Monday, September 17, 2007

Some recent articles

Tuesday, May 29, 2007

Some recent articles

Friday, September 08, 2006

A new beginning...

To Bloghead's readers --
Thank you so much for all the mazeltovs on the occasion of little Eliana's birth (left, at five weeks, below, at eight). It's taken a long time to get back into the swing of things (unfortunately I had a run of bad luck and was in hospital for 3 weeks after delivery) -- but I am now almost fully recovered, and the baby, of-course, is gorgeous, which is the main thing!
Now that I'm feeling much better, I'm going back to blogging. However, I'll be at a new address. I'm joining the (London) Jewish Chronicle's brand-new group blog, which has just been launched and which is busy taking shape. The contributors will consist of the JC's own writers. At the moment it's me and Jeff Barak, the former editor of both the JC and The Jerusalem Post, and other JC journalists will join in the near future. It promises to be extremely lively -- so please check it out and adjust your bookmarks! See you there...

Friday, July 14, 2006

IT"S A GIRL!!!!!


BREAKING NEWS

-- to Miriam and Danny, London UK, Friday afternoon July 14. Mum and baby doing well!!!

-- from the proud Grandfather.

UPDATE: 'Eliana Lia'.

Thursday, July 13, 2006

What I've been reading

  • The Boy Who Fell Out of the Sky -- Ken Dornstein writes about his brother David, who was killed on his way back to the US from Israel in the Pan Am bombing. I didn't expect it to be terribly good -- too often these books just tend to idealise the terrorism victim (for understandable reasons) and are too predictable -- but this one was touching because it was so honest.
    David, who was in his mid-20s when he died, had been obsessed with becoming a writer and with fame. When he died, he left hundreds of boxes of notebooks with his writing, and Ken, who was several years younger and had always looked up to David, decided to go through them and publish some of the material.
    To his horror, he discovered nothing publishable -- just half-baked ideas and unfinished stories. Gradually the picture of David becomes rather sad. He emerges as a charismatic and idealistic dreamer, but a dreamer nonetheless, who died without achieving his potential as an artist -- and who probably didn't really ever have the potential. Strangely, in several of his notebooks he wrote that perhaps his life would only have meaning if he died young and even foreshadows death in a plane crash. It is ironic that in the end, he does achieve a form of immortality through art -- that of his brother.
    Another element is how Ken deals with the aftermath of the bombing and of-course with his renewed understanding of his brother. He struggles to emerge from David's shadow and to work out how best to keep his memory alive. For a while, he actually dates some of his ex-girlfriends -- and even marries one of them (they are still married). His openness about this emotional journey is what makes this book worthwhile.
  • The Lie that Wouldn't Die: The Protocols of the Elders of Zion by former Israeli judge Hadassa Ben-Itto -- I'm still in the middle of this one so I won't say too much about it, other than that a. it is a pleasure to read a 'Jewish' book which isn't about the Holocaust / women / Israel / a small handful of other topics which seem to dominate the 'Jewish book' scene b. So far, it is an absolutely fascinating account of the Protocols' origins and dissemination as well as the various Protocols-related trials that took place in the past century. I'm not sure how much here is new -- not much, I suspect -- but I didn't know most of it. C. One of the enjoyable aspects of this book is that it includes a relatively personal account of Ben-Itto's encounter with the forged document. She begins by explaining in detail how she became aware of its continuing influence and importance and intersperses some of the history -- particularly the accounts of the trials -- with her own thoughts. This is somewhat unconventional in this kind of book but it seems to work here, mainly because of her judicial past and her experience on the international diplomatic scene.
  • Londonistan by Melanie Phillips -- a truly scary account of the way radical Islam has been accepted and even welcomed into Britain. You can find links to reviews in almost every major publication on Melanie's own website. Even many of the positive reviews tend to qualify their approval with complaints about her 'hysterical' tone -- it seems to be socially unacceptable in Britain today to say anything nice about her without distancing oneself at the same time -- but the truth is that sometimes even hysterical people have something to be hysterical about, as I fully believe she does; and if you believed that your country was under serious threat from terrorists and a radical agenda and everyone dismissed you, you would become hysterical too.

Back -- temporarily....

It's a week and a half to my due date and I'm on maternity leave -- so I finally have some time to blog. In fact, after just a few hours at home I am bored out of my mind and really welcome the distraction! So, until the baby appears (pg), here goes.......
(One caveat: I'm supposed to be taking things easy because of high blood pressure. So I'm going to try and avoid discussing the current situation in Israel -- and especially the way it's being covered in the media -- for health reasons.)

Sunday, March 12, 2006

Where we've been...

It may be a little late to announce this a full month after my last post, but it seems I'm on a blog break... As regular readers will have noticed, in fact blogging has considerably slowed down for the last few months.
Thank you all those who left messages of concern / sent me emails inquiring what was up. The simple truth is this: I'm pregnant (due end of July), and until about last week, was either too sick or too tired to do much blogging (usually both). Now I'm feeling better I'm finding I'm catching up with a million other things to do. (And my father is too busy earning a living to fill in...)
I've loved blogging and do not want to shut down Bloghead. Hopefully at some point in the near future it'll pick up again... so please check in from time to time and stay tuned.
In the meanwhile, I also want to point out that Out of Step Jew has officially closed his blog and to thank him for running such an enjoyable and thought-provoking site for so long. To my mind OOSJ was one of the sanest voices in the J-blogosphere and one of the first, if not the first, blogs I would check each day. He really will be sorely missed.
Happy Purim everyone!

Monday, February 13, 2006

Glass ceiling for women educators?

Good discussion on AddeRabbi and Modern Orthodox Woman about women in leadership positions in the Orthodox world, particularly in women's learning institutions, and how they are restricted by the lack of the title 'rabbi' or an equivalent.