Mahzor

New York Public Library

Churches

Sarajevo Haggadah

Mah Nishtanah

Sarajevo haggadah

Antaea Darom

Israeli women's art

Action

Torah as music

Ben Heine

Action

ceramic bowl

Mohammad Said Kalash, "Offering Reconciliation" exhibit (photo: Ilan Amihai)

Action

Punch and Judy/Pinchas and Jamila

Avi Katz

Action

David Grossman

Ben Heine

Action

Eldrige Street shul

Lower East Side

Action

Dove

Ben Heine

Action

Two birds

Hoda Jamal

Action

Israeli and Palestinian boys

from documentary, Promises

Action

Cat in the Hat

Yiddish version

Action

Daylight through the Wall

Banksy: graffiti art on Separation Wall

Action

Maurice Sendak's Brundibar set

New Victory Theater (photo: Nan Melville/NYT)

Action

Daniel Barenboim, West-Eastern Divan Orchestra

Palestinian-Israeli musical ensemble (photo: Kerstin Joensson/AP)

Action

Great Day on Eldrige Street

N.Y.'s klezmer greats celebrate shul rededication (photo: Leo Sorel)

Action

Joint Appeal for Peace

(Avi Katz)

Joint Appeal for Peace

Ketubah, Ancona, Italy (1772)

(Jewish Theological Seminary library)

Ancona ketubah

Archive for July, 2007

Tikun Olam Guest Blogging at Jewcy

Sunday, July 29th, 2007

jewcy logo
Special thanks to Michael Weiss, a Jewcy editor, who asked me to guest blog at that site for the coming week. Jewcy is an interesting addition to the Jewish online world. It’s the opposite of what most Jewish communal projects are. It’s cheeky, gossipy, provocative and mostly doesn’t take itself too seriously. It’s aiming for a target audience about half the age of your average Jewish communal organization. In short, it’s a breath of fresh air.

It’s a great opportunity for me to introduce my views to a larger Jewish audience. Jewcy’s Alexa ranking is 114,000, which makes it one of the more popular Jewish websites. I’ll be devoting the lion’s share of my blogging output there over the next five days so please visit Jewcy’s blog to find out what I’m up to. I just published a post about a progressive Christian evangelical (yes, that’s NOT an oxymoron) campaign on behalf of a just, two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. It’s provocatively titled, Not All Evangelicals Want Us to Fry or Want Israel to Bomb Iran to Kingdom Come.

Guardian Blog Publishes ‘Right to Discriminate’

Friday, July 27th, 2007

comment is free screenshot
The Guardian’s Comment is Free blog published earlier today a piece I wrote on the Jewish National Fund bill and its reception in the American Jewish community. Those of you who read this blog regularly will find some of the column familiar, but I did add new material as well.

The independent blogger petition campaign protesting the bill has been joined by one created by AMEINU. For the life of me, I don’t see the need for two petitions. But more power to them and I hope they pick up lots of signatures that our campaign doesn’t.

I note that the Kahanist swine picked up on the petition and left their droppings as a calling card. I’d foolishly set the petiton so that all signatures were approved automatically until Doni Remba pointed out several fraudulent signatures with messages like this one:

silverstein,you’re a first class, top shelf, prize winning judenrat piece of shit. I hope righteous Jews cut your throat after arabs have raped your ass.

What is it about these violent porn/rape racial fantasies that afflict these people? And isn’t it interesting how similar this garbage is to Streicher’s Der Sturmer? What is sad is that these Jews have aborsorbed the poison and become the Jewish Nazis they claim to detest. It would’ve made a great Rod Serling Twilight Zone episode.

There is one small benefit to these lurid ejaculations. I harvest all the IP addresses so that they’ll never darken the doors of this blog in case they ever wanted to.

And what I want to know is why aren’t my petition collaborators Dan Fleshler and Jerry Haber worthy of smearing as well? Jerry, who first informed Dan and I about the bill’s passage, has written a new post about Zionist history and the moral legacy of discrimination in favor of Jews represented by the JNF.

