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As far as I know (perhaps you can inform me otherwise), the only current native speakers of Aramaic live in a few villages in Southern Syria.
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The modern spoken language certainly resembles Hebrew (although it has been heavily "infected" by arabic).
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There can be no question about the Italianate Latin ("faciam" should, for example, be "fak-iam", not "fatch-iam" ) or the lack of any Greek at all!
Thank you for your response, Hem. It was enlightening.Quote:
Mel Gibson himself has said that PhD's do not know more than he does about his faith and that's certainly true. However, he does not know more than them about the history and issues of the 1st century. You can't ignore decades of research and then call you film historical IMHO. Scholarly works are vetted by their peers and religious works are debated among representatives of the different faiths and biases are thus revealed.
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On the issue of anti-semitism, whether you see it or not seems heavily skewed by your religion.
Time flies by when the Devil drives.
It's not the pace of life that concerns me, it's the sudden stop at the end.
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I have no religion and I didn't see any anti-Semitism, so I think that part of your arguement doesn't hold up.
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www.nytimes.com/2004/02/2...r=USERLAND
(Mr. Gibson's use of Latin, by the way, is deemed a blunder by experts. He'd have done better with Greek, which was widely spoken in Jesus' day. "No one in the Mideast spoke Latin," Rabbi Geller said. In other words, don't expect every scholar to walk away from "Passion" saying, "Si fractum non sit, noli id reficere" - "if it ain't broke, don't fix it." )
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I have no religion and I didn't see any anti-Semitism, so I think that part of your arguement doesn't hold up.
True which is why we are debating it. Scholarship is not the absolute truth but neither is Mr Gibson's movie. However, scholars have spent more time studying and examining the issues than Mr Gibson who returned to his faith in the 1980's. Consequently, I'm willing to put more weight to what they say. Other's mileage may vary. In any case, hisotircal accuracy is a factor worth considering when this film is discussed as is the anti-semitism issue. Some people see it and some people don't but I do see it heavily skewed by your religion (or lack there of). It's possible that Christians and non-Jews can be less sensitive to anti-semitic images such as straight people can be less sensitive to homophobic images. My statments are qualified on purpose to show that it is possible rather than absolute fact. I wish that the movie "The Passion of Christ" had been more qualified in it's statements. Passion represents Mr Gibson's view of the gospels. His view is shared by many but not everyone to include the Catholic Church (since Vatican 2), theologians and many non-Christians.Quote:
The issues and history of ANY century is always debatable.
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I still see dead lesbian cliches
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By WILLIAM SAFIRE
SHINGTON — The word "passion" is rooted in the Latin for "suffer." Mel Gibson's movie about the torture and agony of the final hours of Jesus is the bloodiest, most brutal example of sustained sadism ever presented on the screen.
Because the director's wallowing in gore finds an excuse in a religious purpose — to show how horribly Jesus suffered for humanity's sins — the bar against film violence has been radically lowered. Movie mayhem, long resisted by parents, has found its loophole; others in Hollywood will now find ways to top Gibson's blockbuster, to cater to voyeurs of violence and thereby to make bloodshed banal.
What are the dramatic purposes of this depiction of cruelty and pain? First, shock; the audience I sat in gasped at the first tearing of flesh. Next, pity at the sight of prolonged suffering. And finally, outrage: who was responsible for this cruel humiliation? What villain deserves to be punished?
Not Pontius Pilate, the Roman in charge; he and his kindly wife are sympathetic characters. Nor is King Herod shown to be at fault.
The villains at whom the audience's outrage is directed are the actors playing bloodthirsty rabbis and their rabid Jewish followers. This is the essence of the medieval "passion play," preserved in pre-Hitler Germany at Oberammergau, a source of the hatred of all Jews as "Christ killers."
Much of the hatred is based on a line in the Gospel of St. Matthew, after the Roman governor washes his hands of responsibility for ordering the death of Jesus, when the crowd cries, "His blood be on us, and on our children."
