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Tag Archives: Judaism

Netanyahu to Harper – “You Stood Up Unabashedly.”

20 Monday Jan 2014

Posted by commart in Conflict - Culture - Language - Psychology, Fast News Share, Religion

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Canada, ethical conversation, Harper, Israel, Jewish ethics, Judaism, Netanyahu

▶ Harper and Netanyahu deliver remarks in Israel – YouTube – 1/20/2014.

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The Jewish approach to ethics, culled from a rich heritage of over 3000 years of Jewish existence, has been tried and tested with an astonishing degree of continuity and coherence, enabling it to remain steadfast in the face of the transient whims of society. Judaism’s ascription to the commitments, obligations, and duties of each individual, rather than individual rights, and its lack of distinction between law and ethics, ensures that Jewish ethics does not deal with armchair philosophy, but with real, practical cases while proposing unyielding, yet realistic ethical standards. This comprehensive systematic approach of Jewish ethics has universal validity in the societal debate over public policy involving medical, legal and corporate issues.

Jewish Ethics Institute | Jewish Exponent

* * *

In Wikipedia: Jewish ethics – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia; Jewish medical ethics – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia; Feminist Jewish ethics – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Elsewhere: Jewish Ethics Institute; THE JEWISH ETHICIST; Rabbi Dr. Asher Meir, Business Ethics Center of Jerusalem; Judaism and Ethics.

Four seminal figures: Hillel the Elder – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia; Maimonides – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia; Felix Adler (professor) – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia; L. F. L. Oppenheim – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Not to be overlooked: Jesus is a Jew

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Judaism inspires two great conversations: man with God; man with man.

The conversation begins in a garden with God, a snake, a woman, and a man, and the outcome may be (we could argue about it) a statement about the onset of human awareness, self-awareness, and, most of all, conscience.

There’s commentary on language too in Genesis 2 and 3, but it’s subtle and left to the reader to catch two trees in one chapter and only one in the next (hiding something by omission, but rightly omitting from Eve’s human perception what has been hidden, i.e., the Tree of Life; Eve gets to taste of the fruit of the other tree).

And there’s also the comment on decency, which is not tied to shame (as Christians may have it): more likely than shame, our two humans cover what should be in deference to one another, out of consideration, but it’s God, actually, who sews skins for clothes — clothes strong and fit for living — as he sends them as much into human life as out of the garden.

It may be the development of an extensive and millenial ethical argument in language and language behavior that provides Stephan Harper today with motivation to stand with Israel in defense of western ethics, laws, and values.

______

“There are more votes, a lot more, in being anti-israeli than taking a stand, but as long as I am Prime Minister, whether it is at the United Nations, the Francophone, or anywhere else, Canada will take that stand whatever the cost.”

▶ Canadian PM: I Will Defend Israel ‘whatever the cost’ – YouTube – 11/8/2010.

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FTAC – A Note – Forgiveness, God, and Man

27 Friday Dec 2013

Posted by commart in Anti-Semitism, Conflict - Culture - Language - Psychology, Religion

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Christianity, confession, forgiveness, Islam, Judaism, religion

Language is the belief (take it or leave it). In Judaism’s Day of Atonement, confession (God forgive me) isn’t half the job: setting right with a person whom one has aggrieved is as much the point. From Hillel the Elder — possibly, probably — to Jesus and the construction of a new religion seems a short intellectual distance and the relation of the two together to more ancient tradition would seem hard to refute.

The association of glory in righteous suffering and death and the polarized emphasis on sinfulness and holiness seem to me to run counter to Judaism’s practical emphasis on life — on being alive and living graciously in the sight of God — and ethical awareness and practice.