Protest Knesset Denial of Arab Citizens’ Land Rights

Thursday, July 26th, 2007

Jewish national fund petition protest

**

Realistic Dove, Magnes Zionist and Tikun Olam have united to create an online petition campaign against the Knesset’s odious Jewish National Fund bill which would prevent Arab citizens from leasing the Jewish National Fund’s lands:

We the undersigned express our profound disapproval and sorrow at the Israeli Knesset’s recent passage, on first reading, of the Jewish National Fund bill. The bill would prohibit Israel’s Arab citizens from leasing land owned by the Jewish National Fund (JNF) and managed by the Israeli Land Authority (which administers 93% of Israel’s land). The Israel High Court had earlier ruled that the ILA cannot discriminate against Arabs in leasing such land. This new legislation is an attempt to circumvent that ruling.

We applaud the High Court for putting an end to a discriminatory practice that should never have existed within a democratic state. We also applaud the Israeli MK’s, Jewish and Arab that voted against the amendment. If Israel is to be truly democratic, all its citizens must have the right to lease land held in trust by the government of Israel. Israel must not settle for anything less.

We call upon to the Knesset to defeat the amendment when it comes up for its next reading and to embrace values of equality and tolerance for all its citizens.

As readers here will remember, the Knesset passed the bill on first reading by a 64-16 vote with many Labor members joining the majority including Ami Ayalon, a supposed champion of Israeli-Palestinian dialogue.

I’d be grateful if all my readers would take a moment and visit our petition and add your signature. Also, e-mail the link to this post or the petition to all of your friends, family or co-workers who are interested in this issue. We should stand together against racism and in favor of Israeli democracy for all its citizens. My view of Judaism is that is not a supremacist religion, but rather a tolerant religion that embraces–or at the very least co-exists peacefully with–other faiths including Islam. If we insist that Muslims to be tolerant of non-Muslims, what message does this bill send to Israel’s Arabs and those around the world?

You may view all the petiton’s signatures here.

Jewish Bloggers Initiate Online Petition Against Knesset’s Denial of Arab Citizens’ Right to Lease State Land

Tuesday, July 24th, 2007

UPDATE: Sign the petition.

One of the most racist bills to come down the pike in a long time has just passed its first reading in the Knesset. The Jewish National Fund Bill would prohibit Israeli Arab citizens from leasing state land. A little history is in order. The Jewish National Fund has raised funds in the Diaspora to buy and administer land for the use of Israel’s Jewish citizens. It has always by charter refused to recognize any Arab right to lease such property.

The Israeli Supreme Court ruled that such a practice was discriminatory and not in keeping with the nature of a true democracy and it directed the JNF to allow the Arab complainant to lease JNF land. The current Knesset bill is an attempt to do an end around the judicial ruling.

Jerry Haber first informed me about this troubling and racist bill. After he told me about it we started e mailing about my idea to create an online petition campaign against the bill. We hoped to get several thousand Jewish signatures against it and present them to the Israeli Knesset. Our aim would be to notify the MKs that Diaspora and Israeli Jews are shocked, angry and saddened to see the racist depths to which the Knesset has sunk in passage of this bill on first reading. If enough of us sign, perhaps our sleepy American Jewish leadership might rouse their organizational machinery to oppose the bill as well.

I call upon all my readers to sign the petition. Tell everyone you know about it and ask them to sign. Publicize it in every way you can. Write letters to your Jewish newspaper asking their readers to sign.

Here is the text:

We the undersigned express our profound disapproval and sorrow at the Israeli Knesset’s recent passage, on first reading, of the Jewish National Fund bill. The bill would prohibit Israel’s Arab citizens from leasing land owned by the Jewish National Fund (JNF) and managed by the Israeli Land Authority (which administers 93% of Israel’s land). The Israel High Court had earlier ruled that the ILA cannot discriminate against Arabs in leasing such land. This new legislation is an attempt to circumvent that ruling.

