Tuesday, July 20, 2004

B"H
 
The Owner of the Tzfat Forum to Doreen Dotan: 

Doreen

"You are permanently banned from taking part in the Safed.co.il forum. THIS IS FINAL AND IRREVERSIBLE. "

Roni (Roni Yeshurun, the Owner of
www.safed.co.il)
 
Here's what I wrote to get finally and irreversibly banned:
 
Israel:
 
Israel is quoted exactly. Then my responses follow.
 
I think most Tzfatim would agree with every word that Avinoam wrote. You tell him in your characteristically insulting manner that his arguments are illogical, yet yours are are a collection of bitter and contradictory statements.
 
You, Israel, are in a state of advanced alpha decay. You are emitting vituperative particles at a prodigious rate. You're not very original, however. Can't you come up with a new insult. "Bitter" is worn out. I am not easily dismissed with epithets such as "bitter" or spurious accusations such as "contradictory". According to the laws of which school of logic have I contradicted myself, sir? Proofs please.
 
After 4 centuries of abject poverty and misery for the Jews of Tzfat who survived on charity, the first 3 decades after the establishment of the State saw a tremendous economic revival. It became a thriving little town with a booming tourist trade. Hotels, night-clubs, theaters, concerts and a world-renowned Artists' Colony made this the favorite destination for Israelis and many foreign tourists.
 
This is not Las Vegas and Tzfat did not pretend to offer the attractions of Vegas. The bait used to attract tourists here was the "mystic" flavor of Tzfat. Torah was used to attract people to night clubs. Do you have any idea of the extent of the spiritual/moral havoc wreaked by so doing? There is a pall over this city - a curse. Even a secular journalist had to ask publicly in one of his articles if Tzfat has been cursed. The answer, to my dismay, is "Yes!".
 
Even the tiny Orthodox community profited from the prosperity and they certainly didn't voice any objections to commercial establishments being open on Shabbat since none of them were in the Jewish Quarter (this is a fact -- I was here and you weren't).
 
I have spoken about the fact that Tzfat has been the center of the pseudo-Kabbalistic trade for 500 years. The Ar"I baffled his students with BS and Cha'im Vital claimed to fly here. The greatest admixture of truth and lies since the New Testament, to wit: the "Shulchan Arukh" was redacted right here. On the street where you live perhaps? Bad energy.
 
When the artists started growing older and Israelis started taking holidays abroad, the tourist trade started dwindling and Haredim started moving in and the tourists came even less. Since the 80's Carmiel and Rosh Pinna and even Hatzor have really taken off while Tzfat has regressed economically, the only growth industry being new Yeshivot and housing for young Haredi couples.I'm glad you mention those other towns. Add Katzrin to the list of lovely places to live. It would be a big mitzvah for religious immigrants to bolster the small religious communities in those settlement.
 
You, Doreen, obviously approve of this trend. So how can you possibly complain that highly respected mathematical linguists and poets and numismatic experts are not embraced by the municipality and instantly employed in their fields. How do you expect a little provincial outpost like Tzfat, where half its citizens are exempt from local taxes to provide these obviously talented people with a fitting job? Can you think of a single town of 27,000 inhabitants in the U.S. whose municipality would see it as their responsibility to find appropriate employment for all the thinkers and intellectuals in the community, particularly when most of them would rather study Torah than work ?
 
 Is it a sine qua non, then, that one has to be average and wholly undistinguished in character or in aptitude in order to be able to tolerate living in Tzfat? Jews have always supported prodigies of Torah. That support was extended to the highly gifted in other areas. Do you think that it is preferable that today the economy of Tzfat is structured so that the working class keeps about 7 families living in the lap of luxury and the third generation of Amidar kids are languishing in my building and others like it? People who get support to learn Torah are ensuring Israel's future. People who convolute the economy for their own interests are parasites. Buzzzz. Swat.
 
If you are not of the opinion that Talmud Torah is the greatest Human achievement and that all and any resources should be made available to those who sacrifice their entire lives for that endeavor, then I am not in the wrong town, sir. You are in the wrong religion. You sound a whole lot more Wicca-dik than Jewish, actually :0).
 
If you can, perhaps Tzfat is really not the place for you.
 
