Saturday, October 28, 2023

Free the Hostages First

Saturday, October 21, 2023
"Ceasefire Now!" is an honorable request, meant to spare many innocents from being exposed to the cruelties of war.  Am I wrong or did this plea only emerge along the Israel/Gaza frontier when the direction of the guns changed from east to west?  Two weeks ago, the incursion into Israel and the attack on concertgoers and kibbutzniks in their homes was characterized as Resistance and no call was heard for cessation.  It's the anticipated reaction of the Zionist colonizers that has evoked pleas for moderation and forbearance.
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I attended the 65th Reunion of the Stuyvesant High School Class of 1958.  It was a modest affair with about two dozen participants.  Several registrants failed to appear, including a few that I was particularly interested in seeing after years (decades?).  We toured the building, now 30 years old, with facilities that we couldn't have even imagined in the 50-year old building that we occupied.  Most of the conversation was about teachers and subway rides from the past.
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Once reunited with my young bride, we decided to go out to dinner for Indian food.  Jaz Indian Cuisine, 813 Ninth Avenue, is a relatively new restaurant, a white, square room with about 16 tables.  The menu is large, conventional.  The prices are not what you see on your bill, where a 4% credit card surcharge is applied to already high prices.  

On the other hand, the food was mostly good.  I had Jaz Mixed Grill, 6 pieces of tandoori chicken, 2 lamb sausages and one chunk of grilled fish ($31.20).  Madame’s dish was much better, Malai Kofta, vegetable balls in a creamy, sweet, tomato, ground nut sauce ($21.84).  Rice was $7.28 and naan $6.24.  The days of cheap Indian meals are gone, but then so are cheap anythings.

Sunday, October 22, 2023
Looking at home and community safety, financial safety and natural disasters, 182 American cities were ranked for safety.
https://wallethub.com/edu/safest-cities-in-america/41926

Nashua, NH, Columbia, MD and South Burlington, VT topped the list, while St. Louis, Fort Lauderdale and San Bernardino were the least safe.  Close to home, Yonkers was eighth safest.
For what it’s worth, the Holy Land sat at 137th, between Bakersfield, CA and Buffalo.
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To my non-Jewish friends:
I admit that there are moments when the prickly sensitivities of some of my tribe members test my patience, too.  And then a professor at the University of California Davis acts like an idiot or worse.

If it wasn’t enough to threaten “zionist journalists who spread propaganda & misinformation,” the good professor punctuates her message with emojis of a knife, a hatchet and blood.  So, we’ll go back to being hypersensitive, thank you.

Monday, October 23, 2023
To be fair to a good man, I must correct a misstatement about Konrad Schiemann’s father.  Although a German naval officer in WWII, he never joined the Nazi Party, in spite of his own father’s example.
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Money talks, anywhere and everywhere, it seems.  The New York Times studied student performance by economic status and found, in the immortal words of Sophie Tucker, “I’ve been rich and I’ve been poor and rich is better.”  

An SAT score of 1300 or better, a very respectable score, is achieved by 2.4% of students in the bottom income quintile while 17% in the top quintile hit it.  The disparity did not end there.  31% of students whose families were in the top 1% scored 1300 or better.  It’s good to be the King.
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I find a parallel between opponents of racial equity, such as Chief Justice John Roberts, and Palestinian supporters, such as Viet Thanh Nguyen, a Pulitzer Prize winner, who just criticized Israel for "unprecedented and indiscriminate violence."  Both groups seem to have recently awakened to injustice for the first time.  While Roberts climbed the ladder of American judicial eminence for decades without taking note of racial disparities, Nguyen slept undisturbed through October 7th. 

Tuesday, October 24, 2023
I had a fabulous dish at lunch today at Mamak’s Corner, one of 15+ Singaporean-based vendors at Urban Hawker, 135 West 50th Street.  It was Kway Teow Goreng, a large portion of flat rice noodles stir fried with a bevy of wonderful things, spicy, sweet, soft, crunchy, hot, cold and with a fried egg on top ($18).  

The food court was jammed after 1 PM when I arrived, but many of the Gen Y and Z milling around (too informal for Gen X) were waiting for takeout, so I found a spot quickly.  I must warn you however, Diet Coke was $4 at every stand and street vendors nearby are similarly infected.

