Update on What I Wrote about Towards the End of My Last Post

I'm feeling better about things now.

I'm still plagued by my phobia, OCD, and various anxieties. But I've kind of pushed that to the back of my mind for now—both the issues themselves and the issue of how to treat/deal with them.

I had worried that I had quit/took a hiatus at the wrong time, because I had just paid for a subscription to Haaretz.  I worried that I wouldn't enjoy reading it "just for fun", because it would remind me that I had taken a break from writing the posts, and that would make me sad.

That turned out to be a false prediction.  I'm totally fine reading Haaretz.

I actually felt better morning after I posted and probably could have returned to writing the Nazi-Jew-Holocaust-Israel posts.  But....

Maybe I felt foolish jumping right back in.

I decided to continue on with the break and work on other things.  One project I've started to work on is printing out a copy of my novel The Dead are Online. I had should have done that back in 2014 but never got around to it.

Certain discussions in my family and the Station Eleven miniseries are probably what inspired me to finally start working on the project.

I've had this worry lately that the world as we know it is going to end...probably from what I hear on the news AND from watching Station Eleven.

I imagine the Internet going away.  Bye bye Cloud.  And there goes my dream of descendants and other future people reading all the shit that I've written.  (I mean lately. I have a bin of manuscripts that I wrote decades ago).

I'm planning to use Lulu.com

Just getting the right dimensions on Google Docs for a trade paperback took me hours.

Now I'm very slowly going through and changing the novel from third person present tense to third person past tense.  I'm hoping that this will make the novel more readable.  

I've been kind of tempted to modernize the book—change the 2014 pop culture references to ones more relevant to 2022.  But I think I'm going to refrain from doing so.  

I'm also considering...if I rewrite the novel for a trade book version, maybe I should update the e-book.

Yeah.  I'll probably do that.  

Or maybe not.

My plan for the trade book version is to make only one copy and keep it for myself at home.  Then at some point, maybe I'll read it and if I'm not horrified by a bunch of mistakes I missed, I'll maybe buy other copies and try to sell them or give them away.

OR it might be enough to have just the one copy for myself and the (fantasy) relative who will one day discover the dusty book and decide to read it.  

As for my Nazi/Jew/Holocaust/Israel posts....

A day or two ago, I decided that I didn't want to stop the Eleanor Roosevelt posts. Though I was tired of them and very ready to move onto the next thing, abandoning the project made me uneasy.  Part of it was about being uneasy with quitting...which in itself should be ignored.  We shouldn't stick with projects just because we're ashamed to quit.

BUT I also feel there is more to learn from Roosevelt.  

Or maybe I feel some kind of emotional attachment to her column.

I decided that I would finish the project but space those posts out between other posts.  

I was eager to get on with all the other post ideas.  I have so many of them.


BUT.....

Today I'm questioning if I want to continue the posts in the first place.

I was all into the research posts, telling myself it doesn't matter if I have a ton of readers, because I was mostly doing it for myself.  And I couldn't just research without writing it in a post....

I felt it wouldn't work.

But then last night I ended up learning that the real life allegedly-possessed child who inspired The Exorcist novel and movie grew up to work for NASA.  

Whether he was truly possessed, a creative prankster, misdiagnosed, abused, telekinetic, or the target of a poltergeist, the fact that Ronald Hunkeler had a long successful life and helped us get to space....it brings me joy.

And it gave me something to obsessively research last night and today.

I played with the story on Google Maps looking at the various Ronald-Hunkeler-related buildings on Street View.  

I thought I needed to blog while going on such journeys.  

But it turns out...I don't.

That's not saying I won't do more research posts.  

I'll just have to imagine there's a purpose beyond "I'm mostly doing it for myself".

It's kind of hard to imagine there is a purpose beyond that.  

I suspect my research posts are mostly annoying, tedious, self-indulgent, way too long, etc.  But even if they are also brilliant and entertaining...the world is overflowing with content.  

I guess that's why I feel it's better to concentrate on PRINTED content...for when the Internet is gone and people are eagerly seeking content.

If the Lulu thing works out for my novel, I might also make books of some of my blog posts.  This might be a good idea for other bloggers...if they haven't done so already.  Not going to mention any names....



  

Read my novel: The Dead are Online 

 

Eleanor Roosevelt and the Jews (Part 7)

If you want to read from the beginning of this overly long project, start here.



I've been searching through Eleanor Roosevelt's My Day column and reading the ones that deal with Jews, Israel, Palestinians, etc.

For this post, I'll be looking at 1955.

* * *

Holy shit.

So...for 1954, I ended up with 17 column posts.

For 1955, there are 33!

Thirty-two of those mention Jews or Israel.  And then one mentions Palestinians.

No, it's not that Eleanor Roosevelt never thought about or wrote about Palestinians. It's just she usually referred to them as Arabs.

Now I'm going to go through and see if there are any I can eliminate.  There may be posts where she just quickly mentions going to a Jewish event.  Or if she doesn't say anything I find particularly interesting, I'll skip.

One thing I saw, while quickly going through, is that in 1955, she traveled back to Israel.  I saw a few columns labeled with Tel Aviv.

* * *

The good news is I was able to eliminate four right off the bat, because they were doubles.  

They probably included both the word "Jew" and "Israel".  I search for the words separately.

I went through and closed the window for the columns where Roosevelt briefly mentions attending a Jewish or Israel-related event.

I'm left with 19.  That seems like it should be more manageable than 33.

* * *

The first column is dated February 14, 1955.  Valentine's Day.  And also my nephews birthday, one of my sister's wedding anniversary and the other sister's first-date-with-her-husband anniversary. 

Roosevelt says that during the past week, she had lunch with a woman she knew from the United Nations (Zena Harman) and one of the Israeli consul people (Esther Herlitz).

Lord Wiki knows of both these women, and I see they are written about in other places.  So I added them to my list of possible future posts.

Anyway, if I'm understanding things right, Roosevelt met with these women as preparation for her upcoming trip to Europe and Israel.  She told them and also her column readers that her reason for the trip was to gather insight for two articles she was planning to write about Israel.

She doesn't specifically say that this is the reason she met with them.  It could be that she met with them for other reasons and her upcoming trip was one of a variety of topics.

But since all she mentions is the conversation about her upcoming trip and she doesn't refer to them as friends, I'm guessing that was the purpose of the lunch.

I just realized something, though. Roosevelt says that she told these two women that the trip was entirely a business trip.

Why did she feel the need to tell Harman and Herlitz this...AND her readers?

Was someone pressuring her to have exciting adventures?  Go to a theme park?  Spend a day at a relaxing spa?

Or maybe people were criticizing her for traveling?  Did taxpayers help pay for her travel?  Did she still have to use Secret Service?

I just Googled and ended up learning that the whole presidential Secret Service thing began under FDR.  I had no idea!  I'm not going to read the article right now...but here's the link if anyone is interested.

* * *

I've decided I'm not going to go down a rabbit hole about why Roosevelt was insistent that her trip was business-only.

But maybe clues will pop up somewhere. Somehow.

Oh!  Maybe it was just about glorifying busyness.  Roosevelt's self-worth might have been tied up tightly with whether or not she was being productive.

*.* *

Here's some really sweet few words from Roosevelt.

I saw my granddaughter, Mrs. Van Seagraves, off on the train for Carbondale, Illinois, on Thursday afternoon late and was very reluctant to see her go. Having had my young niece, Mrs. Edward Elliott, with me in New York for five days and then my granddaughter for five days has spoiled me completely.It is much fun to have young people around the house. Even though a good many people may come and go at all times, it is not quite the same as having someone really staying with me and thinking and planning each day together at the breakfast table.

Okay.

So now I have another theory.

