French Jewry establishes major fund to expand Jewish education
French Jewish organization have joined together to found a new 25m. Euros fund to expand private Jewish education for French Jewry, The Jerusalem Post has learned. Just how far would America go for Israeli-Palestinian peace?
George Bush's Middle East tour included a short sideshow visit to Israel, apparently to help Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice to push forward the Annapolis process, which trudges forward against all odds and the predictions of no small number of analysts that there is little logic to a peace plan between domestically unstable and even despised leaders. An American president's blessing can go a long way, since American commitment can potentially carry a financial and military robustness that cannot be matched by any other on Earth. But, as Olmert struggles in the almost-constant grip of challenges to his power from the Left (Barak threatening to leave his government) and Right (Lieberman is already out and the rest of the Right is waiting in the wings), it is an open and crucial question just how much American help Olmert can reasonably expect. How far would America go to reify the Annapolis process? What price would the US be willing to pay to remove the Palestinian drama from being the wrench stuck in its Middle East policy? In the land of fog
England is enveloped in fog this holiday season. It sticks to the ground in the cold night air, so thick you can't see 50 meters ahead on a 150-kilometer drive northward from London's Heathrow Airport to the outskirts of Coventry. Along the way, coalescing out of the fog like carefully orchestrated cinematic hints, road signs offer up town names that are unabashedly lyrical to an American ear: Abingdon, Weston-on-the-Green, Oxford, Banbury, Little Chesterton and Stratford-Upon-Avon. Lost in the desert
Often, and especially with politicians, what is not said in a speech is more important than what is. The only discernible actionable statement to come out of the speeches of the three non-Russian-speaking Israeli politicians at Wednesday's Tribute to Soviet Jewry was about bringing more Russian-speaking Jews to Israel. This speaks volumes about the extent to which Israeli officialdom is blind to the broadest and most worrying trends of the Jewish world. This was noticed by the Russian-speakers in the room at the Jerusalem International Convention Center and by veterans of Jewish organizational life. This is significant because the deepest troubles afflicting world Jewry today - assimilation, lack of identification with Judaism and Israel - have hit the Russian-speakers hardest. And Israeli officialdom's only solution on hand seems to be encouraging everyone everywhere to make aliya. The age of identityWikipedia may sum up "Jewish identity" in 333 words, but the reality is a complex and conflicted Jewish world in which identities are diverging in deep and sometimes mutually exclusive ways. The age of identity
We live in the age of identity. How people see themselves, and how they act on that vision, lies at the heart of the biggest trends on the planet. Globalization pulls us in one direction; our deepest senses of meaning, history and culture pull us in another. Tech-centered networks - Google, Wikipedia, Facebook - and universalizing superstructures - the European Union, the UN, Walmart - are increasingly important, but increasingly revealed to be empty of content that resonates with actual people. Part III: Building the dock but missing the boatCurrently, that cultural content is lacking, with Israelis and Americans - each some 40% of the Jewish people - growing farther apart as they define themselves in increasingly disparate ways. Part II: Networking creativityIn itself, the conference was not especially remarkable. It mixed the feel of a youth group convention - singing at meals, multiple-bed hostel rooms - with the ambition of a think tank. Part I: The aircraft carrier and the fighter wingThe GA was about self-reflection for the multi-billion-dollar Jewish federation system in America; KolDor was about reorganizing the structure of Jewish life. |
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