Originally published Saturday, July 26, 2008 at 12:00 AM
Election 2008
Obama's private prayer published in Israeli paper
Barack Obama's visit to the Western Wall was a public event. The handwritten prayer the presidential candidate left there was meant to be...
Los Angeles Times
In other developments
Democratic Sen. Barack Obama warned Iran on Friday, "don't wait for the next president" to take office before yielding to Western demands to dismantle its nuclear-weapons program. "The pressure, I think, is only going to build," he said at a news conference with French President Nicolas Sarkozy in Paris. Sarkozy veered close to an endorsement, referring to the senator as "my dear Barack Obama." Obama also said "Afghanistan is a war we have to win." The Taliban and terrorist groups they support, he said, pose an unacceptable threat. He added, "We've got to finish the job." Obama's trip, financed by his campaign, ends today in Britain.
Obama campaign spokesman Robert Gibbs said Friday that the candidate thought he could visit wounded troops at a military hospital in Germany without involving them in a campaign controversy and scrapped his plans after the Pentagon raised concerns. Gibbs said the Air Force cleared Obama's jet to land at Ramstein Air Base, and it was only Wednesday night that Pentagon officials conveyed their views.
Wisconsin Democrats on Friday ousted Debra Bartoshevich, a delegate to their national convention, for saying she would vote for Republican presidential candidate Sen. John McCain in November. Bartoshevich was elected as a pledged delegate for Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton. Bartoshevich will be replaced by the person who finished second to Bartoshevich in the delegate election.
Seattle Times news services
The wall
The Western Wall is the lone remaining outer retaining wall of the second biblical Jewish temple, which was destroyed by the Romans in A.D. 70. Revered as Judaism's holiest site, it stands where the Bible says King Solomon built the first Jewish Temple, which was destroyed by the Babylonians in 586 B.C.Source: The Associated Press
JERUSALEM — Barack Obama's visit to the Western Wall was a public event. The handwritten prayer the presidential candidate left there was meant to be private.
But as soon as he left, a snoop pulled a folded piece of paper from a crevice in the ancient wall and offered it to the mass-circulation newspaper Maariv. The newspaper's decision to publish it Friday, under the headline "Obama's note," provoked criticism in Israel over an intrusion into his relationship with God.
"Lord — Protect my family and me," the unsigned note said. "Forgive me my sins, and help me guard against pride and despair. Give me the wisdom to do what is right and just. And make me an instrument of your will."
Obama spokeswoman Jen Psaki, traveling with the candidate in London, declined to confirm or deny the note was the senator's. The Associated Press reported, however, that the handwriting in the photograph published by Maariv appeared to match Obama's inscription Wednesday in the guest book at Israel's Holocaust memorial.
The note was written on stationery of the King David Hotel, where Obama stayed during his visit this week.
Shmuel Rabinovitz, the rabbi who manages Judaism's holiest site, was furious.
"The notes placed between the stones of the Western Wall are between a person and his maker," he told Army Radio. "It is forbidden to read them or make any use of them."
The publication, he added, "damages the Western Wall and damages the deep, personal part of every one of us that we keep to ourselves."
More than 100 readers talked back to Maariv's Web site, most of them to lecture the newspaper about ethics. Some noted that Jewish religious law specifically forbids spying on private mail. One reader wondered how much money the letter would fetch on eBay.
"Chutzpah!" exclaimed a Maariv reader who identified herself as Hasia.
"Shame on you," wrote Hezi Leder. "This is the lowest you have sunk so far."
Maariv's brief report said the prayer was provided by a student at an Orthodox Jewish seminary. It did not identify him or say whether he had been paid.
The newspaper's chief rival, Yediot Aharonot, said it had been offered the note and had declined to publish it.
The removal and publication of the note did not appear to violate any laws. Police officials said they were not investigating.
According to The Jerusalem Post, several people who happened to be at Obama's unannounced appearance early Thursday scrambled to find his missive among the many inserted in the wall.
One man who grabbed a scrap of paper was disappointed to discover it had been written in Spanish, The Post reported.
Millions of people visit the 2,000-year-old wall each year, and many leave written prayers between its wide beige stones. Rabinovitz and his team pull out the scraps of paper to make room for more but do not read them. Jewish law considers the prayers to be holy texts and forbids their destruction; twice a year they are buried in containers on the Mount of Olives.
In recent years, the Western Wall Heritage Foundation, which operates the site, has opened a fax hotline and a Web site where people overseas can send their prayers and have them printed out and put in the wall.
Guy Mashiach, an Israeli attorney, said Obama probably knew what would happen to his prayer.
"Obama is intelligent enough to understand that in Israel, nothing remains private, discreet and secret for more than a few hours," he wrote to an online network hosted by the Haaretz newspaper's Web site.
Material from The Associated Press is included in this report.
Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company
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