Maybe the niece or the granddaughter (or both!) were begging Roosevelt to let them come with her to Europe and Israel.  She reluctantly said no, explaining she was going to be too busy. In order to make sure they believed her about it being a strictly-business-trip rather than a rejection, she wrote about it in her column.

It's probably why she also said those super sweet things in her column.  Not that they weren't true. But she probably wanted to make extra sure, they got the message that she loved them.  

I'm also thinking that if Roosevelt did do some fun, frivolous things in Europe or Israel, it's probably not going to be in her column.  She probably took those memories with her to the grave.

Though, I get the feeling that Roosevelt is the kind of woman who wouldn't do the fun, frivolous things after telling everyone it was just-a-business trip. I think it would make her feel too guilty.  

* * *

Roosevelt's March 7 column deals with UN stuff and refugees.

I think this might be the first time that Roosevelt uses the term Palestinian.

She says, For instance, a separate group looks after the Palestinian refugees because they have full rights of citizenship in the Arab countries.

I didn't know that. 

Is it still true?

I'm going to read something from the Human Rights Watch website—"Human Rights Policy on the Right to Return"

Before reading, I asked Lord Wiki for some quick gossip.  He says people have criticized HRW for having an anti-Israel bias.  I shall keep that in mind as I read.....

* * *

I started reading and then realized I have no idea when this was written.

There's no date.

BUT at the (whatever) time...most of the 1.5 million Palestinians have citizenship and are well integrated socially and economically, although some 278,678 are still living in camps.

Lord Wiki is helping me out.  He says that in 2014, there were 2.18 million Palestinians in Jordan.  Around 370,000 live in refugee camps.  

Wow.

Lord Wiki also says that Jordan is the only Arab country where Palestinians are fully integrated.  

I'm going to go back to reading the Human Rights Watch thing.  I'll try not to let it bother me that I don't know when it was written.  Or maybe there will be some hints.

Well...1963 is mentioned...as in the past.  So I know it's sometime after that then.

The article says: In Lebanon, in sharp contrast, hundreds of thousands of Palestinians are stateless and over half live in overcrowded camps. The right to work is severely restricted, and massive poverty has become the norm.

Why do we hear so much about the mistreatment of Palestinians in Israel but rarely hear about their mistreatment in Lebanon?

Or maybe things are better for them now in Lebanon.

I got another date, by the way.  

1982.  There's a mention of an Israeli invasion.  Invasion is a pretty weighted word...which makes me think maybe there's some merit to the idea of HRW being anti-Israel.  Although I can't say the word isn't deserved.  I have no idea what happened.  

BUT....then HRW says:

Initially the response of host Arab states to the incoming Palestinian refugees was to offer them refuge on the assumption that it would be temporary. When it became obvious that the problem would be protracted, the policies of Arab states toward the refugees changed, and the initial sympathy was coupled with an insistence on Israel's ultimate responsibility for them. As a result most Arab governments strongly opposed resettlement and naturalization of the refugees. Instead, they adopted policies and procedures aimed at preserving the Palestinian identity of the individuals and their status as refugees.

This is the kind of thing I've heard from Zionists. So...I feel it leans more towards sympathetic-towards-Israel.  

One of the biggest Zionist talking points is that Arabs/Muslims have SO much land and Israel is just a teeny-tiny, itty-bitty country.  Why can't the Jews have that little piece of land and be left in peace?

Another thing I've heard is that Arab and Palestinian leaders want Palestinians to be perpetual victims, because it makes the Israelis/Jews/Zionists look bad.  

Here's more from the article: 

For example, as the Palestinian liberation movement gained momentum, this created political and sovereignty tensions within some host countries. This was further exacerbated by attacks on Israel and Israeli citizens carried out by Palestinian guerrillas from the territory of those host countries which then bore the brunt of reprisals from Israel - often resulting in deaths and injuries to the local civilian population.

I'm not sure if this article is the black sheep of HRW.  But it doesn't seem to have an anti-Israel bias to me.  It seems to come down pretty hard on Palestinians.  

Ah....saw more dates.  The latest is 1996.

I was just reminded again that I'm an old lady.

Because I was thinking: Oh, 1996. So, this is a recent article.

* * *

My feeling after reading that article is Palestinians are treated like shit by many people. Yet Israelis seem to be the sole target of their wrath. AND the wrath of all the passionate supporters of Palestinians.

It's kind of like if, with all the antisemitism in the world, Jews concentrated all their wrath on Germany and Germans and ignored all the other countries and people who have wronged them.

And the Germans led a movement that purposely murdered six million Jews!!  

Israel is far from perfect but they are even further away from being Nazis.

If Jews can spread out their outrage beyond Germany, I think Palestinians can spread their outrage beyond Zionists. 

* * *

I wonder which country has been the best for Palestinian refugees.  Which country has the most thriving Palestinians.

I'm doubting it's anywhere in the Middle East.

Maybe Europe?  The United States?

I tried Googling various things to find the answer.  When I Googled one thing (maybe wealthy Palestinians), I spotted an article about Chile.  I didn't read it, because I wasn't sure it would have the answer I was looking for.  I kind of had doubts there'd be an answer.

But then I ended up with Lord Wiki's page on the Palestinian diaspora.  

He lists 19 famous Palestinians.  Five of them are Chilean.  

Famous people aren't the only people who thrive, though.  So it doesn't completely answer my question.

But it might be a hint towards the right direction.

I just glanced up and saw Chile is also the place with the largest Palestinian diaspora outside the Middle East.   

* * *

I'm thinking I should get back to Roosevelt.

I'm going to move onto March 16.  That's one of my niece's birthdays!

 Roosevelt's trip has begun.  The column is labeled as being from Rome.  

Roosevelt says they drove to Cambous which has a camp for children who are brought over from ghettos of Morocco.

I did some Google-mapping and Googling.  Cambous is in France.  

I should have read the first lines of Roosevelt's column more carefully.  Although it's labeled as Rome, she says, The night train from Paris to Montpellier was a comfortable trip and we arrived at 7:30 A.M. 

Why is Rome mentioned then?

Maybe she was in Rome at the time of writing/posting?

Anyway, on the map I saw that this Cambous place is in France. And Googling led me to seeing it's near Montpellier. It's some kind of archaeological site.

* * *

Roosevelt talks about the camp.

There's a castle involved. She says it's used for administrative and classroom purposes.  There's also a girl dormitory and a boy dormitory with sixteen kids each and a monitor to guide them.

I'm getting the idea these kids might be orphans?

Roosevelt writes: 

After three or four months at this camp the children are prepared to proceed to Israel. A few children, however, must stay much longer because when they arrive they are emotionally and physically so upset that they require special care. Some of them are sent to Switzerland, but all of them know that they are preparing to go to Israel and become citizens of their own country.

I was thinking there was only 32 children at this place.  Then I read: 

Most of the youngsters have come from large families and horribly crowded conditions. Some of them have unbelievable case histories. All 200 of them, however, ate in the big assembly hall with the guests when I was there, and you could not help thinking that on the whole they were a very bright-looking group of children, healthier and more normal than you would have expected.

It's not sixteen kids per dormitory but sixteen kids per dormitory building.

And I read the first part wrong.  It's two boy dormitories and ONE girl dormitories for each group.

And the groups are determined by particular religious observation.  

It seems odd to me that they're divided the same among each group.  Each religious group has exactly 32 boys and 16 girls?

I'm wondering if kids were pushed into the wrong religious groups in order to get the numbers to fit perfectly.

Maybe I'm making too much of this.

Maybe Roosevelt was just being approximate.

* * *

I've spent like 10-15 minutes trying to get more information about these camps.

It's been a struggle.

Finally, I ended up with Lord Wiki.  He has an article about the migration of Moroccan Jews to Israel.  It's not a happy picture. 

Lord Wiki says they experienced racism from Ashkenazi Jews.

