columnist Jimmy breslin below visits the third floor Brooklyn apartment
of a 31-year old man with a lap top and shows us how a little guy can have
a really big voice.
kelly
How a Little Guy Can Get a Big Voice
I NEED a merger," Binyamin Jolkovsky said.
Binyamin Jolkovsky, 31, sits in his third-floor apartment in Borough
Park in Brooklyn with a computer that is a couple of generations back,
a cup of tea and all these hopes as he puts out his
JewishWorldReview.Com on the Internet for the world to see and hear.
He started it in 1997 and it has been long and treacherous, but he
never quit.
"I gave up materialism for a higher goal, but I can use a steak," he
was saying.
"I put my morality where my mouth is!" "You're a step from
multimillions," I told Binyamin.
"Don't I wish," he said.
"Somebody is going to call and want to merge with you for big money."
"Your lips to God's ear." So Jolkovsky sits up all night with his Web
site and waits for the miracle that could be coming out of the night
at any hour. He lives in Borough Park, which is a religious area of
soft streets and brick houses that once were priced within reason and
now there are some homes costing a million and more.
Jolkovsky lives in rent. He wears a black Stetson fedora, has a beard
and curls tucked behind his ears. He was raised in Yeshiva schools and
attended the University of Maryland. All he ever wanted to do was work
on a "mainstream paper." One job did come up for him.
"We have a Sunday paper, so you'll be working Fridays and Saturdays,"
he was told.
"I can't," he said. "It's my sabbath." "What if there's a fire burns
down half of Brooklyn on a Saturday?" "I'll pray for the people," he
said.
That put Binyamin in the Jewish press. Never in all the printed past
would a newspaper like Jolkovsky's be viewed as anything more than a
pamphlet of interest only to a few.
"Nat Hentoff says two United States senators read me," Jolkovsky said
yesterday.
He is one of so many-who knows how many tens of thousands?-who are out
there with Web sites and who keep putting them out in hopes of getting
a call from Levin of AOL-Time Warner.
"You we need!" There were people like him in the first days of
newspapers. They set type themselves, wrote stories, printed the paper
and sold it. The circulations were tiny and the money hopeless. But
their newspapers, weekly and daily, told the country enough to keep
them somewhat informed. Only a few lasted to become known papers.
It is more improbable now because the modern version of a small paper
starting up, an online service, comes against Microsoft or AOL-Time
Warner. Binyamin sits home and does it alone.
But this time, the lives and habits of people are so far ahead of what
the conformists view as the way people live that Binyamin's Internet
paper may have more going for it than you'd think. He has people
following it in every corner of the world. He receives 400 letters a
week from Florida, Holland, England, California, Israel.
Last night, his wire had a lead opinion piece by Sam Schuirnan, who
writes: "But a new kind of anti-Semitism may emerge in the 21st
century, in reaction to the attempt to make "the Holocaust" central to
our civilization. The explosion of 'the joy of sex in the death camp'
movies, the proliferation of Holocaust memorials and museums, the
emergence of a new academic discipline detached from history called
Holocaust and Genocidal studies...all these threaten to undermine a
proper understanding of the Nazi war against the Jews." The immediate
reaction was somewhat strong.
I am sitting in Jolkovsky's office when he stopped typing and said:
"You can't say you were here." "What are you talking about?" "My wife
would be furious if she knew you were here." "Why? What am I, a bad
person?" "No, but the house is not orderly enough. She would take it
as a reflection on her. But she can't do all the work. She is a junior
executive on Wall Street.
She comes home at 8 o'clock at night too tired to do housework." "Why
don't you do it?" "Because I am up until 5 in the morning on my Web
site." He met his wife, Rivky, in 1995 when a friend, Rose Miller,
matched them up.
On local issues he notes that people in Borough Park are divided over
the shooting of Gary Busch by five cops. Busch was a tall lanky
disturbed person who had a small hammer held over his head and was
gunned down by six cops. No action was taken against them.
"Half the people think it was blatant anti-Semitism," he says. "The
others assume that Giuliani will win the election against Hillary
Clinton and they don't want to harass a winner." He said he had to go
out to see a doctor. He is a half step away from flu. He looked at the
door with doubt. He is three good flights up. He sighed and mentioned
the return climb.
"That's the weight," he was told.
"Even skinny people say it's hard," he said. "Everything is hard
here." He tapped his computer. "I need a merger."
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