We applaud the High Court for putting an end to a discriminatory practice that should never have existed within a democratic state. We also applaud the Israeli MK’s, Jewish and Arab that voted against the amendment. If Israel is to be truly democratic, all its citizens must have the right to lease land held in trust by the government of Israel. Israel must not settle for anything less.

We call upon to the Knesset to defeat the amendment when it comes up for its next reading and to embrace values of equality and tolerance for all its citizens.

The petition will go online shortly and I will add a link here as soon as it does.

Dan Fleshler reports to me that Ronald Lauder, national chair of JNF has released a statement applauding the Knesset’s racist bill. The language of the statement shows that neither he nor his organization has a clue what being a democracy means:

“We are gratified that the government of Israel…recognized that the land purchased by the Jewish people for the Jewish people should remain in the hands of its rightful owners.

“This Knesset decision reaffirms the vision and the dream of Theodor Herzl and the millions of Jews over the past 106 years who contributed and participated in the rebirth of a Jewish nation after 2,000 years. The land of Israel is part of the very existence of the Jewish people from as far back as Abraham. We are a people linked to our land. Now and forever.”

Jerry Haber of Magnes Zionist has pointed out the aboslute fallacy of this statement here:

It has been argued in defence of the amendment that the lands owned by the Jewish National Fund were purchased by Jews for the express purpose of Jewish settlement, and that to use it for other purposes would be to violate the wishes of the donors. This argument is invalid for two reasons: First, the vast majority of land owned by the Jewish National Fund was not purchased by Jewish individuals but rather was expropriated by the Israel Government in the early years of the state from absentee Palestinian owners and transferred to the Fund so that the Israel government could not itself be accused of discriminatory land leasing – a legal fiction of dubious morality. Second, no parallel mechanism for the settlement needs of Arab citizens was ever established. On the contrary, as the Or Commision set up after the Israeli Arab protests in 2000 noted, “Arab settlements have been surrounded by security zones, Jewish district councils, national parks, nature reserves, and highways, that prevent or inhibit the possibility of future expansion.”

For Lauder and the JNF, a Jewish state means Jews are superior and Arabs hardly exist. Is this a democracy? Or is this a state in which those of one religion possess rights that others don’t have? Can we as Diaspora Jews countenance Israel lapsing into such an abased state?

A Mighty Heart Defies Expectations

Tuesday, July 24th, 2007

mighty heart screenshot
I saw A Mighty Heart last night, the movie about Daniel Pearl‘s abduction and murder, and I was surprised. First, I liked the movie and expected not to. Second, it was not the anti-Muslim screed I’d expected it to be. If anything was a subject made for exploitation Hollywood style it was this story. An American-Jewish reporter goes to Pakistan to report on the teeming world of Islamic extremism. He goes seemingly with an open mind and American values of inquisitiveness and tolerance. His values are met by jihadi hatred, kidnapping and ultimately beheading. Could you have any better recipe for a suspense potboiler full of leering, evil Arabs?

Yet, Michael Winterbottom the director, chooses to avoid this obvious pitfall (and he faces many others as well). He decides he is going to try to write a story about two idealistic children of the world (Daniel and Marianne Pearl) thrown into the maelstrom of third world poverty, desperation and religious hatred. Despite being tested in the deepest and most painful ways it is possible for a human to be tested, the Pearls both retain their humanity intact. This is a hopeful movie. But its hope doesn’t come cheaply or easily. It is hope wrested from violence and suffering. Perhaps this is the only type of real hope there is–hope based on adversity.

The main element of this film is confusion. Everything and everyone is a swirl of movement and emotions. Hardly anything remains in one place very long. The camera sweeps through the teeming streets of Pakistan’s fetid urban centers providing the full panoply of human energy and misery. The crowded slums actually become a character in themselves in the film. Winterbottom does this in an ingenious way. He doesn’t really have to tell you about the social conditions in third world Muslim countries that serve as the breeding ground for Islamic extremism. No characters have to engage in long conversations about it to explain it to the audience. The camera does it for you.

