much healing the world can gain from Jewish wisdom. Should we not try and give America a single national family dinner night, on Fridays, where kids stop texting and parents start talking? Should we not teach men that while evolution says they are walking sperm banks, Judaism says they are, at heart, not sex but intimacy seekers, and that, try as they might to find sexual adventure with women other than their wives, they will never be satisfied because only their soul mate can understand their heart? Would this teaching not have saved Tiger Woods, who acted as a champion on the golf course but as a slave to his libido?

Christianity maintains that people do not have real choice, that notwithstanding righteous action they were born in sin and only faith in Christ can save them. Freud likewise maintained that we are not the masters in our mental household, as we might have supposed, and that an uncivilized id would always rear its ugly head. Modern science echoes the sentiment with its emphasis on genetic predisposition that goes against the belief we are in control of our actions. But amid this triple assault on free will, Judaism stands alone in maintaining, as its most basic foundation, that our lives are unscripted and we can become whatever we choose to be. Astrology is a sham, as is every other supposed limitation on our capacity to chart our own destiny.

I am currently embroiled in a dispute with my congressman, Steve Rothman, for his press release defending the Libyan ambassador’s right to dwell in Englewood based on an agreement he helped broker 27 years ago. Likewise, I am profoundly disappointed with Englewood’s city officials for allowing the Libyans to live tax-free, even as they have now informed me that they are beginning to bring pressure on the Libyans to pay for basic city services rather than having Englewood’s hard-pressed citizens, who are taxed to the max, subsidize an oil-rich dictatorship.

But I am prepared to bury the hatchet with both groups if they do the honorable thing and get behind a sensible plan to transform the Libyan mission from a home, quite literally, of an enemy of the State of Israel — Ambassador Shalgham recently accused Israel of war crimes in the UN Security Council, and last March his mission accused Israel of turning Gaza into a concentration camp — into an institute for the dissemination of family values, moral instruction, and a higher life-calling.

My congressman and city officials can begin by approaching the Libyans to discuss a sale and to inform them, in no uncertain terms, that their sojourn in Englewood is simply untenable. I look forward to their response.

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Welcome change

WASHINGTON — For decades, the Jewish community here in the United States has debated the advisability, constitutionality, and necessity of government aid to parochial schools, Jewish and otherwise. With the United States still experiencing tough economic challenges, however, we find our schools under greater financial stress than ever. This reality, alongside the solidification of court rulings upholding government aid programs and a current of broader education reform, has positioned 2012 to be a year in which we see signs of a sea change within the Jewish community over this perennial issue.

Since the mid-1950s, the majority view within the Jewish community has opposed government aid to parochial schools on the grounds that it diverts funds from the public schools, somehow “breaches the wall of separation” between religion and state, and runs counter to the communal responsibility to support our own institutions.

 

 

Christie unfit to be veep

A Quinnipiac poll in April showed Gov. Chris Christie to be the most popular potential Republican vice presidential candidate, thanks to his budget cuts and standing up to government employee unions. The state’s governor has a problem, however, specifically an Islam problem, that can and should get in the way of his possible ascent to higher office; he has sided time and again with Islamist forces against those who worry about safeguarding United States security and civilization.

 

 

Imprisoned in Bolivia

 

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Dropping the education ball

This weekend, we celebrate Shavuot, the festival known as z’man matan torateinu — the time of the giving of the Torah. The Torah does not refer to Shavuot in this way, but the chronology it gives for the journey from Egypt to Sinai is strongly suggestive, as Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz notes in his article on page 18.

Because Shavuot, the celebration of Torah, focuses on learning, education — specifically, Jewish education — is a proper topic for this week’s column.

What makes it an urgent column is an e-mail I received a couple of weeks back as a member of the North Jersey Board of Rabbis (NJBR). It informed the community’s rabbis that the Jewish Federation of Northern New Jersey (JFNNJ) in effect was cutting its last lines of support to Jewish education in the areas of Bergen, Passaic, and Hudson counties that it serves.

 

 

Flagging the truth

If ever there was any doubt about who we are and what our place is in the world, that doubt should have been erased on a Friday afternoon in Tel Aviv 64 years ago, when David Ben-Gurion stood before a packed room and declared that it was “the natural right of the Jewish people to be masters of their own fate, like all other nations, in their own sovereign State.”

As he stood there, Ben-Gurion, as always, was mindful of both Jewish history and world history. He knew that what he was about to do had never been done by any other expelled people. He knew how impossible it was for this to be happening. And yet, there he was, saying the words Jews only dreamed about hearing for nearly 2,000 years.

 

 

Imprisoned in Bolivia

 
 
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