Bass Misses the Pass
Marc Boone Fitzerman Marc Boone Fitzerman

Bass Misses the Pass

When Joe Biden was interviewing candidates for vice president, I crossed my fingers for Karen Bass. She was everything I wanted a vice president to be: sturdy, reliable, competent, and upright. I knew very little about her except for basic demographics and that she was a well-liked California politician. Biden didn’t need to appeal to Californians, but I thought that Bass would appeal to the rest of us, and take Black women office-holders to the next level in the hierarchy.

Read More
No, You Keep Him.
Marc Boone Fitzerman Marc Boone Fitzerman

No, You Keep Him.

Elon Musk was once a Democrat—as Democratic a voter as you or me. He thought that the party was the future of the country, and that it served his entrepreneurial purposes. Then he decided that Democrats were “unkind,” and he opted to take his business elsewhere. All of this happened in 2022 when President Biden supposedly disrespected his vehicles.

Read More
Anti-Zionism and Anti-Semitism
Marc Boone Fitzerman Marc Boone Fitzerman

Anti-Zionism and Anti-Semitism

When I was a suburban Jewish child in the sixties, Zionism was a simple construct. It was my Uncle Shlomo, my grandmother’s brother, redeeming the land near the Sea of Galilee. He was among the founders of Degania Bet, the second kibbutz in the Land of Israel, an agricultural paradise and visionary experiment in communal living and Jewish collectivism. He married Chaika Shainvexler, my favorite great-aunt who was everything that my grandmother was not: kind, soft-spoken, generous, and enfolding. She seemed to live entirely without grievance.

Read More
Obama Scores Small
Marc Boone Fitzerman Marc Boone Fitzerman

Obama Scores Small

I’ve been complaining this spring about Democratic politicians who have retreated into a kind of political quietism, choosing the wrong battles, or curling up like kittens. Senator Schumer is a perfect example. What remains of the Democratic leader of the Senate cannot cobble together a strategy of opposition.

Read More
Gaza
Marc Boone Fitzerman Marc Boone Fitzerman

Gaza

A beloved friend, a leader in our community, is a committed servant of the Jewish people. She has worked in Jewish fundraising for decades and raised millions of dollars for every imaginable purpose. If you’ve got a job that needs doing yesterday, there is one person, at least, who can deliver the goods. Build an agency? Run a campaign? She is a sparkling combination of talent and will.

Read More
New Sheriff in Town; He Hates the Courts
Marc Boone Fitzerman Marc Boone Fitzerman

New Sheriff in Town; He Hates the Courts

Every so often, I wonder who’s worse: Sauron or Voldemort? Trump or Vance?

Usually, it’s no contest at all. Our president has now humiliated two heads of state, exposing both to televised debasement. He has turned the White House into a cesspool of grift, using his office to cash in on bitcoin, handing out golden watches as rewards.

Read More
Review: “Kidnapped”
Marc Boone Fitzerman Marc Boone Fitzerman

Review: “Kidnapped”

“Kidnapped” will be featured on Thursday, June 12 at the monthly Synagogue film discussion, Blatt + Blue. The film is easy to find on Amazon Prime. Please join us at 7:00 on Zoom. The access code is 918 583 7121. This review may be helpful in setting the stage.

New popes tend to be met with enthusiasm, but when Jews describe the history of the papacy, the story is vastly more complicated and problematic.

Read More
Coded for Failure
Marc Boone Fitzerman Marc Boone Fitzerman

Coded for Failure

The first thing I do when I get up in the morning is check if there are new signs of damage. Agencies dismantled. Treaties suspended. Colleges brought to their knees by defunding. Just today the Administration announced that it was taking another look at Biden-era offenses. It wants to know about that bag of cocaine that someone once planted in the Biden White House.

Read More
The Rabbis Went Crazy
Marc Boone Fitzerman Marc Boone Fitzerman

The Rabbis Went Crazy

I keep writing to all of you about Yeshiva University, a place that you probably never heard of before. It’s my personal contribution to inside baseball, where you go to the place behind the plate and see how a certain Jewish game is played. Not the most important game in the world, but one that reveals the behavior of a team that may never have intruded on your consciousness before.

Read More
The Wall of Separation Stands. Barely.
Marc Boone Fitzerman Marc Boone Fitzerman

The Wall of Separation Stands. Barely.

Wherever you live, you’ve probably been thinking about Oklahoma. That’s because we just dodged a bullet. After years of legal challenge and counter-challenge, the case of St. Isidore has finally been decided: there will be no state funds for Catholic charter schools. Not here in Oklahoma and, presumably, not anywhere. That sound you hear is a great sigh of relief.

