B.W. COOK -- The Crowd
“Our distinguished guest speaker this evening might have had her name
right along side some of the formidable women of American history. There
was Bess, Nancy, Jackie and Tess, Barbara . . . Lady Bird and . . .
Hadassah,” said Rabbi Mark Miller, spiritual leader of Temple Bat Yahm,
Newport Beach.
The crowd roared, then applauded as Miller introduced Hadassah
Lieberman to an audience of some 500 guests who had come to Temple Bat
Yahm on Sunday evening to witness an address by the wife of former
vice-presidential candidate Joseph Lieberman. The candidate’s wife has
joined the ranks of the national speakers circuit since the Democratic
defeat last fall.
Lieberman brings a most unique insider’s perspective on the woman’s
role in the campaign trail. That perspective is further defined by the
fact that Lieberman is the first Jewish woman (Orthodox Jewish woman to
be exact) to travel the 50 states in support of her husband and a
national ticket.
Wearing a tailored navy blue silk suit with a scoop-neck collar, a
triple strand of pearls and a skirt hemmed above the knee, the blond and
personable Lieberman, whose cultural, ethnic and religious background is
steeped in antiquity, was very clearly a modern person who has managed to
stick with her Orthodox principles in a contemporary world that does not,
in large part, take time off for the Sabbath.
Hadassah and Joey -- that’s how she refers to her husband Joe, a
Democrat who is presently serving as a Connecticut senator -- and their
family managed to respect the Sabbath for months on the campaign trail to
the White House, even surrounded by Secret Service in the synagogue.
This, however, was the not the message of this immigrant woman, whose
parents were Holocaust survivors.
“Yes, we did open doors all across America where people had either no
contact or no understanding of the Jewish religion,” said Lieberman. “Our
purpose on the Democratic ticket was not to teach the nation about
Judaism, but rather to represent a broad spectrum of values meant to
enhance the collective life of the American people.”
“Joe and I come from a state with less than 3% Jews in the population.
Our Jewishness makes us who we are,” she said, “and from this perspective
comes a range of Jewish experience, with perhaps the most significant
element being a real grasp of the idea and the practice of tolerance.”
It was from this platform of teaching and living tolerance that
Lieberman made her most passionate point, referring to the Jewish concept
of “tikun olam,” which translated from the Hebrew means “heal the world.”
“It is our belief that we act on principles of tikun olam. Simply
stated, we ask ourselves if the actions we take will help to heal the
world,” Lieberman said.
The lofty stance has brought both tremendous praise and criticism to
Joe Lieberman and his wife.
“People would tell me on the campaign trail to ask my husband to stop
talking about God,” said Lieberman. “Then they would say ‘God Bless
You.”’
She went on to say that the toughest questions concerning their
religious convictions came from Jewish journalists.
“It is our heritage to question and question and question some more,”
she said responding to an inquiry from Rabbi Miller, who was moderating
the speech and discussion.
Miller’s most pointed question concerned the Jewish vote. Quoting
election statistics, Miller quantified the fact that a large portion of
the national Jewish vote went to George W. Bush. Lieberman responded with
dignity.
“Al Gore and Joe Lieberman won the popular vote in America. They won
the vote based on the principles they stood for and the plans they had
for America. This is what matters, and frankly, this is what makes
America great,” she said. “So many people would come to us on the
campaign trail and share with us their religion. Some would say, ‘We’re
Catholic and we’re voting for you.’ Others would say, ‘We’re this and
we’re that and we’re voting for you.’ And many Jews voted for Gore and
Lieberman too. People that didn’t vote for Gore/Lieberman voted for
Bush/Cheney because that’s where their political ideology took them,
whether they were Jewish or not.”
Following the address at the sanctuary, underwriting patrons of
Lieberman’s appearance in Newport Beach were invited to a reception held
at the elegant Belcourt residence of Charles and Diane Karp. A late
evening coffee and dessert was served for some 100 guests who were seated
in the burnt olive-green, two-story Karp living room.
Surrounded by the magnificent contemporary art of the Karp collection,
guests socialized until Rabbi Miller escorted Hadassah Lieberman into the
living room, sitting with her in front of the fireplace at the center of
the room. The large and formal address suddenly became intimate, with
questions of all varieties directed at the candidate’s wife.
Of the more pressing topics discussed: health care reform, education,
military expenditure, bi-partisan politics in the Bush White House, tax
reform and international relations with China, as well as the the crisis
in the Middle East. Also on the minds of Newport-Mesa citizens was the
topic of Lieberman’s campaign seeking media reform.
The event was produced by Marion Jacobson, attending with her husband,
John Jacobson. In the crowd were Edward and Leslea Miller, Elliot and
Joanne Mercer, Jonathan and Sharyn Grant, Lee and Kathy Berman, Jeff and
Heidi Berkley, William and Michelle Klein, Richard and Lauren Packard,
Jerry and Merry Neitlich, Stan and Marion Robboy, Bob and Carol Warsaw,
Karen Green, Broin and Bonnie Jeannette, Cathy Kroopf, Patty Boyle, Lane
Sherman and Yana Briddle.
* THE CROWD appears Thursdays and Saturdays.
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