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Wednesday, September 28, 2005

Jung's First Dream

In the comments section of my last post Sue mentioned C. G. Jung's memoir Memories, Dreams and Reflections, which is a facinating book. I thought I'd share a poem that I wrote while reading the early chapters of that book. Not one of my particular favorites, but it has some nice bits in there.

Jung’s First Dream
by John W. Leys

In the green meadow
Behind the old vicarage
A hole thrust through the earth,
A sparkling spiral staircase
Descending into the pit;
A subterranean labyrinth
Spreading into infinity
Beneath the sleepy village above.
Beyond the green curtains
Stands the throne
Of the one eyed god.
"That", says mother,
"is the man eater."
- 25 April 1999

Tuesday, September 27, 2005

֖אדני פה

VOCATUS ATQUE NON VOCATUS DEUS ADERIT
(Called or not called, God is present) - This phrase was inscribed above the door of C. G. Jung's home in Kusnacht, Switzerland.

The Writing on the Walls

A while back I posted a picture of my desk/work area. At the time I had intended to go back and add notes about what some of the stuff I have hanging on my walls is, but put it off and forgot about it. Since its been so long I decided to give this its own post rather than just updating the old one.

Just for reference, here is the original picture I posted of my workspace:

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This is the area directly above my desk. Starting in the upper right hand corner and moving clockwise we have Johnny Cash, Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel, a picture of Rabbi Heschel marching with MLK, the 5 Marx Brothers (Zeppo, Groucho, Chico, Gummo and Harpo) out of costume, and Groucho Marx. In the center is a framed picture of George Harrison and Bob Dylan from George's Concert for Bangladesh. Continuing clockwise is a copy of the U.S. Declaration of Indipendence, Thomas Jefferson, the preamble to the U.S. Constitution, and two pictures of the Traveling Wilburys.

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This is just to the left of the last picture. The big map is of the State of Israel. Next to that is the Israeli Declaration of Indipendence. Above that is a Clan Map of Scotland and the Scottish Declaration of Abroath.

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This is just below the first picture. The large picture in the center is of Jerusalem, with the Temple Mount in the center. On the upper right are two pictures of Dylan in Israel (one of him wearing Tefillin at his son's Bar Mitzvah and one of him on the Mountain of Olives). The pictures on the left are of my cats, my Fiance and our nephew, her sister and the same nephew and me with the same nephew. On the printer stand is a 10" Batman figure, a menorah (not a hannukiah) and a Yankees baseball. On the desk is a miniature replica of Michaelangelo's Moses. Behind Moses is Pete Townshend and John Lennon.

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This one is to the right of the desk. Behind the laptop are various maps of Israel (modern and ancient, though you can't see all of them in this picture). On the wall are charts of the Hebrew, Proto-Hebrew, Phoenician, Ugaritic and Greek alphabets. Below the charts are maps of ancient Jerusalem. To the right of the Jerusalem maps are maps of the Ancient Near East.

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This is above the last one. Starting in the top left corner and moving right is Lou Gehrig and Babe Ruth, Mickey Mantle, the 2004 Yankees, Lord Byron and an autographed Kinky Friedman for Governor bumpersticker. Below Byron is an autographed picture of Adam West. Below Lou and Babe are Mark Twain and a small MC Escher print.

Banned Books Week

"Censorship is telling a man he can't have a steak just because a baby can't chew it."
- Mark Twain
This week is Banned Books Week (BBW). The American Library Association describes BBW on its website thusly:
Banned Books Week (BBW) celebrates the freedom to choose or the freedom to express one’s opinion even if that opinion might be considered unorthodox or unpopular and stresses the importance of ensuring the availability of those unorthodox or unpopular viewpoints to all who wish to read them. After all, intellectual freedom can exist only where these two essential conditions are met.
For more information please visit the ALA's Banned Books Week website.

