Archive for January, 2008

Independent Jewish Voices Protests Gaza Siege

independent jewish voices ad
Brian Klug sent me today Independent Jewish Voices‘ ad published in yesterday’s Times of London protesting the siege of Gaza and the Qassam attacks on Israeli targets. The ad read:

The siege of Gaza is causing devastating social and economic consequences and threatens a humanitarian catastrophe…The collective punishment of the people of Gaza is illegal under international law. We condemn all attacks on civilians, including the rocket attacks on the people of southern Israel.

We call upon the Israeli government to lift the blockade of Gaza, for both sides to observe a ceasefire as a first step toward a just, comprehensive settlement, and for the international community to bring the isolation of Gaza to an end.

We need to do something similar for the American media. Anyone willing to join me?

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Rachel Tzvia Back’s ‘On Ruins and Return’

Rachel Tzvia Back’s On ruins and return
The Forward carries a review of what promises to be a wonderful collection of poetry by Israeli-American poet, Rachel Tzvia Back. Though I studied for a PhD in Hebrew literature until 1983, I haven’t kept up with new developments in the field and her work is unfamiliar to me. But after reading this review I long to hear her give a reading and read more of her work:

Many of the poems in “On Ruins & Return” have strong political implications — razed homes and wells, ambulances stopped at roadblocks, Arab families forced to stand outside in the cold night as soldiers in jeeps search their village — but a political agenda does not dominate. Back’s images of near-daily Israeli trauma during the height of the intifada — “mangled/metal blood flesh/to be scraped off the street/collected in sandwich bags”(“On the Ruins of Palestine”), “burnt out bus carcasses” (“A Dream”) and “mothers watching/soldiers on their knees/sifting and searching for body parts/do not think of next worlds/they think only of/lost worlds” (“Soldiers on Their Knees in the Sand”) — are searing, and unforgettable. Back’s words stem from a place in the heart that does not distinguish Palestinian from Israeli, but rather weeps for lost limbs, marred bodies and drops of blood, regardless of nationality…

The collection’s finest, most chilling pieces, “A Fable and a Nursery Rhyme” and “Their Sons, My Sons,” are companion poems of sorts, the first inspired by a Palestinian bombing of a Jewish school bus, the latter written after an Israeli bomb fell on an Arab strawberry field. Whatever your political affiliations, both poems — with visceral scenes of Back’s three children searching for the body parts of three children their own ages, and an Arab mother gathering in a head scarf her sons’ flesh among strawberries — will grab you in the gut.

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AJCommittee Attacks Obama as Soft on Palestinians

A senior AJCommittee staffer wrote a memo dissing Barack Obama’s commitment to Israel. After the Forward published it the Committee renounced the document. All this happened in context of the upcoming make or break Super Tuesday primaries in which many states with substantial Jewish populations will be voting. The Forward also places the leaked memo in the context of Hillary Clinton and Republican efforts to portray him as insufficiently loyal to Israel’s interests:

Obama’s approach to dealing with Iran “raises questions,” said the document, which circulated within the American Jewish Committee. It also suggested that Obama placed the burden of solving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict primarily on the Jewish state…

Quoting Obama’s much buzzed-about statement early in the campaign that “no one has suffered more than the Palestinians,” Feuer questioned the lawmaker’s potential as a peace broker.

“He appears to believe the Israelis bear the burden of taking the risky steps for peace, and that the violence Israel has received in return does not shift that burden,” Feuer wrote.

She also expressed concern about Obama’s emphasis on diplomacy, particularly in dealing with Iran and other “rogue states.”

“The Senator’s interpretation of the NIE raises questions,” Feuer wrote, referring to the new National Intelligence Estimate, released in November 2007, which determined that Iran had halted its alleged nuclear weapons program in 2003. While Feuer did not explicitly elaborate further, she included a number of statements Obama has made that encourage diplomatic engagement with Tehran and are critical of the Bush administration.

Feuer also noted Obama’s presence at a fundraiser headlined in 1998 by the now late Edward Said, and of public suggestions by Ali Abunimah, a Chicago-based Palestinian activist, that the senator was more openly critical of America’s approach to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict before his first run for Senate.

