Friday, September 5, 2014

The Jewish New York Week - Connectings the World with Jewish News, Culture, Features, and Opinions "Yente-In-Chief, Rabbi Says Bye, Fall Spices" for Friday, 5 September 2014


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The Jewish New York Week - Connectings the World with Jewish News, Culture, Features, and Opinions "Yente-In-Chief, Rabbi Says Bye, Fall Spices" for Friday, 5 September 2014
Dear Reader,
A serious student of comedy -- no, that's not a joke -- writes a provocative appreciation of Joan Rivers. Don't worry, he quotes lots of jokes, too.
OPINION
Joan Rivers: Yente-In-Chief'
The 'mouth that roared' is silent, but in her life Rivers gave voice to outsiders and women.
Joseph Dorinson
Special to The Jewish Week
Joan Rivers was a fighter. Wikimedia Commons
Joan Rivers was a fighter. Wikimedia Commons
Joan Rivers was a – sometimes off-color – voice of outsiders and women, and a fierce defender of Israel.
The “mouth that roared” is now silent.
Born in Brooklyn in 1933 to Russian immigrant parents, Dr. Meyer and Beatrice Molinsky, Joan grew up in the shadow of an older sister and with many complexes. "I was so fat; I was my own buddy in camp." Despite her carefully crafted comic persona, she actually was a brilliant student, a graduate of Barnard College with high honors in 1954.
Ignoring her parents’ pleas, Joan pursued a career as an actress, dancer, and singer. But comedy provided a better fit. A long apprenticeship that included performing in the Catskill hotels (because she had a car and agreed to drive her male peers there and back), a stint with Chicago’s Second City ensemble, many night clubs, and some “toilets” ultimately led to success capped by a brilliant ten minutes on Johnny Carson’s Tonight Show in 1965.
Billed as a writer, Rivers, who changed her last name at her agent’s suggestion when she entered show business, was 32 when she vaulted into stardom. Her early shtick, with shades of traditional Jewish humor, featured self-deprecation, especially about her allegedly “ugly duckling” appearance. In fact, before multiple cosmetic surgeries, she was actually quite pretty if not drop-dead gorgeous. For example (from critic Sarah Blacher Cohen’s essay “Unkosher Comediennes”):
“On our wedding night, my husband said: ‘Can I help with the buttons?’ I was naked at the time.”
“You've heard of A Cup, B Cup and C Cup. Well, you're looking at demitasse.”
“Dress by Oscar de la Rental; body by Oscar Meyer.”
Obviously, she posed no threat to the femmes fatales or macho males in the audience. As a Jewish comedienne, she evaded the lethal blows of anti-Semitism by mocking our tribe and herself:
“I want a Jewish delivery – to be knocked out in the delivery room and wake up two weeks later at the hairdresser’s.”
“A Jewish porno film is made up of one minute of sex and six minutes of guilt.”
“Jews get orgasms in department stores.”
Unlike her female predecessors, Sophie Tucker, Fanny Brice, Totie Fields, and Belle Barth, the attractive Joan Rivers wrote her own material and launched an arsenal of verbal missiles at sundry targets.
She was a staunch defender of Israel. During an appearance on an Israeli comedy show, she declared of critics of Israel, “If they don’t love [Israel], tell them to go f*** themselves. Then she read a list of “Top Ten Ways to Say I Love Israel,” including “I love Israel so much, at night I go to bed wearing only Chanel No. 5 and an Uzi.”
During this summer war against Hamas terrorists in Gaza, she said, “You cannot throw rockets and expect people not to defend themselves. If New Jersey were firing rockets into New York we would wipe them out!”
Rivers peppered her routines with Yiddish words in order to proclaim, rather than hide, her Jewish identity.
In the late 1970s, she became more aggressive, dirtier like America’s fabled but polluted rivers. Average folks identified with Rivers when she attacked celebrities, the rich and so-called beautiful people, namely, Elizabeth Taylor, Christine Onassis, Nancy Kissinger, and Bo Derek. Rivers declared that Bo Derek, the putative “Ten,”  “is so dumb that she has to study for her Pap Test.” Inspired by the late Lenny Bruce, who had encouraged her to expand her vocabulary, Rivers began a barrage of shmutz (dirty words) to engage audiences in the pursuit of truth as Yente-in-Chief.
