Judaism: Love the Stranger Because You Were Once Strangers

The rabbi does not say anything about the Jewish state needing to do anything for these refugees. He doesn’t say anything about Jews needing to do anything for these refugees, beyond hectoring the goyim with obscene Holocaust parallels to admit these economic migrants.

So what if lots of Jews are going to get murdered now because of this onslaught of Islamic immigration into Europe. I guess in the rabbi’s view, that’s a small price to pay to destroy the hated enemy — white Europe. We must always be fighting the battles of the past, even if that means destroying our future.

Should Judaism adopt this open door policy so that anyone who can make it into a shul is automatically granted Jewish status and must be supported by the community if he chooses not to support himself?

Every major Jewish organization in America supports immigration amnesty.

The following article on the European refugee crisis by Rabbi Sacks was published today in The Observer (a UK national newspaper).

You would have to be less than human not to be moved by images we have seen of the refugee crisis threatening to overwhelm Europe: the desperate scenes at the station in Budapest, the seventy one bodies found in the abandoned lorry in Austria, the two hundred people drowned when their boat capsized off the coast in Libya, and most heartbreaking of all, the body of three year old Aylan Kurdi, lifeless on a Turkish shore: an image that will linger long in the mind as a symbol of a world gone mad.

This is the greatest humanitarian challenge faced by Europe in many decades. Angela Merkel was not wrong when she said, “If Europe fails on the question of refugees, its close connection with universal civil rights will be destroyed.”

The influx of refugees overwhelming parts of Europe is a massive crisis, but it is at just such times that it is worth remembering that the Chinese ideogram for ‘crisis’ also means ‘opportunity.’ Now is a unique opportunity to show that the ideals for which the European Union and other international bodies such as the United Nations were formed are still compelling, compassionate and humane.

Many of the conventions and protocols establishing legal rights for refugees emerged in the aftermath of the Second World War, as did the Universal Declaration of Human Rights itself. One of the dark moments in that history occurred in July 1938, when representatives of thirty two countries gathered in the French spa town of Evian to discuss the humanitarian disaster that everyone knew was about to overtake the Jews of Europe wherever Hitler’s Germany held sway. Jews were desperate to leave. They knew their lives were at risk and so did the politicians and aid agencies at the conference. Yet country after country shut its doors. Nation after nation in effect said, it wasn’t their problem.

At such times even small humanitarian gestures can pierce the darkness and light a flame of hope. That is what happened in Kindertransport, the initiative spearheaded, among others, by the late Sir Nicholas Winton that rescued ten thousand Jewish children from Nazi Germany. Half a century later I came to know many of those who had been rescued. They loved Britain and sought richly to contribute to it. I and many other Jews of my generation grew up with that love, knowing that without Britain’s willingness to provide our parents and grandparents with refuge, they would have died and we would not have been born. As long as human history is told, these acts of humanitarianism will stand as a triumph of the spirit over political expediency and moral indifference.

Sixty years after Kindertransport a gathering took place in London of more than a thousand of those who had been rescued. It was a highly emotional day as one after another told their stories. But the speech that had us all in tears was not from one of the rescued children but from the late Lord Attenborough, whose family were among the rescuers.

He spoke of how his parents summoned their three boys and told them they wanted to adopt two young Jewish girls from Germany, Helga and Irene. They explained the sacrifices they would all have to make. They would now be a family of seven rather than five, which meant that they would have to share more widely, and that, they said, included their love, because “You have us, but they have nobody.” The boys agreed, and the two girls became part of their family. As he told this story, Lord Attenborough wept, and said that was the most important day of his life. Suddenly we realized that it is the sacrifices we make for the sake of high ideals that make us great, and that applies to nations as well as individuals.

Even in the best-case scenario, Europe alone cannot solve the problems of which the refugees are the victims. The conflicts that have brought chaos to the Middle East continue to defy any obvious solution. Every option that has been tried has seemed to fail: military intervention in Afghanistan and Iraq, no-fly zones in Libya, and non-intervention in Syria. None has put out the smoldering fires of unrest, religious and ethnic discord and civil war. It is all too easy to say, this is not our problem, and besides, it is happening a long way away.

Yet nothing in our interconnected world is a long way away. Everything that could go global does go global, from terror to religious extremism to websites preaching paranoia and hate. Never before have John Donne’s words rung more true: “Any man’s death diminishes me, because I am involved in mankind.” Therefore, “never send to know for whom the bell tolls; It tolls for thee.”

