David Nesenoff

David Floyd Nesenoff (born 1960) is an American rabbi, and blogger.<ref name="story hasnt" /> Nesenoff gained national attention in June 2010 when he posted to his website a video he had made of opinion columnist Helen Thomas making controversial statements about Israel. Over the next several days, the video went viral, Thomas resigned her job over this, and Nesenoff received what he initially said were over 25,000 pieces of hate mail, including several death threats.<ref name"25,000 pieces" /><ref name"interviewer" />
Nesenoff himself has been interviewed and quoted in The New York Times,and has appeared on Fox News and CNN's Reliable Sources program.
Early life and education
Nesenoff was born and raised on Long Island, New York, one of four children of Goldie, an art teacher and musician who plays the mandolin in community orchestras, and Norman Nesenoff, an electrical engineer and the founder of CES Industries.<ref name"deaths" /><ref name"norman" /> At age 14 Nesenoff attended an agricultural high school in Ashkelon, Israel for one year.<ref name"the jewel" /> He attended Yeshiva University as an undergraduate,<ref name"intervention" /> studied at Hebrew University in Jerusalem for one year when he was in graduate school,<ref name="the jewel" /> and received a master's degree and rabbinic ordination from the Jewish Theological Seminary of America in New York.
Professional career
Rabbi
Nesenoff served as a spiritual director and rabbi at various synagogues during his career. He was the rabbi for the Conservative Temple Beth Sholom in Smithtown, New York until April 2010 when he was unable to reach a salary agreement with the congregation.<ref name"intervention" /><ref name"temple" /> Previously he was the director of the East Northport Jewish Center <ref name"menorah" /> and in the 1990s he was at the Oyster Bay Jewish Center in Long Island.<ref name"heading off" /> Nesenoff created Temple Tikvah, Synagogue of Hope, to comfort and inspire people and to help create a sense of community following the September 11 attacks. He conducted non-traditional services which included club musicians, poetry readings, popular music and the showing of one of his short films.<ref name="responding" />
Anti-bias work
After Holocaust denial literature and KKK posters appeared in Jewish neighborhoods in the mid 1990s, Nesenoff chaired a local anti-bias task force.<ref name="2 long" /> He created an anti-bias education program for the Nassau County, New York courts, obtaining a state grant and later, private funding through drives at his synagogue.<ref name"heading off" /> Nesenoff's four session course became part of a court mandated program for teens under 16 who had been convicted of bias crimes. Called TRY, (Tolerance Rehabilitation for Youth), his approach began with getting the offenders angry, pushing their hot buttons, then getting them to discuss their reactions.<ref name"juveniles2" /> He also taught leadership skills, emphasizing self-esteem, conflict resolution, tolerance, and the seriousness of the hate crimes.<ref name"heading off" /><ref name"2 long" /> He said that it was important for youth to understand why they committed bias crimes and said that the "reason a kid spray paints a swastika has nothing to do with the historical perspective of the Holocaust". Rather, he said, the hate crimes were the result of the kids "stepping on others to prop themselves up".<ref name"heading off" /> Nesenoff appeared at the arraignment of two 18-year-old men on felony charges related to painting swastikas and anti-semitic graffiti on a Long Island high school track in 1993. According to The New York Times, he pointed to one of the defendants outside of the courtroom and said, "That's what a Nazi looks like, take a good look".<ref name"2 indicted" /><ref name"juveniles1" /> He also taught anti-prejudice classes at local high schools.<ref name"rabbi's tale" /> Remarking about the destruction of a menorah display, Nesenoff said that it is important "'to shine a light' on bias crimes ... 'Make sure people know. We want to yell that it happened.'"<ref name="menorah" />
Filmmaker
Nesenoff's work with high school students and his work with teens convicted of bias crimes sparked his interest in filmmaking.<ref name"2 long" /><ref name"rabbi's tale" /> He saw film as a means to communicate his message, telling The New York Times in 1996 that he looked at "film as a modern-day pulpit".<ref name"2 long" /> After obtaining partial funding from the state and advertising for volunteer actors, he made a 16-minute black-and-white film, Moving Day, showing the viewpoint and experiences of an elderly woman, a crime victim, a black man, a homeless person, a battered wife and a young girl.<ref name"2 long" /> The film was used as a teaching aid in New York schools. He later obtained a grant from the state to help him write and direct a film about the consequences of teens' drinking and driving.<ref name"rabbi's tale" /> The result was Inbound Mercy, an 11-minute black-and-white film about the fatal accident of a teenage couple who drink and drive. The Los Angeles Times said the film was realistic and creatively done.<ref name"rabbi's tale" /> It was featured at the 1997 Sundance festival,<ref name"rabbi's tale" /><ref name"early films" /> winning Nesenoff an award for most unlikely filmmaker.<ref name"sundance" /> The film received a first place Chris Award at the Columbus International Film Festival; it took first place at the Media Awards Competition of the National Council on Family Relations; and it received a Humanitarian Award at the Long Island Film Festival.<ref name"rabbi's tale" />
Nesenoff made a number of other short films over the years. In 2002 he filmed an inspirational short documentary, A Little Drive, touching on the themes of desperation, hope, 9/11 and the story of Joseph.<ref name="san diego" /> In 2002, he directed The Wax and the Wicks a 13-minute film about the goings-on at an East Long Island beauty shop that was entered in the Palm Beach International Film Festival, and that won a first place National Telly Award. The film allows the viewer to "eavesdrop on patrons and staff as they give their views on hairstyles, religion, recipes and reactions to 9/11."<ref name"jewish film" /> In 2006, he directed The Cat Experiment, a full-length comedy film about abandoned cats which was shown at the 2007 Long Island Film Festival.<ref name"cat experiment" />