The thought responds to AN Wilson’s “It’s the Gospel Truth – So Take It or Leave It” in  Wednesday’s The Telegraph (It’s the Gospel truth – so take it or leave it – Telegraph – 12/25/2013), and as a feel-good for the pious of the Christian community, the term “Jew” or “Jewish” seems not to have a place in it.  Instead the “gospel truth” omits reference to the revolutionary thought of Rabbi Hillel the Elder, an elder contemporary — or very near it — of Jesus, also a figure in various historic records, much less mention of the ancient Yom Kippur, the Jewish “Day of Atonement” in which confessional one asks forgiveness of not only God but of any who have been aggrieved by the confessor’s behavior or actions and that on the basis of a just setting to rights, not mere apology.

For some Christian standard bearers, the business of successionary thinking, i.e., that the enterprise of Christianity will fully displace Judaism and, no less than Islamist thinking on this matter, churn the world into itself — a part of the “Christ Process” as one Jesuit noted to me many years ago — has been politely hidden beneath the verbiage.  One need not (at this time) advance the point except by eliminating from discussion mention of origins in thought or other possibilities in belief, ethics, faith, and reason.

That’s the gospel truth.

The term “messianic delusion” seems to refer to the presence of grandiose ambitions to control the world (in the name of one’s own chosen glorious mission) to produce a heaven on earth reverberating primarily to one’s own power.

The lethal nature of that worn track in human affairs would seem to repeatedly prove itself wherever unchecked.

Look to the al Qaeda affiliates pouring into Syria today for the proof of it — and be sure not to miss what they do to others (and themselves) beneath their black death-cult banner.  By comparison, the Christian Church at its strident best would seem a happier affair by far, and yet it too, so well demonstrated in the European history of anti-Semitism — one in which (in 12th Century Hungary) laws devised to discriminate against Jews were applied equally to Muslims — and the culmination of its “Christ killer” libel in Germany’s blood-and-death descent into the mindless cauldron of war against all accompanied by industrialized mass murder and genocide.

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Online Etymology Dictionary – “messiah”.

Messiah – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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FTAC – A Note on Not Conflating Men with God

09 Monday Dec 2013

Posted by commart in Conflict - Culture - Language - Psychology, FTAC - From The Awesome Conversation, Politics, Religion

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anti-authoritarianism, ethical obligation, intellectual evolution, Judaism, moral inquiry

The “Jim Crow” laws are as gone as slavery in the United States. Secularism, as a principle, helps guide the development of laws having to do with human relationships in business, governance, and life, and does not confuse what is human with what is divine nor will it define, nor should it, the relationship between person and God, the experience of the divine, or engagement in ritual or spirituality.

In the Jewish ethos, even Moses is human – merely a man – as is Abraham, whom many wish had questioned God himself over the binding of Isaac.

That invented thing call “The West” is more idea than reality, more built from Greco-Roman esprit, the Judeo-Christian precepts, and the brightening of The Enlightenment that brings to the medieval society a natural humanism and reason. Such things are not exclusive nor exclusively western nor modern nor technological. General Saladin would have known these things in their embryonic stage as well as his personal physician Maimonides. To go back a little further in philosophy attending law and relationships, one might spend some time with the elder contemporary, probably, of Jesus: Hillel, neither and never beatified nor deified.

Some Jews read “The Akeda” and note that God never again speaks directly to Abraham, nor, for that matter, does Isaac.

Is that significant?

If you’re a Jew, the close reading of the Torah elicits passionate engagement in ethical and moral argument, and indeed, though the nodding majority of readers may believe God set out to test Abraham’s obedience, a distinct minority would seem bound to ask whether the ancient lunkhead could not have instead raised his voice to God in argument intended to spare Isaac, which God has to do by sending an angel, a subaltern, or prevent the act and then providing a substitute, a ram, for Abraham to slaughter instead.

At the end of each day, we feel; we question; we reason; we protest – and tyrants, whether with power over body, mind, or spirit, we leave behind us.

