September 2, 2010

How Do You Keep God Alive In Your Life?

In his 1999 lecture on Exodus 34, Dennis Prager says: The Torah says you shall observe the feast of unleavened bread. This is how you keep faith in God, by observing regular rituals. If you don’t observe regular rituals, you won’t keep God alive in your life.

No generation of Jews that has not remained God-oriented has stayed Jewish. Many Jews say I don’t need the rituals, I’ll keep Jewish values alive. It is a well-intentioned erroneous sentiment. Without rituals, nothing is kept alive.

The average Jew observes no Judaic rituals.

How do Christians stay God-oriented without these rituals? They have God made flesh. If they didn’t have God in human form, they too would need rituals to stay God-oriented. Islam has as many rituals as Judaism.

Unleavened bread symbolizes getting out of Egypt. Getting out of Egypt is the symbol for all of the Torah because Egypt symbolizes everything that Judaism rejects, such as a preoccupation with death, paganism, etc. Since the Egyptians invented bread, bread became the symbol of Egypt.

By eating unleavened bread for seven days, you reject Egypt.

There’s been a tremendous degradation in Jewish life over the course of centuries (in addition to tremendous elevation). The overwhelming majority of Jews have no clue as to what matza represents. They think you eat matza because there wasn’t enough time to bake regular bread while leaving Egypt, which is true but trivial.

The most important reason is that bread represents Egypt and unleavened bread represents getting away from Egypt and affirming the one God and life.

Observant Jews who live outside of Israel have added a day to the festival and made it to eight days. Seven days means creating a new life. Eight days means nothing.

Meaningless ritual is as worthless as no ritual. Why are most Jews non-ritual practicing? Their great grandparents in almost every case practiced the rituals. How did we go from 90% observance to 10% observance in a hundred years [the last half of the 19th Century and the first half of the 20th Century]? Because it was meaningless.

The rituals are beautiful but even beautiful rituals that mean nothing will be dropped. Beauty isn’t enough. The brain needs reasons.

The Torah is a rational document. It does give reasons.

Filed under Christianity, Dennis Prager, Torah by

September 1, 2010

God Is Good!

In his 1998 lecture on Exodus 33, Dennis Prager says: I’ve always been intoxicated, not with love, but with goodness.

God tells Moses that his goodness will pass before his eyes, not his love.

What is the difference between goodness and love?

Love is more emotion. Goodness is more action.

If you say Joe loves a lot of people, you mostly think that Joe loves a lot of people, but if you say Joe is a good person, you immediately assume Joe does a lot of good.

There are spouses who beat their spouse and who love the person they beat. You might say, he loves her! He’s sick and he beats her.

That’s easily said. You would never say he’s a good spouse. It’s possible to love and to not do what is good. It is possible to do what is good and to not love.

Once you say that God is good, you’re saying that God rejects bad, because part of goodness is rejecting the bad.

The Hebrew Bible repeatedly says that you should love good and hate evil. There are things you shouldn’t love. Goodness must triumph.

God tells Moses that his essence is good. If someone wrote this today, they would say, Moses, sit back and let my love envelop you.

Love is amoral. There’s no judgment and we hate judgment. We want to be children who are never loved. If I love the person who does evil as much as I love the person who does good, then I am saying that love is unaffected by morality.

God loves but God is not love.

Filed under Dennis Prager, Torah by

Mazal Tov! Shannon Orand Married!

Here she is on onlysimchas (wedding was Aug. 19 in Houston)! Jack Nuszen is the lucky man.

Here’s the dramatic back story to Shannon Orand’s Jewish journey.

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Adopt Me!

I want to be adopted. Ever since I’ve been a kid, when I’ve met loving families, I’ve wanted them to adopt me. I still get this yearning. I’ve wanted some of my therapists to adopt me, or to at least to hold me very close. I wanted Dennis Prager to adopt me.

I’ve been sick the last nine days. It is during times of illness and during Sabbaths and during holidays that I most feel alone. I see most starkly that something is very wrong with my life.

