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At 104, Laura Simon worries for her aging children

November 25, 2009 3 comments

LAURA SIMON—She’s 104 on Thanksgiving Day
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By Donald H. Harrison

SAN DIEGO—Among the celebrants of November birthdays at The Patrician senior residence in the University Towne Center area yesterday was Laura Simon, the oldest of them all.  Today, Thanksgiving, she turns 104.

Simon smiled when Milica Todorivic, a member of the dining room staff, brought over the large birthday cake that would be shared among the celebrants and guests, and expressed delight when she received from well-wishers a gift of a pink Snuggie blanket which she can wear while listening to music or the news in her independent-living apartment.

However, she confided over a hearty lunch of salad, soup, and a combination of chicken and lamb entrees, birthdays really hold no excitement for her.  It’s not because she has had so many birthdays, but  rather because her children also have had so many.   Simon has a son Mayo and a daughter Sydelle, whose ages make them well past eligible to live in the same senior residence that Simon does.

Getting old is like “climbing Mount Everest,” says Simon, who four years ago when she turned 100 had her memoir, I’m Still Here, published.   The book now is being serialized by San Diego Jewish World.

Being elderly is very hard, she says. It upsets her to think that her own children are now facing the period of their lives when they may have to suffer the same kinds of  indignities of age that she has.  She’s too stoic to complain about health problems–”everyone has them,” she says–but she intensely dislikes the way that American culture tends to forget that elderly people have led full lives , contributed a great deal to this country and have wisdom and experience to share.

She also said she worries that her children will have to be old during a time of severe economic downturn.

Simon told me and my wife Nancy that she is very skeptical about the announcements from various federal agencies that the current recession shows signs of ending. “I don’t believe it,” she declared.

She said the day before the Great Stock Market Crash in 1929 which signaled the beginning of the Depression, she had read similarly rosy economic forecasts in the Chicago newspapers.

Simon said she still recalls how well-to-do people become suddenly poor, even homeless. She can still picture people sitting on street curbs during the Depression, trying to heat up food with small fires set in street gutters.

Today, with eyesight so poor that she is classified as “legally blind” and needing a metal walker to get around  the Patrician, Simon says she is painfully aware how much more difficult her life could be if such a facility were beyond her economic means.

She said that she fears for seniors whose savings may become  so depleted they won’t be able to afford to live in such a facility.

When Simon was just a little girl, her father left her mother.  So, her mother had to work, and Simon had to take care of herself.   “I got street smart and I’ve been  taking care of myself since then,” she said – meaning a century of self-sufficiency.  Having to be independent, and having to overcome hardships, made her strong, she said.  Perhaps that strength accounts for her longevity.

Although on the one hand, Simon clearly is proud of being 104 and her ability to avidly follow current events and enjoy literature on tape, she’s doesn’t want anyone to pigeon hole her because of her age.  Chronologically she may be 104, but she said she thinks of herself as perhaps 40 years younger–  mine and Nancy’s contemporaries, in other words.

She certainly is as well-informed—maybe even better informed—than many people of my generation.

This afternoon, her son Mayo, a New York City-based playwright, is expected to arrive in San Diego to be with her on her birthday, and on the following day, Rabbi Moishe Leider of Chabad of University City is expected to drop by The Patrician senior residence as he usually does on the last Friday of each month.

Being with family and friends are the real components of a happy birthday, Simon says.

It’s the same with Thanksgiving !

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Harrison is editor of San Diego Jewish World

Out of court settlement reached in case of school prohibiting church flyers

November 25, 2009 Leave a comment

FORT MYERS, Florida (Press Release)— Alliance Defense Fund attorneys have reached a favorable settlement with the Collier County School Board on behalf of a local church barred from participating in a flier distribution program open to other community groups.

In June, ADF attorneys filed a federal lawsuit on behalf of Cypress Wood Presbyterian Church after school officials rejected its request to include fliers promoting an upcoming Vacation Bible School for children in the flier program.

“Churches shouldn’t be discriminated against for their beliefs,” said ADF Senior Legal Counsel David Cortman.  “We commend the district for its quick actions to end the unconstitutional exclusion of religious materials and allow all community groups to participate equally in the flier distribution program.  Far from barring schools from including religious fliers in such programs, the First Amendment actually prohibits schools from favoring certain viewpoints over others.”

Cypress Wood Presbyterian Church contacted the district’s Community Request Office to inquire about participating in the flier distribution program, which allows non-profit community groups to send written materials home with students.  The church was advised that the district “did not allow religious events to be promoted” but that the church should submit its proposed materials anyway.

After submitting its materials, the church received no response.  The assistant superintendent later informed the principal that the fliers would not be distributed.  As part of the settlement, however, the school board agreed to revise its policies prohibiting religious organizations from distributing materials through the school flier forum.

ADF-allied attorney Roger Gannam of Jacksonville assisted with the lawsuit, Cypress Wood Presbyterian Church v. The School Board of Collier County.

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Preceding provided by Alliance Defense Fund, a Christian legal advocacy group

President Obama sends Hajj season greetings to world’s Muslims

November 25, 2009 Leave a comment

WASHINGTON, D.C.  (Press Release)–President Barack Obama on Wednesday sent the following message to Muslims around the world:

“Michelle and I would like to send our best wishes to all those performing Hajj this year, and to Muslims in America and around the world who are celebrating Eid-ul-Adha.  The rituals of Hajj and Eid-ul-Adha both serve as reminders of the shared Abrahamic roots of three of the world’s major religions.

“During Hajj, the world’s largest and most diverse gathering, three million Muslims from all walks of life – including thousands of American Muslims – will stand in prayer on Mount Arafat.  The following day, Muslims around the world will celebrate Eid-ul-Adha and distribute food to the less fortunate to commemorate Abraham’s willingness to sacrifice his son out of obedience to God.

“This year, I am pleased that the Department of Health and Human Services has partnered with the Saudi Health Ministry to prevent and limit the spread of H1N1 during Hajj.  Cooperating on combating H1N1 is one of the ways we are implementing my administration’s commitment to partnership in areas of mutual interest.

