Aus dem Archiv: Leserbrief zu Organspenden

July 30, 2012

Deutschheart-copyleftVor eine Weile veröffentlichte die Jüdische Allgemeinde den folgenden Leserbrief von mir, zum Thema Organspenden und Halacha. Es war eine Reaktion auf dem folgenden Artikel: Leo Latasch über den Deutschen Ethikrat.

Übrigens, auf Dauer lassen die meisten Patienten ganz sicher ihre eigene, auf Mass vorbereitete, genetisch passende Organe wachsen: Can skin cells help heal your heart? (Scientific ‎Times).
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Overcoming Intergenerational Conflict

July 12, 2012

EnglishHand_holding_finger_bw babyToday I appeared at the European Commission at the invitation of EC President Jose Manuel Barroso, as part of an interfaith panel charged with exploring ways to restore intergenerational solidarity that in recent years has been steadily eroding in Europe (video of the press conference, in which although I am present, I did not take a speaking role). Below is my essay that was the source of my comments.
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Den intergenerationellen Konflikt überwinden

July 12, 2012

DeutschHand_holding_finger_bw babyHeute erschien ich als Teil eines interreligiösen Panels bei der europäischen Kommission, nach Einladung deren Präsidenten Jose Manuel Barroso, um sich laut Gedanken zu machen, wie die wachsenden intergenerationelle Spannung zu überwinden und die Solidarität zwischen Jung und Alt zu stärken. (Video der Pressekonferenz, in der ich zwar anwesend war, aber nicht das Wort ergriff) Anbei mein Beitrag.
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Toleranz leider ohne Respekt – zwei Artikel zur Brit Milá in der Jüdischen Allgemeine

July 5, 2012

DeutschSoeben hat die Jüdische Allgemeine Zeitung zwei von meinen Artikel, die diese Woche in der gedruckten Ausgabe der Zeitung erscheinen, auf ihre Webseite hinaufgeladen.


Joe the Plumber, Gun Control and the Lethal Oppression of the Masses

June 25, 2012

Englishdonkey-elephant-cc1So last week, “Joe the Plumber,” now an Ohio congressional candidate, was reported to have been running a campaign video in which he suggested that Nazi gun controls contributed to deaths during the Holocaust, and Jewish Democrats are not amused. (No, seriously, did anyone expect Democrats to be amused at Republican electoral progress, and vice versa? If Jewish Republicans would be angry, now THAT would be newsworthy).

While he subsequently wisely kind-of-apologized for, what should I call it, oversimplifying the Holocaust, he does raise the legitimate question of whether gun control may sometimes contribute to the oppression of the innocent and the propping up of despots and dictators. Read the rest of this entry »


Offene Brief an die Redaktion von “Die Zeit”

April 27, 2012

DeutschBefore_email_4_Air_letter_from_Saltpond,_Ghana_to_Kabala,_Sierra_Leone_(West_Africa)_January_1968_(3703187062)Es ist mir unklar, was aus journalistischer Sicht trauriger ist, aber der Artikel Andrea Jeskas (Rabbi-Ausbildung / Kein besseres Land für Juden) ist sowohl voreingenommen als auch reichlich mit Fehler versehen. Durch geschickte (oder eben ungeschickte) Wortwahl versucht die Autorin bei den Lesern einige Bilder entstehen zu lassen, in dem das Liberale Judentum deutlich überdurchschnittlich gut abschneidet, während alles Traditionsgetreues negativ geschildert wird. Und wenn die Fakten ihre Behauptungen nicht unterstützen, na ja, wozu braucht man überhaupt Fakten? Read the rest of this entry »


Alle sind gleich vor dem Schabbat, dem hochmodernen Ruhetag

March 4, 2012

DeutschBossard,_Jenny_-_Familie_am_KaffeetischWir haben uns so daran gewöhnt, jede Woche einen freien Tag zu haben, dass wir uns kaum bewusst machen, wie fremd der Gedanke eines Ruhetags in vergangenen Zeiten war. In unserer Gesellschaft schätzen wir Ruhetage sehr: Wir haben eingeführt, dass es pro Woche nicht nur einen, sondern zwei gibt, und haben so das Wochenende geschaffen. Wir haben völlig vergessen, wie außergewöhnlich die Idee einer regelmäßigen Ruhe ist. Wir spüren kaum noch, wie jung das arbeitsfreie Wochenende ist.