But there is one element I felt the filmmaker didn’t explore fully enough. You have to admit that the decision by a young American Jewish journalist to accept an assignment in Pakistan, hotbed of some of the most rabid anti-Israel, anti-western sentiment in the world, strikes one as quixotic or perhaps even nuts. Why did Pearl do it? What were his reasons for taking this assignment? What was the Wall Street Journal’s thinking in making this assignment?

I’d like to know more about Daniel Pearl. What did he believe both as a journalist, a Jew and human being. What were his private thoughts about the imams, sheikhs and jihadis he covered in Pakistan? The movie doesn’t covey much of this and I wish it did more. It would’ve explained much to me that is lacking in the motivations of the key characters.

On a less momentous note, I wish the character of the Pakistani police inspector had been more explosive and energetic. The role as written portrays a genial, humane, soft-spoken man. What about someone who shrieks, who loses his temper, who hits people, who curses, who is wily, but still retains his humanity? Personally, I think it would’ve added to the drama of the situation.

I was struck by one element of the plot. At the end in voiceover, Marianne Pearl tells us that just before he was beheaded Daniel looked into the camera and said he was a Jew and that a street in Bnei Brak (Israel) is named for his grandfather, who founded the town. This is Pearl reaching back into his Jewish soul for something he is proud of, something that will mark his life, something he can leave after his death for others to know what was important to him as he faced his fate. It was also the ultimate act of rebellion against his captors–saying to them: “you can kill a Jew, but my grandfather helped build a Jewish country and it will live on after me despite your hated and violence.”

I am grateful that A Mighty Heart didn’t lapse into parody or propaganda. It portrayed a confusing, multi-faceted event with admirable nuance and emotional complexity.

Christian Zionists Israel’s Mujahadeen?

Monday, July 23rd, 2007

James Besser has a good piece in Jewish Week about Christians United for Israel, the uber-Zionist evangelical group founded by John Hagee, darling of AIPAC’s last national policy conference. What struck me about CUFI is that it threatens to become Israel’s Golem. Rabbi Yehuda Loew created the creature to protect Prague’s Jews from attack by a Christian mob. After routing the anti-Semites and saving the Jews, the Golem eventually runs amok and threatens the safety of the very people he was created to protect. Rabbi Loew then has to destroy the creature by changing the letters on his forehead from emet to met (dead).

Here is what I found especially disturbing about CUFI’s current position regarding Israeli policy:

Pastor John Hagee, the fiery megachurch pastor and CUFI founder…said his group will support Israeli policy “as long as it does not violate biblical principles.”

Those who read this blog will know that I take strong issue with much of the work AIPAC does. But at least that group makes a claim (not always honored in the breach) that its activities adhere generally to Israeli government policy. That at least gives some form of accountability and if AIPAC goes over the top, as it often does, one can point out how its actions diverge from or exceed Israeli policy. The peculiar problem with CUFI is that it is not accountable to the Israeli government or AIPAC which created the monster. Christian Zionists are only accountable to divine guidance defined as they see fit.

This is why it’s one thing to engage in political give and take regarding resolving the Israel Palestine conflict. But once you introduce God into the debate, there is no longer any rational underpinning or pragmatic basis to which one can appeal. CUFI is a monster of AIPAC’s making. It will have to deal with the headache of its very own Golem running amok within the American political scene.

One only has to read today’s headlines in which Ehud Olmert warned his fellow Israelis that they would have to leave “many” settlements as part of a peace agreement with the Palestinians. Do AIPAC and Olmert think CUFI is going to go peacefully as Israel forces these settlers to evacuate? No, of course the Christian Zionist wingnuts are going to make common cause with the radical settlers and try to run amok within the halls of Congress. I can also imagine Christian zealots making common cause with the settlers and joining them on rooftops to battle with Israeli police as settler youth did during the Gaza withdrawal. That could be some heady brew of Christian-Jewish extremism.

