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Mah Nishtanah

Sarajevo haggadah

Antaea Darom

Israeli women's art

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Torah as music

Ben Heine

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ceramic bowl

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

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Punch and Judy/Pinchas and Jamila

Avi Katz

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David Grossman

Ben Heine

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Eldrige Street shul

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Dove

Ben Heine

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Two birds

Hoda Jamal

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Israeli and Palestinian boys

from documentary, Promises

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Cat in the Hat

Yiddish version

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Daylight through the Wall

Banksy: graffiti art on Separation Wall

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Maurice Sendak's Brundibar set

New Victory Theater (photo: Nan Melville/NYT)

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Daniel Barenboim, West-Eastern Divan Orchestra

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

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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 June, 2009

Oy, You Can Stick a Stake Through Ross’ Heart, But He Won’t Die

Wednesday, June 24th, 2009

Dennis Ross appears to have nine lives–at least. He leaves the State Department where he had been hung out to dry by Hillary Clinton and her powerful envoys Richard Holbrooke and George Mitchell. He moves over to the White House for a vague and unspecified assignment. His buddies David Makovsky and the Wall Street Journal talk him up as if he’s going to be given the keys to the kingdom. And then by God, it happens, sort of. Yes, it’s sad but (perhaps) true:

The Cable has learned that deputy national security advisor Thomas Donilon, among others, is positioning Ross to assume an uber-senior NSC position overseeing Iran, Iraq, and the Middle East. The Iraq portfolio formerly assigned to holdover war czar Lt. Gen. Douglas Lute will be shifted to Ross, leaving Lute to focus on Afghanistan and Pakistan. Puneet Talwar, the NSC’s senior director for the Persian Gulf, Iraq, and Iran, will report to Ross, as will Daniel Shapiro, the NSC’s senior director for the Middle East and North Africa.

…[A] group said to be concerned by Ross’s perceived takeover of Middle East turf is the team of Middle East Peace special envoy George Mitchell, which now has to contend not only with resistance from all quarters of the region, but also a rival power center in the NSC that hasn’t tended to see Middle East peace issues the same way.

The Washington Post reports the development as more of a done deal though it also inserts some well-deserved zingers against Ross for his past failures:

It’s been rumored that Ross is headed to the White House National Security Council, but now the picture of his duties seems to be getting much clearer. It does indeed appear to be a big job — a very big job. His duties will include not only Iran but also Iraq and the Middle East peace process — a move that has gotten lots of folks at the NSC very upset, not to mention special Middle East peace envoy George Mitchell.

The most controversial aspect is that Ross will take over the Iraq portfolio from Lt. Gen. Douglas E. Lute, a three-star general who was overseeing both Iraq and Afghanistan. Now Lute will just do Afghanistan — where he’ll be working closely with envoy Richard Holbrooke — while Iraq will be part of Ross’s duties.

Interestingly, Ross has about as much experience with Iraq (virtually zero) as the new U.S. ambassador there, Christopher R. Hill. And both were key players in some of the greatest diplomatic flops of the last 20 years. Hill was point man for North Korea nuke negotiations during the Bush administration. And Ross, an early and ardent Obama backer, has lots of experience in Mideast peace efforts, having been a key player in the Clinton administration’s failed effort to broker a deal.

For the humorless or overly literal among my readers, the title of this post refers to sticking a stake in Dennis Ross’ political career, not his physical person.

Obama to Appoint U.S. Ambassador to Syria

Tuesday, June 23rd, 2009

This is a big story potentially and further confirms Barack Obama’s long-range vision to mend U.S. fences in the Arab world and engage with those the Bush administration denounced as America’s enemies:

President Obama has decided to send a U.S. ambassador back to Syria, a dramatic sign of reconciliation between the two countries, senior administration officials tell CNN. The announcement is expected to be made this week.
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, left, welcomes U.S. envoy George Mitchell in Damascus on June 13.

Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, left, welcomes U.S. envoy George Mitchell in Damascus on June 13.

“It’s in our interests to have an ambassador in Syria, a senior administration official told CNN Tuesday night. “We have been having more and more discussions, and we need to have someone there to engage.”

The official said that the decision was not in any way related to the election crisis in Iran, although the Obama administration has maintained engaging the Syrian regime could weaken Syria’s strategic alliance with Iran.

