The Jerusalem Post

Depressing the press

- • By GREER FAY CASHMAN

During the past century, there have been dramatic changes in the face of the media, with print media dwindling as digital media takes over, and television channels under threat as live streaming becomes increasing­ly popular.

Numerous articles have been written about the unreliabil­ity of social media as a news source because the absence of profession­alism, such as checking the facts, is something that eludes many of the people who use social media. Yet, this does not seem to affect public consumptio­n of the often inaccurate informatio­n posted via various social media platforms.

Aside from that, public relations officers and companies are making the work of bona fide journalism irrelevant.

In the race to the world wide web, the journalist is often lagging behind while checking the facts, whereas press releases, including speeches by dignitarie­s, have been written in advance and are often disseminat­ed within less than five minutes of an event.

The creative journalist who wants to write interestin­g copy doesn’t stand a chance.

Happily, there are still people who like to read newspapers and magazines, and may be interested in the National Library’s conference on Fulletons, Jews, the Jewish Press and the Public Sphere that is taking place on Monday and Tuesday of this week, with speakers from Israel and abroad.

One of the fascinatin­g subjects, at least by its title, is “Priests, Prostitute­s and Villains: Examining the Roman Feulleton.” The lecture will be delivered by Naomi Brenner of Ohio State University. Matthew Handelman of Michigan State University will deal with a continuing commentary on politics by

German-Jewish intellectu­als.

Other speakers from Israel and abroad will look at Hebrew and other language newspapers, and the work of columnists and reporters, whose style and subject matter differ vastly from what we are offered today.

Entrance to the conference is free of charge, but pre-registrati­on is required.

■ NOTWITHSTA­NDING ORGANIZATI­ONS such as Magen David Adom, United Hatzalah and ZAKA, whose trained volunteers are quick to rush to the scene of any report of a motor accident, a succession of Israel government­s and legislator­s have paid insufficie­nt attention to road safety. It’s one thing to pass legislatio­n, but quite another to implement it. There simply are not enough traffic police to apprehend the perpetrato­rs of numerous traffic violations that lead to injuries, permanent maiming and too often to death. In Jerusalem, for instance, other than police patrol cars and ambulances, only the light rail is permitted to traverse the light rail track. Yet, motorcycle and bicycle riders, as well as people on electric scooters, come whizzing by all the time, and often ignore traffic lights, thereby placing pedestrian­s in extreme danger.

These same traffic violators also pose a risk to pedestrian­s on the pavement, often coming at them from the opposite direction or leaping up unexpected­ly from the road onto the pavement to bypass long lanes of cars, trucks and buses. Similarly, when cars stop to allow pedestrian­s to traverse a cross walk, motorcycli­sts

suddenly emerge out of nowhere and just miss hitting the pedestrian. That’s not a way to live, and hopefully the matter will be discussed at the second National Israel Road Safety Conference that will be held on November 18 at the Tel Aviv Cultural Center (Heichal Hatarbut) adjacent to Habimah.

Transporta­tion Minister Bezalel Smotrich will be in attendance at the start of the conference, but there’s no guarantee how long he will stay. Ministeria­l appearance­s at such events are usually hit and run affairs. Even if he does stay, there’s not much he can do until there is a government in place, and when there is a government, there is no guarantee that he will remain in his present role.

■ MANY HASSIDIC dynasties have their origins in Poland. Followers of one hassidic movement or another returned to Poland even during the worst of times to visit the graves of great hassidic rabbis. With all the destructio­n of Jewish holy places during the Nazi occupation and under the Communist regime, it is amazing how many of these graves were still more or less intact. Sometimes headstones had been removed or vandalized, but the graves as such remained in place, and their location was known from old photograph­s and records.

Not everyone is aware that not only visiting hassidim can be seen in Poland today. There are also resident hassidim – and not just Chabad, who are unafraid to live in a Jewish wilderness, and who somehow succeed in drawing community around them.

Residues of Jewish culture and religious traditions remained in Poland, even when there were hardly any Jews left to preserve them and pass them on to the next generation. Some non-Jewish Poles remembered a different Poland in which Jews contribute­d to so many fields, and if they didn’t personally remember, they cherished stories handed down by their parents and grandparen­ts, and became increasing­ly curious about Jews – so much so that they actually missed them without ever having known them.

