T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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91.1 | Typical!!!!! | 11637::GOLD | | Wed Mar 26 1986 08:48 | 7 |
| Maybe if they had made the Yamulkes out of steel, the Jewish officers
could have substituted them for helmets!
Typical case of religious bigotry in action. What possible effect
on performance could wearing a yamulke make!!!!!!!
Jack
|
91.2 | An army is not a democracy | PFLOYD::CHERSON | | Wed Mar 26 1986 08:51 | 31 |
| I heard about the decision on "all things considered" yesterday,
including an interview with Simcha Goldman, the officer who brought
the case to the supreme court. His point was that not only did
it infringe upon his constitutional rights, but the military was
carrying out the "melting pot" philosophy to an extreme. There
also was a case involving Pentacostals, who refused to roll up their
sleeves because they do not believe in exposing any part of the
body in public.
Well I have to say that I can agree with Capt. Goldman, and then
again I can't. He is right as long as he goes to a meeting where
his commanding officer invokes the name of Jesus as a pre-meeting
blessing (which he described in the interview), then as far as I'm
concerned he should wear the kipah. But if all business is kept
on the secular level, then I'm afraid I digress from his opinion.
I've been in two armies, and I can tell you this, an army is not
a democracy, in fact there is no place for democracy in an army
if it is to carry out it's function to the fullest. This is true
even in Zahal. So if there is a regulation in the U.S. armed services
prohibiting wearing religious garments, then that's the law, just
or unjust.
Look emotionally I sympathize with Goldman, but he should realize
that there is only one army in the world in which Jews wear kipot,
tzitzit, etc., and that is Zahal. I'm not suggesting that he
automatically resign from the Air Force, make aliyah and join Zahal,
just that he should realize his surroundings, if you know what I
mean.
David
|
91.3 | You're in the army now. | NONAME::MAHLER | Michael | Wed Mar 26 1986 10:08 | 8 |
|
I too, must back Mr Cherson's message. If you are in the
army, the rules of a Democracy do NOT apply. Sure, I see no
harm in wearing the Kippah, but what can he do. When he enrolled
he, in a sense, gave up his rights of free speech, etc..
|
91.4 | Disagreement with .2 &.3 | DARTH::SCHORR | | Wed Mar 26 1986 13:02 | 10 |
| I disagree
A point to consider that he is a Chaplain and therefore should be
given somewhat different rules such as there are different rules
for doctors. Christian religious symbols needs only be displayed
during religious services but to apply that same doctrine to Judaism
is lacking in responsitiveness to the needs of the troops. I would
have expected this from the Army rather than the Air Force.
|
91.5 | Hat's off to Schieskopf | DELNI::GOLDBERG | | Wed Mar 26 1986 13:38 | 9 |
| I guess we all know now what uniform means -- homogenized. Thos in
thearmed services shall be uniform. But this poses a special problem
for Jews. On the one had we say, "Look I'm just like you. I'm
a human being too." On the other had some of us wear yomulkes, others
wear caftans and broad-brimmed black hats which say, "I'm different,
I'm a Jew." I think that to one degreee or another, we all say
that, because we are different. I so far as the supreme court decision
is concerned: It appears that Lieutenant, then Captain, then Colonel,
then General Schieskopf (Catch 22) has made it to the supreme court.
|
91.6 | Missing the point | PFLOYD::CHERSON | | Wed Mar 26 1986 14:18 | 19 |
| re: .4
As far as I understand it (from radio) is that Simcha Goldman is
not a chaplain, but a psychologist working in a base hospital.
Jewish chaplains are not discriminated against in any fashion in
the armed forces. The ones who don't wear kippot, except during
services, are not Orthodox. That's all, not that there is a rule
against it, chaplains are exempted from that rule.
By flaming the armed services as anti-semitic, etc., you're missing
the nature of anti-semitism in North America. Anti-semitism here
is practiced on an individual basis, not an institutional one (I
know all about the old quota system, but that went out in the '50's).
Outside of the religious garment issue, Jews are treated with equal
respect (you can't account for racist individuals), kosher food
is provided for those that request it.
D.C.
|
91.7 | I still don't agree | DARTH::SCHORR | | Wed Mar 26 1986 16:49 | 10 |
| 1. PBS Radio called him a chaplin. I also disagree that there
needs to be a complete uniformity in the military. If there was
the Russian army would be the best fighting force in the world.