The memo appears to contradict the stated policy of Israel lobby groups like AJC, the ADL and AIPAC to remain politically non-partisan. Perhaps that’s why the group rushed to distance itself from it as soon as word leaked out.

Thankfully, Obama’s Florida campaign chair Robert Wexler took strong exception to the sentiments included in the document:

In an interview with the Forward, one of the senator’s chief backers, Florida Rep. Robert Wexler, argued that the memo reflected “political bias on the part of the drafter of the memo, rather than the facts.”

Wexler, who chairs Obama’s campaign in Florida, said he took particular issue with the idea that Obama’s calls for diplomacy should cause alarm within Jewish circles, given that a number of Jewish lawmakers have advocated the same position.

“The whole notion that if a lawmaker supports renewed diplomacy with Iran, that that somehow suggests a position that the American Jewish community should be concerned about — well, put me on the top of that list,” Wexler said. “Put Tom Lantos on the top of that list, put Howard Berman and Gary Ackerman on the top of that list.”

It should be noted that the recent AJC annual survey found that only 45% of American Jews found Obama a credible candidate as opposed to 70% for Clinton. Makes you wonder…

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Dershowitz to Compose Opera

I kid you not. Alan Dershowitz plans to write an opera. Of course his entire life is an opera–and a very bad one at that. Imagine the character of Dershowitz outside the Leviev diamond showroom pictured in the YouTube video singing his defiance at the Adalah protesters. It would do boffo box office. Or he could write a great opera about the battle of the Jewish titans, Finkelstein and Dershowitz, though he would never do justice to Finkelstein of course and this would destroy the dramatic tension.

Alas, Dershowitz plans his opera on the life of a Warsaw cantor, Gershon Sirota, who perished in the Holocaust. The story sounds like it actually could make a fine opera, though not if written by the Dersh.

Other than clearly loving opera and good singing, his musical qualifications seem a bit slim:

Dershowitz is not without musical experience — he was a choirboy growing up in Brooklyn’s Boro Park at Temple Beth El, and at one point he dreamed of becoming a cantor — but he readily admits the limitations of his prowess. He is writing the libretto for the opera and picking out melodies on the piano, and down the road he plans to get help from more seasoned musicians.

“But even Gershwin needed an arranger,” he said, adding that his musical idol’s original last name was Gershowitz, and that g’s and d’s occasionally get mixed up.

Note the presumption of implying a possible family relationship with Gershwin. I think he needs more than an arranger. He needs a ghost composer.

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Bernard Avishai on Podhoretz, Jewish Liberalism, and Why Obama Strikes a Chord

There are different kinds of great blog posts. There are those that are polished diamonds. There are those that show immense erudition, elegance, or cleverness. And then there are those that are rough-hewn (and I mean this not at all in a disparaging way), more discursive, a little unsure of where they’re headed. But you know the place they’re headed is one helluva interesting one and you’re dying to go along for the ride regardless of–or perhaps BECAUSE OF–the side trips. Such posts take an idea from here and an idea from there, they range back and forth over historical eras, mix it all together and come up with something wild and wonderful.

Bernard Avishai’s My Jewish Problem–and Ours is one such post. He begins with Podhoretz’s seminal Commentary essay, My Negro Problem–and Ours (pdf), and polishes it off nicely by both placing it in its proper historical and intellectual context, and then dismissing its hopelessly outdated and wrongheaded approach to the issue of race and Black-Jewish relations. Podhoretz becomes a central figure of this essay because he bookends two important periods: the 1960s and today. His ideas in the 60s were a bellweather for liberal Jews grappling with questions of race, equity and justice. His ideas today are no longer relevant and plumbing the reason why is the heart of Avishai’s mission here.

I’d have to call myself an intellectual enthusiast. I love ideas, especially those connected with politics. And I love the history of ideas, especially the ideas of progressive movements. This is what Avishai’s essay serves up in heaping helpings. He ranges from Podhoretz, Heschel, and Koufax in the 60s to Obama in the 00s (can we properly call this decade that?). It’s quite a fun ride which is another reason I like the post. The most important and exciting element of the essay is its attempt to parse the excitement that Barack Obama’s candidacy holds for so many of us liberal Jews.