Those of you who prefer to view this through the prism of U.S. Mideast policy should think about the mujahadeen forces the CIA created, funded and armed in Afghanistan to fight the Soviet invaders. Remember that these same forces then turned on us and helped nurture the Taliban and the current resistance to our presence there. Not to mention those like Osama bin Laden who have become world-wide jihadists attempting to overthrow the international order. CUFI threatens to become Israel’s very own mujahadeen.

Hat tip to Middle East Bulletin, a great media resource for Israeli-Palestinian peace reporting.

Jewish Blog Roundup for Jewish Media

Sunday, July 22nd, 2007

Those of you who read Slate or Salon will note their blog roundups which focus on a particularly hot news topic of the day and present sample views of bloggers from different ideolgogical viewpoints. One of my criticisms of the Jewish media is that it’s completely missed the boat on the blogging phenomenon. So I’ve suggested to The Forward’s online editor that that publication create such a column in which they’d choose a different topic of Jewish interest each week and feature links to what Jewish bloggers are writing on the subject. He replied that he’d been wanting to do such a thing for some time but hadn’t gotten around to it yet. I’d encourage him to pursue the idea. I also offered to help in any way I could.

Not only would it help drive traffic to Jewish blogs, it would also drive bloggers and their readers to The Forward’s site. The currency of Jewish blogs is largely unvalued within the Jewish media. Such a blog roundup would do much to integrate the two so they are less divorced and alien from each other.

Halperin’s ‘Forced to Get Along,’ Forced Fantasy

Saturday, July 21st, 2007

Rarely has political tripe about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict been so elegantly written as Mark Helprin’s Forced to Get Along in yesterday’s New York Times. Helprin posits the dubious proposition that George Bush’s new peace plan actually has a much greater chance of success than it is currently being given credit for, because Anwar Sadat’s 1977 peace initiative was similarly derided at the time:

After Anwar Sadat’s spectacular trip to Jerusalem in November 1977, the press, mistaking cynicism for wisdom, was skeptical. After all, in the first 25 years of its existence, Israel had had to fight Egypt four times. But the past was no guide to the future, for in the last 30 years the peace of Menachem Begin and Anwar Sadat has been unbroken.

…At the time, few people were able to see the way ahead even as it was clearly illuminated by the facts.

First, Helprin overlooks one important point. Sadat, the courageous fellow who went to Jerusalem, was gunned down in broad daylight for his trouble. And you can be damn sure that the current leaders of Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and Jordan, who George Bush has called upon to bolster this peace plan, are thinking of Sadat’s fate as they ponder whether to help.

Second, like Helprin, I lived through that period. Unlike Helprin, I seem to remember it quite differently. I watched Sadat deliver his address to the Knesset on TV. I remember my feelings of wonderment and excitement. I remember my realization that something truly historic and remarkable was happening in the history of both Israeli-Arab relations and the Mideast in general. I remember my feelings of hope that some real change and even peace could happen as a result of this wild, improbable event. Everyone I knew understood what this event COULD mean and hoped it would fulfill its promise for peace. So no, I have no idea what Helprin is talking about when he notes people’s skepticism in 1977.

As for the Bush plan, the skepticism is well-founded for, unlike Sadat’s trip to Jerusalem, which required tremendous courage and which broke a logjam of preconceived notions each side had for the other–Bush’s proposal comes out of desperation and offers little that is new or appealing for either side. As usual, what Bush proposes is warmed over ideas which have been tried and failed before
.
Let’s continue with more of Helprin’s fantasy of Egyptian-Israeli rapprochement:

Nearly bankrupt, its population swelling, recently divorced from the Soviet Union, irrelevant to the third world and having reclaimed its honor by partial success in the 1973 war, Egypt was predictable.

Helprin makes it appear that Sadat pursued his policy out of desperation. On the contrary, Sadat pursued his policy with canny analysis of his position. If anything, it was Israel that was the more desperate. It had lost an unheard of 3,000 men in the war. Syria had come within a tank crew or two or entirely overrunning the Golan and north. The country was shell-shocked. It needed a break. Begin too knew that Golda had made a fatal blunder in spurning Sadat’s peace overture before the ’73 war. If anything, it was Israel in 1977 that didn’t want to miss that peace train.