“On behalf of the American people, we would like to extend our greetings during this Hajj season – Eid Mubarak.”
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Preceding provided by the White House

Sara-N-Dipity Place: Some hidden history of Thanksgiving

November 25, 2009 Leave a comment

By Sara Appel-Lennon

SAN DIEGO–While researching Thanksgiving origins, I uncovered some hidden history. Many were taught that the Pilgrims celebrated the first Thanksgiving at Plymouth Rock in 1620. The meal served only a small part of the celebration. Originally Thanksgiving focused on prayer to offer thanks for a bountiful harvest.

In Jewish tradition the festival of the harvest is called Succoth. It falls in September or October, the 15TH-22ND day of the seventh month of Tishrei of the lunar calendar. Many cultures including Jews, Greeks, Native American Indians, and the Puritans. observed the tradition of celebrating by giving thanks for their harvest around the same time as  Succoth.

To this day Thanksgiving in Canada is celebrated on the second Monday in October to give thanks for the harvest.

During Succoth Jewish people build a three sided hut-succah, made from all natural materials with a roof which allows the stars to be seen. It is a mitzvah-commandment forJewish people– to eat their meals and sleep in the succah for one week. (dependent upon the weather)The purpose is two fold. Living in the succah for one week serves as a reminder of how God protected our ancestors when they wandered in the desert for 40 years after the exodus from Egypt. This reminder strengthens our faith that God is present in our lives.

Here is the Biblical reference to Succoth. “You shall sit in Sukkot (or Succot) for seven days, all citizens of Israel will sit in Sukkot (or Succot). In order that your generations shall know that I enabled the children of Israel to dwell in Sukkot (or Succot) when I brought them out of Egypt, I am the L-rd your G-d” (Vayikra 23:42-43, or in English, Leviticus 23:42-43). http://www.angelfire.com/pa2/passover/sukkot/sukkah.html

Another hidden historical fact concerns the Pilgrims and the Indians.

History books teach that the Pilgrims and the Indians shared a Thanksgiving meal together. The Wampanoag Indians befriended and taught the Pilgrims how to plant potatoes and tomatoes. Several of my resources indicated the Pilgrims stole land from the Indians and killed them. I leave it up to the reader to decide what to believe.

I find it interesting that the desire for domination has been with us for centuries and continues to be a dilemma today. As  Jimi Hendrix once said, and I have paraphrased, in a previous article. “When the power of love overcomes the love of power the  world will know peace. “

Thanksgiving reminds me to count my blessings. Rabbi Martin Lawson, spiritual leader of Temple Emanu-El, said that Jews are asked to say 100 blessings daily. The words “thank you” mean so much and take little effort to express.

Thank you for reading my articles. May you all have a nurturing and safe Thanksgiving week-end.

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Appel-Lennon is a San Diego-based freelance writer. Her email: appels@jewishsightseeing.com

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SARA-N-DIPITY PLACE

By Sara Appel-Lennon

SAN DIEGO–While researching Thanksgiving origins, I uncovered some hidden history. Many were taught that the Pilgrims celebrated the first Thanksgiving at Plymouth Rock in 1620. The meal served only a small part of the celebration. Originally Thanksgiving focused on prayer to offer thanks for a bountiful harvest.

In Jewish tradition the festival of the harvest is called Succoth. It falls in September or October, the 15TH-22ND day of the seventh month of Tishrei of the lunar calendar. Many cultures including Jews, Greeks, Native American Indians, and the Puritans. observed the tradition of celebrating by giving thanks for their harvest around the same time as  Succoth.

To this day Thanksgiving in Canada is celebrated on the second Monday in October to give thanks for the harvest.

During Succoth Jewish people build a three sided hut-succah, made from all natural materials with a roof which allows the stars to be seen. It is a mitzvah-commandment forJewish people– to eat their meals and sleep in the succah for one week. (dependent upon the weather)The purpose is two fold. Living in the succah for one week serves as a reminder of how God protected our ancestors when they wandered in the desert for 40 years after the exodus from Egypt. This reminder strengthens our faith that God is present in our lives.

Here is the Biblical reference to Succoth. “You shall sit in Sukkot (or Succot) for seven days, all citizens of Israel will sit in Sukkot (or Succot). In order that your generations shall know that I enabled the children of Israel to dwell in Sukkot (or Succot) when I brought them out of Egypt, I am the L-rd your

G-d” (Vayikra 23:42-43, or in English, Leviticus 23:42-43). http://www.angelfire.com/pa2/passover/sukkot/sukkah.html

Another hidden historical fact concerns the Pilgrims and the Indians.

History books teach that the Pilgrims and the Indians shared a Thanksgiving meal together. The Wampanoag Indians befriended and taught the Pilgrims how to plant potatoes and tomatoes. Several of my resources indicated the Pilgrims stole land from the Indians and killed them. I leave it up to the reader to decide what to believe.

I find it interesting that the desire for domination has been with us for centuries and continues to be a dilemma today. As I said in a previous article. “In order to have peace, the power of love needs to surpass the love of power.”

Thanksgiving reminds me to count my blessings. Rabbi Martin Lawson, said that Jews are asked to say 100 blessings daily. The words “thank you” mean so much and take little effort to express.

Thank you for reading my articles. May you all have a nurturing

and safe Thanksgiving week-end.

Appel-Lennon is a San Diego-based freelance writer. Her email: appels@jewishsightseeing.com

Adventures in San Diego Jewish History~January 8, 1954

November 25, 2009 Leave a comment

Compiled by Gail Umeham
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Edward Breitbard Heads New Board At Tifereth Israel

Southwestern Jewish Press January 8, 1954 Page 1

On Dec. 28 at the largest annual meeting ever held at Tifereth Israel Synagogue, the following officers were elected:  Pres., Edward A. Breitbard; 1st V.P., Al Greenberg; 2nd V.P., Sidney Newman; Rec. Sec., Moss Addleson; Fin Sec., Joseph Finkleman; Treas., Jerome Weissman.  Eighteen members were elected to the Board of Directors.

In a statement to the Jewish Press, Ed Breitbard said that Tifereth Israel would cooperate with all worthwhile community projects and would work toward complete harmony among all in the Jewish Community.

The public is invited to the Installation of Officers which will be held at Tifereth Israel Synagogue Saturday Jan. 16, at 8:00 p.m.  Zel Greenberg is chairman.  Morris W. Douglas, President of Temple Beth Israel is installing officer, and Morrie S. Kraus, President of Beth Jacob Congregation, is assistant installing officer.

After the formal installation, dancing and refreshments will be available.