Though unreported in the Gospels of Mark, Luke or John, that line in Matthew — embraced with furious glee by anti-Semites through the ages — is right there in the New Testament. Gibson and his screenwriter didn't make it up, nor did they misrepresent the apostle's account of the Roman governor's queasiness at the injustice.
But biblical times are not these times. This inflammatory line in Matthew — and the millenniums of persecution, scapegoating and ultimately mass murder that flowed partly from its malign repetition — was finally addressed by the Catholic Church in the decades after the defeat of Naziism.
In 1965's historic Second Vatican Council, during the papacy of Paul VI, the church decided that while some Jewish leaders and their followers had pressed for the death of Jesus, "still, what happened in his passion cannot be charged against all Jews, without distinction, then alive, nor against the Jews of today."
That was a sea change in the doctrinal interpretation of the Gospels, and the beginning of major interfaith progress.
However, a group of Catholics rejects that and other holdings of Vatican II. Mr. Gibson is reportedly aligned with that reactionary clique. (So is his father, an outspoken Holocaust-denier, but the son warns interviewers not to go there. I agree; the latest generation should not be held responsible for the sins of the fathers.)
In the skillful publicity run-up to the release of the movie, Gibson's agents said he agreed to remove that ancient self-curse from the screenplay. It's not in the subtitles I saw the other night, though it may still be in the Aramaic audio, in which case it will surely be translated in the versions overseas.
And there's the rub. At a moment when a wave of anti-Semitic violence is sweeping Europe and the Middle East, is religion well served by updating the Jew-baiting passion plays of Oberammergau on DVD? Is art served by presenting the ancient divisiveness in blood-streaming media to the widest audiences in the history of drama?
Matthew in 10:34 quotes Jesus uncharacteristically telling his apostles: "Think not that I am come to send peace on earth: I came not to send peace, but a sword." You don't see that on Christmas cards and it's not in this film, but those words can be reinterpreted — read today to mean that inner peace comes only after moral struggle.
The richness of Scripture is in its openness to interpretation answering humanity's current spiritual needs. That's where Gibson's medieval version of the suffering of Jesus, reveling in savagery to provoke outrage and cast blame, fails Christian and Jew today.
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I still see dead lesbian cliches
Check the link for the rest of it. I want his crystal ball tuned into lottery numbers.Quote:
By Richard Goldstein
Blood, guts, and a happy ending. No wonder The Passion of the Christ is a showbiz sensation.
Mel Gibson's messianic meller, which opens today after more free media than Janet Jackson got, and a marketing campaign that could make Harvey Weinstein weep, may rake in $100 million—not to mention the skim from souvenir mugs, coffee-table books, prayer-reminder cards, and pewter spike pendants. How did a film described as an "anti-date movie" generate such buzz? The answer has everything to do with Gibson's canny use of Hollywood hype techniques.
First, stir the shit. Gibson did this by fanning the fires kindled by Jews (whose fears were well founded, judging from leaked copies of the script). He made outrageous comments on the order of, "Secular Judaism wants to blame the Holocaust on the Catholic Church." He allowed that he'd cut a scene in which the head Jewish priest cries, "His blood be on us and on our children," because, "Man, if I included that in there, they'd be coming after me at my house, they'd come kill me." Guess who they are?
Next, build a base. This Gibson did by flogging the film to a network of fundamentalist churches. Gibson's company, Icon, worked this sale like the pros they are, sending their man out on the road, facilitating block purchases of tickets, and soliciting testimonials from A-list televangelists, even as they kept the film from the eyes of potential critics. But the mass media were wary until The Passion's distributor got involved. In Bob Berney, president of Newmarket, Gibson had chosen a partner with a track record in pitching edgy films about subjects like pedophilia (Happiness) and lesbian serial killers (Monster).
