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The Wonderful Irving Kristol

September 30, 2009 - 10:44 am - by Michael Ledeen

I have had trouble writing about the death of Irving Kristol.  He is one of those whose death is particularly hard to digest, because he was so full of life.  Blessed are those fortunate enough to have known him.

You will have read a great deal about Irving’s wisdom, of which he had a great abundance.  Not just smarts, but real wisdom, of a particularly Jewish sort, which was anchored to meaningful anecdotes.  Some of these were personal (when I wrote a book on Machiavelli he told me about a Tuscan farmhand who crossed himself when Irving asked for directions to the Machiavelli estate), others were drawn from history or from others’ experiences.  Each illuminated the point he was trying to make, or–for this too was a very important part of his wisdom–not make.  You see, Irving was one of those rare important people who was always willing to admit that he did not know the answer to some tough question.

There is a Jewish law, or perhaps regulation, called Lashon Harah, which forbids telling nasty tales about others.  It’s a very annoying restriction, especially in a place like Washington where gossip, especially “juicy” (that is, damning) gossip is the common currency.  None of us lives up to it, and I sometimes think that the only people who can possibly fulfill the law is someone who lives in a cave, or maybe in a very small town populated with saintly people.

Of all the people I have known, Irving is perhaps the only one who seemed to me to fulfill the requirements of Lashon Harah. I cannot ever remember him saying anything nasty about anyone.  Every now and then he would laugh out loud when someone’s name came up in conversation, and I suppose you might have interpreted that laughter as criticism, but there was never any sign of nastiness, let alone the intense bitterness that characterizes so much of life here.

In short, he was the nicest person I’ve ever met.  Incredible.  So yes, his ideas were important, and certainly the help he gave to young people was memorable and wonderful, but the emptiness I feel these days is because I know I will not hear that laughter, or see those twinkling eyes, or feel the uplifting of the spirit that always came from being near him.

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7 Comments, 7 Threads

  1. 1. Uzi

    Dr. Ledeen.

    I know this is off-topic for this thread, and I mean no disrespect to Irving Kristol of blessed memory, but can you give us an update about what’s happenning inside Iran apropos the insurrection/ possible revolution?

    You’re the best source for English language readers who want to know what’s really happening in Iran, and your posts on the subject , though extremely enlightening, are too rare and sporadic for committed news junkies like us.

  2. 2. Alex

    Dr. Leeden:
    I second Uzi’s post.

  3. 3. David W. Lincoln

    Yes, Michael, the world is poorer with the passing of Irving Kristol. It is for us, well those of us who have the self discipline to live
    up to Lashon Harah, so that the world can have contemporary examples, instead of going back into museums to see examples of such conduct.
    For it is about self discipline to say “no” to giving into juicy gossip.

  4. 4. Azadandish - Tehran

    “No modern nation has ever constructed a foreign policy that was acceptable to its intellectuals”. Irving Kristol
    I think this has been true about all the US President’s during the past 30 years at least with regard to mullahs of Iran.

  5. 5. Ran

    Uzi,
    Here is an update from ML’s WSJ article of 29th.

  6. 6. Uzi

    Thanks Ran.

    I had already read the WSJ article. I was hoping for an update on the turmoil inside Iran, which will hopefully be one day understood as a stage in the Iranian Revolution of 2009. I am eagerly awaiting the photograph of Ahmadinejad in the Mussolini pose (The one where he’s hanging upside down from a lamppost).

    I have recieved intel from a highly placed source that such an update will probably be forthcoming in the next 48 hours. We can only wait and hope.

  7. 7. Jassem Othman

    The Godfather, Irving Kristol, was a wise and great man. He was a genuine patriot who eloquently and forcefully defended America’s values and principles.
    The late Kristol, was one of the towering intellectual figures of the twentieth century. We and the US will miss him greatly.
    May his soul rest in peace.

    My sincere sympathies to you and to the Kristol’s family, and also to everyone who admires the great group. “Neo-Conservatives”.

    Jassem Othman, Syrian, Poland.

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