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Guest  Speaker At Annual Meeting

Southwestern Jewish Press January 8, 1954 Page 1

The Jewish Social Service Agency will hold its 35th Annual Dinner Meeting Wednesday January 20, in the New State Ballroom of the Hotel San Diego at 6:30 p.m.

Mr. Louis Ziskind, Executive Director of the Southern California District, Jewish committee for Personal Service will be the principal speaker of the evening.  He will tell the story of the Gateways, a new demonstration project organized and sponsored by his agency.

The program of the Gateways is centered around the prevention, treatment and rehabilitation of the mentally ill.  It is to serve as a bridge for patients between hospitals and their return to the community.  Gateways is the realization of a dream conceived 15 years ago and only last month opened its doors to those from Southern California who need its services.
A cordial invitation is extended to all persons who are interested, to attend.  Reservation for the dinner, which will be $3.00 per plate, can be made by calling the Jewish Social Service Agency, Main 5172.

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Louis Moorsteen Takes Over Helm Of United Jewish Fund

Southwestern Jewish Press January 8, 1954 Page 1

Louis Moorsteen, prominent business leader and for many years active in local Jewish affairs was elected President of the United Jewish Fund at the meeting of the Board of Directors of the Fund held last Tuesday.  He succeeds Murray D. Goodrich who served as President for the past two years.

He will head the Fund for 1954, and has already begun planning for the Combined Jewish Appeal which will begin activity in late March.

The Board of Directors also elected Morris Douglas as 1st Vice-President; Milton Roberts as 2nd V.P.; and Albert Steinbaum as 3rd V.P.

Officers reelected include Harry Snyder, Treasurer and Manuel S. Fisher, Secretary.

Elected to the Executive Committee were:  Mrs.Gabriel Berg, David Block, Mack Esterson, Carl Esenoff, Rodin Horrow, Sol Price, and Harry Wax.

In announcing the election of Moorsteen, the Board of Directors called attention to his long record of service in Jewish and non-sectarian affairs in San Diego.  A resident of the area for years, he is a former campaign chairman, and for many years a member of the Executive Committee.  A leader in local Israel Bond Sales, he has also supported every movement in the community to aid Jewish philanthropy.

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March of Dimes (Editorial)

Southwestern Jewish Press January 8, 1954 Page 2

The thing that pleases us about the Annual March of Dimes Campaign this year is the slogan, “Research Will Win.”  There is a lot of optimism this year especially in regard to the vaccine testing program going on throughout the country.  The cost of this program is staggering but this dreaded disease will soon be conquered.

San Diego has had a terrible polio year and only through the combined efforts of the entire country can we hope to raise enough money to care for the crippled victims.  We can no longer care for the dead.

The National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis needs your help.  Polio is the only epidemic disease on the increase and Polio Prevention is a must in 1954.  Give to the March of Dimes and give generously.  They deserve your support.

Research must win!

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The New Year

We always like to write editorials about the New Year.  It makes us feel omnipotent and perhaps pontifical.  This year instead of looking backward, we want to take a peek into the future.

Was it a year like any other year?  Let us itemize all the things we think happened in 1954 (cq).

Item:  It was a pretty good year.  Times were still good.  Work was plentiful.  Money seemed to be easy.  The recession everybody talked about never did appear even though people kept looking over their shoulders.

Item:  Autos, beds, and television sets were sold in pairs.  For “Him” and “Her.”   It may be the beginning of the breakup of family life.  A separate bed, bedroom, television, auto.  When do they ever get together?  Those with teenagers were definitely a two-car family.  Maybe we should build separate homes for them, too.  It would make life much easier.

Item:  Fund raising (a major item in our lives).  Most of the drives turned out to be successful in spite of dire warnings from those who give and those who didn’t want to give.  Even the United Jewish Fund Combined Appeal came close to their “realistic” goal in spite of gloomy forecasts that the “other” drives would hurt the U.J.A.

Item:  The young marrieds.  In spite of atom bombs, Russia, and McCarthy, babies were born and still did not have to take the loyalty oath.  There were the usual number of old timers in the community.

Come to think of it, 1953 wasn’t such a bad year, after all.  It could have been worse.  Like they say on television, “It was a year like any other year but—You Were There.”

A Happy and Healthful Year to All Our Friends.

Community Currents

Southwestern Jewish Press January 8, 1954 Page 2

By Albert Hutler, Exec. Director United Jewish Fund.

San Diego’s Loss — San Diego’s Jewish community lost two of its outstanding leaders in the last two weeks in the passing of Morris Niederman and Anna Shelley.

Morris Niederman had been a resident of San Diego for thirty years.  During that time, he was extremely active in Beth Israel Temple, serving for many years as a member of the Board of Directors.  He was also a valued and beloved member of the Board of the United Jewish Fund, and of many organizations in which he believed.

Anna Shelley was a leader in Beth Jacob Synagogue; a leader in the Jewish community, a woman with a heart that not only encompassed her family but also the entire Jewish community of San Diego, president of so many organizations that no one can enumerate them; founder of many Jewish organizations; beloved by all who knew her.

It will be very hard in our community life to fill the void that has been left by the loss of these two leaders.  However, they have handed down a tradition to their children whom they have trained to carry on.

What is Unity? — I don’t know why I should get into the middle of the discussion between the Southwestern Jewish Press and Rabbi Morton J. Cohn as to ”unity” in the Jewish community.  However, I don’t believe anyone is thinking of “unity” in the sense of a totalitarian unit.  When we speak of united or “unity” we’re using it as a much more flexible term.  For instance, the Jewish Education Commission, which is evidently now defunct and which originally consisted of the three synagogues as the religious community and the United Jewish Fund as the so-called secular community, was an instance of “unity” between all facets in San Diego.

It is interesting to note that in Oakland, where they seem to have much more “unity” than in San Diego because of the grand cooperation between the rabbis, congregations and various organizations in the community, a Jewish Educational Council was established in 1952 which included the Jewish Welfare Federation, the schools, the synagogues, the rabbis, lay leaders—all working together.

In the minutes of the American Association for Jewish Education, Western Region, there is a statement that should be more than interesting to those of us who have followed the editorial and correspondence on “unity” in the Southwestern Jewish Press.  They reported that at the “first combined children’s Chanukah festival” held in the Oakland Auditorium theatre on Sunday, December 6th, close to 1100 children and 400 adults from the eleven schools in the two counties attended.  This thrilling program was the inter-school affair arranged by the Jewish Educational Council.  This is qute in contrast to the way we have done things, and certainly points out the difference in “unity” in San Diego and Oakland.

