Sunday, October 20, 2019
Monday, October 14, 2019
A Book No One Will Ever Read: Honey in the Mouth
"One
cannot hold honey in the mouth without tasting it." So says Arthashastra, an ancient Sanskrit text. A
monarch might employ agents to manage his money. Those agents, in the handling
of money, will be tempted to pocket some of it for themselves. Once you
experience something sensually, it's hard ever to release it.
Honey in the Mouth was my first book-length work, a
fictionalized version of my service in Peace Corps on the Indian subcontinent.
Peace Corps volunteers leave their own homes, families, and cultures, and enter
new ones. They wear clothing that is, to them, exotic, they speak a different
language, they eat different food. Then, as military veterans do, they hop a
plane, and return to their previous lives. They are meant to
"readjust" to America.
That
readjustment is not easy. I lived in a village, reachable only by foot, without
electricity, running water, telephones, telegraphs, or roads. I never heard a
plane overhead. I went to bed when it got dark and I got up when the sun rose.
I cooked the minimal food I could find over a wood fire I made myself. I bathed
in a mountain stream, and I supported numerous internal and external parasites.
One of my students died of a stomach ache. Another died from a bad tooth. A
naked shaman was the closest the village had to a hospital. I contracted a
deadly infection and I nearly died. I attribute my survival to a miracle.
Return
to the US was not easy. I've heard, and told, this story many times. A
returning Peace Corps volunteer had a nervous breakdown in the cereal aisle of
the supermarket. I don't know if this tale is fictional or real, but I
understand this character.
I
wanted to write a book that would capture the Peace Corps experience, and to do
that I wanted to communicate to readers what I left behind in the US; thus, Honey in the Mouth begins in the US.
I
finished the book in 1985. I couldn't find a publisher. I had no reason to
believe in myself as a writer. I was born into a poor, immigrant family and my
addiction to writing was clearly interfering with my justifying my immigrant
parents' sacrifice and my achieving the American dream. I felt incredibly
ashamed for having devoted time to writing this book. Honey in the Mouth was stored on floppy disks. I destroyed them,
and I thought that that was that.
Since
then I have managed to publish books. They have been well reviewed, although
they have not sold many copies. I became curious about Honey in the Mouth. I discovered one, remaining, hard copy, packed
in a cardboard box. You are the first to read its introduction.
***
I wrote the above for Embark, a literary journal that publishes the openings of unpublished novels.
You can see this intro, and the opening pages of Honey in the Mouth, at the Embark website, here
Saturday, October 12, 2019
Littlewood's Law of Miracles
So, today is my birthday, and, as ever on my birthday, I am alone.
BTW, thank you to Patricia and Jeanne who were both kind enough to send me birthday cards. Your kindness means a lot.
My life sucks, and it's utterly pointless. I'm alone, I'm a failure, and I've got chronic pain that almost a dozen doctors now have not been able to address successfully. They know what my body is doing (effectively tearing itself apart). They just can't figure out why.
And I've never mattered to anyone.
I keep going, at this point, just out of sheer inertia, and also the awareness that people in my family don't live long, and it will all be over soon enough.
A few years back, I went to Skylands on my birthday. I generally treat myself to a diet coke when I visit Skylands. Diet cola is my drug of choice. It really helps with my dyslexia and ADHD. Without caffeine, my mind is a hot air balloon following its own blissful path away from focus.
I stopped drinking caffeinated drinks years ago, to see if that would have any impact on the chronic pain. I miss caffeine terribly. I do treat myself on visits to Skylands.
So, a few years back, I was at Skylands on my birthday and I got my diet coke and the can was inscribed with the words, "You've got a friend in me." I found that very touching because, of course, I was alone.
I put the can down on a bench and took a photo. That photo is above.
I actually kept the can for a few years but finally relinquished it in the past few months.
So, this morning, I got up, reminded myself that it is my birthday, and sat down to work at the computer.
I have I would guess over a thousand photos that I use as desktop backgrounds. Word shuffles them and they appear on the desktop background for ten or thirty minutes or so.
A lot of the photos are of dogs, birds, nature scenes, leaves, handsome men (Gary Cooper, Hugh Jackman, Richard Armitage, Cary Grant, etc), winter, autumn, deserts, flowers.
This morning, out of all these maybe thousands of photos, the photo that popped up from the Word-juggled shuffle was this very photo, that I took a few years ago on my birthday, a coke can promising me that somewhere, out there, I have a friend.
Littlewood's Law of Miracles states that so many things happen per day that you will experience a miracle at least once a month.
I'm underwhelmed by Littlewood. With a name like that, no wonder he felt a need to establish his own superiority to others.
This photo greeting me as I sat down to work, alone, on my birthday, is a miracle to me.
Or chance.
