Friday, December 08, 2006

Response

From View message header detail Web_Administrator
Sent Friday, December 8, 2006 2:09 pm
To [name]@oberlin.edu
Cc
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Subject RE: Comments

Dear Lauren Binkovotz,

Talk Show Host Dennis Prager speaks solely for himself. His statements
do not reflect the position of the US Holocaust Memorial Museum, whose
board is not self-appointed.

Respectfully,

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum

100 Raoul Wallenberg Place, SW

Washington, DC 20024-2126

(202) 488-2642


If the board is not self-appointed, how can one of its members speak "soley for himself"? This response doesn't make any sense.

Wednesday, December 06, 2006

Reaction paper for class #4
JWST 237
Binkovitz
The two issues that most caught my attention in the first chapter of Women and Jewish Law were the issue of men’s honor being infringed upon by women’s assumption of the commandment to read the Torah, and the question of “how much” a woman’s mitzvah was “worth”.
The issue of honor, when traced back to the root, seems to have no halakhic basis prior to the rulings regarding k’vod ha-tzibbur. I was surprised that Biale let this issue go so easily; after carefully following a convoluted thread of logic back to its non-existent source, she moves onto the next topic without any further speculation as to where this notion of women’s inferiority may have actually come from. Perhaps she didn’t have space or perhaps that question is beyond the scope of her book (being a largely multi-religious problem) but I was dismayed with her failure to at least acknowledge that closer scrutiny of this issue is in order because it seems to represent a disappointingly omnipresent tendency to view men’s subjugation of women throughout history as somehow natural, if not entirely acceptable, due to its thorough permeation of so many cultures.
The issue of the “worth” of a mitzvah on the other hand, is a reaction to the material as well as to its presentation. It seems to me that a lot could be discovered by an examination of exactly why these scholars consider it important to “quantify” mitzvot, insofar as they say that a woman’s fulfillment of a commandment from which she is exempt gains her “less of a reward” than when a man does it. Even if this were true, and there is some kind of quantized spiritual reward system, where on earth do these men get the audacity to act as though they understood and were capable of administering it? As far as I know there is no reference to quantified divine rewards for specific acts in the Torah. Ultimately I would hypothesize that this, too, is a construct devised to support the circular system of gender-based oppression throughout history.

Dennis Prager

submitted at http://www.ushmm.org/museum/contact/ :

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My name is Lauren Binkovitz and I would like to indicate my support for those who feel that Dennis Prager's cultural hostility with regard to the Muslim community is antithetical to what one would hope to learn from a careful study of the Holocaust, and reflects instead a dangerous ignorance and self-preferential absolutism. Please take seriously the recommendation that he be removed from the US Holocaust Memorial Council.

Thank you,
Lauren Binkovitz

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May I suggest the following to my readers:

Step 1: Familiarize yourself with the comments recently made with regard to a Muslim public official's decision to be ceremonially sworn in using the Koran rather than the Christian Bible and decide what you think about his controvertial comparisons between that and "Mein Kampf".

Step 2: Formulate an informed opinion in regard to the expressed sentiments and relate that to his suitability to serve on the US Holocaust Memorial Council.

Step 3: Go to the above link and articulate your opinion to them.