The Jewish Thought Series: What Bibi Should Have Replied to Obama


By Avraham Reiss
November 16, 2010
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This post originally appeared today on Daphne Anson’s fine Blog:
http://www.daphneanson.blogspot.com/
(There it appears with a colored background, and accompanied by photographs. But Daphne's blog is well worth a visit chiefly because of its high-quality content.)
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Obama insisted on a settlement freeze - and Bibi agreed.

In the face of Jewish Thought. And against it. We have precedent. A number of precedents.

I'm saying here how I think the Jew Natanyahu should have answered the gentile Obama.

And I'll say it first in Obamese, and then in Jewish.

Obamese:
Mr. President, former President Calvin Coolidge is reputed to have said that the business of America ... is business. I have to remind you that the business of Israel is ... Zionism. And Zionism first and foremost means building the Land of Israel. Settling the waste lands, and making them liveable.

During the Cold War Mr. President, had the Soviets come to an American President with a condition for disarmament talks that America stop doing business for three months, on the grounds that Capitalism negates the Communist way of life, would any American President have taken the demand seriously? Would he have said "peace with the Soviets is more important, let's stop doing business just for three months"?

I hope you can infer both my position and my answer from that analogy, Mr. President.

That was in Obamese.

Now in Jewish Thought. From two different sources.

(1)
What is considered as probably the holiest of prayers uttered on our holiest of days, Yom Kippur, is probably the "Unetaneh Tokef" whose composition is attributed to Rabbi Amnon of Magenza, at the time of the Crusades.

(A translation of the prayer into English can be found at:
http://www.ou.org/chagim/roshhashannah/unetanehtext.htm )

For the sake of brevity I am using a Google source to tell the story.
http://www.ou.org/chagim/roshhashannah/unetaneh.html

The prayer entitled "U'Netaneh Tokef" is attributed to a Rabbi Amnon of Mainz, Germany, who lived about one thousand years ago. The story behind this piyut, a prayer-poem, is sad and poignant, and may shed light on the prayer itself.

The Bishop of Mainz summoned Rabbi Amnon, a great Torah scholar, to his court and offered him a ministerial post on the condition that Rabbi Amnon would convert to Christianity. Rabbi Amnon refused. The Bishop insisted and continued to press Rabbi Amnon to accept his offer. Of course, Rabbi Amnon continued to refuse. One day, however, Rabbi Amnon asked the Bishop for three days to consider his offer.

As soon as Rabbi Amnon returned home, he was distraught at the terrible mistake he had made of even appearing to consider the Bishop's offer and the betrayal of G-d. For three days he could not eat or sleep and he prayed to G-d for forgiveness. When the deadline for decision arrived, the Bishop sent messenger after messenger to bring Rabbi Amnon, but he refused to go. Finally, the Bishop had him forcibly brought to him and demanded a response. The Rabbi responded, "I should have my tongue cut out for not having refused immediately."

The Bishop angrily had Rabbi Amnon's hands and feet cut off and then sent him home.

A few days later was Rosh HaShanah, and Rabbi Amnon, dying from his wounds, asked to be carried to shul. He wished to say the Kedushah to sanctify G-d's Name and publicly declare his faith in G-d's Kingship.With his dying breath, he uttered the words that we now know of as the U'Netaneh Tokef.

Three days later Rabbi Amnon appeared in a dream to Rabbi Kalonymous ben Meshullam, a scholar and poet, and taught him the exact text of the prayer. Rabbi Amnon asked that it be sent to all Jewry and that it be inserted in the prayers of Rosh HaShanah and Yom Kippur for all time.

That story, Mr. Prime Minister of Israel, should have been the guiding light and spirit behind your reply to President Obama.

(2)
But we can go back much further. The Torah, the Written Law, is written entirely in Hebrew, except for two words. These two words are in Aramaic. The English translators couldn’t handle them, and so they appear together as one word, in transliterated Aramaic.

Genesis 31, 46-48:
46 And Jacob said unto his brethren, Gather stones; and they took stones, and made an heap: and they did eat there upon the heap.
47 And Laban called it Jegarsahadutha: but Jacob called it Galeed.
48 And Laban said, This heap is a witness between me and thee this day. Therefore was the name of it called Galeed.

The translation is little short of atrocious, but the meaning is understandable even in the current translation.

The commentator Sforno points out that Jacob uses the Hebrew term for a monument (the “Galeed” is actually 2 Hebrew words: “Gal Ed”, ‘Gal’ meaning a heap of stones, and ‘Ed’ meaning a witness. Such a heap of stones thus ‘bears witness’, and is therefore what we know as a monument.)

So what actually happened here, says Sforno, is that Laban (whose native tongue was Aramaic) named the monument to peace between himself and Jacob in his language – Aramaic – but Jacob insisted on using the Hebrew – “Gal Ed”. And Laban “capitulated”, reverting to the Hebrew term as declared by Jacob.

This, says Sforno, is the power of Jacob: when Jacob insists on his terms, he has the power to subjugate his opponents. Jacob, of course, after he fought with the Angel, was later named Israel.

Did you get that, Bibi?

COMMENTS

jose (not verified)

17 November, 2010 - 03:42

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Yawn ! Anything else to add, telegramsam, rather than recycle pseudo-religious stories?

Netanyahu will accept Obama's plan because it's simply good for Israel. There is no 'risk' that PA accepts it anyway since they still believe they can dictate their conditions, with the support of Arab countries pressuring the UN.


