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May 24, 2013

Rabbi Tzvi Hersh Weinreb: When I didn't so 'humbly disagree'

Caroline B. Glick: Thank you, Hafez al-Assad

Diana West: From the Brooklyn Bridge to London
Morgan Housel: Why spotting bubbles is so much harder than you think

Environmental Nutrition editors: NuVal labeling to the rescue?

Jewz in the Newz by Nate Bloom : Memorial Day: Jews Serving and KIA in War on Terror; Liberace Bio-Pic; Jew Wins "Survivor"; Shalom, Dr. Brothers; More

The Kosher Gourmet by Emma Christensen: HIDE THESE FROZEN TREATS FROM THE KIDDIES!: Sangria pops; Irish cream pudding pops; mango Lassi pops

May 22, 2013

John Thorne: They launched the 'Arab Spring' but now yearn for the good old days of a strongman

John Rosemond: 'Disciplinary math' adds up to parental successl

Warren Richey: Are prayers before public meetings OK? Supreme Court to decide
Rick Montgomery: Use of ADHD drugs as study aid raises concern on campuses

Brierley Wright, M.S., R.D.: 6 convincing reasons you should keep carbs in your diet

Eoin O'Carroll: Scientists examine nothing, find something

The Kosher Gourmet by Carole Kotkin: This soup is made from one of the great pleasures of spring: A wonderful pairing of rosy color and earthy tang

May 20, 2013

Richard A. Serrano: Is Meir Kahane's assassin now a changed man?

Hannan Adely: Town raises Palestinian flag at City Hall

Melissa Healy: Genetic copies of living people from embryos no longer science fiction
Morgan Housel: When smart investors do stupid things

Sharon Saloman, M.S., R.D.: Hunger games: Eat more, weigh less, without starving

Jewz in the Newz by Nate Bloom : Jews Inducted into Rock Hall of Fame; Anton Yelchin co-stars in New "Trek" film; Kutcher (but not Kunis) visits Israel; Jewish TV Star Praises Jewish Rap Star

The Kosher Gourmet by Cathy Pollak: WARNING: This WALNUT CAKE WITH PRALINE FROSTING, perfect for afternoon coffee, is addicting

May 13, 2013

Rabbi Nathan Lopes Cardozo: Why the giving of the document that would permanently change the world could only be done in desolation

David G. Savage: Church-state, literally? Supreme Court weighing public school graduation in a church

Emily Alpert: Recession dragged down birth rates for less-educated women
Morgan Housel: The deep downside of home ownership

Peter Teffer: Will Dutch police soon be stalking cybercriminals on your computer?

Heidi McIndoo, M.S., R.D.: Meatless 'meat' can have its own set of problems

The Kosher Gourmet by Diane Rossen Worthington: Celebrate! This must-try appetizer is delicate yet has depth of flavor: Corn-Leek Cakes with Caviar, Smoked Salmon and Creme Fraiche

May 10, 2013

Rabbi Berel Wein: Be all that you should be

Caroline B. Glick: The dirty little secret about Israel's Arabs

Mona Charen: Hawking's Moral Calculus: The man and the movement he embraces
Morgan Housel: The biggest retirement myth ever told

Sandi Doughton: Eyes may provide new insight into brain problems

Jewz in the Newz by Nate Bloom : The Great Gatsby's Jewish Ties; Jews in the "Time 100 list" List; People's Most Beautiful Women

The Kosher Gourmet by Linda Gassenheimer: A sweet-hot meal: Pear salsa spices up salmon

May 8, 2013

Peter Ford: Why China is welcoming both Israel's Netanyahu and Palestinians' Abbas

Warren Richey: Obama administration quietly backs out of appeal over new contraceptive mandate

Fred Weir: At Kerry-Putin meeting, US-Russia relations thaw --- a tad
Amanda Paulson: Study reveals sad truths about community colleges