In the following passage Helprin weaves yet another pipe-dream suggesting that 1977 and 2008 have things in common which no one except a neocon fantasist could imagine possible. As I said earlier, the construction of the fantasy is truly elegant and appealing, but fatally flawed and ultimately vacant:

Israel and Egypt, knowing their interests and set upon their course, formed, as it were, the innermost of three concentric circles. Surrounding them was a second circle, the Arab rejectionists, which were divided, militarily weak, geographically separated and economically impotent. Except for the Soviet bloc, which did not have the agility to make up for its lack of position, the major powers that formed the outer circle were overwhelmingly in favor of rapprochement. And in the end, they used their combined strengths to break the middle circle of rejectionists against the solid center formed by the principals. A similar metaphysics has now emerged in the Middle East.

…the effect of the [Iraq] war has been to shatter the politics of the region and create opportunities, one of which is the potential for a settlement between Israel and the Palestinians.

So we are to understand that Israel and the Palestinians (at least those represented by Fatah) represent Israel and Egypt in this analogy. While Hamas, Syria, and Iran are in the “second circle” of rejectionists. And the third circle is to represent the U.S., E.U., and Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Egypt, the “major powers overwhelmingly in favor of rapprochement.” We are to presume that those in the first circle today will similarly combine with the third circle to break the will of those rejectionists in the second circle. As I said, quite nice, quite elegant, but an entirely bogus historical analogy.

Egypt of 1977 is nothing like Palestine of 2008. The former was a united country led by a visionary leader. The latter is a people beset by civil war and utter internal chaos. Even the Israel of 1977 has little to do with the Israel of 2008. Ehud Olmert is no Menachem Begin. Whatever Begin’s weaknesses, Olmert is a political weakling in comparison. He has none of the intestinal fortitude or vision of Begin. None of the character tested by adversity.

As for the rejectionist “second circle,” there is one key member in the 2008 version to contend with–Hamas. As with the 1977 rejectionists, Hamas is “militarily weak and economically impotent,” but it is not divided, not politically weak, and a key player who cannot be ignored. In fact, though Hamas may be rejectionist, it doesn’t deserve second circle billing. In fact, it is the missing player from the first circle–the unseen hand, if you will. Helprin’s attempt to consign Hamas to oblivion in his pseudo-deft historical analogy will work no better than Bush’s West Bank First, Gaza Never policy.

As for the third circle, the 2008 “major powers” are definitely not overwhelmingly in favor of rapprochement [or in 2008 parlance, the Bush plan].” The interests and positions of the U.S., Quartet, E.U. and front line Arab states are disparate and almost never in complete sync. In fact, they are shifting sands which move according to whatever political wind happens to be blowing.

Here, Helprin the fantasist turns his attention to the Lebanon war and its aftermath:

Contrary to the received wisdom, last summer Hezbollah overplayed its hand. Israel emerged shaken but with few casualties and an economy that actually grew during the hostilities. It took 4,000 of the vaunted Katyusha rockets to kill 39 Israelis, they did little material damage, and not one has been launched in the year since the war. Israel showed that upon provocation it could and would destroy anything in its path, thus creating a Lebanese awakening that has split the country and kept Hezbollah fully occupied. Though Hezbollah is rearming, it remains shy of Israel.

Hamas, too, has overplayed its hand, which has provided the opening from which a Palestinian-Israeli peace may emerge. For the first time since 1948, a fundamental division among the Palestinians presents a condition in which the less absolutist view may find shelter and take hold.

The truth of the matter is that Israel emerged from the war shaken to its core both politically and militarily. No one in Israel can believe that in its next war it will enjoy anywhere near the superiority it enjoyed in every previous war save this last one. Everyone knows that future wars will be grim, merciless and grinding. Victory is no longer a given. In fact, victory is very much in doubt. This is a situation Israel has never faced before.

