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 January, 2009

Join Us: American Jews Say ‘Enough’ to Israel’s War Against Gaza!

Friday, January 16th, 2009

As they would say in Israel: Day lanu kvar! (“Enough already”).  American Jews have had enough of the wanton killing of women and children, the attacks on UN food storehouses, killing refugees waving white flags, a doctor’s children as he spoke on Israeli TV, and senior government ministers.  It’s become utterly senseless.  Join us in signing our public statement (read here) which we hope to publish in The Nation in the coming days.

We have received 156 e mails to our Gmail account. Signatories include prominent names like:

Rabbi Leonard Beerman
Prof. Tony Judt
Alice Rothschild
Murray Polner
Prof. Jerome Slater
Prof. Mark Le Vine
Prof. Daniel Garber (Princeton University Philosophy department chair)
Joanne Yaron (senior World Meretz official)

We hope to publish the statement in the coming days. So please sign if you haven’t done so, and if you know anyone else who might like to do so get the word out as quickly as possible to them.

We are considering publishing an ad in the Israeli press and to do this we will need funds. If you’d like to support such an ad please consider a donation to our Paypal account.

Separately, if you’ve found my reporting useful on the Gaza war, I hope you’ll consider subscribing to this blog so you receive notifications and links via e mail to my new posts.

So Long George, It Hasn’t Been Good to Know Ye

Thursday, January 15th, 2009

We all need a good laugh right about now, don’t we?  Well then, do yourself the favor of reading some of the best political satire in American journalism.  Here’s Gail Collins’ take on George Bush’s series of fond farewell performances and his farewell address to the American people tonight (who cares?).  Enjoy this:

“Sometimes you misunderestimated me,” Bush told the Washington press corps [at his final press conference]. This is not the first time our president has worried about misunderestimation, so it’s fair to regard this not as a slip of the tongue, but as something the president of the United States thinks is a word. The rhetoric is the one part of the administration we’re surely going to miss. We are about to enter a world in which our commander in chief speaks in full sentences, and I do not know what we’re going to do to divert ourselves on slow days.

And this:

History does suggest that Bush performs best in venues like this one, in which he has a long lead time and virtually no actual role in preparing the words he is about to say. But still, what could he possibly tell the country that would change anybody’s opinion about the last eight years?

“My fellow Americans, before I leave you next week I want you to know that …

A) “Although things have gone very wrong, I take comfort in the realization that Dick Cheney was actually in control from the get-go. Honest, I never even knew half the people in the cabinet.”

B) “Laura and I have come to realize that all things considered, retirement to a mansion in Texas is just totally inappropriate. And so we take our leave to begin a new life as missionaries at a small rescue station in the Gobi desert …”

C) “Surprise! This has all actually been a bad dream. It’s really still November of 2000 and tomorrow Al Gore is going to be elected president.”

Otherwise, the best possible approach for a farewell address might be for Bush to follow his father’s lead and just not give one.

Israelis Murder Hamas Interior Minister, Son, Brother, Four Neighbors

Thursday, January 15th, 2009
Tomb of Hamas interior minister, Said Siam and family (Abid Katib/Getty)

Tomb of Hamas interior minister, Said Siam and family (Abid Katib/Getty)

Killing Said Siam, interior minister in the Hamas government?? Have they entirely lost their minds? Do they want Olmert assassinated? Or Barak? Do they want to create a bull’s eye on the back of every Knesset member who ever leaves Israel’s shores so that any Islamist around the world will only be too happy to take a potshot? Do they think the Shin Bet will protect them indefinitely? Do they think they’re not vulnerable? Do they have the faintest idea what they are doing? This is classic hubris of Greek tragic proportions.

All I can say is this is the chickens coming home to roost for the international community, the U.S. government and even Barack Obama. They could have intervened to stop this madness. They chose not to. They chose to allow it to go on. Now, everyone will pay the price.

If you were a Palestinian (I’m not even talking about a Hamas member) and they killed a senior minister in your government what would you do? Hell, let’s bring it even close to home…if some Pakistani Islamist whack job assassinated Robert Gates what do you think we’d do to Pakistan?  What do you think Muslims with a violent bent will now try to do to Israel?

The Israelis MUST be reined in NOW. It has descended into the maelstrom. But it can get worse and will unless the world takes immediate action.  As far as I’m concerned Israel has now clearly crossed into war crime territory.  Yesterday, nine Israeli human rights groups called for an investigation along precisely those lines.  Now, this MUST be pursued if the international community doesn’t wish to become a laughingstock.