As she titillated her fans with a new rallying cry — “Let’s talk” — Rivers defended this dramatic departure as a response to “tasteless times.” In a real sense, Rivers spoke to the disaffected if not “silent majority” — for outsiders and women who lacked power but possessed other assets. Following the exhortation of Sophie Tucker, Rivers urged women to barter sex for rewards. “Marry rich. Buy him a pacemaker, then stand behind him and say BOO!” Playing it safely, however, she was both a feminist rebel and, at same time, an advocate for feminine guile
Growing more conservative in the 1980s, Rivers lampooned the Democratic ticket of Mondale and Ferraro as “Fritz and Tits.” If elected in 1984, they would constitute “three boobs in the White House.” The strategy of offending feminists and befriending Nancy Reagan was tailored to a new Joan Rivers persona. 
Crossing boundaries, seeking acclaim, Rivers pushed the envelope with hubris. When she, in accord with her husband-manager Edgar Rosenberg, decided to compete with Johnny Carson on the Fox network at the same late-night time slot, things fell apart. A furious Carson permanently broke off relations with his former acolyte. The experiment failed. Fox executives fired Edgar. Depressed and separated from Joan, Edgar committed suicide.
Undaunted, resilient, a “cat” with many lives, she clawed back to fame with jokes about her marriage, “gigs” on the red carpet as a fashionista alongside daughter Melissa, night-club performances, guest appearances on television, moonlighting as a shopping network pitchwoman, and performances at college venues.
I attended one show at Brooklyn College. That memorable evening featured Rue Paul, a transgendered performer, who was compelled to leave the stage prompted by a chorus of boos. Rivers followed with a masterful comedic act, but not before gently chiding the audience for its intolerance and urging all to be more open-minded. She rivaled Judy Garland as a gay icon.  More significantly, she gave voice to many Jews who had been fettered with that defensive sha-sha “don’t make waves” syndrome.
She was still fighting when that brilliant light dimmed before it died. The talk has ended but the laughter, evoked by aggressive Jewish humor, lingers on.
Joseph Dorinson, a professor of history at Long Island University, writes and lectures frequently about humor.
Rabbi Andy Bachman of the flourishing Park Slope synagogue Congregation Beth Elohim is leaving his pulpit to do poverty work. A well-known progressive, he's using his last sermon to chasten those progressives who oversimplify Israel's challenges.
GARY ROSENBLATT
Popular Rabbi's Parting Shot
Andy Bachman's last High Holy Days message will chasten progressives who oversimplify Middle East.
Gary Rosenblatt
Editor and Publisher

Gary Rosenblatt
Gary Rosenblatt
When I asked Rabbi Andy Bachman what he plans to speak about in his sermons during this, his last, Rosh HaShanah and Yom Kippur services as senior rabbi of Congregation Beth Elohim, I thought he would bring up the importance of closing the gap between the wealthy and the needy in this country.

After all, the 51-year-old rabbi built a reputation at the Park Slope, Brooklyn synagogue as a strong voice 
And on the JW's new Food & Wine page, we have a delightful recipe for an autumn cupcake. It's got cinnamon and ginger, and you could go crazy and add cloves, too. 
Gary Rosenblatt
Gary Rosenblatt
When I asked Rabbi Andy Bachman what he plans to speak about in his sermons during this, his last, Rosh HaShanah and Yom Kippur services as senior rabbi of Congregation Beth Elohim, I thought he would bring up the importance of closing the gap between the wealthy and the needy in this country.
After all, the 51-year-old rabbi built a reputation at the Park Slope, Brooklyn synagogue as a strong voice for progressive Judaism, giving secular Jews a sense of meaning through social justice and communal causes beyond ancient rituals and prayers. Over his nine-year tenure, membership doubled to 1,000 families. Last March, when he surprised his congregation with the news of his plan to step down from his pulpit in June 2015, Rabbi Bachman explained that he felt the need to devote his full-time energies to alleviating poverty in our society.
But when I posed the question about his theme for the High Holy Days later this month, his one-word response came without hesitation.