For this project, Newmarket tapped into the current passion for backstory revelations. Soon we were hearing about the miracle (involving a lightning strike) that had occurred on the set. It was taken as an auspicious sign that the actor playing Jesus, Jim Caviezel, had the same initials as the Savior. These tantalizing tidbits were gravied up with a human-interest angle that centered on Gibson's struggle against the classic demons of drink and drugs. By the time he appeared on Primetime last week, the narrative of the sinner redeemed was at the heart of Gibson's conversation with Diane Sawyer. Her questions were as soft and fleecy as the Lamb of God.
Is Gibson an anti-Semite, she asked. "It's a sin," he replied. "There's encyclicals on it." Never mind that Gibson's breakaway Catholic sect rejects the most recent of these pronouncements, along with every other Vatican declaration since the 1960s. Never mind that Gibson's father thinks the Holocaust is mostly fiction and that the millions of Jews who lived in Poland before Hitler's rise merely migrated to places like Brooklyn. Under Sawyer's sympathetic gaze, Mel presented himself as a loving son who wouldn't allow his enemies to "drive a wedge" between his dad and himself. Karl Rove couldn't have programmed him better.
What accounts for Sawyer's gentle touch? The gut says: positioning. A network that appeals to the demographic taking shape around The Passion can make quite a killing, and to that end ABC will soon broadcast a film about Judas. Ads for this event appeared during the Gibson interview, which was watched by 17 million people, a larger share than even Michael Jackson's sit-down on 60 Minutes. Soon nearly every network was running a low-budget version of the Gospel, all golden light and cathedral chords. Here's a prophecy: You'll see all sorts of faith-based pageants as the media compete for this audience and shrink from its wrath. Their eye is on the sparrow of the bottom line.
The real story here is the rise of a newly mobilized market and the crossing over of its values. In that respect, Gibson has done what Pat Robertson could only dream about, by enlisting the very techniques his co-religionists object to in Hollywood films. Among these aesthetic values, none is more commercial—and less faithful to the Gospel—than ultra-violence. You won't find epistles dwelling on the finer points of human brutality in the New Testament, but you will find such lessons in the cinema of Brian De Palma. When you see Jesus soaked in gore, think of the blood-bucket scene in Carrie.
Never mind those Caravaggio paintings that inspired Gibson. The real model for this film is Quentin Tarantino's Reservoir Dogs, with its relentless depiction of torture, along with every slasher movie that cloaks its intentions in a higher message. Violence has become the measure of verisimilitude. If it's bloody, it looks real. This illusion allows us to enjoy what violence does provide: pleasure. If it weren't so exhilarating, it wouldn't be so popular.
Many people who would never attend a Bible movie will flock to this one because they get to see a man tormented by men as others look lustfully on. The faithful will sublimate this sadomasochistic sensation into religious ecstasy and find it profoundly moving. Either way, Gibson wins. He's made a spectacle of joy in pain—the essence of boffo.
Every generation gets the Passion it deserves. Back in the '50s, anyone could take comfort in Gospel spectacles, with their Roman finery and celestial finales. It didn't matter whether you referred to Jesus as he or He. These old films enrage Gibson ostensibly because they were bland but actually because they crudely reflect the ethic of Christian humanism, tempered by firsthand knowledge of the Holocaust. That was then and this is now. Gibson lives in a world, and works in an industry, where Jews are not afraid to be powerful and profane. It is hard for him not to see these Jews as the linchpin of a culture that tempts him, rewards him, and alienates him from his father's convictions. So it has been for millions of Christians in the centuries since the rise of secular society—and millions of Jews have died as a result.
No wonder Gibson rails against scholars who try to place the Gospel in a historical context. That's the sort of thing his father would call a plot by Freemasons and Jews. When you do embed the New Testament in its time, you discover that the earliest books, composed about a generation after the Crucifixion, portray Jesus as beloved by the Jewish masses but reviled by their priests. It's only in the later Gospels, written by men who knew what the Romans had done to the Second Temple, and could do to them, that Pilate takes on an almost benign air and the Jews are affiliated with Satan. These late books are the primary source of Gibson's rendition, which reflects the traditional—and now repudiated—teaching of the Catholic Church.