Besides all this, the IDF deliberately targeted a UN food warehouse and set it ablaze with five gas tankers within ignition distance.  An entire day’s food aid up in smoke and the UN is the only source of food for hundreds of thousands of Gazans.  A high rise housing foreign news media was hit.

Israel has become a pariah.  And lest anyone mistake where I’m coming from, don’t dare go calling me an anti-Zionist.  I am not.  I do not hate Israel.  But I hate what this government and this army has done to MY Israel and MY Zionism.  They have spat on it.  They have shat on it.  My heart is broken.

Why does it have to come to this?  Why are we like beasts of prey tearing apart the flesh of our victims?  Mauling those we don’t kill?  Are we not human beings?  Have we entirely lost track of this?  This barbarism sickens me.

And for those who object to the term “murder” in my headline, what else do you call deliberately targeting unarmed civilian officials of a government in their home and killing family members and neighbors?  I’m sorry but this is cold-blooded murder.  It’s beyond warfare.  It’s blood vengeance.

Join American Jews in Condemning Gaza War

Thursday, January 15th, 2009

Jerry Haber and I, along with Verso Books, the publishers of A Time to Speak Out, have prepared the following statement from American Jews condemning the Gaza assault and Israeli policy toward the Palestinians. We hope that you will sign it and encourage others you know to do so as well. Roane Carey of The Nation has expressed some interest in publishing it there, if we succeed in getting a significant number of signatories. We hope you will help start a viral campaign by promoting this statement as widely as you can via e mail, websites and general word of mouth.

To sign, please send your full name, title (if you wish), & affiliation (if you wish) to this address. It is only for signatures and not for regular correspondence. For that, please e mail me or this site directly.

“We Shall Not Be a Party to Their Counsel!”

As human beings, we are shocked and appalled at the mass destruction unleashed by the State of Israel against the people of Gaza in its current military operation, following years of Israeli occupation, siege, and deprivation.

As Americans, we protest the carte blanche given Israel by the US government to pursue a war of “national honor,” “restoring deterrence,” “destroying Hamas,” and “searing Israel’s military might into the consciousness of the Gazans.”

As progressives, we reject the same justifications for the carnage that we heard ad nauseam from the supporters of the Second Iraq War: the so-called “war on terror,” the “clash of civilizations,” the “need to re-establish deterrence” – all of which served to justify a misguided and unnecessary war, with disastrous consequences for America and Iraq.

But as Jews of different religious persuasions, from Orthodox to secular atheist, we are especially horrified that a state that purports to speak in our name wages a military campaign that has killed over 1,000 people, a large percentage of them civilians, children, and non-combatants, with little or no consideration for human rights or the laws of war.

While the moral and legal issue concerning Israel’s right to respond militarily in these circumstance can be debated, there is near-universal agreement that its conduct of the military operation has been unjust and even criminal – with only the usual apologists for the Jewish state disagreeing.

As Jews, we stand united with another Israel, the patriarch Jacob, who cursed his sons Simeon and Levi for massacring the people of Shechem in revenge for the rape of their sister Dinah. Like Jacob, “we shall not be a party to the counsel of zealots. We shall not be counted in their assembly. (See Genesis 34. 49: 5-7).

As Jews, we stand united with the Jewish sages who rejected the zealotry of the Jewish “terrorists” at Masada, those who masked ethnic tribalism in the cloak of “self-defense” and “national honor.”

As Jews, we listen not only when the sage Hillel says, “If I am not for myself, who will be for me?” but also when he says, “If I am only for myself, what am I?” Hillel’s closing words also ring true in this hour of decision when a ceasefire is demanded of both sides: “If not now, when?”

Finally, as American Jewish progressives, and as human beings, we condemn Hamas and Israel for violating the human rights of civilians on both sides, although we do not necessarily declare these violations to be morally or legally equivalent. We affirm the rights of both Israeli and the Palestinian peoples to self-determination and self-defense, as we affirm the rights of both Israelis and Palestinians to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.

American and Israeli Jews Refuse to Support or Serve in Gaza

Thursday, January 15th, 2009

Today brings words of two moving developments in the rising opposition to the war in Gaza among American and Israeli Jews.  Michael Lerner’s Network of Spiritual Progressives took out full page ads in the N.Y. Times and Washington Post saying:

Cease Fire Now in Gaza

President-elect Obama:

It’s Time to End the Violence in the Middle East–Once and for All

When you become president, please call for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza and for an international peace conference to implement a fair and lasting solution to all aspects of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.  The solution must also address the conflict between Israel and other states in the region.  The international community must stop the violence and terror against Israeli civilians and against Palestinian civilians in Gaza and the West Bank. The international community must also stop the hidden but persistent violence of the Occupation itself.