Read More
Birthright Citizenship and Alice Blue
Marc Boone Fitzerman Marc Boone Fitzerman

Birthright Citizenship and Alice Blue

Rose and Daniel Blue are our family heroes. They graduated from the Holocaust in 1945 and were liberated from Bergen Belsen on April 12. For several years, they waited in Germany for the ashes of millions of Jews to settle, while the Allies decided who would go where. My father-in-law traded on the postwar black market and honed a masterful talent for practicality and survival. My mother-in-law trained as a dental technician, fabricating bridges and full-blown dentures. She gave birth to their first-born child, Sima, in the explosion of baby-making that followed the war.

Read More
Sarah and Yaron
Marc Boone Fitzerman Marc Boone Fitzerman

Sarah and Yaron

I’ve spent the morning along with many of you, thinking about last night’s assassination in Washington. The Lischinskys and the Milgrims are now mourning their children, and we have been cast into sorrow for them and their families, for the death of hope, for the death of possibility.

Read More
Bring Us the Body
Marc Boone Fitzerman Marc Boone Fitzerman

Bring Us the Body

There’s something thrillingly concrete about the term.

Habeas corpus means “you should have the body.” Imagine a crowd of restive citizens. One of their number has been nabbed by the authorities and dumped into a spider hole by an unscrupulous ruler. No due process. No proceedings of the court. It’s the nightmare prospect of extrajudicial punishment, in this case permanent disappearance.

Read More
The Wrong King
Marc Boone Fitzerman Marc Boone Fitzerman

The Wrong King

I was an English major, so I follow the royals. No, I really follow the British royals. That means I’m interested in everything about them, from the dynamics of the relationship between Princess Charlotte and Prince George, to the number of ceremonies on the Princess Royal’s calendar. I cared about the restoration of Windsor Castle and I certainly monitored the family photographs that Elizabeth displayed during her Christmas broadcast.

Read More
Dying Before Our Very Eyes
Marc Boone Fitzerman Marc Boone Fitzerman

Dying Before Our Very Eyes

Along with many of you, I’ve been trying to think Big Thoughts, like democracy, freedom, and the American Way. That, and the cluster of awful alternatives: tyranny, authoritarianism, dictatorship, oligarchy, and the newly conceivable rule-by-junta. I have Timothy Snyder on a human tracker as he disengages from Yale and moves to Canada. Just in case, I want to know where to find him when the helicopters train their weapons on the crowd. Paranoid? Yes. Inconceivable? No.

Read More
Please God, No.
Marc Boone Fitzerman Marc Boone Fitzerman

Please God, No.

Let me know if I’m getting on your nerves.

It’s probably OK that Kamala Harris made another appearance last week in Manhattan. She was in New York for the gala at the Met, celebrating an exhibit on Black Dandyism at the Costume Institute. It’s a fantastically interesting look at a culture that hasn’t gotten nearly enough attention, from zoot suits to kente cloth to jeweled grilles for rap stars. I’ve tried to follow it closely online and hope to see it this summer in person. I think It will bump out our shared sense of Black America and display a boldness I can’t even imagine.

Read More
Franciscus
Marc Boone Fitzerman Marc Boone Fitzerman

Franciscus

My interest in typography predates my rabbinate. Long before I came to my first pulpit, I messed around with letterforms and typefaces, as if I were preparing for a career as a typesetter. Something tells me I would have been happy in that field. Some of my best experiences—the most stimulating and lively—have been in filling blank surfaces with the ant tracks of text, Many type nerds would say the same.

Read More
America Loves a Parade. Not.
Marc Boone Fitzerman Marc Boone Fitzerman

America Loves a Parade. Not.

Parades have a way of going off course. The most famous episode took place in Philadelphia during the culminating months of WW I. The government still needed to sell bonds for the war effort, and somebody thought that a parade would be the ticket. Two hundred thousand hapless citizens gathered on Broad Street to watch the spectacle of newly minted biplanes, soldiers, and Sousa bands.

Read More
Prayer for Immigrants
Marc Boone Fitzerman Marc Boone Fitzerman

Prayer for Immigrants

If you are free tonight, Tuesday, May 13, I urge you to join us at All Souls Unitarian Church at 29th and Peoria, at 7:00 p.m. Many members of the faith community of Tulsa will be gathering to stand against wholesale deportation and protesting the unjust acts of this administration, especially the threat to rescind habeas corpus. Many millions of lives would be affected by this planned horror. Please help us speak with force. I will be delivering the following as an official speaker:

Read More
Ethel Boone Fitzerman
Marc Boone Fitzerman Marc Boone Fitzerman

Ethel Boone Fitzerman

I’m a little bit late for Mother’s Day weekend, but Ethel would have most certainly forgiven me. She forgave me everything, along with my brother. We did plenty of things that caused her irritation, but on the most basic level we could do no wrong. She had a gift for rapid processing and clean forigveness.. She was honest, direct, and named her disappointments. It meant that we always knew what irked her, but it was over the moment she said it.

Read More