Monday, September 26, 2005

UnNamed Blues

I've been going through my poetry files lately, looking for anything that still looks worthwhile. I've found some that I still like, though a few of them read almost like they were written by somebody else (In a way I suppose they were). I've found many more that have good bits in them surrounded by crap. Those are the one's I'm setting aside to try and rewrite/rework and hopefully salvage. Below is something I found that I had forgotten about. Its one of the few that I like just as it is. I'm not sure when it was written, but it was likely my first attempt at a traditional blues type lyric. I do know that it was written deeply under the influence of the Complete Recordings of Robert Johnson, who I can still hear singing it.

I can't see or feel you
You've fallen from my touch
I can't see or feel you
And You've fallen from my touch
I'd give up right now
If I didn't love you so damn much..

I reach out for you
But your hand isn't there
I reach out for you
But your hand just isn't there
Oh, God almighty, tell me
Why is life so unfair?

I can't live without you
I'd be stupid to even try
I can't live without you
I'd be stupid to even try
And if I don't see you soon
I'm afraid I just might die..
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Sunday, September 25, 2005

Jewish History: A Glob of Snot?

Over at Biblical Theology Jim West critiques an article at IsraelInsider, which argues against Palestinian attepts to deny Jewish/Israeli historical ties to the land of Israel, by calling it a "Glob of Snot." As ever, Jim's professionalism absolutely astounds me.

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The Eyes Are Windows to the Soul

Just for fun I thought I'd post this collage I made quite a number of years ago based upon the notion that "the eyes are windows to our soul."

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Windows
by John W. Leys

Click the image for the full sized version.


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Love is Something You Do

"I am not big on love stories, but I know what love is. Love is something you do."

In The Ether

Due to some hacking over at his main website, Pete Townshend has decided to post the second part of The Boy Who Heard Music, his serialized novella, a week early. He will then skip a week and part three should be available on 13 October.

UPDATE: All the chapters and many of the comments from Pete Townshend's The Boy Who Heard Music blog have been removed from the blogspot site and archived at his main website:

Saturday, September 24, 2005

Kinky Toon

Texan Gubenatorial Candidate Kinky Friedman has recently released an on-line animated campaign commercial that outlines his campain for Governor of Texas in 2006:

The Note

Pete Townshend had posted the first installment of his serialized novella, The Boy Who Heard Music. It's hard to judge any piece based solely on the prologue, but I like what I've seen so far. At the very least it makes me want to keep reading. The story seems very much in the style of the Lifehouse BBC radio play as well as Pete's Pyschoderelict album (which was in many ways a radio play as well) and in many ways seems to be a sequel of sorts to Pyschoderelict.

UPDATE: All the chapters and many of the comments from Pete Townshend's The Boy Who Heard Music blog have been removed from the blogspot site and archived at his main website:

Friday, September 23, 2005

More Poetry

Its strange how the creative process works (or doesn't work) sometimes. After a relatively long dry period I've written two pretty decent poems in the space of a few days. This one is a poem that I've actually been working on for almost a year now. Its present form only vaguely resembles the poem I had started with. I happened to run across my rough drafts in my desk the other night and started reworking it again. I think having a little distance from it helped immeasurably.

That Long Lonesome Road
by John W. Leys

We started breaking up
Before we ever met
In that little wayside music hall
Tucked under Interstate 5

It began in the simple
Joyous revelation:
We were no longer alone.
It ended with carefully
Chosen and calculated words
In a university courtyard
Where the dark gulf winds blow

By the time you looked up
I'd already hit the road.
Alone with my history;
Fresh wounds to tend.

No knees buckled,
No pleas were heard.
In silence I heard your anger
And waved 'Fare thee well.'
Any comments, suggestions and/or constructive criticism is, of course, greatly appreaciated.

UPDATE: Zach Gardner has honored me by including the above poem in his new blog Poetry on My Mind.

Wednesday, September 21, 2005

Dust to Dust (for Simon Wiesenthal)

This is a poem I've been working on since Simon passed away yesterday. I'm not sure its quite finished yet, but I'm happy enough with it at the moment to share it.