Wednesday, October 25, 2023
I was looking for a less exotic lunch locale today when I selected The Chick Inn, 415 Third Avenue.  It’s a bright, airy space decorated like a farmhouse kitchen with raw wood beams and a white-painted brick wall.

The menu is all chicken, mostly fried, but the All Day Special, which I chose, was 1/2 rotisserie chicken and two side dishes, waffle fries and Spicy Vodka Rice (!), for $15.  While the chicken was smallish, the accompanying starches added up to a full meal.

Thursday, October 26, 2023 
“Ceasefire now!” is a call being heard worldwide.  “Free the hostages!” is offered in counterpoint, although less universally.  I don’t doubt that more people, agencies, governments are imploring Israel to do the right thing than those urging humanitarianism on Hamas.  While no one seems to be admitting it, Israel is much more likely to be listening than Hamas.  As crude and cruel as Israel’s conduct against Arabs has been on occasion, no one cites Hamas’s behavior towards even its fellow Arabs as a model of civility.  Forget October 7th.  While I would prefer to be able to label Israel’s conduct as fair and just, there is some merit in “not as bad.”
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Today was the second time in recent weeks that I went to Moon Kee, 2642 Broadway, for lunch.  It is the new branch of a 40-year old Hong Kong establisihment.  This time it was open for business, allowing Baruc S. and I to have a very good lunch.  While the decor is a hodgepodge of contemporary touches, it adds up to a warm setting.  The large room with high ceilings easily contains four booths and 12 four-tops with faux marble surfaces.  Service was very attentive, although there were only a handful of other customers.

The large menu had conventional offerings, dim sum and regular dishes.  We started with steamed scallop dumplings (3 pieces for $8) and scallion pancakes ($8).  The dumplings were excellent; the pancakes quite different than any I've had, 1/2" thick, crispy exterior, soft interior, a special treat.  Then, we shared a Roast Combo, a plate of tasty roast duck and roast pork ($20), and a large portion of chicken fried rice ($16).  
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As to your frequent inquiries about my post-op recovery, I have to point out that after lunch, at 100th Street and Broadway, I walked home to 69th Street on my two hind legs. 
 
Friday, October 27, 2023
Mike Johnson, newly-elected Speaker of the House of Representatives, said in an interview last night that it's "not the time to be talking about legislation" in response to the assassination of 18 people in Maine.  https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/joe-scarborough-delivers-blistering-takedown-of-mike-johnson-s-gun-logic/ar-AA1iXwM0
 
That's a very familiar Republican line.  Time is barely available for thoughts and prayers.  In fact, given the pace of mass shootings in the United States, more than 560 so far this year, Republicans must be in a state of perpetual prayer, having no time to legislate.

Saturday, October 21, 2023

More Rainbows, Please

Saturday, October 14, 2023 
Prime Directive -- Don’t kill Jews. 

Isn't it sufficient to rely upon the Ten Commandments, Thou shalt not kill (Exodus 20:13)?  Except for the blind spot that so many people have had toward Jews in this regard.  We seem to be outside the realm of some people’s morality.  Killing and kidnapping civilians is labeled Resistance, which removes the victims from consideration.
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We were back at J&M Diner, 50 Worcester Road, Framingham, for lunch (see September 1, 2023).  I had the Homemade Corned Beef Hash Omelette, a test of their kitchen and my digestive system ($18).  They both seem to have done quite well, although it may take several more hours to complete the assessment.  I enjoyed the English muffin served, a local brand, different from the typical Thomas’s version, thicker, with an even surface, not the characteristic nooks and crannies.

Sunday, October 15, 2023
We were joined at breakfast at The Cottage, 190 Linden Street, Wellesley, by two family friends and their teenage daughters.  The food and service was good enough to almost excuse the restaurant's promise that we "Enjoy the clean eating and fresh flavors of Southern California without leaving Wellesley, Massachusetts."  I had a large portion of Brioche French toast with bourbon pecan caramel sauce ($18), as sticky, gooey as you might expect, hardly Californian or New Englandish. 

The good mood of enduring friendship was leavened by one of the women's concern for her 18-year old son, spending his gap year in Israel, recently harvesting dates.  It was hard for her to take her eyes off her mobile phone even after her son assured her that he was safe and chose to remain in Israel for the present.    