Harvard Health Letters: Evidence weak that zinc, echinacea are beneficial

The Kosher Gourmet by Leela Cyd Ross : Almost too pretty to eat, this colorful salad with Sicilian inspiration will tickle the taste buds and delight your visual sensibility

May 6, 2013

Edmund Sanders and Patrick J. McDonnell: Think Israel's objective in Syria is to weaken Assad or embolden the rebels? Think again

Brian Bennett: Israeli airstrikes may show weakness in Syrian defense

Michael Ollove: Millions of ex-felons, parolees and those on probation are about to be entitled to tax-payer paid health coverage
Karen Kaplan: Most men can skip PSA test for prostate cancer, urologists say

Kimberly Lankford: How to track down a lost life insurance policy

Dream of Mars exploration achievable, experts say

The Kosher Gourmet by Susan M. Selasky: EGGPLANT WRAPS are an easy, sumptuous and scrumptious meal

May 3, 2013

Rabbi Nathan Lopes Cardozo: Human Courage and the Unavoidable, Disturbing Text

Steven Emerson: Attorney General Fights CAIR in Court, Lauds it in Public

Mediterranean diet helps beat dementia: study
Harvard Health Letters: When to be screened for a hearing problem

Jewz in the Newz by Nate Bloom : Iron Man's Jewish Connections; Marc Maron's New TV Show; Martin Landau Grows Up with Israel; Shalom, Allan Arbus

The Kosher Gourmet by Diane Rossen Worthington: A sweet surprise for Mother's Day dessert

May 1, 2013

Jonathan Rosenblum: An Improbable Journey to Orthodoxy

Jonathan Tobin: Blame Obama, Not Israel for Syria Push

Kids, kittens the Same? With employee perks at struggling Internet pioneer Yahoo! it's hard to tell
Halena M. Gazelka, M.D.: Mayo Clinic Medical Edge: What you need to know about implanted pain relief devices

Sandy Kleffman: Artificial kidney offers hope to patients tethered to a dialysis machine

Jessica Shugart: When it comes to math, MRIs may be better than IQs

The Kosher Gourmet by Mario Batali: The celebrated chef on how high-maintenance ASPARAGUS RISOTTO need not be

April 29, 2013

Roy Gutman: Poland's new Jewish museum celebrates life, doesn't revisit Holocaust

Mark Clayton: Terrorism in America: Is US missing a chance to learn from failed plots?

Kim Murphy: Boston Bomber's 'Svengali' Revealed
Morgan Housel: He's rich, smart and old: Listen to him

Thomas Salinas, D.D.S.: Mayo Clinic Medical Edge: The safety of amalgam fillings

Harvard Health Letters: Tomatoes and stroke protection

Pete Spotts: Tiny satellites + cellphones = cheaper 'eyes in the sky' for NASA

The Kosher Gourmet by Diane Rossen Worthington: Swing into spring with lemon cream pie

April 26, 2013

Rabbi Abraham J. Twerski: The world is a mirror

Caroline B. Glick: Time to confront Obama

Clifford D. May: Defense in the Age of Jihadist Terrorism
Kimberly Lankford: New strategies ease pain of paying for long-term care insurance

Howard LeWine, M.D.: Ask the Harvard Experts: Too much ibuprofen?

Sharon Palmer, R.D.: How to feel your best -- with plenty of energy, a healthy weight and optimal mental and physical function -- without driving yourself batty

Jewz in the Newz by Nate Bloom: Jewish Major Leaguers, 2013; New Movies and Comedy Show; Shalom, 'Lumpy' (Leave it to Beaver)

The Kosher Gourmet by Emily Ho : A bright and cheerful salad to herald the warmer months ahead

April 24, 2013

Steven Emerson: Boston Bomber Exposes Islamist Secret

Morgan Housel Admit it: No one has any idea what's going on
Harvard Health Letters: Can you get headaches from headache medication?