He says: In 1950, the immigration office in Marseilles handling prospective North African immigrants wrote that "these abject human beings" would have to be kneaded to shape them into Israeli citizens.

And he also says: Complaints were made about the influx of 'orientals', 'human refuse' and 'backward people'.

This is making me think that those kids in the dormitories were NOT orphans but children taken from their parents in order to reshape them.  

It's happened to brown and Black children in the Americas and Australia. So I wouldn't be surprised to know it had happened in Morocco.

* * *

Well, I just finally paid for a newspaper subscription!

I talked about planning to do this awhile back.  I think it was when I was doing the Mengele post?  I kept running into the you-need-a-subscription-blocking-things.  But I managed to keep finding sites where I still had some free articles left.  

So....

Lord Wiki had a link to where he was getting the quotes I quoted above.  It was from Haaretz, and they wouldn't let me read the article.

Haaretz is a left-wing newspaper in a country that learns right, so I'm quite glad to support them.  Plus I want to support journalists, period.

Also, since I'm tending to blog about Jews and Israel lately, Haaretz will probably be a very valuable resource.

I've gotten only a month subscription, by the way.  The price for a year seemed a bit daunting.  Although now I'm seeing it would save me $38 dollars.  But that's only if I keep paying for and using it for a full year.  If I end up using it a lot this month, I'll cancel and re-order the year subscription.  Maybe.

Anyway....

The article that pushed me to buy the subscription is called: "We Saw Jews With Hearts Like Germans': Moroccan Immigrants in Israel Warned Families Not to Follow" by Ofer Aderet.  

Ouch.

The guy who compared Jews to Nazis was a soldier for the Israeli Defense Forces. He wrote the sharp words in a letter to his family, suggesting that they stay in North Africa.

I wish it was just one disgruntled soldier.  But Aderet reports that there are many similar letters in the archives.

Another soldier wrote: The European Jews, who suffered tremendously from Nazism, see themselves as a superior race and the Sephardi [Mizrahi] Jews as belonging to an inferior one”

The Polish Jews seem particularly offensive to the Moroccan Jews. One soldier said, The poles control everything.  

So if Jews want to join in on the Jews-control-everything trope and not target themselves, they can specify Jews of a different nationality. 

Another Moroccan Jew said that Polish Jews see Moroccans as savages and thieves.  

This is far from the first time I've heard about white Jews being racist.  When I was younger, though, I was fed the fairytale that Israel is the wonderful Jewish homeland that not only welcomes Jews from every country but works hard to go out and rescue these Jews.

I wish that fairytale was true.

Maybe someday it will be.

* * *

Now I'm seeing a third complaint about Polish Jews.

I'm starting to wonder if maybe the Moroccan Jews called all white Jews "Polish".  

* * *

Aderet says 70% of the soldiers (whose letters were examined) wished they could go back to Morocco.

That's disheartening.

* * *

It seems Haaretz didn't always lean left. Or it was a type of left-wing that is quite different from what left-wing is today.

Aderet reports that, in 1949, a Haaretz reporter went undercover in an immigrant transit camp and then published an article where these things:

This is an immigration of race such as we have never before known in Israel..We have here a people at a peak of primitiveness. The level of their education borders on absolute ignorance, and even graver is [their] incompetence at absorbing anything intellectual

Only slightly do they surpass the general level of the Arab, Negro and Berber inhabitants from their places [of origin]… They are completely subject to primitive and savage instincts..What can we do with them? How can we absorb them? Have we considered what will happen to this country if they became its citizens? One day the rest of the Jews from the Arab world will immigrate! What will the State of Israel look like and what sort of level will it have if it has citizens like these?

It's so horrible to me that people whose people have been a victim of racism can turn around and be so racist themselves.

 * * *

I'm moving onto Roosevelt's March 17 column.  She's still at the camp.

She writes that the children have to carry their own water, because when they go to Negev in Israel, they'll have to do the same.

Roosevelt writes:

To illustrate some of the fears and superstitions these children come with, let me tell you the story of one little boy who arrived a week ago with his brother. He told us there were nine children in the family but six had died, and his mother said that she would lose all the children if they stayed with her, so he and his brother had been sent away. He had a watch on his wrist that his father had given him as a parting gift and he said he would keep it carefully. One little brother, aged 7, was left behind, and quite simply this little boy said: "He stayed with my mother to die."

If six children die in a family, I wouldn't say it's superstitious to worry that more might die.

* * *

I imagine some people pointing out that Moroccan Jews were treated just as bad or worse in Morocco.  I don't know the history yet, but I figure there's a reason they left Morocco.

The thing is, though...people shouldn't be in situations where there are multiple groups in the competition of who's-treating-us-worse.

Wouldn't it be a step up for humanity if each marginalized group was marginalized in only one country.  Then everyone could just happily immigrate to all the countries that will welcome them with love and acceptance.  

* * *

I'm hoping to find most of the rest of 1955 columns uninteresting, because this post is already long enough.

I'm thinking I might just finish with the trip to Israel and then for the rest of the posts....just provide links in case anyone wants to read.

* * *

In her March 18 column, Roosevelt writes about going to a place called Camp Grand Arenas.  It's where Jewish Moroccan families stay until the next boat comes to take them to Israel.

I Googled the camp, and there are actual results.  Since this post is long enough, I'm just going to add it to my list of possible future posts. 

 * * *

In her March 23 column, Roosevelt met with the wife of the President (President of Israel?) Mrs Ben Zvi. 

I just Googled. It turns out Israel has presidents.  I had no idea.  Lord Wiki says the role is mainly ceremonial.

Mr. Ben Zvi was one of the presidents.  He had the job for the longest time—from 1952-1963.

Anyway...Roosevelt says that Ben Zvi kept telling her that American Jews need to come to Israel.  Roosevelt writes:

I took it for granted that she wanted them to come and visit, but I found that she meant they should come and stay here. This seems to me a little more than I can ask, for we don't want to give up our American citizens. But I do think there could be a far greater exchange of visitors and Israel would welcome more people who would want to come to work for one or two years on some special project.

It's nice of Roosevelt to say that she doesn't want to give up American citizens.

See?  This is the position people should be in—where both countries want you.

How nice it would be if both the Jews in Israel AND all the Arab countries were fighting over Palestinians?  I mean fighting over having them rather than fighting over who has to take them.

And wouldn't it be nice if Moroccan Jews were fought over by Moroccans and Ashkenazi Jews.  What if the letters home from soldiers read: Mom and Dad, I know life is fabulous in Morocco.  But you should try living here!  People are so nice!

* * *

In her March 24 column, Roosevelt writes about her meeting with Mr. Ben Zvi.

He reiterated what has been said so often before, namely, that Israel's representatives are ready to sit down at any time to try to negotiate a peaceful settlement with its neighbors.

I'd have more faith in these potential negotiations if there was less racism.  

Maybe I'm being unfair, though.  Maybe the president and his crowd were less racist than those in the military.

Maybe the military was extra racist?

If there was (is!) widespread racism in Israel towards other Jews, I think that needs to be fixed before there can be any hope of there being peaceful relationships with Palestinians.

No. Racism can't ever be completely fixed.  But I think it can be reduced.

Or maybe not.  That's probably too optimistic.  Looking at what's happening in the United States. As some people try to become less racist, it seems this is making other people more racist.  

* * *

I wrote the above yesterday afternoon and later started thinking it goes both ways.  As people become more racist and more outwardly racist, I think this is pushing the other side to become more strongly anti-racist.

* * *

In her March 25 column, Roosevelt talks about immigration in Israel.

She writes: 

Some of these problems we have known in the past in America when our immigration was heavy. As we all know, children adjust rather quickly to new surroundings and become more or less easily absorbed in the life and customs of their new country. Many parents, however, cling to their old customs and thus there is a rift between two generations. They are trying hard to meet all such problems here, but it is no simple matter.