Or a miracle ...
Not really sure. But I liked it.
Friday, October 11, 2019
"How to fight Anti-Semitism" Bari Weiss's New Book Misses the Mark
How to Fight Anti-Semitism
Bari
Weiss's New Book Misses the Mark
America
needs a good book entitled How to Fight Anti-Semitism.
Though Jews make up 2.2
percent of the US population, Jews constitute 60
percent of religiously motivated hate crime victims. Recent months have
seen a surge of violent attacks on Jews in New York City. The attacks are often
recorded on video. Attackers are often black or Hispanic. The attacks have gone
underreported
and little discussed; one theory is that blacks attacking whites is not the
kind of hate crime the media wants to emphasize.
We require
instruction in fighting anti-Semitism because Israel is a valued US ally, and
Israel's very right to exist is questioned on college campuses and by new
congress members. We need it because though many have considered anti-Semitism
to be a right-wing phenomenon, this hatred is found on the left as well as on
the right; witness British Labor Party leader Jeremy
Corbyn. There are too many anti-Semitic events on university campuses to list.
Various watchdog organizations keep records; one such account is here.
We
need to prepare to fight anti-Semitism because the US has a rising Muslim
population, and as The
Pew Research Center reports, "Anti-Jewish sentiment is endemic in the
Muslim world." Muslim anti-Semitism distorts American history. Significant
percentages of Muslims believe that Jews carried out the 9-11 terror
attacks. Amiri Baraka, once New Jersey's poet laureate, PEN award winner, and
father of Newark's mayor, repeated this conspiracy theory in his poetry.
We
need to understand how to fight anti-Semitism because ignorance of the
Holocaust is a "global
crisis," including
among highly "educated" American millennials. We need to
understand the Holocaust for the same reason we need to fight anti-Semitism.
The villains who begin by attacking Jews never end by attacking Jews. Anti-Semites
are a menace to us all.
Bari
Weiss seems well-positioned to write a groundbreaking book defining and
combatting anti-Semitism in the 21st century. She became bat mitzvah
at Pittsburgh's Tree of Life synagogue, scene of the 2018 mass shooting. Weiss
is a New York Times editor. She's
pretty, charming, and young, and has been a guest on Bill Maher's Real Time HBO show. Though she says she
doesn't want "points" for her sexual identity, she earns them
anyway for once dating Saturday Night
Live superstar Kate McKinnon. Weiss describes herself as a centrist, and
she has been praised for criticizing anti-Semitism from both the left and the
right, from both Christians and Muslims. What's not to like?
Alas,
Weiss's How to Fight Anti-Semitism is
not the book America needs right now. It reads more like a Facebook post by a
bright, passionate, but not particularly scholarly, rigorous, or fair Facebook
friend. How to Fight Anti-Semitism, like
a Facebook post, focuses on current events. It offers currently popular
whipping boys: Western Civilization, Christianity, and President Donald Trump.
Much
of the book consists of one account after another of recent anti-Semitic
incidents: Tree of Life, the attack on the Hypercacher supermarket in Paris,
the kidnapping, torture and murder of Ilan Halimi, the decapitation of Daniel
Pearl, anti-Semitic incidents on American campuses, and others. In a short
while all of these contemporary anecdotes will be dusty and dated. Weiss's
insistence that all incidents involving violence against a Jew can be
understood using the same paradigm is questionable. Are the young black men
violently attacking Jews in New York City really driven by the same motivations
as Pearl's murderers and pogromists in medieval Germany? No evidence is offered
to support this.
Weiss
doesn't get around to her suggestions for fighting anti-Semitism until the
final 37 pages of the 210-page book, and her tips feel grounded more in the
self-help movement than in any serious scholarship, boots-on-the-ground
activism, or skilled self-defense. "Lean into Judaism … Stop blaming
yourself … Tell the truth … Trust your discomfort … Allow for the possibility
of change … Praise those who do the right thing … Maintain your
liberalism" are some of her methods. The suggestions are for Jews, not for
non-Jews who are dedicated to fighting anti-Semitism. Prayer and devotion are
not among Weiss's suggestions. Weiss "resonates" with a
self-definition as a Shinto Jew, that is a Jew who honors her Jewish ancestors.
She is not sure about belief in God.
There's
been a great deal of serious scholarship on the topic of hate in general and
anti-Semitism in particular. There's a massive amount of lived experience on
how to survive as a member of a targeted minority. Ethnographers and former
hate group members offer veritable MRIs of haters' brains. Those abundant resources
are not reflected here.
