Opinion Dry Bones A MIX OF IDEAS Editorials are posted and archived on JNonline.us. Editorial Promoting Israeli Dialogue T he answer to the surging debate over religious pluralism in Israel lies in a basic communication principle: dialogue. No less a party of interest than Rabbi Avi Weiss, who heads the Amcha activism group and Yeshivat Chovevei Torah, a lib- eral Modern Orthodox seminary, thinks that's the way to go. So do we. As Weiss put it, "The greatest threat facing us, more than an external enemy, is a divisiveness within our people that is so dangerous, God for- bid, it could lead to calamity." Harsh? Yes. But there's a mes- sage there worth heeding: Sometimes, the social enemy is within for Jews. Israel has enough worries to confront, given the lineup of neighboring enemies. It shouldn't have to fear inter-stream intimidation. Israel's fervently Orthodox Jews strictly enforce Orthodox law there, leaving less- traditional Jews feeling voiceless in the public arena. Orthodox control in the Jewish state is the law. But that shouldn't preclude a government-sanctioned sound- ing board that at least hears the flow of head- line-grabbing actions that involve the practice of Judaism in Israel. On Dec. 28, the New York- based Jewish Telegraphic Agency described a few of these: women who wear tallitot at the Western Wall; haredi protests against a park- ing lot open on Shabbat and against the Intel branch in Jerusalem for allowing work through Shabbat; a battle over gender-segregated public buses; and the burial of a child con- verted to Judaism by a Conservative rabbi in a corner of a Spanish cemetery reserved for non-Jews. The alienation fostered by Israel's Orthodox religious leaders is certainly There needs to be a mechanism through which Israeli Jews, all along the identity spectrum, can share concerns and hopes. QUIZ THE ANSWER 15; "WHEN THEY STOP NAMING THEIR STREETS, STADIUMS, SUMMER CAMPS, AND STUDENT AWARDS TO HONOR TERRORIST MURDERERS". fodder for discus- sion. The grow- ing numbers of Reform and Masorti (Conservative) Jews in Israel demand a WHEN WILL WE KNOW forum through which THAT THE PALESTINIANS members of the three WANT PEACE? major Jewish streams can talk without a prevailing chill of coercion. No one benefits from such separation. Jewish pluralism here in America is stronger than ever. We still have tense DryBones_com moments, but inter- action among the retain the final say although we hope it streams is becoming more commonplace. begins to recognize the value of the other Needless to say, we Jews on this side of the Atlantic shouldn't impose our religious streams and the need to listen to their mores on Israel; Israeli Jews should guide concerns. Israel is more apt to thrive with Jewish their own religious destiny. But for that to diversity and positive religious energy. happen, there needs to be a mechanism Strong as it is, Jewish America's plu- through which Israeli Jews all along the identity spectrum can, at minimum, share ralism model can be a starting point to inspire real dialogue among the expanse their concerns and hopes. The govern- of Israel's Jews. ment-funded Orthodox rabbinate will ❑ Reality Check Stonewall Punts D uring one of the recent col- lege football bowl games, the camera panned across a view of an equestrian statue in downtown Jacksonville, Fla. "And there intoned one of the network announcers, "is the general for whom this city is named — Stonewall Jackson." Uhhh, not quite. The statue and city's name actually honor Gen. Andrew Jackson, which is hardly one of the great cover-ups of American history. But I think the network sports announcers are so used to babbling on and on during the course of a game that spouting mis- informed factoids counts for very little. Besides, the way the schools teach history these days, who's to know? These people make a lot of money. I read recently that one of them was ordered to pay nearly $1 million in annual child sup- port and alimony. Now I'm no expert in this field, but that would seem to indicate he was earning something substantially more than $1 million a year. And for what? Have you ever tuned into a televised sport- ing event because of who was announcing it? I can name a few who drive me away when I real- ize that I'm going to hear their tiresome shtick for an entire evening — as if screaming cliches at the top of their lungs somehow enhances the drama of the event. Ernie Harwell was a great exception, the perfect blend of reporter and story-teller. Before he turned into a pompous self- parody, so was Howard Cosell. But I was saddened to read that one of the great figures in Detroit sports televi- sion journalism, Dave Diles, passed away late last year. Dave was always a journalist first, conditioned by years of tough report- ing with the Associated Press. He was breaking more stories than the newspaper reporters who were assigned to the major beats and he was also a rakishly handsome guy. Someone noticed, and before long he was running the sports desk at Channel 7. His resigna- tion at the AP opened the way for Jerry Green and Joe Falls to take over there and for Al Ackerman, cut in the same mold as Diles, to get a job on TV. They did not back down if they knew their story was right. They were not shills for the teams their stations covered. Diles went on to great success on network TV and quietly retired to his farm in southern Ohio. It was a great era for those who liked their local sports covered seriously and not as a series of cartoon clips. I under- stand that is mostly the consequence of ESPN's wall-to-wall coverage. Still, much of ESPN's commentary simply consists of more babbling. "Pardon the Interruption:' is one of my favorite ESPN shows. Tony Kornheiser is one of the wittiest guys on TV. He and his partner, Michael Wilbon, are based in Washington, D.C., but are expected to offer analysis on teams from all over the country. Much of it is highly amusing. But whenever the show touches a Detroit or Michigan issue, I realize neither one of them has any sort of handle on it. How could they? The territory is much too vast to cover. Sometimes it sounds like it's gone to Jacksonville. "Here is a statue of Abraham Lincoln; not only a great leader but the inventor of one of the top luxury cars in Detroit's history:' And, I might add, a hard man to double on a roller down the third base line. ❑ George Cantor's e-mail address is gcantor614@aol.com . January 21 . 2010 33