The political echelon in Israel has been brought to its knees. No Israeli believes its current leadership has what it takes to lead the nation to security or peace. These are qualities the nation had found in its previous prime minister, Sharon. For Helprin to slough off the impact of the war on Israel so breezily and dismissively shows he’s writing from a distance and does not have his finger on the pulse of the country.

Contrary to what Helprin says, the fact that no Katyusha has fallen on Israel since the war has almost nothing to do with Israel or its military might. Rather, it has to do with Hezbollah’s interest in maintaining the status quo during this period. Contrary to Helprin, Israel showed that “upon provocation” it could not militarily deliver on any of its major goals. It could not destroy Hezbollah. It couldn’t even seriously weaken it.

To describe what Israel did to Lebanon as causing an “awakening” is ludicrous beyond words. The democratic “awakening” occurred before the war and has been almost entirely vitiated by the effects of the war, thanks to Israel. Hezbollah may have its hands full currently dealing with the internal political situation, but if Helprin thinks Hezbollah will remain quiescent for long he makes a mistake so many Mideast analysts have made before him in underestimating the destructive power of attempting to maintain a rotten status quo.

As for Hamas, the claim that it has “overplayed its hand” can in no way be supported. Hamas has done many foolish, counterproductive things during its existence and some of its behavior during the Gaza takeover falls into that category. But Hamas’ general political situation is in no way threatened. Hamas will be ignored at the peril of the Abbases, Bushes, Blairs and Helprins or this world. If Helprin thinks that the current Gaza-West Bank split “presents a condition in which the less absolutist view may find shelter and take hold” he is not just sorely mistaken–he is as deluded as George Bush was when he told the world the Iraq war would be a cakewalk.

Let’s continue with Helprin’s fantasies:

Mahmoud Abbas, the Fatah leader and Palestinian president, is weak in many ways, but he has decisively isolated the radicals.

Has he now? Yes, Abbas and Fatah are ascendant in the West Bank. Hamas has clearly gone to ground. But if Helprin thinks this means that Hamas has been defanged even in the West Bank, let alone Gaza he is sorely mistaken. Going to ground is not the same as being defeated or destroyed. And nothing like that has happened. Abbas has not “decisively isolated” or destroyed anyone and he knows it. He just hasn’t told Helprin the news.

The West Bank…face[s] a different demographic than…Gaza, and a different economy that can be richly watered if Israel is wise enough to do so

First, it is highly doubtful that the West Bank economy can be “richly watered” by anyone, let alone the Israelis. Yes, the West Bank economy is healthier and more viable than Gaza’s. But who in their right mind trusts that Israel will be interested in “richly watering” the West Bank? It has never before been interested in doing so. Why would it start now?

In economically besieged Gaza, Hamas is corralled by Israel, Egypt and the sea, its apparent strength exaggerated by Mr. Abbas’s decision not to fight on this battlefield but rather to profit by its loss, much as did King Hussein in regard to the West Bank in 1967.

Here is more wishful thinking. Hamas IS physically corralled. But you cannot corral a political idea or movement. No matter what Israel or Egypt do regarding Hamas, they cannot tame the tide that Hamas represents. Perhaps if Fatah could somehow reform itself and become a viable political alternative things might be different. But almost everyone but Helprin knows this isn’t in the cards. At least not right now and not in the foreseeable future.

Abbas and Fatah’s ass was whupped in Gaza. He didn’t choose to “profit by his loss.” He didn’t “decide not to fight.” His minions fled in dishonor in the face of Hamas’ superior organization and military will. Fatah’s loss in Gaza is merely a reflection of the latter’s disintegration as a viable political force.

The starving and oppressed Gazans who watch Hamas fire rockets…may soon see a prosperous West Bank at the brink of statehood and at peace with its neighbors and the world.

The operative word in the above passage is “may.” And the Pope may convert to Judaism too. How likely are either possibility?

Hamas leaders…may be held to account for keeping more than a million of their own people hostage to a gratuitous preference for struggle over success.

