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)

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Joint Appeal for Peace

(Avi Katz)

Joint Appeal for Peace

Ketubah, Ancona, Italy (1772)

(Jewish Theological Seminary library)

Ancona ketubah

Archive for August, 2008

Palin the Pallid

Friday, August 29th, 2008

Do I hear “uninspired?”  Do I hear “desperate?”  Do I hear “Who?”

There are a few things we can say for certain about Sarah Palin’s role on the Republican ticket: Alaska’s a lock; former beauty queens, a lock; bear hunters, a lock; NRA members, a lock; social conservatives, a lock.  Only problem is McCain had all those constituencies locked in previously.

Here’s the desperation element of this nomination: Palin, in her “maiden” speech appealed to Hillary Clinton’s supporters to move on over to her side to help her break that “glass ceiling:”

“Hillary left 18 million cracks in the highest, hardest glass ceiling in America, but it turns out the women of America aren’t finished yet, and we can shatter that glass ceiling once and for all…”

Who is she kidding?  Does she think Hillary’s supporters will be suckered into voting for a Republican ornament?  That’s all that Palin will be.  After the past campaign we all know Hillary (though all of us may not be friends of hers) and believe me Sarah, you’re no Hillary.

Or to quote the N.Y. Times:

It was far from clear…whether adding a woman to the ticket would persuade Clinton supporters to come over to the Republicans, given Ms. Palin’s differences with Mrs. Clinton on issues from abortion rights to her positions on health care and climate change. Some women said that the pick could be seen as patronizing…

My wife made an interesting observation–given that John McCain seems drawn to ex-beauty queens (like his second wife, Cindy) reporters should’ve realized Palin would be on the short list.  But the question is: is he taking Palin on a date or is he picking her to be a potential president?  I think he may’ve gotten the two confused.  I can’t imagine that Cindy is terribly happy with John picking an attractive woman as his running mate considering his record going back several decades as a womanizer.

I think Palin’s choice should forever put to rest the charge that Barack Obama has a thin resume.  Palin has been governor of Alaska for less than two years.  Before that, she was mayor of a small-town suburb of Anchorage.  Shouldn’t be a problem for her to hop right into that chair in the Oval Office should she ever need to do so.  Or as the N.Y. Times put it:

Democrats and at least some shocked Republicans questioned the judgment of Mr. McCain, who has said repeatedly on the campaign trail that his running mate should have the qualifications to immediately step into the role of commander in chief.

Republicans are quick to retort that she’s running for vice-president, not president.  But they should remember this:

Mr. McCain’s words on the matter have had more than usual resonance this year because of his age — he turned 72 on Friday, and hopes to be the oldest person ever elected to a first term — and his history with skin cancer.

This passage also reveals the Republicans appear to be in a state of denial about Palin’s qualifications:

Mr. McCain’s advisers said Friday that Mr. McCain was well aware that Ms. Palin would be criticized for her lack of foreign policy experience…

How about for her lack of EXPERIENCE, period?!  The only issues this woman has experience dealing with are ones affecting Alaska.  She knows a little about environmental issues, a little about Native American affairs.  That should take her far in national government.  The Times even infers that until she went to visit Alaska National Guard troops in Kuwait she’d never previously left the country as she had no passport.

Palin reportedly refers to her husband as the “First Dude.”  Let her try that on McCain and see how far that gets her.

Another point my wife brings up is that Palin has a four month old special needs baby.  Keep in mind this is a candidate embracing the family values espoused by evangelical Christians and social conservatives.  I think it’s great for women to be mothers with careers.  But to campaign non-stop for the next four months in which she’s likely to see very little of any of her five children, seems slightly contradictory to these values.

But whatever qualms I may have are more than assuaged by this boosterism from the Republican Jewish Coalition:

“As governor of Alaska, Palin has enjoyed a strong working relationship with Alaska’s Jewish community.

All 6,000 of them.  That settles it.  Anyone who’s given a heksher by a few thousand Alaskan Jews must be ready to be a heartbeat away from the presidency.

Oh, and I think Palin’s going to have a little problem in the gravitas department given this dingbat comment:

As recently as last month, Ms. Palin appeared to dismiss the importance of the vice presidency in an interview with Larry Kudlow of CNBC, who asked her about her prospects for the job.