Weiss
says that the New Testament provides the "template" for
anti-Semitism. "Christianity" is "responsible for the murder of
more Jews than any other ideology on the planet," she writes. Weiss is
wrong on three counts. First, as I'll argue, below, Christians have killed
Jews, but Christianity has not. Second, Nazism, not Christianity, is the ideology
that is responsible for the murder of more Jews than any other. Weiss could
benefit from reading "Against Identifying Nazism with Christianity,"
found here.
Third, Weiss makes this statement as part of a whitewash of Islam. More on
that, below.
In
today's world, every serious person, Christian, Jewish, secular, or other, must
understand the following facts. These facts must be stated not just to Weiss but
to any anti-Semite who seeks rationale for anti-Semitism within the New
Testament. They must also be stated in relation to Islam, which Weiss also
addresses.
The
New Testament was written by Jews, with the possible exception of Luke, who may
or may not have been Jewish. The New Testament was written about a Jew, Jesus.
Jesus and the apostles were Jews, descendants of Abraham, living in Israel,
speaking Jewish Aramaic and using Hebrew in their religious lives. They
followed the Levitical commandments, and they, as do Christians today, regarded
the Old Testament as inspired scripture.
Further,
the New Testament is rooted in the Old. Open to any page of the New Testament
in an annotated Bible and find footnotes directing the reader to parallel
passages in the Old. Mary, the mother of Jesus, recites a song called the
Magnificat. The song's style is that of the synonymous parallelism of Hebrew
poetry. Specifically, Mary's song echoes The Song of Hannah from the Old
Testament book of Samuel. Jesus is asked to identify the greatest commandment;
in his reply, Jesus echoes Deuteronomy and Leviticus. As Jesus dies on the
cross, he speaks words from Psalm 22.
Jews,
no less than Christians, have to wrestle with difficult verses. The Old
Testament contains many hair-raising proclamations where an angry God promises
total devastation to his chosen people. In Hosea 13-14:5-15,1 God says he will
be like a lion or bear and tear Israelites' hearts from their breasts and
fetuses from pregnant wombs. This is terrible stuff, but depicting God as so
angry at sin that he exerts graphic punishment is part of the Jewish scriptural
tradition, a tradition in which the Jews writing the New Testament were
steeped. Jews and Christians must work together to interpret these verses.
There
are no verses in the New Testament calling on Christians to kill anyone,
including Jews. Rather, the message of the New Testament can be summed up in
one verse: "For God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, so that
everyone who believes in him might not perish but might have eternal life."
The Parable of the Good Samaritan is groundbreaking. Its message is that we are
to love those unlike ourselves, including the most hated other. Jesus, after
torture and near death, said, "Father forgive them." This is the
message of the New Testament.
Yes, haters
have used verses from the New Testament to rationalize anti-Semitism and
violence against Jews. While acknowledging this, we must not elevate
haters' twisted logic.
The
Old Testament, no less than the New, has been blamed for atrocity. For
centuries, those who support slavery and serfdom cited the Biblical "Curse
of Ham." Eve's eating the apple, precipitating exile from the Garden of
Eden, has been cited as the source of misogyny. Exodus 22:18 has been blamed
for Europe's witch craze, and Leviticus 20:13 has been blamed for all
homophobia.
I
don't have to wonder how Bari Weiss would feel if I were to advance the Old
Testament as the "template" for slavery, for misogyny, for crazed mob
killings, or for homophobia. I know she would feel the outrage I feel when I
read her citing the New Testament as the "template" for
anti-Semitism. Not just outrage, but logic, renders all these arguments
invalid. Clearly the message of Exodus, of "Let My People Go," is one
of a God who wants people to be free, not enslaved. The Old Testament is alone
in world scripture for featuring real, named, average women as driving
characters: Sarah, Rebecca, Leah, Rachel, Ruth, Naomi, Judith, Esther, Hannah,
Hagar, Rahab, Deborah, Jael, Tamar, Shiphrah, Puah, and Jochabed. When it comes
to the Biblically-mandated death penalty for witchcraft or homosexuality, Jews
mention the Talmud's anti-death penalty stance. Further, we know that slavery, misogyny,
homophobia, and mob killings are found in cultures untouched by the Bible.
Anti-Semites'
distorted interpretations of the New Testament are not the alpha and omega of
Jewish-Christian relations, but that is all Weiss talks about. She does not
mention that again and again popes and everyday Christians have put their lives
on the line to fight against anti-Semitism. The sixteenth-century Council of
Trent insisted that humanity, primarily Christians, are responsible for the
death of Jesus. The twelfth-century papal bull Sicut Judaies insisted
that Christians must not harm Jews; this bull had several antecedents and
descendants. Weiss mentions France's persecution of Captain Alfred Dreyfus, but
not his defense by devout Catholic Charles Peguy.