Now to the esssay itself…I especially appreciate this characterization of the historical American Jewish embrace of Israel in a liberal context:

As my late friend (and Podhoretz’s eventual foil), Dissent’s editor Irving Howe put it, American Jews lived on “the questions.” Israel, for its part, was providing something more like answers, something more resilient and demanding, rooted in Hebrew, there for the long haul if it could survive its siege. But for American Jews before 1967—whose Major Organizations had not yet turned Jerusalem into their Epcot Center—it was American liberalism that was the triumph. Israel’s victories were admired all the more because, after the European horrors, the country was seen as something that remained distantly valiant and progressive. The Weavers sang the songs of Jezreel Valley pioneers in a medley with anthems of Republican Spain. This made Israel a really Jewish state.

The parallel between Jerusalem and the Epcot Center made my heart skip a beat as I read it. He really captures something critical about the Jewish community’s transformation of Jerusalem into a sacred version of Masada, a city worth dying for.

Here, Avishai brings his essay up to date by marrying Podhoretz’s mistaken notions of race and how Jews should relate to the race issue–to the Obama campaign and its impact on Jews today:

I AM RECALLING Podhoretz’s article now because there is something about the current presidential election that is teasing out a moment of truth for American Jews much like the one that article once punctuated. Specifically, there is Barack Obama, whose personification of integration in this old liberal sense can’t help but make Jews question not only what they want, but who they are.

It did not take long for the young Podhoretz to conclude that, instead of marrying African-Americans out of existence [ed. Podhoretz advocated miscegenation as the best solution for the race problem], it was simpler to push them around in ways that, as a child, he could not imagine doing. By the 1970s, his magazine was, among other things, challenging affirmative action and publishing tendentious articles about race and IQ, turning Stokely Carmichael and Ocean Hill-Brownsville into a new assault by Negro gangs. (I wrote about all of this at length in “Breaking Faith: Commentary and the American Jews,” Dissent, Spring 1981, from which some of these ruminations are borrowed.)

Still, Podhoretz’s real breakthrough came, not when he reimagined blacks as more or less permanent adversaries, but when he reimagined Jews as a more or less permanent interest group—when he reimagined the old liberalism as a trendy behaviorism and argued that “Jewish interests” (protection of wealth, “support for Israel,” etc.) required nothing more than a common sense use of power.

The author carries this discussion of Jewish “interests” vs. values into the presidential campaign:

What’s the Jewish interest? I’ll leave that to Podhoretz and (the latest tough he’s attached himself to) Rudy Giuliani to tell Florida today. But what if this was always the wrong question? What if American Jews are not an interest group but restless, loosely connected citizens—curiously proud of (what Aharon Appelfeld calls) their “fate,” not Christian but not unChristian, no longer immigrants, educated and well-off to be sure, but still not quite comfortable, looking to make sense of themselves in an evolving America? What if, by choosing, they show themselves who they are?

THIS IS, PERHAPS, a very roundabout way of saying that Barack Obama got me with hello. Pretty much everything he’s said and done since he started his campaign makes me proud to have voted for him (by absentee ballot, from Jerusalem). But I would be less than honest if I did not explain why voting for him makes me feel like a Jew in America, and in Israel for that matter, in a way I haven’t felt for a very long time. I think of Obama’s candidacy a little like the way I think of my first vote for Pierre Trudeau in 1967, or the emergence of the European Union in my lifetime. It is a kind of show-me-don’t-tell-me proof that the essential premises of liberalism, which Jews have championed since 1848—by which they have defined themselves since Heine—are, well, true.

Yes, Avishai understands that Obama is not perfect. He alludes to the criticism of Jewish mavens like Richard Cohen and Leon Wieseltier. But he seem to say: all that is important, but not as important as an overarching idea of liberalism and hope that Obama has come to embody for his Jewish supporters.