Wrong. Tzfat is not the place for *you*. It is people like you who are contaminating the rarified spiritual nature of Tzfat. Tzfat is a special place, it was probably an Ir Miklat in ancient times, and reacts by becoming violently ill to folks like you. You, and those like you, are responsible for the present state of affairs in Tzfat, not the religious who are trying desperately to go G-d's Will, even as the Rabbinical establishment leads them astray with the superstitious nonsense that was homegrown here in Tzfat 500 years ago. Thankfully, most Tzfatim have a more positive outlook and they really love their town. I know a lot of haves who give as much as they can, and I know a lot of have-nots who are not in the least bitter because it was their choice to live here and to lead a life of Torah and studies. And there are also a lot of secular people here who also love their town because it is pluralistic and not polarized and despite its problems, it is still one of the most beautiful places in Israel.
 
Wrong again (you're on a roll). Most people in Tzfat eat s--t and grin. Hey, I'm not the only one who says so. Don't you read the local papers? There is an inordinately high percentage of masochists in Tzfat. I'm not one of them, so you think I'm "bitter". I'm not bitter. You've eaten so much s--t it tastes like honey to you. Have you every read what the Ramba"m says about the spiritually sick calling the sweet bitter and the bitter sweet? Your taste buds have been distorted. Someone caring enough to tell the truth about this town is sweet, not bitter, fool.And there are also a lot of secular people here who also love their town because it is pluralistic and not polarized and despite its problems, it is still one of the most beautiful places in Israel. Yeah, right. I especially like the ground-in grunge on Yerushalayim Street. It's fun on the cheap in the winter rains for those of us who can't afford ice-skating. Ah, there's nothing like the aroma of garbage on a fine summer's morn'. And the squishshshsh of the "landmines" the horses and cows leave on the sidewalks. Wiggle your toes boys and girls. This may be the closest you'll ever come to going to sleep-away camp. I suppose that if one is among the approximately 30% of Tzfat residents that are on toke most of the time things do look a whole lot prettier.You know, it was a gift from G-d that I wound up in Ofer. I could be living in the Old City and making the same compromises with my conscience that you are, living in denial. Nifla'ot darkei HaShem.
 
I also wrote:
 

A Sad Example of My Points:

When I first moved to Tzfat a singularly intelligent and kind young woman, originally from England, lived here. As the story progresses many of you will know to whom I am referring and will know the story I tell is true to the last detail.

Our heroine was a self-taught computer whiz kid at a time when the internet was not commonplace in Tzfat. Being the kind, concerned and gentle person that she is, she sought every means to help others with the benefit of her knowledge. During wartime she used the net to help people who were in dangerous areas find homes to stay in until the danger passed. She also helped those who needed psycho-social services to find the help they needed via the net.

She came up with a marvelous idea. Her idea was to create a guild of people who would create cottage industries using the net at home. She advertised get-togethers and brought her friends and associates, computer savvy young people all, to come to Tzfat and explain that in the age of the internet the fact that we are far from the center of the country is of no matter at all. Using the computer at home we could reach out and find clients and customers for our various talents, skills and businesses. Forming a guild we could protect one another's interests and aid one another's businesses referring people one to another. People came to her meetings from various walks of life: guesthouse owners from Tzfat and Amirim, my husband Dani'el and I were there as were people who worked in a number of fields. The young, talented, enterprising woman explained that the cost of the start-up businesses would be minimal - the price of a computer and the internet. She would use the benefit of the respect she had in her field and her connections to get the project off the ground.

She went to the Municipality with a very definite plan of how to launch the project. She told them that she had met with people who were very enthused about the idea. She told them that it would cost them next to zilch to help. She told them that she wasn't asking for favors, that she would bear the weight of the project herself. All she wanted was for them to fund a Tzfat web site that would advertise the businesses as they began, and hopefully, became established and flourished. Those were the days of the pillars of Tzfat society Moshe Henia and Meir Amar. All of her plans fell on deaf ears because the people running Tzfat realized her plans were beyond their ken and couldn't figure out how to get control of it. Yet another brilliant, talented and kind-hearted person in Tzfat was ignored and made to feel worthless.

The upshot of the story is that, being single and unencumbered, she left Tzfat and is now working freelance for computer companies who consider it a privilege to fly her all over the world, at their expense, as a consultant.

If any of you imagine that the people sitting in the municipality have Tzfat's interests at heart, think again. If you think that life is fit for human habitation in a town wherein the municipality actively torpedoes initiative you are living in La La Land.

Enough said on my part. I promised myself I wouldn't waste my energies on Tzfat so long as the townspeople will not help themselves. I have bigger and better investments for my talents and energies.

You lost her talent. You've lost mine too - and the procession out of here of the best and the brightest continues.

Doreen Ellen Bell-Dotan, Tzfat, Israel