In some ways, this applies to families who aren't even immigrants. 

It's hard to keep up with all the slang, all the various acronyms, the social media platforms that keep popping up.

(And I'm sitting here thinking is acronym the right word?  Like for things like TBH and OMG. Am I embarrassing myself by not knowing the right word for all this?!)

I can imagine how more challenging it would be if there was also a whole new language to learn, one that the kids are learning in school and us struggling to catch up.

I wonder, though, if the Internet has made language-learning more accessible to immigrants?

* * *

I would hope a political influencer today would avoid using the phrase cling to their old customs

I think in the 1950's, the melting pot idea was preferred over a salad bowl/stew kind of thing.

Well..I mean.a left political influencer.

I think many right-wing influencers would still push for a melting pot.  And they would actually be a step up from those who want to restrict any new ingredients from getting into the pot.  I mean besides potatoes, rice, milk, sour cream, cottage cheese....

* * *

March 26.

Roosevelt talks about meeting with cave dwellers from North Africa.

This is a prosperous village. It was established five years ago for 120 families. Each family has six acres of its own, plus owning in common 250 acres of orange groves and 250 acres of avocado groves. Most of the families are large, each having from eight to 10 children, and since education is compulsory they go to school until they are 14 years old. After that, most of the youngsters go to work to help support their families.

I think this was in Israel.  But I'm not positive.

She says they went to visit the cave folks after visiting a training institution in Pardessiya which is in Israel.  She doesn't describe traveling, so I'm guessing the caves were in the same area.

Roosevelt says that the main industry for the community is rugs woven by the women.  But they were also working towards depending more on agriculture.

She met the head man of the village. He spoke Hebrew, Arabic, and Italian.  

I wonder if most people in the neighboring areas were also from North Africa.

And that got me thinking...or hoping...maybe the Ashkenazi racism towards Moroccan Jews wasn't universal.  Maybe it was more common in certain places/communities.  For example: The Defense Forces.

This is probably wishful thinking on my part.

* * *

In her March 28 column, Roosevelt talks about visiting Youth Aliyah Ramat Hadassah, Szold Village.  

She says the village is a screening center for 225 youth Aliyah centers.

The place held about three hundred kids who would spend a month or two there.

I'm guessing that many of these kids were orphaned by the Holocaust.  

Roosevelt writes, Some of them have no parents, and many at first understand no language which is spoken by the workers.

Why were kids WITH parents coming there...without their parents? 

Was Israel making it easier for kids to come alone rather than with families?

Were they separating children from their families in order to quicken the whole melting-pot process?

* * *

Hadassah has a page about youth aliyah.

The program is still in place.

It kind of sounds like their version of fostering.

They say:

Nearly a third of Israel’s children live in poverty, according to a 2020 report by the National Council for the Child in Israel. In addition, more than 450,000 children suffer from high-risk situations such as physical, sexual, and emotional abuse, learning disability without access to proper resources, or a lack of basic rights.

Youth Aliyah sets at-risk children in Israel on the path to a successful future, and since 1934, over 300,000 young people from 80 lands have graduated from Youth Aliyah.

That seems like a lot of poverty.

What is it here in the United States?

The United States Census website says there are two measurements.  One puts the child poverty percentage at 5.2% and the other 15.3%

Both of those numbers are much less than 1/3.

The Statista website has Israel at 22.2% which would be closer to 1/5...or 1/4.  

They show the United States being not so far behind—21%.

The three best countries?  Finland, Denmark, and Iceland.   

* * *

Getting back to Hadassah and the Aliyah stuff.

They talk specifically about Ramat Hadassah Szold.

It was found in 1949 for refugees from Yemen and young Holocaust survivors.

It's still in action, providing assistance to both immigrants and Israeli-born youth.

The Hadassah website says: 

Special programs at Ramat Hadassah Szold include high-tech precision tool making, animal therapy, horsemanship, and Jewish study.

These programs combine to provide a strong foundation of psychological strength, vocational preparedness, and Jewish literacy.

That sounds nice.  

Hopefully programs like this are more about supporting young people and their families rather than pushing assimilation or equating poverty with child abuse.

I live in a state where parents can be investigated for child abuse if they provide medically-recommended trans-affirming healthcare.  That along with all the times in history that children have been removed from homes for the purpose of assimilation and exploitation has made me a bit weary of interventions.  

BUT sometimes interventions are needed and sometimes the services provided are actually decent.

I'm hoping Ramat Hadassah Szold is one of the good ones.

* * *

In her March 29 column, Roosevelt writes about getting a tour of Haifa with the city's mayor.  There were playgrounds, clubs for children, children orchestras, and lots of rose bushes.

It sounds lovely.

* * *

In her March 31 column, Roosevelt writes about medical care in Israel. 

The hospitals here have been integrated with the Public Health Service, and a type of community service has been worked out that should prove quite valuable to both the community and the doctors. The hospital is in the background for use when it is really needed, but a young doctor and a nurse are assigned to an area in which 250 families live. They provide all medical care, with the help of occasional "specialist" visits, which include dental and psychiatric work.

That reminds me of soap operas (and other TV shows) where one doctor seems to be in charge of almost all medical care. 

I guess it's a reality for some places and communities. 

I love the idea of a small town doctor who knows and cares about everyone...where the patients are also neighbors.  

 * * *

Roosevelt speaks very fondly of Ben Gurion in her April 1 column.  

She seems very impressed by him, writing: Mr. Ben-Gurion typifies...the pioneer in Israel, a man who felt he must live on the soil and make things grow and be as self-sufficient as possible.

If you're wondering what I left out with the dot, dot, dot....it's just another person she named who, she thought, had similar qualities.

I thought the quote looked better without the second name.

But now I feel it looks like I'm trying to hide something.

* * *.

Roosevelt talks about visiting various communities—a settlement of new arrivals from North Africa, a new city in Beersheba, and a village of Indian Jews from a place called Cochin.

Plus, they visited some industrial type projects.

I wish the negative stuff about the Polish mistreatment of Moroccans weren't true.

The stuff that Roosevelt writes about is so hopeful and lovely.  

I like the idea of various kinds of Jews moving to a new homeland—working together and helping each other.

The good stuff is probably true to some degree.

* * *

Just as a reminder: The events Roosevelt talks about don't actually coincide with the publication date.

I noticed that, though she talks about more of her Israel adventures, in her April 2 column, the location is listed as New York.

Then I looked back and saw that New York is also listed for April 1.

I went on my Washington Post app to see if locations were listed at the beginning of articles.  They are.

Well...I checked two or three.

I guess it's a writing custom?

Do most publications do it?

It seems kind of unhelpful if the place written about doesn't match the place where the writer is at.  

I just checked more articles in the Washington Post, and some do NOT have locations.

* * *

Anyway....

On April 2, Roosevelt writes about meeting with forty women in Israel.  She writes:

They were able to tell me of their efforts in this council to prevent duplication and to integrate all the women coming into Israel. They realize, of course, that there is a tremendous amount of education to be done, but they are making every effort to bring the change about as quickly as possible.

I'm not sure what duplication refers to.

As for integration...hopefully it was at least somewhat about sharing a variety of cultures rather than pushing one way of life onto others.  

That being said, although I'm all for multiculturalism, I think some amount of shared culture is nice.

It's like with TV.  It's wonderful that there are so many TV shows to choose from.  There are so many shows available now that you can have a group discussion where for every TV show one person mentions, all the others respond with Never heard of it.

But it's nice that there are a few TV shows, that if one brings them up, almost everyone in the group will say something like Oh I heard that was good!  or  We watch that too!  or We tried it. It's not my cup of tea.

To have a shared culture, we don't need to have all watched Game of Thrones.

We just need to know that it exists, and it's a TV show. 

* * *

I'm having (extra) mental health issues.