2. Instituionalized anti-semtitism exists and if you don't believe
then you must lead a very sheltered life. The Army only recently
allowed a Jewish Chapel at West Point. Interesting in that 50%
(1 out of 2) of the first class at West Point was Jewish. The military
condones extensive anti-semtism especially in the Southern bases.
|
91.8 | Ivan must be happy about this | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | Fred @226-7388 | Wed Mar 26 1986 19:06 | 13 |
| .0 has it right. The US military is stuck somewhere in 19th centuty
Prussia. Such utter uniformity is not productive.
Hey, if they want to exclude Orthodox Jews from serving in the
military, it's their loss. This should make the Soviets rather
happy.
The "military class" which makes up most of the officer corps in
the US is heavily Southern, conservative Protestant, and doesn't
cotton up too much to minority types. Especially uppity ones,
who insist on their rights to retain their own cultural identity.
(Sound familiar on Purim week?)
<set flame off>
|
91.9 | put a hat on...you'll catch cold | NY1MM::BCOHEN | | Thu Mar 27 1986 01:23 | 46 |
|
re .4> According to the N.Y. Times Mr. Goldman was an ordained
rabbi but he was NOT a service chaplain, his capacity with
the armed forces was that of psychologist.
Now for my own opinion,
This is starnge for me to say but according to the story in the
paper, I disagree with Simcha. The army is not a democracy
and that he was being asked to remove it while given testimony,
when he had never been bothered before (acc. to N.Y.T.) I thing
going to supreme court was out of line.
I don't think it was nice that he was asked to remove it BUT
1) A yarmulka is not a law rather a custom taken to a mitzvah.
2) A jew is supposed to abide by the rules of his chosen country
of exile. 'deena demalchuta deena' - aramaic for the laws of your
kingdom are your laws.
3) I feel more harm in totality was done, than good could have been
achievedif he had won. It reinforces the fact that we are
*different* and that we follow another rule above the one they
represent. I for one don't like reminding people of that as
I don't have a very healthy attitude of the United States
as the perfect haven for the Jewish Folk.
Don't get me wrong on this one guys, I'm a frummie whose father
never wore a kippa except in shul, and I always were mine
(except when [for my own reasons] I go out on a sales call [I'm
pre-sales]) ALL the time. As was pointed out in an earlier
response. There is only one country you can (& should) were a kippa
in - Zahal. (Which BTW doesn't give special dispensations to the
religious in terms of praying, if they want Shacaris- they better
be up earlier than the rest of the guys and daven.)
I expect criticism of my opinion and I will gladly entertain them
all, tommorow.... Good Night
Bruce C.
P.S. While talking of kippot my wife crocheted a great on with the
DIGITAL logo on it.
|
91.10 | Some more facts on the case | PNEUMA::MASON | | Thu Mar 27 1986 11:06 | 24 |
| I think it's important to get all the facts of this case. The man
in question had served in the military (always wearing his kippah)
for 4 years. He had an outstanding record, and was planning to
make the military his career.
When he went to testify at a court martial trial he was asked by
the prosecuting attorney to remove his kippah, and he would not.
That's when the s@$% hit the fan for him and a number of other
religious people in the military.
My own opinion: Mr. Goldman ran up against an anti-semite, pure
and simple...and this anit-semite was a higher rank than Mr. Goldman.
It may have started out as a personal issue, but it has become a
broader one and affects a fair number of people in the military
who have always been accomodated in the past.
From NPR (All Things Considered)...evidently a number of congressmen
are very upset about the Supreme Court ruling, and there will be
some bills to get around it. Eventually Mr. Goldman and other people
like him in the military will be protected.
Personally, I admire him for taking a stand.
****andrea****
|
91.11 | Fight for the American way of life | SWATT::POLIKOFF | | Thu Mar 27 1986 12:25 | 13 |
| Basically the world has always been antiSemitic and still is and
probably will always be. Have we not learned from the Magilla? It seems
that we Jews have to fight for our rights every generation in every country.
On one hand our government tries to remove religion from the
military yet on the other hand the military has a chaplain corps. On
the other hand our government forbids prayer in school yet on the other hand
starts every congressional day with a prayer. Maybe the government has too
many hands.
By the way I used DECspell on this message and as it should be DEC
does not have antiSemitic in its dictionary. Thank G-d for little things.
|
91.12 | DIGITAL yumilchas | SWATT::POLIKOFF | | Thu Mar 27 1986 12:41 | 5 |
| In reply to 91.9 I think there might be a market for yumilchas
with the Digital logo. I would love to have one and I am sure that
readers of this notes file would be interested. Would someone in
the yumilcha business consider producing them. Any leftovers could be sold
as P.C. covers to Goyum.
|
91.13 | A Rebuttle | PFLOYD::CHERSON | | Thu Mar 27 1986 12:51 | 28 |
| re: .9 -
Bruce,
I'd like to take issue with what you said about soldiers in Zahal
having to get up earlier than others to say Sacharit, that's just
not true. I know for a fact that dati soldiers didn't get up any
earlier than myself, and proceeded to services before breakfast
while the rest of us were off doing other things. In fact in basic
training in Zahal, they usually organize entire platoons of dati
soldiers, so there will be no conflicts and for mutual support.