“I still can’t answer that question until somebody answers for me, what is it exactly that the V.P. does every day?” Ms. Palin told Mr. Kudlow. “I’m used to being very productive and working real hard.”

Vice-presidents work hard?  Nah.  Probably less hard than the mayor of Wasila, Alaska.

Peace Activists Set Sail from Gaza

Thursday, August 28th, 2008
Disabled Palestinian loaded on board FGM ship (Reuters)

Disabled Palestinian loaded on board FGM ship (Reuters)

Activists of the Free Gaza Movement boarded their two boats this morning and left the port bound on a return journey to Cyprus after successfully breaking Israel’s siege of the enclave.  They carried on board 7 Palestinians denied exit visas by the Israelis including a 16 year-old boy in a wheelchair awaiting an artificial leg.

Until the moment of sailing, the participants weren’t certain how the Israeli navy would react.  They were prepared for forcible boarding of their boats.  But thankfully, it hasn’t come to that.  I note that certain elements of the IDF disagreed vociferously with this decision not to interfere as Maariv reports (Hebrew):

Sources in the security establishment expressed marked dissatisfaction with Israel’s passive reaction.  A security source told Maariv: “Tzahal vociferously opposed the decision to allow the Palestinians to leave.”  Elements of the military even specifically requested “overpowering the ships with whatever level of force was necessary.”

Other security sources explained it was better to allow the ships to leave without interference.  “We discovered the peace activists intended to add a disabled Palestinian to their number.  None of us wanted to see on international TV channels Israeli military personnel forcefully removing a disabled Palestinians in a wheel chair [from the ship].”

The implication is that Israel would’ve had no compunction using such force against able-bodied Palestinians exiting on the boats.

All I can say is that I’m pleased that cooler heads prevailed in the Israeli government and they took a restrained approach to this matter.  Of course, the FGM plans to return to Gaza on the same boats this time with food and other humanitarian relief.  I doubt Israel will be as restrained the next time.  But one can always hope.

In Maariv’s coverage (Hebrew) it interviewed Jeff Halper, who noted his debt to Abie Nathan, the pioneer Israeli peace activist who died this week:

Abie Nathan met with Arafat and was imprisoned twice.  Today the president and prime minister are eulogizing him.  Then [when Nathan met Arafat] the situation was exactly as it is today.  Nathan believed that the citizen must act even if he pays a personal price.  Had they listened to his voice then [in 1966 when he flew to Egypt], perhaps they would have avoided the Occupation, made peace with the Egyptians and prevented thousands of Israeli dead.

Halper also noted his philosophical approach to citizen peacemaking which precisely mirrors Nathan’s:

The attempt to break the Gaza siege “could only be mounted by private citizens.  Governments with political agendas are not suited to do this.  Only after private citizens break down the walls can there be an opening for governments to begin negotiations.”

I’m guessing that the Nobel committee is watching this episode with interest.  Wouldn’t it be wonderful to have Halper’s Israeli Committee Against Home Demolitions nominated alongside a Palestinian peace group for a Nobel Peace Prize?  Do I hear Nobel, anyone?  Thanks again to Ira Glunts for providing the links.

The Face of Jewish Hate

Thursday, August 28th, 2008

Every so often a reader publishes a comment here that is so hateful I feature it in my Hall of Shame.  My coverage of Jeff Halper’s travails with the Israeli justice system has brought out of the miasma just such a “human being.”  He calls himself Yoni Brukirer and this is what this fine specimen of a Jew (ultra-Orthodox natch) and militant Zionist has to say for himself:

Jeff Halper is an evil man for wanting to help Islamist terrorists who seek Israel’s destruction. This has nothing to do with “occupation”, the Arabs themselves controlled those lands before 1967 (Jordan and Egypt), and as Benny Morris himself writes in “1948″, if the Jews had lost that war the surrounding Arab countries would have taken what is now Israel for themselves. The whole idea of “the Occupation” was invented by the Arabs to destroy Israel. Only demented leftists obsessed with “open-mindedness” accept Arab propaganda in the name of “understanding” and “alternate  narratives”. Jeff Halper and others like him should be tried and executed for treason.

Yoni’s IP reveals him to be in New York.  I have half a mind to report his incitement either to the FBI or New York City police department.  These people think their thoughts and ideas are mere rhetorical ranting.  The problem is that words can kill and maim even if indirectly.  This is the type of hate that led to Yitzchak Rabin’s assassination.  I feature it here because I believe we have to look it in the eye unblinkingly in order to disarm it.