Yvetta

17 November, 2010 - 09:52

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-1 points

I'm sure I posted on this thread yesterday, saying how great to find such erudition.


telegramsam

17 November, 2010 - 09:55

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And I'm sure I responded, Yvetta, with a snorking guaffaw. But the cold has cleared up, so it's just a guffaw now.


jose (not verified)

17 November, 2010 - 13:55

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Sure telegramsam: in fact, I'm Bibi in tutu.
Who takes you seriously anyway, not even yourself as Avraham.


Yehuda Erdman

18 November, 2010 - 08:46

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So it seems there are a number of people using aliases and "pen names" because they lack the courage to speak up in their own name. Does it not say in the Torah not to bear false witness?
Jose I am behind you 100%, it is time to remove these "clever" tricks and let everyone speak in plain English, we are after all posting in the JC, which has been for 160 years the organ of British Jewry. The "pilpul" should remain in the Yeshivas, but in the real world strangers seek a common language, a lingua franca if you will. To my mind this remains English, but a case might be made for Mandarin or Spanish based on the number of people fluent in those tongues.
To come back to Mr Reiss' blog, does he really think the President of the USA, would give any visiting leader the time of day if he chose to publicly insult him in his own country, the USA? Even though Israel has relied very deeply on the unswerving support of its strongest and most faithful ally, all Jews should remember that the USA and its President do not exist merely to promote the interests of the State of Israel or for that matter, the Jewish people wherever they are. A junior partner must always show respect to the senior, which applies in business, education, politics and many other fields of human endeavour.


Kahina

18 November, 2010 - 09:36

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Yehuda Erdman

If you want to get an idea of grass roots Jewish thoughts in London get in the back of a black cab with a Jewish taxi driver. Or have a falafel in Sunnyhill park. These people are all supporting the Israeli right.

They are being censored by the British Jewish establishment.

The JC, which like you said, has been for 160 years the organ of British Jewry is busy reporting today on:

Diana's Designer tipped for Kate Middleton
Jamie Lester's Apprentice Team
Harry Potter and the Israeli Muggle team
Hollywood legend gunned down
Graff Diamond auction sets new record

Today it comes to light in another post, that the JC moderated a community leader's post here because he wrote Obama's middle name.

You can't really take them seriously.

They are trying really hard, but they won't win, because like the dissidents in Iran, we have the internet. We can get our word out.


Yvetta

18 November, 2010 - 10:19

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An excellent post re the JC of late, Kahina. There's frippery (alright in its place, so long as it's balanced by hard news and comment) and also dumbing down.
Avraham is feisty and controversial, but he is steeped in Jewish learning. I admire him for that.


Yehuda Erdman

20 November, 2010 - 19:43

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1 point

Kahina
My wife's uncles are cab drivers, but I don't think they would be my primary source of data on Zionism. Sorry I like to form my own opinions after extensive study.
I know you can get your word out but so can I.


Avraham Reiss

20 November, 2010 - 20:09

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Erdman:
"all Jews should remember that the USA and its President do not exist merely to promote the interests of the State of Israel or for that matter, the Jewish people wherever they are. A junior partner must always show respect to the senior, which applies in business, education, politics and many other fields of human endeavour."

You are the very epitomy of a Galut Jew - the mentality hasn't changed since 150 years ago when Jews were afraid of the paritz (local land-owner) of the village. You've just replaced him with a bigger one.

I can just see you touching your forlock, bowing and doffing your cap in respect.

That kind of thinking went out decades ago.
Get up and smll the coffee.


telegramsam

20 November, 2010 - 20:52

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So, Avraham, do the US and its president exist merely to promote the interests of Israel? Last time I looked, the US is the superpower, while Israel is the client state.


Yvetta

20 November, 2010 - 21:10

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-1 points

There he goes
There he goes again ...


Avraham Reiss

20 November, 2010 - 21:12

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You don't know the first thing about Jewish Philosophy in particular, or Judaism in general, except for that one verse you keep quoting and violating simultaneously. So why do you feel the need to comment here?


Avraham Reiss

20 November, 2010 - 21:13

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tspam - what I replied to Erdman above, applies equally to you. Now doff your cap and bow down nicely.


telegramsam

20 November, 2010 - 21:22

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I bow to no one, especially not to unJewish fascists like you, Avraham


Yehuda Erdman

22 November, 2010 - 16:44

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Reiss
For your information I was born in Jerusalem on 14th May 1948 and as a boy went to the Sokolov school in Jerusalem. I remember as a boy we used to play as a gang in no-mans land between the Old city and West Jerusalem, as our home was close by in Rehov Ha'Neviim opposite the Bikur Holim Hospital where I was born in the siege of Jerusalem. My late father was a Dental Surgeon who practised from our apartment and he had served in the Haganah as well as Tzahal throughout the War of Independence, and he completed his service with the rank of Lieutenant.
In 1956 my parents left Israel taking my brother aged 15 and myself aged 8 to London, where my father built up his practise from nothing because in those days you were not permitted to take anything out of Israel.
I was privileged to receive a Grammar School education in Kilburn (North West London) which is why my command of the English language is possibly better than yours?
As a teenager I joined Habonim, the Zionist Socialist youth movement and spent over two years on Hachshara in West Sussex, before Aliya with a Garin of Habonim to Kibbutz Amiad in 1968. For a variety of reasons I did not succeed in settling on Kibbutz and returned to London and became over a long period of study while also working, a scientist working in Microbiology Laboratories (Bacteriology). After marrying my wife who is a Sephardi (her parents were from Bombay but previous generations from Baghdad), we settled eventually in Wembley and we have four sons. My wife was also born in Israel, in Hadera because her family had been living in the Ma'abarot near there.
When our boys have completed their higher level studies, my wife and I intend to return to live in Israel so you and I, Reiss, will both be residents there.

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