Weiss
blames the Rintfleisch massacres, a medieval German pogrom, on the Catholic
doctrine of transubstantiation and, as she puts it, "a wafer," that
is, to me and other Catholics, the Eucharist. Weiss claims that "one
hundred thousand Jews were murdered." I cannot find her number supported
in other sources.
In
fact the pogrom to which she refers was sparked by debt. A man indebted to Jews
invented a story of abuse of a Eucharist in order to excuse a pogrom. Weiss
does not mention that some Christians attempted to assist persecuted Jews, or
that when the local monarch regained lost power he put the man who stirred up
the pogrom to death.
Why
do these details matter? Why must we mention that Catholic doctrine does not
mandate that Christians murder Jews, that communion is indeed holy to Catholics
and that attributing to communion the power to murder Jews is profoundly
inaccurate, that not all Christians, even in the midst of a medieval pogrom,
were murderers? Why must one mention the class elements at play?
These
details matter because Christians like me are on the front lines in condemning
anti-Semitism wherever we encounter it, no matter the social cost. It matters
because Christians like my father risked their lives fighting, and defeating,
anti-Semitic fascism in World War II. It matters because Christians are the
most persecuted faith group in the world today, and when you equate a religion
– Christianity – with a crime – anti-Semitism – you make Christians less safe. Why
bother protecting Christians if their belief system is the font of worldwide
evil? These details matter because Weiss's analysis is wrong. The New Testament
is not the template for anti-Semitism, and one must understand the historical
factors at work in hate.
Weiss's
tendency to leave out key facts occurs more than once in How to Fight Anti-Semitism. She bashes Breitbart as anti-Semitic.
Proof? Breitbart called Bill Kristol a "renegade Jew." Weiss does not
mention that the author of that very column was David Horowitz, who is himself
Jewish.
Weiss
insists that she was subjected to internet abuse after her appearance on the
Joe Rogan show because she is Jewish. During her appearance, Weiss smeared
Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard as an "Assad toadie" and as a supporter
of conversion therapy. Rogan challenged Weiss. Weiss floundered, acknowledging
that she didn't know the meaning of the word "toadie." She continued
to insist that Gabbard was pro-conversion therapy. In fact Gabbard supported
conversion therapy when she was a teenager. She has since renounced that
support. The most popular critical comments on YouTube accuse Weiss of
being arrogant and unaware of facts. The most popular comments do not mention
Weiss's Jewishness.
Weiss
cites Nathan Hannover, the seventeenth-century chronicler of the 1648-1657
Khmelnytsky Uprising of Ukrainian Cossacks against Polish domination. Weiss describes
tortures committed by Ukrainians against Jews. It looks, again, like what we
have is those evil Christians doing bad things to Jews because they are
Christian and Christians hate Jews. Weiss does not mention that the Khmelnytsky
Uprising, which, to her, is all about Christian Ukrainians expressing their
innate, Christian anti-Semitism, is recorded in Polish history as part of
"The Deluge," a catastrophic series of attacks against Poland in the
seventeenth century. She doesn't mention that Christian Ukrainians tortured
Christian Poles, thus, it can't be explained away as "Those awful
Christians inevitably acting out their innate anti-Semitism caused by their
religion." The tortures of the Khmelnytsky Uprising were repeated
centuries later. In the 1940s, during the Volhynian Slaughter, Ukrainians again
tortured and murdered Poles. One hundred thousand Poles were killed. Priests
were crucified. The genocidal goal was to obliterate any biological or cultural
Polish presence. Weiss doesn't mention that the very historian she cites,
Nathan Hannover, himself speaks of Jewish oppression of Ukrainian peasants.
My
friend John Guzlowski's family members were raped, tortured, dismembered, and
murdered by Ukrainians and Nazi allies. I do not hesitate to acknowledge that the
people who tortured my friend's family were, in their own minds, exacting
revenge on Poles for previous mistreatment. Acknowledging this history does not
justify Ukrainians torturing and murdering my friend's family. Acknowledging
this history contributes to understanding. Weiss, though, rejects any
integration of historical details into her analysis of anti-Semitism.
"This kind of logic" she says "excuses anti-Semitism." No,
placing attacks in context does not excuse anti-Semitism or any other violence.
Rather, fully understanding atrocity is perhaps the only way out of atrocity.
Weiss
extracts events from historical context. Those atrocities are simply just more
examples of Christians hating Jews just because they are Christians, and that's
what Christians do. Weiss also extracts anti-Semitism from the context of other
hatreds. Anti-Semitism, she insists, has nothing in common with hatred of any
other people from any other group. Study of hate and atrocity in general, she
seems to feel, cannot add to understanding of anti-Semitism.
Other
scholars have taken a different approach. One such scholar is Edna Bonacich; another
is Amy
Chua. Bonacich is a rabbi's daughter. Chua's aunt was murdered by her
Filipino chauffeur. Both scholars struggled with the problem of hate. Their
work describes a variety of populations that have experienced prejudice, atrocity,
and exile. Bonacich calls these populations "middleman minorities."