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Guest Blog – From the Hills South of Hebron, Rachamin Dwek Writes About Chanukkah

29 Friday Nov 2013

Posted by commart in Conflict - Culture - Language - Psychology, Religion

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Chanukkah, defiance, Hanuka, history, Israel, Jewish history, Jews and Romans, Judaism, liberation, miracles, Succos, Sukkot

I’ve given this piece only a cursory editing and committed the sin of mixing American and British spelling (changing my mind several times as to which I prefer and several times appreciating the “colour” added to “color” by the additional vowel). –jso

______

For the previous two years Yehudah Maccabi and his army had been in the bush. The agrarian cycles had been neglected but not by choice. To celebrate the liberation of Jerusalem, Yehudah had a vote taken, over whether to implement a Second Sukkot.

The vote favoured Yehudah’s idea and so the holiday was born.

______

Chanukkah 2013 begins at sundown, Wednesday November 27th on the Western Calendar.

If I were to ask Jews what this holiday commemorates perhaps 99%, including frum, would tell me about how a single day’s supply of holy oil miraculously lasted 8 days, just enough time to obtain more.

Ninety-nine percent of Jews would be wrong.

The story about oil only entered Judiasm 700 years after the holiday began and is an invention of collaborationists and kapos who who sought to extinguish Jewish ethno-nationalism.

* * *

Judea of the mid-2nd Century BCE was being torn apart by external, as well as internal forces.

Internally, the Saduccees and the Pharisees were jockeying for dogmatic superiority, as well as for the High Priesthood. In addition, Apikoros, Jews who favored the Hellenisation of Judaism, were at odds with traditionalists who viewed any overt foreign influence as poisonous.

Externally, Judea was situated between two opposing orbits, the Greco-Egyptians and the Greco-Syrians. After Alexander the Great died, his empire was split among his successors and two top generals. Later, these would split further so that by g167/166 BCE, the Ptolemaic Dynasty controlled Egypt, and the Seleucid Dynasty controlled Syria.

The Saduccees, under the Tobiad Faction, had managed to come out on top, with the help of Seleucid Emperor Antiochus III. The relationship worked well as Antiochus III believed in a high level of autonomy so that the Saducees could imagine at least, that Judaea was still nominally independent.  However, in 175 BCE, Antiochus III was succeeded by a son who took the title Antiochus IV Epiphanes.

Where his father had exercised restraint and a modicum of respect, Antiochus IV was greedy and lustful for power, aiming to annex Judaea and destroy the Ptolemaic Dynasty in Greco-Egypt.

______

By 167/166 BCE Judea had been under the boot of Seleucid Emperor Antiochus IV Epiphanes for more than a year. In those 14 months the leader of Greco-Syria had outlawed HaBrit (Jewish Ritual Male Circumcision), forbade the propagation of Torah and had just profaned the Second Temple in Jerusalem by looting its treasury, defiling its ritual objects, and (re-) dedicating the Temple to Zeus, the chief deity in the Greek Pantheon.

Following this travesty, Antiochus IV deployed deputations to each population centre where altars were built and every head of household was made to participate in the sacrifice of pigs to Zeus.

In the village of Modi’in one such deputation was slaughtered after an elderly Priest, Matityahu, killed a villager who had capitulated and was about to become an Apostate. Matityahu and his five adult sons led most of the village into the bush to avoid retribution and became yet another group fighting the foreign Occupiers in a war of national liberation.

In 166/165 BCE Matityahu died, and was replaced by his son Yehudah, who was given the nickname “Maccabi,” meaning “Hammer,” in recognition of his military prowess in guerilla warfare. In 165/166 BCE Yehudah led a large, consolidated force in the capture of the Jewish Political, Cultural and Spiritual Capital, Jerusalem, and set about ritually purifying the Second Temple.

Up to this point, there is no divergence from the authentic, historical narrative. All Observant Jews agree on the preceding. It is what happens next that separates fact from fantasy, a sacrifice of truth and heritage in favor of myth and assimilationist fantasy.