A strong humanitarian response on the part of Europe and the international community could achieve what military intervention and political negotiation have thus far failed to achieve. They would constitute the clearest possible evidence that the European experience of two World Wars and the Holocaust have taught that free societies, where people of all faiths and ethnicities make space for one another, are the only way to honour our shared humanity, whether we conceive that humanity in secular or religious terms. Fail this and we will have failed one of the fundamental tests of humanity.

I used to think that the most important line in the Bible was, “Love your neighbour as yourself.” Then I realised that it is easy to love your neighbour because he or she is usually quite like yourself. What is hard is to love the stranger, one whose colour, culture or creed is different from yours. That is why the command, “Love the stranger because you were once strangers,” resonates so often throughout the Bible.

It is summoning us now. A bold act of collective generosity will show that the world, particularly Europe, really has learned the lesson of its own dark past and is willing to take a global lead in building a more hopeful future. Wars that cannot be won by weapons can sometimes be won by the sheer power of acts of humanitarian generosity to inspire the young to choose the way of peace instead of holy war.

Comments to Failed Messiah:

* Israel fails to take in refugees from anywhere if they aren’t Jewish. Just imagine if Britain would say that they can’t take these refugees because they aren’t Anglican! The Chief Rabbi likes to play moral advisor as long as it’s not Israel that he is advising.

* What he wants is to flood Britain with potentially hostile aliens in order to ruin that Country once and for all!

* I want to know where all the Arab countries are on this crisis of Arab refugees? All those oil rich Arab countries which are right around the corner – right there in the Middle East – how many refugees are they taking in? All those Arab countries claim to care so much about the Palestinian refugees. So much so that they make Israel out to be the devil incarnate, but now that they can do practical hands-on saving of tens of thousands of their Arab refugee “brothers” – where are they?

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Elderly Jewish Couple Brutally Attacked in Holland

REPORT: Holocaust survivors Samuel and Diana are confined to wheelchairs after being viciously beaten by anti-Semites in their own apartment.

Samuel (87) and Diana (86) Blug, two elderly Holocaust survivors, fell victim to a vicious and violent anti-Semitic attack at their home in Holland a month ago.

According to a Yedioth Ahronoth report on Sunday, the couple were only able to come forward now and recount what happened to them.

The Blugs say two men, who looked to be of Moroccan descent, knocked on the door to their apartment, claiming to be the police and demanding entrance.

As soon as Samuel opened the door, the nightmare began. Two men dressed in black barged into the apartment and started severely beating the couple.

The assailants threw the couple on the floor, kicked them repeatedly and shouted: “Dirty Jews – from now on your property is ours.”

After tying up the badly injured couple, the thieves ripped Diana’s jewelry off her body. At gunpoint, they forced the couple to tell them where the rest of the valuables in the apartment were located.

Samuel was blinded in the assault and suffered a broken femur. Both he and Diana, who were living independently before the attack, are now confined to wheelchairs at a rehabilitation center in Amsterdam.

“Those bastards have destroyed our lives,” Samuel said in tears to Yedioth Ahronoth. “I have severe pain. I’m completely broken inside,” Diana added.

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Who Wants Syrian Refugees?

Comments to Steve Sailer:

* The Pope is asking every parish in Europe to take in an immigrant family. His Holiness himself has offered to take in one immigrant family. ONE.

There are about 2,000 Catholic parishes in Europe. So the Pope’s grand gesture would accommodate only a tiny fraction of the immigrants.

I say we should look to His Holiness for REAL leadership on this issue. The US should donate temporary shelters to be erected in St. Peter’s Square. 500 to 1,000 shelters sounds about right. Just deliver them to St. Peter’s. While some narrow-minded people might object to the lack of permits and such, His Holiness would certainly not turn away such charity.

His Holiness can then show us how to humanely care for a large influx of immigrants.

TV cameras could have 24-hour live feeds showing us the gratefulness of the immigrants non-stop. (This would be very convenient for TV crews. They would be able to get non-stop images of the vibrant new Europeans without traipsing around the continent. Just set up and let the cameras roll.)

* By the way to anyone that hasn’t, do watch this video of “poor refugees” in Hungary throwing away food and water. NYT better put this story on the front page.

Notice how virtually all of migrants refusing or throwing away the provisions and acting like insufferable douchebags are men. They insult and harass the workers. They even discourage and prevent the children from getting food. Quite a lot of these migrants are men aren’t they… why isn’t the MSM highlighting that?

At least some of the parents tried to ignore those fools and get food for the children. Even some of the kids got the courage to get the food themselves. They have my sympathies and respect for that.