As Yoni posts at a Yeshiva University affiliated discussion forum, it’s likely he’s a graduate of that august institution, which has the distinction of having a rabbinical school dean who also called for Ehud Olmert to be hung if he conceded any of Jerusalem in a future peace deal with the Palestinians.  Dare I wonder whether Yoni earned smicha and is a rabbi?  After all, why should rabbis be immune from ideological diseases that afflict other Jews?  I think the Jewish community has a right to know where hate lives when it lives among them.  It appears to thrive at YU.

I was also tickled by this praise from a fellow forum member about Reb Yoni:

Yoni Brukirer’s response is a great example of a civil response that gets his point across without being rude or condescending.

Apparently, Yoni knows how to be kind to his fellow Orthodox Jews, while the rest of us can go hang ourselves–literally–for all he cares.  And he’ll lend us the rope.

I decided to register for the YU forum and publish Brukirer’s comment there.  This is what I wrote there:

I write a Jewish blog devoted to Israeli-Palestinian peace.  I am not a YU grad, though I am a JTS grad.  I am writing here because I was shocked to read this comment a member of this forum attempted to publish on my blog.  A word of background: an Israeli-American, Jeff Halper, was arrested yesterday by Israeli police for running the Israeli blockade of Gaza.  Now, most of you will certainly disagree with Halper’s actions.  I don’t have a problem with this.

But I would like you to read what one of yr own has written about a fellow Jew:

[comment follows]

I have several reasons for posting this.  First, I want Mr. Brukirer to know that when he writes such comments that he does not do so in a vacuum or privately.  Second, I’d encourage you–members of this community–to debate the repercussions of such expressions of hatred for one’s fellow Jews.

Again, I understand that this community may have entirely diff. ideas about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict than I or Jeff Halper.  But must it come to this?  Do we have to wish death on our fellow Jewish “enemies?”

I also realize that many of you like & respect this person & so I have linked the full comment to a post I published at my blog.  I also have the original comment sent to me in my Inbox.  I wish I was making this up.

Free Gaza Movement Ships Leave Gaza Tomorrow

Thursday, August 28th, 2008

The ships which broke the Israeli blockade of Gaza have announced their intent to hoist anchor and return to Cyprus tomorrow morning.  With them, they plan to take 14 Palestinians including students accepted to universities abroad and a professor who has not been able to take up his teaching post in Europe due to the Israeli siege.

Just as Israel faced a dramatic decision when the ships were steaming toward Gaza, it faces another as they leave, since they once again will be breaking the travel ban which prevents almost all Gazans from exiting their living prison:

Two boats full of international activists that were allowed to sail into Gaza’s harbor on Saturday may be detained by the navy on Thursday as they set sail back to Cyprus, this time with 14 Palestinians on board.

On Wednesday, the Free Gaza Movement held a press conference in Gaza City to announce the departure of the SS Free Gaza and SS Liberty early Thursday morning. In addition to the 40 foreign activists, organizers said, the boats would also be carrying some 14 Palestinians who had previously been denied the right to exit Gaza by Israel.

The organizers said that among the Palestinians were students with valid foreign visas or dual citizenships who had been accepted to universities abroad. Additionally, a Palestinian professor will be leaving to return to teach in Europe, and a young woman will be trying to reunite with her husband abroad.

Once again, the government seems confused about how to react to such non-violent resistance:

Government officials in Jerusalem and the Defense Ministry said they were closely monitoring the situation and by Wednesday evening they had yet to publicize their decision. It was possible that the navy would interdict the boats and at the least inspect the passengers to ensure that none of them posed a security threat to Israel.

Why would the navy need to “interdict” ships leaving Gaza and steaming away from Israel to determine whether they “posed a security threat to Israel?” As with much of Israeli government thinking, this one is a bit hard to fathom.

Abie Nathan, Israeli Fighter for Peace, Dies

Thursday, August 28th, 2008
Abie Nathan, iconoclast, uncompromising fighter on behalf of peace

Abie Nathan, iconoclast, uncompromising fighter on behalf of peace (Benny Ortal)

Trusty reader Ira Glunts informs me of one of the supreme ironies of today’s news–a synchronistic moment that doesn’t happen often in life.  Just as Jeff Halper was being arraigned before an Israeli court for civil disobedience on behalf of breaking Israel’s siege of Gaza, Abie Nathan, one of Israel’s most fearless peace activists was dying in a Tel Aviv hospital (Hebrew). For those of you who don’t know, Abie was a true Israeli original and represented the absolute best that Israel had to offer the world. He was an iconoclast who harbored grand ideas and was fearless in  implementing them.  He had the bold vision of a Don Quixote and the hubris to believe he could pull it off.