Kerri-Ann Jennings, M.S., R.D.: How to easily get more Omega-3s in your diet

Melissa Healy: Pot in a pill: All the pain relief without the smoke

The Kosher Gourmet by Susan Russo: Chipotle Chili Butternut Squash Soup is bold, zesty, hot

April 22, 2013

Ken Dilanian: Counterterrorism's future is unclear

US man departing country arrested on terror charges
Barbara Williams: An unorthodox but growing treatment in a 9-year-old's battle against cancer

P.J. Skerrett, M.D.: How to recognize a good whole grain product

Jewz in the Newz by Nate Bloom: Teen actor Jonah Bobo in New Flick: Hunky James Wolk on Mad Men; Erich Segal's Daughter Writes Prize-Winning Jewish Novel


Jewish World Review

At the midpoint of the world, with no now

By Rabbi Yonason Goldson





The battle for the spirit of mankind revealed in a letter to the future

JewishWorldReview.com | What would you ask of a time traveler from a hundred years ago? And if you traveled a hundred years into the future, what would you want to tell the people you found there? Perhaps it would sound something like this:

What did you do to handle the overpopulations we predicted? How did you protect the seashores? What did you do to keep the ozone layer intact, the energy supplies, the trees? Have you eliminated ignorance, brutality, greed?

There might be no better way to discover unexamined truths about ourselves then by composing a letter to our grandchildren's grandchildren. This was certainly on the mind of award-winning essayist Roger Rosenblatt a quarter century ago when he penned his deeply thoughtful Letter to 2086:

This letter will be propped up in a capsule at the Statue of Liberty, to be opened on the statue's bicentennial. Go ahead. Undo the lock. I see your sharp, bright faces as you hoist us into your life, superior as cats to your primitive elders. Quaint, are we not? Beware of superior feelings. The message is in this bottle.

As a student of Jewish philosophy, I don't believe in coincidences. So when my neighbor — out of the blue — handed me a long forgotten back issue of Time Magazine, the cover article by Mr. Rosenblatt resonated with the faint echo of providence. And although the intended audience still reside three generations in the future, this letter offers a tantalizing window into the past, as well as an illuminating perspective on how much has changed and how much has remained the same.

Everybody seems to know everything everywhere. The television news displays a riot in an overcrowded Tennessee prison, a newly discovered poem by Shakespeare, an earthquake in Mexico, a bombing in Libya, starvation in Africa, a dinosaur bone.

Mr. Rosenblatt paints an impressionist masterpiece that, in surprisingly few words, successfully captures the persistent tensions of the Cold War and the Mideast, the growing division between rich and poor, the opening volleys of the culture wars, the growing malignancy that is our political system, the advancing disintegration of the traditional family, the discrediting of Marx and Freud, the pending infantilization of American youth.


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But there's a lot that he missed (though not, to be fair, through any fault of his own). Who could have anticipated the dissolution of the Soviet Union and the Eastern Bloc within half a decade? Who would have imagined the national (and even global) obsession with reality television or predicted wide-scale ignorance as a consequence of information overload? And even the most prescient science fiction writers never foresaw a society in which everyone carries in his pocket a computerized telephone the size of Captain Kirk's communicator with the processing power of Mr. Spock's tricorder.

BEAM ME UP, SCOTTY
In outlining the "secrets of the age," Mr. Rosenblatt bats about .500. He accurately records the resurgence of faith and religion, with the accompanying specter of violent religious extremism; but he misses the equal and opposite reaction of rabid secularism and its adherents' blind faith in technology and human reason. He identifies the mindset that was yet to be labeled "non-judgmentalism," but he fails to appreciate how the failure of our collective moral compass would come to threaten the stability of civilized society. He perceives a resurgence of individual empowerment and personal responsibility, but he closes his eyes to the erosion of a national work ethic amidst the growing culture of entitlement.

In short, he wants to believe that we are learning from history. But Friedrich Hegel's sobering observation remains unshaken: the great lesson of history is that no one learns anything from history.