The strength of the statement was also its weakness.  It focused almost exclusively on the big picture of resolving the entire conflict and almost ignored the immediate events of the Gaza war.  As such it does little to stop the fighting and death occurring right now.  But it does compel us to keep our eyes on the prize of long term and comprehensive peace between Israel and its Arab neighbors.

The problem of course with a visionary statement like this is that it deliberately ignores the tremendous bitterness built up in Israel and especially in Gaza as a result of the Gaza massacre.  And this is precisely the bitterness which pushes such visions of peace farther into the distance.  It is hard to know whether peace has receded a month or a year or a decade as a result of Operation Solid Lead.  But certainly Lerner’s statement will do little to lessen that and that is the insurmountable obstacle that we now face.

The other strength of Lerner’s statement is that it focuses profoundly on the moral and spiritual underpinning of opposition to Israel-Arab enmity.  In Israel, unfortunately, there is almost no consideration given to such concepts.  This has become a war of survival for Israelis, who often feel there is no room for ethincal considerations when life is at stake.  Of course, it is precisely when life is at stake that morality becomes an even more critical component of our decision-making apparatus.  Who needs morality when life is good and all is well?

The Israeli peace group, Courage to Refuse, held a demonstration encouraging IDF soldiers to refuse to serve in Gaza.  This YouTube video is a series of interviews with several refusers (Seruvniks in Hebrew), who provide a moving counterpoint to the flag-waving and jingoism that characterizes much of Israeli society about this war.

This is an excerpt of Noam Livne comparing the courage it took him to serve in intense combat conditions versus the courage it took him to refuse to serve:

 I was a combat officer for four years.  I was in Gaza.  I was in Lebanon.  I commanded ambushes.  I commanded outposts.  I fought “terrorists.”  I was under mortar attack.  I was shot at and did all the scary things one does in the military.  And I say with all my heart that to refuse demanded more courage.

I call on all soldiers, pilots, officers and all who participate in this war to seek that courage within.

Stirring words from the frontline of the battle for the hearts and minds of the Israeli public.

Gaza Phase 3: IDF Marches into Hell (Gaza City)

Thursday, January 15th, 2009
10 year-old Gaza boy blinded by IDF white phosphorus (Ismail Zaydah/Reuters)

10 year-old Gaza boy blinded by IDF white phosphorus (Ismail Zaydah/Reuters)

The madness continues. Ehud Olmert and his generals have made the ultimate decision to enter Gaza City, the most densely populated portion of the territory of Gaza where a considerable portion of its 1.5 million residents live. Thousands of civilians are fleeing their homes under sustained, ferocious bombardment. The AP gives you a small sense of the insanity:

 

Israeli troops backed by helicopter gunships, tanks and heavy guns thrust further into the city than ever before to seek out Hamas fighters, executing the army’s most relentless shelling of the Gaza Strip in nearly three weeks of fighting.

Live video footage from a Reuters camera in central Gaza showed sustained artillery fire from the edge of the city for several hours. Shells exploded in downtown areas and long machinegun bursts echoed off Gaza’s cramped housing blocks.

Much of the fighting was centred in the Tel al-Hawa neighborhood, where some residents fled on foot while others remained in the precarious shelter of their homes as a night-time attack stretched into the morning.

Tanks and bulldozers rolled into a neighborhood park, apparently seizing it as a kind of command center, witnesses said. Masked gunmen ran toward the areas under fire carrying bags containing unidentified objects.

Residents were seen fleeing their homes in pajamas, some wheeling elderly parents in wheelechairs. Others were stopping journalists’ armored cars or ambulances pleading for someone to take them to safety.

Israeli forces have encircled the city of 500,000 people for days.

The Gazan death toll is 1.024. The Palestine Human Rights Center estimates that 670 of the dead were civilians, a far higher percentage of the dead than previously reported by the N.Y. Times and other media outlets. I’d guess that the Times 25% claim is grossly understated. And of course, fighting among civilians will dramatically raise the civilian death count.

Ceasefire Takes Shape: Is It a Winner or Loser?