Helen Thomas controversy
On May 27, 2010, Nesenoff attended a reception at the White House in honor of Jewish American Heritage Month with his 17-year-old son and his son's 18-year-old friend.<ref name"marking" /><ref name"whose question" /> Nesenoff had a press pass representing his website, , and his son had a press pass representing his website.<ref name="whose question" /> They attended a press conference where Hearst opinion columnist Helen Thomas asked President Obama a question about Afghanistan.<ref name"whose question" /><ref name"why we" /> Nesenoff then recorded a two-minute-long interview of Thomas as she was leaving the White House via the North Lawn driveway.<ref name="why we" /> Nesenoff posted a one-minute-long video excerpt of the interview on on June 4, 2010. During the interview, Thomas made brief remarks about Israel, the Jews and Palestine, that have been described with a variety of labels, including "off the cuff",<ref name"Thomas missed" /> blunt,<ref name"Thomas undone" /> and "anti-semitic".<ref name"why we" /><ref name"under fire" /><ref name"obtuse" /> Nesenoff said that Thomas was "whisked away by a helper or a page" after making her remarks about "Poland". Another reporter at the scene said Thomas had been shuffling along the driveway on the arm of a third reporter, en route to a taxi that was being hailed to take her home, when the interview occurred.<ref name"why we" />
After the video was posted, Nesenoff was in contact with Hearst Newspapers and discussed whether they should dismiss her.<ref name"the man who" /> Thomas retired from her job on June 7, 2010 following negative reaction to her remarks heard on the one-minute June 4 video. This video was published on numerous websites and had over one million hits on YouTube. On June 8, Nesenoff posted the complete two-minute interview which contained no further controversial remarks, and which ended with Thomas telling Nesenoff's son and his son's friend: "All the best to you. Go for journalism, you'll never regret it."<ref name"rabbi releases" />
Nesenoff has given dozens of interviews in which he has described his encounter with Thomas.<ref name"blowback" /> Thomas was reportedly well known as a critic of Israel.<ref name"Thomas undone" /> Nesenoff told CNN he had not been not aware that Thomas had anti-Semitic views before he interviewed her, and approached her as a supporter.<ref name"liberal rabbi" /> Nesenoff said "When I heard what she said, I was taken aback, confused. I was not expecting it," "I guess I was a little naive about her reporting over the years."<ref name"outed" /> In an interview with Haaretz, Nesenoff said he knew Thomas had been critical of Israel in the past, but was surprised at her answer to his simple question.<ref name"who filmed" /> Nesenoff said that Thomas must have known she was speaking to Jews because he, his son, and his son's friend were all wearing yarmulkes and tzitzit and that was another reason why he was shocked by her comments.<ref name"rabbi sat" />
Nesenoff has said that he interpreted Thomas' comments as meaning that Jews should get out of Israel and go home to Poland or Germany. He further described Thomas' comments as "vile, a paradigm of hate talk" to Howard Kurtz of The Washington Post.<ref name"tarnished" /> According to Haaretz, he described Thomas as saying "that not only was she opposed to the two-state solution, but that she thought that the Jews should leave Israel and return to the final solution, more or less."<ref name"who filmed" /> Referring to the fact that Thomas had a front row seat at presidential press conferences, Nesenoff told another reporter that: "There's anti-Semitism in the world... And it's sitting a foot from the president".
Nesenoff wrote an op-ed that was published in The Washington Post on June 20, 2010. He said that after attending a press conference in the White House, divine intervention led to his encounter with Helen Thomas.<ref name"I asked" /> He has said that he believes that Helen Thomas and her supporters "have broken into the very rock and the foundation of all religion and all philosophy" and that he wants to fight people who believe there is no connection between Israel and the Jewish identity.<ref name"intervention" />
Fallout
In the wake of Thomas' resignation, several colleagues remarked that she should have been given a break. Nesenoff responded: "The Washington press corps and the president and her boss at Hearst have found her fit. I don't go up to people and take their pulse before I ask question... I didn't fire her and I didn't hire her. I just asked her a question. And as she's been doing for 60 years, I let people know what she answered."<ref name="after thousands" />
Critics questioned why Nesenoff waited more than one week to post the interview and suggested that the timing was a political maneuver to divert media attention away from Israel's handling of the Gaza Freedom Flotilla. Nesenoff replied that the delay happened because his 17-year-old son serves as his webmaster for the blog and was busy with final exams for that week.<ref name"rabbi sat" /> In later interviews, Nesenoff explained that he was told by a friend who is a reporter at a Jewish publication that his video of Thomas was not a big story.<ref name"blowback" /><ref name"outed" /> According to Nesenoff, the friend said, "Oh, she's been that way for years, that’s nothing surprising".<ref name"blowback" />
In the wake of the Helen Thomas controversy, Nesenoff said that he received 25,000 of pieces of hate mail, including several death threats. He filed a report with the Suffolk County Police,<ref name"25,000 pieces" /><ref name"interviewer" /> and the department's hate crimes unit launched an investigation.<ref name="outed" /> He has said while he was shocked by the volume of the hate mail, he was even more shocked to discover there was a hate media that was accusing him of right-wing ambush journalism and looking for "dirt" in his past.<ref name"blowback" /> Nesenoff has also remarked that he has received positive emails and invitations for speaking engagements.<ref name"blowback" />
Biblography
Articles written by Nesenoff:
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