Latest Shows
Shmuley and Rick in a Public Discussion
Public Discussion between Rabbi Shmuley and Rick Sanchez regarding his firing from CNN after ...
- Date
- Title
- 01/17/11
-
Shmuley and Rick in a Public Discussion
Shmuley and Rick in a Public Discussion
Public Discussion between Rabbi Shmuley and Rick Sanchez regarding his firing from CNN after comments made that were seen as offensive to the Jewish Community… The discussion takes place at the Carlebach Shul In NYC…
Click title to download! - 01/04/11
-
Raising Spiritual Children
Raising Spiritual Children
Discussion between Rabbi Shmuley, rev. Charles Gilmore, and Felicia Stoler at West Side Presbyterian Church in Englewood, NJ.
Click title to download! - 12/06/10
-
Larchmony NY Female Depression and its Cure
Larchmony NY Female Depression and its Cure
Lecture in Larchmont NY
Click title to download! -
View All Podcast Shows
Articles Listing
Wednesday, October 14, 2009
Decline and Fall of the Nobel Peace Prize
By now we’ve all heard the criticisms of President Obama receiving the Nobel Peace Prize just a little too early. But Judaism and Jewish values offer a unique perspective on the controversy that others have missed. Let me explain by first prefacing with my own grave disappointment in the steady decline of a once mighty prize.
I grew up in awe of the Nobel peace prize and its noble recipients. This award was simply amazing, an acknowledgement on the part of our civilization that peace is life’s highest end, fraternity humanity’s greatest goal. I read books on the prize and its recipients. I gave my kids quizzes on the winners and the year in which they received the prize. I went so far as to establish at Oxford University an annual lecture that could only be delivered by winners of the prize. Endowed during the 1990’s by philanthropist Edmund Safra, the lecture was delivered to capacity audiences by such luminaries as Elie Wiesel, winner in 1986, Joseph Rotblat, winner in 1995, Shimon Peres & Yitzhak Rabin, winners in 1994, and most significantly Mikhail Gorbachev, winner in 1990.
I used to wait expectantly for the annual Friday morning in October when the Peace Prize was announced as the culmination of a week-long series of Nobel announcements. And as a young teenager when I dreamed of what significant achievements my life might one day bring, the Nobel Peace Prize was at the top of the list, even ahead of the presidency of the United States (yes, back then I dreamed big).
But what a drag the last few years have been. For me it began when the prize was awarded in 1994 to Yasser Arafat, the godfather of modern terrorism, whose lasting legacy is not lasting peace with Israel but the army of suicide bombers he launched against the Jewish state to dismember pregnant women and disembowel helpless children. That a cold-blooded killer could win the world’s highest award for peace made the prize into a farce. At Oxford I hosted Kaare Kristiansen who bravely resigned from the Nobel Peace committee after it disgraced itself with the award to Arafat. But one bad apple, I said to myself, could not ruin a prize so majestic in its ambition and scope. But then more strange choices followed. Strange, not because its recipients lacked virtue but because their achievements seemed to have little connection to peace. The whole purpose of the prize is to promote harmony as humanity’s most noble objective. So what did the prize have to do with Al Gore and climate change, important as the issue is? And why award the prize to Jimmy Carter whose legacy is not peace between nations but an almost irrational penchant for championiong strong-arm dictators at the expense of their oppressed people, including praise he offered for such international criminals as Kim Il Sung, Marshal Joseph Tito, Nicolas Ceausescu, and Raul Cédras. Indeed, after the prize was awarded to Muhammad ElBaradei in 2005 it seemed it had simply become a political tool by which to bash the Bush administration, bringing the prize into further discredit.
In light of these developments last Thursday, the night before the prize’s announcement, I told a friend that I bet President Obama would receive it. My friend was incredulous. ‘But he hasn’t done anything.’ ‘Yes,’ I said, ‘but he’s not President Bush.’ To be honest, even as I said it I did not completely believe it. Surely the members of the Nobel Peace Committee would not cause Alfred Nobel to turn in his grave by destroying his prize just because they loathed George Bush.
But the next morning the unthinkable happened. A man in office only eight months who has not resolved a single global conflict and who has yet to disarm the Iranian nuclear menace or confront North Korea’s saber rattling won the prize.
Don’t get me wrong. I am not an Obama basher. Our President is a man or rare eloquence and oratorical gifts. I have supported him strongly through the good he has done and criticized him for the missteps he has taken. But come on. Peace is not simply a great speech and universal harmony is not merely a collection of words.
And here is where Jewish values comes into play. Because perhaps the greatest teaching Judaism has to offer the world is that action is always more important than even the most noble intention. Words can never be a substitute for deed.
Martin Luther King was arguably the finest American orator of the twentieth century. But he won the 1964 prize for his marches rather than his speeches. It was his courageous action throughout the south, defying attack dogs, powerful water hoses, and determined assassins, that earned him the prize. It was the change he brought in ending segregation and Jim Crow that made him a global hero of peace. Indeed, the speech King gave in accepting the prize in Oslo is considered to have been of his most lackluster addresses, appropriate perhaps in highlighting that it was what he did rather than what he said that really mattered.
And this is where the real guilt of the Nobel Committee lies. They have mistakenly and destructively conveyed the message that what a man or woman says is as important as what they do. And while we need eloquent words to motivate us and make us march, until those feet start astompin’ the speech remains empty rhetoric.