After all the bull's-eyes and near misses, however, one short paragraph eclipses all the others:

"[W]e are learning that democracy can kill democracy. For one thing, excessive freedoms have made it almost impossible for an ethical conscience to assert itself. People have been free to ignore social obligations, to abuse one another, to kill themselves."

Perhaps most dangerous of all, suggests Mr. Rosenblatt, is the influence of public relations. "That enterprise," he wisely observes, "has taken the expansiveness of democracy and honed it to a point from which a few manipulate the many." All too true. But the author is not worried, he says, since the country is aware of the danger and its people "are beginning to resist our manipulators… In the sweet and deadly mass marketing of thought, we are quietly reclaiming our individual lives."

It's a pretty thought, but one so far removed from reality that we have to wonder how Mr. Rosenblatt's otherwise dispassionate vision could have turned so inexplicably rose-colored. When we reflect that in 2008 an upstart politician with virtually no experience and no credentials effortlessly dispatched a field of more capable and more seasoned presidential candidates, that a late-night comedienne's impersonation of an obscure Alaska governor was among the main factors in deciding that year's election, that four years of Carter-style mismanagement failed to dissuade the majority of an electorate from returning to office, on the basis of "likeability," a demonstrably disingenuous and imperious chief executive — when we look back at all the damning evidence, it's a mystery how any thoughtful commentator could have concluded that independent thinking had any chance at all to survive mass-media manipulation.

But this is not Roger Rosenblatt's fault. He was looking at a thin slice of history, and history does not reveal itself in slices. Like continental drift and the advance of glacial ice, history creeps along with an inertia that can only be measured over the expanse of centuries and which can never be held at bay.

That being so, the relevance of historical, social, or political trends seems purely academic. If we are carried along by the tide of history not only helpless but utterly unaware, is there really any profit in trying to capture the zeitgeist of our times?

There is. Like a kayaker seeking out the place in the current that will speed him along without dashing him upon the rocks or trapping him in the eddies, each of us is master of his own fate, even if we cannot control the course of events that swirl around us. The paddler will never change the river, but he can force the river to carry him where he wills if he possesses the vision and the ability to navigate its waters.

THE ELUSIVE PRESENT
In the slippery grammar of Biblical Hebrew, there is technically no present tense. Although we translate ani holeich contextually as "I am walking," the words translate more literally as "I am a walker." This is not mere semantics. According to Jewish philosophy, there is no present; rather, we exist in a state of constant transition between the past and the future. Man is not meant to be static. His existence is one of perpetual re-creation, in which he is charged with the often overwhelming task of transmuting the lessons of experience into the choices that will define the person he will become. His goal is to transform himself, over the course of a lifetime, from an animalistic creature of the flesh into a divine being guided by the promptings of his soul.

This is no small undertaking. Indeed, the Talmud records the sages' opinion that the process would span the entire history of mankind:

The world will last six thousand years: two thousand years of Chaos, two thousand years of Torah, and two thousand years of the messianic era. Because of our moral failures, the years that have gone by have gone by.1

Simply stated, the sages foresaw that human beings would engage in a battle for economic, military, and political supremacy for the first two millennia of recorded history. Only with the arrival of the Jewish patriarch Abraham would this dynamic begin to change; only then would the moral and ethical teachings of Judeo-Christian tradition begin to take root throughout the world. From that point forward, the struggle between man's higher and lower selves would ensue: competition vs. cooperation, selfishness vs. social responsibility, visceral gratification vs. spiritual refinement. Man's ultimate victory in the battle for moral elevation would naturally and organically usher in the advent of the messianic era.

Ideally, that process should have taken only a third of human history. But the power of human self-interest is not easily tamed, and the influence of the human soul has not prevailed. The ages have continued to go by, and the world remains locked in a seemingly hopeless stalemate as man's battle against himself wages on.

Even as the second two-thousand-year "era" came to a close, it seemed unimaginable that man's physical nature would ever submit to the dominion of his spiritual self. It was then that the culturally dominant elite sought to press their advantage against an unyielding Jewish intelligentsia by marshalling the full weight of logic and sophistry to refute the predictions of Jewish tradition.

