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New York Public Library

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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 October, 2009

Clinton Praises Israel’s ‘Unprecedented Concessions’

Saturday, October 31st, 2009

I don’t know what Hillary Clinton has been drinking since she arrived in Israel for a visit with Bibi Netanyahu. But whatever it is it did the trick and she’s dutifully sung the praises of Israel’s rightist government:

Speaking at a joint press conference with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Saturday, Clinton said Israel is putting significant limits on settlement activity.

“What the prime minister has offered in specifics on restraints on a policy of settlements … is unprecedented,” she said.

…Clinton made it clear that she wasn’t pleased with Israeli settlement construction but that it was no reason to hold up talks.

“There are always demands made in any negotiation that are not going to be fully realized,” she said.

Clinton also agreed with a statement by Netanyahu that Palestinians had never demanded a settlement freeze in the past as a condition for sitting down with Israel.

Hillary Clinton, ever since she was New York’s junior senator, was a faithful sister to whatever Israeli government was in power.  She even sang the praises of the Separation Wall and had herself pictured in front of it.  That’s one of the reason I could never support her presidential candidacy and that I worried when she became secretary of state.  Though I since have been convinced that Obama exercises enough control over administration policy and frowns on freelancing, Clinton’s performance today was disappointing.  Can the Obama administration really believe Bibi is doing anything remotely “unprecedented” when it comes to a settlement freeze?  Or is Hillary playing good cop to Obama’s bad?  One wonders though, even being a good cop, whether her praise has to be so effusive and divorced from political reality?

Not only does it appear that Clinton and perhaps the Obama administration have abandoned the attempt for a settlement freeze, it also appears Clinton has taken Bibi’s side in demanding Israel be allowed to complete 3,000 units currently under construction.  Yet another Clinton cave to Israel.

It’s rich that Israel is trying to claim that the Palestinian demand for a settlement freeze as a precondition for talks is somehow not cricket.  What does that say about Israel’s never before advanced demand that the Palestinians accept Israel’s demand to be recognized as a Jewish state?  At least the Palestinians are only asking for what every U.S. president has demanded of Israel for decades.  No U.S. president of Israeli PM has ever made the demand that Bibi has as a precondition for talks.

J Street Opposes, Then [Sorta] Supports Congressional Attack on Goldstone

Friday, October 30th, 2009

[UPDATE: After hearing from Jeremy Ben Ami, I have extensively rewritten this post to reflect information he provided and other research material I've discovered.]

The House of Representatives, at the behest of Aipac and the Israeli embassy, is debating HR 867 (text), which denounces the Goldstone Report and calls on the U.S. government to quash further consideration of it in the UN.  The Resolution also reaffirms Israel’s “right to defend itself” presumably in the way it did during Operation Cast Lead.  So in effect, the U.S. House is encouraging the IDF to engage in war crimes in future military actions against the Palestinians.

Tikkun is circulating an acute critique of HR 867 by Steven Zunes:

The lead-off clause cynically places “fact-finding mission” in quotes, implying that this was not in fact the purpose of the investigation of a reputable and experienced team.

This is followed by a series of clauses criticizing the original mandate of the UN Human Rights Council which called only for an investigation of Israeli war crimes.  This is completely moot, however, since commission head Justice Richard Goldstone – to his credit – refused to accept the position unless its mandate was changed to one which would investigate possible war crimes by both sides in the conflict…The House resolution does not mention this…implying that the original mandate was the basis of the report.  In reality, from the start of the actual investigation, there was not such a bias against Israel, since it dedicated over 70 pages to detail a whole series of violations of the laws of war by Hamas, including rocket attacks into civilian-populated areas of Israel, torture of Palestinian opponents, and continued holding of kidnapped Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit.   Yet H. Res. 867 makes no mention of this…thereby giving the false impression that the report unfairly only dealt with the actions of the Israeli armed forces…

The resolution claims that the report makes “sweeping and unsubstantiated determinations that the Israeli military had deliberately attacked civilians during Operation Cast Lead.”  If one bothers to…read the report, there was indeed detailed and well-substantiated evidence of deadly attacks against schools, mosques, private homes and businesses nowhere near legitimate military targets.  In particular, the report cites in detail eleven incidents in which Israeli armed forces engaged in direct attacks against civilians, including cases where people were shot “while they were trying to leave their homes to walk to a safer place, waving white flags.”

…The resolution…claim[s] that the report denies Israel’s right to self-defense.  This is patently false.  There was absolutely nothing in the report that denies Israel’s right to self-defense.  It simply insists that neither Israelis nor Palestinians have the right to attack civilians.