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“Adventures in Jewish History” is sponsored by Inland Industries Group LP in memory of long-time San Diego Jewish community leader Marie (Mrs. Gabriel) Berg. Our indexed “Adventures in San Diego Jewish History” series will be a regular feature until we run out of history.

ZOA opposes construction freeze

November 25, 2009 Leave a comment

NEW YORK (Press Release)–The Zionist Organization of America (ZOA) is opposed to the policy announced Wednesday in Jerusalem by the Israeli government to institute a freeze on all Jewish construction in Judea and Samaria for a ten month period.

ZOA National President Morton A. Klein said, “We would oppose freezing Jewish construction in any event, as Jews have a right to live in their religious and historic homeland. It would be wrong to deny Jews the right to live and build in these territories, simply because they are Jews. But we particularly oppose a freeze on Jewish construction in this instance as it is unilateral. Israel has not received any comparable, reciprocal concessions from either the Palestinians or the Arab states.

“At a minimum, Palestinian Arabs should also freeze Arab construction in Judea and Samaria so as not to permit Palestinian Arabs to prejudice a final settlement. As Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu himself said in April to former Czech Prime Minister Mirek Topolanek, ‘If Israelis can’t build homes on the West Bank, Palestinians shouldn’t be allowed to either. …If someone wishes to build a home in an existing settlement, I don’t think this is a problem (Haaretz, April 24, 2009).

“Even President Barack Obama opposed unilateral concessions last April by Israel when he said, ‘My hope is that we’re going to see movement not only from the Israelis but also from the Palestinians around issues of incitement and security, from Arab states that show their willingness to engage Israel. All sides must be willing to move off the rut we’re in currently.’

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Preceding provided by Zionist Organization of America

Reasons for international thankfulness

November 25, 2009 Leave a comment

By Shoshana Bryen

WASHINGTON, D.C.– Last year at Thanksgiving, we noted that November 2008 was a moment of “tremendous upheaval, economic dislocation and a truly historic presidential election. As a country, we are exhausted and jittery, and nothing makes us think the way ahead will be any easier or calmer.”

We were right. On the security front, very little makes us feel better–the old threats remain, plus an increase in Iranian intervention in South America. The trend in Turkey is not good and the UN has proved–if it was still necessary –that there is no new depth to which it cannot find a way to sink. At home, the economy has stabilized somewhat, but American politics are still exhausting.

On the other hand, this Thanksgiving we are thankful that there is always another hand.

Honduras has proved that a government that believes in its own laws and its own constitution could withstand the pressure of its neighbors, including the colossus to the north. What began as a thwarted attempt by Manuel Zelaya to illegally pave the way to run for a second term as president should end Sunday with the previously nominated candidates for election, and with American and OAS approval. We are thankful for brave
democrats even, and especially, in small countries.

Iraq is moving-two steps forward and one back-toward its second open, multi-party national election. That makes two more than most Arab countries have had. We are thankful for brave nationalists even, and especially, in shaky new governments.

The Israel Test by George Gilder, and Start-up Nation by Dan Senor and Saul Singer are powerful antidotes to the negativism that sometimes pervades our thinking, and a powerful reminder of the economic, political and social miracle that is Israel. We bought both books and are thankful for authors who are looking at the same country we’re looking at, but turn the prism and see it from an entirely different angle-and write about it with grace and wit.

We are thankful, too, for the continuing closeness between the United States Armed Forces and the IDF. The Juniper Cobra joint exercise that finished a week ago was a model of high-level military cooperation, high-powered technology and shared attitudes among one very large democratic force and one rather small one–proving that size doesn’t matter where it doesn’t matter.

And we are most assuredly thankful for America and for Americans.

We are thankful for the blessings of our great country, our freedoms, our families, our friends, and our lives. We are grateful to servicemen and women, police officers, fire fighters, airport security screeners, border guards, FBI and CIA agents, the administration and members of Congress of both parties who believe and speak and vote with the understanding that our nation is still at war. We are grateful for heroes by choice and heroes by chance. We believe it is the combination of all these people working under difficult and often-dangerous circumstances–not a lack of trying on the part of the bad guys–that has have kept us safe for another year. We are grateful to the parents for raising the children who grew into the adults who serve America in so many ways at home and abroad, and grateful to their families for sharing them.

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Bryen is special projects director for the Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs. (JINSA). Her column is sponsored by Waxie Sanitary Supply in memory of Morris Wax, longtime JINSA supporter and national board member

Mitchell: Palestinian-Israeli negotiations should have a ‘mix of contacts’

November 25, 2009 Leave a comment

WASHINGTON, D.C. (Press Release)–Following is the text of a U.S. State Department press briefing given on Wednesday by George Mitchell, the U.S. special envoy for Middle East peace.  He was introduced by State Department spokesman Robert Wood.

MR. WOOD: Good afternoon, everybody. Welcome to the briefing. As promised, Senator Mitchell is here, and he is going to give you an update on the recent announcement by the Israeli Government with regard to settlements. So without further ado, Senator Mitchell.

MR. MITCHELL: Great. Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. Prime Minister Netanyahu has just announced his government’s moratorium on new settlement buildings. I think it’s important to look at this issue in a broader context, particularly how it affects the situation on the ground and how it can contribute to a constructive negotiating process that will ultimately lead to an end to the conflict and to a two-state solution.

It falls short of a full settlement freeze, but it is more than any Israeli Government has done before, and can help move toward agreement between the parties. As President Obama has said many times, we believe that a two-state solution to the conflict is the best way to realize the shared goal of Israelis and Palestinians to live in peace and security. It is also in the national security interest of the United States. It is urgently needed.

The President knows that achieving this goal will be difficult, but he also has said that he will not waiver in his persistent pursuit of a comprehensive peace in the Middle East. For that reason, he has dedicated himself and his Administration to the resumption of Israeli-Palestinian negotiations and to the creation of an atmosphere that maximizes the prospects for success.