I'd also like to take issue with the person who claimed I was leading
a "sheltered life" vis-a-vis anti-semitism in this country. I was
having fights in junior high over the fact that I was Jewish, I
made the mistake of going to a school which was mostly populated
by lower-class whites, and I was only one of three Jews in the school.
My mother and her family were the only survivors of their town,
where the entire Jewish population was slaughtered. So don't tell
that I don't know about anti-semitism.
Yes the U.S. military is primarily run by Southern wasps, but that
is where this country's military tradition comes from. Of course
many of them are bigoted, that's the South. But that still doen't
make for instritutionalized anti-semitism, there are no racist laws
on the books, federal or state, we're not in Europe.
D.C.
|
91.14 | read the Soviet constitution lately? | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | Fred @226-7388 | Thu Mar 27 1986 13:22 | 7 |
| There are no institutionalized anti-Semitic laws on the books in
Russia either. Their constitution even promises freedom of religion.
It's custom, attitude and the opinions of the people in power that
make the difference.
Hence the US military reflects the attitudes of its officers. Law
or no law.
|
91.15 | Counter-point | PFLOYD::CHERSON | | Thu Mar 27 1986 13:35 | 15 |
| Anti-semitism has been institutionalized by means other than laws
in the Soviet Union for centuries. The Bosheviks thought that by
outlawing racism, that it would go away. Unfortunately they couldn't
account for the "natural" racists among themselves.
Why is everyone making comparisons to the Soviets anyways? Do you
all think that the U.S. military isn't any better in it's treatment
of Jews than the Red Army? Why don't you go over to Russia and
try asking a Jewish conscript which army he would rather be in?
I have a nephew who is serving with the 82nd airborne right now,
when he comes home for Pesach I'll ask him about this issue. I
think there is more to this than what we see or hear in the media.
David
|
91.17 | | ELWOOD::SIMON | | Thu Mar 27 1986 19:36 | 4 |
| Re: .11
DECspell has "anti-Semitism".
|
91.18 | Where's Zahal? | TLE::BISHOPB | | Thu Mar 27 1986 21:11 | 5 |
| So what does "dati" mean, and why are you calling Israel "Zahal"?
Or are you talking about some other place? Please, for readers
like me who do not know Hebrew, give a translation the first time
you use a word.
-John Bishop
|
91.19 | Apology to .18 | PFLOYD::CHERSON | | Fri Mar 28 1986 08:24 | 8 |
| Apologies to those who don't know Hebrew.
DATI = Religious, Pious ; The word DAT in Hebrew means religion,
and when you add a Yud, the word becomes an adjective.
ZAHAL = This the Hebrew acronym for "Zvah Hagana L'Yisrael", in
English that means "Israel Defense Forces".
David
|
91.20 | sorry I'm a klutz | NY1MM::BCOHEN | | Fri Mar 28 1986 11:54 | 20 |
|
To all,
Sorry for the typo's and non-exlplanation in my note, but if
you noticed the time I wrote it, it was 1:23 AM and I was kind of
zonked.
David, thanks for the elaboration. I meant 'army' and not 'country'.
I stand corrected on the issue of getting up to pray. I was basing
my facts on what a friend who served had told me.
John B. - A personal apology, from now on after-midnight is strict
read-only mode.
Also, my reaction wasn't condoning the armies decision, I thought
it was petty and anti-semetic but not unexpected.
P.S. - how do you use decspell w/VAXnotes ???
|
91.21 | DECspell | SWATT::POLIKOFF | Arnie Polikoff | Fri Mar 28 1986 12:25 | 5 |
| re. P.S. - how do you use decspell w/VAXnotes ???
You don't. I get out of notes, edit a text file, do a DECspell on it,
go back into notes, reply and then include the text file. Sounds
kloogy but at least the words are spelled rite.
|
91.22 | EVE has DECspell ability | VENUS3::MIREIDER | Robert Mireider 86x0 �diag support | Fri Mar 28 1986 14:15 | 7 |
| Re DECspell
If you are using the EVE editor all you have to do to hit the DO
key (PF4 on VT100) at the command line type spell and you are in
DECspell
Rob
|
91.23 | DECspell from EDIT key pad | GRAMPS::LISS | Fred - ESD&P Shrewsbury MA | Fri Mar 28 1986 14:39 | 12 |
| If you have your profile set up for the EDIT key pad as mine is, you
can use DECspell from the numerical keypad as follows.