If I were 24 or 34 and never married and blogging and living in a hovel, I could easily justify to myself that this next blog post would make the difference, that I was about to turn the corner, that I was about to achieve a good life, but now I am 44 and I can no longer live in this delusion. All I can do is look in the mirror and then look around me and realize I need to change. What I’m doing is not working.

When people don’t learn to connect normally to others in their first couple of years of life, they end up like me.

So, boys and girls, the life lesson that I want you to take away from this is that it is a very bad idea to give your moms cancer. You can plead on your blogs all you want that you’re an orphan but you killed her and normality ain’t ever coming back.

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Blaming Ourselves For The Holocaust

In his 1998 lecture on Exodus 33, Dennis Prager says: Jewish history holds the Jews responsible for leaving their land. It’s the only history I know of where the people have taken 100% responsibility for their own misfortune.

The Holocaust is the first time Jews started to think they didn’t deserve what happened. Still, there are a few Jews who say the Holocaust is a punishment for failing to live up to God’s law.

Jews understand from the Torah that their misfortunes come from God. Human agents are used and not excused…

Filed under Dennis Prager, Holocaust, Torah by

Widow Gets Victory In Court

Jack emails: “I wonder if the rebitzen will be able to sell these torahs with the stigma attached to them.”

The Los Angeles Daily News reports:

The widow of a North Hollywood rabbi who has fought for years to regain four Torahs that once belonged to her late husband won another battle this week when a civil court ruled in her favor.

A Los Angeles Superior Court judge on Tuesday confirmed an earlier ruling by a rabbinic court that Rita Pauker should get back four Torahs that had been in her husband’s family for decades, but are now being used for prayers at a Sherman Oaks synagogue.

But with appeals planned, the four sacred texts won’t be exchanging hands anytime soon.

The late Rabbi Norman Pauker had given the Torahs – valued at anywhere from $29,000 to $80,000 but priceless in sentimental value – to Rabbi Samuel Ohana, now of Beth Midrash Mishkan Israel, in the late 1990s after closing his own temple.

But whether that act was intended as a loan or a permanent gift remains at the center of a bitter dispute between Rita Pauker and Ohana.

“I’m emotionally exhausted,” Rita Pauker said. “Considering I’ve been chasing them for seven years, it’s about time.”

Rabbi Pauker died in 2002, years after he closed his own synagogue and gave the Torahs to Ohana. Although Ohana has been using the Torahs for prayers at Beth Midrash Mishkan Israel in Sherman Oaks, Pauker believes the scrolls were on loan and wants to reclaim them to give to her nephews, who are rabbis in Long Beach, New York and Florida.

Ohana, who was Rabbi Pauker’s assistant, said his former colleague gifted the scrolls to his congregation and called Pauker’s claims “ridiculous.”

“It’s unheard of,” Ohana said. “The Torah are always donated either in the memory of loved ones or in honor of somebody else. Therefore, when the rabbi closed the synagogue and he died, these Torah were not the property of the rabbi so he could bequeath them to his wife or his children. It goes from one congregation to another.

“What’s the purpose to fight and give it to another chabad?” Ohana said. “This is the congregation where her husband used to come and gave to in memory of his loved ones.”

Filed under R. Samuel Ohana by

It’s Been A Couple Of Months Since Somebody Called Me Inappropriate

“Inappropriate” is the most used description of me next to “insecure.

I was starting to feel good tonight. I was reflecting back on the past couple of months and I couldn’t think of anyone telling me, “That was inappropriate!”

Then I read this Facebook response: “Maybe people realize the futility in pointing out your inappropriate behavior. Sort of like trying to train a tiger to be a vegetarian. We still love you. Just need to keep you away from civilized society.”

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Is Dennis Prager High Maintenance?

On Dennis Prager’s radio show today, he devoted the male-female hour to a discussion of high maintenance people.

Dennis said he was not high maintenance.

Ralph calls from Manhattan: “Dennis, I would think it would be impossible for you to not be high maintenance because of what you do for a living. You’re seeking the approval of others.”