…The resolution even claims that the report is part of an effort “to delegitimize the democratic State of Israel and deny it the right to defend its citizens and its existence can be used to delegitimize other democracies and deny them the same right.”  In reality, there is absolutely nothing in the report that delegitimizes Israel or its right to defend its citizens, nor is there anything in the report that could conceivably delegitimize other democracies or deny other democracies their right to exist or defend their citizens.  This is demagoguery at its most extreme and appears to be a right-wing effort to silence defenders of international humanitarian law by putting Congress on record as saying that documenting a given country’s war crimes is tantamount to denying that country’s right to exist and its right to self-defense.

…Perhaps most seriously, there is the final clause of the resolution which endorses Israel’s right to attack Syria and Iran because of their alleged support of Hamas.

Peace Now has taken an unequivocal stance opposed to this atrocious bit of grandstanding:

APN has serious reservations about H. Res. 867.  We do not believe that Israel or the cause of peace is aided by a Congressional effort that, however well-intentioned, is focused solely on denouncing the Goldstone Report and its authors and dismissing its findings.

…We urge the Obama Administration to show leadership in the UN and other multilateral fora in order to ensure that the Goldstone Report becomes a basis for moving forward toward peace and reconciliation…

We believe that the correct course now is for Israel’s government to launch its own independent investigation of alleged violations of human rights and international law that may have taken place in the context of the Gaza war, including those documented in the Goldstone Report.  We strongly believe that such an investigation is in the interests of Israel.

Regardless of how one judges the Goldstone Report and its findings, the report serves as a clear reminder of both the horrors of war and the critical importance of President Barack Obama’s efforts to renew peace talks.   Whatever Members of Congress may feel about the Gaza war or the Goldstone Report, the reality is that absent progress towards peace, it is only a matter of time before another war breaks out and more lives are lost.  We believe that H. Res. 867 does not serve the cause of peace and therefore, regrettably, cannot support it.

J Street began the day with a statement which portrayed the group’s doubts though it expressed itself in a more “hawkish” manner:

J Street is unable to support House Resolution 867 regarding the Goldstone Commission report on Operation Cast Lead.

J Street would be able to support a resolution that:

  • Recognizes the history of bias against Israel at the United Nations, the flaws in the original mandate to the Goldstone Commission and the dangers in pursuing resolutions in multilateral fora with a track record of anti-Israel bias;
  • Condemns the series of one-sided resolutions adopted by the UN Human Rights Council;
  • Expresses support for the people of southern Israel who were traumatized by years of constant rocket and mortar fire as well as for the people of Gaza who are suffering greatly from the effects of both the military operation and the ongoing blockade of Gaza;
  • Correctly acknowledges that the Commission’s original mandate was adjusted by Judge Goldstone himself and accepted by the Human Rights Council to include a focus on the conduct of both sides, and that the report included the first-ever exposure by a UN body of war crimes and human rights violations by Hamas;…
  • Calls on the US government to attempt to defeat in the General Assembly any resolution which unfairly focuses only on Israel and
  • Calls on the US government to state unequivocally that it will veto in the Security Council any resolution which refers charges against Israel and Israelis to the International Criminal Court.

…J Street further urges the Obama Administration to make every effort to oppose and defeat the one-sided and biased resolution that is likely to be presented next week in the General Assembly and to work actively for the adoption of a better, balanced resolution.  We urge the United States to make clear that it will use its veto to prevent any referral of this matter to the International Criminal Court.

Jeremy Ben Ami argues that this position is essentially the same as APN’s.  But that’s not the case.  In fact, APN makes no mention of an ICC referral and wisely steers clear of the minutiae of UN action.  And there are numerous other differences.  APN wrote a nuanced statement that said just enough.  J Street decided it had to throw in the kitchen sink and as a result got lost in a political thicket.

Further, when people began calling them saying that it appeared J Street was calling for a No vote on HR 867, the group released the following “clarification:”

J Street supports passage of a resolution by the U.S. Congress calling for the United States to oppose and work actively to defeat one-sided and biased action in the United Nations when it comes to Israel and the Goldstone Report.

We are not urging members of Congress to oppose H. Res. 867.  We are urging thoughtful amendment of the Resolution before passage to bring it in line with the principles we articulate…

Though this statement does support an independent Israeli investigation of Cast Lead (which is also what Goldstone calls for) the comment saying the group doesn’t oppose a yes vote disappoints.  J Street used a sledge hammer while APN used a scalpel.  The difference shows.

HR 867 was probably written by Aipac staff, though it’s lead sponsors are right-wing Republicans Ileana Ros Lehtinen and Dan Burton, along with water-carriers Howard Berman and Gary Ackerman.

Jewish Voice for Peace is also in the thick of this fight on behalf of the credibility of the Goldstone Report.

Jeffrey Goldberg: Take That, You ‘Hard-Core Anti-Zionist Leftist!’