I'm not sure I want to continue with this project....which is upsetting, because this was bringing me lots of joy and a big sense of purpose.

Now I just feel really blah about it.  Not just the Eleanor Roosevelt posts but all of it.

I think I need to take a break for a couple of weeks and then figure out what to do.

I probably am going to quit Eleanor Roosevelt, though.

Right now it's mainly my OCD, phobia issues, anxiety, social issues/self esteem that are causing me grief.  But also, I think I have a touch of Eleanor Roosevelt burn-out.

* * *

This is all bad timing, because I just bought the Haaretz subscription.

I tried telling myself it's fine. I can just read it in a non-researching way.  But when I think of reading it, it makes me feel unhappy.  I fear it will be a reminder of the shitty state I'm in—being passionate and excited about a big project and then suddenly feeling blah...and lost.

Adrift.


Read my novel: The Dead are Online 

Eleanor Roosevelt and the Jews (Part 6)

The beginning of this messy journey begins here.  


What I've been doing with these posts is searching for mention of Jews, Israel, and some related words in Eleanor Roosevelt's My Day column.

In this post, I'll be looking at what she wrote in 1954.

My searching has given me 17 results.  I'm going to subtract the ones where Roosevelt mentions the searched for words just in passing....UNLESS she talks about something else in the column that is particularly interesting to me.

* * *

Okay. I went through the 17.

I'm now left with 12.

* * *

Starting with January 8, 1954.

Roosevelt writes:

The Jewish people have been among the earliest settlers in our country. On October 12, 1492, Luis de Torres was the first Jew to land from Columbus' caravel Santa Maria and he gave thanks to God for having safely crossed the uncharted seas.

Yes. Jews participated in colonization.

I wonder how bad Luis de Torres was in terms of that.

Roosevelt also talks about the first Jewish cemetery in the United States.  It was consecrated in the year 1656.

* * *

Lord Wiki says that Luis de Torres was Columbus's interpreter.  He knew Hebrew, Chaldaic, and Arabic.

Uh...weren't they looking for India?

Maybe they were planning to go to Arabic countries as well.

Who was speaking Hebrew at the time?  

I have no idea what Chaldaic is.

I shouldn't judge these guys, because the world was much less explored in those days.  They might have had no idea about who was speaking which languages were.  

Or I might be wrong, and these guys were ignorant and didn't know how to use the research sources that were available back then.

* * *

Lord Wiki says de Torres was a converso.  I was thinking that had something to do with conversations...relating to him being a interpreter.  But it turns out that it means he converted to Catholicism.  

SO...if it ends up he was an extra violent, greedy, or cruel colonizer, I'll let the Catholics claim him.

If he ends up being less awful than the typical colonizer, I'll let us Jews claim him.

I'm joking.....

* * *

Lord Wiki says de Torres was killed in 1493, so he didn't spend a lot of time in the Americas.

* * *

I've now happened on an interesting website called The Internet Index of Tough Jews.

I'm wondering if the site is right-winged or more center.

Is it prejudiced that I can't imagine it being left-wing?

I feel left-wing people would appreciate toughness, but I feel we'd be more likely to honor things like compassion and intelligence.  

Anyway....

This website says that de Torres converted to Catholicism because of the Inquisition.  So it wasn't exactly a choice.

I'm not sure how much he needed to be coerced.  Was it like screaming No!!!!! Don't cut off my head!  I'll convert! Or was it more like Oh. Okay. Sure. Why not?  

Here, they give de Torres more languages for his resume—Aramaic (Fallen!) Spanish, Portuguese, French, and Latin.

They don't mention the Chaldaic thing.

Oh!!

Columbus thought he was going to find Asian descendants of the last tribes of Israel on his journeys.  That's why he wanted someone who could speak Aramaic and Hebrew.

So, there was some thought put into the languages.  It might not have been correct.  But it wasn't random or completely ignorant.

When they reached Cuba, Columbus sent de Torres and some others to find people.

There are conflicting stories about what happened to de Torres.  Some people gives him a long-lived happy ending and others have him being killed.  

The website says that in a Simon Weisenthnal book, Weisenthnal speculates that the first words spoken to the Native Americans were probably Hebrew.

Maybe?

I guess that's possible if they really saw finding-the-Asian-descendants-of-the-last-tribes a sure thing. 

I imagined it was more of a maybe-kind-of-thing.  

If one has no idea what language a group of people speak, what do they start with?

For those of us not bilingual, we'd probably just use our own language and hope for the best.

Would it be the same for an interpreter?

Maybe de Torres should have worked on some Indian languages. Like Hindi? I mean he did have that long ship ride.

Or maybe there were no books on Indian languages.

Maybe Chaldaic is an Indian language?

No...

Googled. It's a Semitic language.  Or it's connected to a Semitic group of people.  They were from what is now Southern Iraq.

It's confusing.

* * *

I'm thinking maybe I'm stupid and Columbus wasn't trying to go to India but some other place around there.

Googled.

I'm not going to read too much.  But I think he was trying to get to Asia in general.  And that might have included what we now call the Middle East.

I'm probably applying too much of our modern globe to 1492.

* * *

I was going to look up the first Jewish cemetery.  But I've already spent more time on the January 8 column than I wanted to.

I think I shall move onto the next column.  

* * *

I'm confused about whether I should use the term "Column" for the individual entries.

A few times, I've written "post" or "entry" but then I tell myself that Roosevelt wasn't a blogger, and I delete it.  

* * *

Before I move on, actually...

We had flags in our front yard—three small Pride flags and an American flag we took from the Lake House.

A few weeks ago, the American flag disappeared.

Of course, we thought it was some kind of political attack.  

We watched the Ring videos, but it didn't show the thief.  

Tim questioned why they took the American flag and not the Pride ones.

I said they probably didn't like people like us having an American flag.

Then....

Yesterday, I suddenly noticed the three Pride flags were missing.

Again, I watched the Ring video.  I didn't see a thief.  But I could pinpoint the general time, the flags disappeared.

Tim couldn't figure out how the thief circumvented the camera.  He suggested it might be an animal.  Though I'm not sure he actually believed that.  I vetoed that theory. I could imagine an animal accidentally taking one flag.  But all three?

I ordered more flags from Amazon...a whole bunch.  It was kind of about being patriotic and supportive of LGBTQ+.  But I think I mostly bought them as bait.  

Tim had plans to put out a second camera.

Then I guess he decided to watch the footage from yesterday again. He has access to something where the camera takes a photo every...thirty seconds? Three minutes?  I forget.

He called me over.

It HAD been an animal. A squirrel!!!

We didn't get good footage of the actual thievery.  It's too far away and blurry. But we saw enough to conclude the squirrel did it.

I Googled and found a story of a veteran who thought people were stealing his flag.  It ended up being a squirrel taking the parts of the flag to use for his nest.

Anyway...I have lots of flags.  So I'll keep providing the squirrel with new material.  

* * *

Moving onto January 19, 1954.

I was confused here.  

Roosevelt says:

Sunday a very unique party was given in New York City in honor of Dr. Israel Goldstein. This party was an informal reception for the many "little people" whose troubles and difficulties have been heard by members of the Jewish Conciliation Board of America, Inc., of which Dr. Goldstein is the president. He is also the president of the American Jewish Congress and a distinguished rabbi.

When I first saw this, I quickly imagined she was talking about dwarfs.  I told myself I was wrong. But then I started having doubts.  

Maybe the word "unique" made me question things.

* * *

Well, I just Googled Israel Goldstein.  He wasn't a dwarf.

So I think little people here probably means not-famous.

It would the 1950's version of not-blue-checked.

* * *

Now I'm having more (different) confusion about the party.

