Wednesday, April 30, 2025

Do Not Surrender Our Hopes and Dreams - Rabbi Alan Fuchs

 


We no longer will stand helpless while our neighbor bleeds. Together we shall challenge amoral and immoral authority. Together we shall challenge injustice. Together we shall right the wrongs that threaten this earth. 

Together we shall offer hope where there is despair and love where there is hate. Together we shall listen to the voice. Together we shall say to my grandchildren - here we are, send us.  - Rabbi Alan Fuchs


Thursday, April 24, 2025

Ashton Jeanty - A LaDainian Throwback

 


Raiders Got Jeanty!
Raiders Got Jeanty!
Raiders Got Jeanty!

Just one look-see of this young man's highlights and you understand why Raider Nation is Power Walking like Vince McMahon. With the #6 Pick of the 2025 NFL Draft the Raiders selected Ashton Jeanty, running back out of Boise State. Not only was he the best player available on the board but also fills the Raiders need at running back.

In an interview Jeanty was asked what past running backs he admires; he rattled off a host of greats. When asked which one of those he felt his style of play most resembles he said LaDainian Tomlinson, the Hall of Fame (2017) San Diego Charger who earned much respect from Raider Nation.

What I see and admire about Jeanty is his low center of gravity allowing him to retain balance while alluding would be tacklers. He has elite speed, power, agility, and field vision. With the ball in his hands, he is always a threat to take one to the house. To Take One To The House!!!

Get Ready for Beast Mode II Raider Nation.

Welcome Home BASHton!


Ashton Jeanty is a Raider - 6th overall pick | 2025 NFL Draft



Tuesday, April 22, 2025

As A Driven Leaf by Milton Steinberg



I picked up this novel at my local thrift store after returning from a wonderful vacation with friends. I swear the book was just sitting there waiting for me to come along and claim it. 

"I don't know how or when, but from a street I was summoned."

I've read to chapter III, thirty-five pages, and like "The Sacrifice" by Adele Wiseman, the writing, the story and its characters have grabbed my attention early. I know the book was originally written in 1939, and yet it has a modern flow and style that feels so relative. Even its Roman era second century AD setting comes across as fresh and vivid, as if the peoples and places are headlines in an international news broadcast on television.

I suspect I will enjoy this interesting read and learn from its wisdom. And it does serve up a descriptive writing style that's very tasty to the palate of avid literature readers.

- Raiderlegend


Embrace Your Values: Our Lives Should Not Feel Like “A Driven Leaf” by Rabbi Emeritus Alan Fuchs – Rodeph Shalom

Elisha ben Abuyah is the main character in Milton Steinberg’s famous novel, As a Driven Leaf. Elisha is born in second century Palestine, under Roman rule and Hellenistic influence. His mother dies in childbirth. He is raised by his father who is sympathetic to Greek culture and philosophy, but he dies when Elisha is ten. His uncle now raises him in a traditional Jewish environment. He is brilliant, becomes a rabbi and a member of the Sanhedrin. He increasingly grows disillusioned by strict Orthodox law. He moves to Antioch, leaves his family, adopts the philosophy of stoicism, is expelled from the Jewish community and lives his life searching – a life that ends in despair, loneliness and poverty.

The title of the book, As a Driven Leaf, is taken from the Book of Job, who also spends his life questioning and challenging the wisdom and goodness of a faith that can cause such human suffering. He protests to the god in whom he wants to believe – “Why do you hide your face, and treat me like an enemy? Will you harass a driven leaf?”

Both Job and Elisha ben Abuyah are trying to make sense of a life where they feel helpless in the face of injustice and human suffering over which they have little or no control. When i asked a former student and friend how he and his family were doing, he responded that they were doing fine, but then he observed that is a common response, but that “fine” is not good enough. They needed to have some hope, a vision that life would be better, that they and their young children would know a future where life would not seem so unsafe, where they could feel more secure and unafraid, a future in which they felt in control of their lives.

We may be feeling like a driven leaf in the face of this pandemic. At the same time, the events of the recent past, in which hundreds of thousands of people the world over have marched to bring justice and humanity to our societies, point to a different virus that has plagued our planet. Millions of people have been willing to risk their health and their lives because they know that racial injustice also is an epidemic, and that conquering it is within our control. The disease of COVID-19 descended upon us from life forms below us on the Darwinian scale and we hope will be defeated by the science of medicine. The disease of racism has been endemic in our human life form for centuries and will only be defeated by our moral consciousness. Perhaps this moment has taught us the difference between what we can control and what we cannot. A virus from without is very different from a sickness from within. If we have learned from this pandemic that nature does not distinguish among Black or white, Asian or Arab, young or old, straight or gay, that we all are equally vulnerable and therefore, we understand that we all are equally human, then perhaps hundreds of thousands of   us will not have died in vain.

