- SA Jewish Report
Transcription
- SA Jewish Report
ISRAELI ELECTIONS: RIGHT IS EXPECTED TO WIN / 6 TARARAM: BIG PLANS TO BRING SAUJS PLANS FOR ISRAEL ART ‘FLASHPOINTS’ AT WITS / 16 TO SA / 14 www.sajewishreport.co.za Friday, 6 February 2009 / 12 Shevat 5769 Volume 13 Number 4 Hajaig apologises in Cabinet for her anti-Semitic remarks THE CABINET ‘expressed concern’ about her original anti-Semitic statement as it was ‘contrary to the stated policies of this government’. Hajaig said the control of America and most Western countries, was ‘in the hands of Jewish money’. SEE PAGE 3 DANIEL S MARIASCHIN WASHINGTON Chavez picks up anti-Semitic flak OVER THE last few years, Venezuelan Jews have been increasingly the target of ever bolder anti-Semitic attacks. The latest example of growing hostility toward Jews came on January 30, when a Caracas synagogue was vandalised by armed perpetrators who threw Torah scrolls and prayer books on the floor, and wrote on the walls: "We don't want Jews here" and "Jews get out". Anti-Israel news abounds on state-controlled television and radio stations, which feature excerpts from The Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion, the antiSemitic tract claiming a Jewish plot to rule the world. These trends are a result of the atmosphere President Hugo Chavez is cultivating by singling out Jews from their countrymen. The Chavez regime called Israel a "genocidal" state that is willingly attacking the "peaceful, unarmed and defenceless Palestinians". Chavez said Israel withdrew from Gaza in 2005 in order to be able to attack the area and get rid of all the Palestinians. He says the United States would like to have "other Israels" in Latin America to attack the Latin American people. His statements underline his long alliance with Iran and his sympathy for the Iranian regime's extreme antiZionist and anti-Semitic agenda. In the picture, Chavez, at a recent march in Caracas. (JTA) CREDIT: BERNARDO LONDOY/CREATIVE COMMONS SEE PAGE 7 (Daniel S Mariaschin is executive vice-president of B'nai B'rith International.) Jewish Report inundated with Wendy Kahn on WJC SOCIAL SCENE: INSIDE FEATURE: more letters on Gaza / 8-12 team for ‘Durban II’ / 2 Essence of life / 4 Valentine’s Day / 19-21 YOUTH TALK / 16-17 SPORTS / 24 LETTERS / 8-12 CROSSWORD & BRIDGE / 18 COMMUNITY BUZZ / 5 WHAT’S ON / 18 2 SA JEWISH REPORT 06 - 13 February 2009 PARSHA OF THE WEEK Published by S A Jewish Report (Pty) Ltd, Suite 175, Postnet X10039, Randburg, 2125 Tel: 011-886-0162 Fax: 011-886-4202 Printed by Caxton Ltd EDITOR - Geoff Sifrin geoffs@icon.co.za Sub-Editor - Paul Maree Senior Reporter - Rita Lewis jont@global.co.za Editorial Assistant - Shelley Elk carro@global.co.za Sports Editor - Jack Milner jackmilner@telkomsa.net Youth Editor - Shelley Elk jewishreport@yahoo.com Books Editor - Gwen Podbrey Arts Editor - Robyn Sassen info@frodo.co.za Cape Town correspondent Moira Schneider: 021-794-4206 Pretoria correspondent Diane Wolfson: 082-707-9471 ADMINISTRATION MANAGER Melvyn Jaye MANAGER: SALES AND DISTRIBUTION Britt Landsman: brittl@global.co.za Sales Executives - (011) 886-0162 Britt Landsman: 082-292-9520 Tammy Freedman: 082-820-0509 Manuela Bernstein: 082-951-3838 Freelance Sales Executives Marlene Bilewitz & Assoc: 083-475-0288 Classified Sales jrclassified@global.co.za Design and layout Frankie Matthysen Nicole Matthysen February 6/ 12 Shevat February 7/ 13 Shevat Help, Steven Spielberg! HASHEM SAID to Moshe: “Now raise your staff and stretch out your hand and split the sea”... and Moshe stretched his hand over the water and Hashem made a strong east wind blow all night which split the sea. - Sh’mot 14 :16-21 Watch the “Prince of Egypt”, especially the part where Moshe splits the sea. Watch what happens. He sort of plunges his staff into the depths and wham, like some sort of magical shockwave, the sea splits. The movie has great drama and great action. Moshe is the hero who is the central, torn character: We learn that Pharaoh is his stepbrother and there’s this tangled love-hate relationship between them. And then at the climax, we have the hero, the sea and the Egyptians - a clashing tripod of torrential energies revealed in full DreamWorks splendour. But it is simply not what happened and not what the Torah wants us to hear. Instead, the Torah goes to great lengths to explain that it didn’t take a second to split the sea, it took the whole night long. And PARSHAT B’SHALACH Rabbi Ramon Widmonte Johannesburg there was no wham, bam shockwave which magically did the deed, but rather there’s a breeze which gets stronger and then it blows the whole night and causes some part of the seabed to become exposed and the Jews walk across it, and then the breeze dies down and the Egyptians are caught by the returning tide. The Torah is at pains throughout to give us a description devoid of any Harry Potter rationales, rather suggesting “natural” explanations. The Nile turning to blood has natural explanations as do the frogs, lice, locusts and all of the plagues. How average! How mundane! Or so it seems. But this is at the heart of what the Exodus, y’tzi-at DAVID SAKS SAJBD NATIONAL Director Wendy Kahn has been appointed to the World Jewish Congress Durban II working group following her attendance at the 13th plenary assembly of the World Jewish Congress (WJC), held in Jerusalem last week. Kahn’s appointment to the sevenperson working committee was made following a special session with Jewish communal professionals to plan a strategy for the upcom- ing United Nations Review Conference to the 2001 World Conference Against Racism (WCAR). The SAJBD’s experience in dealing with major UN conferences that have been held in South Africa, including the WCAR and subsequent World Summit on Sustainable Development, enabled Kahn to make constructive, practical input into the discussions. Jewish leaders worldwide are joining forces in seeking to prevent the Review Conference, which is to take place in Geneva in April this year, BOARD OF DIRECTORS Honourable Abe Abrahamson (Chairman), Issie Kirsh, Bertie Lubner, Herby Rosenberg, Russell Gaddin, Marlene Bethlehem, Stan Kaplan, Norman Lowenthal. Mr Justice Meyer Joffe (Chair, editorial comm) The following symbols will appear on advertisements and/or advertising features to indicate whether or not they are kosher. Where no Kashrut mark appears on an advert, the Jewish Report assumes no responsibility for the Kashrut status of that establishment or advertiser: NK Non-Kosher K Kosher Where no symbols appear, consult the Beth Din Kosher Guide or contact the advertiser. Advertisements and editorial copy from outside sources do not neccessarily reflect the views of the editors and staff. mitzrayim, is all about. The Torah’s story is not about one man, a magical hero, a Moses. It’s also not about a magical G-d who lets rip with mind-blowing special effects. All of this is in the background. We know that Hashem could have taken us out of Egypt in a second and destroyed Egypt as easily without any plagues at all. The real story is about a man, Pharaoh, who is a slave to his power. And it’s about a people, the Jews, who give up power to become free. Pharaoh is a slave to his own desire for power. He cannot, even when “Egypt is lost”, relax his grip on this drug. He must control. He must at least squeeze some concession from his slaves. He feels he is nothing and has nothing if his will cannot coerce some other. The Jews, on the other hand, give up power to become free. How? Rav Soloveitchik makes a remarkable comment. He says, can we imagine what “normal people” would do if after 210 years of slavery and torture, they became the masters, and their masters were at their mercy? There would be a massacre and a frenzy of vengeful destruction. But what do the Jews do? Hashem has shattered their shack- Erev Shabbat Starts 18:15 18:23 18:15 18:20 17:55 18:15 Ends 19:30 20:23 19:24 19:42 19:54 19:43 Johannesburg Cape Town Durban Bloemfontein Port Elizabeth East London les. The Egyptians are gibbering idiots - gone is their arrogance, replaced by numbing terror. But the Jews do not take revenge. They do not plunge Egyptian children into the Nile. They restrain themselves. They do not exercise power over some other. Instead, they exercise power over themselves. They sit together in family groups, late into the night, eating the korban pesach, living freedom. Y’tziat mitzrayim is about one idea - an idea which has rocked the world since then. It’s about freedom, which the Torah teaches us is the ability to master oneself in the pursuit of what is ultimately moral and good. That’s something you can’t put in a special effect. SAJBD’s Kahn appointed to WJC Durban 11 working group Subscription enquiries Avusa Publishing (Pty) Ltd Tel: 0860-13-2652 KASHRUT SHABBAT TIMES The South African delegation with WJC Secretary General Michael Schneider. From left: Cecelia Smollan, Mervyn Smith, Dalia Lichtenstein, Wendy Kahn, Michael Schneider and Rabbi Moshe Silberhaft. from being turned into a platform for anti-Semitism and radical antiIsrael activism as happened with its now notorious Durban predecessor. Over 600 delegates from 62 countries attended the three-day conference, which focused on such issues as the threat of Iran, the Gaza question and reports on antiSemitism in India, Norway, Turkey and Venezuela. There was also a commemorative event at Yad Vashem to mark International Holocaust Memorial Day. President Shimon Peres, Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni, Defence Minister Ehud Barak, Diaspora Minister Isaac Herzog, Likud Chairman Benjamin Netanyahu and Jerusalem Mayor Nir Barkat, addressed various sessions of the plenary assembly. The South African delegation took advantage of the occasion to distribute to every delegate a copy of the SAJBD’s newly-completed “Let’s Talk Israel” e-book, an innovative multi-media advocacy project which promotes Israel’s credentials as a multiracial democracy and refutes the “apartheid” comparison. Kahn gave a brief overview of Bethlehem reappointed to CRL Commission DAVID SAKS LAST FRIDAY, veteran Jewish communal leader Marlene Bethlehem and 17 others were sworn in for a five-year term as commissioners on the Commission for the Promotion and Protection of the Rights of Cultural, Religious and Linguistic Communities (CRL Commission). The swearing-in ceremony, conducted by Mr Justice Skewiya, took place at Constitution Hill, adjacent to the Constitutional Court, in Braamfontein. Bethlehem completed a five-year term as deputy chairman of the Commission in December last year. She is one of just three of the original 18 commissioners who have been reappointed. Bethlehem said she was delighted to be back for a second term and thanked the SAJBD for motivating on her behalf. It was an honour to serve on so august a body on behalf of the Jewish community, she said. The stated mission of the CRL Commission, which was established in terms of the Promotion and Protection of the Rights of Cultural, Religious and Linguistic the project, using extracts to demonstrate how it could be used in countering commonly made accusations against Israel and Zionism swiftly and effectively. Veteran South African Jewish communal leader Mervyn Smith, a former national chairman of the SAJBD and currently long-serving president of the African Jewish Congress, was elected as a vicepresident of the WJC. Other members of the South African delegation were Dalia Lichtenstein, Rabbi Moshe Silberhaft and Josh Schewitz (SAUJS). Ronald S Lauder was re-elected as WJC president and Eduardo Elsztain and Cobi Benatoff were elected as chairman of the governing board and treasurer respectively. Former South African Michael Schneider was re-appointed secretary general. It was resolved that participants would work intensively with their communities over the next three months to minimise possible negative repercussions of the Durban II conference. Representations will also be made to the Holy See concerning the revocation of the excommunication of Holocaust denier Bishop Williamson, by Pope Benedict XVI. Communities Act of 2002, is to “promote and develop peace, friendship, humanity, tolerance and national unity among cultural, religious and linguistic communities”. It has become an important forum for South Africa’s many and varied ethnic, religious, racial and linguistic communities to find common ground as fellow South Africans and work towards resolving their differences. UPCOMING FEATURES 2009.... February 13 Focus on Dunkeld Contact Tammy or Manuela February 20 Focus on Illovo Contact Manuela Bernstein February 27 The Office Contact Tammy Freedman TO ADVERTISE TEL: (011) 886-0162 for more information 06 - 13 February 2009 SA JEWISH REPORT SAJBD rejects Hajaig’s ‘so-called apology’ position in government”. Specifically, the SAJBD said that the deputy minister’s statement had THE SAJBD has unreservedly reject“failed to address, let alone repudiate ed a “so-called apology” from Deputy and unequivocally retract the racist Foreign Minister Fatima Hajaig for anti-Semitic hate speech statement” anti-Semitic statements she made at a made by her, which led one to “the rally in Lenasia south of Johaninevitable conclusion that she stood nesburg, last month. by her statement made at the Lenasia On Tuesday, Hajaig read a three- Fatima rally”. minute statement over the radio Hajaig While apologising for “any hurt” regarding her statements at the rally and the reaction to them. This included only she may have caused the Jewish community, a brief and evasive reference to her previous she had done so only “in passing”, as if it was assertion that the control of America and of of no great concern. While interviewed on the matter by e-tv, most Western countries, was “in the hands of Jewish money”. The bulk of the state- SAJBD National Chairman Zev Krengel furment concerned her pro-Palestinian sympa- ther commented that far from making an thies and anti-apartheid “Struggle” creden- apology and retraction, Hajaig had in fact used the opportunity to further propagate her tials. As read over the radio, Hajaig said in this pro-Palestinian views, and in doing so had regard: “At a singular point in my talk, and seemingly sought to justify her offensive entirely unrelated to any South African remarks about Jews. The SAJBD concluded by urging the South community, I conflated Zionist pressure with Jewish influence. I regret the inference African government to unequivocally distance itself from the “false, inflammatory and made by some that I am anti-Jewish.” In a media release, the SAJBD said that racially offensive statement” made by the Hajaig’s latest statement had been “deliber- Deputy Minister. The SAJBD last week took the matter to the ately crafted in a manner to obfuscate the issue” that had given rise to the complaint it Human Rights Commission and that still had lodged against her with the SA Human stood. There had also been concern from abroad expressed on the deputy minister’s Rights Commission. Far from constituting an acceptable apolo- stance, awaiting a formal denunciation from gy, the SAJBD said that Hajaig’s statement Foreign Affairs Minister Nkosazana Dlaminihad served only “to compound her original Zuma on South Africa’s formal point of view. hate speech declaration”, which had insult- The minister’s silence - thus far - has been ed world Jewry, America and other Western deafening. Jewish Report on Tuesday submitnations and reflected South Africa “in an ted a series of questions to her office on this extremely poor light having regard to her issue and is awaiting a reply. DAVID SAKS International Jewry slams Hajaig slurs DAVID SAKS LEADING INTERNATIONAL Jewish organisations have joined in condemnation of Deputy Foreign Minister Fatima Hajaig’s allegations that Jewish money power controls America and other Western countries. The Anti-Defamation League of B’nai B’rith (ADL), World Union of Jewish Students and American Jewish Committee’s Africa Institute (AJCAI) have deplored Hajaig’s remarks, describing them as a betrayal of the ideals of non-racism that underpin South Africa’s post-apartheid society. All three organisations have written to President Kgalema Motlanthe to express their concern and urge him to take appropriate action to address the matter. In an ADL media statement, National Director Abe Foxman said: “For the government to remain silent in the face of prejudiced sentiments directed against the Jewish community in South Africa enables an environment of intimidation and hate to become socially acceptable,” Foxman said. In a letter to President Motlanthe, AJCAI Chairman Stanley Bergman wrote that Hajaig’s statements were an offence against not only the Jewish community of South Africa but against South African society as a whole. Chaya Singer, the newly elected chairman of the World Union of Jewish Students, in her letter to Motlanthe said: “We believe this to be a betrayal of the non-racist, democratic and tolerant society that South Africa is seeking to build,” she wrote. Welcome, Mampara Fatima Hajaig FOR MANY years, the satirical Hogarth column on the leader page of the Sunday Times, has torn strips off well-known personalities - usually politicians - invariably deflating huge egos and simply cutting them down to size and poking fun at their pomposity and thoughtless remarks. What most of these “celebrities” or “public figures” dread, is the last entry in the column, the “Mampara of the Week”. A “mampara” is a fool, a dunce or someone acting plain stupid. This “Mampara of the Week” is a badge of infamy no-one wears with pride. Some of the better-known mamparas have been ANC Youth League President Julius Malema (or Jelly Tsotsi as some irreverent journalists have dubbed him); also our Dr Beetroot, our former Minister of Health Manto TshabalalaMsimang; and the hardy annual, the Butcher of Harare, Robert Mugabe. Last week’s choice as “Mampara” was Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs Fatima Hajaig. “Can it really be true? Those recent comments by deputy foreign affairs minister Fatima Hajaig to the effect that the United States was in the ‘grip of Jewish money power’ amounts to what has been described as the ‘first instance of public Jew-baiting by a member of the government in over half a century’? “Sadly, and shamefully, yes. “Hajaig has yet to apologise for, or explain, her rabid anti-Semitism. Her hate-filled nonsense begs a response from the government and there has been none. And how insulting. “This midgety mampara has no place in foreign affairs. She is a foreign object, which must be expelled from the body politic. Laxatives, anyone? “Heil Hajaig!” 3 4 SA JEWISH REPORT 06 - 13 February 2009 SOCIAL SCENE Rita Lewis jont@global.co.za Loving kindness the essence of life The takers of this world eat well, but the givers sleep better said Rabbi Yehuda Stern at a dinner at the HOD in Johannesburg, organised by the Behr family ‘to honour and pay tribute to those who serve the community’. STORY AND PHOTOGRAPHS BY RITA LEWIS RABBI STERN was one of the speakers who encouraged the gathering to continue their work of giving to those less fortunate because "Hashem takes note of everything given in this world". Other speakers included Chief Rabbi Warren Goldstein, Steven Adler, president of the Chevrah Kaddisha, Yad Aharon's, Alice Friedman and Maurice Behr. The annual dinner was given by Maurice Behr and his sons Phillip and Ross, in memory of Israel Jacob and Mary Behr, in conjunction with the Orange Grove shul. Addressing the gathering, Behr said: "You are all special people. You can walk tall with pride. Loving kindness is the essence of life and this is what this function embraces." Understanding this were representatives of 26 organisations - as well as the 13 organisations invited there by Investec. Investec's connection was that the guest speaker, Setlogane Manshidi, head of Corporate Social Investments, a division of Investec, had come to the event to describe how just being nurtured by a loving Jewish couple, had given him the impetus to make something of himself. He recalled how his mother had worked as a domestic for a Jewish couple, Mark and Sandy Sussman, for 31 years. "I therefore got to know about gefilte fish, yarmulkes etc. But what I got to know about life itself is what they taught me. "I can only attribute what I am today to being brought up in their backyard. They taught me to realise I could rise above my situation. Through their caring they encouraged me to study. To learn. To aim high. "I am humbled to hear about all the efforts made by Jewish people to help others... and not expecting anything in return." He spoke of visiting the camps where the victims of xenophobia were being helped by Jewish organisations and was "deeply touched and humbled". After his speech, presentations were made to Morris Behr and to two groups of youngsters, chosen by their head teachers "for visiting the elderly, sick and lonely and bringing warmth, love and caring into their hearts". Chazan Ezra Sher, Mark Shapiro and George Mxadana, musical director of Imilonji Ka Ntu Male Choir, accompanied by Evelyn Green, entertained the guests. Mxadana recently received an award from President Kgalema Motlanthe for his contribution to music in Africa. Morris Behr presents a bouquet of flowers to his PA, Glynis Sifris for all her efforts. Gail and Morris Behr with Bradley and Jody Benater, Sean and Desiree Kramer and Celia Singer. Rabbis Siggy Suchard, Moshe Kurtstag rosh Beth Din, Avraham Vigler and Yehuda Stern with host, Morris Behr (centre). Some of the girls who received acknowledgement for their many acts of kindness, Shani Hurwitz, Candice Sifris, Amanda Blankfield, Natalie Fisher, Emma Berkenfeld and Ilanit Chernick. Holding the gift presentation for Morris Behr are Ryan Sifris and Justin Sher. Chazan Ezra Sher, Mark Shapiro and George Mxadana, musical director of Imilonji Ka Ntu Male Choir, entertain the gathering. Compassionate learners Ari Katz, Ariel Sobel with their certificates presented by Rabbi Yehuda Stern next to Morris Behr and Mark Friedman. Mosoane Morgan, Setlogane Manshidi, Tumelo Mabitsela, Morris Behr and Tshepo Kgame - delegates from Investec and the Kutlwanong Centre for Maths, Science and Technology. Guest speaker, Investec's Setlogane Manshidi. 06 - 13 February 2009 COMMUNITY BUZZ LIONEL SLIER 082-444-9832, fax: 011-440-0448, lionel.slier@absamail.co.za MUIZENBERG From David Abel: “I remember standing on the Muizenberg Pavilion, looking down at the Snake Park at young boys and girls during the summer of 1955. “One of our crowd told us a story which could or could not, be true. Apparently a young man from Johannesburg had looked down at the bevy of young, beautiful girls below and asked his Cape Town companions: ‘Who is the daughter of the richest Jew in Cape Town?’ “When his friends pointed out a certain young lady, the Johannesburger went down and introduced himself. Legend has it that he later proposed and married her!” MUIZENBERG From Hyman Jocum: “In recent years revisionist English historians have been trying to dissociate Cecil Rhodes’s name with Muizenberg by claiming that he bought a cottage in St James where he died in March 1902. “Few people knew Rhodes better than his private secretary, Philip Jourdan, who loyally served his employer to the very end of Rhodes’s eventful but short life. “In his biography of Rhodes, Jourdan states that Rhodes first discovered Muizenberg early in the summer of 1881. What appealed to Rhodes most about Muizenberg were the cool iodine flavoured sea breezes which helped the (then) young Member of Parliament breathe more easily. “As the nearest railway station was at Wynberg, 12 kilometres away, only visitors who owned horse carriages could enjoy the luxury of visiting Muizenberg which boasted one hotel, Farmer Peck’s Inn, which, incidentally, had been in existence since 1825. “But for the Rhodes biography, few would have known that in 1881, the hotel was owned and managed by Mr and Mrs Isidore Hirsch who bought Farmer Peck’s Inn in 1880 and ran it until March 1895 when it was sold to Charles King. “While Mrs. Hirsch supervised the kitchen, Isidore Hirsch ran the bar which could never have seen a shortage of customers as a British army camp was situated directly opposite from Camp to School Roads. “Isidore Hirsch also erected a men’s changing premises on the beach. It was known as Farmer Peck’s Bathing House and was demolished in 1910 to make way for the wooden pavilion.” SA JEWISH REPORT Blumsohn.” JOHANNESBURG From Ian Spitz: “I refer to the article about the welldeserved award given to Dr David Blumsohn by the University of the Witwatersrand at the Faculty of Health Sciences graduation ceremony on December 10 2008. (SA Jewish Report January 23 2009). In fact, Dr Blumsohn was not the only recipient of an illustrious award. “My wife, Charlotte and my daughter, Moira, were at the ceremony to witness my brother, Professor Lewis Spitz, receive an Honorary Doctorate, being the University’s highest honour after which he gave the keynote address to the new graduates. “Lewis grew up in Pretoria and started his tertiary education at Tukkies, then proceeded to Wits where he specialised in paediatric surgery. In 1980, after five years at the Children’s Hospital, Sheffield, he took up the appointment as Consultant Paediatric Surgeon, Great Ormond Street, London, culminating in his being offered the chair of paediatric surgery at the University of London. “He became renowned as one of the foremost paediatric surgeons in the world and a leader in the separation of conjoined (Siamese) twins. In 2005, an hour-long BBC production marking his retirement, was aired on TV. “It was gratifying to note that the honours at the Wits ceremony went to two outstanding Jews, but what disturbed me was that out of a total of 164 medical and dental graduates, less than five per cent were Jews. “I often wonder that with today’s criteria for admission, whether Lewis would have been accepted into the medical faculty of a local university. Food for thought!” BENONI Rollo Berman continues: “I remember my cousin, Wolfie Levy saying to me: ‘I’m taking you for a steak.’ “So, off we would go to the Criterion Restaurant which was famous in its time for ‘grills’. It was run by a family named Davis. My cousin would go armed with a chequebook to pay for the meal. “Credit cards were not known at that period. I wonder if the restaurant still exists. (It doesn’t -ed). “I will never forget the visit to the Toweel family house in Benoni, where I saw Vic Toweel, the bantamweight champion of the world, in action. There I saw the whole family backing and training Vic in the ring. “I was so excited that I told my friends about it when I got home. Yes, as the song goes, Benoni, ‘you are always on my mind’.” PIETERSBURG/POLOKWANE. From Gwen Heiman: JOHANNESBURG From Maurice Blumsohn: Concluding the accolade given to Prof David Blumsohn by Prof H P Laburn, dean of the Faculty of Health Sciences, Wits University: “David Blumsohn is a scholar of note. Not only has he published widely in medical literature, but he has also been invited to leading cardiological and other medical institutions in North and South America as visiting professor, researcher or teacher. “Our own students hold him in the highest regard as teacher and mentor. He regularly receives letters and gifts from the students expressing their gratitude for his teaching, philosophy, guidance and mentoring and for showing them the importance of patient-centred medicine. “He was the recipient of the P V Tobias and Convocation Award for distinguished teaching in 1996. He is definitely one of the students’ heroes which is borne out by the fact that he has been guest speaker at the final year medical students’ ball for the past five years. “Professor Blumsohn also has scholarly interests outside of medicine. He holds a doctorate in Semitic languages and is extremely widely read. “In recognition of the abovementioned extraordinary contributions to the Faculty of Health Sciences and its students and to the community of Soweto, it is an honour to award the Gold Medal of the University of the Witwatersrand to Professor David “I knew Max and Anne Himmelhoch who were buried in Polokwane. Anne was a sister to Abe, Jack, Harry and Minnie Serman of Louis Trichardt. They married and had two sons, Nathan and Stanley, who were orphaned very young, I think about seven and nine years old, when they passed away. “The boys then went to live with their aunt and uncle Jack and Rose Serman who were also my aunt and uncle and were then living in Graaff-Reinet in the Cape where they owned a hotel. “The Serman children are still in touch with Nathan and Stanley Himmelhoch who are both living in Israel. “I also knew the Brenners and Palte families of Pietersburg, but not as intimately as the Himmelhochs, as I was very young then.” WELKOM Told by Lionel Gilinsky to Anne Lapedus Brest: “Some of the Jewish families were: Eva and Izak Queit (concession and outfitting stores). Sachs (who owned Welkom Pharmacy), Cherin, Levitt, Hack, Max Greenberg, pharmacist, Hollanders (jewellers), Hersch, Harry Keftel, Smokey Simon (life insurance agent, a former Israeli and RAF pilot). “Dr Matty Cohen (GP emigrated to Israel), Dr Moss (dentist), the Ogus family. (Mrs Ogus ran a fish and chips shop).” 5 6 SA JEWISH REPORT 06 - 13 February 2009 OPINION AND ANALYSIS FORUM FOR DIVERSE VIEWS A very Jewish debate THE LETTERS to the Jewish Report triggered by Israel’s Gaza operation continue flooding in. This debate is important, both for the topic itself and the vitality of the Jewish community. We have given several pages to the letters; even so, we will simply not have space to publish all of them. This is the biggest influx of letters we have experienced in the more than 10 years of the paper’s existence. It is gratifying that Jews from a broad spectrum are so moved that they are taking the trouble to sit down and write a letter for public consumption, taking ownership of the forum of this paper. Open debate has always been part of our vision - even if heated and contentious - for the benefit of the community as a whole. Many people from the mainstream are participating, as well as others who are Jewish but have not generally identified with the mainstream and have never done so publicly in a Jewish forum. They are insistently claiming their Jewish identity, saying they will not yield it to others. It is good for the richness and diversity of the community - an expression of broad democracy in action, where everyone, from ordinary people to leaders and thinkers, can participate and make their voices heard. All the letters show the passion of the writers and their confidence in standing up for their views about Jewishness, Israel, South Africa, etc - a reflection of a mature community. Different kinds of letters are apparent. Firstly, there are those either defending Israel itself, or criticising it. Then there are those arguing for “community unity” - essentially, that we should not show the world that Jews don’t all agree on Gaza and Israel, lest it give ammunition to our enemies. To some of these writers, Jewish critics of Israel are “traitors”, endangering us in a world of antiSemitism and threat. Conversely, others insist it is essential that all Jewish voices are heard, whatever direction they are coming from, and that this diversity is a source of strength. Pretending all Jews think - or should think alike is both false and dangerous: false, because an abiding characteristic of the Jewish world, and a source of its genius, is the diversity of voices on every topic, that Jews do not march in lockstep; dangerous because when community pressure forces people to keep silent about their views when they are different from an “accepted” version, deep resentment results, and erosion of feelings of “belonging”. No-one has a monopoly on the truth or the “correct” perspective. Others have challenged communal organisations, saying they cannot speak for all Jews, many of whom don’t belong to the mainstream, but are fully Jewish and identify as such. The notion of open debate itself is given attention by some letters. There have been attacks on the Jewish Report for its insistence on this, and for publishing certain letters, particularly of a “leftwing” slant; although we are also criticised for being too weighted towards the “right”. Fortunately, most people have come to appreciate the Jewish Report as a forum for diverse views, for robust debate - that particular letters do not necessarily reflect the views of the paper itself. A few years ago this was not the case - the paper was slammed by some readers whenever it carried anything not conforming to their personal views. In many of the letters, the “never again” theme is present. In other words, “never again” will Jews allow themselves to be led to the slaughter like lambs, as happened in the Holocaust; they will fight back, the world needs to know that, and Israel’s strong response to the Hamas rockets is an illustration of this principle. One unfortunate tendency is that some letterwriters have launched personal attacks on previous writers with whom they disagree, in order to discredit their views, rather than addressing the issues themselves in a dignified way. This is understandable in robust debate, but only up to a point. What comes through clearly in all the letters is the passion evoked among all Jews by this tiny piece of Middle East land called Israel, whatever they think about its nature and politics. Even people who reject the idea of its existence as a “Jewish state” are paradoxically engaging vigorously with the issue of its “Jewish” behaviour and demanding high “Jewish” standards. This debate is a very Jewish one. We should cherish it. Billboard shows Israel’s three candidates for prime minister in the Feb. 10 elections: from left, Tzipi Livni, Ehud Barak and Benjamin Netanyahu. (CREDIT: BRIAN HENDLER) Polls point to decisive win for Israeli right LESLIE SUSSER JERUSALEM IF THE polls are right, the outcome of next Tuesday’s Israeli election is a foregone conclusion. Not only does Benjamin Netanyahu’s Likud seem bound to emerge as the largest single party, but the bloc of right-wing and religious parties that it leads seems certain to garner a winning majority in the 120-member Knesset. All the latest polls put Likud ahead of Tzipi Livni’s ruling Kadima Party, some by as many as 12 seats (34-22), others by as few as three (28-25), which theoretically is a small enough margin to be overcome via a coalition deal. But all the surveys without exception give the religious and rightwing parties a virtually unassailable lead, ranging from at least 10 seats (65-55) to as many as 18 (69-51). That means Netanyahu is almost certain to be invited to form the next government. The only question seems to be the nature of the coalition he forms. Will he go for a narrow right-religious government that includes the hardline Yisrael Beiteinu party led by Avigdor Lieberman; two fervently Orthodox parties, Shas and Torah Judaism; and two national-religious parties, Jewish Home and National Union, associated with supporters of the settlements? Or will he opt for a national unity government that also includes Kadima and/or Ehud Barak’s Labour Party? Netanyahu claims his biggest mistake as prime minister from 1996 to 1999 was in not forming a national unity coalition with thenLabour leader Shimon Peres. It is a mistake he does not intend to repeat. This time, Netanyahu says, he wants to establish the widest possible national unity government with the parties on the right balanced by Kadima and Labour on the left. Likud insiders, however, suggest that he would actually prefer to leave Kadima in opposition, where he believes it will disintegrate as a political force. The thinking is that Kadima in opposition might split, with the hawks rejoining the Likud in return for government portfolios. Moreover, including Labour without Kadima would be enough to enhance the otherwise hard-line government’s international image and, more importantly, give Netanyahu a degree of flexibility in the Cabinet in dealing with peacemaking initiatives. Livni, who just four months ago seemed certain to become the country’s next prime minister, is now very much the underdog, and she is pulling out all the stops. Her most recent campaign tactic is to appeal for support as a woman. A campaign ad suggests that no one would question the prime ministerial credentials of a man with her record: army officer, Mossad agent, head of the government companies’ authority, minister of immigrant absorption, regional co-operation, justice and foreign affairs, and deputy prime minister. Livni is also highlighting the “Obama factor”, arguing that an intransigent Netanyahu-led government would be almost certain to clash with a new US administration bent on bringing peace to the Middle East. Israel needs to put a peace plan on the table now because time is running out, she declared on Monday at a conference on national security. As for Barak, the most significant element of his campaign is the way he has been targeting Livni, not Netanyahu. More than anyone else, he has played on the “think twice before voting for a woman” card. When Livni called for tough action in the wake of renewed rocket fire from Gaza this week, Barak referred to her as “gveret mebarberet” - the chattering lady - and said he found it difficult to see people who had never held a gun or fought a battle calling for military action. In contrast, Barak, a former chief of staff of the Israel Defence Forces, highlights his performance as defence minister in the 22-day war against Hamas in Gaza. Given Israel’s tough security environment, he suggests that anyone who can manage the defence portfolio can also serve as prime minister. But Barak’s chances of actually winning the election seem negligible. According to the polls, the best he can hope for is perhaps to supplant Livni as runner-up. Whether or not Labour finishes ahead of Kadima, Barak’s post-election dilemma is likely to be whether to join a Netanyahu government that includes the hawkish Lieberman. As much as Barak would like to stay on as defence minister under Netanyahu, there are strong voices in Labour insisting that if Lieberman, who is advocating a “loyalty test” for Israeli Arabs and says only he knows how “to deal” with them, they will stay out in principle. Netanyahu, however, will find it difficult to keep out Lieberman. Indeed, Lieberman has been the big story of the 2009 election. Latest polls give his strident Yisrael Beiteinu party about 16 Knesset seats, with some even placing it ahead of Labour as the country’s third largest party. Lieberman, who emigrated from the Soviet Union in 1979, started his political life close to Netanyahu in the Likud. In 1999, after a falling-out with the then-prime minister, Lieberman founded a small Russian immigrant party, which has since developed into a major force on the international stage. In this election, he calculatingly fanned anti-Arab sentiment to build a wide base of electoral support. The showdown with Hamas and the widespread criticism by Israeli Arabs of the devastation in Gaza helped his cause. His main election slogan - “No citizenship without loyalty” - suggests that if empowered he would deny citizenship and its concurrent voting rights to Israeli Arabs. Lieberman’s many critics on the left accuse him of racism. One thing that could prevent him from becoming a minister in the next government is the fact that police have just accelerated a long-standing criminal investigation against him involving the alleged laundering of huge sums of money. The probe might actually help Lieberman win more seats - many see its sudden renewal just days before the election as a part of a conspiracy against Lieberman. But if he is indicted or if the attorney general disqualifies him from serving in the new government because of the allegations against him, he would not be able to join the coalition, making it easier for Barak to lead Labour into a Netanyahu administration. What could change things and have all the pollsters eating their hats? Thirty per cent of voters say they are still undecided. If they have not been factored in by the pollsters, February 10 could still provide a surprise twist or two. (JTA) 06 - 13 February 2009 SA JEWISH REPORT AROUND THE WORLD | NEWS IN BRIEF DOCKWORKERS WON'T OFFLOAD ISRAELI SHIP CAPE TOWN -- South African dock workers say they will not offload an Israeli ship that is set to dock in Durban. In a Palestine Solidarity Committee news release, the Congress of South African Trade Unions' decision to "strengthen the campaign in South Africa for boycotts, divestment and sanctions against apartheid Israel" is noted. Referring to workers' commitment to "refuse to support oppression and exploitation across the globe," the committee recalls the refusal by Durban dockworkers last year to offload arms from China that were destined for Zimbabwe. The release also says that workers will not allow South African ports to be used as "transit points for goods bound for or emanating from certain dictatorial and oppressive states such as Zimbabwe, Swaziland and Israel". The release continues: "We also welcome statements by various South African Jews of conscience who have dissociated themselves from the genocide in Gaza. We call on all South Africans to ensure that none of our family members are allowed to join the Israeli Occupation Forces' killing machine." Calling on the South African government to sever diplomatic and trade relations with Israel, the Palestine Solidarity Committee announced a week of action under the banner "Free Palestine, Isolate Apartheid Israel". (JTA) PRES SARKOZY BRIEFS ABBAS, MITCHELL PARIS - French President Nicolas Sarkozyon Monday met in Paris with Mahmoud Abbas and George Mitchell to discuss strengthening the fragile ceasefire between Hamas and Israel. Abbas, the Palestinian Authority president, told reporters on Monday night following the meeting, that he hoped Europe would play a more "political" supportive role in the Middle East. Abbas began a tour of Europe on Monday, where he asked for a more unified Palestinian government, including Hamas, but with his own Fatah Party at the helm, the French news agency AFP reported. Abbas also told reporters that last week's call by Hamas leaders for the replacement of Fatah was "totally unacceptable". Nevertheless he said, "We should dialogue with Hamas." As part of Sarkozy's continued investment in Middle East negotiations for peace, the French leader also met earlier on Monday with Mitchell, the newly appointed special US envoy to the Middle East, and Prime Minister Sheik Hamad bin Jassem alThani of Qatar. Mitchell, who just completed a tour of the region, reportedly was briefed on the French government's efforts at solidifying a Gaza ceasefire. Abbas travelled to Britain, Turkey, Poland and Italy later this week. (JTA) HUNDREDS RALLY OPPOSITE VENEZUELAN CONSULATE NEW YORK - Hundreds on Monday afternoon rallied in front of the Venezuelan Consulate in New York to protest the vandalising of a Caracas synagogue. The rally, organised on short notice, expressed solidarity with the Venezuelan Jewish community and accused the country's president, Hugo Chavez, of fomenting an anti-Jewish atmosphere in which such anti-Semitic violence was inevitable. Demonstrators called on the Chavez government to bring the perpetrators of the attack to justice. Chavez has condemned the attack. "We hold you accountable," veteran activist Rabbi Avi Weiss told the crowd as footage of Chavez delivering a speech played behind him on a video screen behind the consulate window. The rally was responding to an attack over the weekend on the Mariperez Synagogue in the Venezuelan capital. According to reports, 15 armed men overpowered a secu- rity guard before desecrating religious objects, painting threatening messages on the walls and stealing community information. At the rally, local political figures and Jewish communal officials led the crowd in chanting "Never Again" and its Spanish translation, "Nunca Jamas". Manuel Kohn, a Venezuelan Jew who has lived in the United States for nearly 50 years, addressed the protesters, describing his native country's history of hospitality to Jews and other minorities. "G-d bless you all, G-d bless Venezuela, and never again," Kohn said. David Harris, executive director of the American Jewish Committee, sounded an ominous warning in noting the theft of administrative information about the local Jewish community. "Historically," Harris told JTA, "that has never ended well." (JTA) ANOTHER CATHOLIC CLERGY DENIES NAZI GAS CHAMBERS ROME - Another traditionalist priest has publicly denied that Nazis murdered Jews in gas chambers during the Holocaust. "I know that the gas chambers existed, at least to disinfect [inmates]," the Rev Floriano Abrahamowicz said in an interview last week Thursday with Italy's Tribuna di Treviso newspaper. Like Richard Williamson, whose rehabilitation by Pope Benedict XVI despite his denial of Nazi gas chambers sparked a crisis in Jewish-Catholic relations, Abrahamowicz is a follower of the late traditionalist Bishop Marcel Lefebvre. Abrahamowicz said he could not say if people were killed in the gas chambers because he had not studied the question. He said, however, that he did not doubt that six million Jews "or even more" were killed in the Shoah. But he went on to compare the Holocaust to "other genocides" that did not receive the same amount of public recognition. These included the Allied bombing of German cities - and Israel's actions in Gaza. "And the Israelis can't tell me that the genocide that they suffered from the Nazis is less serious than that of Gaza because they have killed several thousand people while the Nazis killed six million," he said. Abrahamowicz denied he or other followers of Lefebvre were anti-Semitic, and noted that he came from a Jewish family on his father's side. He described the Jewish people, however, as "G-d killers" and called on Jews to "embrace our Lord Jesus Christ." Followers of Lefebvre reject Vatican II Church teachings that reject the collective branding of Jews as Christ killers. (JTA) 7 INTERNATIONAL COURT EYES WAYS TO PROSECUTE ISRAELIS LONDON - The International Criminal Court in The Hague is exploring ways to prosecute Israeli commanders for alleged war crimes in Gaza, according to a British newspaper report. Last month, when Palestinian groups petitioned the court to lodge complaints against the Israeli military, they were told that the court had no jurisdiction over Israel as it was not a signatory to the court. But the prosecutor of the court, Luis Moreno-Ocampo, told the Times newspaper on Monday that he was examining the case for Palestinian jurisdiction over alleged crimes committed in Gaza even though Israel, like the United States and other countries, was not a signatory to the court. According