Wednesday, January 14th, 2009

Haaretz runs two stories reporting on the shape of a potential ceasefire proposal, but with markedly different tone and emphases.

Ami Issacharoff and Natasha Mozgovaya write that Egypt is brokering a ceasefire with Hamas and that the group has accepted the terms in principle with some reservations:

Hamas representatives held a press conference in Cairo Monday evening following talks with Egyptian officials, and announced that they have accepted in principle…a cease-fire agreement to end the fighting…saying that they hoped that the Egyptian efforts will bring about an end to the aggression against the Palestinians.

…Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmet Aboul Gheit said…that Hamas had accepted the Egyptian draft which calls for immediate end to aggression on Gaza, the opening of the border crossings and the withdrawal of Israeli forces inside the Strip…

Earlier Wednesday, the Saudi-owned Arabic language Al Arabiya TV reported that…Hamas had agreed to abide by the 2005 agreement which calls for Palestinian Authority forces to man the Rafah border crossing between Gaza and Egypt under the supervision of European observers.

Hamas conditioned the cease-fire agreement with Israel on the immediate withdrawal of the IDF from the Gaza Strip, Al Arabiya reported.

Which all seems well and good if these are the actual terms.  Israel gets an end to rocket attacks and Hamas gets open border crossings.  But when you read Amos Harel’s account, all is not as it appears to be:

After 19 days of fighting and more than 1,000 Palestinian fatalities, the first significant signs that Hamas is breaking could be seen Wednesday night. Hamas representatives to talks with Egypt announced an agreement in principle on Wednesday to the Egyptian cease-fire proposal…

But the way things looked on Wednesday, Hamas seems to be willing to accept the Egyptian initiative, which is almost a kind of surrender agreement for it.

The Egyptian proposal is mostly bad for Hamas. It doesn’t let the organization bring the Palestinian public any political achievement that would justify the blood that has been spilled, and even forces on it the return of the Palestinian Authority to Gaza, in the form of its renewed presence at the Rafah crossing (as a condition for its reopening).

Once the cease-fire is reached, the IDF will withdraw from the positions it captured in Gaza, and only then will the two sides begin to discuss the opening of border crossings and removal of the blockade, which was the reason Hamas gave for waging war. The most that Cairo is offering is a timetable for the opening of the crossing points, and even that depends on negotiations due to begin after the cease-fire is reached, and it’s tough to know how or when they will end.

Clearly, Harel’s report is much closer to the line the Israeli cabinet and IDF want Israelis and the world to hear: Hamas is defeated; acceptance of the ceasefire signals capitulation; Israel has given them virtually nothing and gets virtually everything it seeks in return.  If Harel is correct, then this a red flag.  It is not enough for Hamas that the IDF withdraws from Gaza.  If Israel doesn’t actually lift the ceasefire or at least give Gaza and Hamas some respite from the terrible 18 month siege, then it gives the Palestinians no reason to abide by the ceasefire.

Further, the idea that Israel can impose on Gaza the reintroduction of Fatah seems far-fetched given the history of the past year:

Israel is proposing, with the tacit agreement of Egypt and the United States, to place the Palestinian Authority at the heart of an ambitious program to rebuild Gaza, administering reconstruction aid and securing Gaza’s borders. But that plan is already drawing skepticism. Mr. Khatib, for example, called the idea of any Palestinian Authority role in postwar Gaza “silly” and “naïve.”

It is far more likely if Fatah gains control of reconstruction funding for Gaza that it will embezzle the funds rather than use them for the purpose intended.  Ironically, it is only Hamas that would actually use the funds properly and actually reconstruct the territory.  The reconstruction plan is yet another false gesture by some Israeli official working in a Tel Aviv government office who has not concept of what actually might work on the ground in Palestine.  Need I mention the following words to give you a sense of how misguided all this is: Iraqi reconstruction.

Unlike Israel’s apologists who are interested in Israel vanquishing Hamas, I’m interested in a durable ceasefire that brings real peace to the two sides.  To get that, Israel cannot be seen to be the victor.  It cannot be seen to get all it wants and give nothing it doesn’t want to give.

That’s why the Arab world is so deeply split on the virtues of Egyptian and Saudi mediation of this crisis.  Nations like Qatar and others in the Arab League believe that the mediators are not representing Palestinian interests.  Further, they believe that the ruling elite of these two nations have done everything they can to silence voices of support for Hamas within their respective countries.  These elites have, out of mistrust of Hamas, been all too willing to sell its interests for a mess of porridge.