“Israel,” he said.
“My message will be, ‘Don’t abandon Israel.’”
Shaken by witnessing the effects of the Gaza war while visiting Jerusalem this summer, the rabbi said he plans to press home the point that the Mideast is an increasingly dangerous region with direct implications for us here in America.
Citing the rise of ISIS and Islamic militants in Syria, Gaza and Lebanon, he asserted that the violent aggression is “all interconnected” and that “Israel is at the front lines of a conflict that will affect us for the next 100 years, so we’d better get used to it.”
Critical, at times, of Jewish groups that advocated either widening the war or making deep concessions, he said he will “poke some holes on both sides. But I want to criticize the left internally,” he added, troubled by leaders who spent more time criticizing than defending Israel during the recent Gaza fighting.
Though he is a member of J Street and Rabbis for Human Rights, he said that dovish Jewish groups have “worthy values, but too often they don’t take into consideration how tough and complicated the world is.”
In a sense, “the terms ‘left’ and ‘right’ no longer apply” when it comes to Israel, according to the rabbi. It’s more about being a realist, recognizing the country’s very real security concerns while resisting what he sees as “the erosion of civil structures” in a society moving rightward.
“Who speaks for the center of American Jewry?” he wondered aloud, crediting AIPAC for “doing an amazing job of advocating for the government of Israel’s position” but noting that the pro-Israel lobby “is not about convening nuanced conversation on Israel and its policies.” That’s something that interests him as a worthy cause he may want to be involved in the future.
Rabbi Bachman is a longtime supporter of Yad b’Yad, the only bilingual Hebrew and Arabic school in Jerusalem. Having visited there recently he came away impressed that he could not tell which students were Jewish and which were Arab. He supports other programs as well that foster Jewish-Arab cooperation in Israel, whose society has “too great an emphasis on difference,” he said.
He thinks diaspora Jewry has “far less clout than we think” on Israeli politics, and that “the most impact we could have would be a mass aliyah of religiously pluralist Jews.” But he knows that is not likely, in part because most American Jews are not sufficiently devoted to live in an Israel that he says is far less multicultural than the U.S.
Personally, he would prefer to make aliyah now. What holds him back, he said, are the obligations of his family life, with a wife with a career and children in their teens. “As a student of history,” he said, “I am fascinated by the miracle of Jewish history and I wonder what it will all end up looking like.” Beyond his rabbinate, he plans to keep working toward ensuring a more open Israeli society.
“If I’m not moving there I have to find ways to stay in the game,” he said, with the goal of “creating new institutions.”
Among the projects Rabbi Bachman expressed an interest in launching is a post-high school gap year program in Israel for large numbers of American Jewish teens, recognizing the success of the Orthodox community in strengthening Jewish identity for their children through yeshiva programs in Israel. He is concerned about diminishing ties to Israel for non-Orthodox Jews here.
In the Aug. 1 entry of his thoughtful, often lyrical blog, “Water Over Rocks,” he wrote from Israel:
“I worry about American Jewry on this trip more than I ever have. I worry about their increasing alienation from the notion of a Jewish people, each of us inherently obligated to one another despite our differences; I worry about our understandable abhorrence of the killing of innocents that too quickly shifts to blame, guilt and distance from Israel … and I worry about a kind of liberal American Jewish hopelessness toward the Jewish national project, the dystopian other-expression of the very spirit that created this improbable, historically miraculous, wildly creative yet weighted, complex, imperfect nation.”
In our interview, he asked aloud, “What will it mean for American Jewry if the next leader of Israel will be a [Naftali] Bennett or [Avigdor] Lieberman,” right-wing cabinet members who advocate tougher policies regarding the Palestinians and “who don’t speak for most diaspora Jews?”
“Part of the exhaustion of liberal rabbis,” he noted, “is that it takes so much to move the needle” in terms of encouraging congregants to become more engaged, either in Israel advocacy or active Jewish life at home.
As for the future direction of American Jewry, which Rabbi Bachman calls “a huge challenge,” he says he is both “hopeful and despairing.”
There has never been “a more open time than now, with gays and lesbians ordained, women Orthodox rabbis,” (some would dispute that description) “and the Conservative movement slowly accepting non-Jews as members,” he said.