Syrian Ambassador to the United States Imad Moustapha said his country had not formally been notified of the decision, but told CNN if this is true, it reflects the genuine desire by the United States to correct the past efforts of the Bush administration and engage Syria.

It’s good for the United States, it’s good for Syria and it’s good for the region, Moustapha said.

One of the themes I pounded home over and over again during the election campaign was that Obama was a realist and pragmatist, as opposed to the raging messianism of the Bush cabal.

A president who can do what Obama has done has an overall vision for comprehensive peace in the region and I am convinced he will get there. If not all the way there then at least partially so. Even partial success will be far better than the abysmal failure of the past few administrations.

Bibi Netanyahu is right if he’s trembling in his boots a bit more than normal tonight. U.S. rapprochement with Syria means this president thinks a peace deal is within striking distance between Syrian and Israel. Just as he has been a dog with a bone regarding the settlement freeze, Obama will not rest until Syria and Israel are negotiating in earnest for a peace deal. That means giving up the Golan, which will cause Bibi no end of shame in the eyes of his territorial maximalist supporters.

We might’ve known something was up when Mideast envoy George Mitchell made a stop in Damascus during his visit to the region last week, where he met with Bashar Assad. It seems when Mitchell comes to town things happen. I like that.

There is another reason this development is important: if the U.S. can ratchet down tensions on Israel’s northern border and perhaps even achieve a peace deal that includes Syria, Israel and Lebanon…then Syria can use its influence on Khaled Meshal and Hamas’ Syrian-based leadership to achieve a modus vivendi between Israel and Hamas. A second Israeli-Palestinian negotiation and settlement might even be possible.

I don’t know if Obama plays chess, but so far his diplomatic moves give one that impression. The pieces are aligned and moving step-by-step towards their target. Each piece makes a small incremental move toward the final goal.

The Kids: Spring Photos

Tuesday, June 23rd, 2009
Miriam at Washington Arboretums Japanese garden

Miriam at Washington Arboretum's Japanese garden

Adin sings at a preschool concert

Adin sings at a preschool concert

Being the lazy ould sod that I am (that’s a joke by the way) I have six months worth of images I’ve just uploaded to my photo gallery. Here are a few nice shots.

The shot of Miriam was taken during a trip to the Japanese garden in the Washington Arboretum.

The other image shows Adin singing at a Secret Garden preschool concert.

The new photo gallery features images of Jonah’s eighth birthday party, a Little Gym gymnastics performance, the Tacoma model train show, a Nancy Stewart end of school year children’s concert, and some spring garden flower displays.

Now, I owe my wife prints for the grandmothers (who don’t use computers).  That’s where my laziness kicks in!

After Bloodshed, Iranian Opposition Takes Deep Breath

Monday, June 22nd, 2009
Faezeh Hashem speaks at Moussavi rally shortly before being arrested (N.Y. Times)

Faezeh Hashem speaks at Moussavi rally shortly before being arrested (N.Y. Times)

After Sunday’s mayhem and the murder of between 19 and 150 Iranians by the state security services, the opposition seems to have taken a deep breath today to consider where it goes from here.  Demonstrations appear to have been lighter and jockeying of various forces seems to be going on behind the scenes.

All of Hashemi Rafsanjani’s children were arrested earlier today and then released, in a veiled threat to the former president to desist from his rumored backroom wheeling and dealing, either to overthrow Ayatollah Khamenei or arrange for a face-saving compromise, depending on which source you read.

The N.Y. Times publised a report asking where Rafsanjani, who has been unseen since the election, is and what he is doing:

Mr. Rafsanjani, who leads two powerful state institutions, has been working behind the scenes to find a compromise solution to the disputed June 12 presidential election, a relative said Sunday. The detention of his family members, this relative said, was a pressure tactic on the part of his opponents.

…“He is the question mark right now,” said the expatriate political analyst. “A lot of people are hoping that he is the guy who can mend it.”

Given that both Ahmadinejad and Khamenei have staked out maximalist positions, I wonder what room Rafsanjani can find for a compromise.

Speaker of parliament Larijani, an otherwise loyal ally of Khamenei, spoke out against the favoritism showed by electoral officials to “one candidate” (Ahmadinejad).  This would appear to contradict the overt endorsement the ayatollah offered to the would be president at his Friday sermon.  On the other hand, Larijani lashed out against the “shameful” intervention of western governments which have denounced the violence.  As a possible presidential candidate himself, he seems to want to have it both ways.