No doubt had our President been given some time he might have earned the prize outright based on real achievements confronting Iran, shoring up Afghanistan’s fledgling democracy, and perhaps even disarming North Korea. He might have earned the prize by bringing an end to some of the thirty-odd civil wars in Africa where so much of his family still lives. But this Prize will now be seen for what it has sadly become, a political statement against Republican governments of the United States.
I am not a Republican and I am not a Democrat, preferring to utilize my G-d-given intelligence to choose my position on the issues. But my value system comes from Judaism which has always promoted peace as life’s supreme goal and positive action as the very barometer by which character is built. Indeed our religion says that G-d’s very name is Shalom, peace.
The President should of course accept the prize. It is not his fault that the committee awarded him something he has not yet earned. But it would be noble and worthy if he utilized his speech in Oslo to tell the world that when it comes to people dying and cities being pulverized words are never enough. Condemning the darkness will never supplant saving the dying and repudiating the aggressors will never replace protecting the innocent.
Rabbi Shmuley Boteach, who won the London Times Preacher of the Year Competition days before the Millennium, is the founder of ‘This World: The Values Network,’ has just published two new books: ‘The Blessing of Enough’ and ‘The Michael Jackson Tapes.’ http://www.shmuley.com
Comments
-
Wednesday, October 14, 2009
Frank in south Jersey
Bravo, Rabbi.
-
Thursday, October 15, 2009
Grizzly Bear Mom
To nominate a man who had only been in office two weeks reduced the meaning of the award, unless it was meant as a nose thumb to former President Bush.
-
Saturday, October 31, 2009
Britt
This was a fantastic article.
-
Tuesday, November 03, 2009
muchogroucho
Not so fast there buddy! You ARE bashing Obama by putting him in the same category with Afarfat, Carter and the rest. Listen with an unfiltering ear and you will hear an eloquent voice of reason and change. Did Martin Luther King accomplish all that he set out to do in his lifetime? No!! But Obama is the fulfillment of the King promise and you are cheapening it with your unfair remarks.
Michael “Mickey” Cohen
http://www.muchogroucho.com
NYC -
Saturday, November 07, 2009
Christie311
I agree Rabbi! It made it all seem like a joke…
-
Saturday, November 07, 2009
muchogroucho
Its amazing - we finally have a President that actually cares about the people and he gets bashed by right wing loonies like you people posting these comments. What did Bush do in 8 years except fool us into war, get us into a depression and cut taxes for the most wealthy. So far Obama is revising the health care system (where we are victims of the whims of the Ins cos), revised the law re: credit card companies forcing them to give at least 45 days notice before ripping us off with “whimsical” rates, revised the benefits for the veterans (who were duped into Iraq) - no- I think you should give Bush the by king the nobel peace prize. No, actually give it to Cheney and his Halliburton cronies.
muchogroucho
nyc -
Tuesday, November 10, 2009
Grizzly Bear Mom
Smuley is not a right winger. Additionally expressing truth about President Obama winning a Nobel Peace Prize with two weeks in office is not bashing. As a federal employee who knows how we waste tax payers money, the additional government control of our health plan dollars scares me. I am not aware of any veterans’ benefits Obama revised.
-
Thursday, June 09, 2011
jay
online shoe store
online shoe stores
shoe stores online
shop shoes online
shoe shopping online
christian louboutin online
christian louboutin online store
louboutin online
christian louboutin online shop
discount shoes online -
Tuesday, June 21, 2011
louisvuittonreplicaluggageuk
Your woman louis vuitton seemed to be louis vuitton bags not too long ago louis vuitton handbags observed coming louis vuitton outlet to your Los Angeles louis vuitton purses flight terminal louis vuitton wallets having two Lv louis vuitton luggages carriers, one louis vuitton replica particular becoming lv bags your attainable lv bags look-alike and lv purse the some other lv handbags a Montsouris GM pack. Surprisingly,
lv monogram while Reid shed louis vuitton sale the buckskin drawstring louis vuitton store uk of which shuts louis vuitton online the highest component lv bags sale of a carrier, the cheap louis vuitton lady exchanged louis vuitton speedy that with a louis vuitton canvas grubby light tight! louis vuitton monogram Thinking about the louis vuitton monogram canvas bag itself is louis vuitton damier canvas true of through louis vuitton vernis $500, you may fake louis vuitton consider the lady louis vuitton belts meet the expense louis vuitton replica purse of the actual louis vuitton replica handbags substitute synthetic leather louis vuitton replica bags string you can find louis vuitton replica luggage at Louis Vuitton for louis vuitton replica belts just $20.Just louis vuitton replica sunglasses after attaining louis vuitton replica wallet consideration when ‘Bunny.fvgbf -
Sunday, July 03, 2011
huchunhua
louis vuitton Outlet always has a good reputation and good credit, and our louis vuitton Store is committed to providing customers with high quality louis vuitton handbags. Such as the louis vuitton handbags you can see in this website, which is designed with the latest fashion elements, looks very stylish. Moreover, you will find the price is fairly favorable. So we are confident that such a great Coach Bag will catch your eye. In our louis vuitton handbags Outlet, we also offer various kinds of louis vuitton Outlet which are all in top quality guarantee and affordable price. Wearing these luxury Caoch Jewelry will make look more charming. If you really like them, hurry up to choose and buy!

To comment, please login or complete the free registration.