In this week’s Torah portion, titled Pinchas, from the Book of Numbers, Moses is instructed to go to the top of Mount Abiram, in other sections called Mount Nebo, and look over the land which he will not be allowed to enter.  He will die, not stepping foot onto the promised land with the people he led for forty years, because, according to the text, he disobeyed instructions when giving the Israelites water from a rock.  Moses asks the god whom he worships to appoint a new leader. Rashi, in his commentary on the text, makes the point that Moses understands that the virtues of the righteous are that they disregard their own needs and occupy themselves with the needs of the community.  Moses lobbies for his own son to inherit his position. It is not to be. Rather, it is Joshua. Again, according to Rashi, Joshua’s great strength is that as a leader he will tolerate each person according to his individual character.

Milton Steinberg, the leaders of Black Lives Matter and Civil Rights movements of any name, the authors of this Torah portion— all bring us to this critical moment in our lives and in the life of our country. We are on this earth as visitors, all inheriting a divine image. We are equally vulnerable to natural forces beyond our control, but we are in charge of our own lives and who we are as human beings. The tzadikim, in the words of Rashi, the righteous, will always occupy themselves, not with their own needs, but with the needs of the community and will tolerate each person according to his individual character.  We seek those qualities in ourselves, and we must insist on those qualities in those who will lead us to a better future. 

In his search for meaning, Elisha ben Abuyah sets forth this philosophy:

A man has happiness if he possesses three things–those whom he loves and who love him in turn, confidence in the worth and continued existence of the group of which he is a part, and last of all, a truth by which he may order his being.”

Those are values we must hold dear through these trying times. We seek to love and be loved. Each one of us is a small part of human life on this planet. Its healthy continued existence must be our primary goal – one nation, one world, with liberty and justice for all. That is the truth by which we must order our being.

The march of science and the march of people says there is hope. There is a future. There will be an end to the flood and the dove will find a resting place, and with our determination and because of our innate goodness, a rainbow will appear in the sky.

Shabbat Shalom

D’var Torah delivered July 10, 2020.


A New Leaf - Tablet Magazine


update: from page 187 of "As A Driven Leaf"


Wistfully Elisha whispered a passage uttered by one of the sages who had gone before, "Consider ye the heavens which I created above you. Have they ever modified their habit? Has the sun ever risen in the west to set in the east? Have the stars in their constellations ever departed from their path? Consider the earth which I have created to sustain you. Has it ever varied its character? Hast thou ever planted wheat and harvested barley, or planted barley and harvested wheat? Now consider yourselves whom I have created to serve Me. In all the wide world it is only you who know not your law, even as it is written, 'The ox knoweth his master and the ass his owner's crib. Israel doth not know, my people doth not understand.' "

If only man, Elisha brooded, could know his law as the stars knew theirs. If only he could move unswervingly along a course charted for him as they followed their destiny so that all things might be at peace in God.

But where was that orbit for man which was also harmony with the universe? And knowing it, how was one to be certain that one has charted it aright out of all the infinite lines that might be drawn through space?      


After finishing "As A Driven Leaf" I come away with a broader sense of the importance faith plays in our lives, as well as the caution of living a life without it. It is okay to have questions and uncertainties while trying to understand our faith. But we must remember to seek God first in our hearts and souls before ever trying to find any meaning of faith outside ourselves. Yes indeed, a very enjoyable book to read.

Eternal Light 600320 0777 As A Driven Leaf Repeat of 450520, Old Time Radio


Thursday, April 10, 2025

Tariff War Education 101 - Singapore Delivers

 


It appears that one man is attempting to disrupt current and future World Trade. If one man can potentially tear down a supposedly fair global trading system, then it says as much about the system as it does about the man. Maybe the system of world trade is outdated and in need of an overhaul. But let's not throw out the baby with the bath water overnight and call it progress.

What does a world without rules and fair-trade agreements between nations look like?

When Goliath the Philistine, armed with sword, spear, and javelin cursed and threatened to kill handsome, healthy young David, the giant thought his strength and size would allow him to continue causing havoc and destruction on peoples he viewed as inferior.

A stone, a slingshot, and faith that his almighty Lord would protect and guide his aim in battle was all David brought to the confrontation. The giant never had a chance. One stone slung with Lord-like (inspired) force struck and embedded itself deep into a vital area of the giant's head (between the eyes) bringing down Goliath and ending his reign of terror.

1 Samuel 17:42-51 Goliath looked at David with disgust. 


The World Trade Organization (WTO) is the only global international organization dealing with the rules of trade between nations. At its heart are the WTO agreements, negotiated and signed by the bulk of the world’s trading nations and ratified in their parliaments. The goal is to ensure that trade flows as smoothly, predictably and freely as possible.