Roosevelt says:

Here I want to report to you only on this particular party. Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas was the principal speaker and the place of meeting was the old Educational Alliance Building on New York's Lower East Side. This is one of our oldest and best known settlement houses. Many of the little people gathered there were survivors of Hitler's concentration camps, others were products of New York's tenements. There were also present, however, judges and lawyers and business leaders who sat on the panels to hear the cases and to settle the disputes for these little people to the satisfaction of both the plaintiff and defendant.

I'm guessing the party was for the people who once had their disputes handled there.  The Little People.  But it almost sounds like they dealt with disputes at the party.

I'm kind of impressed that they got all these disputing people to come and celebrate together.

I mean even if a dispute is settled, I don't think it automatically restores peace between people. I also imagine the losing side would often be resentful.

I'm wondering if most of the people attending the party were the winners in their disputes.

* * *

The Jewish Telegraphic Agency has a 1959 article about the Jewish Conciliation Board. 

The article says, Dr. Goldstein pointed out in his speech that many of the cases dealt by the Board “involved Jewish patterns, traditions and mores which only a Jewish tribunal could understand sympathetically.

And....

Under the arbitration laws of New York State we have been able to render binding decisions, “Dr. Goldstein reported. “We have probably saved our city and state millions of dollars in court costs and eased the already overcrowded court calendars.

That makes sense.

Though I still imagine people being disgruntled about the decisions.  

* * *

In her January 29 column, Roosevelt writes about the one hundredth anniversary of the Jewish Community Center Movement.

I knew there were Jewish Community Centers, but I didn't realize there was a movement regarding them.

A Senator named Herbert Lehman talked about the the Centers and the movement in Congress.  At that time, there were 350 centers and more than a half million members.

This makes me feel guilty that we don't belong to a Jewish Community Center.

The last time we had any involvement is when we accompanied my sister and her family to a Jewish Community Center pool.  I have no idea what year that was.

Lehman said to Congress that the centers are a vigorous force for democracy. A center gives the American Jew those enriching experiences which help make him a better Jew and a better citizen and therefore a happier and more interesting person

I can imagine that's true for some Jews.  But I think the same can be said for libraries, fandom conventions, movie theaters, college campuses, dog parks, theme parks, haunted houses, museums, botanical gardens, zoos, sporting events, virtual online spaces....

Well, maybe not the Jewish part but it would work for the happier-and-more-interesting person part.

* * *

The Jewish Community Movement has a website.  They now call themselves the JCC Association of North America.

I'm very glad to see that the JCC leans left.

They have a whole page for a statement on racial equality and also one for their support of Asian and Pacific Islanders.

On racism they say:  We are inspired by voices calling upon us to come together to root out racism and inequality while those who would incite and divide us, sow discord and disharmony that place our progress as a nation at risk.

That's a very polite and pointed way of saying We're not MAGA.  

They have the longer version of the beautiful, important Eli Wiesel quote: 

I swore never to be silent whenever wherever human beings endure suffering and humiliation. We must take sides. Neutrality helps the oppressor, never the victim. Silence encourages the tormentor, never the tormented. Sometimes we must interfere. When human lives are endangered, when human dignity is in jeopardy, national borders and sensitivities become irrelevant. Wherever men and women are persecuted because of their race, religion, or political views, that place must—at that moment—become the center of the universe.

I wish there was a gun that would shoot quotes instead of bullets.

I would shoot Eli Wiesel's quote to anyone who 

A) tells a corporation or company to stay out of politics

B) tells a celebrity that they should stay out of politics

C) Treats politics like team sports rather than decision-making that will have huge consequences for people lacking in privilege.  

* * *

I just remembered/realized that both my nieces attended and worked/work at a Jewish Community Center camp.  And now one of them is getting a degree in education.  

Interestingly, the Jewish day camp that my older sister and I went to in Madison Wisconsin isn't listed as a JCC camp.  I guess some Jewish camps are outside the system?

And the Cystic Fibrosis camp where Tim and I first met was held at a Jewish camp.  That's not part of the JCC either.

Well...now I'm looking at the website of Camp Blue Ridge, and I'm not seeing anything about it being a Jewish camp.

Maybe it's not Jewish anymore?

* * *

I Googled and ended up on the Jewish Federation Website

About Camp Blue Ridge, they say: While the camp is officially non-affiliated, the majority of the clientele come from an American Jewish background.

Interesting.

I wonder if it was affiliated in the 1980's and 1990's?

Also...I'm thinking maybe some Jewish camps are affiliated with the Jewish Community Center and others are affiliated with the Jewish Federation.  And I guess some are unofficially affiliated.

* * *

Googled my old day camp.  Camp Shalom.

It's affiliated with the Jewish Federation.  

I'm wondering what's the relationship between the Federation and JCC?  Are the two organizations friends?  Frenemies?

* * *

Later in the January 29 column, Roosevelt talks about her visit to Canada.  She had dinner with the Consul General of Israel whose husband became the Minister of Israel from Canada.

She mentions their last name (Camay) but not their firsts.

I did some Googling and was unable to find about more about Mr. and Mrs. Camay.

And....One of the few sites listed was Roosevelt's column.

* * *

Sadly, I wrote two of the days out of order.

I don't really want to jump back in time, so I'm going to skip talking about what Roosevelt wrote on January 27.

* * *

Jumping ahead to February 12. 

Roosevelt writes about a movement in Chicago to get people to buy Israeli Bonds.

Some things that Roosevelt says about Israel for this day:

So far the interest in these bonds has always been met promptly and I think that anyone who has been in Israel will come away, as I did, with the feeling that the spirit of the people there is one that promises success for the establishment of a stable country.

And...

There is much to be done and many problems to be met in Israel but in that area of the world, Israel is the one country which seems to be embarked on creating a truly democratic form of government. If peace can be really established between the Arab nations and Israel, I think Israel can serve as a valuable spark plug for democracy as well as for economic improvement in the lives of the people of the whole area.

I feel that's somewhat ethnocentric. I'm not sure.

As much as Jews were "other" in the United States, I think back then that Arabs/Muslims were much more so.  

And while some of the Jews in Israel were Middle Eastern, there were others coming from Europe.  And Americans in the 1950's probably had a stronger comfort level with people originating from Europe.  

On the other hand, I am lacking when it comes to the history of the Middle East.  It could be that the countries there were very much lacking in democracy.

And economic progress.

Progress is a hard one for me.

I wish every person had access to progress whether it be about values or technology.

At the same time, I want every individual to have the freedom not to participate in modern values and modern technology.  BUT.... I don't want those people imposing their restrictions on others...including their spouses or children.

Well...all children are going to be at least somewhat restricted by their parent's decisions and way of life.  I think it's only problematic when there are too many restrictions and/or the child, as they approach adulthood, is forced or manipulated into remaining a part of a very restrictive situation 

* * *

Thinking more about it.

It's like I feel it's wrong to judge other cultures and countries for being less modern.

But then at the same time, less modern often equals less civil rights.

And thinking about it....

I would very much prefer that people around the world judge my state (Texas) harshly.

So...if most countries in the 1950's Middle East were like Texas in terms of how the laws treat women and other marginalized people, and Israel showed promise of turning the whole area into less Texas and more California or New York.....

Then I'm 100% on board with what Roosevelt was saying regarding the Middle East.

* * *

Onto March 11....

Roosevelt writes about getting a pathetic letter from an Israeli mother.  I was sort of expecting some shaming from Roosevelt.  But pathetic has changed meanings through the years.

These days, it's usually used as an insult.  But I think in the past, it was more a word of compassion.

Anyway, what happened is the mother's daughter had been heading to Iran to visit her husband. He had been working there.  

The plane had to make an emergency landing in Iraq. The police detained the daughter, because she had an Israeli passport.  Then they put her in prison.

I really am lost when it comes to Middle Eastern politics.  

I'm surprised it was deemed safe for her to go to Iran.  Did Iran have better relations with Israel than Iraq back then?