Dennis: “That’s not true. I don’t. I seek the respect of others and that’s a very big difference.”

Ralph: “I’m an actor and I know that I’m high maintenance.”

Dennis: “Well, actors do seek approval. You seek applause. I don’t. That is a big difference. It’s something I’ve thought through very carefully.”

Ralph: “If you didn’t get that constant reinforcement from listeners who often open their calls with saying you’re wonderful. I listen to you every day.”

Dennis: “It was not that way. I’ve been on for 28 years. That began to happen after perhaps 15 or 20 [years]. I am deeply appreciative of that but it is not what sustains me.

“What sustains me in terms of listeners is — you changed my thinking. You changed the way I raise my kids. You changed my marriage. You made it better. I think differently now in political and social issues. That does give me a kick. Not in ego, but because I have a real sense of mission.”

Filed under Dennis Prager by

They Got Me!

I opened up my email this evening to find one from an “Al Ha-madaf.”

Oh, man, I thought. The terrorists have got me. They’re coming to get me.

I open it up and find out it is from AJU. Why would a Jewish university send out emails from “Al Ha-madaf.”

Doesn’t that sound like a terrorist’s name to you?

Anyway, this is what is going on at the Jewish Community Library:

My Father’s Paradise,
by Ariel Sabar

Reviewed by Miriyam Glazer, Rabbi, Ph.D., Author and Chair of the Literature, Communication and Media Department at AJU

How well do we actually know people we’ve “known” for years? This is neither a metaphysical question nor a psycho-spiritual one; I’m not talking about those who are close to us, our life-partners, our children, our dearest friends. I mean it much more casually. For example, how well do we know professional colleagues whom we’ve greeted warmly over many years, whose paths we have crossed repeatedly, or next to whom we’ve sat at gatherings of our particular professional tribe? Read More.


AT THE LIBRARY

AJU’s Ostrow Library
Houses Ben Maslan’s
Rare Bible Collection

“You wouldn’t happen to have a slightly used copy of the Gutenberg Bible?” the Maslan boys would ask when they went to second-hand bookstores and thrift shops with their father, Ben Maslan. Although Mr. Maslan never acquired a copy of the first printed Bible, he did amass a collection of close to 4,000 other rare and unusual bibles in dozens of languages. These were donated upon his death to the Ostrow Library at American Jewish University. Maslan’s daughter, Ruth Maslan Sassoon, an alumna of AJU’s Brandeis-Bardin Institute, didn’t accompany him on these expeditions, but she still is very much a part of the story… Read More


interview

One Author’s Perspective

Dr. Michael Berenbaum is the Director of the Sigi Ziering Institute, a think tank that explores the ethical and religious implications of the Holocaust and other genocides. He is the author and editor of eighteen books, scores of scholarly articles and hundreds of journalistic pieces. Read More

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Automatic Citizenship for Children of Illegals?

Jeff emails: “I think all foreign-born nationals should have their citizenship reviewed periodically, and if they aren’t productive it should be revoked, just like conversion. Particular attention should be paid to Australians.”

From CIS.org: WASHINGTON (August 31, 2010) – Every year, 300,000 to 400,000 children are born to illegal immigrants in the United States, each one of them automatically a U.S. citizen despite the illegal status of their parents. This practice of automatic, or birthright, citizenship is not the result of any specific legislation, regulation, executive order, or judicial ruling, and yet has become de facto law of the land.

This has recently become an issue of political controversy, but has been debated for many years. Legislation aimed at narrowing the scope of birthright citizenship has been introduced in every Congress for many years, and the latest iteration has attracted nearly 100 sponsors in the current Congress. Likewise, some leading legal scholars and jurists have long questioned whether such a permissive citizenship policy is constitutionally mandated.

The international trend is clearly away from universal birthright citizenship. Those countries that have ended the practice in recent years include the United Kingdom (1983), Australia (1986), India (1987), Malta (1989), Ireland (2005), New Zealand (2006), and the Dominican Republic (2010). The overwhelming majority of the world’s countries do not offer automatic citizenship to everyone born within their borders.