* * *

As Yehudah Maccabi led his force into Jerusalem they made their way to the Second Temple. Before their great victory against the pre-eminent regional superpower, Greco-Syria, they had to cleanse the seat of Judaism. The Second Temple had been rendered ritually unclean in some of the worst ways imaginable.

Rebuilding the altar, finding the Second Temple bereft of ritual items, including Menorot (Menorahs), the Jews improvised…and here is the divergence… to perhaps 99% of Jews- including the most knowledgable Frum- the Jews needed the sacred olive oil used to fuel Menorot. Searching through the stockrooms they eventually found a tiny container with only enough oil to fuel the Menorot for a single day, but at least it had the Kosher seal of the last ritually pure High Priest. Using that single day supply, the Priests set about manufacturing the sacred olive oil, a process that took 8 days. The single day supply miraculously lasted all 8 days, ensuring that the Menorot would stay burning until they could once again be fueled with the new supply of sacred oil.

This is said to be both the reason for the lighting of the 8 lights, as well as the length of the holiday being 8 days long.

In reality, none of this has anything at all to do with Chanukkah.

The photo is Hasmonean Era, roughly 140 BCE, and was recently discovered in an excavated trench adjacent to the Temple Mount. It is believed to have been carved to remind the amateur artist of the Menorot in the Second Temple, but later discarded in the drainage ditch.

The photo is Hasmonean Era, roughly 140 BCE, and was recently discovered in an excavated trench adjacent to the Temple Mount. It is believed to have been carved to remind the amateur artist of the Menorot in the Second Temple, but later discarded in the drainage ditch.

______

Having liberated Jerusalem, the guerrilla army of Jewish warrior Yehudah Maccabi led the ritual cleansing of the Second Temple which for two years had served as a Greek Temple serving Zeus, the chief deity in the Greek Pantheon.

The most important holiday in Judaism at that time- apart from the High Holidays- was Sukkot.

Judea was an Agrarian Society and Sukkot, a harvest festival included the all important “Teffilat Geshem ” a prayer for Winter Rains which are so crucial to the Judean Environment and the agricultural calendar.

For the previous two years Yehudah Maccabi and his army had been in the bush. The agrarian cycles had been neglected but not by choice. To celebrate the liberation of Jerusalem, Yehudah had a vote taken, over whether to implement a Second Sukkot.

The vote favoured Yehudah’s idea and so the holiday was born.

In 120 BCE Judaeans were celebrating the dynasty born with Yehudah Maccabi, that of the Hasmoneans.

Two works from approximately that year, known today as Maccabis I, and Maccabis II offer us great insight into that part of Jewish History. In Maccabis II (10:1-8), it tells us that Sukkot, as I just discussed, was the inspiration for this festival. Originally, the Lulav (Myrtle Branches) and Etrog (large, lemon like citrus fruit) played a central role, just as in Sukkot itself.

Maccabis II (1:18) tells how letters were sent to Alexandria, in Egypt, then the most important centre in the Diaspora. The letters, one of which is attributed to Yehudah himself, instruct the Diaspora to commemorate the Second Sukkot.

Alexandria, home to a carbon copy of the Second Temple, situated in a semi-autonomous territory ceded to the Jews, was held in great esteem all over the Diaspora and the Alexandrian Temple’s adoption of Second Sukkot is probably the single most decisive factor in the holiday’s longetivity. Of the multitude of Post-Biblical Holidays that have been created over the course of 2,300 years, Channukah has stood alone against the test of time.

The Jewish traitor Flavius Josephus, in Antiquities Volume XII, confirms what I have stated. He tells us that the holiday was known as the “Festival of Lights,” and again he doesnt mention oil in any way, shape or form.

Contemporary to Josephus,”Megillat HaTa’anit” (Scroll of the Days of Fasting being Prohibited), does tell us that the label “Channukah,” meaning “Dedication”, must have been known to at least some Jews, as it is mentioned within the scroll’s text.

Detail, Temple Menorah Paraded by Romans, Arch of Titus, Via Sacra, Rome, 82 CE.