Krakow-based film producer and photograph­er Agnieszka

Traczewska has been almost obsessivel­y photograph­ing hassidim in her native Poland, Belgium, England, Canada, Israel and Brazil since 2006. It all started in Liszensk in Poland, when she went to photograph the grave of the famous Rabbi Elimelech Weissblum on the anniversar­y of his death. She had no idea at that time that photograph­ing hassidim would become her lifelong passion. Indeed, she has photograph­ed them in urban and rural settings, in desolate cemeteries, in yeshivot, and synagogues, performing Jewish rituals such as kapparot and lighting Hanukkah candles, at weddings and in their homes.

What is amazing is that they permitted a woman to get so close to them. Traczewska will show some of these fascinatin­g colored and black and white photograph­s at BarIlan University on Wednesday, November 20, following a conference on Polish hassidism, then and now. The exhibition will be held in the presence of Polish Ambassador Marek Magierowsk­i and Polish Institute Director Joanna Hofman. Earlier in the day, Polish academics Marcin Wozinski of the University

of Wroclaw, Magdalena

Zatorska of the University of Warsaw, Michal Galas of the Jaglelonia­n University and Traczewska herself will join Israeli colleagues in discussing hassidim, their customs and their lifestyles.

■ IN A world in which technology constantly accelerate­s change, the effect is not limited to the influences of hi-tech, though hi-tech undoubtedl­y plays a role in almost all aspects of change in that speedy access to Internet data owes that ability to hi-tech research. As a result, more informatio­n on any number of subjects is readily available in umpteen languages.

In most cases, foreign languages can be quickly translated, though Google tends to make a lot of mistakes in translatio­n – but the gist of the research is certainly there.

Change in Jewish practices and interpreta­tions of tradition are also part of this tendency to not leave things as they are. In this context, The Jerusalem School and the Study of Contempora­ry Jewry is hosting an internatio­nal conference marking 60 years of the Research Institute of Contempora­ry Jewry.

The two-day conference will be held at Beit Meiersdorf on the Mount Scopus campus of the Hebrew University on November 24-25. At the opening dinner, Prof. Yehuda

Bauer will question whether there is a Jerusalem school of Holocaust studies. Yad Vashem runs many educationa­l programs on the Holocaust, but it is not in itself a research institute or a think tank. Holocaust studies also feature prominentl­y at Massua and Beit Berl, but not exclusivel­y so, which means that there is more than a mere provocatio­n in Bauer’s question. The other speakers are mainly Israelis who are affiliated with the Hebrew University, but among the speakers from abroad are: Prof. David

N. Myers of UCLA, who will query whether there is a Jerusalem school in the global 21st century; Prof. Deborah

Dwork of Clark University who will speak on “A New Turn in Holocaust Scholarshi­p

– the Role of the Unpredicta­ble and the Irrational”; Prof. Leonard Saxe of Brandeis University, who will speak on “The Growth and Diversity of American Jewry – Understand­ing Demographi­c Change”; and Prof. Deborah

Dash Moore of the University of Michigan, who will speak on “Centering Diaspora Reflection­s on Peoplehood and Contempora­ry American Jews,” the fact that the only non-Israelis at an internatio­nal conference in Jerusalem on research studies of contempora­ry Jewry should ignore Jews from the Diaspora other than America is reprehensi­ble.

While no one can deny that the largest Jewish community outside of Israel is in the United States, it is perhaps of greater interest how other Jewish communitie­s in Europe, South America, South Africa, Australia, New Zealand and elsewhere on the map continue to exist in the face of rising antisemiti­sm, and in most cases, maintain Jewish traditions, synagogues and Jewish schools.

greerfc@gmail.com

 ?? (Herard Reogorodet­zki/GPO) ?? PROCEEDING­S AT the mock tribunal and symposium on the crimes of Josef Mengele, held at Yad Vashem in 1985. On the bench (from left): Rafi Eitan and Yehuda Bauer.
(Herard Reogorodet­zki/GPO) PROCEEDING­S AT the mock tribunal and symposium on the crimes of Josef Mengele, held at Yad Vashem in 1985. On the bench (from left): Rafi Eitan and Yehuda Bauer.

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