This Book: Views humankind with the objectivity that only a political cartoonist could attempt... or a tree could achieve. Explores the Jewish people's connection with the land of Israel and explains how the Zionist tree-planting compulsion holds the hope for the future of the entire planet. Shows your roots as only a tree could see them!
The Author: Ya'akov Kirschen is the internationally acclaimed cartoonist behind the Israel-based syndicated political comic strip Dry Bones. For more than 20 years, his satirical comments on the news of the day and developments in the Middle East have been quoted and reprinted in the world press and electronic media. From the NY Times to the LA Times, his work has elucidated current events around the world for hundreds of millions of people.
The Challenge: Forbes Magazine called him "tough minded and unafraid of deflating his audience's pride and prejudices." Now, in his first book-length work, Kirschen thumbs his nose at political correctness and dares to suggest that the solution to the troubles of our planet lies in the inherent ecological message of the Bible and offers a vision of its fruition in our time.
Yaakov Kirschen, Political Analyst, Yale Fellow, Blogger, and Dry Bones Cartoonist.
Kirschen was born in Brooklyn NY in 1938. He studied art at Queens College and became a cartoonist after he graduated in 1961.
In 1971 he moved to Israel, changed his first name from Jerry to Yaakov, and in 1973 began drawing a daily editorial strip called Dry Bones, which has become internationally syndicated and is known as Israel’s Political Comic Strip. Kirschen is a member of both America’s National Cartoonists Society and the Israeli Cartoonists Society.
He was, in parallel with his career as a cartoonist, been an innovative computer game designer and inventor. His company LKP ltd. has done work for major computer and game companies both in Israel and in the U.S.
In 2009, Dry Bones cartoonist Yaakov Kirschen was made a “visiting fellow” and “artist in residence” of Yale University’s Initiative for the Interdisciplinary Study of Antisemitism and Racism (YIISA).
In 2010, Yale published Kirschen’s ground-breaking working paper entitled “Memetics and the Viral Spread of Antisemitism through “Coded Images in Political Cartoons”. The paper identifies antisemitism as a behavioral virus, isolates its three viral strains, and reveals its use by totalitarian movements in their attempts to conquer the West.
In October of 2010 Kirschen presented his revolutionary findings at Yale in a presentation called “Secret Codes, Hidden War”. The “Hidden War” is the war against free and Democratic societies. The “Secret Codes” are the codified and virally spread anti Jewish libels used in that war. The presence of these codes in political cartoons should be seen as symptoms of a deeper sickness.
He wrote a Dry Bones Blog which he started in 2005 dedicated to combating the willful rewriting of history and fighting the spread of antisemitism.
“The people of the covenant had been taken from us. But we were different than trees in other lands for we had lived in partnership with men.” p. 108
This comic book/graphic novel presents a retelling of the Jewish people from the perspective of trees. The trees link humans and trees as partners in the original covenant and that environmental degradation has resulted from “the separation” between these partners. During this separation, the “Rootless” humans left their lands to study war and weaponry, exploited the land and the trees, but they eventually returned to their land and resumed their roles as gardeners.
“Our covenant was the promise of the future for both of our species … and we knew the nations of the rootless could not ignore us [the trees] … because we grew at the crossroads of their world! … in the path of their movement?!?” (p. 93)
I’m not sure I fully understood all of the allusions to the Old Testament, nor have I fully captured the many tenets of the tree & human covenant in this book. That said, I appreciate the positioning of humans as in partnership with the trees and that part of one’s spiritual practice is to repair this communion.
Used: Bookman (Anaheim, CA)
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Meh. I'm a Zionist, but this was particularist beyond what even I can handle. Plus sides: cute trees, graphic novel format. Minus sides: just about everything else.
A great read of the history of the Jewish people and the value of the trees who live/d on the land and combined their story with the story of these people of The Covenant.