* I think Steve’s moral hazard argument is the one that needs to be pushed. Admitting refugees of any description in any numbers creates a moral hazard, a slippery slope leading to an unnecessary humanitarian catastrophe.

* If I go to a party and am allowed to bring a guest, and the guest does something wrong (breaks something, steals something, etc). Then most people would hold me somewhat morally accountable (not legally) for what happened. How come that same moral code does not apply to people who want to bring in refugees?

Is this because of scale and the impersonal nature of our society?
Or because they feel so superior, this normal morality does not apply to them?

We need to start asking these Christian groups that bring in these refugees questions like this.

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‘Import The Third World and You ARE The Third World.’

From the New York Post:

Variety of mutilated animals found strewn in city parks
By Aaron Short September 6, 2015 | 3:18am

There’s magic in New York City’s parks — black magic.

More than a dozen mutilated animals have been discovered in the past 18 months, apparent victims of ritual sacrifice, records show.

New Yorkers found four severed goat heads, scores of mutilated chickens and other birds, three butchered pigs and a calf’s head, according to 311 complaint data.

The Fort George Playground in Highbridge Park in upper Manhattan was fouled by a particularly gruesome animal mutilation in January 2014 — a goat head “pinned up on one of the trees” and the body “wrapped in a red sheet and on the ground,” a 311 caller reported.

Goat heads were twice found in another kiddie park, the Lincoln Road Playground inside Prospect Park in Brooklyn.

In the same park, a passer-by noticed a dead duck and two decapitated doves placed “in possibly some sort of ritual” near a statue of Challenger astronaut Ronald McNair in June 2014.

“The bodies are forming a ring and the heads are very close to this ring,” the caller reported. …

Parks officials could not say if the animals were butchered in the public spaces or dumped, but acknowledged some could have been used in religious rituals.

Comments to Steve Sailer:

* Rotting entrails: this is what vibrancy smells like.

* I think Haitians could make a good case for religious discrimination. Since NYC permits Jews to do their ritual chicken choking ceremonies (Kapparot) right out on the streets of Brooklyn, where does the city get off telling Haitians they can’t sacrifice small animals, too?

* Rather than butchering animals at random locations, maybe we could offer Haitians and other Caribbeans some nice ritual sacrifice area off in some corner of the park.

Add some faucets, hoses and storm drains. Maybe an altar, stone carving of Baphomet, something like that. It would satisfy the Haitian religious desires, with the added advantage of being easy to hose down and clean up. Add a dumpster for carcasses and leftover body parts.

Put it on the park maps so Non-Pagan Americans (NPAs) would know what areas of the park to avoid. Alternatively, if NPAs wanted to watch they would know exactly where to go. Heck, it could become quite a tourist attraction: frenzied, ecstatic dancing in animal skins, painted bodies, native drumming, etc.

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The Underearning Mentality

Over the past couple of months, I have been listening to about a hundred free Underearners Anonymous lectures on this unofficial website and Dropbox account.

In lecture 68, Jeff in LA says he’s been in the program for two years. He’s a writer in his 30s.

Here are some highlights:

* I knew I was uncomfortable asking for money, but I didn’t understand the disease. In my childhood, I was wounded… In my 30s, I had a small life. I couldn’t build a career. I wasn’t able to have a relationship. I was lonely. I’ve learned that underearning is cave dwellers disease. It’s an addiction to the cave. As an under-earner, I’m scared to get out into the world with the healthy animals because I’m wounded and bleeding. I keep my life small so I don’t have to do that.

Recovery is about going into those wounds and seeing that they are a conversation that came out of childhood. My disease manifested in my life as a sapping of vitality towards my vision and an inability to take the right steps to get larger. As I got older, I saw friends getting married, friends getting promotions and I couldn’t get off the ground. I had these fears and resentments that would sap the energy in my life.

I would attract toxic bosses and dysfunctional work situations. I was always sabotaging myself…

The tools of UA don’t amount to much unless I really work the 12 Steps. Unless I can establish a spiritual foundation and look at my fears, resentments, guilt and remorse… I’ve gotten clear on my childhood wounds that keep me from taking steps towards visibility.

Before the program, my life was about looking good. How can I fix my problems? How can I get my career to a place where I feel OK. In recovery, it is the opposite. When I get scared about work or my vision, I know that is my disease and I know I need to throw myself deeper in the program.

Symptoms of Underearning

1. Time Indifference – We put off what must be done and do not use our time to support our own vision and further our own goals.

2. Idea Deflection –We compulsively reject ideas that could expand our lives or careers, and increase our profitability.

3. Compulsive Need to Prove – Although we have demonstrated competence in our jobs or business, we are driven by a need to re-prove our worth and value.