In a new report, ‘Birthright Citizenship in the United States: A Global Comparison,’ the Center for Immigration Studies’ legal policy analyst Jon Feere reviews the history of the issue in American law and presents the most up-to-date research on birthright citizenship policies throughout the world. The global findings are the result of direct communication with foreign government officials and analysis of foreign law. The report concludes that Congress should promote a serious discussion about whether the United States should automatically confer the benefits and burdens of U.S. citizenship on the children of aliens whose presence is temporary or illegal.

Among the findings:

  • Only 30 of the world’s 194 countries grant automatic citizenship to children born to illegal aliens.

  • Of advanced economies, Canada and the United States are the only countries that grant automatic citizenship to children born to illegal aliens.
  • No European country grants automatic citizenship to children of illegal aliens.
  • The global trend is moving away from automatic birthright citizenship as many countries that once had such policies have ended them in recent decades.
  • 14th Amendment history seems to indicate that the Citizenship Clause was never intended to benefit illegal aliens nor legal foreign visitors temporarily present in the United States.
  • The U.S. Supreme Court has held that the U.S.-born children of permanent resident aliens are covered by the Citizenship Clause, but the Court has never decided whether the same rule applies to the children of aliens whose presence in the United States is temporary or illegal.
  • Eminent scholars and jurists, including Professor Peter Schuck of Yale Law School and U.S. Court of Appeals Judge Richard Posner, have concluded that it is within the power of Congress to define the scope of the Citizenship Clause through legislation, and that birthright citizenship for the children of temporary visitors and illegal aliens could likely be abolished by statute without amending the Constitution.

1. Memorandum: From Bad to Worse: Unemployment and Underemployment Among Less-Educated U.S.-Born Workers, 2007 to 2010
2. Video: Mark Krikorian debates Obama Administration’s Relaxed Enforcement
3. Blog: ICE’s Melting Math
4. Blog: 2009 Yearbook of Immigration Statistics Offers Some Insights
5. Blog: Seeing Is Believing
6. Blog: Price of Victory
7. Blog: Obama Administration Caves on Questionable Border-Area Passports
8. Blog: Jesuit Demands Mexico Stop Abuses of Migrants
9. Blog: Paradigm Shift: Updating Immigration Policy’s ‘Conventional Wisdom’
10. Blog: Breaking Immigration Policy’s Spiral of Silence
11. Blog: Let ‘Em Loose Bruce, or Line-Flushing in Immigration Court
12. Blog: Immigration Policy and the Real ‘Two Americas’
13. Blog: The U.S. Needs a Vibrant Low-Growth Population Advocacy Organization
14. Blog: A Strategy for Winning the Immigration Battle
15. Blog: Ross Douthat’s Two Americas
16. Blog: Grassroots Groups Call Obama Amnesty on Carpet

– Mark Krikorian]

1.
From Bad to Worse: Unemployment and Underemployment Among Less-Educated U.S.-Born Workers, 2007 to 2010
By Steven A. Camarota, August 24, 2010
http://www.cis.org/bad-to-worse

Excerpt: Less-educated, younger, and minority American workers face the worst job market in decades, far worse than their more educated counterparts. However the situation for these workers was very difficult even before the current recession began at the end of 2007. This report examines their employment situation in the second quarters of 2010 and 2007 (before the recession). Younger and less-educated workers are the most likely to be in competition with immigrants — legal and illegal. (Figures in this report are seasonally unadjusted.)

2.
Mark Krikorian debates Obama Administration’s Relaxed Enforcement
By Mark Krikorian, August 27, 2010
http://www.youtube.com/user/CISORG#p/u/0/X_–CAbIsMM

3.
ICE’s Melting Math
By James R. Edwards Jr., August 29, 2010
http://www.cis.org/edwards/melting-math

Excerpt: If you wanted to show the public that you mean business, and you’re the nation’s immigration enforcement agency, maybe you’d want to show some real results. Maybe you’d keep producing real results in a sustained manner. Maybe you’d think, ‘Hey, if we really, truly start enforcing the immigration laws and drop this de facto amnesty stuff, the public might be convinced that we’re sincerely trying to do the job we’re sworn to do.’