“Those are signs of great hope. But what frightens me is the allure of universal culture and multiple identities, with Jewish identity moving lower down on the priority list,” particularly among young people. That translates into “a smaller voice” to address “the lessons of Jewish history and values that assured our survival” for centuries.
Rabbi Bachman emphasized that though he will be leaving the pulpit, “I’m still a rabbi and I’m not done agitating.” It’s just that his focus will be on helping the broader community in “alleviating human suffering,” with an emphasis on areas like poverty, homelessness and gun control, rather than confining his energy to the Jewish community.
He hasn’t decided yet on a specific post.
Though he acknowledges he was “never motivated to bring God down to people,” and would sometimes tell his associate rabbis to “take your foot off the gas” when it comes to direct mentions of the Lord, Rabbi Bachman says he is not leaving his pulpit because of any personal crisis of faith, as some have speculated.
“I still pray and feel connected; I am a profound believer. And I want to deepen my commitment to my spirituality and to Jewish study,” he said. He also plans to continue to teach and to write. He is working on a book on what it means to be a Jew in the 21st century.
Rabbi Bachman’s career record suggests a degree of restlessness. “I need to change every seven years or so,” he said, having worked in politics in his native Wisconsin and as a Hillel rabbi at New York University before coming to Beth Elohim. But along the way he has learned that “as impatient as you may be, change comes slowly.” (Thus the title of his blog, “Water Over Rocks.”)
He is ready for the next chapter, well aware that he may be letting down many congregants who were devoted to his rabbinic style, which he described as “bringing secular Jews back into Jewish peoplehood,” and ensuring the continuation of Jewish heritage and tradition. But he believes he can be an example, to them and others, of someone who serves God by caring for as many of God’s people as possible.
Gary@jewishweek.org
Gary Rosenblatt has been the editor and publisher of The Jewish Week for 20 years and has written more than 1,000 "Between The Lines" columns since 1993. Now a collection of 80 of those columns, ranging from Mideast analysis to childhood remembrances as "the Jewish rabbi's son" in Annapolis, Md., is available. Click here for details.
Have a great weekend, everybody.
Best,
Helen Chernikoff
Web Director

ARTS GUIDE
ARTS GUIDE
Your weekly guide to what's hot in New York area arts.
Gabriela Geselowitz
Painter and Holocaust survivor Frederick Terna in the CUNY TV documentary. Courtesy of CUNY TV
Painter and Holocaust survivor Frederick Terna in the CUNY TV documentary. Courtesy of CUNY TV
The Buzz
Painter and Holocaust survivor Frederick Terna in the CUNY TV documentary. Courtesy of CUNY TV
Painter and Holocaust survivor Frederick Terna in the CUNY TV documentary. Courtesy of CUNY TV
 FREDERICK TERNA
CUNY TV’s “Arts in the City” program features this new short documentary about Frederick Terna, a New York City-based artist who first began drawing when he was a prisoner at Terezin. Also an Auschwitz survivor, Terna’s experiences during the Holocaust still inform his work today. After multiple screenings on television, the profile will be available for viewing online.
—Fri., Sept. 12 at 10 a.m. and 3 and 8:30 p.m. and Sun., Sept. 14 at 12 p.m., CUNY TV, cuny.tv/show/artsinthecity.
THE GOOD AND THE TRUE
This documentary drama enters its final week of performances at the DR2 Theater. The play takes its text from the testimony of two Prague natives who lived very different lives until the Holocaust, when they both survived internment at Auschwitz. The stories of athlete Milos Dobry and actor Hana Pravda, both now deceased, are heard onstage. Czech theater artist Daniel Hrbek directs.
—DR2 Theater, 101 E. 15th St., (212) 239-6200, goodandtrue.co.uk. Through Sept. 14.
EXPLORING LATIN AMERICAN CUISINE
Think of guava and cream cheese on matzah, or brisket tacos. Is your mouth watering? Then get to this special event, where a panel of experts discusses the Latin American Jewish food scene, from an exploration of early Sephardic influences to cuisine today. And of course the reception following the talk will boast Latin desserts.