4. Clinging to Useless Possessions – We hold onto possessions that no longer serve our needs, such as threadbare clothing or broken appliances.

5. Exertion/Exhaustion – We habitually overwork, become exhausted, then under-work or cease work completely.

6. Giving Away Our Time – We compulsively volunteer for various causes, or give away our services without charge, when there is no clear benefit.

7. Undervaluing and Under-pricing – We undervalue our abilities and services and fear asking for increases in compensation or for what the market will bear.

8. Isolation – We choose to work alone when it might serve us much better to have co-workers, associates, or employees.

9. Physical Ailments – Sometimes, out of fear of being larger or exposed, we experience physical ailments.

10. Misplaced Guilt or Shame – We feel uneasy when asking for or being given what we need or what we are owed.

11. Not Following Up – We do not follow up on opportunities, leads, or jobs that could be profitable. We begin many projects and tasks but often do not complete them.

12. Stability Boredom – We create unnecessary conflict with co-workers, supervisors and clients, generating problems that result in financial distress.

In talk 69, Mike says: Every time I chased the money problem, I got sicker. Every time I chased recovery, I made more money. There is no linear path to the money. The money comes as a result of you being a healthier human being. The problem for the under-earner is that he can’t develop intimacy with others because he is out of touch with himself and God. The program will give you tools to fix your relationship with yourself and with God.

UA has made me feel whole. I’m not scared of people anymore. I can sit with relationships.

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The Fear Inventory

Here are some of my notes from HerbK’s Tuesday night 12-step workshop:

* When we wrote out our fourth column (where were we to blame in our conflicts with others) in the Fourth Step, we had the experience of feeling the damage we have done to other people around us.

* Do I take on other people’s fears? Understanding the base of my fears will reduce my fears. Am I praying daily for removal of my needless fear and resentment? Prager can be a great way of procrastinating.

* Anger and resentment are about the past. Fear is about the future. They all prevent us from living in the present. Going to 12-step meetings and doing 12-step work is energizing because it brings you into the present.

* My greatest fear is that I haven’t lived, that I haven’t used my gifts. Step one is about admitting powerlessness. It lasts four months in this workshop. Step four is evidence of my powerlessness in writing.

* If I am having consistent problems with women and with bosses, it is not the women and the bosses.

* What would my life look like if I didn’t have this fear?

Posted in Addiction | Comments Off on The Fear Inventory

I Grew Up Seventh-Day Adventist In Australia At Avondale College

With a young Russell Crowe:

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Jews & Power

Jeff the Jew* emails: Dear Luke,

You really have been posting up a storm since Shabbat ended.

I do think that you are in error about Jewish history. Jews have not always for 2600 years been a reviled minority. After Christ but before Constantine, Judaism was widespread throughout the Roman world. Jews were not discriminated against. It was only with the widespread adoption of Christianity (which many of the Jews also embraced) that Jews began to be mistreated. With the rise of Islam, although Jews were driven from Mecca and Medina in Saudi Arabia, Jews continued their places of prominence without discrimination (despite efforts today to suggest that the Jews were reduced to dhimmitude) in such places as Tehran, Bagdad, Damascus, Alexandria and Jerusalem. Furthermore as Islam spread to conquer much of Iberia, Jews were a very large minority and were not discriminated against throughout the Iberian Peninsula. It was only when Ferdinand and Isabella (Los Reyes Catolicos) drove the Moors from Spain and then expelled the Jews who wouldn’t convert and then instituted the inquisition that Jews first faced discrimination. The Jews that emigrated to Turkish held areas (such as Turkey, Greece, Cyprus and Rhodes) and North Africa, in particular Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia and Egypt had no problems, until WWII and after.

The problem is that much of the Jewish perspective is based on anti Semitism in Western Europe (as you know from Albert S. Lindeman’s work) which didn’t really materialize until the mid 17th century. Even then Napoleon welcomed them and unlocked the ghettos at the beginning of the 19th Century. People look at the expulsion of the Jews from England, the Dreyfus affair, pogroms under the Tsar, and the rise of the Nazis as things that can be tied together as some sort of overarching anti semitic strain from Gentiles towards Jews in their midst.

The fact is that Jews probably had a higher standard of living than Russian or Polish peasants, despite being confined to the Pale of the Settlement. Within the Pale, Jews were not a minority, at least not in certain areas. When you read the memoirs of Czeslaw Milocz who was born in Vilna, Lithuania in 1911, you will see that the population was almost equally divided among Jews, Poles, and Lithuanians with a smattering of Ukranians. As you know Vilna was the capital of Jewish learning, the center of Haskalah (as opposed to the ignorant Hasids) and the home of Litvaks (as opposed to the cruder, earthier Galitzianers).