4.
2009 Yearbook of Immigration Statistics Offers Some Insights
By David North, August 29, 2010
http://www.cis.org/north/2009-yearbook

Excerpt: The newly issued 2009 Yearbook of Immigration Statistics provides some useful insights into how our government deals with immigrants, while simultaneously not providing some badly needed policy-relevant data.

The publication, as the name implies, is part of a long-running series of statistical reports – my own collection goes back to 1961 but the government’s set must start in the 19th century. It is assembled and published by the Office of Immigration Statistics, the smallest of the four immigration-related agencies within the Department of Homeland Security.

5.
Seeing Is Believing
By James R. Edwards Jr., August 29, 2010
http://www.cis.org/edwards/seeing-is-believing

Excerpt: If there’s any doubt that the Obama administration is running headlong away from immigration enforcement and toward de facto amnesty, it will disappear with a quick review of the latest evidence.

The weak-on-crime, coddle-the-lawbreakers political appointees in the Department of Homeland Security have had their deliberate non-enforcement policy direction exposed in the past few weeks. Instead of a drip-drip-drip dribble of tidbits and leaks, the administration has been blown by torrents of irrefutable evidence against denials of its systematically undermining the rule of law in immigration.

6.
Price of Victory
By Mark Krikorian, August 27, 2010
http://www.cis.org/krikorian/price-of-victory

Excerpt: This is an important issue. Linda and the rest of the pro-amnesty crowd have to denigrate McCain’s decision to flip-flop, because to admit its necessity would be to admit that being weak on immigration can, under certain circumstances, have serious political consequences — something the Obama crowd and its conservative auxiliaries cannot accept. Maybe McCain was wrong. Maybe he could have stuck to his original position on immigration and won anyway. But whose political judgment about the mood of the electorate do you think is more sound? That of a career politician who’s never lost an election in his home state and who survived a serious corruption scandal to go on to secure his party’s presidential nomination? Or that of a pundit

7.
Obama Administration Caves on Questionable Border-Area Passports
By David North, August 27, 2010
http://www.cis.org/north/border-area-passports

Excerpt: It has been known along the southern border for decades that some birth certificates, particularly in rural areas, were both suspect and likely to be used in U.S. passport applications.

Not all midwives and rural county clerks were beyond suspicion.

But what better way for illegal aliens, usually of Mexican extraction, to obtain instant legalization than to obtain State Department-issued U.S. passports?

8.
Jesuit Demands Mexico Stop Abuses of Migrants
By Jerry Kammer, August 26, 2010
http://www.cis.org/kammer/massacre

Excerpt: A Jesuit priest who has long denounced the Mexican government for failing to protect Central American migrants from abuses on their way northward has rejected official statements of outrage at the massacre of 72 migrants in the northern border state of Tamaulipas.

‘Don’t come to me and tell me that this causes you great pain because that isn’t true,’ said Jesuit priest Pedro Pantoja, according to the online edition of the Mexican magazine Proceso. Pantoja directs a migrants’ center in the city of Saltillo.

9.
Paradigm Shift: Updating Immigration Policy’s ‘Conventional Wisdom’
By Stanley Renshon, August 26, 2010
http://www.cis.org/renshon/paradigm-shift

Excerpt: The philosopher of science Thomas Kuhn revolutionized his field with the 1962 publication of a seminal book, The Structure of Scientific Revolutions. In it he argued that science, no less than other forms of human effort, proceeded on the basis of its own received beliefs. These beliefs formed the foundation of what was deemed acceptable scientific practice and provided as well the basic framework for examining science’s results. What then developed was the practice and reward of so-called ‘normal science’ that took place almost entirely within and according to the rules of the dominant paradigm.