The daughter was thirty-one when this happened. About a decade earlier, she had spent four years in a Nazi concentration camp.

I wonder what happened to her.

Did she get out?

Did she survive?

Roosevelt provides the name of the daughter—Minni Bar-Ness.  I Googled and didn't find anything.

* * *

I Googled more—using different search terms.  I still can't find anything.

I feel it should be out there somewhere.

Roosevelt says the mother wrote: Since then six weeks have passed and all efforts on the part of the Israeli, Dutch, English and other authorities were ineffectual and fruitless. The whole world is informed about the matter and calls it a 'kidnapping.'

If the whole world knew about it, I feel someone should have written about it somewhere.

Maybe it was written about but never archived...at least not where it's easy to find on the Internet.

I could also be Googling the wrong things.

Two disturbing theories cross my mind.

A) That it never happened and the woman was seeking attention from Roosevelt.  It's not like, in those days, Roosevelt could go on Twitter to see for herself what the world was saying.

B) These types of kidnappings/imprisonments were so commonplace that they weren't seen as newsworthy.

* * *

The better scenario is that I'm Googling wrong.

The best solution is someone points me in the right direction, and I learn the Israeli woman was released from Iraqi prison and lived a long life.

I want to say happily ever after but after a Nazi death camp and then being imprisoned for having the "wrong" passport, I'm sure she'd too traumatized to be a very happy person.

* * *

I just tried again.

I'm unable to let this go.

I Googled Minni Bar-Ness and Tel Aviv.  I ended up seeing another My Day column one that I hadn't saved.  I guess it doesn't mention Israel or Jewish specifically.  But I'll add it now.

From what I can see in the little search blurb, Minni Bar-Ness ended up coming home.  I'll read the other details when I get to June 5.

For now, I'm heading over to March 26. 

Roosevelt writes about Catholics, Protestants, and Jewish groups making a joint effort to raise money for distressed people overseas.

She writes: It is a heartening thing when the three great religions in the United States come together and make a joint appeal for the support of their widespread relief and reconstruction efforts in areas of distress overseas.

I imagine/hope that these days, Muslims and other religions would be included in the team work.

I imagine American Muslims were not included (or not mentioned) in the 1954 endeavor, because they were marginalized.  I doubt it was because they were less giving and compassionate.  

I'm wondering what the US population of Muslims was compared to the US population of Jews.  

* * *

I'm not easily finding population statistics about Muslims in the 1950's.

I think I'm going to give up.

My Google adventures are not going so well today.

* * *

May 19.

Roosevelt writes about a booklet that talks about her husband's meeting with King Ibn Saud.  It was published by a group called American Friends of the Middle East, Inc.

I think I read about this meeting.  It was where the King was not very on board with the whole Israel plan.  

* * *

I searched my blog.

It was in part 2 of my Eleanor Roosevelt series.  

I'm not sure when the meeting between FDR and King IBN Saud took place, but she wrote about the meeting in October 1945...which was six months after FDR had died.

FDR hadn't been pleased with the talks.

Roosevelt defends...explains...what she had meant in the May 22 column.

My husband came back full of interest in the whole meeting and with great admiration for King Ibn Saud. But Colonel Eddy says in one place that he was surprised to hear that my husband said he was disappointed in his interview. I think I can clear that point up.

It was not the meeting nor the personal feeling he had for the King that was a disappointment. It was something else, which I heard him speak of several times. He had hoped that from this meeting there could come an understanding with the King which would make for a pleasanter atmosphere surrounding the small, new state of Israel.

Well, yeah.

In her 1945 column, it's not like she said that her husband came home and talked about how the king was creepy, annoying, rude, etc.  

I think it was clear that he was disappointed with the talks and not the king himself.

Though if a meeting doesn't result in what we're were hoping for, it wouldn't be surprising if we hold some negative feelings towards the person who brought on the disappointing results.

Roosevelt writes: 

My husband felt that there was so much land in that area, and that the promise of a homeland had been made to the Jews who settled in Israel. He hoped that by peaceful means a settlement could be arranged which would not create bad feeling between peoples that had lived side by side in harmony. He was disappointed that, just as Colonel Eddy reports, King Ibn Saud made no concessions as regards Israel.

I feel in this particular column, Roosevelt is playing the game of diplomacy. Maybe kind of awkwardly.

 

* * *

In her May 22 column, Roosevelt talks about opposition to the United Nations.  

She talks about a pamphlet she received titled  "Giving Away Our Liberties to the Super Government of the U.N."

The pamphlet says: Apart from these dangerous aspects of our membership in the anti-Christian U.N. these are serious reasons why we must unite in prayer to try to get the U.S. out of the U.N. Some of the most-important reasons are the deadly 'genocide treaty,' the 'Covenant of Human Rights,' the 'UNESCO,' together with other demands of the U.N. that we abandon our immigration laws, our tariffs and our foreign policies.

I think there are Americans today who are against the UN.  I think usually right-wing ones.

In response to the "deadly genocide treaty", Roosevelt writes:

The genocide treaty is not deadly. It was written to unite all people of all nations against the mass extermination of a whole people in the way Hitler tried to exterminate the Jews in Germany and later the Poles in Poland.

What kind of person would be against a genocide treaty?

Did they imagine it was a pro-genocide treaty?

Roosevelt says the pamphlet was written by a group called the Cinema Education Guide.  I wonder if they're still around or if there's anything out there written about them.  

* * *

Googled.

I can't find anything.

They might have been super fringe.

* * *

Now I'm back to the story of Minni Bar-Ness.

I thought I had initially missed the June 5 column, because it doesn't mention "Jewish" or "Israel".  But Roosevelt does mention the United Jewish Appeal.  So, I think for some reason, I had wrongly concluded that it didn't have anything substantial.

OR I might have clicked on it/closed it accidentally?

Anyway...Roosevelt writes that she received a letter from Minni Bar-Ness. Apparently, Bar-Ness had been released from the Iraqi prison and reunited with her husband and son.  

I was thinking that her story need not have been very commonplace in order to be not newsworthy.  

These days, it seems very easy to become newsworthy. We have so many news outlets.  And most every news outlet can be accessed via Google.

If something newsworthy happens to me in Carrollton Texas and someone from my past decides to Google me, they'll be able to probably find mention of it.

In the 1950's, there was finite space for news.  There was more chance for things to fall under the radar.

All that being said, I'm still suspicious and can very much imagine a person writing to Eleanor Roosevelt with a fake story.

* * *

If anyone out there knows of this Minni Bar-Ness....please tell me!

She must have descendants out there somewhere.

Though...I say this and then think, What if someone out there decides to pile on to the making-stuff-up.

* * *

Roosevelt mentions neither Jews nor Israel in her July 20 column.  She mentions Palestine.

A group called The Christian Rural Overseas Program sent surplus food items to various groups in needs; one being displaced Arabs from Palestine.  This included butter, cheese, powdered milk, and cottonseed oil.

* * *

I Googled Christian Rural Overseas Program and ended up on the website of CWS: Church World Service.

I'm guessing it's the same organization. 

They seem to be a left-wing Christian organization.

I say this, because their website says: 

We know that racism and prejudice have no part in the just world that we want to live in. In 1996, we responded to an epidemic of burned and desecrated Black churches in the United States. Alongside our partners, we mobilized thousands of volunteers to help rebuild more than 80 churches. In 2020, we launched our Platform for Racial Justice.

That's very cool.

* * *

I'm not seeing anything on their website that says they used to be called Christian Rural Overseas Program.

Googling some more....

This Mennonite cousin of Lord Wiki says that Christian Rural Overseas Program worked under CWS.  CWS sponsored them.

* * *

The last column I'm going to look at for 1954, and this post, is December 20.