Election authorities seem to have come up with a new narrative that both credits some accusations of fraud registered by the opposition, while denying the misbehavior could possibly have altered the election result:

…The authorities have acknowledged that the number of votes cast in 50 cities exceeded the actual number of voters, state television reported Monday following assertions by the country’s supreme leader that the ballot was fair.

But the authorities insisted that discrepancies, which could affect three million votes, did not violate Iranian law and the country’s influential Guardian Council said it was not clear whether they would decisively change the election result.

So it appears there is some tweaking of the official narrative in order to be able to claim it is taking complaints seriously, while not actually doing so. It is hard to know whether this is a meaningful change in approach by the ruling forces or tactical and cosmetic.

More ominously, the Times also reported:

…The government might be laying the groundwork for discrediting and arresting Mr. Moussavi. IRNA, the official news agency, quoted Alireza Zahedi, a member of the Basij militia, as saying Mr. Moussavi had provoked the violence, sought help from outside the country to do so and should be put on trial. The Fars news agency quoted a Tehran University law professor as saying that Mr. Moussavi had acted against “the security of the nation.” State television suggested that at least some of the unrest was instigated by an outlawed terrorist group, the Mujahedeen Khalq…

What is notable is the fragmented nature of the response of the governing elite.  Depending on the source, statements vary from no-holds barred all out confrontation to grudging acknowledgement of grievances.  It’s not clear whether the hardliners or the compromisers will win.  If tomorrow brings people out in the streets in the same numbers as earlier in the week and the crackdown continues, then the fracturing is likely to continue.  But there is the possibility that people have taken a deep breath and will step back from the brink, leaving the maximalists to win the day.

If you want to read about someone who fundamentally misunderstands what is going on in Iran and is happy to work his mischief, read about Bibi Netanyahu’s Meet the Press interview in which he praised the demonstrators basically for attempting to topple the regime.  And note, yet again, AFP’s distorted characterization of past comments by Ahmadinejad about Israel:

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Sunday hailed the “incredible acts of courage” by Iranian demonstrators [who] “unmasked” the true nature of the regime.”Obviously you see a regime that represses its own people and spreads terror far and wide,” Netanyahu told NBC’s Meet the Press in an interview from his Jerusalem office, repeating Israel’s longstanding position towards an Iranian leadership which has vowed the destruction of the Jewish state.

…”It is a regime whose real nature has been unmasked, and it’s been unmasked by incredible acts of courage by Iran’s citizens,” Netanyahu said.

“They go into the streets and face bullets, and I tell you, as somebody who believes deeply in democracy that you see the Iranian lack of democracy at work, and I think this better explains and best explains to the entire world what this regime is truly about.”

…”I think something very deep, very fundamental is going on, and there’s an expression of a deep desire amid the people of Iran for freedom,” Netanyahu said.

Unfortunately for Bibi, the Iranians are not trying to topple their form of government, they are trying to reform it.  Neither Bibi nor the neocons see any difference between Ahmadinejad and Moussavi.  As far as they’re concerned even a win by the latter will mean business as usual.  Which is why Bibi hopes that ultimately Iranian unrest will lead to an overthrow of the entire Islamic political apparatus in Iran.  Bibi won’t say that on American TV.  But it’s what he hopes and dreams for.  It’s not what Barack Obama wants, nor necessarily is it what Americans want.  That’s why the Israeli leader attempts to couch his ideas in terms Americans understand like “freedom,” “democracy,” and “tyranny.”  This is motherhood and apple pie to the American ear.  Regime change, invasion and bombing are not.  But follow Bibi down the road as plays the Pied Piper, you’ll surely end up in that place.

Also, don’t forget the cruel irony of Bibi praising the Iranian people for clamoring for freedom in the face of the bullets of the oppressors, while he denies such freedom to Palestinians and showers on them the very same bullets the Basij fires on crowds of Iranians demonstrators.

Bringing the Boycott Back Home: Israeli Bar Boycotts IDF, Settlements

Sunday, June 21st, 2009

You didn’t think it was possible for Israel to boycott itself, did you?  But a Tel Aviv bar, organized by an anarchist collective, refuses to serve anyone in IDF uniform and refuses to stock products made in the Territories:

A new vegan bar opened last week in Tel Aviv that bans Israel Defense Forces soldiers in uniform and boycotts products made in West Bank settlements.