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I still see dead lesbian cliches
Whether its a power for good or ill is what is being debated and it's an argument worth having IMHO. Time will tell what the impact of this film is. I hope it will be for good but fear that it may only make things worse.Quote:
I will say only that within its narrow confines, The Passion is a work of shattering immediacy and devastating power.
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I still see dead lesbian cliches
I knew I had seen that article somewhere. I've creditted you in the post. _____________________
I still see dead lesbian cliches
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OTOH most people can agree that movies like "Quo Vadis", "Ben Hur", "The greatest Story Ever Told" and "King of Kings" are inspiring even if they are not Christians or religious.
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How can you love God who you cannot see when you hate your brother who you do see.

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As for the language, I´m totally clueless when it comes to Aramaic, but I´ll take Hemiola´s word for it, I´ve no reason to doubt her and at least someone else agrees with her about the use of Latin in this movie
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I think Sam´s point was whether you see the anti-semitism or not might (partly) depend on your point of view, and that point of view is also influenced by whether you´re a Christian, an atheist, a Jew, a Jewish atheist etc. etc. It seems logical that Jews would look at that particular aspect of this movie with a very critical eye when non Jews would not.
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Despite not seeing the movie, I vehemently disagree with this response to Sam's observation. A non-Jewish person will not be NEARLY as sensitive to stereotypical Jewish references (i.e. offensive) in any type of artistic medium as would a Jewish person.
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Images carry meaning. Messages can be subversive. And one who has not been oppressed by such stereotypes is often not in the best position to call them out (or say they don't exist).
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Scholarship is not the absolute truth but neither is Mr Gibson's movie.
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I do not see this movie as antisemitic,however it can be used by antisemites.
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How can you love God who you cannot see when you hate your brother who you do see.
Time flies by when the Devil drives.
It's not the pace of life that concerns me, it's the sudden stop at the end.
I knew I recognized the quote and now I know why. Can you give me the scripture #?
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Those who say, "I love God," and hate their brothers or sisters, are liars; for those who do not love a brother or sister whom they have seen, cannot love God whom they have not seen.
Time flies by when the Devil drives.
It's not the pace of life that concerns me, it's the sudden stop at the end.
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So is my anti-meter out of whack?
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"Hard work often pays off after time but laziness always pays off now!"
Gatito Grande: Agreed. Sorry again for the belated credit on the Village Voice article.Quote:
By: Jeff Milgram , Staff Writer, 03/02/2004
Mel Gibson's controversial movie "The Passion of the Christ" should not be allowed to damage the 40 years of good relations between Christians and Jews, participants at an interfaith program hosted by Trinity Church said Sunday.
"People of good conscience should stand together against anti-Semitism," said the Rev. Robert Moore of Princeton, executive director of the Coalition for Peace Action and the pastor of United Church of Christ congregations in New Brunswick and East Brunswick.
The film, which portrays the last 12 hours of Jesus' life, has been criticized for its violence and for its portrayal of the role of first century Jews in Jesus' betrayal, scourging and crucifixion. Jewish groups fear the film will inspire anti-Semitism by reviving the charge of deicide.
The Rev. Moore said significant progress in interfaith relations has been made since Vatican II, the Roman Catholic conference that, in part, said Jews, both in the first century and today, bear no responsibility in Jesus' death.
Since then, Jews and Christians have made great strides in interfaith understanding, he said.
"Jews and Christians have become good friends, neighbors and colleagues," said Allyson Gall, director of the New Jersey Chapter of the American Jewish Committee, which sponsored the program along with the Princeton Clergy Association. "Then along comes a movie like this one and we Jews and Christians want to make sure we don't turn back the clock."