In this column, Roosevelt writes:

In thinking about this question of human rights, I have lately wondered whether anywhere in the world they are the concern of all the world or should be considered only as a domestic question.

And then she answers:

But the more I turn this over in my mind the more I feel convinced that, at least for those nations that signed the charter of the U.N., human rights must be viewed as the concern of all the nations and not only the concern of an individual nation.

I agree.

Though it can be complicated and difficult.  Because of....

A) Hypocrisy. It's hard to successfully point fingers at other countries when your country has its own problems

B) There's always that battle between minding our own business and saving the vulnerable.

C) The need to maintain diplomatic relations.

Judging countries is very similar to judging families.

Where do we draw the line between abuse/dysfunction/toxic vs. a  different-style-of-parenting?

When should we respect differences and when should we intervene?

(By intervening, I don't necessarily mean calling CPS. It could be a concerned email/ text; Or an in-person meeting; Or subtle hinting with memes on social media)

* * *

With families, there's probably less of a need to maintain diplomacy.

Well...there's still a need.  But the threats are more along the line of silent treatments and angry emails rather than oil access, Federal Aid, trade agreements, war, etc.  

Note: I write these posts over a few days and didn't realize until proofreading and editing that this kind of connects (maybe contradicts in some ways) what I wrote regarding the Elie Wiesel quote.  Or it doesn't really contradict it.  It's maybe more explaining why it might be difficult to speak out. BUT I think fear and hesitation about speaking out is understandable and somewhat sympathetic.  I think its' much different from pressuring others not to speak out.  

* * *

Getting to the Jewish/Israeli part of the column.

Roosevelt recommends some books.  One of them is a book called A Village by the Jordan by an Israeli named Joseph Baratz. Roosevelt says he's a friend of hers.  I wonder if she means a real friend or someone she had the pleasure of briefly meeting once or twice when she was in Israel.  

Used copies of the book are available on Amazon.  

I wonder if the book was ever (somewhat) popular. And if so, did Roosevelt help with that?  I wonder if she was like Oprah (or any modern day influencer).  Did things get a bump in popularity when she mentioned them?

* * *

Lord Wiki has a page on Baratz.

He was also a politician.  

Born in Russia, he immigrated to Palestine in 1906 at the age of 16.

At that time, Palestine was under the control of the Ottoman empire.

I really need to learn more about all these different stages of Israel.

Anyway....Baratz worked on Israel's first Kibbutz.  I think that's what the book was about.


Read my novel: The Dead are Online 


50th Birthday in Disney World

In the near future, I'll be going to Disney World for my 50th birthday trip.

Sadly, Jack won't be there, because he's in college.  And Tim will be there only part of the time. I'm making him go home early, because I don't like leaving the cats for long periods.  I insisted that one of his gifts to me be that he relieve me of leaving-the-cats stress.

We left the cats last May for a family trip, and it wasn't a fully successful experience.

I want to save these future experiences...experiments...for when we want to go on trips with all three of us.

Anyway, so I'll be having two nights with Tim at Animal Kingdom Lodge and then five nights by myself at the Beach Club.

We're not going to do any park days while at Animal Kingdom Lodge.  Don't worry.  It's fine with Tim.  Out of the three of us, he's the one who most advocates for less park time and more resort time.

My rule for our AKL day is to not leave the resort. I mean as long as there's not some kind of emergency.  (obviously).  I just want to relax and bond with the resort.

I had the idea of us eating at Jinko, Boma, and/or Saana.  Then I was looking for reservations and realized I missed that boat.  Oops.

Boma is a possibility if we want to eat at 9 pm.  I hesitate with Boma, though. I mean even if we can get a better meal time.  I dread the after-meal fullness feelings more than I look forward to eating the food.

So, we shall be probably getting to know Mara very well in those few days.

We'll also look out for last minute reservations to Jinko and Saana.

For my Beach Club Days....

I planned to do four days at the park.  Two days at Epcot, one day at Magic Kingdom, and one day at Hollywood Studios.

This will be the second time I'm skipping Animal Kingdom!  I feel a little guilty about that.  I do love the park but mostly for Everest.  And I'm not sure I feel up to that.  

Plus I have an aversion to Pandora.

Anyway...now I've decided to actually do only three days.  My main reason for subtracting a day is to punish Disney for their relentless price-increases.  I was reading about how Disney is going to keep increasing prices, because us consumers keep paying and enabling them.

Also, I realized that there is no true savings between three and four days.  There's a certain point that if you go enough days, you might as well add a day, because that extra day will be very cheap.  But this doesn't work with three days vs five days.  

 Now my plan is one day at Epcot, one day at Hollywood Studios, and one day at Magic Kingdom.

I was on the fence about buying Genie+ for Magic Kingdom.  Now I'm pretty sure I'll buy it.  And I might also buy the lightening pass thing for Rise of the Resistance.

Or should I buy Genie+ for Hollywood Studios?  I can stand in line for Rise of the Resistance and then use Genie for Toy Story and Mickey Mouse.  

I plan to wake up early and get there for rope drop.  I don't plan to stay until closing.  I don't like being out at night, because I sometimes feel unwell at night.  

I don't plan to eat at any restaurants.  I'm just going to eat counter service and snacks.  I'm bringing Beyond Meat jerky for any lacking protein. 

There are overwhelming food choices at Epcot but much less so if you're a vegetarian who doesn't like anything related to mayonnaise...even if it's a plant-based version.  I've decided I'm going to do most of my eating at Kringla Bakeri Og cafe.  I love that place. 

I'm not sure what I'm going to do on my non-park day.

If it's bad weather or I'm lazy, I might just hang out at Epcot resort area.  

Otherwise, I might go to the Magic Kingdom resort area.  It seems a bit of a hassle, though—bus; then monorail; then bus again to get back.  

I don't love Downtown Disney. But maybe if I go at my own pace, I might like it.

No...just thinking about it makes me feel blah.

I wouldn't mind doing a tour via the gondolas—Riveria, Caribbean Beach Resort, Pop Century, and Art of Animation.  But Tim and I had a bad experience where we were almost stranded.  

The same can happen with the Monorails, though.  

BUT if the monorails break down, I can take a bus to Hollywood Studios and then walk back to the Beach Club.

Although...when Tim and I got stranded, it was after a late night event.  A lot of things were closed, and we were exhausted.  The cast member wanted us to take a bus to Downtown Disney and then take another bus to the Beach Club.  Late at night, that sounded like a disaster.   If I'm doing this in the afternoon, it might be more of an adventure.  

Anyway, here is a list of rides I plan to go on.

Magic Kingdom

The Haunted Mansion

It's a Small World

Pirates of the Caribbean

Splash Mountain

Carousel of Progress 

Epcot

Soarin

Spaceship Earth

Living with the Land (maybe 3 times.  I always love this ride.  But now I'm into gardening, so I might love it even more)

I might do Frozen if I'm in the mood for a long line.  Sometimes I am.  

Hollywood Studios

Rise of the Resistance 

Star Tours

Toy Story Mania

Mickey and Minnie's Runaway Railway.

I'm not very worried about being lonely in the parks; though I think there are certain areas that will make me miss Tim and Jack a lot.  But I've wandered around the parks alone many times. So that doesn't seem like it will feel unusual to me.  

What might be lonely is returning to the hotel alone.  But I did spend a fair bit of nights alone, at home, in 2021-2022.  I don't remember being very lonely.  

I did have the cats.

I'll probably need to go out and befriend a duck or something.  

Or one of the tiny little lizards. 

* * *

Although this is my birthday trip, it's also a we-need-to-use-our-points trip.

We had a lot this year, because of not traveling during the pandemic.

Tim is actually going back to Disney for his own solo trip next year.

And if we are unable to arrange a family trip for all three of us in 2023.  OR if we have points leftover, I might end up taking a 51st birthday trip.  


 

Read my novel: The Dead are Online