To be clear, the steps we have suggested to all parties – Israel, the Palestinians, and the Arab States – to improve the atmosphere for negotiations are not ends in themselves, and they certainly are not preconditions to negotiations. But they can make a valuable contribution toward achieving our goal of successful negotiations that result in a two-state solution. That’s why we’ve urged the Palestinians to expand and improve their security efforts and to take strong and meaningful action on incitement. It’s why we’ve urged the Arab states to take steps toward normalization of relations with Israel, and it’s why we’ve urged Israel to stop settlement activity.

As I said earlier, while they fall short of a full freeze, we believe the steps announced by the prime minister are significant and could have substantial impact on the ground. For the first time ever, an Israeli Government will stop housing approvals and all new construction of housing units and related infrastructure in West Bank settlements. That’s a positive development. The Israelis have said that the only exception will be a small number of public buildings, such as schools and synagogues, within existing settlements.

Under the moratorium, those buildings already under construction will be completed. But the number of buildings under construction will decline since, as each new building is completed, there will not be a new building started. So implementation of the moratorium could mean much less settlement construction than would occur if there is no moratorium.

The steps announced today are the result of a unilateral decision by the Government of Israel. This is not an agreement with the United States, nor is it an agreement with the Palestinians. United States policy on settlements remains unaffected and unchanged. As the President has said, America does not accept the legitimacy of continued Israeli settlements.

We recognize that the Palestinians and other Arabs are concerned because Israel’s moratorium permits the completion of buildings already started and limits the effect of the moratorium to the West Bank – concerns which we share.

As to Jerusalem, United States policy remains unaffected and unchanged. As has been stated by every previous administration which addressed this issue, the status of Jerusalem and all other permanent status issues must be resolved by the parties through negotiations.

The United States also disagrees with some Israeli actions in Jerusalem affecting Palestinians in areas such as housing, including the continuing pattern of evictions and demolitions of Palestinian homes. The United States has not accepted and disagrees with any unilateral action by either party which could have the effect of preempting negotiations. As we and others have said many times, the way to move forward is to enter negotiations without preconditions and reach agreements on the two-state solution: a Jewish state of Israel living side by side in peace and security with an independent, contiguous, and viable Palestinian state.

As the Secretary of State said today, and I quote, “Today’s announcement by the Government of Israel helps move forward toward resolving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. We believe that through good-faith negotiations, the parties can mutually agree on an outcome which ends the conflict and reconciles the Palestinian goal of an independent and viable state, based on the 1967 lines, with agreed swaps, and the Israeli goal of a Jewish state with secure and recognized borders that reflect subsequent developments and meet Israeli security requirements. Let me say to all the people of the region and world: Our commitment to achieving a solution with two states living side by side in peace and security is unwavering.” That’s the end of the Secretary’s quote.

Despite the difficulties and the complex political circumstances in the region, we are committed to the re-launch of negotiations and to the two-state solution. We will not be deterred by setbacks. We are determined to stay the course in the cause of comprehensive peace in the Middle East.

Thank you, ladies and gentlemen, and I’ll now be pleased to respond to your questions.

QUESTION: So we all thought you were going to come down here and say you were frustrated and you were going to resign, but I guess that’s not the case. (Laughter.)

You’re going to keep at it? I guess the question is: Is this the best that you could get? And are you going to try to sell it to the Palestinians as the best that they could get? As you probably know, senior Palestinian officials have already come out and said this is not enough, it has to – anything has to include East Jerusalem. And this, as you noted, does not. So I guess the bottom line is: Is this the best you could get out of the Israelis?

MR. MITCHELL: I’ll address the latter part of your question first and then I’ll return to your earlier comment. Our goal remains the re-launch of negotiations as soon as possible in an atmosphere in which they can succeed. We recognize that the internal political situation is more challenging on both sides, especially in light of the after-effects of the Goldstone report. We’ve always intended that negotiations will proceed on a variety of tracks, including high-level direct talks that establish the framework and set the tone, parallel talks with the U.S. about key issues, and lower-level direct talks where the details of issues are often worked out. Given the current environment, we think it makes sense to explore a re-launch of negotiations through a mix of these tracks. As the Secretary said, we believe that the differing views of the parties can be reconciled through good-faith negotiations.

Now, as to your earlier comment about being discouraged, although there are many differences between the Middle East and Northern Ireland, in this respect, my experience there is relevant. Over a period of five years, I chaired three separate sets of discussions. The main negotiation lasted for nearly two years. For most of that time, there was little or no progress and our effort was branded a failure. The question you asked me today I was asked hundreds of times there. But then after two years of saying no, both sides said yes. In a real sense, we had 700 days of failure and one day of success.

I know that if anything, the Middle East is more difficult and more complex. But no matter where the conflict is or what it’s about, if you’re serious about peace, you can’t take as final the first no, the second no, or even the hundredth no. You can’t get discouraged by setbacks and you can’t be deterred by criticism. You have to be patient, persevering, and determined. Neither the President, the Secretary of State, nor I have ever promised anything other than a total commitment to comprehensive peace in the Middle East. That remains our commitment and our goal.

MR. WOOD: Janine.

QUESTION: Senator Mitchell, given that you’re hoping this will launch final status talks, I was wondering if you could talk to us a little bit about any contacts you’ve had with President Abbas since he announced that he doesn’t plan to run. And do you think he’s sincere about that? Or what has the United States been doing to try to convince him – or if they are, maybe they’re not – to stay on?

MR. MITCHELL: I’ve had several meetings with President Abbas since then, and several conversations. We have encouraged him to remain in office and to work with us in achieving his longstanding goal of a two-state solution, which includes, as I said earlier, an independent, viable, and contiguous Palestinian state. We hope that he does stay. We hope to continue working with him.

MR. WOOD: Michel.

 

QUESTION: Yes. Senator Mitchell, Matt has asked this question, but the Palestinian Authority has refused the Israeli offer because it doesn’t include the East Jerusalem. How can you push them to go to the negotiations?

 

MR. MITCHELL: Well, as I said, we believe that the best way forward is to re-launch negotiations in an atmosphere in which they can succeed. We will encourage both sides to continue to take steps that will lead to that result and enable us to begin negotiations in a way that affords what I believe to be a reasonable and good prospect of achieving what the Palestinians want and what we want; that is, a two-state solution with an independent and a viable and a contiguous Palestinian state, and a state of Israel living with secure and recognized borders with security for all of its people. And we are going to continue to pursue that objective.

 

MR. WOOD: Kirit.

