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Jerusalem
(SatireWire.com) Update — Jews, whose troubled, 10,000-year term as God's
"chosen people" finally expired last night, woke up this morning to find
that they had once again been hand-picked by the Almighty. Synagogues
across the globe declared a day of mourning.
Asked if
the descendants of Abraham shouldn't be pleased about being tapped for
an unprecedented second term, Jerusalem Rabbi Ben Meyerson shrugged. "Of
course, you are right, we should be thrilled," he said. "We should also
enjoy a good swift kick in the head, but for some reason, we don't.
God conducts
blind drawing. "Now don't ask such questions until you watch the news,
or read history, or at least rent 'Fiddler on the Roof'."
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God
conducts blind drawing.
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Much of the
world's re-blessed Jewish community shared that feeling. "It's always
been considered a joke with us. You know, 'Please G-d, next time choose
someone else,' ha ha," said New York City resident David Bashert.
"Ha. Ha ha,"
Bashert added. "Shit."
According
to a worldwide survey of faiths, not a single group expressed an interest
in being chosen, and the only application submitted before last night's
filing deadline, on behalf of the Islamic people, proved to be a fake.
"Somebody
filled out a form and signed our name to it, but I guarantee it wasn't
us," said Imam Yusuf Al Muhammed of Medina, Saudi Arabia. "I'm not going
to say who it was, but the application was filled out in Hebrew."
"Oh, don't
be such a k'vatsh," responded Meyerson. "It's only 10,000 years. Trust
me, after a few diaspora, you would have gotten used to the universal
hatred thing."
Due to the
absence of voluntary candidates, God's Law stipulated that the Almighty
had to choose a people at random to serve out the next 10-millenia term.
Elias Contreau, director of the International Interfaith Working Group,
said he wasn't surprised it came to a blind drawing.
"According
to the Bible, God promised to bless Abraham and those who came after him,"
said Contreau. "Who knows, maybe that sounded good at the time, or maybe
'blessed' meant something different back then, like 'Short periods of
prosperity interrupted by insufferable friggin' chaos.' Whatever, I think
it's safe to say that people didn't know what they were agreeing to."
Now they
do, Contreau added, which he said explains why so many religions had lately
been exalting God's existence, but downplaying their own.
"We were
not avoiding Him. We just told our parishioners that if Anyone asks, we're
out," insisted Archbishop of Canterbury Dr. George Carey, who had called
off services during February. "Besides, we weren't the only ones. I didn't
see the Hindus raising their hands."
"Now look,
it's like we told the ethereal vision who dropped off the application,
'Sure, we have a strong shared faith and all that, but I wouldn't exactly
say we're a 'people,' not really,'" recalled Hindu leader Samuldrala Swami
Maharaj of Calcutta. "Plus, you know, I told him we had a lot of other
commitments. We'd like to help, honestly. Another time, maybe."
In Jerusalem,
Jewish leaders said they will propose an amendment to God's Law prohibiting
a people from having to serve more than two consecutive terms. "Hopefully,
G-d will hear our prayer," said Meyerson. "No, wait, that's what got us
into this."
Americans,
meanwhile, expressed outrage at the decision, saying they had assumed
they were God's chosen people. However, explained Archbishop Carey, "It
only seems that way because so many people don't like you."
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© 2002, SatireWire.
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