The Talmud records a series of cryptic debates between the sage Rabbi Joshua and Elders of Athens, the wise men of Greek letters whose academies survived under the Roman Empire until the early part of the sixth century. In one such debate, the Elders asked Rabbi Joshua, "Where is the midpoint of the world?"2

Rabbi Joshua raised his finger in the air and declared: "Here!"

"Prove it!" the Elders demanded.

"Bring ropes and measure," the rabbi replied.

Although couched in the language of a riddle, the meaning of the Elders' question was to the point: According to you Jews, the middle stage of human history is at an end. The messianic era should be upon us. And yet the world is as far away as ever from the victory of the soul. Man has embraced the supremacy of his physical nature, and you Jews who stand for mankind's divinity remain in exile, feeble subjects broken beneath the might of Rome.

In short, the Elders asked Rabbi Joshua, why will you not concede that history has passed you by?3

THE MEASURE OF MANKIND
The battle between man's higher and lower impulses has waged since the beginning of time and, as long as mankind is not up to completing the task, will continue until time's end. But like any war, the contest takes place at the battlefront, which in this arena is the constantly shifting moment between the past and the present. The opportunity for the soul to prevail may have arrived long ago, but victory is never farther away than the next moment of human history.

The physical impulses of man may be strong, but eventually they will tire. When they do, when mankind is forced to confront the failure of secularism, the corruption of power for power's sake, the manipulation of hearts and minds in pursuit of profit and unreachable utopian dreams, then the divine spirit of man will prevail.

I cannot prove it to you, concluded Rabbi Joshua, for you deny the very existence of the soul and therefore cannot comprehend its inevitable victory. Having never contemplated or attempted the denial of your baser impulses in pursuit of loftier ideals, you are no more able to accept the transcendence of man's divine nature than you are able to calculate the measure of the earth with ropes. But those who have harnessed and experienced the indomitable strength of the supernal soul have no doubt that it will eventually guide man to his ultimate spiritual transformation.

No, Jewish tradition does not believe in coincidences, even in the most pedestrian events. For myself, I can't help but wonder at the improbable appearance of a 26 year old issue of Time Magazine between the afternoon and evening prayers. And how remarkable is the small but insistent miracle that I would have been 26 years old when the issue hit the newsstands, placing its publication at precisely the midpoint of my life as I came to hold it in my hands?

Indeed, Rabbi Joshua teaches us that we are always at the midpoint of our lives, just as Judaism teaches that mankind is perpetually poised at the midpoint of Creation, one moment away from Chaos and one moment away from fulfilling the purpose for which we were created.

Will the soul have prevailed by the year 2086? We can hope that it will. But whether it has or has not, we can be certain that until it finally does the battle for the spirit of mankind will continue between those inspired to reach for their higher selves and those mired in the self-indulgence of moral anarchy, between the small, still whisper of our inner voice and the trumpeting cacophony of the relentless media.

To paraphrase Roger Rosenblatt, we will prevail when we have successfully resisted our manipulators; when, in the sweet and deadly mass marketing of thought, we have quietly reclaimed our individual lives. Then the world will be ready for the End of Days.


1 Babyonian Talmud, Sanhedrin 97a-b

2 Ibid, Bechoros 8b

3 Rabbi Elyahu of Vilna; see The Juggler and the King by Rabbi Aharon Feldman, Feldheim publishers, Jerusalem, 1990.


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JWR contributor Rabbi Yonason Goldson teaches at Block Yeshiva High School in St. Louis, MO, where he also writes and lectures. He is author of Dawn to Destiny: Exploring Jewish History and its Hidden Wisdom, an overview of Jewish philosophy and history from Creation through the compilation of the Talmud, now available from Judaica Press. Visit him at http://torahideals.com .






© 2013, Rabbi Yonason Goldson