Dust to Dust
(for Simon Wiesenthal)
By John W. Leys

Caught in the sacrificial flames
That licked the heavens,
Burned but not burnt

Your brothers' and sisters' blood
Cries out to you from the ashes:
"Where is God," they ask,
"Where is justice?"

The Lord answered:
Tempered in flame
a voice cried out from the wild,
"I am my brother's keeper!"
Bearing the shield of righteousness;
wielding the sword of truth,
"Justice! Justice I shall pursue!"

A voice for the silenced.
A memory for the forgotten.
A promise to the wicked:
Judgment Day is at hand.

Tuesday, September 20, 2005

Simon Wiesenthal, 1908-2005

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Simon Wiesenthal
1908-2005
"Wiesenthal spoke often of a Sabbath dinner he had spent at the home of another survivor of Mauthausen, who had become a wealthy jeweler. The man speculated that Wiesenthal could have become a millionaire if he had gone back to architecture instead of hunting Nazis.

"When we come to the other world," Wiesenthal said he responded, "and meet the millions of Jews who died in the camps, and they ask us, 'What have you done?' there will be many answers.


"You will tell them, 'I became a jeweler.'

"Another will say, 'I smuggled coffee and American cigarettes.'

"Another will say, 'I built houses.'

"But I will say, 'I didn't forget you.'.""
- Quoted in his LA Time Obituary
"Simon Wiesenthal was the conscience of the Holocaust. When the Holocaust ended in 1945 and the whole world went home to forget, he alone remained behind to remember. He did not forget. He became the permanent representative of the victims, determined to bring the perpetrators of the history’s greatest crime to justice. There was no press conference and no president or Prime Minister or world leader announced his appointment. He just took the job. It was a job no one else wanted.

The task was overwhelming. The cause had few friends. The Allies were already focused on the Cold War, the survivors were rebuilding their shattered lives and Simon Wiesenthal was all alone, combining the role of both prosecutor and detective at the same time."

- Rabbi Marvin Hier, founder of the Simom Wiesenthal Center

Friday, September 16, 2005

Happy Birthday, BB!

I just wanted to take a moment to wish BB King a very happy 80th birthday!

Tuesday, September 13, 2005

Quote for the Day

"Because religious belief, or non-belief, is such an important part of every person's life, freedom of religion affects every individual. State churches that use government power to support themselves and force their views on persons of other faiths undermine all our civil rights. Moreover, state support of the church tends to make the clergy unresponsive to the people and leads to corruption within religion. Erecting the 'wall of separation between church and state,' therefore, is absolutely essential in a free society.
"We have solved ... the great and interesting question whether freedom of religion is compatible with order in government and obedience to the laws. And we have experienced the quiet as well as the comfort which results from leaving every one to profess freely and openly those principles of religion which are the inductions of his own reason and the serious convictions of his own inquiries."
--Thomas Jefferson, as quoted in the Letter to the Virginia Baptists (1808)

Torah, Talmud and Dylan

JewsRock.org has an interesting, but brief, article by Seth Rogovoy about Bob Dylan and some of his Jewish/Biblical influences:

Monday, September 12, 2005

The Internet As A Mirror of Society

On Pete Townshend's on-line diary he has posted the following quote made recently by Dr Vint Cerf, who in 1970 helped create the TCP/IP proticol. I think its worth thinking about:

"If you have the ivory tower view that the internet is good only if everything on it is good you are mistaken."

"The internet is a reflection of our society and that mirror is going to be reflecting what we see," he said. "If we do not like what we see in that mirror the problem is not to fix the mirror, we have to fix society."

Sunday, September 11, 2005

What We Wanted To See

Miss Alli of This is Not Over has posted a very good piece on what detracters of President Bush wanted to see and hear in the wake of Hurricane Katrina.