Vor nicht so langer Zeit war schon ein Ruhetag pro Woche ein Luxus; an ein zweitägiges Wochenende war schon gar nicht zu denken. Bevor bezahlte Ferientage üblich wurden, konnten sich nur Reiche Ruhe und Freizeit leisten. Und bevor das Christentum die jüdische Idee des Schabbats1 verbreitete, war selbst ein wöchentlicher Ruhetag unvorstellbar … ausser bei einem kleinen, eigenartigen Volk … dem Volk Israel. Kurz nachdem sie das Land ihrer Knechtschaft verlassen hatte, stand ein Haufen befreiter Sklaven, die die Niederlage ihrer Herren miterlebt hatten, am Fusse des Berges Sinai und hörte:

Gedenke des Schabbat-Tages, ihn zu heiligen … Denn in sechs Tagen hat der Ewige den Himmel und die Erde, das Meer und alles, was darin ist, gemacht, und am siebten Tag hat Er geruht; darum hat der Ewige den Schabbat-Tag gesegnet und ihn geheiligt. (Das Buch Schemot, Kap. 20, Vers 8 und 11)

Ja, diese Leute waren unsere Vorfahren, das Volk Israel, das nur kurz zuvor aus Ägypten – dem Land seiner Leiden – ausgezogen war und nun die Offenbarung G”ttes am Berg Sinai miterlebte. Read the rest of this entry »


Thoughts on a Polarizing Society

January 10, 2012

EnglishConflict_(1936)_1It’s been several years now that I have been dismayed at the increasingly polarized din of political and societal “debates.” I put debates in quotes, because people are mostly talking past each other. This first hit me in the early 90s in Israel, when the climate in Western Europe was still more concilliatory. I have seen American politics become increasinly polarized and ascerbic, and see it in Europe, too, though to a lesser extent. In Europe, this is usually seen in matters relating to money (taxes, monetary policy, rescue of failing banks, national cost cutting plans, pensions), but less so in other, mostly social matters, while in the US, those are bones of polarizing contention, too.

So now I am reading Melanie Philips The World Upside Down (more about it in a future post), and I wonder whether the reason for this increased polarization is because we are growing increasingly philosophically distant from each other, to the point of not noticing we are takling past each other.

Think of secularist scientism vs. traditional theism as the possibly overarching disagreement, expressing itself in autonomy vs. dignity of life in bioethics; freedom from religion vs. freedom of religion in the educational realm; the definition of marriage and the family; the definition of science and of religion (think Kansas vs. Board of Education); even how to understand the big questions in the Middle East, including multilateralism and pacifism vs. military intervention, Israel & the Arabs, Afghanistan, Iraq, Iran.

I know this looks like quite some diverse topics to group together as one phenomenon, but reading Philips’ book, I must say she skillfully documents a common thread to all these, which provides the meat for describing the phenomenon of growing polarization between Right and Left. (However, linking her thesis to the manifest polarization in politics and society, and how that may be the result of being so entrenched in divergent philosophical views to the point of not identifying with the Other, well, I must take responsibility for those insights, unless she writes about that later in the book – I am only about a third of the way through).

I’ll be watching out to see which of those trends are most manifest in Germany, which issues are actually debated, or at least considered controversial, over here.


Parsing Modim’s Poetry

October 30, 2011

EnglishPikiWiki_Israel_14321_Religion_in_IsraelThe penultimate blessing of all ‘Amidot (standing devotions) is the Thanksgiving Blessing, which begins with the words Modim ana’hnu Lakh (“we thank You/we acknowledge Your grace”). However beautiful and central the notion of thanksgiving is to prayer in general and to the ‘Amida in particular, it is by no means easy to parse this text, as it is a written in a rather typical rabbinic style of liturgical poetry which non-initiates do not directly recognize.

A careful study of the text will, however, make some of that poetic beauty stand out and make the text more readily understandable. Read the rest of this entry »


Muslims Question Their Calendar – Could it Have Happened to Us?

September 12, 2011

Both Jews and Muslims follow a lunar calendar for counting months. Once upon a time, Jews did not calculate the calendar, except to double check their astronomical observations. The new months was instead declared by the Great Tribunal in Jerusalem, after they cross examined witnesses who had seen the tiniest sliver of the new moon. This system was gradually abolished when it became increasingly difficult for the Great Tribunal to meet and to convey its declarations to the entire Jewish diaspora. Instead, during the early centuries after the destruction of the Second Temple, the Great Tribunal increasingly relied on astronomical calculations, culminating in the leader Hillel II sanctifying all future months (at least until the year 6000 since Creation) in advance, enabling us to use a fixed calendar ever since (For a brief primer on the Jewish calendar, click here).

Muslims, on the other hand, continue the practice of establishing the new moon — and the new month — every month, a practice which … might sometimes potentially cause some chaos. Apparently, with the end of the most recent Ramadan, that is exactly what happened, as the Jerusalem Post reports (see below). Had we Jews not moved to a fixed, precalculated calendar, could that have happened to us, too? Read the rest of this entry »