 

QUESTION: Kirit Radia with ABC News. You’ve got now a 10-month window. Do you think that’s long enough? What would you like to see happen during that period? What would you like the Palestinians to do next? And where do you see the process 10 months from now?

 

MR. MITCHELL: We would like very much to begin negotiations on the permanent status issues. As I said earlier in my response to the first question, we think the best approach is a mix of contacts – direct, bilateral in some cases, at varying levels, contacts with us for discussions on permanent status issues. We hope that there will be substantial progress. My personal and fervent wish is that we will during this process at some point have a resolution of the issue of borders so that there will no longer be any question about settlement construction, so that Israelis will be able to build what they want in Israel and Palestinians will be able to build what they want in Palestine. And we think that the negotiations should begin as soon as possible. We hope that they will be time limited to a period at the end of which all of the permanent status issues will be resolved and the people of the region can achieve their objective.

I want to be clear, however, that while this discussion has understandably focused on the Israeli-Palestinian negotiations, when the President addresses his vision of comprehensive peace, he includes, in addition, Israel and Syria, Israel and Lebanon, and the full normalization of relations between Israel and all of its Arab neighbors. And we’re going to continue to pursue those objectives at the same time with the same vigor.

MR. WOOD: Right here. And please state your name and news organization.

QUESTION: Muna Shikaki with Al-Arabiya TV. There is talk about terms of reference from the Americans as guarantees to the Palestinians so that they can resume negotiations, including 1967 borders, changing some areas from B to A, and perhaps releasing some prisoners. Is there – are there any American guarantees or terms of reference that you’re preparing?

 

MR. MITCHELL: We have been in discussions with both Israelis and Palestinians for some time regarding terms of reference for negotiations. We have closed many gaps between them. And while admittedly important differences remain, we’ve made very substantial progress. And we continue to explore those, and I will pursue those on my next visit to the region, which will be in the near future, to continue that dialogue and that effort as part of trying to bring the parties together.

 

In addition, some of the points you mentioned represent steps that Israel can take, and we have encouraged action in that regard as a means of both steps to create an atmosphere toward conducive and what we hope will be good-faith and constructive negotiations, and as ways to move us toward the final result.

 

MR. WOOD: Glenn.

 

QUESTION: Hi, Glenn Kessler with The Washington Post. I mean, I noticed you didn’t, in your statement, call this unprecedented, though you came very close to that. And I’m just wondering, was there – is there anything different between what Israel has outlined today versus what the Secretary labeled as unprecedented when she was in the region a few weeks ago? And can you outline in what ways this is superior to the unstated agreement that the Bush Administration had with the state of Israel?

 

MR. MITCHELL: Well, first, I said that this has never happened before, and if you look in the dictionary, that is the definition of unprecedented. (Laughter.)

 

QUESTION: I know, but there was – that word was loaded. So like I said, you came close to unprecedented.

 

MR. MITCHELL: Nothing like this occurred during the Bush Administration. From 2000 to 2008, there were new housing construction starts on nearly 20,000 new housing units, 9,000 of them between 2004 and 2008. In the moratorium just announced by the Government of Israel, there will be no new housing construction starts during the 10-month period. None. There will be no approval of any housing projects during the 10-month moratorium. None. No Israeli Government has ever taken this step, and nothing remotely like this occurred during the Bush Administration.

 

QUESTION: John Terrett from Al Jazeera English Television. The desk has just sent over to me here Mahmoud Abbas’s comments, and he’s pressing the necessity that Israel put an end to illegal settlements on Palestinian territories, which he says block the viability of the geographic border of the future Palestinian state, which must have East Jerusalem as its capital. Could you talk to what you think it is in this announcement today by Mr. Netanyahu that you think the Palestinians should find some optimism in or some hope in?

 

MR. MITCHELL: Anyone who opposes settlement construction, continued settlement activity, as does the United States, should, of course, take into account that under the moratorium announced today, there will be much less settlement housing construction activity than there would have been if there were no moratorium. That’s a fact.

 

Now, we will continue in our efforts to persuade the parties that the best way forward is to enter negotiations, with the United States as an active participant and supporter of the parties, encouraging them in their direct talks to move forward. And we believe that’s the best way to achieve what is the common goal, not just of the leaders, but more importantly, of the people they represent on both sides to be able to live in peace and security. And we will continue to pursue that objective vigorously and to seek to persuade both sides that the way forward is through negotiation and agreement.

 

MR. WOOD: Question here. We’re going to take two more after this.

 

QUESTION: Yes. Joyce Karam with Al-Hayat newspaper. Senator, there are many cynics in the Arab world that are saying if Washington couldn’t get the Israelis to completely freeze settlements, how can they force them to withdraw to the 1967 borders? I mean, how do you respond to this? What kind of assurances can you give the Arab world that these negotiations are – be different than the one we had previously multiple times? And what can the Arab governments do to contribute to the success of such negotiations?

 

MR. MITCHELL: Right. As I mentioned briefly in response to an earlier question and in my remarks, we have asked all of the Arab governments to join in the effort in support of the Arab Peace Initiative to take steps toward normalization of relations with Israel. We’ve not asked anyone to take the final step of full normalization.

What we’ve asked is gestures, actions, statements and movement in that direction. For example, we are seeking, and we believe we’ve gotten a good response, to a multilateral track in which several governments of the region would meet to discuss regional issues that they have in common, such as energy and water, which would follow the resumption of direct negotiations. It won’t occur before then, but if direct negotiations can get underway, we believe this could occur.

 

And this would operate to the benefit of everyone in the region, whatever country they happen to live in, because it would help to deal with these important issues that they all face in common. And we think that increased contacts between political and nonpolitical leaders, cultural and other exchanges, trade relations and other forms of contact for mutual benefit, all of that can form an ever-strengthening web of support for the concept of normal relations throughout the region.

 

Now, in response to your first question, of course, there can be no absolute total guarantee in advance of what is going to occur in a negotiation. I said earlier that if you’re serious about this, you can’t take the first or the second or the hundredth no for an answer, and that has to be the case here. We have to continue to urge, to encourage, to seek to persuade. The alternative is to accept for the people of the region endless conflict, never-ending disagreement, and the absence of opportunity and hope for the future.