Saturday, April 05, 2025

Warriors Back-to-Back Takedown of Lakers & Nuggets



They are doing the do Warriors fans. Who Got Next? is what we followers of the Golden State Warriors are feeling this morning. Coming off a Thursday night stoppage of Lebron James and the Lakers in Los Angeles, the Warriors came home and put a halt to the Nuggets nine game winning streak against them. Their Friday night victory over the Nuggets marks an impressive run against some of the top contenders in the Western Conference.

It's not only that they are winning games against higher seeded playoff contenders, but how they are doing it has reminded fans and the league of past Warriors championship seasons. They have shooters, they have defenders, they have synchronicity (rhythm). And I believe the weapon now overwhelming opponents is Warriors depth. We fans of the team know Jonathan Kuminga's potential and can't wait to see him blossom in these upcoming playoffs. Moses Moody, Brandin Podziemski, Santos, Post and others have stepped up their games to follow the lead of the veterans and contribute mightily. 

If you haven't been tuning into Golden State Warriors Basketball, you might wanna start paying attention now rather than watch it in a sports history documentary later. What we are seeing is not only historic, but fun and entertaining competition at its highest level.

Who Got Next?

Nuggets 104
Warriors 118

Who Got Next?:   Rockets vs Warriors (sat. 4/6)



Thursday, April 03, 2025

Lagrimas Negras, Cuba Feliz (Black Tears)

 


I just enjoy watching and listening to this impromptu Cuban jam session. Flavored with all the spices and ingredients found in a Cuban Barrio. As for the song itself, it speaks of one who cries and suffers over their loss of love. And yet even though love has abandoned thee, I will go on loving even if it costs me dying. Although the English translation might not relay the song's poetry, the video's festive faces and celebratory music is unmistakable. For as with love, we can do nothing but celebrate it, with all its ups and downs.

Viva La Cuba!


Black Tears
(a © translation of “Lágrimas Negras”)

Although you
have left me desolate with your abandon,
although you
have been death to my every illusion
instead of cursing you now
with justified rancor,
in my dreams I enshrine you,
in my dreams I enshrine you
with benediction.
(2X)

Immensity of pain I suffer over losing you,
my feelings so profoundly hurt
torn by your parting.
I cry without your knowing
and that lonely crying
weeps out a stream of black tears,
weeps out a stream of black tears
and all my living.
(1X)

You want leaving me
I can’t suffering be
so with you I go my darling
even it costs me dying.
(3X with 2 short breaks)

[It is impossible for me to match the poetry of the Spanish original in an English translation. Let me know if you perform “Black Tears” successfully.]

Lágrimas Negras — Español-English | manuelgarciajr


Tuesday, April 01, 2025

"No-one Has The Right To OBey!" - Hannah Arendt

 


As of this morning, Senator Cory Booker of New Jersey continues to hold the U.S. Senate floor, exposing what the Trump Administration has been doing to the country. His finger points blame primarily at the president and his hired non-government representative Elon Musk for their cutting and dismantling of vital services like Social Security. Senator booker is calling out republican colleagues, inviting them to "act according to one's conscience, when faced with orders when they are unjust."

While watching Senator Booker "yielding to questions while retaining the floor," I was encouraged to pose my own question for the senator to ask his Republican colleagues:

How can U.S. Senators and Congressmen continue to carry out Trumpian orders that hurt American citizens and go against the U.S. Constitution? Did not all legislators swear an oath to "Uphold the Constitution" and serve all Americans? Remember, "I do solemnly swear . . ."

The late political theorist and author Hanna Arendt in response to WWII Nazi SS officer Adolf Eichman, while he was on trial for crimes against humanity invoking the so-called Nuremberg Defense (I was only following orders), said this:

"No one has the right to obey"

meaning - subordination doesn't justify abdication of responsibility

emphasis - resisting unjust orders, rather than following them blindly


So, how is it so many of our well-meaning American representatives, voted into office by trusting American citizens, are turning their backs on civic duty while obeying unconstitutional and un-American presidential orders? Lord have mercy, that someday after this presidential crisis has passed, these representatives will cowardly invoke the Nuremberg Defense to avoid accountability and punishment as accomplices in their dereliction of duty while serving.

This American would like to hear Senator Cory Booker pose Hannah Arendt's comment in the context of a question to Trumpian Republican legislators:

Do you Senator or Congressman -fill in the blank- believe you have the right to obey orders knowing they will bring down long-standing American Institutions and hurt American Citizens and Families?


'I was only doing my job'. No-one has the right to obey | Cambridge Network

RaiderLegend: Hannah Arendt - Author of "The Origins of Totalitarianism

Hannah Arendt - Wikipedia