Norma Zager
May 19, 2009
“Politics makes strange bedfellows…” Charles Dudley Warner
Recent talks between the Obama and Netanyahu administrations vacillate between irony, humor and extreme pathos. For sheer entertainment value they rank only below Slum Dog Millionaire as a view into an impossible, yet optimistic world. Ah, how the dance of politics changes partners at breakneck speed. At the end of days they will both posture for their respective bases and do exactly as their particular agendas dictate. Besieged daily by new rounds of political misbehavior, untold volumes of disgust with hypocritical failed American Feminism and no response to my constant cries for a Lipstick Revolution throughout the world, I am forced to take my moments of pleasing irony where I find them.
Today my consciousness has lighted on German Chancellor Angela Merkel. I can barely contain my admiration for her incredible similarity to Golda Meir as a woman of integrity, truth speak and nobility.
Ironic indeed when, as a Jew, I have of late found myself experiencing a kinship with a country I was raised to despise.
In a recent Smith Research poll only one in three Israelis believed the U.S. is pro-Israel. Israelis view governments of other European countries even less favorable to Israel than the US. Among those nations, only the government of German Chancellor Angela Merkel was seen as being more pro-Israel (37 percent) than pro-palestinian (21 percent).
Had I ever thought I would be aligned with Germany through a pro-Israel stance, I should have laughed and choked. To think Germany would be regarded more pro-Israel than America, well just cut off my legs and call me Shorty!
A new day has certainly dawned over Berlin and a woman who truly represents the very best of feminism and leadership is guiding a nation. Were the other countries of the world so fortunate, perhaps a more peaceful status may prevail.
It seems to me much the same as the feeling of irony I encountered recently when watching the news, listening to the sad tale of a Chrysler dealer pink slipped out of existence. Can things have gotten so bad I am actually feeling pity for a car dealer? Well, Lord, love a duck!
It is with that same amazement at the absurdity I gaze at the world map and find myself at a loss to explain how Israel has found a valuable ally in, can it be, Germany? Would not the fuehrer be spinning in his grave, if he is actually dead?
It has been interesting to watch the planet spinning backwards at breakneck speed toward a time of pre-medieval thought and behavior. Viewing with horror our current cast of countries with billions of people who would rather die than live in a world they cannot control, could anyone blame me for being astounded at the fact that Germany, once the very Capital of Evil, is now leading the way toward tolerance, balance and sanity?
I am so thankful in these insane times a country exists with the capacity for reason, a deep sense of humanity and a leader who views the world in a clear, concise way; but Germany?
Having lost a grandmother and an aunt in the Holocaust, a trip to Deutschland wasn’t high on my travel list. Yet, now there is a new sense of hope on the horizon: a government that suddenly shines through the darkness of ignorance and evil with a leader that truly gets it.
German pride has, in the past, provided a catalyst for war and bad behavior. As a Jew and a woman, I feel compelled to say for the first time in my life, I believe Germany has more than ample reason to be proud of itself as a nation, a free government and a role model. Perhaps the rest of the world should take some notice and follow the Rhineland’s lead.
I never believed I would ever write those words, yet now that I have, I am thrilled to have done so. If it is meant to be that Israel and Germany shall bond to lead a new League of Rational Nations, I say it is the ultimate testament to forgiveness.
Paul Boese once said. “Forgiveness does not change the past, but it does enlarge the future.”
A future alliance between Israel and Germany is indeed a great source of hope as it is forged from a mountain of pain, suffering and evil. Certainly from such ashes shall arise the largest Phoenix the world has yet to see.
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In the series “Postcards from Israel – Postcards from Home,” Ari Bussel and Norma Zager invite readers throughout the world to join them as they present reports from Israel as seen by two sets of eyes: Bussel’s on the ground, Zager’s counter-point from home. Israel and the United States are inter-related - the two countries we hold dearest to our hearts - and so is this “point - counter-point” presentation that has, since 2008, become part of our lives.
© Postcards from Home, May, 2009
Contact: aribussel@gmail.com
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