Chua calls them "market-dominant minorities." Bonacich, Chua, and Thomas Sowell,
who has also taken up this topic, write not just about Jews in Europe, but also
Chinese in Malaysia, Indians in East Africa, Armenians in the Ottoman Empire, Koreans
in Los Angeles, and others. My own take on the middleman theory at play in
Polish-Jewish relations can be seen here. Weiss never
mentions these scholars' work. Even if Weiss wanted to reject Bonacich's theory,
she should at least have addressed it.
Rather,
Weiss chooses an ahistorical and disease-model approach. She says anti-Semitism
can't be defined because it is a "shape-shifter" that
"slithers" away from definition. Anti-Semitism cannot be understood
alongside any other hatred. Rather, anti-Semitism is "an intellectual
disease," "a deeply rooted and highly infectious thought virus
carried in the DNA of Western culture." Every participant in Western
civilization carries this virus. When stress affects the immune system, you
break out in a case of anti-Semitism. "The virus will out." "Anti-Semitism
is baked into the very foundations of the world we inhabit." Anti-Semitism
is "an essential scaffolding for Western civilization." It is
"one of the basic tools with which that edifice was constructed." Thus,
anti-Semitism is "a culturally inherited disease."
If
you think you are not infected with the anti-Semitism virus, if you think you
actually like Jews, Weiss will correct you. "A philo-Semite is an anti-Semite
who likes Jews." Did no one reviewing this book at the editing stage
realize how offensive this is, or how close it is to Nazi ideology that
compared Jews to a disease?
Weiss
misrepresents the Jewish experience in the United States, and her misrepresentation
is not a minor matter. Jews succeeded in America without having to sacrifice
their Jewishness, she says. Their success proves that America is better than,
say, Poland, a country she mentions several times, always disparagingly . In
fact Jewishness in Poland and America were completely different phenomena. In
Poland, Jews spoke a different language, Yiddish, than the rest of the
population, they wore distinctive dress, they did not marry non-Jews, and they
occupied a caste-like status in the primitive economy. Those conditions don't
exist in the US. Where they are even slightly replicated, tension erupts.
Weiss
mentions the 1915 lynching of Leo Frank in Georgia. She depicts Frank's murder
as an unchanging expression of Christian hatred for Jews. She does not mention
the economic and regional tensions at work. Frank was a Yankee, and Mary
Phagan, the girl he was alleged to have killed, was a 13-year-old local girl
working in his factory. She'd gone to work at age 10. There was much tension
among poor, Southern whites because their children were doing hard, low-paying
work in factories owned by non-locals. None of these economic and social details
excuses the lynching of Leo Frank. All of them must be adduced fully to
understand what happened to Frank.
University
of Iowa Professor Stephen G. Bloom's superb 2001 book Postville: A Clash of Cultures in Heartland America offers a contrast
to Weiss's approach. Bloom describes cultural and economic tension between non-Jewish
Iowans and newly arriving Orthodox Jews in one rural town. Bloom offers a
thorough history and rich ethnography based on his penetration of the local
community. He does not write off tensions as resulting from
"diseased" Christian Iowans just giving in to their innate,
undefinable, anti-Semitism virus. He describes daily interactions that go
wrong, and that can be addressed and changed for the better for everyone involved.
If
there is one antagonist in Weiss's book, it is President Donald Trump. He has,
she argues, eroded standards of civility that protect minorities like Jews. She
categorizes as anti-Semitic Trump telling The Squad to go back to where they
came from. I'm no Trump apologist and I acknowledge that Trump is uncivil. But
Weiss misses that Trump's successful incivility is an epiphenomenon, a backlash
against a more powerful social force. Trump did not invent incivility. Have a
look at the utterly vile, misogynist and classist insults that liberals hurled
at Alaska Governor Sarah Palin when she first appeared on the national stage. Look
at how liberals use the word "white" to denigrate human beings. Listen
to what squad members Rashida Tlaib and Ilhan Omar say about America. When
Trump supporters hear Trump's incivility, they hear a champion standing up for
them against an all powerful Political Correctness that has suppressed and
demonized them.
Similarly,
Weiss could, but she does not, cite ethnographic research on those online hate
group members she rants against. Christian Picciolini, a former hate group
member, says that young men are susceptible to hate groups because they need
identity, community, and purpose. Modern schools, popular culture, and other
socializing forces in America all too often do not provide these vital gifts to
young white men. Rather, the powers that be drill into them that they are
shameful racists, sexists, and responsible for all the world's woes. Weiss does
acknowledge that the left creates a vacuum by refusing to create a healthy
patriotism and pride. But she insists that Western Civilization is inherently
diseased, so she undermines her own argument.