to the Times, Palestinian groups have submitted arguments asserting that the Palestinian Authority is the "de-facto state" in the territory. "It is the territorial state that has to make a reference to the court," Moreno-Ocampo told the Times. "They are making an argument that the Palestinian Authority is, in reality, that state." Moreno-Ocampo explained that the Palestinian argument rests on Israeli insistence that it has no responsibility for Gaza under international law since it withdrew from the territory in 2006. "It's very complicated. It's a different kind of analysis I am doing," MorenoOcampo said. "It may take a long time, but I will make a decision according to law." The prosecutor said his examination of the case did not indicate that he believed war crimes had been committed. Determining jurisdiction was a first step, he said, and only after it had been decided, could he launch an investigation. The court already has received several files on alleged crimes from Palestinian groups. It is awaiting further reports from the Arab League and Amnesty International containing evidence gathered in Gaza. (JTA) 8 SA JEWISH REPORT 06 - 13 February 2009 LETTERS Disclaimer The letters page is intended to provide opportunity for a range of views on any given topic to be expressed. Opinions articulated in the letters are those of the writers and do not necessarily reflect the views of the editor, staff or directors of the Jewish Report GAZANS ARE BETRAYED BY THEIR OWN PEOPLE MY HEART aches for all the citizens of Gaza - men, women, children and babies who are suffering and living in fear of their lives due to the present unrest there. These poor innocent victims have been betrayed by their own people - Hamas. In 2005 Israel removed their citizens from Gaza, many by force. These victims lost their homes, businesses and many of their personal possessions in the hope of creating some sort of peace in the Middle East. This area was then inhabited by some 1,5 million Palestinians. Throughout the recent ceasefire agreement in the Middle East, Hamas has been firing rockets from Gaza into the southern cities of Israel, primarily Sderot. How many innocent victims lost their homes, were injured and possibly killed? To my knowledge the number of casualties has never been officially reported. As the time of the ceasefire agreement was drawing towards an end, Hamas began firing more and more rockets not only into Sderot but Ashkelon and Be’er Sheva as well. The week of Christmas, Hamas fired 200 rockets into these areas, no doubt provok- ing Israel into retaliating. The leaders of Hamas were well aware of the implications of their increasingly aggressive actions and knew full well how the citizens of Gaza were going to suffer. Unfortunately, Hamas have been storing their ammunition and firing their rockets from nursery schools, schools, hospitals and many other unlikely places, even civilian residences. In the name of Allah, what kind of people put their citizens, particularly children’s lives at risk by doing this? And even worse, in the name of Islam, how can these “leaders” hide ammunition under a mosque - a holy site? There is no doubt that the poor, innocent civilians of Gaza have been betrayed by Hamas and in view of this, Muslims throughout the world should be targeting their anger at Hamas who so carefully planned this “invasion”, purely to make them (Hamas) appear to be the innocent victims when, in fact, they themselves are the actual perpetrators. Cheryl Codron Johannesburg ONLY HAJAIG SACKING WOULD ELIMINATE CANCER WHETHER FATIMA Hajaig, the deputy minister of foreign affairs, will remain at her post or be summarily dismissed, is the question, as it will determine whether there is in fact an inclusive place for all ethnic minorities in South Africa. The two events that highlighted the deputy minister’s true colours are well documented and display a disturbingly warped state of mind. Hajaig’s utterances could have been lifted from the pages of The Protocols of the Elders of Zion which has eternally branded Jews as the surreptitious rulers of the world - quite a feat considering that Jews number no more than 14 million worldwide. This would suggest that no world leader has ever reached a major decision without the sanction of this insidious group of Jewish, black-hooded, Illuminati. Considering the relatively advanced standard of living enjoyed by most of the developed world, it would seem that these Jewish puppet-masters appear to deserve a vote of deep gratitude for a job well done. But truth is not the issue when it comes to feeding the frenzy of inborn hatred and prejudice that applies uniquely to the Jewish world where the message remains the same: “The Jewish conspiracy lives !” The denial by Eddie Makue, general secretary of the SA Council of Churches, that the fight against Israel was anti-Semitic (“he ... only wanted to bring his Jewish brothers and sisters onto the ‘right path’”) did nothing to alleviate our anxiety. However, Makue should note that those elements of the Jewish community who wish to align themselves with Israel need not his approval to do so; nor do we require his assistance in finding “the right path”. We have managed perfectly well for the past 3 500 years. If we are to assume that this despicable tirade by the deputy minister is acceptable to our government, then we are, indeed, in serious trouble. It would clearly indicate that internal discipline at the highest level has not only broken down, but that ministers can wilfully incite hatred against a minority group of their choosing without fear of retribution. Further, it would show that those essential elements of human rights enshrined in our Constitution and Bill of Rights, are under serious attack and in clear danger of being discarded. Even if we as a community have recourse to the Human Rights Council and, ultimately to the courts, the mere fact that we have to resort to such action is disquieting in itself. One can only ask what would constitute an appropriate response from the minister. A mere apology, issued on the instruction of her superiors, would be meaningless. Nothing short of her sacking would eliminate the cancer she has propagated. It should be of deep concern to the government that this event has not gone unnoticed around the civilised world where individuals and organisations find it inconceivable that the land that spawned Mandela could have spawned Fatima Hajaig. But - should we be surprised? Victor Gordon Pretoria ISRAELI GOVERNMENT WILL HAVE TO TALK TO HAMAS THE PERSONS who signed off on the Gaza incursion, are highly respected members of not only the Jewish community, but the public at large. I am in awe of some of the names on the list. It is their fundamental right to express whatever views they feel are necessary. However, I would suggest that criticism should be constructive. One cannot simply condemn without providing suggestions on how Israel should have gone about defending herself, and at what level this response should have been. It is quite clear to all, that none of these prominent members of our society has ever had rockets fired at them before, not once nor for the many years that it happened to Israel. The question I would like to ask these prominent South African Jews is: What would you do, if you were in Israel’s shoes? The condemnation of Israel by such prominent members of the Jewish community in my humble opinion adds fuel to an already inflamed anti-Semitic inferno. Criticising Israel in public - as the editor of the Jewish Report (February 6) states - legitimises the public expression of hatred toward Jews. If these respected members of the Jewish community can condemn, so can we (the anti- Semites). There is no doubt in my mind the time has come for Israel to start thinking about how they are going to talk and negotiate with Hammas. This might be controversial to many Jews worldwide, but I must ask: Were not the ANC sworn enemies of the Nationalist government? The Nationalist government would have done all in its power to destroy the ANC. However, they managed to bring themselves to talk to the ANC, no matter how they must have hated it. The proof of the pudding is in the eating. One cannot deny that as South African Jews we live in peace as a result. But today (Feb 1, 2009) as rockets fly into Israel from Gaza, they have no alternative but to fight back, with all their might. If a mouse keeps on pulling an elephant’s tale long enough, making its life miserable, what do you think the elephant will do? It will stomp on the mouse so that it does not do it again. Sorry I almost forgot: No mention is made of Israel’s right to defend herself. Why was this left out? Prof Steven R Firer Johannesburg The Editor, Suite 175, Postnet X10039, Randburg, 2125 email: carro@global.co.za Guidelines for letters Letters up to 400 words will get preference. Please provide your full first name and surname, place of residence, and a daytime contact number. We do not publish letters under noms de plume. Letters should preferably be e-mailed. Letters may be edited or shortened. Note: Due to space limitations we are unable to publish all the letters received on Gaza. We will, however, publish more in forthcoming issues. HOW DO YOU DETERMINE ‘PROPORTIONALITY’ TO AN ATTACK? ONE WOULD expect that these eminent jurists and the other signatories (denouncing “disproportionate” action in Gaza, in SAJR of January 30), would apply their minds to perusing the laws and rules as applicable, as the framework within which the facts would be considered. If one or more of the authors of the letter would identify by any references in international agreements, protocols etc to “proportionality” of response to any attack, this mantra could be disposed of in a dustbin. For the benefit of laymen a précis of the rules, if they exist, should be furnished. Furthermore, in terms of international conventions, sovereign states are entitled and permitted to take such measures and actions as they consider necessary, to protect themselves from aggression; that combatants shall wear recognised uniforms and identifications so that non-combatants and civilians are not targeted; and that prisoners of war should be properly housed, nourished, visited regularly by ICRC officials, their families informed of their incarceration and the facility of communication by letter. One has only to recall Cpl Gilad Shalit who was kidnapped two years ago in Israeli territory and is lost in the maw of terrorism. Hamas, being a terrorist organisation, is not a subscriber to the international laws, protocols etc, and does not consider applying them. The intentional firing of ordnance into a neighbouring state is considered a casus belli. The Israeli government showed forbearance in not responding to the rocket attacks for many months past. Some weeks ago that government warned the terrorists that if they did not cease their attacks, Israel would respond. The attacks persisted and Israel DID respond, not against Gazan citizens per se, but against terrorists and their installations. When or where in the annals of history were civilians timeously warned to remove themselves from the vicinity of intended targets? Electricity and water supplies were maintained by Israel and operations suspended daily to enable supply trucks to enter Gaza. One wonders that if the IDF had conducted their operations in a way that would have caused them to suffer 1 200 casualties, the “bleeding hearts” would have been staunched. Hamas may have scored a skewed propaganda success, but at what cost and benefit to the citizens of Gaza? Avram Pelunsky Johannesburg HAMAS’‘INABILITY TO BE SENSIBLE’ INSTEAD OF criticising Israel for what was described as a “disproportionate” response to the Hamas provocation, it would have been more appropriate to berate Hamas for its inability to be sensible. Conditions in Gaza are appalling, but instead of making every effort to improve the situation, Hamas and its supporter (Iran?) spends untold amounts of money on rockets. There is no doubt that Hamas’ objective to destroy Israel, precludes any thoughts of using their resources and influence to improve the conditions of the population of Gaza. This negative attitude was revealed when Hamas destroyed the enterprises left by the Israeli settlers when those settlers withdrew from Gaza. It is impossible to set a standard for the response that Israel should have made to the rocket attacks. In effect, Hamas declared war and the consequences are on their heads. As Barack Obama said in 2008: “If somebody was sending rockets into my house where my two daughters sleep at night, I would do everything in my power to stop that, and would expect Israelis to do the same thing.” Dr Arnold Mendelowitz Waverley, Johannesburg LET THE LETTER WRITERS LIVE IN SOUTHERN ISRAEL TO THOSE brave SA Jews living in comfort and safety in South Africa, whose names were published in the January 16 issue, condemning Israel’s war against Hamas, the following: “Take your families and live in southern Israel for two or three months. “The men can count the rockets fired at the town, while the wives and children live in bomb shelters, eating, sleeping, studying, playing etc, etc.” This should give these letter writers a better idea of what Israeli citizens live with every day. Israel welcomes you! Any takers? I doubt it. Harry Cohen Edenvale MEASURE ‘DISPROPORTIONATE’ NOT BY RESULTS, BUT BY INTENT I REFER to the letter entitled “Gaza: Israel’s response disproportionate, inhumane”, published in your edition of January 30 2009. “Disproportionate” should clearly not be measured by results, but rather by intent. If, for example, Iran was to send over a nuclear bomb into the United States which mistakenly did not detonate, would the United States just ignore it because no one was hurt? Clearly not. Hamas has sent over 8 000 rockets into southern Israel. These Iranian-supplied rockets were not sent over for fun or for effect, but rather to kill and maim as many people as possible. The fact that they have not managed to kill thousands of people, due to air sirens, bomb shelters and perhaps Heaven’s blessing, does not detract from their intention. If three people were killed by each rocket - a modest ambition - that equates to 24 000 people. Hamas is also continuing to obtain more powerful weaponry. The Government of Israel has, in this light, therefore shown incredible restraint. Such a high level of restraint, in fact, that it is likely that the Government will be replaced by a right-wing Likud-led coalition in the upcoming elections. David Smith Johannesburg WHAT HAS SAJBD TO FEEL ‘POSITIVE’ ABOUT? THE LEADERSHIP of the SAJBD is to be commended for initiating a meeting with President Kgalema Motlanthe to express its concerns, firstly about the president of this country being a signatory in an advertisement likening Israel to an apartheid state and secondly, the deplorable behaviour of his deputy foreign minister, Fatima Hajaig. However, I find it hard to understand how the SAJBD can feel positive about the outcome of this meeting as stated in the headline of the report published in your January 23 edition. For nowhere in your report does President Motlanthe respond to the two specific concerns which prompted the meeting in the first place: He offers neither an apolo- gy nor an explanation for likening Israel to an apartheid state. Similarly, he does not address the Fatima Hajaig issue. Instead, we are offered vague and dare I say it, mealie-mouthed assurances that we all have a place in sunny South Africa. The SAJBD has a moral obligation to be honest and forthright in its relationship with its constituents. Similarly, you sir, have an obligation in the interests of honest reporting, to ask the right questions and where definitive answers are not forthcoming, to state so publicly. Philip Greenberg Morningside, Durban 06 - 13 February 2009 SA JEWISH REPORT 9 10 SA JEWISH REPORT 06 - 13 February 2009 LETTERS Disclaimer The letters page is intended to provide opportunity for a range of views on any given topic to be expressed. Opinions articulated in the letters are those of the writers and do not necessarily reflect the views of the editor, staff or directors of the Jewish Report THE REAL ISSUE IS ONE OF VALUE ISRAEL’S LEADERS have been hearing the call for their nation’s destruction for 60 years now. They believe it. They cannot ignore it. We in other countries seem not to understand that the party in this conflict that has a gun to its head is not Palestine - it is Israel. For a nation that came into being legally, and for all the right reasons, it is living daily on the brink. Can even the most fervent Israel-detractor suggest this: “Lay down your arms; greet your Palestinian and Arab neighbours as they come to visit you. They don’t really mean what they said about killing every last one of you.” No, Israel has had to learn to walk more and more softly, and carry an even bigger stick, just to survive. The David that the Western world loved 40 years ago, has become the hated Goliath, by necessity. Now that they are using that stick, we gasp: “Not fair! Disproportionate response!” What is proportionate? Fifty of your citizens for 40 of mine? Two for one of mine? Who’s counting? There is barely a Jew or Israeli in the world who is not sickened by the killing of the women and children of Gaza. On the other hand, the attacks of suicide bombers in Israel, which resulted in the walling off of the borders with Palestine, were ecstatically celebrated in Palestine. But the quid pro quo justification for the Middle East conflict can and has, filled books. We have to look beyond this. And so the real issue emerges. It is an issue of value. This is a conflict, not of unequal military might, but one of unequal morality. Israelis have shown constantly their fundamental belief in the value of, and respect for, life. Due to their own repressed history, it appears that the Jew has developed a highly sensitised conscience. It is inherent in their make-up as well as being a rational conviction. This is their dominant characteristic, despite lapses of judgement by the government and the individual actions of IDF soldiers resulting in occasional atrocities. The duly elected government of Gaza, Hamas is still a terrorist organisation, except now they have more than a limited cadre of soldiers at their disposal; they have the Anthony Garland Johannesburg This letter has been shortened - Editor. brick by brick. Lamyce Nafte Greenside Johannesburg HAMAS IS MERELY CARRYING ON HITLER’S WORK I THINK that the learned law persons, the financial experts, the artists and fellow ANC cadres, must have met, smoked some powerful weed and sent that letter to the editor. Adolph Hitler wrote a book, Mein Kampf, of which I have a copy in English, outlining his campaign “My campaign”, and among his points was to better Germany through national socialism and the destruction of the Jews. In a free and fair election he won power and his SS started to harass and destroy Jewish cultural centres, synagogues and businesses. Hitler’s SS then went on and destroyed six million Jews. We had no army, no police no country. We had no-one to protect us. After the war we established a Jewish state called Israel. We were attacked on the first day by all the Arab states. Since that day until today, we are at war with them. The war has not ended. Hamas and its leaders to this very day continue with Hitler’s work. They won free and fair elections based on national socialism and the destruction of Judaism. They started it... We do not want to end up in Arab death camps. So, what did they smoke when they wrote the letter to the editor complaining of disproportionate response? Jack Shnaier Norwood, Johannesburg THOSE WHO SIGNED PROTEST LETTER, WHERE WERE YOU? IN RESPONSE to the letter on January 30, signed by the “honourable” members of the Jewish community which appeared in the SA Jewish Report, I should like to ask: Where were their voices in 2006 when 4 228 rockets were fired into northern Israel and where between half a million and a million Israelis had to be evacuated from their homes to places of safety? What was the physical and emotional cost to these people? Where were their voices when for eight years the people of Sderot and southern Israel lived in daily terror of more than 10 000 rockets that also killed and maimed civilians, including children and destroyed homes? When visiting Sderot we were told Guidelines for letters Letters up to 400 words will get preference. Please provide your full first name and surname, place of residence, and a daytime contact number. We do not publish letters under noms de plume. Letters should preferably be e-mailed. Letters may be edited or shortened. GAZA WAR - IT’S ALL A QUESTION OF ARITHMETIC... 