The Rogatka (Hebrew)- “slingshot” – bar was opened by an “anarchist collective” who once ran the Salon Mazal bar; it is located on Yitzhak Sadeh street in central Tel Aviv.

The new ideologically-devoted bar will not seek to make a profit, and the founders say they hope it will bring together left-wing activists, environmentalists, and other fellow travelers, under the banner of cheap drinks and fair trade products.

The bar’s ban on soldiers in uniform and the carrying of weapons, along with its boycott on products made in the settlements, derive from what employees see as the connection between all forms of oppression, from the slaughter of animals to sexism to occupation.

…”We wanted to show it’s possible and even worthwhile to live differently,” [Adi] Vinter added.

Though one might argue that this business isn’t going to make a big difference in destroying the Occupation, I give them a ton of credit for their moxie. Someone’s got to show the way. May other’s follow suit.  H/t Rupa Shah.

Yeshiva Bochers Study Arabic

Sunday, June 21st, 2009
Ben Heine

Ben Heine

After writing something particularly critical of Orthodox Jews (say, extremist settlers) some of my readers disparage my views claiming I clearly have an animus against Orthodoxy.  While it is true that I do not admire many Orthodox interpretations of Jewish law and practice (I am a Conservative Jew by practice), my grudge with such Jews lies in their political beliefs much more than in their religious ones.

As evidence of this, I offer up a wonderful article published in the N.Y. Times today (on Shabbos no less!) about the SAR Yeshiva in Riverdale, which offers Arabic language instruction to 40 students.  Frankly, I was amazed to read this.  I do have certain conceptions about contemporary Orthodox Jewish beliefs about Islam and Muslims, and they aren’t favorable.  This branch of American Judaism is known far more for its deep suspicion of, and intolerance toward Arabs because of its ardent support for the Israeli settler movement, among others.

So imagine my surprise and delight to read this:

Several years ago, six teenagers at the SAR yeshiva high school in Riverdale came to the principal with a request: They wanted to study Arabic.

It was an unusual appeal in this heavily Orthodox neighborhood in the Bronx…The talk on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is usually supportive of the settlers on the West Bank, many of whom are transplanted Orthodox Jewish Americans, not Arabic speakers.

Still, the students, all of whom had spent time in Israel…were eager and…the principal of SAR High School decided to add Arabic to the foreign language offerings…This year, the fifth year of the Arabic program, 40 students are studying Arabic in four grades…

Though I would venture to guess that in a few years, many of these children will no longer hold views as open-minded and tolerant as the ones they express now, still their good-heartedness is very moving.

Their reasons for studying the language of Israel’s enemies showed an inquisitiveness about “the other” that was refreshing:

“The Arab-Israel conflict is a huge part of our lives, and understanding the culture and language helps us to relate to the other side,” said Jonah Eidman, an 11th grader taking Arabic for a third year.

Sarah Samuels…who just completed their first year, said a schoolmate had questioned her commitment to study Arabic, saying, “It’s the language of terrorists.” But Sarah shrugged the student off. “You can’t define a whole people by certain members of the language-speaking population,” she said.

Adin Goldstein, another ninth grader, added: “Not everybody who speaks Arabic is a bad person. Most are good people.”

“I feel like lots of people have misconceptions about Arabs and Palestinians,” chimed in Ariel Mintz, “and if I speak Arabic I can better understand the culture and understand what is really going on.”

If I read more stories like this one and heard Orthodox leaders saying some of the same things these children are saying, I would feel much more heartened about Orthodox Judaism than I do.  But this article gives one hope that the next generation may free itself from some of the shackles with which its elders are chained.

Keyn yirbu (“may they thrive and prosper”).

Rabbi Brian’s Blog: New Progressive Jewish Blog

Saturday, June 20th, 2009

When I first began this blog in 2003, you could’ve put every progressive Jewish blogger comfortably inside a phone booth.  There were Dan SieradskiAaron Trauring and maybe a few others.  Now, just look at my Mideast Peace blog directory in my sidebar.  There are 90 sites listed there.  Not all are blogs written by progressive Jews, but well over half are.  It’s an extraordinary flowering and a testament to a historic trend toward a just peace between Israel and its Arab neighbors.