Weiss
opens her chapter on Islam with her description of the Rintfleisch massacres.
Holy communion makes Catholics kill Jews: a Politically Correct way of opening
a chapter meant to discuss Islamic anti-Semitism. Weiss goes on to indict
Christianity as the "ideology" that is responsible for the murder of
more Jews than any other. She relativizes. The New Testament is just like the
Koran because both contain "terrible lines about Jews." Weiss says
that Jews lived comparatively well in Muslim lands until recently, when Christian
colonizers arrived, bringing anti-Semitism with them. Surprisingly, she also
cites the creation of the state of Israel as a cause of Islamic anti-Semitism.
I
sent my impressions of Weiss's comments about Islam to Robert Spencer. As far
as I know, he has not read Weiss's book, so his reaction is to my summary of
it. He wrote back to me, "This is howlingly false. Antisemitism is deeply
embedded in the Quran and Sunnah. See the citations here.
There is also a great deal of antisemitism in Islamic tradition and Islamic history.
See my book The
History of Jihad."
In
addition to the anti-Semitism in the Koran, one must be aware of the following.
Mohammed, the founder of Islam, unlike Jesus, was not a Jew. He did not live in
Israel. He did not speak Jewish Aramaic or understand Biblical Hebrew. Islam
denigrates the Bible, saying that Jews and Christians corrupted the message
they received from Allah. Mohammed was sent to correct that corruption.
Christians read the Old Testament every day. People in Muslims countries have
been tortured for being in possession of a Bible. Islam
rewrites Jesus as desiring to destroy Christianity. The Koran insists that Abraham was not a Jew.
Weiss mentions none of this.
And
this is one of the reasons why every citizen, no matter their personal faith
life, must understand my lengthy comments, above, about Christianity and
anti-Semitism. If Weiss is correct, Christianity is evil and should be
eliminated. She's not correct. The New Testament is not like the Koran. In
Jesus's sayings and behavior, there is no exhortation to, or celebration of,
killing Jews or anyone else.
The
same cannot be said about the Koran, hadith, and Sunnah. Readers should expose
themselves to the sources Robert Spencer cites, above. The Koran repeatedly and
explicitly calls for the killing and torture of non-Muslims. It says that Allah
turned Jews into apes and pigs. As part of daily prayer, Muslims repeat seventeen
times a day that Jews anger Allah (and that Christians go astray.) There is
no comparison between the Islamic approach to Jews and Judaism and the
Christian approach.
Christians
like me, indeed Polish Catholics like me, oppose anti-Semitism with everything
we've got. We do so because of, not in spite of, our Christian faith and investment
in Western civilization. I am not diseased because I am a Christian and a
Westerner. I am blessed. My faith and my civilization give tools I would not
otherwise have to dismantle hate. I hope those who see the world as Weiss does
learn to recognize people like me as allies.
Persons
who are neither Christian nor Jewish need to understand, as well. We live in
the age of the Clash of Civilizations and that clash is taking place in local
schools. Young people need to know that their heritage is worth cherishing, and
they need to understand the challenges presented by other worldviews.
Danusha
Goska is the author of God
through Binoculars: A Hitchhiker at a Monastery
Thursday, October 10, 2019
"God through Binoculars" Took Me Outside Myself: Father Dwight Longenecker in the Imaginative Conservative.
Father Dwight Longenecker was kind enough to
review God
through Binoculars: A Hitchhiker at a Monastery at the Imaginative Conservative
website. You can read Father Dwight's review below or at his website, here
Escaping from Myself
by Dwight Longenecker
Books should take you
outside yourself. They should introduce you to new people, new worlds, new
thoughts and new ideas. They should give you new ways of seeing and new ways of
being.
Unfortunately, my life has too often been
filled with books that do no such thing. I am sent two or three books a week to
read and review. Because I have a blog authors and publishers seem to think
that I have nothing else to do but read their books and write wonderful reviews.
It is assumed that the blogger must be a full time book promotion and publicity
machine—and all completely free of charge!
Unfortunately, with the advent of print on
demand, the price of producing books has fallen. The number of books has
therefore shot upward, at the same time the number of serious readers has
plummeted. Alas, most of the books therefore are disposable and forgettable.
What is that tart comment? “Everyone has a book
inside them, and for most people that is where it should stay…”
Consequently, I have developed a cunning plan
to deal with the steady stream of books that wash up on my desk. If the cover
is interesting I open the book. If the table of contents is interesting I start
to read the book. If the second paragraph still holds my interest I read on. I
stop reading the book when I am no longer interested.
I’m afraid I rarely get past the first chapter.