PF1, 7 - This puts you in the command mode
spell
<ENTER>
Does anyone know how to run DECspell with your profile set up for
WPS?
Fred
|
91.24 | Wow it does work, but.... | CADZOO::MAHLER | Michael | Fri Mar 28 1986 15:53 | 4 |
|
Real Men Use Dictionary's !
|
91.25 | DECspell with WPS Keypad | NAAD::GOLDBERG | Len Goldberg | Wed Apr 02 1986 22:57 | 5 |
| > Does anyone know how to run DECspell with your profile set up for
> WPS?
<gold> <cmnd> (PF1 [ ) Will put you in command mode. SPELL <cr>
runs DECspell.
|
91.26 | Getting back from DECSpell | WHICH::SCHWARTZ | Steven H. Schwartz | Thu Apr 03 1986 23:18 | 9 |
| Interesting how kippot in the army turned into a discussion of
DECSpell.
To circle back, I wear a kippah all the time. Nevertheless, I can
appreciate the homogenizing effect of a military unit sharing one
uniform. If you (G-d forbid) ended up on the front line, and the
rest of your unit were nochrim, would you want to be the
"distinguished" one?
|
91.27 | no bareheads in the foxhole | DELNI::GOLDBERG | | Fri Apr 04 1986 15:56 | 3 |
| re .26
Only under the helmet.
|
91.28 | turbans and such | RANGLY::SPECTOR_DAVI | | Fri Apr 11 1986 14:07 | 8 |
|
How about a Sikh soldier that is required to wear a turban by his
beliefs ?
Would the Armies prohibition of his wearing it constitute
anti-semitism ?
David
|
91.29 | men in turbans make good soldiers | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | Flame of the Day Club | Mon Apr 14 1986 11:24 | 13 |
| > How about a Sikh soldier that is required to wear a turban by his
> beliefs ?
Sikhs are proportionately overrepresented in the Indian army.
It doesn't seem to be a problem there (except perhaps since the
recent problems, which don't relate to turbans!). Sikhs traditionally
are among the best soldiers -- their religion also includes something
about carrying a sword, too!
> Would the armies prohibition of his wearing it constitute
> Anti-Semitism ?
No, because Sikhs aren't Semites. Anti-Sikhism, though!
|
91.30 | Tee-shirts | GRAMPS::LISS | Fred - ESD&P Shrewsbury MA | Mon Apr 14 1986 14:11 | 14 |
| This shabos an Israeli paratrooper dropped in for services
(no pun intended) at our shul. Actually, he grew up in the
neighborhood and then moved to Israel. Now he's on leave and
visiting his parents.
He told a humorous story of how one Friday morning before
inspection he put on a bright yellow "Sevas Ha'Shem"
(Soldiers of G-d) tee-shirt under his uniform. Everyone had a
good laugh and he was told not to do it again. That was the
end of the issue. Try to imagine what would have happened to
this young paratrooper in this country.
Fred
|
91.31 | Off the top of my head! | RANGLY::SPECTOR_DAVI | | Mon May 05 1986 14:17 | 35 |
| RE: .28 & .29
From 'India Abroad'- English language Indian newspaper published
in N.Y. Friday, April 18, 1986
Senate Bill May OK GI Turbans
Washington - Senators Frank R. Lautenberg (D-NJ) and Alfonso
D'Amato (R-NY) introduced a bill last week on military uniforms
that could have an impact on turbans being worn by personnel of
the American armed forces
On August,21 1981, the wearing of turbans by services personnel
was banned, after a review found the wearing of beards,unshorn
hair,turbans and bracelets adverse to safety requirements in the
service.
Lautenberg and D'Amato said that their bill was intended to
overide a Supreme Court decision upholding the ban on services
personnel wearinf yarmulkes, the skull cap worn by Orthodox Jews,
but that it would also apply to other religious symbols.
In a letter to congress members,Lautenberg and D'Amato said
,"Our legislation is not confined to the wearing od yurmulkes,but
addresses the wearing of any item of apparel that is part of the
armed services member's religious observance.
" The legislation is nonsectarian and insures that the wearing
of religious apparel will in no way interfere with the performance
of military duty."
That is the gist of the article. If you would like a copy of the
article in its entirety,please send mail and I would be happy to
send it out to you.
David
|