 

Now, nobody gets everything they want in a negotiation seeking to resolve a conflict like this. There has to be a willingness on everyone’s part to give more than they want to give and to accept less than they want to get. That applies to everyone in the process. That takes time, it takes patience, it takes courageous leadership. I believe that it can and will be done for one overriding reason: It is in the best interest of the people of the region – Israelis, Palestinians, and other Arabs.

 

A continuation of this conflict and further delay in attempting to resolve it does not serve the interest of any of them. And the leadership now should commit themselves that the next generation – young people now growing up, those yet to come, Israeli, Palestinian and Arab – don’t have to live through what the present leaders have had to live through. And we believe that that can be done, and we are determined that it will be done.

 

MR. WOOD: The gentleman right here, please.

 

QUESTION: Thank you. Senator Mitchell, you’re making it sound as though the Israelis have given a concession by their decision today to temporarily phase the building of new settlements, when it is actually an agreement that had taken place in Annapolis meeting years ago, during the Bush Administration. Now, asking the Arabs also to normalize – to take steps to normalize the relations with Israel – is like putting the horse before the cart where it is actually supposed to be a result of a peace agreement.

Now, the Syria Government – and I am Syrian reporter, my name is Zaher Imadi. I’m sorry I didn’t mention that.

 

MR. WOOD: That’s all right.

 

QUESTION: But the Syrian Government has welcomed so much the speech of President Obama – your mission. But President Asad has asked in the last interview if there were any roadmap to execute the peace agreement or peace negotiations that are supposed to take place in the future with the Israelis. Do you have any elaborate plan or detailed plan for your mission where the steps could be taken, one after the other, that you could emphasize that the parties must take in order to bridge that peace. What is your goal? Do you still recognize 232, 338, the United Nations resolutions? Is it peace-for-land kind of negotiations? I need some explanation along these lines, Mr. Mitchell, please.

 

MR. MITCHELL: Well, thank you. I’ll attempt to provide it.

 

QUESTION: Thank you.

 

MR. MITCHELL: We’ve been consulting intensively with Israel and Syria for several months. We’re seeking a mutually agreeable basis for the parties to renew talks, and we have strongly encouraged them to do so. Both sides are well aware that President Obama’s vision of comprehensive peace, as I’ve just explained a few moments ago, includes Israel and Syria. We think that is an important part of the objective.

 

I have met with President al-Asad and with Prime Minister Netanyahu and discussed directly with them our hope and our encouragement that peace talks be revived, and we will continue in that effort. Until now, while they both state a willingness to get into them, their differences on how to do so have prevented them. The Government of Syria wishes to conclude the indirect talks which were begun through Turkey last year before going to direct talks. The Government of Israel prefers to go directly to direct talks without preconditions. We are attempting to find a mechanism on which both can agree, because we think it’s important that they begin the process. We want them to do so. We want to support that effort in any way that we can. And that will continue.

 

MR. WOOD: Last question, back here. Please, the lady. Yes.

 

QUESTION: Thanks so much. This is Tulin Daloglu with the Turkish daily newspaper Haberturk. You talked about the Israeli-Syrian talks, and Turkey has played a role in that. Do you still see a role for Turkey to play at this time?

 

MR. MITCHELL: I have had several meetings with Turkish officials, including the president, the prime minister, the foreign minister, and others. And we welcome their further participation, but that is, of course, a decision for the parties to make, whether or not they wish to continue the indirect talks in that manner. So it would be up to them to decide how best to proceed. I have told the Turkish officials and both the Syrian and Israeli officials we welcome that as one mechanism. We welcome any mechanism that will result in progress.

 

And so we hope – I intend to make this a part of my discussion in my next visit, because we do want this process to proceed, not to the detriment of, not as an alternative to, talks between Israelis and Palestinians. I want to make that very clear. These are not exclusive alternatives. These both must happen. We believe they both should begin. And we will encourage the parties and we ourselves will do all we can to make that possible.

 

Thank you very much, ladies and gentlemen, for your presence here today.

*
Preceding provided by the U.S. State Department

PRN: 2009/1179

 

 

 

The Greene Line: Klezmers and terrorists could have mixed in Paris

November 25, 2009 Leave a comment

By Norman Greene

PARIS–Is there a connection between Klezmer music and Islamic terrorism? I was afraid I might find one here in Paris

My wife Bobby and I were spending eight days in Paris this fall bemoaning the precipitous decline of the American dollar and generally enjoying the French escape from their recession. Actually, if there was a recession in Paris in September, you couldn’t prove it by me. The shops, boulevards, restaurants and concert halls were filled with French speaking buyers. You could tell they were seriously in pursuit of material things by simply viewing the packages and bags they were carrying.  In the French department stores, I thought there might be an early holiday sale underway judging by the vast numbers of shoppers and the constant ringing of cash registers.

In the midst of all this observation, our French cousin Beatrice called to invite us to a Wednesday night concert. We were delighted to accept. Beatrice has a good ear for music and a better eye for alerting us to special events. Because of the timing, we were instructed to take the Metro to a little visited arrondissement (district in Paris) where the Theatre de la Vieille Grille is located.

So we braved the Metro and with only two changes in trains arrived at a fairly bleak little square.

We had no trouble finding Beatrice seated under a tree in this businessman’s district far from the tourist crowds. But we could find no familiar sights to help us gain our bearings.

Well, some Champagne at a sidewalk café helped while we waited for Beatrice’s friend Sophie to arrive and then we four walked a block or two to a tiny restaurant not listed in any tourist guide. I am sure neither Zagat nor Frommer’s ever heard of the place, which strongly resembled a neighborhood bar. In fact, after settling into our chairs, I noticed there were mainly swarthy male customers in the establishment. The only three women in the small room were all seated at my table.

Cousin Christophe arrived and dinner was served. We had to rush in order to be at the theater in time for the concert. While half way through my meal, it belatedly occurred to me that we were in an Arab neighborhood, but the food was excellent, albeit with a heavy Middle Eastern emphasis. My French cousins seemed unphased by anything but the passing of time and Sophie, who is of Jewish Moroccan decent, was serenely happy because her meal was vegetarian and didn’t violate her practice of kosher dining.

As we walked to 1 Rue du Puits de l”Ermite, I kept an uncharacteristically nervous look out for any unsavory characters. The others chirped away unaware of my paranoid discomfort. We soon arrived at the theater on a deserted side street. It was little more than a store front. The owner evidently knew cousin Beatrice and after hugs and kisses, we were all introduced. As for me, I was just anxious to get off the street corner and into the safety of the theater.