Saturday, September 10, 2005

9-11

11 September 2001
Never Forget


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Complete 9-11-01 Timeline

And where is the justice?
Why have those responsible for this horror not been brought to justice yet?

Ask a Silly Question...

"How should they answer?"
- Abigail Van Buren in reply to the question: "Why do Jews always answer a question with a question?"
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Does This Count Toward My 15 Minutes?

I just noticed that the new JTS Graduate School brochure is available on-line at the JTSA website. I mention this only to give myself the opportunity to point out that I am featured on the cover (I'm the one with the beard)

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(Click on the image to view the brochure in PDF format)

The Boy Who Heard Music [UPDATED]

Pete Townshend had announced on his website that he will soon be publishing a novella he wrote a few years ago, 'The Boy Who Heard Music,' on-line in a serialized form. He'll be posting it to the "Diary" section of his website as well as to a new blog he set up especially for this project:

On the Who's American tour of 2000, when we kicked off the second leg, we stayed in Florida for a part of a week to get our bearings and to enjoy a little sun and sea air. On Sunday, September 24th, I began work on the first draft of a radio play called The Boy Who Heard Music.

I subsequently worked on various scripted adaptations of the story for radio, movie and television. I even envisaged a kind of simple webcast theatre event. In February and March of 2002 I spent about six weeks writing it out longhand, as what I suppose might be called a 'Novella' as it is a little longer than a conventional short story.

On Saturday the 24th of September, the fifth anniversary of the day I sketched out the plot by the Atlantic in Florida, I am beginning a serialization of the novella of The Boy Who Heard Music on the internet.

This will be a text only offering posted on my diary pages here, and also on a Blog site at boywhoheardmusic.blogspot.com so that comments can be posted by those reading it. Who fans will find the story especially interesting I think. In many ways it is a vanity, it refers to some of my best ideas, but also perhaps to some of my worst.

So return here on 24th September. The posting will go up at 1600 UT. So here in the UK it will appear at 1700 GMT. In New York at 1200 EST. In Japan at 0200 etc.



UPDATE: In the comments section of the first Chapter of The Boy Who Heard Music Pete has posted a little more about his purpose in doing this serialized novella on-line rather than in a more traditional media:
Some comments have asked whether this posting is valid, or whether it attempts to sidestep the usual interactions between author and reader. (And maybe even to sidestep mainstream criticism).

This novella has been designed to illicit response as it travels and unfolds. It is as much a place for others to reflect their own ideas, and to place themselves inside my ideas if they wish, as a good song. Or I hope it is.

I am not trying to write conventional fiction here. I am trying to use the internet in a new way. This novella is ABOUT who I believe we are today and how we choose to reach out to each other. You may not like my approach.

My genre, rock and pop, is always more about the audience than the artist. It just doesn't always seem that way. In this genre the artist is also a part of the audience.

I can do this serialization in this way because I am already famous as an artist in a new and still evolving genre. I can put up this novella and create a dialogue that engages all of our ideas and thoughts as an audience. We, the audience, have massive powers today that we didn't have forty years ago.
You can read his full comments here.

UPDATE: All the chapters and many of the comments from Pete Townshend's The Boy Who Heard Music blog have been removed from the blogspot site and archived at his main website:

Friday, September 9, 2005

Toys

Part of me has never grown up. As a result even well into my 30s I have a small (well, relatively small) collection of toys and action figures (Eagle eyed readers will have already spotted the 10" Batman figure in the photo of my desk that I posted a few days ago). These are a few I picked up over the summer:

Ace, The Bat-hound with the Joker's hyenas, Bud and Lou (from the Krypto the Super-dog show):
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The rest are from Corgi's wonderful line of Batmobile replicas (They're listed under "Pop Culture" on thier web site for those wishing to take a look at the whole line):

The 1950s Bat-mobile (the back canopy lifts up to reveal the crime-lab in the back):
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The 1960s Bat-plane:
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Which transforms into the Bat-Sub:
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A 1990s Bat-Mobile (The rear panel lifts up to reveal the engine):
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And a shot of my ever growing Bat-mobile fleet:
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Monday, September 5, 2005

Desktop

Quite some time ago a few Bible-Bloggers (Jim West and Tyler Williams) posted pictures of thier desks and workspaces. Since I was home on vacation at the time I couldn't participate, but now that I'm back at school I can show everyone what my desk looks like (I know you've all been dying to know!):

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oy... and you can tell I've been away for a while, my calendar is still turned to July!!