Monday, October 16, 2023
I am unsure whether Israel's decision to wait to conduct a ground invasion of Gaza is strategic or circumstantial, merely governed by practical considerations, but it keeps its opponents and much of the world in suspense, providing the opportunity to reflect on what has led us to this point.  Whether any of us learn anything is to be determined.

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I listened to a talk hosted by our special friend Marianne Motherby from Berlin this afternoon.  The Right Honorable Sir Konrad Schiemann discussed his memoir “A Dual Perspective: The German in an English Judge.”  


As a German orphan after WWII, he came to England to be raised by an uncle who left Germany before the war.  Eventually, he rose to be a Lord Justice of Appeal in Britain and then a judge of the European Court of Justice in Luxembourg.  


His story had potentially a Tom Stoppard “Leopoldstadt” element to it; his mother was Jewish, married to a Nazi naval officer.  Yet, it seemed to make no difference to him.  His mother survived the war seemingly without incident, only to commit suicide when learning belatedly of her husband’s death late in the war.


Tuesday, October 17, 2023
Michael Ratner and I went to Chinatown for lunch at Golden Shanghai, 50 Mott Street, previously the site of New Yeah Shanghai Deluxe.  The change wasn’t necessarily for the better.  There are 37 lunch specials at $9.95, including a choice of hot and sour or egg drop soup and white rice.  We both had hot and sour soup, a little heavy on the sour, and swapped back and forth beef with scallions and sweet and sour chicken, conventional dishes.  Additionally, we shared House Special Crispy Duck (Half), with a side of hoisin sauce to give it sparkle ($25.95). 

There was nothing wrong with the meal, but it was Chinatown and I thought that we wasted an opportunity.
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What a welcome sight.
 
Wednesday, October 18, 2023
The current Israeli/Palestinian conflict has opened up two seams on some college campuses.  One divide is between the administration and (predominantly Jewish) alumni dissatisfied with belated or tepid responses to the Hamas attacks of October 7th.  The other divide is between Jewish students and apologists for evil and depravity, a/k/a pro-Palestinian students. 

Harvard is experiencing these controversies after a consortium of over 30 student groups posted an open letter, saying that Israel was “entirely responsible” for the violence that ended up killing more than 1,400 people, most of them Israeli civilians.   https://www.nytimes.com/2023/10/18/us/harvard-students-israel-hamas-doxxing.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare

Some pro-Palestinian students have been harassed on or about campus and some major employers have withdrawn or threaten to withhold employment offers from members of the participating student organizations.  This has come as a surprise to some of the best and brightest.  Said one, "You kind of feel like you’re responsible,” obviously unaware of Newton's Third Law: For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction.

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All the international news is not gloomy.  In Poland, voters rejected right-wing populism.  "It boiled down to a choice between two different visions of the future: one dominated by nationalism, traditional Catholic norms and the defense of Polish sovereignty; the other by promises to 'bring Poland back to Europe' and the liberal democratic values espoused by the European Union."   https://www.nytimes.com/2023/10/17/world/europe/poland-election-law-and-justice.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=highlightShare

Thursday, October 19, 2023

Just as I urged you last week, I attended the talk by Steven Zipperstein about his forthcoming biography of Philip Roth.  I am a sucker for erudition and Zipperstein thoroughly demonstrated it.  I hope that you experienced it as well.

Friday, October 20, 2023

After the book talk on Monday, I wrote to dear Marianne Motherby.  “I enjoyed the session with Sir Konrad Schiemann, but ethnocentric me was bothered by his discounting the importance of his family’s Jewish background.  What was fateful for so many others seemed of little importance to him."  This morning, to my surprise, I received a letter from Sir Konrad, forwarded by Marianne.  "I am deeply sorry that part of what I said about my family’s jewish background gave you the impression that the holocaust seemed of little importance to me."  He left Germany when he was 7-years old.  "When I came to England, every effort was made to distance me from Third Reich memories, as I explain in the book.  So about such matters a discreet silence was kept."  In Germany and England, his family was totally secular.  "We were simply not brought up to think of ourselves as jews or jewish.  It was not a category by which we divided mankind."  This is a commendable universalist thought, neither subscribed to by philosemites nor antisemites.