Once inside, I wasn’t so sure that this whole thing was a such a good idea. The theater was a makeshift affair with four or five rows of uncomfortable seats squeezed into a very small space. There may have been room for 30 – 40 people at the very most. No U.S. fire department would have ever allowed this one exit, fire trap to house so many people, so crammed in together.

Beatrice seemed to know half the people in the house as she explained to me that the evening’s program had undergone an emergency change of plans. The lead singer was taken ill, along with a few of the musicians, but not to worry, there was a plan B.

“Spilkes,” the band to perform that evening was being augmented by two singer/musicians from another band called “Les Gares.” Eleonore Biezunski, who became the lead singer for the evening and played the violin with great aplomb, also performs with a another, older group called “Les Shtetlstompers.” Samuel Maquin, presumably the leader, played the Klezmer and a few other instruments. The fourth musician for the evening was a Jewish American, Brian Bender, who spends two months of every year in Paris picking up gigs, played a trombone, the piano and also sang. He was the only one to speak English, although he sang in Yiddish. Sadly, I didn’t catch the percussionist’s name. I think they had all practiced together for about an hour before the performance. What troupers! Oh well, we already had paid for the tickets.

What kind of a concert was this? Why a Klezmer Concert in a small theater in an Arab neighborhood in Paris, France, of course. Was I nervous about all of this? You bet I was.

Beatrice’s pleasure radiated throughout the small, cramped room. The music began and it was nothing short of marvelous. All of the young 30 something performers knew their stuff. Their program mainly in Yiddish was varied and spirited. The audience, which must have been solidly Jewish, responded with great enthusiasm. Encores were demanded and delivered.

Amidst this euphoria, it occurred to me that the sounds of the music and singing were being carried loud and clear up and down the city block. I wondered if Arab gangs might be gathering outside to storm the place or to merely pick us off one by one as we exited. I made a commitment to myself to quickly leave once the performance was over and not to linger on the sidewalk.

This was not to be the case, though. Beatrice had to embrace each of the musicians who congregated with many of the audience members on the sidewalk after the performance. Each performer was very generous with his/her time and took pains to chat with us all. In all of the rush of enthusiasm, I almost forgot my concerns about possible French Arab terrorists lurking in the shadows. I say almost, but not quite.

While stories of growing anti-Semitism in France swirl around the world, Beatrice and Sophie seemed totally oblivious to them. They are happy to be French and Jewish and able to enjoy a fabulous evening of Klezmer music that would have made even Molly Picon, Fanny Brice or Fyvush Finkel smile.

I smiled, too, but couldn’t quite shake the paranoia.

*

Columnist Greene is based in San Diego

Erich Leinsdorf: his life, music and thought

November 25, 2009 Leave a comment

By David Amos

SAN DIEGO–When we are asked to name the greatest conductors of the Twentieth Century, many important names come to mind. No need to repeat them at this time. But, it is unlikely that Erich Leinsdorf would make that list. This is unfortunate, since Leinsdorf, who admittedly did not break any major new paths, was a solid conductor of symphonic music and opera as there were in our times.

Many of us remember Leinsdorf (1912-1993) as music director of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, conductor and music consultant of the Metropolitan Opera, and guest conductor of great orchestras of Europe, Israel, and America.

Born Erich Landauer in Vienna, he started studying music at the age of five. He later studied conducting at the Mozarteum in Salzburg and worked as an assistant to Bruno Walter and Arturo Toscanini. He first conducted at the Metropolitan Opera in New York in 1938, and after immigrating to the United States, became a citizen in 1943. He held the position of Music Director of the Cleveland Orchestra for three years, but that was interrupted when he was drafted by the Armed Forces for World War II.

He also was principal conductor of the Rochester Philharmonic from 1945 to 1955 and New York City Opera, but is best remembered for his tenure with the Boston Symphony, from 1962 to 1969. He continued with many guest conducting assignments throughout the world.

Leinsdorf was notorious for being highly opinionated on many subjects, and he had his share of clashes with musicians and administrators. On the positive side, he left us a legacy of many wonderful recordings.

I read a book, Erich Leinsdorf, On Music, a valuable compilation of his various writings, letters, and essays on orchestral music, opera, and our rapidly changing times. I found his opinions and his stands on various issues, both in complete agreement with my thoughts, and at times somewhat less so.

For example, I objected to the labeling of certain music as “inferior” and other works as unquestioned masterpieces, solely because they came from a particular composer or school.

On the other hand, the book contains so much logic and a no-nonsense approach to music making, that I was pleased to find reinforcement of many of my own feelings, such as Leinsdorf’s love for baseball. He drew this comparison, with which I fully agree, much to the chagrin of many a musical purist:

“Conducting and coaching (in opera) in the music world is in many ways very similar to coaching in the world of sports. In music, as in sports, the coach aims to bring together, as a team, a number of individuals, who will, in public performance, demonstrate unanimity of purpose. These individuals must learn the same phrasing, the same pronunciation of the language sung, and the same emphasis on similar themes and tunes. They must produce a balanced sound that requires flexible reading of dynamic markings and a few hundred other items concerning nuance, special effects, and whatever else the score and work may require”.

Other interesting remarks that caught my attention:

*“An accomplished conductor has people playing with him, while a good faker will have an experienced orchestra play in spite of him”.

*“If music, as performance is again to become a healthy and health-giving activity, the dominant striving for more perfection must be replaced by a new priority, that of honesty. The “star” system and the obvious overuse of the great classic masterpieces have opened the box office doors to many kinds of dishonest dealings”.

*“Unless government can be convinced that funding of minority values is more important than the objections of regional disinterested hostility, I see no point in federal subsidies at all”.

*“Edward Bernays once told me that the aim of publicity was to engineer consent. It was this that Herbert Von Karajan did to perfection, and he was rewarded with a pedestal reserved exclusively for the invulnerable”.

*“Composers have a fully conscious relationship with the public, and this is not to be confused with catering to low instincts and vulgar tastes”.

The book is full of quotable gems, and on the whole, is very readable for musicians and non-musicians alike.

It is published by Amadeus Press, Portland, Oregon.

*
Amos is conductor of the Tifereth Israel Community Orchestra  in San Diego and has guest conducted orchestras around the world.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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