Detail, Temple Menorah Paraded by Romans, Arch of Titus, Via Sacra, Rome, 82 CE.

______

The first mention of oil miraculously burning for 8 days isnt found until the codification of Talmud Bavli (Babylonian Talmud) in the 5th Century CE/AD. Tractate Shabbat, Folio 21b tells how upon searching the Second Temple for sacred olive oil to fuel the Menorot (Menorahs), a one day supply was found and was used, as the Priests began the manufacturing process to press and refine more olive oil. It took the Priests 8 days and miraculously, the one day supply continued to fuel the Menorot until then.

To understand why this myth was included in the Talmud, one needs to understand the utter devastation in Judea. First, in 70 CE/AD, the Romans finally managed to quell the Jewish Insurgency, re-capturing Jerusalem and sacking the Second Temple.

During the Romans’ long siege of the Judean capital, a leading rabbi broke ranks and decided to become a collaborator with Rome. Rabbi Yochanan Ben Zakkai saw no future in holding out against Rome and planned to escape alive. Were he to have made his plans widely known Zakkai would have been executed as the kapo he was. Instead, he relied upon his disciples to smuggle him outside the city walls where he planned to appeal to Vespasian, then a Roman General leading the siege, to try and save himself and his disciples’ lives.

On the chosen day Ben Zakkai shed his clothing and was wrapped in a tallit (prayer shawl) and burial shroud. His disciples, dressed as laborers, acted as if they were carrying a corpse to be buried outside Jerusalem’s walls.

According to Jewish Tradition, once free of the city, Ben Zakkai made his way to Vespasian’s camp and sought an audience with the General. Vespasian obliged and was taken aback when Ben Zakkai asked the Roman officer for permission to establish a Jewish religious center far from the field of battle, vowing to teach acceptance of the Roman yoke and obedience to the dictates of the Roman Governor. Vespasian asked why he should oblige such an offer now that the long and bloody war was winding down. Ben Zakkai replied that it was only befitting of a man who would soon be made Emperor of Rome.

Vespasian thought Ben Zakkai daft but decided to humor him. He told Ben Zakkai that if and when he was made Emperor, he would allow Ben Zakkai to found an academy. Within a year Vespasian ascended to become Emperor and true to his word, he allowed Rabbi Yochanan Ben Zakkai to open an academy in Yavne’, and later, to reconstitute the Sanhedrin, Judaism’s highest legislative body. In obliging Ben Zakkai, Emperor Vespasian exacted only one pledge, that all ethno-nationalist dogma be excised from Judaism.

Still, try as the Jewish Establishment might, it could not erase the Jewish desire for sovereignty, nor the Jewish revulsion against Rome. By the early 2nd Century CE, less than 60 years after Rabbi Yochanan Ben Zakkai’s shameful collaboration, a new movement emerged that once again sought to vanquish Rome and to liberate Judea. Under the leadership of Shimon Bar Kosiba, whose nickname was “Bar Kochba,” Judea was briefly liberated and for a year and a half basked once again in a proud and independent Jewish State.

Rome, under then-General Hadrian retaliated fiercely and by 133 CE/AD had boxed Bar Kochba into his stronghold at Betar, southwest of Jerusalem.

By 135 CE, the city had fallen and the Roman Army committed mass genocide against all inhabitants.

Hadrian then had Jerusalem once again declared offlimits to Jews and converted it into an entirely pagan city, Aelia Capitolina. It was then that Judea, Samaria and Israel became “Palestine,” and the Jewish Establishment became firmly convinced that ethno-nationalism would be the utter ruin of Judaism and the Jewish People.

Ethno-nationalist movements would arise periodically, and sovereignty would even be achieved again in the 7th Century CE/AD (Sassanian Jewish Commonwealth, 614 to 628 CE/AD), but the establishment never again cooperated until Israeli Independence in 1948.