I do not blame the author. Some of the books are worthy and well written but
simply not for me. Then there is my own increasingly short attention span and
even shorter patience.
Therefore, if a book does get me…if I finish
the darn thing it finally gets a review. This
summer two books got me because they took me outside myself. I should
explain that my world is what you might expect. It is the rather conventional
and conservative world of a Catholic priest and writer. My conversations, my
books, my viewing and my life, like most people’s, usually circle within my
little world.
But God Through Binoculars - A Hitchhiker at
a Monastery caught my attention. First it was the author’s name. Is Danusha
Goska male or female? What is this foreign sounding name? I am guessing
Russian, Rumanian, Ukranian or something thereabouts. I view the cover.
Monastery is good and hitchhiker is good. In the summer of 1987 I hitch hiked
to Jerusalem from England staying in monasteries all along the route so I was
curious.
Danusha, it turns out is a feisty Polish
American woman, and a devout Catholic. Down on her luck, she decided to
hitchhike from New Jersey to a monastery in Virginia to seek God’s guidance.
Her book is the account of that journey. Part
travel book, spiritual journal, bird watcher’s guide, conversion story and
delightfully eccentric grumble, God Through Binoculars took me outside
myself on a curiously unpredictable adventure.
The author tells how she was brought up in an
impoverished, devout but dysfunctional Catholic family and how she overcame all
odds to pursue a career in academia. With
detours to discuss the sex life of hyenas, the birds of North America and the
disappointments of her experience of the Catholic Church, this is one
hilarious, passionate, weird and wonderful tale.
Danusha is a person
with no guile. She doesn’t pull any punches and has no time for the artificial,
the phony and the fake. She is a non conformist and rages against the expected
compromises of academia, the hypocrisy of churchmen and the betrayal of friends.
One of the highlights
for me was her dissection of Thomas Merton. Far from paying homage to the
famous monk, she pokes at Merton’s romanticized monasticism, observing his
hypocrisy and the phony liberal Catholicism that his fake mysticism spawned.
I’ve felt that way about Merton for some time, so it was refreshing to find a
kindred spirit—someone willing to pop the Merton balloon.
Danusha is also
refreshingly frank about sex. She discusses some of her love affairs with an
explicitness that may make some readers blush. She is equally blunt about her
love-hate relationship with the Catholic Church. She clearly loves God and
loves her faith, but is impatient with clerical nincompoops, monastic frauds,
incompetent establishment goons and all the pompous rigamarole.
God Through Binoculars is a smart, funny, refreshing and quirky read. It’s the
best irreverently reverent religious book I’ve read this year.
Speaking of monasteries, Quarr Abbey on the
Isle of Wight in England is one of my favorite places on earth. We were
received into the Catholic Church there and I was there to research a book for
a week last summer. While there, and old friend, Dom Luke Bell handed me a book
to read and review. Love’s Many Names is a collection of poetry by Sam
Davidson.
Davidson studied theology and philosophy at
Edinburgh University and film studies at Exeter. He worked with Kurdish
refugees and war veterans in transit camps in Europe and traveled widely in
Europe. His poems reflect his travels and faith, and like Danusha, he took me
out of myself because his approach to the faith is so vivid, personal,
passionate and unconventional. Like Danusha he writes not only from the heart,
but from the guts and from the groin.
These are not religious poems per se, but
they are deeply mystical. Like all good poets and authentic mystics, Davidson
wrings meaning out of his life. He sees with sacramental eyes and perceives the
passion within his experience. Here a poem describes with painful objectivity
the passion and despair of the homeless. There a poem subtly melds his love for
a woman with the passion of Christ. Here he rages with the refugee, there he
touches the hem of nature’s beauty with a masculine tenderness.
Davidson’s verse is sometimes free but often
formal, with the subtle formality of the under appreciated Movement poets—that
group of English post war poets who retained classical forms while integrating
natural speech rhythms and idioms. When he is writing formally Davidsom echoes
the style of Philip Larkin, Thom Gunn, Donald Davie and Elizabeth Jennings.
Like Jennings, Davidson’s poems hover around
the subject of Catholic faith without ever being on the nose, saccharine or
sentimental. The Christian faith is never obvious here. Instead it runs like
life blood through the images, cadences and schemes of the poetry.
Like Danusha, Davidson writes simply and
without guile. Both authors do not seem to care whether they please anyone.
They are being honest and they write truth from the heart.
Did I say these books took me out of myself?
They did, but only to open me more deeply to remember a man I sued to be. I rediscovered that young man who hitchhiked
to Jerusalem over thirty years ago, flirting with the call of the monastery. I
got back in touch with the unconventional young man who fled America on a crazy
notion of being a poet, like George Herbert in an English country vicarage.
