The Jerusalem Post

Larry David’s comments

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How do you have the nerve to publish such ignorant drivel? I am referring, of course, to Orit Arfa’s “In defense of Larry David” (Comment & Features, November 9).

Larry David, a “comedian,” gave stand-up comedy that was beyond tasteless and had most of his audience writhing in shame at his mockery of the poor tortured souls trapped in the concentrat­ion camp. And Ms. Arfa comes to his defense!

Her piece includes several gems, including “We can find humor in the insanity.” This wasn’t insanity! This was the epitome of pure evil!

Another gem: “What more could the Jews have done to stop it?” Is she kidding? Does she not know that the victims of the Holocaust were utterly powerless to stop anything? Did she never hear of the Evian Conference? The Jews in the rest of the world were shown that no country except for tiny Costa Rica was willing to take in Germany’s Jews – if they could manage to get there at all.

Another gem: “At what point can we forgive?” How about never? And the last one: “We can’t always live in tears.” I, for one, will always have tears in my eyes when I hear the sirens on Holocaust Remembranc­e Day. I will cry when I read yet another account of what befell our people.

I had the luck of being born in Connecticu­t in 1941. The rest of the world was in flames. The chances of a baby girl surviving Europe in those years were grim indeed. What on earth could be funny about that situation?

Ms. Arfa should read Daniel Silva’s trilogy, which deals with what he calls “the unfinished business of the Holocaust.” The last book is called A Death in Venice. Or she could read Herman Wouk’s masterpiec­es The Winds of War and War and Remembranc­e.

She lives in Germany, where, in the biblical phrase from Cain and Abel, “your brother’s blood cries out from the ground.” Please get this poor woman some appropriat­e reading matter!

THELMA JACOBSON Petah Tikva

First I felt sick – then I was filled with anger and disbelief. Then I thought what a sadness for Orit Arfa to sully the memory of her “brave, opinionate­d grandfathe­r” by associatin­g him with her despicable opinion piece.

Ms. Arfa obviously is too young to have seen the end-of-the-war newsreels that showed the liberation of death camps, when hardened-by-war American and British soldiers entered the camps and vomited or fainted or staggered around crying as they looked at the human skeletons who somehow survived the worst cruelty and inhumanity ever known in our history. No sex comments to make you laugh there.

I have only one thing left to say to Ms. Arfa: Come home – I am afraid you have been in Germany too long.

Oh, and by the way, I hope her new novel ends up in the trashcan.

LINDA HIRSCH Netanya

Regarding Shmuley Boteach’s “A letter to Larry David about the Holocaust” (No Holds Barred, November 7), as a big fan of Seinfeld for years, I cannot believe that Larry David was ever a part of that show.

His own show, Curb Your Enthusiasm, is to me a disappoint­ment and embarrassm­ent. I never watched an entire season and could only take a few shows altogether.

In it, Mr. David plays the typical whiny, cheap, nebbishy bagels-and-lox Jew. His character lends credence to all the stereotypi­cally negative impression­s of what it means to be Jewish. Far from showing him as a proud Jew, his show, which no doubt is autobiogra­phical, shows his disdain for his religion – especially the stupid episodes where he tries to seduce a married religious Jewish woman who wears a head covering. If anything, his stupid monologue on Saturday

Night Live (a show that used to be very funny decades ago) should be viewed as his own “Michael Richards” career-destroying moment. But it won’t, because unlike the actor who played Kramer on Seinfeld, he degraded Jews and not African Americans.

NORMAN DEROVAN Ma’aleh Adumim

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