1-million strong population of Gaza. The dominant aspect that has come to light on the Palestinian side has been one of anti-life. It says in effect: “My life is nothing in the quest for that holy outcome, the elimination of Israel.” The eminent writer/psychologist Nathaniel Branden has advocated that between two men of equal self-respect there can be no conflict. Obviously self-respect engenders respect for others. But when one party continues to demonstrate total lack of value of their own life, as well as loathing for yours, how does one react? Ultimately bloodshed must follow. One hesitates to think the unthinkable: that the endless provocation by rocket fire from Gaza and the deliberate cessation of the six-month truce by Hamas, were premeditated to reach this very point of massive retaliation by Israel. Can the leaders of Hamas be so morally bankrupt as to want to see the bodies of children (their own citizens) splashed across the front pages of the world? All this to garner emotional and political capital around the world? And to gain the “moral” high ground by justifying future attacks on Israel? Can this just be a PR campaign? Well, it seems to be working. Condemnation of Israel as an imperialistic bully is widespread. The fact remains that Israel no longer has the slightest desire to expand its territory; it became powerful primarily in defence of its land; it knows that its vibrant economy is affected by ongoing conflict. It would rather trade with its neighbours than fight them. Without a doubt Israel wants long-lasting peace. Those of us around the world who, with smug certainty of the right and wrongs involved, condemn Israel at every chance we get, must reassess. By all means demonstrate against the loss of innocent life anywhere and for all time, but beware of lending weight to those cynical propagandists whose aim is wholesale slaughter of the Israelis REDEEM YOURSELVES BY BUILDING UP GAZA A NEW list of Jewish anti-Semites (the intellectuals) - shame on you! Redeem yourselves by getting off your backsides, and out of your cosy homes, and go to Gaza and build up the country The Editor, Suite 175, Postnet X10039, Randburg, 2125 email: carro@global.co.za that little children were only allowed outside their rocket-proof day care centre for 10 minutes daily, as a safety precaution. How do you count the trauma to these children and families? Where were their voices when Ehud Goldwasser and Eldad Regev were captured and murdered? Where are their voices for Gilad Shalit, languishing as a prisoner, and where his parents and family have news of his wellbeing? Where is the indignant condemnation against Hamas for not allowing the Red Cross to visit him. Marcia Parness Johannesburg I HAVE followed with great interest the debate raging on your letters pages over Israel’s response to Hamas (rocket) attacks. I have to agree with the “Not in my name” lobby. There is nothing achieved by slurring the proponents in a debate; we should rather discuss the issues, of which (probably) the central one is Israel’s “disproportionate” response. So let us discuss the issue. Besides sending us bombs, in more illustrious times, the Arabs gave us another wonderful gift arithmetic. So let’s use that to try to find a more proportionate response. Now the population of Gaza is purported to be about a quarter the size of Israel’s, so one could argue that Israel should respond (under strict UN supervision, of course) with only a quarter of the missiles that Hamas toss across the border. Wait a moment! Perhaps my maths is wrong! Perhaps it would be fairer if the proportions were reversed. The Jews should be allowed to throw four times as many missiles into Gaza. But then I might have it all wrong again. Perhaps this should all be calculated on land area. Now Israel is (I don’t know), maybe 100 times the size of Gaza. Perhaps Hamas should be allowed a 100 times the rockets that the IDF deploys. But then again, perhaps it means that the ratio should be a 100 times more in Israel’s favour. Let us use the figure of 7 000 missiles launched by Hamas over the past few years. That means that if we calculate a “proportionate” response, then one of the answers would be a factor of 400:1 in Israel’s favour. We can then multiply the 7 000 missiles by 400 and come up with a “fair” or “reasonable” response of 2,8 million rockets. To be perfectly equitable, the figure varies between 18 missiles (one in 400) and 2,8 million, so let’s take an average of 1,4 million that the IDF could be expected to fire into Gaza. That is roughly a deadly bomb per man, woman, and child, fired at random into a densely populated civilian population. (The rules according to Hamas.) A proportionate response? But I do get ahead of myself - I really do not want to get into calling anyone “stupid”, for the mind boggles (if this were to become an international standard) as to how many missiles it would be acceptable for the Chinese to unleash on the people of Burma or Tibet. The truth, of course, is that there is no “disproportionate” response - only one that stops the terrorists called Hamas from shooting missiles on a daily basis against innocent civilians in Israel. Roy Chazen Glenhazel, Johannesburg TWO PARTIES ARE NEEDED TO MAKE PEACE THE CORRESPONDENCE that you received about the war in Gaza is very pertinent, but there is something that is not mentioned - and it’s very important in my eyes - namely that one needs two parties to make peace. Are the Islamist Hamas prepared to make peace? Israel has made lots of effort and concessions in that regard; has Hamas accepted any of these (concessions)? And they have not stopped firing rockets into Israel for eight years and they are continuing to do so. I leave it in the hands of the experts to find a viable solution for both parties. Victoria Perlow Fairmount Ridge, Johannesburg MOVE FROM LANGUAGE OF DESPAIR TO LANGUAGE OF HOPE LAST WEEK’S editorial, “Arguing with dignity” made an important point when it stated that “the anger in the letters among Jews suggests this is a ground-shifting moment in this community’s life”. I asked myself: “Why now?” and “What kind of shift are you calling us to make?” Are we tasked to promote tolerance of difference and encourage a rational debate? Well, these kinds of requests have been made to us several times before, in relation to other contested issues, so it must be something else. I am suggesting that we need to seize the ground-shifting moment of anger and use it to shift ourselves from a language of despair to a language of hope; from a language of blame to a language of possibilities. To my mind, most of the letters - in support of or against Israel’s operation in Gaza - express a deep sense of despair. The language used against the dissenting voices, in particular the form of engagement with their letter- whereby a claim gets dismissed by vilifying its author, is an expression of helplessness and defensiveness. At the same time, the accusations made by the dissenting voices, of Israel’s response being “inhumane and disproportionate collective punishment” (letter, January 16), or even “barbaric” (Sue Ruben, January 30) do not help us imagine an alternative; they do not help us imagine that things could be different, that the language of planes and tanks or of rockets is only one kind of language, but there are others (David Grossman, Ha’aretz, January 20). The language of despair and of blame hooks, in fact, into deep-seated beliefs commonly heard in Israel and in Jewish communities around the globe, which include statements such as “there is no solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict” or “Arabs understand only force” (although, collective punishment has gone too far) or “Israel is a foreign imposition on the Middle East” or “Jews and Arabs are fundamentally different cultures”. We need to recognise our despair. This is the first step. We need to recognise that many of our claims connect to these deep-seated beliefs (which I think only contribute to our despair) and that we need to work on changing these beliefs before we can argue about strategy. We need to strengthen the belief that only peaceful means of dialogue between Israelis and Palestinians will move us forward; that no matter how much (we feel) we have tried, we need to try again and again, harder and harder to create the possibility for dialogue. We need to collectively imagine a different social order. Yael Shalem Johannesburg ISAACS AND GEFFEN SHOULD JOIN ONE VOICE MOVEMENT I’D LIKE to address Doron Isaacs and Nathan Geffen. The Support Association for Zionism (SAZ) acknowledges that both of you are motivated by what you believe to be Israelís best interest - as unpalatable as your antiIsrael government public actions may be. Furthermore, SAZ also applauds your efforts reconciling Jews and non-Jews, Israelis and Palestinians.However, we suggest that instead of drawing up petitions condemning Israel Government actions which achieve little other than giving succour to Israel’s enemies and inadvertently fanning the flames of anti-Semitism, you should consider deploying your energies constructively by backing the One Voice Movement. According to sub-editor John Harvey writing in the Eastern Cape’s Weekend Post (24 January 2009) “the One Voice Movement is an international grassroots organisation with more than 640 000 signatures in roughly equal numbers (to date 331 781 Israelis and 295 776 Palestinians) with 1 800 highly trained youth leaders. It aims to amplify the voice of the overwhelming but hitherto silent majority of moderates who wish for peace and prosperity.” SAZ is aware of similar efforts you are promoting, and we hope that that sort of activity will occupy your attention exclusively and without your having to resort to counter-productive anti-Israel Government activism. David Abel Co-chairperson SAZ George 06 - 13 February 2009 SA JEWISH REPORT 11 LETTERS The Editor, Suite 175, Postnet X10039, Randburg, 2125 email: carro@global.co.za BIASED GAZA COVERAGE HAS DENTED ISRAEL’S IMAGE PLEASE EXPLAIN ‘DISPROPORTIONATE’ TO ME BIASED COVERAGE of operation “Cast Lead” has once again dealt a tremendous blow to Israel’s image. When critically dissected, though, it is easy to wade through the propaganda and find some truth. Qatari news channel Al Jazeera immediately labelled the operation “The War On Gaza”. This wording implies an indiscriminate targeting of every Gazan civilian. This is obviously incorrect as all targets were affiliated to Hamas - a terrorist organisation who openly and illegally smuggle weapons (into the Strip) and refuse to recognise Israel’s right to exist. A war in Gaza - yes. A war on Hamas yes. A war on Gaza - absolutely not! It is the Hamas modus operandi to fight within populated areas, stake a strong political image when the pressure is on and then cry foul to the international community when things go awry! How can the world have any respect or sympathy for a group who publicly vowed I WISH to comment on the letters that appeared in your January 30 edition. They deal with the rights and wrongs of the Israeli attack on Gaza. Some maintain that the land of Palestine was stolen from the Palestinians. We know that for thousands of years there was a Jewish presence in the land of Israel. Since the late 1870s there was a strong influx of Jews from Eastern Europe and by 1896 out of a population of 45 420 in Jerusalem, 28 112 were Jews. Muslims numbered 8 560. Zionism had been a Jewish ethos for thousands of years as the Tanach testifies. It became a political movement at the beginning of the 20th century. Money was gathered worldwide in order to buy land from absentee Palestinian landlords and from the Ottomans who had ruled Palestine for the past 400 years. Who does not remember the “blue boxes” in every Jewish home used to collect funds for the purchase of land in Palestine? During the 1930s Muslim nationalists tried to persuade the occupying British to ban the selling of land to Jews. They bought it, they did not steal it. The action by the IDF in Gaza is described by some as being cruel and disproportionate. Despite some very prominent names on your correspondence page, I have not read one letter that explains at what stage a war becomes disproportionate. During the Second World War, Britain was bombed by Germany and 51 509 civilians were killed. Churchill then promised the British people that every bomb would be returned tenfold. By the end of the war Allied bombing had killed 269 618 men, women and children in Germany while more than 6 300 000 had been made homeless. Inhumane and disproportionate? After the bombing of Guernica, Warsaw, Belgrade, Rotterdam, and Coventry, not to mention the Holocaust? Without the Second World War, Hitler would not have been defeated. Some days ago we commemorated the liberation of Auschwitz by the Russian army. Between 250 000 and 350 000 Jews were liberated from the concentration and death camps by the Allied armies. Without the war, disproportionate or otherwise, these men, women and children would also have been murdered. You, who condemn war as being disproportionate, on what planet are you living? Some 1 300 Palestinians are said to have died and about 5 000 wounded. I have seen a to turn Gaza into a “graveyard for the IDF” but then turn around and call the Israeli strikes “a holocaust”? Israeli spokesman, Mark Regev pointed out in the first days of the operation that all Gaza-related statistics came courtesy of the Hamas-run health ministry. This fact was confirmed by the Reuters press agency. How then can Hamas claim that only 20 or so militants were killed when their very own stats said that after three days over 200 were dead, including only 50 civilians! Also, after the UN Security Council eventually drafted a negotiated ceasefire, Hamas’ senior leaders were quoted by Sky News as saying that a ceasefire “is not in the best interests of the Palestinian people”. That is quite simply the definition of bringing a war onto your own people. Joel Block Johannesburg WHERE ARE VOICES OF PROTEST ON THESE ISSUES? I AM an expatriate with close ties to South Africa. Imagine, during my current annual visit, my dismay to encounter mounting anti-Israel criticism and hostility within the now shrunken Jewish community, which in my era was so staunchly supportive of Israel. This is not unlike the divisions within, which led to the fall of the Second Temple and the collapse of ancient Israel almost 2 000 years ago. It is striking that similar multi-signature protest letters (Jewish Report January 16 and 30) are not forthcoming regarding the recent Goebbelsian antiSemitic diatribes from your deputy foreign minister. I am unaware of such protests regarding up to 10 000 unprovoked rockets fired into Israel in the past eight years and the injuries, deaths and havoc they caused. I await similar protests about the Durban anti-Semitic hate fest and comments about the pending “Durban 2”. I have not come across comparable moral outrage over the bulldozer deaths and mayhem in Jerusalem last year, not to mention the barbaric summary execution of Muslim collaborators or women who have been raped, or the massacre of celebrants singing at a Muslim wedding in Gaza (of course, the bride was not allowed there). Where is the outcry about Gilad Schalit? Here their silence is truly deafening. The latest cynical demand by Hamas - 11 000 prisoners in exchange for one? How’s that for disproportion? And not a murmur about Hamas operating from within hospitals, schools, mosques and using civilians as human shields. And how do you recognise and separate militants from civilians when nobody wears a uniform? (All in contravention of the Geneva Convention and the rules of warfare). Now to cap it all, the Hamas leaders and their Syrian comrades-in-arms proclaim “victory” in the Gaza. How does that gel CASE FOR RETAINING THE JEWISH SETTLEMENTS WITH REGARD to the two-state solution, the problem is that while the Palestinian state is Judenrein, the Jewish state has a great many Arabs and this is clearly inequitable. So, unless the Arabs from the Jewish state agreed to leave Israel (which they would not) or the Palestinian state agreed to have Jewish citizens (which they would not), the Jewish settlements should not be evacuated. The Jewish soldiers should have the right to disobey the evacuation of Jewish settlements as it is morally wrong. I have a problem with the overrepresentation of the left wing Jewish views in your newspaper. With regard to the letter signed by about 140 people, the editor said it was not a petition because they did not ask for anything, but they just made a statement. But they did in fact ask for an immediate ceasefire. Sydney Brian Shefts Illovo, Johannesburg with the concept of “disproportion” from Israel? What if the madman of Iran should drop a nuclear bomb? Despite the so-called truce, rockets are still being fired into Israel. Are you going to pen a letter with multiple outraged signatures? I cannot fathom what prompts such venomous outbursts against Israel within a Diaspora community. Some of the people whose names appear on the letters, I once knew. Many are, I believe, are employed by Government or are otherwise close to Government in South Africa or the ruling party. Is it coincidental that some of the signatures evoke images of traditional and longstanding Communist anti-Israel antipathy? Is there a hidden agenda or is it the erroneous belief that if you pat a hissing cobra’s head, he won’t bite you? A re-read of what happened to Germany’s Jewish “patriotic Germans” in the thirties, is strongly recommended to inject some reality. I look forward to future similar heartfelt condemnations of atrocities perpetrated by the other side, in which case I may be willing to re-evaluate my own opinion. If, for the moment, we accept that Israel used excessive force, I suggest that we should be thankful that Israel has that ability, or Israel would surely have long ceased to exist. If the madman of Iran should follow through on his threat to wipe Israel off the map, are these misguided but otherwise probably good folks, going to register protests by mass signature then? I appeal to those of you, well intentioned as you may be, to desist from the selfdestructive practice of mass written protest against your own, in the media. Norman A Blumberg Houston, Texas This letter has been slightly shortened Editor. video showing armed Palestinians dressed in civilian clothing being transported in UN ambulances, if you don’t mind. If they are killed and one removes their guns and ammo, then they become poor innocent civilians killed by IDF excessive force. I have seen reports from Gazans denying that anywhere near 1 300 were killed and complaining bitterly about the use that Hamas made of them as human shields. Judy Favish waxes against the violence being perpetrated against Palestinians. May I ask when did she speak out against the 7 000 rockets and 3 000 mortar bombs fired over eight years against the innocent Israeli civilians living in Sderot, Ashdod, lately Ashkelon and Beer She’va? Has she seen the effects of those bombardments on the towns and their people? Over the past eight years there have been an estimated 500 casualties from these shellings. Ten thousand missiles were fired over eight years at Israeli civilian settlements. Each was intended to kill, maim and destroy. If each of those misslies had caused only one casualty there would have been TEN THOUSAND ISRAELI DEAD OR WOUNDED. Do you still believe that Israel’s efforts to stop the bombardment was disproportionate? I have been to Sderot and seen the shelters outside every housing block, the streets empty at midday because one only has 15 seconds to seek shelter from a rocket. I have visited the créche with its rocket-proof shelter some of the infants there show the symptoms of stress and fear. I have seen the double roofs on the schools built in the hope that the top one will absorb most of the impact... Every missile was fired with the intent to kill, maim and destroy! Perhaps our clergy and Israel’s builders of shelters can explain why there were not more victims in these civilian towns. What government would allow its citizens to carry on existing like that? Leonard Shapiro writes that he sees Judaism and Zionism as being separate from each other. Nothing new in that - the Naturei Karta feel the same way, which is why they travel to Iran to kiss Ahmadinejad who would wipe Israel off the map. Let Zapiro consider this: If the Zionists had succeeded in creating Israel around 1933, perhaps millions of Jews, just like him and otherwise, might have been saved. Don Krausz Ex-Rotterdam, now Johannesburg ‘HAIL ISRAEL, THE LAND THAT G-D HAS GIVEN THE JEWS’ THIS IS a rebuttal in answer to the letter published in the Jewish Report condemning Israel for using “excessive force” (Not in my name). It is appalling to any thinking, feeling Jew, to read the statement that Israel’s reaction in Gaza was too extreme - after briefly referring to the constant barrage of rockets and missiles on Jewish settlements for three bloody years when young Jewish children had to hide in bunkers for safety. How can Jews blame Israel for defending itself against terrorist Hamas, who hide their weapons of destruction among “blame- less” civilians who voted the terrorist organisation into government. Shakespeare wrote: “Thrice is he armed who hath his quarrel just, and he but naked though be dressed in steel, who with injustice is corrupt.” This quote is so apt in these times... people who aid and abet terrorists put themselves in the line of fire. I say “Hail Israel, the land that G-d has given the Jews, and shame on you, who forget that they are Jews.” Batia Davidoff Killarney, Johannesburg 12 SA JEWISH REPORT 06 - 13 February 2009 LETTERS The Editor, Suite 175, Postnet X10039, Randburg, 2125 email: carro@global.co.za MONEY FROM ANY HUE INFLUENCES NATIONS ARE THESE MEMBERS OF THE FLAT EARTH SOCIETY? I READ in the previous edition of the SA Jewish Report about a pro-Hamas (or proPalestinian) rally, in which some participants challenged Jews who serve - or whose relatives serve - in Israel’s army to fight them “at home” or be expelled from the country. I have expected some complaint about such remarks of hate. But instead, I read that a complaint was made about the remark of the deputy foreign minister, that US/Western politics are influenced by wealthy Jews. Excuse me, but this is not untrue, just like the fact that US/Western politics are influenced by wealthy Muslims, and by the regime of Saudi Arabia and other I WISH to reply to the letter in last week’s: “Gaza: Israel’s response disproportionate, inhumane”. With the greatest respect to all 14 illustrious luminaries, other than for a single line saying “While we unreservedly condemn the firing of rockets at Israeli towns by Hamas”, I did not read another condemnation from these people of the constant bombarding by Hamas, in fact for a period of over eight years. How come that none of these 14 saw fit over this period to condemn Hamas for firing rockets into Israel? How come none of them raised their voices and not only condemn Hamas for shooting off the rockets in the first place but more importantly shooting the rockets from school playgrounds, hospital areas and from residential areas. The funniest part of their condemnation was the fact that the article does not carry what in their opinion would have been a proportionate and acceptable response. Are they all members of that austere body of believers that not only believe that the world is flat but believe that you can solve matters by quiet diplomacy with a people who are hell bent in destroying not only every Jew but eliminating the State of Israel in it’s entirety? With regard to quiet diplomacy, perhaps they could take a lesson from our own politicians. I wonder if anyone of the 14 have ever visited the towns in Israel and been there when they were subjected to these Hamas countries who have the same kind of “democracy” as Saudi Arabia. This is not an incitement - this is a fact. And indeed, my late grandmother once told me that a Muslim electrician told her: “We (Muslims) have the upper hand in the US.” So I would like to see some legal actions taken, if possible, against those who call for the deportation of Jews who serve in the IDF, or for civil war against them, while I don’t see anything illegal in stating a fact (though it is not the whole truth etc). Avner Eliyahu Romm Sea Point, Cape Town SAKS SHOULD FIRST LOOK AT HIS OWN PRONOUNCEMENTS DAVID SAKS’S Barbaric Yawp of January 30 criticises people who draw analogies between Nazism and the actions of the Israeli state. I agree these criticisms are ill-founded. But in his September 12 column, Saks wrote: “What is being instilled into the Palestinian population is sheer unadulterated Nazism, this time with an Islamist religious veneer rather than a racist Aryan one.” He uses this analogy to justify the use of force against the Palestinians: “If people still generally fail to learn from history, one of history’s lessons that they seem to have taken to heart is that Nazis cannot be appeased nor negotiated with, but can only be dealt with through superior force.” His article made several racist statements. Here’s a particularly alarming one: “One cannot very well expect them [Palestinians] to love us, even if the demented extent of their hatred goes far beyond what can be regarded as reasonable resentment. More than anyone else, the Palestinians are obsessed by - even self willed prisoners of - the Islamist death cult.” While comparing the actions of the Nazis to that of the Israeli government is dumb, it is not necessarily racist. Saks’s September column, however, was undoubtedly racist, as much so as Fatima Hajaig’s recent pronouncements. I’m not religious. Nevertheless, here’s Talmudic advice that is worth following, “K’shot atzmecha ve’achar k’shot acherim” (baba batra daf samech amud bet). It means, roughly, criticise yourself and afterwards criticise others. Nathan Geffen Cape Town APPROVING GAZA ACTION IS SUBSCRIBING TO WORLD GONE MAD I WAS encouraged by the number of fellowJews who signed the petition in