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*** THE ALIYAH REVOLUTION ALBUM ***

Monday, August 06, 2007

The Boring Galut "Controversies"




I trust you have all read the Noah Feldman controversy. Its basically the story of a successful graduate of Maimonides high school who went on to Harvard law, the CFR, and the New York Times. Recently he wrote a well written, but utterly self-serving article about how since his intermarriage, he has been ostracized from the Orthodox community and that his picture has been airbrushed away from the Alumni newsletter. Throughout the article Noah throws in some jabs at Modern-Orthodoxy to which he has a love/hate relationships. The article was in the NY Times and has since elicited responses (some very good ones) from rabbis, columnists and many many bloggers. I shall not repeat what has been already hashed out.

I would like to point out one thing though: this essay and its resulting hubbub is yet another of the Galut community's obsession with "issues" that don't matter so much. Remember the Brit Milla issue that had the American Jewish world storming? Remember the not-so-kosher-chicken fiasco of Monsey? And now the case of the whining intermarried Harvard-grad! They all seem like big issues when you are in Galut, but when you are in Israel, all these things seem like a joke. Why? Because here we deal with Jewish war and Jewish nation building, we deal with Jewish education, care for Holocaust survivors, Jewish land and the Jewish future. The giant "controversies" of America are nothing more than entertaining spats to be intellectually debated in the ever-shrinking circles of the Galut.

Do us a favor and wake up. We have bigger fish to fry in the greatest Jewish project of all time - the building of Israel. Let the Noah Feldman's whine about Modern-Orthodox mistreatment - but don't give them a bigger platform than they deserve. They are really boring as compared with the very big, very real, and very exciting issues we face here daily.

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6 Comments:

  • At 11:25 AM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

    Excellent article ! Also compare absurd works of fiction written in the galut such as Michael Chabon's "Yiddish Policemen's Union" in which he imagines a Jewish state in ... Alaska. Sick. Notice that Yiddish, the language of the exile, is spoken in his imaginary Jewish state.

    Contrast with "Lochamei ha-Tmurot" or the fighters of transcedence, by Erez Doron, a Breslav Chasid who has combined ideas of Chasidus with a fantasy novel. Only in Israel can real Jewish literature be written instead of galuty schmaltz.

     
  • At 12:26 PM , Blogger גיל רונן said...

    Beautiful article in Ynetnews, Yish!

    Yishar coach!

     
  • At 6:48 PM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

    Noah Feldman and the New York Times Misled Readers

    Catch the deception, oh so clever, tailored to mislead with cover:

    1. "THE Photo"

    He said “We all crowded into a big group photo..." Then later: "...I happened to notice THE photo."

    But it was not "the" photo. We now know there were several -- that Feldman and the Times knew before publication that the photographer had taken several different group photos, only one of which was used. Here, therefore, is the lie: by saying it was "the" photo -- the same photo -- then the only possible way he could have been absent is if he was airbrushed out. His use of the definite particle is the smoking gun, the subtle but clear lie.

    2. Intent to Mislead

    Noah Feldman’s article intentionally misled his readers into thinking that he had been airbrushed. It is noteworthy that when an interviewer that week expressly asked about the “airbrushing”, Professor Noah Feldman allowed the flase impression to stand without ever correcting him:




    http://www.jewcy.com/daily_shvitz/questions_for_the_author_of_orthodox_paradox



    INTERVIEWER: You were surprised when Maimonides —- the yeshiva from which you graduated -— AIRBRUSHED out you and your (non-Jewish) wife from a photo published in the alumni newsletter. Your surprise struck many readers as rather strange, since the community makes no secret of its rejection of intermarriage. It’s a bit as if you’d pulled out a bag of pork rinds, devoured them with relish throughout the evening, and then expressed bewilderment when someone asked you if you'd set them aside until later.

    What are your critics missing here?



    FELDMAN: My classmates are great. As it happens, the reunion was lots of fun and we were all warm towards one another, as one would hope. What is troubling about the view you describe—which I never sensed from my classmates—is its implication that somehow modern Orthodox people should be protected from my living my life as I choose. As if choice of life partner were as trivial as a snack. Going to a reunion is a perfectly normal part of life, and choosing not to attend, in order to shield people from my life, would be absurd. People who are comfortable with their own life choices don't get "offended" when others choose differently.

    [...]

     
  • At 5:51 PM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

    Oy vey guys. You are all products of the galut. Your families are there. Your ancestors were there. Mnay of oyu have gone through a process of adopting an Israeli identity. And I'm guessing you're presumed American with some regularity. Has a shopkeeper ever responded to or addressed you in English? Your galutness is displayed in the English you use in daily life, in the mediums in which you communicate. It shines in the lengthy descriptions you write of visits to the states. It's in your references to Starbucks. If it's so inconsequential, why do you stay on top of it? Blog about it?

    And Dan, why trash Yiddish? It was the language of the majority of Jews for over 1000 years. If it weren't for Ben Yehuda's full court press and revival in the late 1800s, you would probably be speaking Yiddish (and English) in Israel right now.

     
  • At 9:38 PM , Blogger Yishai said...

    Dear anonymous,

    #1. For the record, I don't mind Yiddish - I find it to be quaint, it reminds me of the Alte Haim, but that's because Yiddish has been beaten out by Hebrew and doesn't pose a threat anymore. Even Yiddish-speaking Chareidim in Israel today speak a fluent Israeli Hebrew. In the Land of Israel today, Jews speak the same language that they spoke 2,000 years ago.

    #2. Ah! But you may ask, "so why am I typing to you in English? Why does the blog concern itself, at times, with American affairs?" The answer is: THERE IS A BIG DIFFERENCE BETWEEN GALUT AND CHUTZ L'ARETZ. When I was living in America, I had a realization that we were stuck in the galut, and were dealing with stupid non-issues. That is why I, along with my friends, founded Kumah, to try to awaken a renewed sense of Zionism (Neo-Zionism) to get the Jews out of the galut. The people who blog on this site are not galut Jews. They are Jews from Chutz L'Aretz. Yes, we speak English, but I believe that when G-d hears us speaking English in the Land of Israel, He is happy, because He knows that we have chosen to come home. We deal with Chutz L'Aretz issues because we are concerned with our brethren and we try everything we know to bring them home. Our speaking in English and being involved with the issues of Chul is no way a sign that we are galut Jews. Nay, I say, we are free Jews with a burning spirit of redemption and awakening. The Noah Feldmans of this world are not. They are very much trapped in the matrix of the galut. The purpose of this blog is to free their minds.

     
  • At 8:51 PM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

    Free their minds a la the galutniks Matrix?

    And do you really think Feldman's struggle with Modern Orthodoxy is a galut issue? Israel has the same issues, my friend. At least we have jews struggling with their religious-secular balance. Israelis are pushed to take sides. And I know dozens of jewish Israelis married to non-jews. And look at the tempest in a teapot over the mezzuzah-kissing. I don't think that's heavier than our issues in the states.

     

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