After serving in Israel’s first air force, he used his flying skills to travel to Egypt against Israeli law to urge Nasser to seek a peaceful solution to his conflict with Israel. Yediot Achronot’s description of the incident is descriptive:

Abie Nathan

Abie Nathan's Shalom 1 plane

He sought to meet with the leaders of the Arab world when such meetings were against the law. His first noted attempt came in 1966. Nathan, in a white Steerman plane, on which was painted the words “Shalom 1″ in black, departed the small airfield outside Herzliya, his destination Cairo.

Upon his arrival, he greeted the airport manager saying he wanted to meet with Egypt’s president, Gamal Abdel Nasser. In Israel, they announced his death. But he was well-received in Egypt.

Before leaving, he parted with the Egyptian officers and journalists saying: “Shalom u-l’hitraot.” 33 hours later his plane appeared in the skies over the Tel Aviv airport.

In 1973, with the help of John Lennon, Nathan founded Israel’s most famous pirate radio station, Kol Shalom. It broadcast music and news in Hebrew and Arabic from a ship in the Mediterranean. It did this in a time when relations between Israel and the Arab world were frozen. This made Nathan’s venture both bold and dangerous to some. It also forever sealed him in the minds of all Israelis as a quixotic dreamer on behalf of peace.  But to those on the political right, he was a meddlesome troublemaker and publicity seeker.

Nathan also worked tirelessly on behalf of refugees in countries like Somalia, Ethiopia and Guatemala. In the 1980s, he met Yasser Arafat when contacts with the PLO were still illegal. In 1991, he went on a 40 day fast in protest of such laws.  The same year he was prosecuted and sentenced to 18 months in prison for his trouble.

Yediot Achronot reports that Nathan was born in Iran and grew up in India. As an ethnic outsider in Ashkenazi dominated Israel, that might explain why his ideas were so outside the social consensus.

In later years, he was felled by several strokes which left him partially paralyzed and unable to speak. Before he lost the power of speech he spoke bitterly in an interview of the cost he had paid for his devotion to peace:

Those who put me in jail wasted my life. I could have done much more for peace.

This is precisely the reason I have covered Jeff Halper’s legal predicament so intensively.  I want to do my part to ensure that yet another peace activist doesn’t have to face the opprobrium that Nathan suffered, only to become a prophet in retrospect.  Let’s honor our dreamers and heroes, not imprison them.

Just as Nathan flew his small plane to an enemy land to broach the subject of peace with Israel’s sworn enemy, so too Halper and the Free Gaza Movement activists have boldly penetrated Israel’s siege in an attempt to break through the barriers of Occupation Israel has imposed.  And just as Nathan’s vision was redeemed with the Camp David Accords signed in 1979, so too someday Israel will achieve peace with its Palestinian neighbors.  People like Nathan and Halper make such miracles possible.

Haaretz reports this moving testament to Nathan’s energy and vision:

When asked what he would want written on the stone, he replied “Nisiti” – (“I tried)”

Nathan’s website provides a more comprehensive view of his life and achievements.  This is a true Israeli original who deserves to be celebrated.  If there was an Israeli Hall of Fame, he should be in it.

Halper Released, Faces Indictment for Gaza Civil Disobedience

Wednesday, August 27th, 2008
Jeff Halper flashes "v" for victory during court arraignment (Tsafrir Abayov)

Jeff Halper flashes

Jeff Halper was released from an Israeli jail today after being arraigned for his efforts to break the Gaza siege through the Free Gaza Movement recent journey.  Ynetnews reports:

Professor Jeff Halper, the only Israeli citizen [ed., there were actually FOUR Israeli citizens] to participate in a sea-borne attempt to sail into Gaza on Saturday, was released on Wednesday after being detained by police on Tuesday.

Minnesota-born Halper, an Anthropology lecturer from Ben Gurion University…was arrested after he passed through the Erez crossing back into Israel, since he had violated a military order prohibiting Jewish civilians from entering Gaza that was legislated pursuant to the Disengagement in 2005. Police originally thought to release Halper conditionally following preliminary questioning, but apparently decided to keep him in lock-up overnight.

