Thursday, September 30, 2010



A Tale in two photographs

Daniel Gordis, senior vice president of the Shalem Center in Jerusalem, finds a powerful visual way of illustrating Israel's frame of existence, past perfect, past simple and present continuous:

"The dramatic change in Jewish self-perception that Israel has wrought can perhaps be best appreciated by recalling two photographs—each, in its own time, the iconic representation of what it meant to be a Jew. The first, taken in the Warsaw Ghetto, depicts a terrified young boy, his arms raised helplessly in the air, as a Nazi points a submachine gun in his direction. This little boy, a victim in every way, is dressed in his finest but seems likely to die. He is alone; no adults have come to his aid, and even if they chose to, of course, there would be nothing they could do in the face of the armed Nazis standing just feet away. To be a Jew is to be a victim.

Flash-forward to June 1967, when the Israeli photographer David Rubinger photographed three paratroopers at the Western Wall shortly after they had captured it from Jordan during the Six-Day War. It was the virtual undoing of the condition reflected in the Warsaw Ghetto photograph. The boy in the photograph is alone; these three men are surrounded by comrades. The boy is pure victim; the Israeli soldiers are victors. The gun in the former photograph belongs to the Nazi; there are no weapons in the 1967 picture, but had there been, they would have belonged to the Jews. The boy in the Warsaw Ghetto seems certain to die; the victory these soldiers had just wrought would breathe new life into the Jewish state, inspiring Soviet Jews (who almost immediately demanded permission to emigrate) and American Jews (who took a sudden great pride in the Jewish state and expressed it more openly and unabashedly than at any time before) to new heights of Zionism.

Interestingly, the paratroopers in this photograph have their heads uncovered, and they face away from the Wall, not toward it, as would be the case were they praying. There is one combat helmet, and though it is visible, it has been doffed. Rubinger’s is neither a religious nor a military image. It is, instead, the image of the “new Jew” that Israel had created, the Jew who could shape his or her own destiny rather than waiting for it to be shaped by others."

Read the article in its entirety, here.

5 Comments:

At 4:15 PM EDT, Blogger EscapeVelocity said...

CNN News Anchor Rick Sanchez says: CNN run by the Jews.

http://hotair.com/archives/2010/10/01/sanchez-cnn-run-by-the-jews/

 
At 6:23 PM EDT, Blogger The Contentious Centrist said...

Poor Rick Sanchez. It's not the first time he puts his foot in his mouth:

http://contentious-centrist.blogspot.com/search?q=Rick+sanchez

 
At 6:53 PM EDT, Blogger EscapeVelocity said...

Geert Wilders speech in Germany today, on the creation of a new political party in same.

http://gatesofvienna.blogspot.com/2010/10/tear-down-this-wall.html

excerpt...

One of the things we are no longer allowed to say is that our culture is superior to certain other cultures. This is seen as a discriminatory statement — a statement of hatred even. We are indoctrinated on a daily basis, in the schools and through the media, with the message that all cultures are equal and that, if one culture is worse than all the rest, it is our own. We are inundated with feelings of guilt and shame about our own identity and what we stand for. We are exhorted to respect everyone and everything, except ourselves. That is the message of the Left and the politically-correct ruling establishment. They want us to feel so ashamed about our own identity that we refuse to fight for it.

 
At 8:16 AM EDT, Blogger SnoopyTheGoon said...

Interesting that there is a possibility that the boy in the first picture is alive. There were a few claimants to the image this year.

As for the latter: this is, of course, one of the images so hated by the usual crowd. Unfortunately, the crowd includes quite a few Jews...

 
At 8:54 AM EDT, Anonymous Bella said...

The article is bone-chillingly accurate. Israelis are 'bone-weary' yet the Arab world seems to have an inexhaustible supply patience.

 

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