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Stepping Back Into Church

I’m a preacher’s kid. I grew up in Seventh-Day Adventist churches. Then I left all that at age 18 and became an atheist for a few years and then converted to Orthodox Judaism.

For the past four years, I’ve been going to various 12-step programs dealing with emotional addictions and many of them meet in churches.

Stepping back into a church makes me feel, at times, as though my whole Jewish journey was pointless. I must have done it wrong.

I grew up in church. Church feels so familiar to me. It is disturbing to be back in church.

A major reason I converted to Judaism was to get my wild destructive impulses under control. That didn’t work. I had to enter a 12-step program for that.

So now I’m back in church, looking for help for my character defects that block me from the sunlight of the spirit. Perhaps if I had done my Judaism more properly I wouldn’t need to be back in church. Something is terribly wrong.

I went on this great big journey to Orthodox Judaism and here I am.

What’s that quote from the Father Brown detective story “The Queer Feet“? “I caught him, with an unseen hook and an invisible line which is long enough to let him wander to the ends of the world, and still to bring him back with a twitch upon the thread.”

I admit that for the first part of my journey into Judaism, I felt superior to my benighted Christian friends and family from childhood. Then I made such a big mess of things that I had go give up that illusion. Now I’m back in church and I’m shattered. Will they say I’m shattered at the foot of the Cross? Oy vey! What will the Jews think?

We talk in 12-step programs about doing a “geographic,” meaning to move to a new place, hoping that will fix your addiction. It doesn’t work.

I didn’t just do geographics for my addictions, I also did a massive religious change, and it made no difference to my addictions and to my fundamental character defects that block me from God, from other people, and from my best self. Only 12-step work, with meetings often held in a church basement or library or rec room, has done the trick, somewhat, a day at a time.

I’ve always looked for the easy way out but that rarely works.

It’s sobering to be back in church. It’s humbling. It’s shattering. I alienated myself from family and friends! I gave up everything to make Orthodox Judaism my life and here I am, despite my best efforts, I’m back in church. My own best thinking got me here. My own best efforts simply returned me to the starting line.

A life run on self-will doesn’t work. External changes may not shift your heart. You can’t run from who you are.

It’s a bit like going back to Australia where all the people I grew up with have created much better lives than I did — they’ve all married and have kids, own homes, have saved for retirement. If I had never left Australia at age 18, I probably would never have destroyed my health at 21 and spent the next six years in bed. I was making more money per hour cleaning a shopping center in Boyne Island, QLD, at age 18 than I make now. Australia is the best place in the world to be an average bloke but I couldn’t be satisfied with being an average bloke. I reached for the prize and fell here.

I have to face that I am delusional. I swing between delusions. I substitute one delusion for another. Everything I have sacrificed for, devoted myself to, has simply revealed new delusions in my thinking. I march from failure to failure.

My life would have been easier and more productive if I hadn’t been so enraged and rebellious.

This feeling of self-annihilation isn’t horrible. It gives me some peace.

I feel like the Australian diggers preparing — to the tune of Albinoni’s Adagio — to run into Turkish machine gun fire at the end of the 1981 Mel Gibson movie Gallipoli.

What are your legs?
Springs. Steel springs.
What are they going to do?
Hurl me down the track.
How fast can you run?
As fast as a leopard.
How fast are you going to run?
As fast as a leopard!
Then let’s see you do it!

PS. I was looking forward this afternoon to having a good wallow with my feelings of loss and unlovability, but I got interrupted by my weekly Skype call with my brother and now I feel too chipper to wallow to sufficient depth. If I were to try to wallow right now, I don’t think I’d feel my darkness with sufficient hopelessness, but that’s not going to stop me from trying.

PPS. Chaim Amalek: “I mean you no offense or hurt, but at this stage in your life, being an average bloke would be a huge, vast step up in life for you. You really should rethink your sojourn in America.”

Posted in Addiction, Christianity, Personal | Comments Off on Stepping Back Into Church

What Does Sports Mean To Me?

Luke: “Jarryd Hayne is doing amazing.”
Therapist: “What does that mean to you?”
Luke: “Nothing. It’s just a distraction from the misery of my life.”

* Luke: “I’m feeling unloved.”
Therapist: “What about other people? Do you love anyone?”
Luke: “Whoa.”

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