—Sun., Sept. 14, 2:30 p.m., $20/$15 members. The Museum of Jewish Heritage – A Living Memorial to the Holocaust, Edmond J. Safra Plaza, 36 Battery Place. (646) 437-4202, mjhnnyc.org.
FILM
SHADOWS FROM MY PAST
In the new documentary “Shadows From My Past,” Gita Kaufman returns to Vienna, the city she fled as a child at the outset of World War II. While there, she and her husband and co-director Curt Kaufman explore the themes of guilt through the generations.
—Quad Cinema, 34 W. 13th St., (212) 255-8800, quadcinema.com. Through Sept. 4.
LE GRAND CAHIERS (THE NOTEBOOK)
This 2013 Hungarian film based on the Agota Kristof novel tells the story of twin boys during World War II, and how the incessant violence around them, anti-Semitic and otherwise, shapes, hardens, and perhaps corrupts them.
—Quad Cinema, 34 W. 13th St., (212) 255-8800, quadcinema.com.
OBVIOUS CHILD
Gillian Robespierre’s funny, emotional new film, “Obvious Child,” tells the story of Donna Stern (Jenny Slate), an aspiring comedian who faces several life changes, including an unexpected pregnancy that leads for a rare on-screen, realistic portrayal of abortion.
—Angelika Film Center New York (18 W. Houston St., [800] 326-3264) and Nitehawk Cinema (136 Metropolitan Ave., Brooklyn, [718] 384-3980).
IDA
Pawel Pawlikowski’s award-winning film takes place in Poland in the 1960s, a time when the country was still reeling from the aftermath of the WWII. The titular heroine, readying herself to take her vows to become a nun, discovers that she is Jewish, and that her parents were murdered in the Holocaust.
—Cinema Village, 22 E. 12th St., (212) 924-3363.
JERUSALEM
The new documentary “Jerusalem” seeks to reveal life in Israel by focusing on three local teenage girls from different religions, each giving a tour of her home city from a unique perspective. The film plays in IMAX in limited release.
—Cradle of Aviation Museum-National Geographic Theater, Charles Lindbergh Blvd., Garden City, (516) 572-4111, jerusalemthemovie.com.
THEATRE
WAITING FOR GODOT
After performing in Ireland, The New Yiddish Rep brings its recent production of “Waiting for Godot (Vartan af Godot)” — in Yiddish — back to New York as part of the seventh annual Origin Theatre Company’s 1st Irish Festival.
—Barrow Street Theatre, 27 Barrow St. Tickets from $35, (212) 868-4444, smarttix.com. Through Sept. 21.
OLYMPIC UBER ALLES
“Olympic Uber Alles,” examines a dark time in sports history, telling the story of Jewish sprinters Marty Glickman and Sam Stoller, who were banned from running on the U.S. track team in the 1936 Olympics, the so-called Hitler Games. The play also follows historians as they explore the incident.
—Performances Wed. at 2 p.m., Thurs. at 8 p.m. and Sun. at 1 p.m. St. Luke’s Theater, 308 W. 46th St., stlukestheatre.com. (212) 248-8140, Through Sept. 21.
GREED: A MUSICAL FOR OUR TIMES
This new musical comedy features several prominent corrupt bigwigs who fell from grace — including one Bernard Lawrence Madoff.
—Wednesdays 7 p.m., and Thursdays and Saturdays at 8 p.m., $40-$65, New World Stages, Stage 2, 340 W. 50th St., (212) 239-6200, www.telecharge.com. Open run.
BEAUTIFUL: THE CAROLE KING MUSICAL
“Beautiful: The Carole King Musical” traces the iconic singer/songwriter’s life and career, from her hits like “Will You Love Me Tomorrow?” to her relationship with Gerry Goffin, her songwriting partner and husband. Jessie Mueller and Jake Epstein star.
—The Stephen Sondheim, 124 W. 43rd St., (212) 719-1300, beautifulonbroadway.com. Open run.
MUSIC
JOHN ZORN’S MASADA
Fresh off his 60th birthday celebration, John Zorn, the downtown Jewish music guru who blends free jazz with klezmer, plays the storied Village Vanguard for the first time. The six-night gig has Zorn and a series of bands associated with him focusing on his “Book of Angels” series in his “Masada” songbook.