response to the statement by the Jewish Board of Deputies, Zionist Federation and Chief Rabbi’s Office, concerning Israel’s attack on Gaza The army knew that the terrorists hid out in schools and hospitals and used kids as body armour, but this did not stop them from killing hundreds of women and children. To think that because terrorists are hiding out in a civilian population it entitles a responsible government to destroy the entire infrastructure of a city, is to subscribe to a world gone mad. I therefore cannot subscribe to ongoing human rights violations against Palestinians civilians. I hear my friends whispering: “They hate us,” to each other, like it’s some kind of mantra that’ll make “everything” go away, like the use of illegal white phosphorous munitions or the practice of detention without trial. Here in South Africa, we’ve learned that this kind of action by Government to achieve “peace” didn’t work, neither did separate development. A solution can only come about by immediately dealing with the legitimate grievances of the Palestinians while thwarting the terrorists with diplomatic solutions. There is no option of “collective punishment” in my view of things. That is not a “peace agenda” in anyone’s language. In South Africa it’s OK to comment on the fact that many (ZA) officials are corrupt but we all know that it’s not just in South Africa that this is happening. Greed and politics are a global epidemic from which we, as Jews, are not exempt. In the 21st century, no single race or religion has a monopoly on suffering, or owns the moral high ground. No government represents G-d and no government is infallible. The call to bear arms is an ugly one, no matter which ethnic nationalism it embraces. Sadly, what we’re seeing here, not only in Israel but across the world, is a decline in the moral principles of those in government shown by their disregard for the Geneva Convention and international law. We Jews now find ourselves, collectively, on a longer and more convoluted path to global peace. Let’s each try and be judged as worthy of being Jewish. Keep the faith! Michael Kawitzky Producer: Cognition Factor Johannesburg HAJAIG: WHERE’S THE FORMAL CENSURE BY PRESIDENT, ANC? NINE YEARS into the 21st century and we still have to bear witness to pernicious and appalling statements from the mouth of South Africa’s Deputy Foreign Minister Fatima Hajaig, statements that cannot pass without protest and comment. In election time, politicians will spout all kind of rhetoric to glean votes. However, to my way of thinking, there is a dividing line which politicians should abide by and one of cardinal importance which calls on one not to use hate speech and unsubstantiated information to denigrate any ethnic group or person. Ms Hajaig is guilty of spewing archaic 19th century anti-Semitic propaganda at a recently convened rally in Lenasia. As a member of the Cabinet and a deputy foreign minister to boot, I am surprised that there has not been some form of censure from President Motlanthe. His silence on the matter and the silence from the ANC and its president, Mr Zuma is deafening! For a party that claims human rights as a pillar of its manifesto and insists it holds dear each and every minority group, how come that not a word of admonishment has been heard from this hierarchy? No self-respecting Jewish person should allow this disgraceful behaviour to pass by. No self-respecting Jewish person should even contemplate voting for the ANC until (maybe) it proves beyond any reasonable doubt that it condemns and distances itself from these appalling statements from one of their senior Cabinet members. Hajaig in turn should issue a public apology to the Jewish community and should be made to become more informed with the history of the Holocaust and also study certain facts of world population distribution and demographics. She should be told that the total number of Jewish people worldwide comprises a mere 13 million, whereas the Muslim population worldwide numbers more than a billion and counting. Haijag should also be told that among the one billion Muslims there are the richest people in the world in places such as oil-rich Dubai, Saudi Arabia and Borneo/Bhutan among others. I recommend that South African Jews boycott the ANC until we are satisfied that their ministers in senior positions act responsibly and do not plumb the depths and make use of archaic propaganda as a populist ploy. This is the least we can expect from people in senior posts in Government. Councillor Ray Wolder Ward 74 Johannesburg bombings and seen for themselves, mothers, fathers and grandparents having had not only to get themselves into the bunkers but before that, gather up their children and all this within a space of 30 seconds. Most of the 14 are known to me by name only, but I would surmise that the only “bombing” or “shelling” that they have ever experienced, occurs on November 5 when some hooligans let off fireworks in undesignated areas. If the attitude of the 14 was not so pathetic I would find their statement: “We fervently hope that the recent ceasefire will hold, that obstacles to a lasting peace in the region will be removed”, quite hilarious. I wonder if they are aware that by the time the 14 had agreed to the wording of their letter and agreed to submit it, that Hamas had already broken the ceasefire and started shelling Israel. Thankfully, however, Hamas must have been privy to their letter since their shelling was “not at all disproportionate” as only a “few dozen shells were fired” and this only occurred on three occasions during the day and not the usual three to eight times a day as before. My personal advice to the illustrious 14 would be simple: “Wake up and smell the roses.” Aubrey Lampert Fairmount Johannesburg ZAPIRO’S ‘BADLY-EXECUTED, POORLY-CONSIDERED’ CARTOONS WHAT IRRITATES me about Jonathan Shapiro, is his keen need to doodle badlyexecuted and poorly considered antiSemitic caricatures. I say this with the utmost respect. Goebbels or the Czar would have liked his hook-nose jokes. I don’t. I like a caricaturist who can draw properly, and cogitate. In short, a proper cartoonist. Somebody like Larson, Doonesbury, Ralph Steadman, Heath Robinson or Don Martin, which Johnny will never be. Any time Israel has to defend itself militarily, for any reason, he exhibits the usual knee-jerk or rather, goose-step response. Shock and awe of the bleeding heart politically correct Jew baiter. Never mind that Israel was attacked repeatedly by better armed states outnumbering them. We could have seen in his scribbling a mosque in Gaza described as a missile launching site with missiles as minarets. We could’ve - but don’t - see a cartoon collection of Iranian nuclear scientists described as a subterfuge of, rather than a centrifuge of, physicists. What about a nice joke about the Mumbai atrocities? What about crowning moments like when UN troops politely let Nasser’s army through in the Sinai or when Idi Amin got a standing ovation at the General Assembly? Maybe Mugabe should get the Nobel Prize? Shapiro’s not really barbedly satirical, he’s just stupid and hurtful. What kind of a Jew really wants to see a Magen David depicted as a swastika under any circumstances? Rather replace Trotsky’s hammer and sickle with a swastika. I’ve had enough of things in my name that aren’t, Shapiro. I also didn’t kill Christ, Shapiro. Anyway one of the popes forgave me when I was three. Meanwhile, in not so great Britain, which pioneered the concentration camps here, (remember?) over 150 assorted antiSemitic incidents, which Zapiro ignored, were reported last week, including the attempted firebombing of a synagogue. (Not like it was used to fire missiles from or to store weapons, unlike a Gaza mosque.) Of course there was the expulsion, and the SS Exodus etc. The only Briton who was kind to the Jews was Oliver Cromwell. Well maybe Balfour too, but that was payback to Weitzman - Britain needed the cordite to blow up the Germans. Other Jew-friendly Brits? Mrs Blair? No. Not Annie Lennox. Back to tachlis: What Shapiro misses, probably because he seems not to think hard enough and have a purchase hold of history, is the disproportionate volume of world anti-Semitism, past and present, which extends to Israel hate. And that puts him beyond the pale, in cahoots with a familiar apparatchik and contemporary. And that makes him painfully unbearable. Please count the ways I can insult him. I wish I could throw a shoe that far - a pretty docile insult, I can do better. Are there many letters damning him to be signed? Apparently he’s won some awards recently from institutions sounding like the University of Bronkhorstspruit and Jeffreys Bay. What he should be awarded by the Jewish community via the Chief Rabbi, is a herem. With Jews like Jonathan Shapiro who needs antiSemites? Stephen Davimes Orchards, Johannesburg ARE THE CRITICS’ COMMUNIST SLIP STILL SHOWING? THE ONGOING heated debate over Israel’s incursion into Gaza has thrown up some interesting side issues. It appears that many (by no means all) of those so vociferously critical of Israel, are well-known Communists. Let me quickly add that that is their democratic(?) right. However, the Communist Soviet regime, which they so ardently supported, was guilty of massive, ongoing human rights abuses, as well as tyrannical rule over its, oft-reluctant subjects. Does anybody out there remember the invasions of Prague and Budapest to name just two? One of the arguments used against Israel is that the people of Gaza have no army, navy or air force. Does the Taliban or AlQaida have such formal and well-armed military structures? It is also noteworthy that, by and large, pro-Israel protests have been very peaceful, while pro-Palestinian protests have regularly degenerated into violence. Much of the hate speak, including blatant anti-Semitism, emanates from the Palestinian supporters. As far as I know, the only world leader who stormed out of a democratic, high profile debate on the matter, was pro-Palestine. I believe these things say much about the opposing sides. Lastly, I am a fan of Dennis Davis, but found his arrogant reference to the military expertise of participants in this debate totally unnecessary. I would suggest that Davis remembers that he is a judge and not a general. David Wolpert Rivonia Sandton 06 - 13 February 2009 SA JEWISH REPORT 13 COMMUNITY COLUMNS ABOVE BOARD Zev Krengel, National Chairman A column of the SA Jewish Board of Deputies MOST PEOPLE will by now be aware of the unacceptable comments made by Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs Fatima Hajaig asserting that America and most other Western governments were controlled by Jewish financial power. Last week, the Board lodged an official complaint against her for anti-Semitic and inflammatory hate speech, thereafter issuing a media statement announcing what we had done and why. This became one of the major media events of the day, with the issue being reported and debated on radio stations countrywide and featuring one the front pages and editorials of various leading daily newspapers. It was the lead story on etv on Wednesday night, for which I was interviewed. In my responses to the questions put to me, I made a point of stressing that the incident was not solely of Jewish concern, but had national implications. Such inflammatory rhetoric from a member of Government was a betrayal of the principles of non-racism on which our postapartheid society is based, and a betrayal of all those South Africans of all colours and creeds who have been and are striving to prevent the evil of racism rearing its ugly AROUND THE WORLD NEWS IN BRIEF REPORT: STATE DEPT COMPOSED LETTER TO IRAN WASHINGTON - US State Department officials have drafted a letter to Iran from President Barack Obama aimed at changing the tone of relations between the two countries, according to a British newspaper. The Guardian reported last week Thursday that the State Department had been working on drafts of the letter since Obama's election. It says the letter is being considered by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton as part of a review of US policy on Iran, but that no decision about sending the missive has been made. The article said that three drafts of the letter - which would be addressed to the Iranian people and sent directly to either Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, or released as an open letter have been written. It would assure Iranians that the United States does not want to overthrow the Iranian government, but would like to see a change in the regime's behaviour. (JTA) The thin line towards anti-Semitism head once more. The Middle East conflict should not be allowed to sour inter-group relations within South Africa. I could do no better in this regard than to quote Reverend Frank Chikane, who observed during our meeting with President Kgalema Motlanthe two weeks ago that in a sense our own country was a victim of the Middle East crisis since when conflict arose there, it resulted in heightened tension between fellow South Africans. I further emphasised that criticism of Israel, even if it was robust and in our view unwarranted, did not constitute anti- Semitism. The danger was that hostility to Israel could, and unfortunately sometimes did, cross the line into attacks on Jews in general, as had clearly happened in this instance. No matter who makes them, such statements are unacceptable, but they are especially scandalous in having been made and in a public forum - by a government minister in a democratic country. This was not the time for pulling punches. In our media statement, and in the numerous media interviews that followed, we rammed home the point that in advocating the views that she did, Hajaig was depicting Jews worldwide as a disloyal, plotting and underhanded people who manipulated their host societies for their own pernicious ends. Such racist conspiracy theorising constituted a fundamental breach of existing anti-racism legislation and was against the spirit of the Constitution of South Africa. The SA Human Rights Commission is a body that has been especially set up to address such matters. From our own dealings with it in years gone past, we can state with confidence that it can be expected to give our complaint the thorough and serious consideration it requires. 14 SA JEWISH REPORT 06 - 13 February 2009 TAPESTRY ART, BOOKS, DANCE, FILM, THEATRE ARTS MATTERS COMPILED BY ROBYN SASSEN Call 084-319-7844 or info@frodo.co.za at least one week prior to publication Baxter Theatre, Cape Town: In the Theatre, Paul Slabolepszy’s “Freak Country”, February 10-28. In the Sanlam Studio, “Pictures of You” with Liezl de Kock and Dorian Burstein, until February 21, (021) 685-7880. David Krut Projects, Rosebank, Johannesburg: “Swamp Eyes”, works on paper, contemplating the natural world. Artists include Ryan Arenson, Gail Behrmann, Claire Gavronsky, William Kentridge, Kim Lieberman, Rose Shakinovsky, Nathaniel Stern, until March 16, (011) 447-0627. Iziko, South African National Gallery, Cape Town: William Kentridge’s “I am not Me, the Horse is not Mine”, based on Gogol’s “The Nose”, until March 8, (021) 467-4660. Johannesburg Art Gallery, Joubert Park: Thami Mnyele and the Medu Art Ensemble Retrospective until March 30, (011) 725-3130. Kim Sacks Gallery, Rosebank: “Transformed Fibres” textiles from the African continent, until February 28, (011) 447-5804. Market Theatre, Newtown: In the Laager, Dael Orlandersmith’s “Yellow Man”, until February 8. In the Barney Simon, James Ngcobo’s “Thirst”, until March 1. In the Main Theatre, Lara Foot Newton’s “Tshepang”, until February 8, (011) 832-1641. Maynardville Open-Air Theatre, Cape Town: Shakespeare’s “As you like it”, directed by Geoffrey Hyland and Leila Anderson, until February 14, (021) 461-3746. Ninth Street, Parkhurst: Jonathan Hurwitz’s ballet evening, on work by choreographer Christopher Bruce, hailed as the Nureyev of contemporary dance, on February 8 is fully booked; another evening with the same focus will be presented, depending on audience demand, on March 22, (011) 7830088. Old Mutual Theatre on the Square, Sandton: “My mother’s Italian, my father’s Jewish; I’m in therapy”, with Michael Richard, until March 1, (011) 883-8606. Spier Old Wine Cellar Gallery, Stellenbosch: “Cape Town: How I love you and all your secrets”, watercolours and monotypes by Pamela Silver, until February 19, (021) 809-1100. Wits University, Braamfontein: In the Amphitheatre, the Kurt Weill musical “Lost in the Stars” based on “Cry the Beloved Country” and directed by Gina Shmukler, until February 14, (011) 717-1376. Accessible love - the Shakespeare way MOIRA SCHNEIDER CAPE TOWN A PARTNERSHIP between a director and his former student should make for an interesting As You Like It, this year’s Shakespearean production at Maynardville open-air theatre. Since drama school, when Leila Anderson was a “special” student of Geoffrey Hyland, he’s had his eye on her; this is the first time he’s had the funds to employ her as assistant director. Hyland lectured Anderson during her BA in Theatre and Performance at the University of Cape Town; she scooped the Most Outstanding Student of the Dramatic Arts award in her final year. For her part, Anderson is not at all intimidated at the prospect of working with Hyland; she grabs the “opportunity to learn” with both hands. “It’s fantastic!” she says. “Geoff has been incredibly nurturing of me and my ideas and work.” He, on the other hand, relishes the chance to mentor younger directors. Theatrically, Anderson can be described as an all-rounder. In the two years since graduation, she has worked non-stop in film, television and theatre, directing, designing and stage-managing; it’s a field in which it is notoriously difficult to be continuously employed. Needless to say, she does not go along with the trend of super-specialising like “doing doctoral theses on one kind of rat”. “In South Africa, you can’t afford to do that. I take equal delight in all the things that I do; they all feed each other,” she says. On the present production, Hyland says he hopes it is both cutting-edge as well as having general appeal. “With Maynardville you’ve got a wide audience base, from the reluctant 16-year-old who doesn’t want to see boring Shakespeare, to the learned professor who knows all his Shakespeare - hopefully you’re appealing on many levels. “It’s a very accessible play,” he adds. “Love is always accessible.” As to the challenges of putting it together, Hyland agrees that a comedy such as this written 400 years ago may not be perceived as humorous to a modern-day audience. “It needed a strong red pen. “If I couldn’t see on a first read what it was pointing to or might mean, then I tended to cut it.” As assistant director, Anderson said she really appreciated her role as a sounding-board, as it signified to her that Hyland valued her opinion. She also had to assist choreographer Jay Pather as well as keep an eye on the dances in this “busy” production. One would think that the sylvan setting of Maynardville could have been tailor-made for this play, set as it is in the Forest of Arden. “Yes and no,” says Hyland surprisingly. Geoffrey Hyland (director) and Leila Anderson (assistant director) confer on the set of William Shakespeare’s As You Like It at Maynardville. (PHOTO: GRAHAM ABBOTT) “You’ve got a stage and the forest as a backdrop - I don’t work with backdrops, I work with settings. The blend of art and nature is extremely difficult - the forest and the gardens around can just suck the performance energy right out,” he says, adding that one has to do “a helluva lot more” than one would in a “neutral space”. • As You Like It is at Maynardville until February 14. Tel (021) 421-3746. Tararam has exciting range of events for 2009 ROBYN SASSEN “EVERYONE PANICKED,” Sara Gon director of Tararam, the Israeli Cultural Fund, describes pandemonium at the Musho International Festival, last month in KwaZulu-Natal. This was the welcome Dov Segev-Steinberg, Israel’s new ambassador to South Africa, received from the cultural front: a political demonstration, around “Sounds from here”, the first Tararamsponsored cultural event for 2009, written by Israeli Dorit Weintal and performed by Rasha Jahshan, a Palestinian actress. “It is an avant-garde play about abuse,” Gon explained. “I did not think there were so many people so strongly political since the notorious Durban conference in 2000.” Some journalists ignored the protest; others tried to weave it into an interpretation of the play; others devoted more page space to the events, which were ultimately peaceful, than to a critical reading of the play. Shika Budhoo, on artsmart.co.za, said: “Theatre staff, festival organisers, patrons, crew and cast were visibly tense... A small group of protesters gathered, monitored by the SAPS. Protesters shouted slogans and waved banners outside, defying the Israeli government.” Businesswoman Sharon Emmerich wrote on Musho’s website: “Curtain went up, Israeli ambassador was whisked away by his bodyguards and SAPS dotted the theatre... And so the scene was set.” Since its inception in 2006, Musho has been supported by Israel; under the steerage of Gon, Israeli cultural sponsorship has taken an intelli- FELDMAN ON FILM Peter Feldman The Secret Life of Bees Cast: Starring Queen Latifah, Dakota Fanning, Jennifer Hudson, Alicia Keys, Sophie Okonedo, Paul Bettany Director: Gina Prince-Bythewood Dakota Fanning has grown from a child star to a mature, alluring teenager and in “The Secret Life of Bees” she certainly shows her mettle. Gina Prince-Bythewood’s production is based on the New York Times’ best selling novel and is set in South Carolina in 1964. Fanning portrays Lily Owens a 14-year-old girl who is haunted by the memory of her late mother. To escape her lonely life and troubled relationship with her abusive father (Paul Bettany), Lily flees with Rosaleen (Jennifer Hudson), her nanny and only friend, to a South Carolina town that holds the secret to gently provocative line, but not one designed to forge conflict. This month, Johannesburg dance audiences will see work by Israeli choreographer, Nimrod Freed, in the Dance Umbrella. “After Musho, security must be breached,” Gon acknowledges. “There’s been no mention of can- Rasha Jahshan in celling; I expected it,” “Sounds from Here”, at she adds, in parentheses. this year’s Musho Gon is currently selec- Festival. (PHOTOGRAPHS ting films for the Israeli COURTESY TARARAM) Film Festival, in June. “Trends emerge, which must reflect on where the current thinking of Israelis is,” she said. “There’s lots of sturm und drang in many of the works. Further, there’s a preponderance of films dealing with dysfunctional domesticity, foreigners, prostitution and poverty. They’re social realism; Russians, Thais, Ethiopians and Filipinos form part of the community, and Israelis completely lack charm.” With actress Keren Tahor, Gon hopes to launch a documentary film festival, showcasing Israeli documentaries, including Yariv Mozer’s acclaimed “My First War”, about the Lebanon War. Another documentary Gon is keen to bring, is “Jerusalem is Proud to Present”, a controversial gloss on the contemporary status of gay and lesbian communities in Israel. Directed by Nitzan her mother’s past. Taken in by the intelligent and independent Boatwright sisters, Lily finds solace in their mesmerising world of beekeeping. The film manages to soar to great heights thanks to the powerful all-round acting and a script that avoids being too sentimental or preachy. The Boatwright sisters, played by a commanding trio of Queen Latifah, Alicia Keys and Sophie Okonedo, give Lily the spiritual sustenance and nurturing that she craves. Painfully, she also learns something about the politics of the time. Gina Prince-Bythewood, who also wrote the script, is a sensitive storyteller, creating a touching study in which the key character is worthy of our sympathy and admiration. Doubt Cast: Meryl Streep, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Amy Adams, Viola Davis Director: John Patrick Shanley Meryl Streep, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Amy Adams and Viola David, plus writer-director John Patrick Shanley, have all been nominated Gilady, this film exposes the homophobia uniting fundamentalist Jew, Christian and Arab. In July, Old Mutual Theatre on the Square in Sandton rehosts Motti Lerner’s play “Hard Love”, Yariv Mozer, which premiered last year. writer and Starring Tahor opposite director of “My Ashley Dowds and directed by Alan Swerdlow, it looks First War” at complexities across religious lines. This year, Tararam assists the theatre in bringing Lerner to South Africa. “Festival links are very important.” Gon is working on ideas for the Grahamstown Festival as well as Joy of Jazz. In June, she hopes to involve Tararam in a Chamber music festival, introducing legendary Haifa-born violinist Ivry Gitlis, who is in his 80s; he no longer performs, but his role as a teacher is phenomenal, and the plan is to have him collaborate with organisations like Buskaid. “I’m also keen to work with Limmud in bringing out interesting speakers from Israel, on subjects ranging from archaeology to politics. It is an extraordinary privilege to bring Israeli practitioners here,” she adds, commenting on the informed support Segev-Steinberg brings Tararam. “He’s culturally alive. He’s an expert on Islamic art and Middle East literature and speaks several languages.” Watch Tapestry for more details on Tararamfunded projects through 2009. for Oscars in this potent and emotionally exhausting production. The film, set in 1964 at St Nicholas in the Bronx, deals with a vibrant, charismatic priest, Father Flynn (Hoffman), who is trying to overturn the school’s strict rules, which have long been fiercely guarded by Sister Aloysius Beauvier (Streep). She is the iron-gloved principal who believes in the power of fear and discipline. The winds of political change are sweeping through the country, and, indeed, the school has just accepted its first black student, Donald Miller. But when Sister James (Adams), a hopeful innocent, shares with Sister Aloysius her suspicion that Father Flynn is paying too much personal attention to Donald, Sister Aloysius is galvanised to begin a crusade to both unearth the truth and to expunge Flynn from the school. Now, without a shred of proof or evidence except her moral certainty, Sister Aloysius locks into a battle of wills with Father Flynn, a battle that threatens to tear apart the Church and school with devastating consequences. 