There were two potential charges considered against Halper: As stated, his presence in Gaza violates a military order that delineates the region as a military-only zone. Additionally, he was considered a public hazard, since his presence in Gaza would have made him a prime target for kidnapping, which could have had massive negative repercussions on the state and its citizens.

This second justification is laughable as it places Halper in the same category as kidnapped IDF soldier Gilad Shalit who WAS kidnapped. But Halper certainly would not have been kidnapped since he was considered a hero by all Gazans. Again, this is a transparent and rather petty attempt to remind the world that Gazans are lawless, violent thugs who would kidnap ANY Israeli they could get their hands on–even someone considered a hero by the native population. Patently absurd. But again, I guess you can’t blame the Israeli police for trying to pass this off as a legitimate argument.

What is perhaps most interesting in this story is the following which indicates a decided split in the thinking between the local police and the attorney general’s office:

Police met Wednesday morning with Halper’s lawyers, as well as with representatives from the Foreign Ministry and Defense Ministry, to discuss his status. Despite wanting to file an indictment against Halper, the discussions, and in particular a consultation with the Attorney-General’s Office, motivated police to release him conditionally.

It is important for the peace community to exploit this difference of opinion in government circles and lobby for a sensible approach to Halper’s case. Israel will gain nothing by criminalizing a legitimate act of civil disobedience. In fact, if we organize on Jeff’s behalf we can make it be known that following a hardline against him will in fact cost Israel in goodwill.

So far, the foreign ministry’s better judgment has prevailed in allowing the FGM boats to reach Gaza without intervention. It would be a shame if such moderation were spoiled by Israeli overreaction to Halper’s alleged violation.

Here the report notes the local police’s determination to punish Halper despite the attorney general’s effort to deescalate the situation:

The head of the Sderot Police Station said that, despite the Attorney-General’s advisory opinion, it intends to file an indictment against Halper for his actions.

We also need to pressure the U.S. media to do a better job of covering this story than they did with the earlier FGM voyage. So far, reader Ira Glunts informs me that the Washington Post has run a short item on Jeff’s arrest. I hope this is the first of many such stories.

Here is Jeff’s statement to the press:

Halper said that he pleased about his release. He referred to his illegal action as part of a “historic moment, because we succeeded in breaching psychological barriers and this shows that it’s possible to make a connection between the two peoples without the interference of governments and shows that there is a partner on the other side.”

“Israel implements a policy of holding the rope at both ends. Allegedly, the state isn’t occupying Gaza but it is in charge of the entrances into Gaza, such that it is actually operating in Gaza,” he added.

If this statement by Jeff’s lawyer is a verbatim quotation, then he has made a major, and very basic mistake in representing his client:

…One of the professor’s lawyer, Yaron Gat, said that Halper had not met with any individuals hostile to Israel, nor had he cooperated with terrorists, but rather merely wanted to promote human rights in by bringing humanitarian supplies to Gaza.

“We are pleased that the attorney general and other government entities understood that this was a purely civil action that, while illegal, was only meant to promote human rights, and that they decided accordingly,” Gat said.

Israeli activist S notes:

…That is blunder on the part of the lawyer. You never admit that your client did something illegal. And especially in this case, when you want to leave yourself room to argue so many possible arguments – that the order itself is not valid, that it was ultra-vires, that it does not apply to humanitarian missions, that it was overridden by the Israeli Foreign Ministry announcement that they can enter, that it violates international law, etc. etc.

A professional lawyer never helps the prosecution tie the noose around his client’s neck. Never admit to any fact or allegation. The state already has so much more power over you, and often abuses that power – why help them in any fashion?

But certainly no great harm was done, as this was an out-of-court statement, apparently made to the press, which does not affect Jeff’s rights at trial. If this case does indeed proceed to trial,  I am confident Jeff’s lawyers will raise all the above-mentioned arguments in a persuasive manner.”

Again, there are a number of errors in this article and I can only hope the reporter misquoted Jeff’s lawyer.