—Village Vanguard, 178 Seventh Ave. South, (212) 255-4037, villagevanguard.com. 8:30 and 10:30 p.m. each night through Sept. 7. Tickets from $25 with one-drink minimum.
MUSEUMS AND GALLERIES
MUSEUM OF JEWISH HERITAGE
“Against the Odds: American Jews & the Rescue of Europe’s Refugees, 1933-1941” presents both individual stories and a portrait of the collective experience of American Jews trying to help relatives, friends or even just strangers thousands of miles away, linked by the shared bond of religion. In particular, the exhibit explores how American immigration laws limited the power of those trying to assist, and how Jews overcame tremendous obstacles to help those in need.
—Museum of Jewish Heritage, 36 Battery Pl. (646) 437-4202. $7-$12.
MEL BOCHNER: STRONG LANGUAGE
Mel Bochner’s first job in New York was as a guard at The Jewish Museum. Now, it  is the artist’s conceptual paintings that will be stationed uptown, in an exhibit that explores the use of text and wordplay, and its intersection with Jewish tradition.
—The Jewish Museum, 1109 Fifth Ave., (212) 423-3200, thejewishmuseum.org.Through Sept. 21.
A TOWN KNOWN AS AUSCHWITZ: THE LIFE AND DEATH OF A JEWISH COMMUNITY
This exhibit explores the vibrancy, peacefulness and Jewish history of the town of Oswiecim, otherwise known as Auschwitz, emphasizing images of the day-to-day life and people that comprised this town before the Holocaust.
— Museum of Jewish Heritage, Edmond J. Safra Plaza, 36 Battery Place, (646) 437-4202, mjhnyc.org.
BE! (H’VEI)
Sara Erenthal was raised ultra-Orthodox in a Neturei Karta-affiliated family, but she escaped an arranged marriage as a teenager and today works as an artist. Her solo exhibition, “BE! (H’Vei),” includes sculptures, video and installations that reflect her journey.
—Gallery hours Thurs. and Fri. from 5 to 7 p.m., Sat. from 2 to 8 p.m. and Sun. from 3 to 6 p.m. Soapbox Gallery, 636 Dean St., Brooklyn, soapboxgallery.com. Through Sept. 13.
KINDSIGHT®
The 92nd Street Y hosts an exhibition of Photographer Robert G. Zuckerman’s “Kindsight®” series, emphasizing universal humanity and goodness in the face of an uncertain world. Zuckerman’s aim is also to raise awareness and research money for Adult Polyglucosan Body Disease, a Jewish genetic condition.
—92nd Street Y, 1395 Lexington Ave., (212) 415-5500, 92y.org/Exhibits. Through Oct. 20.
TALK
ISIS AND ISRAEL: WHY THE FUTURE OF IRAQ MATTERS FOR THE JEWISH STATE
AJC ACCESS, the committee’s program for young professionals, hosts this lecture from KCPS Clarity analyst Sam Chester about how Syria and Iraq affect the Jewish state. With light dinner.
—Wed., Sept. 3, 7 to 8:30 p.m., $15/$10 members. AJC NY Offices, 165 E. 56th St.,ajc.org/isisandisrael2014.
BEN G. FRANK
Author Ben G. Frank will discuss his new novel, “Klara’s Journey,” about a Jewish family during the Russian Revolution. Frank, an expert on Russia and the Ukraine, will also discuss the current crisis. Light refreshments to be served.
—Tues., Sept. 9, 12 to 2 p.m., J. Levine Books and Judaica, 5 W. 30th St., (212) 695-6888, levinejudaica.com.
TELEVISION
THE HONOURABLE WOMAN
Jewish-American actor Maggie Gyllenhaal stars in this dramatic, eight-part TV miniseries as the heir to a British-Israeli company, whose efforts to promote peace between Palestinians and Israelis get her embroiled in the conflict in a way that will put her in grave danger.
—New episodes Thurs. at 10 p.m. on SundanceTV.