There are two categories of bloggers who are underrepresented among us in my opinion: academics and rabbis.  I’ve felt that in order for the world to begin to take us more seriously we needed to include more “experts” among us who could add gravitas to our efforts.  And that is precisely what has happened.  Mark LeVine for years was one of the few academics willing to put his name out there.  Now there is Jerry Haber, Bernard Avishai, Aryeh Cohen and others.  For years, Velveteen Rabbi was one of the few blogs written by a rabbi.  Now there are Shalom Rav, Marc Gopin and others.

Now, I’d like to welcome Rabbi Brian Walt to our chevra.  He writes Rabbi Brian’s Blog and began blogging in May, 2009.  He is the executive director of Rabbis for Human Rights-North America (a group founded in Israel by Rabbi Arik Ascherman).  I hope you’ll check out his blog, subscribe to his RSS feed, and keep tabs on his work.

Baruch Ha-ba.

Democrats Abroad Calls ‘Feel the Hate’ Video ‘Drivel’

Saturday, June 20th, 2009

The leader of Israel’s chapter of Democrats Abroad, an international organization that promotes the interests of the Democratic party among expatriate Americans, has condemned Max Blumenthal’s Feel the Hate in Jerusalem video as “drivel” and “hate material.” Instead of blaming the American Jews who spouted racist epithets smearing Barack Obama and the peace process, Joanne Yaron appears to blame Max Blumenthal for producing the video in the first place.

After the group’s spokesperson lambasted Blumenthal in the right-wing Jerusalem Post, Yaron wrote:

The video is a stupid piece of hate material. [Saying] anything more than that [about the video] would elevate such nonsense to the level of a worthy opponent, which it is not. Let’s forget it.

Earlier Schorer had said this to the Post:

The spokesman for Democrats Abroad in Israel, Sheldon Schorer, called the video “useless.”

“This video is of no value whatsoever. If you removed the expletives you’d be left with very little material,” Schorer said.

The video…”should be ignored as a silly piece and as more of a comment on the depth to which the Internet can sink.  The journalist really should have gone out to find people who had an opinion and supported their opinion. You can’t have an intelligent discussion with someone who is inebriated,” he said.

What I find astonishing about this reaction is the notion that the individual American Jews featured in the video did not have an opinion or support their opinion.  At work among Jews offended about the video, is the notion that the views expressed somehow don’t count because they may’ve been spoken by geshikert Jews.  Mel Gibson was drunk when he asked a non-Jewish Malibu police officer whether he was Jewish and then proceeded to rant about the Jewish conspiracy to run the world.  Did Abe Foxman dismiss his views and say they should be “ignored?”  Of course not.  So why is a shvartze-hating Jewish drunk let off the hook when an anti-Semitic Hollywood celebrity isn’t?

The video has been viewed on YouTube and other sites several hundred thousand times, yet Yaron dismisses it as little more than a prank unworthy of being addressed.  One of the interviewees boasts about shooting the president if he endangers Israel.  All of the interviewees express disgust with Obama’s Israel policy and African-Americans in general.  Yet Democrats Abroad wants to shoot the messenger instead of defending the president and addressing the source of the Jewish hate.  It make you wonder about their priorities.

So what’s the real problem here:  it’s that pro-Israel liberal Jews wear blinders.  They are so petrified about anti-Semitism and what potentially damaging material like this can do to Israel that they refuse to examine the underlying issues.  We need to confront Jewish hate not excuse it as the drunken prank of Jewish teenagers.  For every drunken Jew in this video, there are 100 who are not drunk who freely express such attitudes.  But because there are anti-Semit’n lurking out there waiting to pounce on the least tidbit that embarrasses Israel the operative phrase is: sha shtill.

A similar process was in play when Israeli liberals like those in Meretz (Yaron is head of the World Union of Meretz North America-Australia desk) initially refused to condemn the wars in Lebanon and Gaza.  They were petrified that they would look like enemies of Israel by critizing her in her “hour of need;”  instead of thinking what the proper Jewish (or even Zionist) moral response should be to Israel’s brutish behavior.  Again, we’re faced with a certain timidity when what was required was forthrightness.  Essentially, they did the wrong thing for the wrong reason.  That is why Meretz tanked in the last election.  It no longer (if it ever did) represented a true alternative to the political mainstream.  It became its left bank instead.

What Jews need is a truly progressive vision of Israel and Jewish identity, not a blinkered one represented by Democrats Abroad or Meretz.

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