Here are some ways you can do something concrete to protest Jeff’s detention:

Minister of Interior Meir Shitreet

Phones +972 2 640 8410
+972 2 670 1411
Fax +972 2 670 1628

=======

Minister of Foreign Affairs Tzipi Livni

Phone: +972 2 530 3111
Fax: +972 2 530 3367

==================

Minister of Defense Ehud Barak

Phone: +972 3 569 2010
Fax +972 3 691 6940

==============

Attorney General Menahem Mazuz

Tel: +97226708511
Fax: +972 2 6285438

Halper will hold a press conference tomorrow (August 28th) at 4.00 p.m. at the American Colony’s Pasha Room. If any reader can come up with phone numbers and e mail addresses for the U.S. embassy in Israel and State Department, I’ll add those as well since Jeff is a U.S. citizen.

On a separate note, the Free Gaza Movement has decided to take Palestinians with them on their return journey to Cyprus:

12-14 Palestinians who have previously been denied exit visas by Israel will be traveling to Cyprus on the two boats. Some of those leaving are students with vaild visas or dual citizenship, who have been accepted to universities abroad. Additionally, one Palestinian professor will finally be able to go back to teaching in Europe, and one young Palestinian woman will finally be reunited with her husband.

Since the organizers of the Free Gaza Movement will not be entering Israeli territorial waters, and since they will request inspection from the Gaza Port Authority before they depart as well as from Cypriot authorities when they arrive in Cyprus, they expect no interference on the part of the Israeli authorities when they leave Gaza. By Israel’s own admission, it has no authority to inspect the boats or the passengers when they leave Gaza.

This seems a deliberate and strategic provocation toward Israel, but one that is entirely justified. You’ll recall that three Gaza students who won Fulbright awards were denied visas by the U.S. after Israel reported derogatory information about them. Several hundred Gaza students are prevented every year from accepting their places at universities abroad. It’s an important gesture to bring some of them out via the FGM boats. There is no reason an ordinary Gazan should be denied the basic right to travel outside their country for legitimate educational or personal reasons.

Halper Arrested and Arraigned for Running Gaza Blockade

Wednesday, August 27th, 2008

Word just in from Israeli peace activist, Dorothy Naor: Israeli authorities have arrested and arraigned Jeff Halper, a leader of the Free Gaza Movement journey which broke the Israeli blockade of Gaza.  He was in the midst of the court hearing as Dorothy wrote her e mail two hours ago.  I will update you when I hear more.  This clearly ratchets up the pressure a notch against both Halper and the FGM.

As reader Fiddler pointed out, Halper is the only Israeli Jew who participated in the voyage.  As such, he holds great symbolic value for the Israeli authorities, who will be eager not only to poke a finger in FGM’s eye, take Jeff down a notch or two, and also remind any like-minded Israeli of what they will face if they try those shenanigans again.

Tzipi Livni’s foreign ministry, which made the decision to allow the boats to reach Gaza, doesn’t want a flood of copy-cat actions in future.  So it behooves her to go after Jeff and make an example of him.  For this reason, it is important for progressive bloggers to organize on Jeff’s behalf.  We must ensure that his arrest and subsequent treatment are covered, to the extent we can, by the media here in the U.S.  The way to begin is by flogging the hell out of this story in the blogs.

Jeff is a U.S. citizen.  Though it’s doubtful the State Department would be willing to do anything on Jeff’s behalf, that doesn’t mean we have to give them a free pass.  I’d urge any interested party to visit the State Department website and contact them, asking for U.S. diplomats in Israel to intercede on Jeff’s behalf.  They may not want to, but we’re paying their salary and at least can contribute our two cents about how they SHOULD be doing their job.

We can also contact the Israeli consulates and embassies in our respective communities.  Call them to express concern on Jeff’s behalf.

He has done nothing wrong.  It is the Israeli siege of Gaza that is not only illegal under international law, but counter-productive to resolving the issues that divide Israel and Hamas.  A military order prohibiting Israelis from visiting Gaza is designed to ensure there is no threat to the Occupation; that Israelis will be shielded from it; that their journalists cannot report on it.  What Jeff has done is a brilliant act of civil disobedience.  One of which Henry David Thoreau would be proud.  We should support him in every way we can.

An earlier Ynetnews report that Halper was released was clearly wrong.

Jonah: Horse and Barn

Wednesday, August 27th, 2008
Horse and barn (Jonah)

Horse and barn (Jonah)

Jonah just drew this picture this morning for his sister, Miriam. He asked his mom how to draw a horse and she said to take out one of our toy horses and draw it. This was the result.