06 - 13 February 2009 SA JEWISH REPORT TAPESTRY ART, BOOKS, DANCE, FILM, THEATRE Flawed novel not only works, it wrenches Mercy by Lara Santoro (Penguin, R130) REVIEWED BY GWEN PODBREY HOW DOES one tell an authentically African story? By identifying what element of this continent makes it transcendent, even when its peoples are being driven to their knees by the innumerable tragedies and tyrannies that beset them. For Lara Santoro, that element lies partly in history, and in the resilience of peoples who have endured centuries of oppression and servility. Mostly, however, it lies in Africa’s unique ability to live to its own rhythm, drawing strength from a core of humanity that has not been dislodged by adversity. For those visiting the continent, its apparent insanity can be overwhelming. On its most basic level, the book is a human drama, relating an encounter between two women with seemingly irreconcilable values, and from unimaginably different backgrounds. Anna - an Italian American journalist, who narrates this novel - arrives in Nairobi with almost no baggage except her notebooks, a chronic drinking problem and a propensity for self-destruction. Cynical, contemptuous and far more absorbed in her own chaotic affairs than in those of Kenya, she juggles two lovers, neither of whom can cope with her lifestyle. Undisciplined, anti-social, irresponsible, judgemental and - for all her experience as a foreign correspondent for a mainstream US journal - strangely naïve, Anna is as incompetent at maintaining domestic order as she is at relationships. Enter Mercy: a middle-aged Nairobi housekeeper who has survived an abusive marriage and clawed her way to comparative prosperity by working first as a prostitute, and then as a brewer of illicit alcohol. Gregarious, insupportably arrogant, flamboyant in both dress and demeanour, Mercy takes Anna in her capable hands. At first, the younger woman deeply resents her continual criticism, her admonishments and her (unfailingly accurate) appraisals of her slovenly, self-centred existence. However, gradually, the realisation dawns that this difficult, perverse personality has bullied her back into contact with fundamental values she has all but relinquished. Fidelity, for example. And hygiene. And accountability. Above all, faith. In many ways, Mercy is the embodiment of Santoro’s Africa: worn, inured to poverty, accepting of a thousand outrages on body and soul - but never embittered. Fanciful and hyper-responsive to flattery she may be, but when situations call for moral choices, her decisions are swift and inflexible. Thus, when one of Anna’s lovers is killed and she flees to Nigeria, in a haze of guilt and pain, prolonging her stay there for weeks. Mercy’s reaction is one of contempt. Escape is never an option: it is the resort of children. On a deeper level, the novel’s primary concern is faith, the life force of Africans and their only bulwark against the destructive forces that ravage their countries: starvation, corruption, tyranny and disease. There is the faith of Father Anselmo, a Catholic missionary who makes his home in the worst of Nairobi’s slums, who instructs Anna to look beyond the face of violence and see its real cause: “Many of the early Christian communities did not define evil in moral terms at all. “They did not even call it evil. They called it ‘aporia’, roadlessness. Blindness. There is a road, a path, but you do not see it. [Ask a murderer] to describe the man he killed. His face. His tastes. You’ll find out that he can’t... He didn’t see him. So he killed him.” And there is the faith of Anna’s Muslim colleague Kez, who upbraids her: “What do you know of the music of numbers, the clarity of water, the human eye? You know nothing... Allah is great. You’re not. End of story.” There is also the faith of David, the Igbo who takes Anna to a spot on the banks of the Niger and tells her: “Na here Jesus stay.” Pressed for an ‘Celebration 60’ a DVD full of pleasant surprises REVIEWED BY ROBYN SASSEN BILLING ITSELF a “vibrant tapestry of moments and milestones in Jewish history”, this DVD doesn’t disappoint. It nostalgically cross-references Jewish music traditions with popular beats, as it embraces cultural pride. It contains a rich medley of old favourites, celebrating Israel in English and Hebrew, with heart. “Celebration” concerts were begun by Oshy Tugendhaft in 1993. With pepperings of African references, the “60” version celebrating Israel’s milestone, honours the tradition well. The highlight is an inspired melding of song with “Bring Him “Celebration 60: Live in Johannesburg”, with Len Kay, Micha Schachat, Azi Shwartz, Oshy Tugendhaft. Directed by Jeanne Zaidel-Rudolph. Price: R150 from Jewish bookshops in Johannesburg. Home” from “Les Miserables”, and “Avinu Shebashamayim”, where boy soprano Micha Schachat lends a haunting spirituality. The repertoire itself vies gently with tradition, with jazzed-up shul classics and popular culture, including songs like “If We Only Have Love”, and the theme song of “Schindler’s List”. This is celebratory sound at its impressive best, to warm the cockles of any Zionist heart. explanation, he insists: “Make us no discuss. With faith you accept. You just accept.” Finally, there is the faith of Mercy. Stricken by HIV/Aids and wasting rapidly, she is - as Anna notes - ravenous for life. Since Kenya, like many other African countries, is desperately short of anti-retrovirals, and its clinics a mockery of even the most rudimentary healthcare, it is only through the manipulations of Anna the Western journalist, with rank to pull - that help is forthcoming. So when Father Anselmo persuades Mercy to use her own plight as a rallying cry for civil disobedience - “the way of Gandhi” - in order to expose the greed of Western pharmaceutical companies whose retroviral prices are unaffordable, Anna is forced to watch the inexorable decline of the only human being who has ever really mattered to her. The novel is, in many ways, clumsy. The actions of its characters are not consistent with their natures: for instance, would a woman as vain, as crudely educated and as deeply mired in bodily appetites as Mercy conceivably give herself over to immolation at the behest of a priest? Conversations - and even casual exchanges - suddenly abandon their context and becoming high-flown oratory, even sermons. Themes are drawn, only to be truncated, as new ones emerge. It is as if Santoro is unsure of how to tie threads together neatly - or credibly. Yet, for all its contradictions and fault lines - rather like Africa itself the novel not only works, but wrenches. Santoro’s writing blazes with her love for this continent and her wonder at its ability to give itself over to laughter, teaching timeless truths, even as it bleeds and lies sprawled in the dust. 15 16 SA JEWISH REPORT 06 - 13 February 2009 YOUTH TALK Shelley Elk jewishreport@yahoo.com Fulfilling the sacred duty of ‘Never again’ STORY AND PHOTOGRAPH BY SHELLEY ELK KNOWLEDGE OF the Holocaust had limited value unless applied to society in today’s world. Learning about a tragic and complicated history, which not all have the opportunity to learn formally - the hows and whys of it - provided a vital opportunity to appreciate and understand the Holocaust and use that knowledge to ensure it never happens again. Everyone needed exposure to the genocide, stressed Michael Moss, a grade 12 learner, from Crawford College Lone Hill, at the UN and Johannesburg Holocaust Centre’s exhibition of “Lost Voices” and commemoration of the Holocaust last week at the Rabbi Cyril Harris Community Centre in Johannesburg. The voice of youth was important, said Tali Nates director of the Johannesburg Holocaust Centre. Moss, one of two delegates who represented South Africa at the First International Youth Congress on Holocaust Remembrance at Yad Vashem, held under the patronage of Unesco last year, spoke about the role of youth in ensuring that the promise of “Never again”, was kept. On November 1 2005, The UN General Assembly condemned, without reservation, any denial of events of the Holocaust, saying that denial was “tantamount to approval of genocide in all its forms”. The United Nations has designated January 27 as the annual International Day of Commemoration in Memory of the Victims of the Holocaust. The Holocaust was recognised as a warning of the dangers of hatred, bigotry, and racism. It was also an initiative to mobilise Holocaust education, after the world had witnessed previous acts of genocide. In total 116 youngsters from 63 countries, discovered the Holocaust, and learned about previous generations and human rights violations. At the International Youth Congress, it became the role of the youth to promote human rights and dignity, spread awareness and fight intolerance. An important step in a long hard journey, promoted a universal understanding of Michael Moss at the recent “Lost Voices” exhibition at the RCHCC in Johannesburg. human rights, in all places in the world. Moss said South Africa was a leader in Holocaust remembrance and education, where it was a compulsory subject for grade 9s, to learn about and understand human rights and to safeguard the declaration of human rights and South Africa’s constitutional rights. At the end of the Second World War, the ideal of “Never again” had not become a reality. It was a promise broken in Cambodia, Darfur, Sudan, Bosnia, and it had been broken again. The responsibility of today’s youth was to safeguard tomorrow against human rights violations, Moss said. Formally and informally, teacher to student, parent to child, and human to human knowledge and understanding of the Holocaust, genocide and human rights violations could be imparted and “in this way we can grow human rights consciousness in the world and move forward, on fulfilling this big promise of “never again”, to today,” said Moss. In preparation for his participation in the Youth Congress, Moss visited the Cape Town Holocaust Centre and consulted with Richard Freedman, the director, where he was briefed on the South African standpoint on general youth issues. “We could be the last generation to have contact with Holocaust survivors first hand.” Tu B’Shvat puts emphasis Gaza will become a on global warming PSC rallying point IN RAISING youth’s awareness this Tu B’Shvat, Jewish National Fund (JNF) is sending shlichim to various schools to discuss how climate change and water shortage pose a threat to life and how it may change the face of the planet. JNF explained in a media release what climate change and global warming was, what contributed to the greenhouse effect, and how keeping the planet green would make a vital difference to looming catastrophe. Climate change - or global warming - was a slow but steady rise in the earth’s temperature as a result of different gases trapped inside the atmosphere, creating a blanket and acting as a giant greenhouse. According to JNF, British scientists have warned that if climate change isn’t slowed down, the planet could heat up by 5 degrees C before the end of this century - that’s as much difference as between now and the last ice age! It would be impossible for humans to go in the sun, crops would die, seas and lakes would dry up, the icy North and South Poles would melt completely. Most explanations for dangerous greenhouse gases, had to do with lifestyle choices. Burning fuel released carbon, a potent greenhouse gas. Cars and planes, household appliances requiring electricity, also burned fuel. The manufacture of paper, glass and cans (which could be recycled) burns fuel and releases gases. Most activities modern-day city-dwellers engage in, release carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. Ancient forests helped combat global warming. Trees breathe in carbon dioxide and breath it out as oxygen, lessening dangerous amounts of noxious gases in the atmosphere. Forests are the planet’s lungs. Cutting down, burning trees, selling off wood and clearing land to raise cows for fast food chains or to grow crops for supermarkets in wealthy countries halfway across the globe, means famous rainforests like the Amazon of South America are decreasing every year. As the planet’s trees die or are cut GLENHAZEL FROM R1.6 MILLION 47 ON SUMMERWAY RE-LAUNCH On the Doorstep of Yeshiva College 3 bedroom duplexes/simplex option Call Mike 083-326-9946 down, so do plant, animal, bird and insect life. In fighting global warming, says the JNF’s release, “you can make a difference; firstly be more careful about what we buy, what we throw away and how much we travel; and secondly we can plant more trees.” The JNF plants trees in Israel and researches how to stop “desert creep” and how best to grow crops and save trees. It points out that climate change is terrifying and dangerous, “but if we all pull together and take responsibility for our own actions and behaviours, then it can be beaten”. The JNF shlichim will visit the King David Schools in Johannesburg as well as Yeshiva College, where they will discuss global warming and where each scholar will be asked to contribute towards saving the forests of the Galilee and making Israel a green and fertile land once more. “Every tree you plant helps absorb carbon produced all through your life.” For more information contact Sharon@beyachad.co.za or (011) 645-2541. for 2009, either a “Monkey Thorn Tree” or a “Brown Leaf Teak”. GAZA WOULD be a flashpoint SAUJS’s other plans include for recruiting students to the a party with for orientation Palestinian Solidarity Comweek, a debate on February 8 mittee’s (PSC) cause, Benji on Israel’s elections on the Shulman, national chairman 10th, and representatives from of SAUJS told Jewish Report “Young Judea”, the biggest in an interview. Zionist student movement in The PSC’s message was “the the US will be coming to South same: anti-Israel” not “proPalestine” said Shulman Benji Shulman, Africa this month to assist SAUJS with issues facing explaining: “It is the same, as national chairJews in South Africa. Young it has always been, but they man of SAUJS. Judea will also meet the will just be using Gaza for a “Lemba Jew”, who claim to be rallying banner.” descended from the Yemenite tribes. SAUJS’s response would be a peace A nice mix of people are this year on rally, inviting students to say tehillim the SAUJS team, some, with experias was the case during the Lebanon ence who have been around for some War. The message of Israel’s right to three years, and others with fresh defend itself would be put across in ideas who have been around for two posters around campus, added years or less. Shulman. “In orientation week we need to Protests, demonstrations and focus on making sure we represent posters on campus, required adherJewish students on campus. SAUJS’s ence to laws and security procedures. key focus was to sign people up, Permission was required before any involve them on committees, and to protest or rally could be staged, he demonstrate that young Jews can pointed out. make a difference. “We don’t normally have protests Opening new campuses, to SAUJS during orientation week, because sturepresentation, no matter how few dents are concentrating at that time on Jewish students were on campus, was signing up for classes.” another SAUJS goal. So far, Lisof SAUJS’s key political battle would (London International School of take place over the course of the year. Fashion), Varsity College, Boston, “During the year we will show the stuAAA (advertising), Vega (a design dent population at Wits that Israel is school), and Forbes (a business school) the only democracy in the Middle East, will have SAUJS representation. that we are up against a group of ter“Each Jewish student will have his rorists and that we need to find the or her issues represented, as for exambest way we can to peace... that is key,” ple last year when Tukkies needed said Shulman, exams moved and we helped with This year, in celebration of Tu that.” B’Shvat, SAUJS will for the first time Campus committees, explained donate a tree to the campus with the Shulman, were the lifeblood of SAUJS, emphasis on sustainability. SAUJS has at the coal-face, running events. SAUJS asked Wits to select an indigenous tree portfolios spanned religious, social, that would thrive and survive in its political issues (and more) affording environment. A tree would be selected students an opportunity to get involved. from one of the two trees of the year SHELLEY ELK GLENHAZEL R 1 250 000 GLENHAZEL R1 850 000 GLENHAZEL/FAIRVALE R 3.9 MIL GLENHAZEL R1 550 000 ORCHARDS OFFERS MID 1 MIL Renovated ground floor apartment The best position. WFH in Glenhazel Superb Property – MUST BE SEEN Beautifully renovated apartment Outstanding simplex cluster Mod Kitchen, 3 beds (mes) lounge, dining room. Huge patio, underground parking Staff accommodation, pool in complex Call Peter 083-274-9568 Gerald 084-424-6628 Lounge, dining room, kitchen, 4 beds 2 baths (mes) 2 garages, pool, jungle gym. Studio, office & flatlet 500m2 of accommodation with guest suite. 4 beds, 3 baths, lounge, dining room, TV room, playroom, staff suite. Pointers from Northfield & George Ave. On Show Sunday Feb 8, 2 to 5 pm Meet Peter 083-274-9568 Gerald 084-424-6628 4 beds (3 onto enclosed patio with view) 2 beds, granite kitchen 2 u/g parkings. Best position in Glenhazel - pointers from Northfield Ave. On Show Sunday Feb 8, 2 to 5 pm Meet Henry 082-347-8044 Top security. Close to all amenities. Sizeable lounge/dining room. 3 beds, 2 baths (mes). Well-fitted kitchen. Double auto garage. Pointers from The Avenue & Sunnyside Road On Show Sunday Feb 8, 2 to 5 pm Meet Henry 082-347-8044 Call Henry 082-347-8044 www.mikerodrealty.co.za (011) 454-6442 Partners in Property 06 - 13 February 2009 SA JEWISH REPORT 17 Shelley Elk jewishreport@yahoo.com YOUTH TALK Large grade 8 intake at KDVP JESS COOPERMAN PHOTOGRAPH: YAEL GORDON King David High School Victory Park welcomed over 100 new grade 8 learners on the first day of school. This is the largest intake for several years. An exciting day was enjoyed by all. Grade ones and their own anashim STORY AND PHOTOGRAPH BY STACY FLEISHMAN AT THE end of an amazing first two weeks in grade one Hebrew at King David Victory Park Primary School, the children made their own anashim (people) to celebrate their knowledge of the body parts in Hebrew. Here are Georgia Lewis, Sam Herring, Brent Butkow, Ruby Gimpel, Kareen Sandler (Hebrew grade 1), Gina Altshuler, Dante Tinchero, Matthew Kerem, Desmond Zeelie (headmaster) and Isabella Fischer. TA learners wish Israeli soldiers well OWN CORRESPONDENT PHOTOGRAPH: SUZANNE BELLING ALL THE learners from Torah Academy Primary School showed their support for soldiers in the Israel Defence Forces with letters mounted on a special wall display in the school quadrangle. Quotes from the letters include: “Thank you for protecting Israel”, “I know you lost your arm and I am saying tehillim for you”, “I was in Israel for four years. Thank you for protecting my country... Do you know my father? He was (also) a soldier...”, “I hope I will see you safe and sound with the coming of Moshiach”, “This is coming from the bottom of my heart”. Here Primary School Administrator Chani Zwick, accompanied by some of the children, points to an apt quotation from one of the letters. 18 SA JEWISH REPORT 06 - 13 February 2009 WHAT’S ON NOTE: Deadline for all entries is 12:00 on the Friday prior to publication. Key to organisations, venues, contact details and cost: • The Jewish National Fund (JNF) Choir, Beyachad, 2 Elray St, Raedene. Contact Crystal Kaplan. 