USCJ Hurricane Relief Fund

Hurricane Katrina Relief Effort
United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism

To help our Conservative movement communities and all the victims of the community, United Synagogue has opened a Hurricane Disaster Relief Fund. Our Conservative synagogues are still assessing damage to their buildings and communities. Synagogues in the affected areas that sustain extensive damage that is not covered by insurance may receive money from the fund. Funds for assistance to individual victims will be made from this fund to organizations on the ground that they are best able to provide direct assistance. If you would like to make a financial contribution that will help our communities affected by Katrina, you can do so in one of two ways:

1. Bring a check (made out to "USCJ") to the JTS Va'ad Gemilut Hasadim (212 Unterberg) or send it to USCJ Hurricane Disaster Relief Fund; 121 Congressional Lane; Suite 210; Rockville, MD 20852. Please write "Hurricane Disaster Relief Fund" in the memo section.

2. Credit card donations can be made online at www.uscj.org
Click on the link to the Hurricane Disaster Relief Fund. When you make a credit card donation you must write in the designated box that the donation is for the Hurricane Disaster Relief Fund.

If you have any questions or concerns, please contact me at (212) 678-8916 or at adpollack@jtsa.edu.

Sincerely,
Adam Pollack

Adam Pollack
Coordinator of Community Outreach
Va'ad Gemilut Hasadim
The Jewish Theological Seminary
3080 Broadway
New York, NY 10027
tel. 212-678-8916
fax 212-678-8017

Saturday, September 3, 2005

www.JewishHurricaneRelief.com

The need is urgent! Hurricane Katrina has left hundreds of thousands of people homeless, their homes, their businesses,
all of their belongings have been destroyed... washed away . . .

They need all the help we can give them,
as fast as we can possibly get it to them,
to rebuild their lives, to restore their homes, their businesses, their communities!

The crisis is severe. We are doing everything we can to alleviate the stress
and dislocation. Join hands with Chabad Lubavitch. Show you care! Send your generous contribution to the Jewish Hurricane Relief Fund now and let's work together towards the rebuilding and recovery of families affected by Hurricane Katrina.

Mail checks to:
Jewish Hurricane Relief Fund

770 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, NY 11213
www.JewishHurricaneRelief.com - 718-744-4000

Friday, September 2, 2005

Israel Show Support for Hurricane Victems

The Government of Israel Offers its Condolences and Assistance to Those
Affected by Hurricane Katrina

For Immediate Release

September 01, 2005


The hearts and prayers of Israel’s people are with the people of the United States, and the many millions who are suffering in the regional devastation resulting from hurricane Katrina.

Israel is prepared to assist in any way it can to alleviate the suffering and will make available all necessary resources to this end. We are now in discussions within our own government and with US officials at local and national levels to see how best we can provide assistance. America has always been there for Israel and Israel is there for America.

Israel’s Foreign Minister Silvan Shalom sent a letter to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice expressing our condolences and offering assistance. Ambassador Daniel Ayalon discussed the situation with Under Secretary Nick Burns, Homeland Security and FEMA officials and is reaching out to Members of Congress, governors and other local government officials.



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The background image on this page is a Hebrew translation of the verse from Bob Dylan's song  It's Alright, Ma (I'm Only Bleeding), from which the title of this blog is taken. Translation courtesy of Yoram Aharon of Hod-HaSharon's page--found via YudelLine-- which has many Dylan lyrics in Hebrew.