This bit of deft historical analogy shows off the author’s command of the history of the left and brings the essay to a satisfying and hopeful conclusion:

But none of this gets at the big opportunity here. Imagine, by analogy, what it felt like for Frenchmen, a couple of generations after the Dreyfus Affair, to vote for Leon Blum in 1936. Don’t tell me that the only thing at stake was who was the most experienced Social Democrat to govern “on day one.” (And please, New Republic editors, if you are reading this, don’t respond that Blum had failed by 1938; Obama will have the first Congressional majority without Southern Democrats ever, not a tragic alliance with Communists following Stalin’s zig-zag line.)

Anyway, to those of us who’ve been heartsick since the assassinations, the debasement of commercial television, the political triangulations, the vaguely reciprocal threats of creationism and hip-hop, Obama’s voice sounds just prophetic enough. Der mensch tracht und Gott lacht, my father used to say, “Men strive, God laughs.” Fair enough. But I have, I’m afraid, a dream.

For those of us contemplating the enormous excitement we’ve been feeling for the past year at the prospect of an Obama candidacy, Avishai’s essay plumbs this territory beautifully.

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Israeli Chief Rabbi: Expel Gazans to Sinai, Make It ‘Like Arizona’

I don't know whether to laugh or cry over this one. But I'm definitely filing it in my Humor category because if you didn't laugh at the preposterousness of this story you'd have to cry. Israel's chief Ashkenazi rabbi got together with some "wise men" and came up with the brilliant idea of expelling Gazans from Gaza and building them a new home "like Arizona" in the Sinai desert. And there you have it--presto chango--the Palestinian conflict is solved (the relevant portion of the video begins around the 4:00 mark): Metzger has been quoted as calling for Gazans to be transferred to the Sinai Peninsula, ...

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11 Courageous Democrats Criticize Gaza Siege, Where Have You Gone, Barack Obama?

That's all they could muster. 11 brave Democratic Representatives (not a Jew among them) signed a letter criticizing Israel's assault on common decency by laying siege to Gaza last week. Instead of demanding the U.S. ambassador to the UN criticize Qassam rocket attacks or remain silent on the Gaza issue, Barack Obama should've looked over his shoulder at some really forward-thinking Democrats who could've shown him the right thing to do regarding Gaza. It reminds me of the old Simon & Garfunkel song, Mrs Robinson, which I paraphrase: Where have you gone Barack Obama? A nation turns its lonely eyes to you. What's that you say...Barack has left and gone away. Unfortunately, there seems to be only one copy of ...

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Semifreddi’s Bakery

I'm incredibly gratified by some of the wonderful response I've gotten to my article in Haaretz last Friday. For that and other reasons, my site traffic has gotten a delightful boost in the past week or so. No doubt that'll come down to earth all too soon. Bloggers and authors have written telling me about their new projects. They even ask me for advice as if I'm the eminence grise of the blog world. Here I can't get a publisher interested in my book proposal and people are asking me about improving their blogs and securing funding for video projects. Heady stuff. And the nasty trollish stuff in the Haaretz Talkback thread has ...

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Obama Wins South Carolina–Bill Clinton, Back to Your Corner

Obama won and it was decisive. The NY Times is now reporting 55% to 27% for Hillary. Yes, you can take the approach that Bill Clinton did when he minimized the state's impact by dissing its Black majority in the Democratic primary: “Jesse Jackson won South Carolina twice, in ’84 and ’88. And he ran a good campaign. Senator Obama has run a good campaign here, he has run a good campaign everywhere.” Bringing up Jesse Jackson in response to a question about Mr. Obama seemed to be another way of pointing out that Mr. Obama is black and at the same time marginalizing his importance, as well as South Carolina’s, since Mr. Jackson did not become ...

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Why Leila Abu-Saba Will Not Mourn George Habash’s Death

Leila Abu-Saba is the extraordinary Lebanese-American blogger at Dove's Eye View. I know her only through her blog and our various e-mail exchanges. But I feel we are brother and sister at heart. Tonight, she has outdone herself with her anti-eulogy for George Habash. From my slight acquaintance with ancient Greek via the UC Berkeley summer language program, I can tell you a eulogy is a "good word" for the dead. Leila has no good word to say about Habash (which is why I call hers an anti-eulogy) except when she speaks about the beginning of his PFLP movement. But her words about Habash's impact on the Lebanese civil war and subsequent Palestinian terror are ...

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