083-3765999. • The Jewish Women’s Benevolent Society (JWBS) Sandringham Gardens, 85 George Avenue Sandringham 2192. Contact Carolyn Sabbagh. (011) 485-5232. • The Jewish Outlook Team. Contact Ryan Cane, Support line: 27 76 215 8600; e-mail info@jewishoutlook.org.za; website http://www.jewishoutlook.org.za • Nechama Bereavement Counselling Centre - Room A304, 3rd Floor, hospital wing, Sandringham Gardens, 85 George Avenue, Sandringham, 2192. Contact (011) 640-1322. • New Friendship Ladies Group - A group for single women - contact Lucille (011) 791-5226 or 082-9275786. • ORT and ORTJET South Africa - 44 Central Street, Cnr 10th Ave, Houghton. Contact (011) 728-7154. • Rabbi Cyril Harris Community Centre (RCHCC) and Great Park Shul, Johannesburg. Contact Hazel, (011) 728-8088 or Rene Sidley (011) 728-8378. Cost usually R50, including refreshments. • Second Innings, Johannesburg - Jewish Community Services - Donald Gordon Centre, 85 George Avenue Sandringham. Contact Grecia Gabriel, (011) 5329616. • The Israel Centre. Contact Debbie (011) 645-2560. • The Simcha Friendship and Cultural Circle (SFCC), Johannesburg - Sandton Shul. Contact Sylvia Shull, (011) 783-5600. • The United Sisterhood, 38 Oxford Road Parktown. Contact Helen (011) 646-2409. website:http://www.unitedsisterhood.co.za • Society of Israel Philately (SIP) - daniels@wbx.oc.za. Contact Maurice (011) 485-2293. • South African Zionist Federation (SAZF), Johannesburg - Beyachad, 2 Elray Street, Raedene. Contact Froma, (011) 645-2505. • South African Jewish Board of Deputies (Jhb) Beyachad, 2 Elray Street, Raedene. Contact (011) 645-2500 or (011) 645-2523. • United Zionist Luncheon Club (UZLC), Johannesburg - Our Parents Home. Contact Gloria, (011) 485-4851 or 072-127-9421. • Union of Jewish Women (UJW), Johannesburg - 1 Oak Street Houghton. Contact (011) 648-1053. Cost R10 for the Friendship Luncheon Club. • Union of Jewish Women (UJW), Cape Town - (021) 434-9555, e-mail: info@ujwcape.co.za • WIZO Johannesburg - Beyachad, 2 Elray Street Raedene. Contact Joyce Chodos (011) 645-2548 or Sandy Kramer (011) 645-2515. • Bikkur Cholim - Jewish Society for Visiting the Sick, 7A Chester Road, Greenside East, Johannesburg. Joy Gafin (011) 447-6689. • Tiyulim (Jewish Outdoor Club) - Contact Greg 082- 959-9026 or Martin 082-965-7419. • King David Schools’ Foundation. King David Alumni info@kdsf.org (011) 480-4723. www.kdsf.org • CAJE - College of Adult Jewish Education, Sydenham Highlands North Shul (011) 640-5021. • JAFFA - Jewish Accomodation for Fellow Aged. (012) 346-2007/8. • SAIJE - Sandton Adult Institute of Jewish Education, Sandton Shul (011) 883-4210. E-mail: saije@sandtonshul.co.za. • CSO - Emergency phone number 086 18 000 18. • UOS- Union of Orthodox Synagogues (011) 4854865. E-mail: info@uos.co.za. Fax 086-610-3442 Today, Friday (February 6) • UZLC hosts Wendy Kahn, director of the SA Jewish Board of Deputies, on “The effect of Gaza in Johannesburg”. Venue: Our Parents Home. Sunday (February 8) • Second Innings hosts Bryan Hirsch on “Financial fitness” at Beyachad, 2 Elray Street, Fairmount. • Auditions for a musical production “Barmy Days” will take place in Glenhazel from 17:00. All ages welcome. Please call Helen Heldenmuth 083-272-8541 or e-mail Nadine Lazarus nade@mweb.co.za for details. • SAZF hosts a panel discussion “The Israeli elections - what changes will they herald for Israel?” Panellists Geoff Sifrin, Basil Platsky and Howard Sackstein at 19:00 at Beyachad Auditorium, Raedene. Information (011) 645-2512/10 or e-mail lisa@beyachad.co.za Monday (February 9) • UJW Johannesburg, adult education division hosts David Shapiro consultant to Sasfin, at 09:30 on “The world financial crisis”. Tuesday (February 10) • Ribbon Revolution launches its Judaica range in Killarney Mall (opposite Pick n Pay), until February 16. Proceeds go to charity. • Second Innings hosts Dr Bernard Levinson, psychiatrist on “Psychiatry today” at Our Parents Home, 14:15 for 14:30. Wednesday (February 11) • Rabbi Michael Katz of Chabad will talk at SFCC, Sandton Shul hall on a subject of topical interest. • UJW Johannesburg adult education division will screen “The Nuremberg Trial” featuring Alec Baldwin at 09:30. Friday (February 13) • UZLC hosts Mike Judin at Our Parents Home talking on “Hey folks - you’re spending my inheritance”. Saturday evening (February 14) • WIZO Etgar Group presents “My Mother’s Italian, my Father’s Jewish and I am in therapy!” at 20:00. Venue: Theatre on the Square. Cost: R180 per person THE BRIDGE LOUNGE by Jeff Sapire FINESSES ARE not to be underestimated, but the expert is always on the lookout for a superior line of play that will avoid a finesse. One option is the endplay or throw-in. Clearly NS got too high here - 4H is where you would want to be. But after 1H3H South got a little carried away and went looking for slam. East wins the opening lead with the ace and returns the jack of spades. Where do you go from here? To begin with, things are pretty straight forward, but somehow you have to try to avoid losing two club tricks. So after drawing the outstanding trumps, what chances do the clubs offer? You could lead the jack from dummy, and when the honours are split, if East slips up and covers you will win with the ace and play another club towards 1062, making when West has the other honour and the suit breaks 3-2. But if East doesn't cover you are in trouble. West will win and as you are missing the 8 and 9, there is no way you can catch the queen. Good players don't try to make plays based on misdefences, unless there is absolutely nothing else. But here, as is so often the case, an endplay may work. Draw three rounds of trumps, cash the king of diamonds throwing a club, followed by the remaining two high spades, and then ruff the last spade in hand. With the groundwork now complete, play ace and another club, hoping that one of the defenders started with a doubleton honour. If so, that defender is finished - a South dealer, NS vul NORTH AK42 10532 6 J1062 WEST 86 764 QJ9873 K4 SOUTH Q7 AKQJ9 K5 A753 Shelley Elk carro@global.co.za (includes refreshments). Call: Marion 083-326-3791, or Sandy at Beyachad (011) 645-2515. Sunday (February 15) • Second Innings is having a morning of music with the Giuseppe Verdi Choir at The Gerald Horwitz Lounge, Golden Acres. • Tiyulim is going to Somabula Nature Reserve, near Cullinan. Meet at Balfour (near the carwash) at 08:00. Members R40, non-members R45. Greg 082-9599026. • Friendship Forum for Holocaust Survivors, second generation survivors and those who lost family members in the Holocaust, hosts Ronnie Mink on “The Holocaust by bullets... Recent discoveries on the Holocaust Experience in the Ukraine”. Followed by tea, refreshments, and music with Yochanan. Venue: Our Parents Home Auditorium, Oaklands. Time: 14:30. Monday (February 16) • UJW Johannesburg adult education division hosts Tim Naery naturalist, conservationist and radio communicator at 09:30 on “Conservation through the eye of the camera”. Tuesday (February 17) • WIZO Fortnightly Forum welcomes Ambassador Dov Segev-Steinberg on “Israel today and tomorrow”. Cost R35 includes tea and refreshments. Wednesday (February 18) • SFCC hosts Dr Brenda Lasersohn at 10:00, at the Sandton Shul on “Is your brain drained? And new advances in brain function and the effects on your memory”. • UJW Johannesburg adult education division hosts Dr Lorraine Chaskalson, former lecturer Wits on “Poetry’s pleasures, small and large” from 09:30 to 11:30. Friday (February 20) • UZLC hosts Ian Glauber - “The death penalty as a deterrent”. Venue: Our Parents Home. Sunday (February 22) • Second Innings hosts David Grier on “Courage and rice: my run along the Great Wall of China” at The Gerald Horwitz Lounge, Golden Acres. • SAZF presents a piano duet from Israel “In harmony; the magic of music” featuring Orian Shukrun (16) and Gadi Abu Sam’an (17), students at the WIZO Merkaz Hamusika Maa’lot Tarshiha. Time: 18:30 at Liberty Theatre on the Square, Sandton. Donation R100. Bookings (011) 645-2515 or sandy@beyachad.co.za. Monday (February 23) • UJW Johannesburg adult education division hosts Brian Altshuler, architect, artist, writer, researcher, lecturer at 09:30, on “Landmarks of Johannesburg, past and present”. • SAZF presents a piano duet from Israel “In harmony; the magic of music” featuring, Orian Shukrun (16) and Gadi Abu Sam’an (17), students at the WIZO Merkaz Hamusika Maa’lot Tarshiha. Time: 20:00 at Liberty Theatre on the Square, Sandton. Donation R100. Bookings (011) 645-2541 or Sharon@beyachad.co.za Tuesday (February 24) • UJW Johannesburg presents “Cesar Franck’s symphony in D Minor”, from 10:00 to 12:00. Venue: 301 Eton Place, Kernick Avenue, Melrose. Cost R30. Wednesday (February 25) • SFCC is having Israeli folk dancing lessons with Ora at 10:00 at the Sandton Shul. • UJW Johannesburg adult education division hosts Dr Lorraine Chaskalson, former lecturer Wits on “Poetry’s pleasures, small and large” from 09:30 to 11:30. Saturday evening (February 25) • WIZO Tzabar screens “Lemon Tree”, Israeli film (English subtitles) at 20:20 at Beyachad. Donation R40 includes refreshments. Sunday (March 1) • Second Innings hosts Lily Mark on “Jewish art: Jewish artists and the genetic factor”, at The Gerald Horwitz Lounge, Golden Acres. Tuesday (March 2) • UJW Johannesburg adult education division is hosting Prof Jonathan Jansen, hon prof of education, Wits at 09:30 on “Education advice to the new president”. • Registration open for classical Hebrew course by Dr Yehudah Leib Yitzchak Levin. Course starts on March 16. Fee: R10 per weekly session. Venue Ohr Somayach, Glenhazel. Queries and registration: Yehudah Leib Levin (011) 640-2425. Wednesday (March 4) • SFCC hosts Rabbi Michael Katz, at Sandton Shul at 10:00 who will talk on a subject of topical interest. Saturday (March 7) • WIZO Tzabar’s Purim Ball at 20:00 at Simon Kuper Hall, Killarney. Theme is “Guys and Dolls”, the 40s, with Frankie “Blue Eyes”, Brando, “Gangsters and Babes”. Tickets: R350. Sunday (March 8) • Second Innings hosts Solange Cziernicwicz on “Passionate about growing older” at The Gerald Horwitz Lounge, Golden Acres. Monday (March 9) • UJW Johannesburg adult education development is hosting Tim du Plessis, editor of Beeld, at 09:30 on “Current affairs - an update”. CROSSWORD NO 103 BY LEAH SIMON EAST J10953 8 A1042 Q98 Contract: 5H by South Opening lead: DQ spade or diamond return will give you a ruff and discard - you can pitch dummy's remaining club, taking the ruff in hand. This line of play is not guaranteed, however. You will go down if either defender started with CKQx. Also, if West started with KQx, then leading the jack would have worked. West would have to return a low club and now you would need to decide whether to put up the ten, playing him for the other honour, or play low, hoping East has just the singleton queen remaining - a guessy situation. So, while there are some layouts where running the jack would work, nevertheless the best play is definitely to play ace and another club. The chances of either opponent having a doubleton honour is much higher than the other combinations. ACROSS: 1. Fail to hit a young lady (4) 3. Southerner falls and trips (8) 8. Not common to find artist about (4) 9. For doc, pie is somehow given in bouts (8) 11. It’s all about the numbers game (12) 13. Reside, broken, in want (6) 14. Involve being late, in disorder (6) 17. The basis for earthly understanding? (6, 6) 20. Cite cast about being delighted (8) 21. A steady organisation (4) 22. Sharp leaders - if very 1 2 small ones! (8) 23. Exist, with hesitation, for ale (4) 8 DOWN: 1. Very fetching girls, in the main (8) 2. Southern teaches - and 11 causes tension (7) 4. Put the edge on gratuity (6) 5. Mary surrounds two sons for church envoy (10) 6. One lady is upset by her (5) 13 7. Fire the bag! (4) 10. Place for the model in an era of destruction (3, 7) 12. ———— Ashkenazy, pianist (8) 19 15. A vehicle I have for being most uncivil (7) 20 16. Untied, but still together (6) 18. He appears in major sonnets (5) 19. You and I go back to Port 22 Elizabeth - and cry (4) SOLUTION TO CROSSWORD NO 102 ACROSS: 1. Wasp; 3. Pampered; 8. Riot; 9. Customer; 11. Happy New Year; 13. Gloche; 14. Greece; 17. Country music; 20. Chastity; 21. Irma; 22. Tuesdays; 23. Edit. DOWN: 1. Warthogs; 2. Scorpio; 4. Abuses; 5. Petty crime; 6. Rumba; 7. Dare; 10. Hyphenated; 12. Penchant; 15. Ensured; 16. Pretty; 18. Orate; 19. Scot. 3 4 6 5 7 9 10 12 15 14 16 17 18 21 23 20 SA JEWISH REPORT 06 - 13 February 2009 VALENTINE’S DAY FEATURE Latest European fashions at Gigi von Helden MARLENE BILEWITZ eived the latGIGI VON HELDEN has just received est, most gorgeous collections of autumn e. and winter fashions from Europe. In true style, her collection conable sists of a range of clothes suitable for all occasions and covering the most up-to-date fashion trends in nEurope by top European designers. nThe fabrics and textures are inre teresting, vast and varied. There ts are separates - pants and skirts d in different fabrics, weight and d cuts, jackets in fur (rabbit and fox), tweed, knit and wonderfull polyester jackets with interest-ing trim for all kinds of weather. e Very in this season, is the rn knitted gilet, kimono-style, worn ways, over a long-sleeved shirt. As always, irts is the attention to detail on the shirts rment outstanding, making each garment unique with its individual look. urope Basic colours as seen in Europe currently, are grey, brown and black, esting, while the accents are interesting, a, plum, warm and vibrant, using fuschia, ns, reds jacaranda and different greens, and lime yellow. ove the Skirt lengths vary from above eryone an knee to ankle, thus giving everyone ashion, yet opportunity to be totally in fashion, maintaining their own most comfortable fashion stance. Shoes: boots are in - ankle or long flat, medium o or high heels. A visit to Gigi’s showroom will tempt you not only with the elegant stylish sty yet highly fashionable clot clothes, but by a selection supe accessories such as of superb bags a and costume jewellery. Basic colours Black Grey Brown Accent colours Green Yellow Lime Fuschia Plum Red Jacaranda Try Danish chic this Valentine’s Day A NEW DANISH watch collection is in South Africa and in time for Valentine. Europe’s best-selling watch brand, Skagen, which is also the topseller through department stores in the United States and Australia, is experiencing very high interest from consumers and retailers alike. Highest early demand is for Skagen’s new Swiss Movement Collection for men and women, which is seeing brisk sales with buyers snapping up the elegant timepieces at Truworths, stores in up-market shopping malls and at Johannesburg and Cape Town international airports. Paul Kent of Scandinavian Brand House which imports Skagen watches from Denmark, said: “Higher priced items are moving the most rapidly. It surprised us, given the economic downturn, but it seems that buyers are more cautious with their money; they want jewellery to be an investment. “The days of a different watch with jeans and another with the corporate suit, seem to be over for the moment.” The Skagen Swiss Movement Collection is the ultimate globalised watch; it has Swiss quartz movement, with Italian leather straps or stainless steel links to Danish design. The Skagen Denmark Swiss Movement Collection features spring-powered mechanical function, to reduce friction during movement. Many of the spaces between gears are set with tiny synthetic gem crystals - using this feature instead of metal, reduces temperature changes and holds lubricant longer, extending the life of these watches. The bestseller in this range are hyper-elegant stainless steel cases with chrome mirrored borders and mother of pearl dials for women, with diamond indicators and two-tone stainless steel links. In the men’s range, stainless steel cases in silver or rose-gold with mirrored borders and brushed chrome or brown dials with two-eye multifunction and luminous hands and indicators with black or brown Italian leather straps, are flying off the shelves. Pictured: Skagen Swiss 583XLSDO 20 SA JEWISH REPORT 06 - 13 February 2009 VALENTINE’S DAY FEATURE Latest European fashions at Gigi von Helden MARLENE BILEWITZ eived the latGIGI VON HELDEN has just received est, most gorgeous collections of autumn e. and winter fashions from Europe. In true style, her collection conable sists of a range of clothes suitable for all occasions and covering the most up-to-date fashion trends in nEurope by top European designers. nThe fabrics and textures are inre teresting, vast and varied. There ts are separates - pants and skirts d in different fabrics, weight and d cuts, jackets in fur (rabbit and fox), tweed, knit and wonderfull polyester jackets with interest-ing trim for all kinds of weather. e Very in this season, is the rn knitted gilet, kimono-style, worn ways, over a long-sleeved shirt. As always, irts is the attention to detail on the shirts rment outstanding, making each garment unique with its individual look. urope Basic colours as seen in Europe currently, are grey, brown and black, esting, while the accents are interesting, a, plum, warm and vibrant, using fuschia, ns, reds jacaranda and different greens, and lime yellow. ove the Skirt lengths vary from above eryone an knee to ankle, thus giving everyone ashion, yet opportunity to be totally in fashion, maintaining their own most comfortable fashion stance. Shoes: boots are in - ankle or long flat, medium o or high heels. A visit to Gigi’s showroom will tempt you not only with the elegant stylish sty yet highly fashionable clot clothes, but by a selection supe accessories such as of superb bags a and costume jewellery. Basic colours Black Grey Brown Accent colours Green Yellow Lime Fuschia Plum Red Jacaranda Try Danish chic this Valentine’s Day A NEW DANISH watch collection is in South Africa and in time for Valentine. Europe’s best-selling watch brand, Skagen, which is also the topseller through department stores in the United States and Australia, is experiencing very high interest from consumers and retailers alike. Highest early demand is for Skagen’s new Swiss Movement Collection for men and women, which is seeing brisk sales with buyers snapping up the elegant timepieces at Truworths, stores in up-market shopping malls and at Johannesburg and Cape Town international airports. Paul Kent of Scandinavian Brand House which imports Skagen watches from Denmark, said: “Higher priced items are moving the most rapidly. It surprised us, given the economic downturn, but it seems that buyers are more cautious with their money; they want jewellery to be an investment. “The days of a different watch with jeans and another with the corporate suit, seem to be over for the moment.” The Skagen Swiss Movement Collection is the ultimate globalised watch; it has Swiss quartz movement, with Italian leather straps or stainless steel links to Danish design. The Skagen Denmark Swiss Movement Collection features spring-powered mechanical function, to reduce friction during movement. Many of the spaces between gears are set with tiny synthetic gem crystals - using this feature instead of metal, reduces temperature changes and holds lubricant longer, extending the life of these watches. The bestseller in this range are hyper-elegant stainless steel cases with chrome mirrored borders and mother of pearl dials for women, with diamond indicators and two-tone stainless steel links. In the men’s range, stainless steel cases in silver or rose-gold with mirrored borders and brushed chrome or brown dials with two-eye multifunction and luminous hands and indicators with black or brown Italian leather straps, are flying off the shelves. Pictured: Skagen Swiss 583XLSDO 06 - 13 February 2009 SA JEWISH REPORT VALENTINE’S DAY FEATURE It remains simply the best ShowerTime shower doors Furman Glass’ CEO Leonard Malkin gives some facts about shower doors and the Furman Glass ShowerTime range: A QUALITY SHOWER door should have standard features like SABS-approved toughened safety glass, heavy duty sealed bearing rollers for smooth operation, mitred corners and solid construction, a supplier with SABS accreditation that offers back-up, support and warranties. A frameless shower door will increase the value of your home, will last three to four times longer than a framed shower door and it eliminates the need for metal framing. It is easy to clean and eliminates corrosion. The initial cost is more, but in the long run frameless shower enclosures are less expensive than a framed shower door. Most shower doors can be fitted on to a shower tray, tiled base or a wetroom floor. Maintenance is easy and mostly preventive. It is important to keep the glass clean and residue free. We supply a special glass cleaner (CleanPowa) that removes oils, mineral deposits, and soapy water stains. We offer a wide variety of shower enclosure models with a wide range of finishes and prices. Our commercial clients include hotels, shopping centres, apartment buildings and lifestyle developments. All ShowerTime shower doors carry a five-year guarantee, provided the installation w was done by a Furman Glass Fitm ment Team. For a truly refined shower door lo look, professional shower door insstallation is paramount. Unprofesssional jobs can lead to leaks, crackiing, product malfunction and many o other problems. We have over 112 years’ experie ence in the glass industry. All produ ucts are locally manufactured to the h highest international standards, with g guaranteed workmanship. ShowerTime products are availa able directly from any Furman Glass b branch and from selected sanitary and tile merchants. Contact us at 0861 FURMAN (387626). • For further information please contact: Furman Glass Keith Feldman/Kevin Dudgeon Tel: +27 11 473-6700 Cell: Keith: 082-451-5662/ Kevin: 079-526-6425 E-mail: keith@furmanglass.co.za/ kevind@furmanglass.co.za Website: www.furmanglass.co.za Being observant no impediment to travel enjoyment KEEPING SHABBAT and kosher does not mean that you are restricted to holidaying locally and eating tinned tuna. You can travel internationally in style with The Travel Wizard, while keeping fully kosher and being observant. Laura Joselowsky, the sole proprietor of The Travel Wizard, has 20 years’ experience in the travel industry, and being observant herself, understands the unique and demanding requirements of the kosher traveller, thus making her the ideal agent of choice for worldwide kosher holidays. The Travel Wizard arranges luxury kosher holidays on almost every continent, whether it is a five-star luxury cruise in the Panama Canal or a six-star Pesach vacation in Cancun, The Travel Wizard has the contacts and expertise to ensure a holiday that will never be forgotten. In addition to organising the kosher packages at a deluxe hotel in Mauritius, for those who prefer a more private and secluded locale, The Travel Wizard offers luxurious and very private self-catering villas all over the island. The villas are fully serviced daily and offer a full 24 hour concierge service that will meet and greet you at the airport on arrival, and can arrange anything from massages and manicures in your villa, to catamaran excursions. Fulltime chefs are avail- able if required and each villa receives a welcome pack which includes South African Beth Din-approved groceries and special dedicated kosher crockery and cutlery. With The Travel Wizard you enjoy the advantages of personal service with the benefits of being affiliated to a large company - E Travel. Whether you need to arrange your trip in person in or out of normal office hours, or via e-mail, Laura will personally see to it that all queries, quotes and requests are actioned swiftly and efficiently. Laura Joselowsky The Travel Wizard in association with E Travel Tel: (011) 440-2011 Fax: 086-539-9170 Cell: 082-715-3706 E-mail: laujoss@telkomsa.net 21 06 - 13 February 2009 22 SA JEWISH REPORT HOW TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED ADVERT: 1. Only adverts sent via email to brittl@global.co.za will be accepted. 2. You will be advised on cost & payment details. 3. Payment is prior to the advert appearing. 