 Blogs
THE POLITICAL INSIDER | THE ROSENBLOG | THE NEW NORMAL | A COMIC'S JOURNEY | WELL VERSED
THE NEW NORMAL
A Teacher And His Runaway Student: Preparing for the High Holidays by Rabbi Michael Levy
On Tuesday night, August 26, the "spiritual pre-season," 
Rabbi Michael Levy
Rabbi Michael Levy
leading up to Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur, began. We celebrated the first day of Elul, the Hebrew month during which Jews traditionally examine their behavior and contemplated self-improvement.
A Wake-Up Call from Our Liturgy
From Elul through the 8th day of Sukkot, we recite Psalm 27 twice daily. It begins "Of David, The Lord is my Light and my Salvation, whom shall I fear?  It concludes "Hope in the Lord, be strong and let your heart take courage, and hope in the Lord."  The Hebrew word for hope, "qaveh," also has the meaning of "expect, anticipate, await."
What Might God Expect from Us?
God wouldn't challenge us to improve ourselves if He had not given us the capacity to do so. Improvement can mean being less angry, being kinder to others, taking on a mitzvah, or succumbing less often to despair. For those of us who have disabilities, improvement can mean defying both the messages of limitation" that we too often receive, and doing something, large or small, to help all Jews with disabilities gain access to synagogues, schools and social events.
As Ethics of the Fathers points out, it is unrealistic to expect to "finish the job" quickly. Yet we must be strong and sincerely aspire to begin the work.
What Should We Expect from God?
Hoping in God is complicated.  On the one hand, His Attribute of Justice would treat every human being in accordance with his/her accomplishments and misdeeds. On the other hand, God's Attribute of Mercy is ready to forgive a truly contrite worshipper.
My Personal Picture of Hope
In his younger days, Dr. Hyman Grossbard worked at a school for children whose behavior was so disturbed that they couldn't live at home. Once one of the boys ran away from the school. Perhaps he had given up on self-improvement.
Frantically, Professor Grossbard drove around the area until he found the boy. He returned with the boy to within a few blocks of the school and stopped the car. He told the boy, "You have a choice now. I can drive you back to the school, and everybody will know that I caught you.  Or, I can let you can leave the car and walk back to school yourself. Everyone will then believe that you made your own decision to come back.
"If my supervisors ever find out about this arrangement, it could end my career.  Can I trust you to return to school on your own?"
The boy nodded. Professor Grossbard opened the door. The boy, with a renewed sense of dignity, walked back into the school himself.
I'd like to think that at this time of year, God searches for all of us, and reminds us that we have the power to correct our misdeeds. We can hope that God will trust us enough to decide ourselves to correct our misdeeds.
For Israel, for many innocents worldwide, and perhaps for many of us, 5774 has not been an easy year.  May 5775 bring out the best in individuals and in nations, so that God, seeing us all seeking the right path, blesses us beyond even our own expectations.
A native of Bradley Beach, New Jersey, Rabbi Michael Levy attributes his achievements to God’s beneficence and to his courageous parents. His parents supported him as he explored his small home town, visited Israel and later studied at Hebrew University, journeyed towards more observant Judaism, received rabbinic ordination, obtained a master’s degree in social work from Columbia University and lectured on Torah and disability-related topics.
As a founding member of Yad Hachazakah, the Jewish Disability Empowerment Center (www.yadempowers.org), Rabbi Levy strives to make the Jewish experience and Jewish texts accessible to Jews with disabilities. In lectures at Jewish camps, synagogues and educational institutions, he cites Nachshon, who according to tradition boldly took the plunge into the Red Sea even before it miraculously parted. Rabbi Levy elaborates, “We who have disabilities should be Nachshons --boldly taking the plunge into the Jewish experience, supported by laws and lore that mandate our participation.” Rabbi Levy is currently director of Travel Training at MTA New York City Transit. He is an active member of Congregation Aish Kodesh in Woodmere, NY. He invites anyone who has disability-related questions to e-mail him at info@yadempowers.org
POLITICAL INSIDER
UN Needs Day Of Atonement by Douglas Bloomfield
There is a greater likelihood that the United Nations will vote to blame Israel for global warming than it would to put Yom Kippur on the official holiday calendar of UN Headquarters as called for in an op ed in Wednesday's New York Times.
