You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Rabbi Yisrael Lau denies running for president
2006-10-20
Tel Aviv Chief Rabbi Yisrael Meir Lau denied Thursday that he was running for president as media sources had reported earlier. "I am in no way considering the issue," the rabbi said during an interview in the morning radio program, "Non-stop Radio." Sources close to Rabbi Lau said afterwards, however, that while the rabbi cannot officially say he is running until President Moshe Katsav's fate has been decided, the rabbi has, in fact, decided to run and will announce his candidacy only then.
Israel needs a holy man as head of state like it needs more Paleostinians.
Posted by:Fred

#7  Thanks, TW. If nothing else, one would think that as a rabbi he should be above the moral turpitude that has brought Katsav down.
Posted by: mac   2006-10-20 19:19  

#6  I've no idea, mac, although the rabbi circles have always been highly competetive on the basis of raw knowledge and subtlety of analysis (I can't imagine they're spending much time on kosher/nonkosher masturbations, f'r instance). My knowledge is entirely theoretical. Daddy's mother was part of the Labour Zionist circle from the time the two of them arrived in Palestine in 1934. She used to kaffeeklatch with Golda Meir and design school curricula for the refugees fleeing Europe. Daddy became a chemist, using his skills to help the Haganah, and later helped set up the Israeli version of OSHA (steel-toed shoes and hard hats on the Haifa dockworkers cut deaths from 1/1000 man-hours to less than 1/year, that kind of thing) as part of Golda Meir's government. Daddy came over to the States for a short stint as a university professor, but then he met my mother...

I imagine gromgoru, Elder of Zion, liberalhawk or several other posters who actually understand Israeli politics can explain.
Posted by: trailing wife   2006-10-20 14:15  

#5  "the respect we accord Supreme Court justices..." That varies an awful lot, TW. I don't have laudatory enough words to express my respect for Scalia. I simply don't have any respect for Ginsburg, Breyer, Souter, Kennedy or Stevens. So how does this Lau guy rate?
Posted by: mac   2006-10-20 10:17  

#4  Do you mean the Prophets, Nimble Spemble? Or Samuel consecrating first Saul as king, then David? They were tapped by God for those jobs; rabbis are merely steeped in the Bible, Jewish history, and the body of rabbinical arguments and precedents that have developed over the last 2200 years. The best have earnt the respect we in the US accord to Supreme Court justices or law professors, except that their decisions are advisory rather than binding. There is no Jewish Pope.
Posted by: trailing wife   2006-10-20 09:23  

#3  a Chief Rabbi already has a time consuming job, and in my opinion he's no business getting involved in politics.

Isn't that what the books of hisotry in The Bible are all about?
Posted by: Nimble Spemble   2006-10-20 09:12  

#2  Generally speaking, rabbis are no more holy than teachers or government health inspectors. Anyway, a Chief Rabbi already has a time consuming job, and in my opinion he's no business getting involved in politics.
Posted by: trailing wife   2006-10-20 09:10  

#1  As an outside choice, the only holy man I would choose is Adin Steinsaltz .

I doubt they would choose Aumann. But they should.

Posted by: Penguin   2006-10-20 02:14  

00:00