4. DEADLINE for BOOKING and PAYMENT is Tuesday 12pm. If deadline is missed the advert will appear (when payment is received) in the next edition. Our banking details: SA Jewish Report, Nedbank Randburg, Account Number: 1984 514 865, Branch Code: 198405 To book your classified notice contact: Tel (011) 886-0162 • Fax (011) 886-4202 • email: brittl@global.co.za NOTICES PERSONAL COMMUNITY NOTICES SOULMATES (FOR SECULAR AND DATEE SINGLES) NATIONWIDE BEAUTIFUL/HANDSOME SINGLES SEEKING MATCHES; Pretty (Grad) IT Manager 27 yrs old; Pretty Gymnast 35yr; Handsome B.S.C. Masters 30yr; Slim stunning blonde senior secretary 28yr, Beautiful, blonde radiologist 26yr; handsome MD large corporation 50yr; attorneys 66yrs, 56, 48, 41, 38, 27; advocates 58yr, 63, 35,29; handsome pilot 68yr; stunning doctors 29yr, 37, 44, 49, 54, 49, 67, 71; handsome dentists 29, 36, 38, 43, 55, 62 Yrs; gyne 37yr; surgeon 47, 59 yrs; stunning actuary 37yr; handsome engineers 28yr 34, 36, 42, 53, 64yrs; teachers 25yr, 27, 30,33,37,46, 53, 55 MANY OTHER PRETTY/HANDSOME PROF/EXEC SINGLES ARE WAITING TO MEET U HEARTIEST MAZELTOV TO JOE & AMY, CLIVE & LILLY ON THEIR ENGAGEMENTS! THANK YOU TO HASHEM! CALL: (011) 485-4034/ 082-357-3616 JEWISH HELPLINE - Facing a crisis? - Feeling desperate, distressed? - Feeling hopeless and overwhelmed? - Don’t know where to turn to? Phone the Jewish Helpline on Pager: (011) 321 0505 (all hours) If you receive no response within 20 minutes, please call Cell 082 4991010 This is a free 24-hour service of the Johannesburg Jewish Helping Hand Society CONSECRATIONS PHYSIOTHERAPIST – SANDRINGHAM Sandringham Gardens, Home for the aged, requires a physiotherapist registered with the HPCSA to work in the physiotherapy department. The candidate will be part of a multi-disciplinary team that provides acute and postoperative care for the residents. Only short-listed applicants will be responded to. Interested candidates please forward a current c.v. to hr@jhbchev.co.za, fax, 0866327774 or Private Bag X1, Sandringham, 2131. OCCUPATIONAL THERAPIST A vacancy exists at Sandringham Gardens, Home for the aged, for a qualified Occupational Therapist who is registered with the HPCSA. Applicant must have at no less than three years experience in working in a hospital environment as well as dealing with the elderly and intellectually disabled. Only short-listed applicants will be responded to. KOSHER COOK Experienced sleep in cook required to start immediately. Must be experienced in running a large home. Please contact 083-327-5444 SERVICES GENERAL Reliable, Reasonable Rates! Contact Arnold, 082-447-0185 011-454-1193 HIRE CASTLEMANIA Jumping Castles for hire. Weekend deliveries. www.fantasiacastles.co.za GLENDA: (011) 452-1958 HOUSE SITTING GOING AWAY ? We take care of your home, animals, and provide transport, references provided. Sam: (011) 728-5219 083-627-8516 DIAL-A-LIFT Reliable safe transport, door-todoor, airport transfers, etc. Phone Pip Friedman (011) 728-3998 cell: 083-267-3281 ACCOMMODATION TO LET/SHARE SANDRINGHAM Two rooms are available in a spacious commune set in a lovely garden. The rooms are going for R1900 each neg if taken together. Suitable for single persons. Lights and water separate on prepaid system. Large separate secure parking for 6 cars. In very easy walking distance to many shuls, shops and schools. Large newly renovated fully kosher kitchen. Electric gates and armed response. Dogs are welcome (outside) . Please email ninalewin@gmail.com or tel 074-102-1383 after 5.30pm or from 7 to 8am GLEN VILLAGE Delightful, sunny, one bed garden flat in secure complex in the heart of Glenhazel. Take over remaining lease till 31July at R5000 + elec + MNet & renew for further 12/24 months for R5500 neg. Phone Brian 082-854-5702. LIFTS GOLDERS GREEN, LONDON Kosher 2 bedroom apartment, available for short term rental from mid-February until mid-April 2009. laurence@mama.co.za A-TAXI SERVICE Let Warren Pogorelsky chauffeur you to your destination in Jo’burg and back only R100 round trip. Tel: 082-399-6187 ALWYN - ZAIDA’S TAXI SERVICE We specialise in transport, house-to-destination, school service, old age homes and airport trips. Call Alwyn on (011) 646-5265 or 083-541-7929 KOSHER ACCOMODATION available in Pretoria near Shul & university. Call 083-564-2561 FLATS SMILE-LEE'S LIFTS A reliable lift service. Specialising in lifts to and from airports, shops, appointments, casinos and courier. Call Charna 083-391-6612 CYRILDENE 1 and 2 Bedrooms, spacious, quiet area, with security and parking. 1 February 2009. Contact Allan 082-4567-117 0r (011) 484-7559 LIFTS WANTED HOLIDAY ACCOMMODATION URGENTLY NEEDED To University of Johannesburg. Living in Highlands North/Waverley/ Sydenham/ Norwood Areas. Will contribute towards petrol. Pls contact Brandon Davids. Tel: 082-887-8840 (h) (011) 885-2698 BEACON ISLE: Unit available to rent from 2128th February. Sleeps 4. 6th floor. R5000 for the week. PLEASE CALL 082-416-2727 MISCELLANEOUS MENTAL HEALTH NURSE Suitable candidates to forward a current c.v. and updated SANC registrations to hr@jhbchev.co.za, fax, 0866327774 or Private Bag X1, Sandringham, 2131. HOME SERVICES AIRPORT SHUTTLE JHB Interested candidates please forward a current c.v. to hr@jhbchev.co.za, fax, 0866327774 or Private Bag X1, Sandringham, 2131. Our organization in Sandringham requires a Registered Mental Health (psychiatric) Nurse to offer community based mental health services. Previous experience in caring for mentally ill individuals, the ability to make accurate clinical assessments and the ability to manage mental health emergencies is essential. The successful candidate will become a member of a multi disciplinary team. The position would suit an independent and self motivated person. Own transport is essential. Only short-listed applicants will be responded to. LIFTS CAPE TOWN SHUTTLE COMING TO CAPE TOWN? AFFORDABLE RATES. AIRPORT TRANSFERS FROM R160 NEW COMFORTABLE VEHICLE PHONE ANDY 082-336-9780 BOOKKEEPING & ACCOUNTING OFFICER Excel & Pastel On / Off Premises JN ACCOUNTS SERVICES 072-203-5305 (011) 882-9701 TUITION & EDUCATION FOR SALE ART & PHOTOGRAPHY KASSEL GALLERY ONLINE www.jonathonkassel.com Fine Art and Photography on View and for sale jk@jonathonkassel.com VACANCIES EMPLOYMENT AVAILABLE BOOKKEEPER REQUIRED. Half-day. Orange Grove. Email cv’s to wayne@fotocats.co.za MISCELLANEOUS MAD ABOUT MUIZENBERG? Order your branded souvenirs now! 082-429-5539 muizlogostore@iafrica.com PROPERTY Young lady seeking domestic worker's post. Experience in kashrut. Ref’s. Tel. 076-904-4006 WANTED EMPLOYMENT WANTED Retired lady seeks employment as day companion, shop assistant or similar. Own transport. Contact Eleanor (011) 648-7371 SEEKING POSITION Carer/companion with a drivers license. Avail ref’s. Sharon 082-395-1062 EXCELLENT DRIVER Honest & trustworthy seeks work for two days a week, outstanding references. Lives in Killarney. Very knowledgeable of all suburbs Tel Rachel (011) 728-9883 082-886-3642 06 - 13 February 2009 WANTED TEACHER WANTED Well qualified secular senior primary teacher required at a Jewish Day School to commence immediately. Please call 011-4851716 for an interview. ACCOUNTANT WANTED A steel company in the East is seeking an accountant, preferably completed articles, age 30 to 40. Contact Brett 082-900-3232 PART TIME PA This experienced young lady is looking for a half day secretarial position. Commended for her proficiency in MS Word and Excel. Experience in function coordination and general office management. Contact Karen. SALES An enthusiastic young man, currently studying towards a Bcom degree, requires a full time sales post. Bright with an ability to communicate at all levels. Contact Karen. PART-TIME BOOKKEEPER A competent and accurate bookkeeper who has a good working knowledge of Pastel and Quickbooks. Experienced in the preparation of VAT Recons and submitting of VAT 201 forms to the receiver. Salary negotiable. Preferably Linksfield and surrounding areas. Contact Karen. GRADUATE-DRAMATIC ARTS A well presented young lady, with a degree in dramatic arts, is looking for an entry level position which involves either; writing, editing or selling. Computer literate. Contact Karen. WAREHOUSING A mature gent, with experience in receiving and dispatch, requires a full time stores position. Known to be hard working and responsible. Contact Wanda. VEHICLES WANTED ARE YOU IMMIGRATING OVERSEAS AND WANT TO SELL YOUR VEHICLE? SA JEWISH REPORT 23 Queenie Slade of Savyon Lodge passes on DAVID SAKS IN A society plagued by crushing poverty, political violence and rapidly declining standards of healthcare, Savyon Lodge, the Jewish aged home in Bulawayo in Zimbabwe, is a rare oasis of stability. Here, residents can depend on at least the basic services being provided for them - food and shelter, medication, water and electricity and physical security. To an increasing extent, Savyon Lodge’s running costs are being met through donations from the wider Jewish Diaspora. But it is not only ute to a true “Woman of Worth”, one who had always gone well beyond the call of duty in serving her organisation and the community as a whole. Slade was buried at Bulawayo’s Jewish Cemetery in Donovan Road on January 14. In his eulogy, Block remarked that that much of the credit for Savyon Lodge’s worldwide renown and repute as “a real home for Jewish senior citizens” had to be attributed to Queenie Slade. “For Queenie there was absolutely nothing more important than the wellbeing, comfort and happiness for all at Savyon Lodge. So great was this dedication and motivation, that on many occasions, she said she would never leave Savyon Lodge, never cease managing it to the best of her abilities, so long as there was even one resident there,” he said. Prior to joining the staff of Savyon Lodge, Slade managed the Baobab Hotel in Hwange, doing so with such success that the then Tourism Board recognised her as “Hotel Manager of the Year”. She also managed the now defunct Matabeleland Turf Club and Ascot Race Course. An MBE for old-Herzlian Doron Swade Swade worked at the Science Museum in London for 27 years, 14 of which as senior curator of computing A FORMER Herzlian has expressed and information technology and, for “disbelief and delight” at being award- the three years prior to his departure ed an MBE - Member of the Order of in 2003, as assistant director and head the British Empire - in the Queen’s of collections at the institution. During this time, he masterminded New Year Honours list for services to and led the construction of the first the history of computing. Dr Doron Swade, who matriculated working Babbage calculating engine, in 1963, left his hometown for Europe built to the original 19th-century in 1971 after graduating with a designs. The project took 17 years, was Master’s of Science degree in engi- completed in 2002 and was internaneering at the University of Cape tionally acclaimed. Referring to his myriad achieveTown. After completing postgraduate stud- ments - too numerous to mention in an ies in the philosophy of science at article of this nature - Swade seems Cambridge, his career took a turn in vaguely surprised by the path his the direction of the historical aspects career has taken. In an e-mail interview, he told Jewish Report that he of his discipline. The award was made partly in would have been “dumbfounded” had recognition of the fact that he is the he had an inkling in his schooldays of leading authority on the life and work what the future would hold for him. “These were accomplishments that of 19th century mathematician and were beyond imagining,” he says. “I computer pioneer, Charles Babbage. MOIRA SCHNEIDER CAPE TOWN ago and walked into the local shul. “I was tentative and hesitant, wary about what I was doing and how I would be did not have any clear plan to achieve received,” he recalls. “The young rabbi, whom I had never them.” Despite the passing years, Swade met and who had no idea who I was, still has “strong and deep” attach- came up to me, embraced me, sat me ments to the city of his birth. “A group down, and spoke to me. He was warm, of us were together from kindergarten kind, interested, solicitous. “I remain overwhelmed by the memright through junior and high school ory of this experience. at Herzlia and we remain Uprooting, even to a counclose, despite the geotry as supposedly familiar graphical distance and the as Britain, is often a social dispersion of some of and emotional trauma that them to many countries,” one sleepwalks through for he says. at least a decade until one “The Herzlia kindercan begin to register the full garten was then in Hope extent of it. Street and we were among “To be accepted and welthe first generation to go comed to shul in this to Highlands, then an old Dr Doron Swade, unconditional way, simply house in the grounds of who has been awarded the MBE. because I presented myself the present school.” as a Jew, and to witness the As far as his involvement with the Jewish community in continuity of rituals and practices that his home of Kingston upon Thames I had assumed were left behind, was a goes, he says he “came in from the moving discovery. I go to shul when I cold” one Friday night about five years can.” Death penalty as deterrent ‘does work’ STORY AND PHOTOGRAPH BY JULIA COOK FOR MANY years the subject of the death penalty has been a matter of heated debate. Ian Glauber, a retired engineer and author of The Death Penalty as a Deterrent, at a recent talk at Second Innings, justified his stance on bringing back the death penalty. “In 1995 I submitted a proposal to the Constitutional Court, which was unfortunately not brought into effect. It is difficult to talk to intelligentsia about the topic because there is a certain stigma attached to anyone who supports this topic, as it is often associated with the old ‘lynch mentality’. “Those who support this stance are often ‘excommunicated’ from the liberal community, which is why it is so difficult to discuss it with professors, Cabinet ministers and newspaper editors. “To me, this is not a political matter. The current government has had little success at dealing with violent crimes, and I doubt that any other party would be able to achieve more. There are two ways in which the death penalty can be implemented: one is as a severe punishment at the end if a protracted judicial procedure, that only concludes after 15 years, when the actual event has long been forgotten, and the other option is for it to act as an effective deterrent, given after serious consideration by the judiciary under specific AROUND THE WORLD NEWS IN BRIEF Please Contact Solly Kramer 082-922-3597 anytime money that has enabled the institution to maintain its high standards under such difficult circumstances. The selfless, and largely unheralded, dedication of various individuals associated with it has been equally crucial to its success. One such individual was the late Queenie Slade, long-serving secretary of Savyon Lodge who passed away at the beginning of this year. Those who worked closely with her over the years, including Bulawayo residents Brian Sher and Eric Block and Rabbi Moshe Silberhaft, spiritual leader to the African Jewish Congress, all paid trib- guidelines for clearly specified types of violent crimes, where the criminal will have been fully aware of the outcome, before he had committed the crime. “It is true that the death penalty has been abolished in over 110 countries, but none of them shares our country’s (crime) problems. Abolitionists claim that in places where it has been implemented for at least 10 years, it has never been proven to be an effective deterrent, but if it was structured in such a way that no people were wrongfully punished, how would they respond then?” He said today it was normal to hear of people being killed for a cellphone, or the rape, abduction and murder of a little child, “while we live in fear, hoping feebly that electric fencing will keep the criminals out”, and yet, according to the Constitution, murderers, and not just the victims, also had the right to life, and should not be treated in a cruel, inhuman and degrading manner. “Yet, for this same system it is acceptable to place them in overcrowded prisons, where they can be passed through the ‘university of crime’, thereby giving criminals the skills to perpetuate even worse crimes. “In this regard, the Constitution seems to subordinate the right to life of the innocents in favour of those of the criminals. The Constitution is not cast in stone. If it was, and it had not been amended 100 years ago, then today women would still not have the right to vote.” Glauber said during apartheid, the death penalty had often been used in cases of “perceived treason”, rather than as a system of justice. In 1995 the problem had been about controlling the apartheid mentality, but that was not the problem today. “During the course of the Second World War, 8 681 South Africans lost their lives, and in South Africa today it is normal for this many people to lose their lives to violent crime every six months. We are at war with criminals and should treat them as such. “In the proposal I gave to the Constitutional Court in 1995, I mentioned several situations that I felt should qualify as a death penalty crime (D-crime). Currently, for murder to qualify as such, there must be a psychological connection between the perpetrator and the victim, and this is often used as a defence in criminal courts, as the criminals do not feel anything in killing the victims. “This definition should therefore be amended. This should also apply in cases where there was no intent to murder; the fact is that they did.” Glauber said fourthly, whenever a policeman or security guard was murdered, it should be considered a Dcrime. “I do not mean for this to apply to a case of violent moments of passion, but only for premeditated actions that lead to the crime. “Finally, it should not matter who pulled the trigger. If criminals take guns with them and someone gets killed, then all of the gang members should be held equally responsible. These cases should be judged only according to the evidence, and even if he is found innocent, at least he will be shocked at how close he came to death. “Thirty years ago, Singapore had one of the worst crime rates in the world, but now every time you step onto a plane, you hear a warning that if you are caught in possession of drugs, you will face the death penalty, and the only people who dare to challenge this are the occasional foreigner, who is brought to justice to the outcry of Amnesty International. “In the first year after such systems were introduced, the crime rate dropped by 64 per cent. There should be an awareness in the criminal’s mind about what the possible outcome of his/her crime could be, that regardless of whether he pulled the trigger, he will be killed by lethal injection within a few weeks after the crime.” Glauber said the execution of the sentence should occur after such a short period, “so as to impact fully on other potential D-crime offenders, as we are currently living in a society that basically conveys the idea that you can do whatever you like” He said that when a criminal currently considered the statistics, he could see that there was a 75 per cent chance that he would not get caught, and that if he was, then there was only an eight per cent chance of him being tried and convicted, and this perception had to change. BRITISH CAMERAMAN'S FAMILY GETS $2 MILLION LONDON - Israel paid more than $2 million to the family of a British cameraman shot and killed by an Israeli soldier in Gaza. In May 2003, James Miller, 34, was in the Gaza-Egypt border town of Rafah shooting footage for a documentary about the impact of violence on children in the region when he was shot and killed by Israeli gunfire. A statement issued by Miller's family did not specify the amount of money it accepted, but an Israeli official confirmed that the amount was around "$2,2 million". Last April, Miller's family rejected a higher offer from Israel, claiming that it was "a ruse" to delay its planned civil court case. However, the family now says "it was as close to an admission of guilt from Israel as they were ever likely to get". Miller was posthumously awarded an Emmy in 2004 for his film, "Death in Gaza". The cameraman's killing, which was caught on film by another cameraman, was screened on British television numerous times. The footage showed that Miller and his colleagues, who were leaving the home of a Palestinian family in the Rafah refugee camp after dark, carried a white flag and called out to let troops know they were British journalists. As they walked toward an Israeli armoured personnel carrier, Miller was hit by gunfire. (JTA) 24 SA JEWISH REPORT 06 - 13 February 2009 SA Maccabi soccer seniors work for gold Soccer is one of the most competitive events at the Maccabiah. In South America soccer is a way of life and the teams from Brazil and Argentina in particular, are always tough to beat. JACK MILNER THIS YEAR, the South African Maccabi senior soccer squad are determined to break the stranglehold and earn a medal, so with less than five months to go until the 18th Maccabi Games kicks off, they have been hard at work training and preparing. A squad of 18 players was selected in November last year, along with 10 non-travelling reserves, to represent South Africa at the Games. With gruelling training sessions taking place four days a week currently, the squad are well on their way to achieving success and bringing home a medal. Under the watchful eyes of coach Mike Pavkovich, who accompanied the team to Israel in 2005 for the last Maccabiah, the Soccer coach Mike Pavkovich keeps a watchful eye on proceedings at a Maccabi SA soccer training session. squad have been involved in fitness, tactical and conditioning training, which includes a nutritionist and a pilates instructor. In 2005 South Africa finished sixth out of the 17 participating countries. This year the team will be up against quite a few unknown countries, like Finland, Hungary, Panama, Slovakia, Turkey and Venezuela, along with all the other strong nations who are regular participants in this competition. The squad have also been working hard off the pitch on their fundraising efforts with various events planned for the coming months to help ease pressure on the players financially. • For more information on the team contact team manager Ryan Kalk on 083-703-4463. Hartman is Maccabi Stag guest speaker GUESTS AT the next Maccabi Stag evening on Tuesday February 17, will be entertained by one of the country’s leading sports journalists. Rodney Hartman, who has been sports editor of the Sunday Times and Sunday Independent among other highly regarded positions, is not only a person of great humility but someone who has a wonderful grasp of Well-known all aspects of South African sport. journalist He was the media liaison officer for the 2003 Rodney Cricket World Cup and also penned a biogra- Hartman is phy of Ali Bacher. He has written two books guest on Hansie Cronje as well as a biography of speaker at Brian Mitchell. He still has a column in The Star, which Maccabi demonstrates his excellent insight into the Stag. vagaries of sport. The talk will take place in the main boardroom at Beyachad in Raedene at17:30 for 18:00. For catering purpose, those interested to attend, please contact the Maccabi office on tel: 11645-2557, fax: 11-458-1011 or e-mail: maccabisa+AEA-beyachad.co.za