The article, by two top officials of B'nai B'rith, notes that the calendar already includes two Muslim holidays (Eid al-Adha and Eid al-Fitr), two Christian holidays (Good Friday and Christmas) and six American federal highways.
UN Headquarters, they point out, is in the city with the single largest Jewish population in the diaspora and in the country with the second largest Jewish population in the world. Jewish communities can be found in 120 of the UN member states.
Israel’s assailants at the United Nations often assert that they respect Jews and Judaism — and reserve their shrill disdain only for Israeli policies and Zionism
Here's a chance to demonstrate they are sincere and that their differences with Israel really are political not religious or racial, say the authors, Daniel S. Mariaschin and David J. Michaels. 
In addition to showing respect for a religion U.N. members claim to respect, the authors offer a practical reason as well for adopting the proposal:
Important United Nations events — even, sometimes, meetings related to Israel — have repeatedly been scheduled on major Jewish holidays, forcing Jewish diplomats and representatives of civil society to choose between their professional duties and their faith and families.
Last month 32 nations -- including Argentina, Canada, Israel, Nigeria and the United States -- declared support for adding Yom Kippur to the UN calendar, and the proposal was sent to a committee.
Secretary General Kofi Annan noted that "it has sometimes seemed as if the United Nations serves all the world's people but one:  the Jews." 
Yom Kippur would be a good opportunity for the United Nations to atone for this oversight and follow the advice of Secretary General Ban Ki Moon by making the world body “a place where Jews and the State of Israel can feel at home.”


 Food & Wine
The Perfect Fall Cupcake
Carrots, ginger and cinnamon give this baked treat all its flavor.
Amy Spiro - Online Jewish Week Columist
A Carrot, Ginger And Cinnamon Cupcake
As soon as September 1 hits I'm all about fall. I've just about had enough of summer with it's heatwaves and sweating, and I'm more than ready to move to the elegance of autumn. And nothing spells (or smells) more like fall than these cupcakes: chock full of carrots, ginger, orange zest and cinnamon. The cupcake is moist and dense from the carrots, and the cinnamony cream cheese frosting is the perfect pairing. 
One of my favorite baking tips when using the zest of any citrus fruit is to mix it together with the sugar in the recipe first, then let it sit for 5 to 10 minutes. This infuses the flavor in to the sugar and ensures an extra punch of flavor in the final baked product. Because of the zest and the ginger I kept the spicing here to a minimum, but a little hit of ground cloves wouldn't go amiss in this recipe. 
Amy Spiro is a journalist and writer based in Jerusalem. She is a graduate of the Jerusalem Culinary Institute's baking and pastry track, a regular writer for The Jerusalem Post and blogs at bakingandmistaking.com. She also holds a BA in Journalism and Politics from NYU.
Hide Servings & Times
Yield:
Makes 10-12 cupcakes
Active Time:
15 min
Total Time:
1 hr
Hide Ingredients
Cake:
1 teaspoon orange zest
1/2 cup sugar
5 tbsp butter or margarine, softened
1 egg plus 1 egg yolk
1 teaspoon vanilla
3-4 tablespoons milk
2/3 cup plus 2 tablespoons flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
1/3 teaspoon baking soda
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/3 teaspoon ground ginger
1 2/3 cups grated carrots
3 tablespoons finely chopped crystallized ginger
Frosting:
1/4 cup (½ stick) butter or margarine, softened
4 ounces cream cheese, softened
1 ½ cups confectioners sugar
1 teaspoon cinnamon
½ teaspoon vanilla
Hide Steps
Mix the orange zest with the sugar and let sit for 5 to 10 minutes (this could be a good time to grate your carrots).
Beat the butter and sugar together until light and fluffy. Add in the egg and mix to combine, then add the egg yolk and continue beating. Add in the vanilla and milk and beat to combine.
Add the flour, baking powder, baking soda, salt and ginger and mix until just combined. Stir in the carrots and finely chopped ginger until evenly distributed. Divide the batter among paper-lined muffin cases and bake on 350 F for 15 to 20 minutes until test done. Let cool.
Beat together the butter and cream cheese, then add in the sugar, cinnamon and vanilla. Add more sugar if frosting is not stiff enough. Frost cupcakes.
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