The Rabbi Shamely's website is riddled with all that is Michael Jackson! Would the Rabbi wilt away and die if he could not cling onto Michael Jackson like a leech? Here is what the Leech Rabbi Shamely has posted on his site: www.shamely.com.

Sunday, September 27, 2009

The Destructive Deification of Michael Jackson

Publishing my new book, The Michael Jackson Tapes: A Tragic Icon

Reveals His Soul in Intimate Conversation, has been a fascinating and

at times painful education in the need for Michael’s most diehard fans

to deify him. The book is out only three days. But even as the book

and the Dateline NBC special highlighting the conversations has been

met with international acclaim, near-universal praise, and instantly

entered the best-seller lists, that hasn’t stopped a Tsunami of angry

messages from Michael’s most fanatical fans on their message boards,

some laced unfortunately with anti-Semitism and even threats of

violence. Their complaint: how dare I call Michael ‘tragic.’ How dare

I not declare unequivocally that he never molested a child. Most of

all, how dare I publish any book that does not completely extol their

fallen deity.

First, the facts. The Michael Jackson Tapes was published because it

was Michael’s desperate wish that it be so. For most of the

conversations Michael held the Dictaphone directly to his mouth so

that not a word would be lost. In the conversations he refers to the

importance of the book constantly. He wanted it to be as complete as

possible, even sending me to interview his mother for her perspective

on her son, which ended up being one of the most fascinating chapters.

Unfortunately, when Michael was arrested on charges of child

molestation in 2003, it became impossible to fulfill Michael’s sincere

wish that the book be published. Much as he wanted it, it simply could

not be done. The public had little to no sympathy for Michael, even

after he was exonerated in 2005. Michael was reviled everywhere. But

Michael’s death brought an outpouring of grief and a sincere desire on

the part of the general public to more deeply understand a fallen

American icon. And just as important, Michael’s tragically shortened

life called out for redemption. Michael’s desperate wish that his soul

be known to the public through the medium of these conversations and

that the lessons of his life be used to help heal families could

finally be fulfilled.

It is clear to me now that Michael was so much more courageous and

honest than some of his diehard fans wanted him to be. They are

uncomfortable with these conversations because they feel Michael is

too forthright, too honest, too open about his frailties,

shortcomings, and flaws. It seems incredible but the tables have now

completely turned. It is the people who claim to be his most diehard

fans who now wish Michael would have censored himself and portrayed

himself as the perfect superstar. And, conversely, it is the general

public, who before were extremely suspicious of Michael and wanted to

hear nothing from him, who have made the book and the NBC Dateline

special into an international phenomenon and arguably the most

positive statements about Michael ever to be released to the public.

Why is Michael so breathtakingly honest in these powerful

conversations? Because, deep down he never wished to be worshipped. He

understood he was only human. And he wanted people to understand his

pain and brokenness so that they would judge him more charitably. The

unforgettable and searingly honest tone of Michael’s conversations

say, in essence, ‘Put yourself in my shoes before you judge me. And

try and learn some lessons from my life, my sad childhood, so that you

don’t repeat the same mistakes with your kids.’

Should we not applaud his honesty? What would we prefer? The speeches

that were given at Michael’s ‘Memorial service,’ a funeral cum concert

where speaker after speaker spoke of how there was nothing wrong with

Michael even though his appearance at the Staples center came in a

gold box because he had died of a drug overdose? Would we prefer

celebrities getting up, misleading, and saying that the only

challenges Michael ever faced was hatred from the media, even though

Michael himself repeatedly said something completely different, that

he was the loneliest man on earth, that his fame was utterly empty for

him, that he yearned endlessly for his father’s affection, and that

the only thing that he wanted was to help families but was prevented

from doing so.

Perhaps this is why Michael chose a Rabbi to share his deepest

thoughts with while holding the recorder to his mouth so that the

widest possible audience would hear the conversations. Perhaps it was

because Michael understood that Judaism has no Jesus figure. The

Hebrew Bible has not even a single perfect person. Everyone from

Abraham, to Moses, to David is portrayed as flawed. Still, what made

them special was that they wrestled with their nature to live selfless

and morally centered lives amid a predilection to do otherwise.

Deep down, Michael never wanted to be Jesus Christ. He yearned not for

martyrdom but for redemption. He didn’t want to die but to consecrate

his fame to a higher purpose. He felt trapped by superstardom and

wished to liberate himself by directing his celebrity to the service

of neglected children. Sadly, his management, many sycophants, and

those on the gravy train got in the way as they feared that the more

Michael participated in family healing projects, like the lectures

that I organized for him at Carnegie Hall, Oxford University, and

Newark, New Jersey, the less money he would make by singing in

concerts and producing albums, even though he was in no mental or

emotional state to carry those obligations through, which is why it

was no coincidence that he died just days before the ludicrous ‘50’

London concerts were set to begin.

But ultimately, Michael, like the rest of us, has to take

responsibility for his own actions. In this book he does, which is why

this is, warts and all, the most positive portrayal of Michael Jackson

ever produced. It is Michael in his own words. Michael going beyond

the legend and coming across as fully human. Michael instructing

parents to learn from the terrible example of his own neglected

childhood and reach out and love their kids. And Michael reaching out

from the grave, in a book he desperately wished to be published, to

declare to those who loved him most to stop this ridiculous campaign

to venerate him. For he was not a god but just a man. A man who made

many mistakes in life, but who desperately reached for something

higher and who was lost way too soon.

Rabbi Shmuley Boteach is the international best-selling author of 21

books. He is founder and President of This World: The Values Network,

who major national campaign is Turn Friday Night Into Family Night.

The Michael Jackson Tapes: A Tragic Icon Reveals His Soul in Intimate

Conversation is available everywhere. http://www.shamely.com.