10.
Breaking Immigration Policy’s Spiral of Silence
By Stanley Renshon, August 25, 2010
http://www.cis.org/renshon/spiral-of-silence

Excerpt: Elisabeth Noelle-Neumann, a specialist in German public opinion research, published a book in 1984 with the University of Chicago Press, entitled The Spiral of Silence. In it, she tried to understand why ordinary Germans had not been more vocal in their opposition to the gradual rise and consolidation of Hitler’s regime.

11.
Let ‘Em Loose Bruce, or Line-Flushing in Immigration Court
By Mark Krikorian, August 25, 2010
http://www.cis.org/krikorian/line-flushing

Excerpt: Mind you, this isn’t a question of ICE agents deciding to focus on, say, airport workers instead of dishwashers; that kind of prioritization happens all the time and is unavoidable in the real world. These are people who’ve already been arrested, charged, and in deportation proceedings simply being let go because the backlog is too large. It’s like the phenomenon of ‘line-flushing’ at border crossings, where if the line of foreigners trying to enter the country gets too long, inspectors are sometimes instructed to just let everyone in and start checking again later, so as not to interfere with border commerce

12.
Immigration Policy and the Real ‘Two Americas’
By Stanley Renshon, August 24, 2010
http://www.cis.org/renshon/political-class-vs-mainstream

Excerpt: It is easy to get into trouble when you divide this vast, diverse country into two dichotomous parts and claim that distinction explains something enormously significant. If like former Democratic presidential candidate John Edwards you argue ‘we still live in a country where there are two different Americas … one, for all of those people who have lived the American dream and don’t have to worry, and another for most Americans, everybody else who struggle to make ends meet every single day,’ while living in a 28,200-square-foot house, you can legitimately be accused of hypocrisy and trying to foment class warfare for political gain.

13.
The U.S. Needs a Vibrant Low-Growth Population Advocacy Organization
By David North, August 24, 2010
http://www.cis.org/north/population-advocacy

Excerpt: America needs a vigorous conversation about the size of our future population, and a vibrant organization making the pro-slow-growth argument.

Such an organization would, among other things, argue for a much lower rate of immigration, but it would do so from a possibly sturdier foundation than the one currently available to the restrictionists.

14.
A Strategy for Winning the Immigration Battle
By Ronald W. Mortensen, August 24, 2010
http://www.cis.org/mortensen/winning-strategy

Excerpt: Previous blogs have discussed how those of us who oppose illegal immigration have largely failed to win the battle in spite of years of effort. We have allowed ourselves to be defined by the opposition and we have all too often adopted tactics that validate their portrayal of us. But perhaps most importantly, we have generally failed to put a human face on our arguments and we have seldom appealed to the emotions of the public and policy makers.

15.
Ross Douthat’s Two Americas
By Stanley Renshon, August 23, 2010
http://www.cis.org/renshon/douthat-two-americas

Excerpt: The usually sensible New York Times columnist Ross Douthat careens into a conceptual immigration ditch in trying to divide Americans into those who welcome immigrants as long as they profess allegiance to this country’s iconic creedal ideals and those who ‘often strikes cruder, more xenophobic notes.’ In two different entries last week – ‘Islam in Two Americas’ and ‘Assimilation and Nativism’ – he made an unfortunate and ill-founded distinction between those for whom ‘allegiance to the Constitution trumps ethnic differences, language barriers and religious divides’ and those who expect ‘new arrivals to assimilate themselves to these norms, and quickly’ and one might add ‘or else’!

16.
Grassroots Groups Call Obama Amnesty on Carpet
By James R. Edwards Jr., August 23, 2010
http://www.cis.org/edwards/administrative-amnesty-letter

Excerpt: Eighteen grassroots organizations, including NumbersUSA, Eagle Forum, ProEnglish, and Let Freedom Ring, have today released a jointly signed letter opposing an administrative end-run around Congress by the Obama administration. The scheme entails amnesty by bureaucratic means to legalize millions of illegal aliens through what are supposed to be exceptional-case powers.

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