First, there’s a Seder in the White House. Then a dog named for a Torah portion?
Given all the hubbub about the Obama’s new dog — a closely guarded secret that somehow was leaked over the weekend — it strikes some of us as more than curious to see the connection between the dog’s new name and the holiday that Jews (and others) are now celebrating.
The official story is that Malia and Sasha named their adorable, black-and-white Portuguese water dog “Bo” after the famous musician Bo Diddley, and because that was their maternal grandfather’s nickname. (The fact that Bo also can be read as B.O., their famous father’s initials, seems to have garnered little notice in the breathless coverage of this major event.)
But learned Jews might also note that “Bo” — which in Hebrew means the command “come” or “go” — is the first word uttered in the Torah portion from the third book of Exodus describing the plagues visited upon Pharoah for refusing to let the Jewish people leave Egypt. And while the portion is usually read in synagogue in January or February, the dramatic story it tells is headlined in the Haggadah that was read at last week’s Seders.
So could there be a connection here — between the Seder held in the White House on Thursday and the naming of the new dog just a few days later?
At least the four-legged pet didn’t arrive a couple of weeks from now. Can you imagine a dog — or anyone else — answering to Tazria-Metzora?
What are your plans for Kislev 5769? People around the world are lighting the candles in a multitude of different ways, but always left to right, others have chosen to show communal solidarity on 28th and 29th Kislev by volunteering at hospitals and soup kitchens.
President Bush celebrated Kislev by flying to Iraq and dodging a pair of shoes. But Brad Cohen, author of the book “Front of the Class” — and de facto spokesman for Tourette’s Syndrome — anchored the White House Hanukkah Reception for him while he was away. Tourette’s is a serious and generally misunderstood syndrome but, in the same way as it’s okay to envy a man’s wheelchair seat at a five-hour march, it would be great to meet the leader of the free world — or her husband — and have carte blanche to say anything you wanted to her.