Don't call me princess!
   
  Sender: Davina Mahendrata
e: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
   
  Ngomong-ngomong soal Yahoo (read: Yahudi) -- dan penasaran siapa mereka? I 
have a bunch of Jewish friends from the UK, USA and Latin America  (originally 
from the Middle East and Europe). Yes, they are brilliant!
 
Artikel di bawah ini mengulas sesuatu yang kocak mengenai "Jewish Princesses" 
(read: high maintenance women with $$$$ Manolo Blahniks high heels!).
 
Cheers, 
  DM
 
http://www.women.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,18030-1837619,00.html
 
Don't call me princess
Why are 20 pampered Jewish women heading for the desert? 
   
  Anita Chaudhuri
   
  It's Friday lunchtime at a north London studio and the air is  syrupy with 
hairspray and hysteria. A group of self-confessed Jewish  princesses are 
squabbling over a rail of sequined frocks. The women  have gathered for photos, 
before embarking on a terrifying ordeal.  As participants in I'm a Jewish 
Princess: What Am I Doing Here?, 
they will attempt to survive for 10 days in the desert without  professional 
manicurists, Seven jeans or cheesecake. 
 
The 20 women come from every strand of Jewish society. There are  "becks" (the 
north London tribe of moneyed teenagers closest to  chavs) and the wife of the 
Israeli ambassador in London. There is  also Nancy Dell-Olio, whose mother is 
Jewish. She surveys the room  with a Fellini-esque stare. "Jewish princesses 
are women of 
substance," she declaims, like a general rallying her troops.  "They get things 
done, they believe in themselves. This is the  essence of being a Jewish 
princess."
   
  JPs have had a bad rap. The term may have been reclaimed as a badge 
of ironic cool by the likes of Sarah Jessica Parker, who brought the 
sensibility to Sex and the City, but princesses are still perceived 
as capricious, self-obsessed grooming addicts. Which is why, early 
next year, the ladies will be setting off for the Israeli desert, 
to raise money for the children's charity Emunah by performing 
tasks set by a former SAS strategist. "We want to dispel the myth 
about Jewish women being spoilt and high maintenance," says 
Madelaine Black, 43, the organiser. "We want to show that, 
actually, we're tough and practical."
   
  So, the desert jaunt is, in essence, a rebranding exercise. The 
question is, how tough can these ladies be? "I've never slept 
anywhere I haven't been protected by secondary glazing," admits 
Black. "And I'm scared of snakes." She pulls on a pair of 
python-skin shoes. "These are as close as I want to get." Over 
by the clothes racks, a hapless stylist is trying to persuade the 
princesses to choose gowns for the shoot. "I'm not wearing 
that," says one, casting off a shimmery green gown with a 
£1,000-plus price tag, as if it were Primark. "I have a 
reputation to think about."
   
  Samantha Pearlman, 19 and studying to be a PA, is fingering a slinky 
moss-green number. She's an ice-cream sundae of a girl, with 
blonde hair and pearlised lipstick. "I spend £60 a month on my 
nails," she admits. "My last visit to the hairdresser 
cost £260." She is being eyed up by Gaby Tenenblat, 23. 
Tenenblat, clad in designer jeans, with expensively highlighted 
hair, was destined to be a beautician, but rebelled and now works 
with young offenders in Tower Hamlets. "Beck alert," she says, 
gesturing at Pearlman. Is being a beck a bad thing? "No, no. 
It's just a look you can spot a mile off." The stylist offers 
her a dress. She insists on a trouser suit. 
   
  It's a worry. If this prima donna behaviour is genuine, how are 
they going to survive in the wilderness? "Easily," Tenenblat 
snorts. "I'm used to working with hard cases. I've signed up 
because I want to help kids in Israel. The only thing I'm scared 
of is jumping off a cliff." Obviously, there is sterner stuff 
going on beneath the Christian Dior self-tans. Pearlman is already 
thinking up fundraising ideas. "I'm holding a JP club night,"
she says. "We'll get people to dress up as Jewish princes and 
princesses - except people dress like that anyway."
   
  Sigalia Heifetz, the wife of the Israeli ambassador, arrives. With 
her curtain of black hair and Celine riding boots, she is a dead 
ringer for Modesty Blaise. She used to be the only female partner 
in her accountancy firm in Tel Aviv. Now, she juggles seven children 
with an arduous social diary featuring Cherie Blair and Kevin 
Spacey. "I did my national service with the Israeli army when I 
was 19," she says. "I know how to fire an Uzi."
   
  Soon, they are all assembled. The flashbulbs pop. Everyone smiles 
serenely, not a hair out of place. I'm not fooled, though. 
These girls are as hardcore as any elite task force. If you can 
handle hairspray like them, jumping ravines will be a breeze.
   
   

                
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