Again, the operative word is “may.” But the real truth is that Hamas has paid no political price whatsoever for Gaza’s current siege. Why should it? Gazans don’t blame Hamas. They correctly blame Israel and secondarily the world community for their misery. Why in heaven’s name would Mark Helprin think that because it’s clear as day to him that Hamas is the cause of Gaza’s misery that 1.5 million Gazans would agree with him? It’s really the height of neocon presumption.

The sudden and intense commonality of interest between the Palestinian Authority and Israel is the equivalent of the Israeli-Egyptian core of 1977. But today, the Arabs, in the second circle, have largely reversed position. Fearful of Iran’s sponsorship of war, chaos and revolution, they will apply their weight against the rejectionists.

Egypt, the Persian Gulf states and Jordan…cannot afford an active front in their midst, and are therefore forming ranks against Iran, Hezbollah and Hamas, bringing most of the rest of the Arab states with them.

Does anyone with any sense in their head believe that Israel and Fatah share a “sudden and intense commonality?” The very idea is preposterous. They MAY share some short term goals and interests, but even these interests are as unstable as the shifting desert sands given the political winds that could disrupt them.

Don’t you just love the word “will” in the closing sentence of the above passage? The Arabs WILL unite against Iran. They will see it Bush’s way and push for Hamas’ continued isolation. The only problem is that while the frontline states are opposed to Iran, they are by no means united in their belief that Bush’s policy represents the way to go. And they are absolutely opposed to Bush’s West Bank First concept. In fact, they continue to support the idea of a Palestinian unity government first proposed by Saudi Arabia. So there you have it. Helprin’s 2008 Arab “coalition of the willing”–won’t. ‘Nuff said.

All I can say to this is Wow:

This is extraordinary and it is where we are now: on the verge of a rare alignment of Israel and the Palestinian Authority, the leading Arab nations and the major powers.

Doesn’t this remind you of the high-blown rhetoric that preceded the Iraq war? The neocon power of self-deception knows no bounds.

…Though the United States has of late been a graceless lummox drunkenly knocking everything awry, its powers remain pre-eminent and its will constructive.

Gee, I think the Iraqi insurgents and Iranians might take issue with the claim that our “power remains pre-eminent.” If that were so, why haven’t we cleaned up in Iraq? Why haven’t we forced Iran to do our will over the nuclear issue? As for the claim that our “will is constructive,” I guess that depends who you’re asking. If you’re asking 99% of the world’s Muslims then the answer would be a resounding No. If you’re asking Europeans the answer would be No. If you’re asking the circle who populate the neocon think tanks like Helprin’s Claremont Institute, then hell yeah, our will is constructive.

Here Helprin again makes the empty claim that Hamas is politically ineffectual:

Anything for the worse can happen in the Arab-Israeli conflict, and usually does; but now the chief pillars of rejectionist policy lie flat…

Hamas is no more “flat” than the earth is. To believe otherwise is to simply deny reality much as the Copernicans did in their dispute with Galileo.

Helprin’s final sentence is truly breathtaking in its self-delusion and deserves to be relished by anyone with a more pragmatic, realistic bent:

…Historical processes have unfrozen. If Israel and the Palestinian Authority can pursue a strategy of limited aims, concentrating on bilateral agreements rather than a single work of fallible grandeur, they may accomplish something on the scale of Sadat’s extraordinary démarche of 30 years ago. The odds are perhaps the best they have been since, and responsible governments should recognize them as the spur for appropriate action and risk.

The truth of the matter is that Sadat’s “demarche” was not built on a “strategy of limited aims.” It was a bold, radical break with the past. And Sadat expected bold, radical results which is what he realized in the Camp David agreements. “Bilateral agreements” will not resolve the Israeli-Palestinian mess. Only final status negotiations resolving all of the major issues separating the parties will do so.

Anyone who listens to Bush’s pipe dream of West Bank First or Helprin’s fatal vision of Israel finding peace with its rump Palestinian adversary is in for a rude awakening. Remember Iraq?

Mark Helprin is no doubt an elegant, powerful and persuasive fiction writer. He should stick to fiction. Leave Mideast politics to the realists.