Just for the record…my friend Edward Alexander for whose judgement and intellect I have the highest regard…must have seen a different film. I went to the premiere with friends and my own litmus test for judging any writing or film about Israel, namely, will it change minds and really counter the bias and anti-Semitism that crowds the debate? This film- a sappy recollection of the Jewish patrimony in ancient Palestine would not alter one single opinion in today’s climate. There was no footage of present day and lively Israel, there was airbrushing of the ancient towns of Palestine peopled by fierce patriots today…yes- I mean the “settlements”….And despite all the good intentions of its protagonists it end on the message by the brilliant and articulate Ruth Wisse that the biggest mistake that Israel made from its independence in 1948 was not to demand respect. Huh? That was the biggest mistake?…Puleez!!!! rsk
At the present historical juncture, when millions of Arabs and hundreds of millions of Muslims awaken each morning thinking of ways to destroy Israel and murder its Jewish inhabitants; when John Kerry doggedly unfurls his best Chamberlain umbrella at the latest charade of nuclear negotiations with Iran’s mullahs; when a White House spokesman declares the president’s “eagerness to restore Iran to the family of nations;” when The New York Times finds ever more ingenious ways to “explain” the Islamist murder of Israelis in Jerusalem (or Jewish schoolchildren and their teacher in Toulouse), and columnists declare in that paper’s magazine that “The Palestinian cause has become the universal litmus of liberal credentials,” or call for “a third intifada,” a documentary film that reminds us of how and why the Jews’ first and second temples were destroyed may provide some assistance in throwing back the concerted attempt to expel Israel from the aforementioned “family of nations” and so destroy the third temple—and almost certainly the last.
Gloria Greenfield’s lavishly illustrated and lucidly narrated account of the relation between the Jewish people and the land of Israel both opens and concludes with the compelling voice and warm presence of Ruth Wisse, who is worth several battalions in the unending war of ideas over the Jewish state. She begins by pointing out that the Jews of the ancient Near East took the view that they were responsible for their fate, were “sent into exile,” ostensibly by the Babylonians but really because of their sins by the Almighty, and would eventually return—as indeed they did. They were unlike Jebusites, Hittites, Girgashites, and Hivites, conquered ancient nations who gave up on their ineffectual national gods.