This is what worries me about the prospective agreement.  Though I do not support Hamas or its principles, the fact is that it is a political representative of the Palestinians.  There can never be real peace unless Hamas and the people of Gaza buy into the agreement.  If Israeli policymakers werer smart (and unfortunately they aren’t), they would understand that it is their own interest to get such buy-in.  Without it, rockets or some other form of violent resistance will resume in a matter of weeks or months and then we will be right back where we started.  With the only difference being that the frustration and rage on both sides will have been ratcheted up considerably leading to even greater bloodshed and savagery in the future.

Harel also notes a more practical and cynical reason for Israel to agree to a ceasefire now:

Several said it would be best to end the operation now, when Israeli deterrence has improved – and before U.S. President George W. Bush makes way for his successor, Barack Obama, on January 20.

Anyone who understands how Israel works will know that this is indeed a critical consideration for Israel since it is essentially a U.S. satellite (though with a mind of its own).  Indeed, I believe the timing of the initiation of hostilities by Israel was deliberately chosen to allow a decent interval in which it could attack Hamas before the transition to a new, and possibly less favorable administration in Washington.

Harel closes his report with this typically vacuously hopeful spin:

if nothing goes wrong with the plans in the next few days, Israel has a decent chance of ending this conflict while maintaining the upper hand…

Again, this is the problem with Israeli policy.  It is obsessed with tactical advantage, who’s up and whose down.  Instead, it should be worrying about securing the consent of its adversary.  This is not the Japanese surrender at the end of WWII.  Hamas will never capitulate and Israel cannot drop an atom bomb to vanquish the foe.  Though Hamas is not Israel’s equal, if the latter looks at this as a conventional conflict with winners and losers, then Israel will be the one that loses in the long run EVEN IF it currently “maintains the upper hand.”

Lies Jeffrey Goldberg Told Me (About Gaza)

Wednesday, January 14th, 2009

The title of this post came to me as I was trying to assimilate Jeffrey Goldberg’s typically beside the point column in today’s N.Y. Times. The only thing I can say for it is that it’s not as wrongheaded as most of his work about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict usually is.

But the following passage brought to mind the title of the Canadian Jewish film, Lies My Father Told Me, because here Goldberg shows that he’s laboring under terrible delusions and completely misunderstands the current political environment in Palestinian society, especially Gaza:

“There is a fixed idea among some Israeli leaders that Hamas can be bombed into moderation. This is a false and dangerous notion. It is true that Hamas can be deterred militarily for a time, but tanks cannot defeat deeply felt belief.

The reverse is also true: Hamas cannot be cajoled into moderation. Neither position credits Hamas with sincerity, or seriousness.

The only small chance for peace today is the same chance that existed before the Gaza invasion: The moderate Arab states, Europe, the United States and, mainly, Israel, must help Hamas’s enemy, Fatah, prepare the West Bank for real freedom, and then hope that the people of Gaza, vast numbers of whom are unsympathetic to Hamas, see the West Bank as an alternative to the squalid vision of Hassan Nasrallah and Nizar Rayyan.”

Goldberg actually believes that Fatah can lead the Palestinian people to “freedom?” How? What has it achieved on this long road to freedom so far? And you’ll notice that he only goes so far as to say that Fatah’s “friends” among the nations should “help” prepare it for freedom. Prepare? What does this mean? How long will this process take before anyone actually deigns to give Palestine its freedom? Really, Goldberg is quite ridiculous.

Further, Goldberg calls feebly on Israel and the U.S. to “help” lay the groundwork for such freedom. Like they’ve “helped” up till now? In the past eight years, tell me one thing Israel in particular has done to help Fatah appear to be a more attractive choice to the Palestinian people?

But the portion of this passage that really takes the cake is the one in which Goldberg claims, with absolutely no proof whatsoever, that there are “vast numbers” of Gazans who are “unsympathetic” to Hamas. Perhaps Goldberg might want to take a walk in the streets of Gaza right about now, if he could avoid being hit by one of his country’s missiles, and ask the average Gazan whether they are “unsympathetic” to Hamas. This notion is part of the Israeli delusion that by bombing Gaza back to the Stone Age this will somehow turn the Gazans against Hamas. Anyone with eyes in their head can foresee that the only party they will turn against and blame in this situation would be Israel.

What do the Times’ editors see in this guy? They print the propaganda and delusions of Benny Morris and Jeffrey Goldberg as if they were oracular wisdom about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. It’s little short of sickening.

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