Commentary Quotable "If I can make a Jewish kid proud of playing baseball and give him more confidence, I'm very proud of that." — Kevin Youkilis, third baseman, Boston Red Sox, Moment magazine, Sept.-Oct. 2011 standing guard ... ... For Israel And Our Jewish Community Buy Israeli products as you shop for the Jewish holiday season. Wine, flowers, candy, candles and other necessities. As you prepare your shopping lists for the yom tovim (holidays), please search out Israeli- made products at local grocers and retailers. — Prepared by Allan Gale, Jewish Community Relations Council of Metropolitan Detroit ©Oct. 6, 2011, Jewish Renaissance Media Greenberg's View A Brooklyn Jew In Dodger Blue? G iven all the tsores we worry about as a people, do we really need that? The "that" is the discovery that Ralph Branca, the former Brooklyn Dodgers pitcher, who argu- ably threw the most infa- mous pitch in baseball his- tory is Jewish. Oy vey! Yes, a New York Times reporter Joshua Prager conducted the research and broke the news to the 85-year-old, telling him that his mother, Kati, was Jewish. Branca, raised as a Catholic, who said he knew nothing about his Jewish heritage, apparently did not have much of a reaction. But on learning his his- tory, he said he asked his wife: "Do you know you married a Jew?" Now this revelation comes in the face of increasing anti-Semitism around the world and an Israeli- Palestinian conflict whose peace prospects are as good as, well, Branca's pitch. Even Job's patience would run out. Enough already! Some background: The Brooklyn Dodgers were in a playoff pennant series with the New York Giants in 1951. Leading 4-2 in the bottom of the ninth and ready to clinch the pennant, Branca served up his fastball and the Giants' outfielder, Bobby Thomson, who had a history of great success against Branca, lifted the ball over the leftfield wall for a three- run homer, clinching the game and the pennant on Oct. 3. The home run became known as the "shot heard 'round the world," and even the poet, Ralph Waldo Emerson, who coined the phrase in writing about the American Revolution, would have agreed. Assuming he would have been a Giants fan. What was even worse, the loss came after the Dodgers led the league by 131/2 games in mid-August when the Giants went on the winning streak to tie for the pennant at the end of the season. Unsavory Twist? Branca could take little solace in the fact that there may have been some hanky-panky to assist Thomson. Reports were that Herman Franks, a Giants coach, at the request of his manager, Leo Durocher, used a tele- scope from centerfield at the Polo Grounds to steal the Dodgers catcher's signs. With instructions from Franks, an electrician by Franks' side activated a buzzer in the Giants' bullpen — one buzz for a fastball and two for a curve. Sal Yvars, a reserve catcher in the bullpen, would listen for the signals. If Yvars held on to a baseball, the batter would know a faster ball was coming. If Yvars tossed the ball into the air, the batter should expect a curve ball. According to Yvars' relay from the bullpen, Thomson was to expect a fastball and, sure enough, Branca did not disappoint. Thomson, properly prepared, obvi- ously had a little advan- tage and became part of baseball lore. Thomson, however, always denied that he ever looked at Yvars. He said he was too busy concentrating in the batter's box. He may not have looked directly at Yvars, but no one asked him if perhaps he took just a little peek. Brooklyn Dodger Ralph Branca pitched briefly for the Detroit Tigers two years after the "shot heard 'round the world." Power Of Fate Whatever the case, might Branca have escaped his fate in baseball's history, if his mother had told him he was Jewish? Maybe she would have taught him not to rely on his fastball so much. "Ralphie, your fastball is good but as a Jew, be careful not to exploit your strengths. It isn't nice. Work on your weaknesses. Some day you'll thank me for this advice." Maybe if he had gone to cheder and studied the Talmud, he might have learned that sometimes it pays to reject a catcher's signal. But it was not to be. As the non-Jewish Greek gods would certainly tell us, Branca was fated to be history's all-time scapegoat. They would maintain it would not have mat- tered if Branca had known he was a Jew. Fate is fate and it takes its course whether you're Jewish, Catholic or an atheist. Just ask Oedipus. It was reported that Branca even went to see a priest after his traumatic experience. Whether it helped or not is not known; but now, perhaps, he can seek additional guidance on his faux pas from a rabbi. One can't have too much spiritual help. Nevertheless, in all due respect to Zeus and his assistant deities, as a people, we could have done without this latest news — particularly the former Jewish Brooklyn Dodgers fans. But then, we still have Hank Greenberg and Sandy Koufax. Berl Falbaum of West Bloomfield is an author and public relations executive who teaches journalism at Wayne State University, Detroit. He is a former political reporter. October 6 • 2011 47