Ms. Gall saw the film with a friend, a Roman Catholic monsignor. "The first thing he said was, 'It's pure Hollywood,'" Mrs. Gall said.
She said passion plays have historically sparked intense anti-Jewish violence. Ms. Gall said passion plays' use of visual images such as blond, blue-eyed actors playing Jesus, Mary and 11 of the apostles, with a dark, hooked-nose actor playing Judas, perpetuates anti-Semitic stereotypes. "No words are needed to get across a message. Visuals are enough," she said.
The movie opened Wednesday — Ash Wednesday — and comes at a time when Jews are feeling especially vulnerable because of an upsurge in anti-Semitic rhetoric and violence in Europe and the Middle East, Ms. Gall noted. And, she said, some Christians don't always understand this uneasiness.
"They say, 'If you only kept quiet it all would have gone away. It's a film in Aramaic and Latin — no one would have seen it,'" Ms. Gall said.
Largely, the unease is a matter of numbers. Jews make up only 2 percent of the American population and out of a world population of 6.3 billion, Jews number only 13 million.
But also there is an upsurge in anti-Semitism.
"When Jewish students in Paris are advised by their leaders not to wear Jewish stars and kipot (skullcaps), we know there is a problem," Ms. Gall said. "We are extremely uneasy about the virulent teachings about Jews that are coming out in the Arab world. Who would have thought that 'Mein Kampf' and the forgery 'The Protocols of the Elders of Zion' would be bestsellers in the Arab world?"
She said Mr. Gibson, a traditional Catholic who rejects the teaching of Vatican II, rejected an offer of advice from Catholic theologians and the movie is "full of historical inaccuracies," making the Roman procurator Pontius Pilate sympathetic and making Jewish leaders culpable for the death of Jesus. "Because of his choices this film ... is deeply flawed," she said. "It is not the gospel truth."
The American Jewish Congress rejected the idea of boycotting the movie. "Of course Christians have every right to produce a play or film about the passion," Ms. Gall said.
The Rev. Frank Strasburger, associate rector of Trinity Church, said first-century Jews would never agitate for crucifixion, which was a Roman punishment. "It's not believable," the Rev. Strasburger said.
"Mel Gibson didn't make it up. He gets it out of the Gospel of John and the Gospel of Matthew. The onus is on us. Christians are the most poorly educated people about their religion," he said.
"The Passion of John is a deeply anti-Jewish story," the Rev. Strasburger said. "The big issue is not the movie, the big issue is not Mel Gibson. ... Anti-Semitism is deeply imbedded in Christianity right from the beginning. We can get rid of the movie, we can't get rid of the gospel."
The Gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke and John were written between 20 and 70 years after Jesus' death and their versions of his final hours are not entirely consistent.
"It's the gospel according to Mel Gibson," the Rev. Moore said of the movie. "It doesn't have integrity."
Rabbi Dov Elkins of the Jewish Center of Princeton, president of the Princeton Clergy Association, said the question of Mr. Gibson's intentions in making the movie can be easily settled. Mr. Gibson should contribute some of the profits from the movie to groups that foster interfaith cooperation, Rabbi Elkins said.
Natalie Vaughn, a member of Trinity Church, said, "The concern that I have is that with the dialogue we have with our Muslim brothers and sisters: Is this film going to improve matters or make them worse? I think it's going to hurt; this film is adding fuel to the fire."
Princeton resident Herbert Horowitz urged Christians and Jews to remember the improvement in relations.
"We have to stand united," he said.
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The religious epic The Gospel of John lies somewhere between Cecil B. DeMille’s 1961 King of Kings and Pier Paolo Pasolini’s 1964 The Gospel According to St. Matthew.
All three are intelligent, sensitively realized stories of the last years of Christ’s life.
DeMille used too many marquee actors, which always tends to be distracting, whereas Pasolini and Philip Saville, who directs The Gospel of John, chose actors who could lose themselves entirely in the characters.