Both books are a refreshing and heart inspiring
read and for once I was glad for the unsolicited books that end up on my desk.
Consequently I have decided to grumble a little less and view each new book as
a possible fresh adventure and perhaps another pilgrimage outside myself.
Love’s Many Names is published by
Angelico Press. God Through Binoculars by Shanti Arts Publishing.
Tuesday, October 8, 2019
Judy 2019 Heartbreaking Portrait of a Goddess in Decline
"Judy"
is a heartbreaking portrait of a goddess in decline. It depicts the final year in
the life of film icon Judy Garland, during her performance at the London
nightclub The Talk of the Town in 1969. And there isn't much more to say about
this movie than that. It's heartbreaking. You see Judy fall on stage. You see
concert-goers throw their bread at her in contempt. You see her, a woman who
had been addicted to pills by MGM when she was just a teenager, struggling to
sleep at night. You see her grabbing for booze, cigarettes, and pills just to
get through the day.
She
marries Mickey Deans, a much younger, starstruck man she barely knows, whom the
viewer decides is not good for her. She is unceremoniously kicked out of her
residence, where she lives with her two children, Lorna and Joe Luft. She can't
pay the bills. She's broke. She hands her kids over to ex-husband Sid Luft
(Rufus Sewell). Sewell's scenes are brief but he communicates that he's been
around the block, the hard way, with Judy, and he no longer views her through a
gauzy lens. Luft informs Judy in brusque, no-nonsense words that he wants custody
of the kids. They want and deserve stability and friends, not the peripatetic, hand-to-mouth
show business life Judy offers them.
All
of this heartbreaking material would be easier to take, and would add up to a
better movie, if there were a plot that allowed for Aristotelian pity, fear,
and catharsis. Instead I'll remember this movie most for seeing Judy fallen on
the stage, disgusted and betrayed fans throwing their bread at her.
The
problem is, of course, is that this is a true story, a story that most people
who will attend this movie know all too well. We can't change the details of
the plot, so the plot has no place to go but down.
Judy Garland,
born Frances Ethel Gumm, was one of the singular talents of the Golden Age of
Hollywood. You can experience Judy's gift with a short visit to a YouTube
video. Watch, for example, her televised rendition of "The Battle Hymn of
the Republic." She delivered this soul-stirring, powerhouse performance
just after JFK was assassinated. That's more than a movie star. That's a
supernova.
Judy
was born to a mother who didn't want her and looked into aborting her. Abortion
was illegal and so Judy drew breath. Her father was gay and the family had to
leave town after he faced morals charges. They moved to California. Her talent fell
into the hands of Louis B. Mayer. Mayer, in photos, looks like a plump, elderly
city councilman. If what we hear about his treatment of Judy is true, there is
a special place in Hell for Louis B. Mayer.
He
was – allegedly – a drug peddler and greedy exploiter. Mayer recognized that
Judy had talent, but he also recognized that she was not attractive. When Judy
was just a child, Mayer starved her, plied her with drugs, and, allegedly,
called Judy "My little hunchback" because she was short and had
curvature of the spine. At the same time, this – alleged – greedy perv used to
molest Judy. He would, repeatedly, put his hand on his child star's breast.
Finally, when Judy grew up, she told him never to do it again. We see all this
in "Judy" in flashbacks. You just want to jump up onto the screen and
rescue that child.
There
are a couple of great scenes in "Judy." Late one night, she greets
two gay fans at the stage door. They take her home for a meal. What happens in
their apartment, and, again, close to the end of the movie, is very touching. I
don't want to describe it here because I don't want to ruin it for you.
Another
provocative aspect of the film is its treatment of performance, and the life of
a performer or any creative person. "Judy" shows Judy in performance
mode, in mask-is-off mode, and in performance mode even though she's not onstage.
All of this is handled very deftly. You realize what incredibly hard work
performing is.
I
love Judy Garland. I see her as a martyr. I can't say that I've ever seen any
other performer give so much, so consistently, in one performance after
another, over the course of decades. Her rendition of "The Man that Got
Away" in "A Star is Born," that sums up impossible sexual
yearning, her dreamy, wistful, melancholy, defiant, resigned, ever-hopeful
"Friendly Star" from "Summer Stock," her "Get
Happy" from that same movie that feels like taking a bath in unadulterated
sunshine, "Mack the Black" from "The Pirate," a performance
both sexy and witty – no one else has racked up that depth and breadth of
material. Watching her suffer through this new movie made me cry.
There's
much talk about Renee Zellweger's performance. Zellweger is a fine actress and
she gives a fine performance. The thing is, we already have Judy onscreen.
Maybe what we need is a documentary. A question I'd really like to see answered
is, by physicians, psychiatrists, accountants, Hollywood historians, did it
really have to end the way it did?