Of the two Talmuds, Bavli (Babylonian), was the one more opposed to Jewish sovereignty- or, more succinctly, sovereignty prior to the Messianic Advent at which point Jews believed Ha Moshiach — The Messiah — would reestablish the Jewish Nation.

Bavli repeats the Jewish Proverb, “Deenah d’Malchutah Deenah,” an Aramaic statement that holds, “The law of the Government is the law,” an old Jewish saying which has been co-opted by Christianity and rendered as, “Render unto Caesar what is Caesar’s.”

In Talmud Yerushalami (Jerusalem Talmud, sometimes misidentified as the “Palestinian Talmud”), Tractate Rosh HaShanah, Folio 18b tells how the Jewish Establishment decreed that a fast take place on 25 Kislev, the date upon which Chanukkah begins.

Notably, Rav Yehoshua Ben Channaniah visited the town on that date and had a haircut; likewise, Rav Eliezer Beb Hyrcanus visited and on that same date and bathed: bathing and cutting one’s hair on a decreed holiday was then heretical behavior — consequently, both sages demanded that the citizenry repent for having violated Halacha, or Jewish Law.

Although the Talmud does not say so, it has been deduced that the leaders of Lydda were in fear of the Roman Occupiers might misconstrue Second Sukkah as political militancy, and therefore the Roman Occupation would get so much worse.

Kosher Bread Stamp, dated to 300 BCE, discovered in Jerusalem.

Kosher Bread Stamp, dated to 300 BCE, discovered in Jerusalem.

About the Author

Major Rachamim Ra’anan Slonim Dwek, IDF, ret., hails from a family that lost 18 members in the Hebron Pogrom of 1929 and from which the survivors were ethnically cleansed three days later.  He lives today in Sussiya in the hills south of Hebron. 

Related Reference

Roman Jews and the Arch of Titus | Robert Kahn’s Blog

* * *

The rebels never surrendered, but died from famine and thirst. Among the dead bodies, the legionaries recognized that of Simon, the son of Kosiba. When they brought his head to the emperor Hadrian, he said: ‘If his God had not slain him, who could have overcome him?’

Wars between the Jews and Romans “Wars between the Jews and Romans: Simon ben Kosiba (130-136 CE)”.

# # #

FTAC – God, Moses, Pharaoh, and Time

22 Friday Nov 2013

Posted by commart in A Little Wisdom, Conflict - Culture - Language - Psychology, Politics, Psychology, Religion

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ancient and modern politics, Exodus, free interpretation, Judaism, religion, Torah

Moses merely facilitates God’s design in that story — and keep in mind we read these stories very carefully and a little differently — and what we notice is that God, being God, knows what’s going to happen to Pharaoh.

Moses, of course, has no idea what’s going to happen to Pharaoh.

And the reader, reading for the first time or the hundredth, may note that Pharaoh, all said and done after the tenth plague, the slaughtering of the first born, is not conquered so much as abandoned, then isolated, then left to see his pursuing army drowned.

Quite a story.

The Jews don’t get Egypt — and they don’t get off easy either: for their suffering, they get 40 years wandering in the wilderness; and Moses never makes it across the Jordan to the Promised Land. In exchange, I guess, the Jews and the “mixed multitude that left with them — get to own themselves in their next generation.

Today we ask, “what was Pharaoh?”

Whatever the answer to that, we leave it behind us, locked in history, gone forever.

For many Pakistanis, I may be the first conservative Jew with whom they have chatyped or met face to face via Skype.

I had not intended to engage in “Torah study” or to spew homilies; yet these conversations about civility — which today having to do with polite speech helped launch the above observation (my correspondent noted, “It often reminds me [of] the blessed words of the Holy Prophet Moses ( Peace and blessings be upon him ), while addressing the Pharaoh in delivering the divine Message of the All-Mighty to him” — and ethics, faith, and morality come up and I engage with abbreviated knowledge, talent, and tools I have at hand.