DeMille also heightened music instead of letting the story and dialogue work upon the emotions of the viewer.
Saville’s Gospel feels a little too much like a documentary, not that this a bad thing; it just lacks the emotional wallop one expects from the story.
The Gospel of John boasts that it’s based word-for-word on the Good News Bible translation of disciple John’s account.
This might have been its downfall had Saville not employed Christopher Plummer to deliver the narration. It is a passionate reading that is not impassioned. Plummer gives the words resonance without bleeding them for melodrama.
It’s a cast of 75 principals and thousands of extras, yet there isn’t a single cloying portrayal. The miracles are treated with a kind of clinical approach where so often they’re accompanied by mock angelic choirs.
Henry Ian Cusick has the traditional look and compassion attributed to Christ, but he also gives the man fire and anger. It’s an excellent, thoughtful performance.
The cinematography, art designs, costumes and makeup give the film a rich look — a remarkable feat considering it was filmed for just $3 million. Also to its credit, The Gospel of John makes it clear it was the Jewish religious hierarchy — not the Jewish people themselves — who persecuted Christ.
This film is a faithful retelling of The Bible story, which is true to its source without sounding or feeling like a sermon.
Sun rating (3.5 out of 5 stars)
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I still see dead lesbian cliches
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Not everyone has to see or agree on what is present. However, I always assumed that this Board respected all POVs without saying that "Well if you don't see this my way, you're dismissing me." I have NEVER said that AT ALL and don't condone that AT ALL. However, I do feel that my POV, because it is contrary to the popular opinion on this movie, is being dismissed a) because I am an atheist and as such have no allegience to any religion or religious group and b) because I do not see something that apparently the majority of members of this Board apparently see in this movie.
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You are assuming that they don't care about the issue because they do not agree with you and I think that is a fallacious line of reasoning. It's all right to acknowledge that someone has a differing viewpoint. In order for there to really be proof that an anti- is there, one would need to know the intent of whomever the author, movie producer, etc. If they intend for there to be racism, anti-semitism, homophobia because they have their own issues, then it's a fact that these things are present and there are reasons for it. If, however, one views something as anti-Semitic, homophobic, what have you and that is not the intent of the creator and they have inadvertantly offended a particular person or group, that could not have been forseen. They could either choose to apologise or explain themselves.
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It is a FACT that there were SOME Jews that called for Jesus death. It is FALSE that ALL Jews call for Jesus death. It is up to society to explain the difference between the two and not just label something as an anti- without first investigating into the matter a bit more deeply.
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It may not show certain Jews in a good light, but that distinction MUST be made or we could have a upwelling of misplaced hatred like the aftermath of the events on 9-11 caused. But that is not for a movie to do....that is for US to do. If we were an enlightened society (or at least one where people actually stopped to think sometimes), that distinction would not have to be made. However, since we are not, someone has to take the initiative to dispel the myths and stereotypes. I would not censor someone's work because it offends me personally.
Time flies by when the Devil drives.
It's not the pace of life that concerns me, it's the sudden stop at the end.
While that's true, it's important to recall that accuracy and sensitivity are two different characteristics of a measurement. The fact that one measurement is more sensitive does not imply that it's also more accurate. I can set up an optical table so that I can measure nanometer wavelengths, but if the table's not perfectly flat, those measurements may be very sensitive and precise, but completely inaccurate. While the Jewish view may be more sensitive to anti-Semitism, someone with a perspective from outside that of the three Abrahamic religions and their conflicts will be less biased and more accurate.
Despite not seeing the movie, I vehemently disagree with this response to Sam's observation. A non-Jewish person will not be NEARLY as sensitive to stereotypical Jewish references (i.e. offensive) in any type of artistic medium as would a Jewish person.
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"Omnia mutantur, nihil interit." -- "Everything changes, but nothing is truly lost."
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