Judaism’s emphasis on compelling ethical argument, each line and passage urging us to examine and fight — with words — over the meaning intended produces its analogs in law and social behavior and comportment.  Hillel the Elder’s update, which is how I think about his work in the interpretation of law, has sealed a great philosophy into the Greco-Roman architecture of the western character and its humanity.

For a blog frequently referencing “malignant narcissism” the trace back to Pharaoh stands first in the line of channel markers denoting the worst inhumanity imaginable — and then some — experienced by the Jews and others.  If today for the Jews we should stop at Hitler while mulling over resurgent and similar nationalism in Hungary, I would ask why not afford and expand these ideas to Syrians deeply suffering between a ruthless dictator losing his state and an equally ruthless and ugly religious juggernaut murdering its way into taking it over?  The part of Arab public relations that demonizes the Jews only does so to keep the promise and reality of freedom and political equality and significance — equal voice, individual, family, and community in the operations of place and state — from displacing its captive souls.

# # #

From the Awesome Conversation — “I Am Not An Atheist . . . .”

23 Thursday Aug 2012

Posted by commart in Conflict - Culture - Language - Psychology, Religion

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agnosticism, atheism, Judaism, philosophy, religion, theism, theology

I guess I love to talk by “chatyping”.

Even back in my Booz (Allen and Hamilton) days, lunch and bbc-type intranet went together, not necessarily a good thing because in some corporate environments, people may track what others say with interest in evaluating or stinging the same down the road.

Then too, there are some “thought police” scattered around the world: the existence of state-controlled media tells as much, and the various wars on various nasty cabal and larger organizations involve every kind of intelligence “listening post” and cyber-scanning.

The machines want to know some things, one may suppose, and certainly all those offices also want to know the nature of the various species crawling across their once pristine and easily defined battlespace: forget about cartel kingpins and venal state lobbyists — what do with so many friendlies zipping and zapping everywhere in shark tank cyberspace?

God bless ’em.

And God bless us, one and all.

In any case, come forward about 17 years from the olden days and upwards of, I don’t know, maybe 30,000 or more messages typed online in various communities, and here am I (and you perhaps) with Facebook and both of us — all of us — somewhere in the middle of an awesome conversation, and it turns out I like what I type in short form.

Of course, I’ve had a lot of practice.

The subject was an aphorism that I “Liked” in the Facebook way: “Morality is doing the right thing regardless of what you were told; Religion is doing what you were told regardless of what is right.”

I laughed too.

And then I thought about it.

—–

Although I got a chuckle out of this, I feel I should mention that I am not an atheist, do not advocate “no religion”, and do believe that the cultivation of “good conscience” may be derived from and integrated with culture, cultural values, language in general, language metonymy more specifically, language behavior (sensibility and timbre in expression), and the vagaries of individual psychology and various social processes. If we follow the black-and-white inversion that may formulate as Too Much Religion –> No Religion, the barren quality in that may force even the most rigorous intellectuals to advocate as healthy the presence and persistence of magical, romantic, and universal thought.

The matter of resisting malicious ideas and impulses comprise a large part of moral and religious instruction, but a few can and do get their grip on the levers of institutions and in the pursuit of their own “dreams of glory” lose the better part of their humanity. They are those who exceed limits, cannot contain themselves, become the worst hypocrites, and, when so empowered, lead their people to ruin.

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Epigram

Hillel the Elder

"That which is distasteful to thee do not do to another. That is the whole of Torah. The rest is commentary. Now go and study."

"If I am not for myself, who will be for me? If I am not for others, what am I? If not now, when?"

"Whosoever destroys a soul, it is considered as if he destroyed an entire world. And whosoever that saves a life, it is considered as if he saved an entire world."

Oriana Fallaci
"Whether it comes from a despotic sovereign or an elected president, from a murderous general or a beloved leader, I see power as an inhuman and hateful phenomenon...I have always looked on disobedience toward the oppressive as the only way to use the miracle of having been born."

Talmud 7:16 as Quoted by Rishon Rishon in 2004
Qohelet Raba, 7:16

אכזרי סוף שנעשה אכזרי במקום רחמן

Kol mi shena`asa rahaman bimqom akhzari Sof shena`asa akhzari bimqom rahaman

All who are made to be compassionate in the place of the cruel In the end are made to be cruel in the place of the compassionate.

More colloquially translated: "Those who are kind to the cruel, in the end will be cruel to the kind."

Online Source: http://www.rishon-rishon.com/archives/044412.php

Abraham Isaac Kook

"The purely righteous do not complain about evil, rather they add justice.They do not complain about heresy, rather they add faith.They do not complain about ignorance, rather they add wisdom." From the pages of Arpilei Tohar.

Heinrich Heine
"Where books are burned, in the end people will be burned." -- From Almansor: A Tragedy (1823).

Simon Wiesenthal
Remark Made in the Ballroom of the Imperial Hotel, Vienna, Austria on the occasion of His 90th Birthday: "The Nazis are no more, but we are still here, singing and dancing."

Maimonides
"Truth does not become more true if the whole world were to accept it; nor does it become less true if the whole world were to reject it."

"The risk of a wrong decision is preferable to the terror of indecision."

Douglas Adams
"Isn't it enough to see that a garden is beautiful without having to believe that there are fairies at the bottom of it too?" Epigram appearing in the dedication of Richard Dawkins' The GOD Delusion.

Thucydides
"The Nation that makes a great distinction between its scholars and its warriors will have its thinking done by cowards and its fighting done by fools."

Milan Kundera
"The struggle of man against power is the struggle of memory against forgetting."

Malala Yousafzai
“The terrorists thought that they would change our aims and stop our ambitions but nothing changed in my life except this: weakness, fear and hopelessness died. Strength, power and courage was born.”

Tanit Nima Tinat
"Who could die of love?"

What I Have Said About the Jews

My people, not that I speak for them, I nonetheless describe as a "global ethnic commune with its heart in Jerusalem and soul in the Land of Israel."

We have never given up on God, nor have we ever given up on one another.

Many things we have given up, but no one misses, say, animal sacrifice, and as many things we have kept, so we have still to welcome our Sabbath on Friday at sunset and to rest all of Saturday until three stars appear in the sky.

Most of all, through 5,773 years, wherever life has taken us, through the greatest triumphs and the most awful tragedies, we have preserved our tribal identity and soul, and so shall we continue eternally.

Anti-Semitism / Anti-Zionism = Signal of Fascism

I may suggest that anti-Zionism / anti-Semitism are signal (a little bit) of fascist urges, and the Left -- I'm an old liberal: I know my heart -- has been vulnerable to manipulation by what appears to me as a "Red Brown Green Alliance" driven by a handful of powerful autocrats intent on sustaining a medieval worldview in service to their own glorification. (And there I will stop).
One hopes for knowledge to allay fear; one hopes for love to overmatch hate.

Too often, the security found in the parroting of a loyal lie outweighs the integrity to be earned in confronting and voicing an uncomfortable truth.

Those who make their followers believe absurdities may also make them commit atrocities.

Positively Orwellian: Comment Responding to Claim that the Arab Assault on Israel in 1948 Had Not Intended Annihilation

“Revisionism” is the most contemptible path that power takes to abet theft and hide shame by attempting to alter public perception of past events.

On Press Freedom, Commentary, and Journalism

In the free world, talent -- editors, graphic artists, researchers, writers -- gravitate toward the organizations that suit their interests and values. The result: high integrity and highly reliable reportage and both responsible and thoughtful reasoning.

This is not to suggest that partisan presses don't exist or that propaganda doesn't exist in the west, but any reader possessed of critical thinking ability and genuine independence -- not bought, not programmed -- is certainly free to evaluate the works of earnest reporters and scholars.

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