Thursday, October 29th, 2009
Jeffrey Goldberg: in his Israel lobby element

Jeffrey Goldberg: in his Israel lobby element

If you’re one of the supposed hard-core haters of Zion who’s attempting to turn J Street into a Manchurian Candidate of anti-Zionism, I’ve got news for you.  Jeffrey Goldberg has your number:

…The group [J Street] runs the risk of being hijacked by haters of Israel. I don’t doubt that most people who join J Street are motivated by love for the Jewish state, as a Jewish state, and anguish over its government’s decisions. But there are those who would like to use J Street to weaken the bonds between the U.S. and Israel. The challenge to Jeremy Ben-Ami, the founder of J Street, over the next year, is to keep the group pro-Israel in the face of concerted efforts to move it in the direction of the hardcore anti-Zionist left.

The level of paranoia in this statement reminds me of the fear with which anti-Communist liberals greeted the New Left during the 1960s.  They seemed to be fighting the battles of the 1930s to avoid allowing such groups to be hijacked by the Communist Party.  Instead of reacting to contemporary reality, they were acting out an old script.  Goldberg too seems to see enemies of Israel everywhere, even hiding out in the dark corners at the J Street conference.

I don’t know what Goldberg is nattering about.  Who’s trying to hijack J Street?  All of those so-called radicals, even some who attended the conference, are expressing skepticism about J Street.  They’re not attempting to bore their way in and take over from the inside.  Specifically, those bloggers at our I-P session who he’s attacked so intemperately have no desire to fulfill Goldberg’s paranoiac nightmare scenario.

I fear that Jeffrey Goldberg, along with J.J. Goldberg and other Jewish liberals like them are sinking further and further into dyspeptic irrelevance.

Berman Iran Sanctions Bill Approved by House, Senate Committees

Thursday, October 29th, 2009

Yesterday and today, the House foreign affairs committee and the Senate banking committee approved new sanctions legislation, the Iran Refined Petroleum Sanctions Act (IRPSA), designed to punish Iran for its nuclear program.  The legislation, written by Howard Berman, one of Aipac’s leading stooges (er, friends) on the Hill, targets oil-related products.  I noted in earlier posts that the otherwise progressive J Street has publicly endorsed it as “thoughtful and nuanced.”  At the same time, Jeremy Ben Ami, during the J Street national conference, suggested the contradictory notion that U.S. policy should embrace diplomatic efforts, but not yet sanctions.

Trita Parsi noted during the same conference that anti-Iran sanctions have been in place for 15 years and have had virtually no effect other than to entrench the Revolutionary Guards who profit immensely from the smuggling trade.  The same will likely happen in spades when the new sanctions take effect.  At a recent hawkish pro-Israel Seattle presentation on Iran, an Aipac representative conceded that sanctions have virtually no impact on the leadership, but instead punish the common Iranian.  His response: “That’s the price they have to pay.”

Make no mistake about it, this policy is bought and paid for by the Israeli government and its domestic agent, Aipac.  Congress is following the rules as indirectly laid down by the Netanyahu government.  Certainly, there is strong sentiment for such a policy among American Jews as well.  So in effect Berman and his buddies are doing something that makes their friends at Aipac at happy while also satisfying their wealthy Jewish donors and even rank and file Jews.

Regardless of all this, sanctions are a recipe for failure.  Every major Iran analyst says this including Trita Parsi, Hillary and Flynt Leverett, Roger Cohen, Anthony Cordesman, and many others.  More than this, after sanctions fail and Iran’s nuclear ambitions still remain unrestrained, that is when the calls for military solutions will ring loudly from Tel Aviv to Capital Hill.  It will then be hard to avoid the siren call of armed force.  Virtually all of Israel will be singing the tune.  Iran war hawks in the Israel lobby and Congress will be joining in.

What causes me great fear is that like Ulysses’ men, we will be lured into war by the entrancing notes of the Sirens, notes that will lead many to leap to their proverbial death, just as Greek mariners did before the Greek hero finally succeeded in defying their lulling call.  I worry that by the time we have convinced enough Americans and fellow Jews that current policy is doomed to fail, we will be too late and the bombs will fall and blood will flow.

In a related matter, Turkish Prime Minister Erdogan began a visit to Iran yesterday which appeared to mark both a growing closeness between the two nations and a growing distancing of Turkey and western nations like Israel, the EU, and the U.S.  It is no accident that Erdogan expressed his displeasure today with the mounting pressure exerted by the west on Iran.  This is yet another signal of the major east-west fissure that will come if Israel and the U.S. exert mounting pressure on Iran and even resort to force to secure their desired policy outcome.

Likud Lunacy: Goldstone Liable for Synagogue Shootings

Thursday, October 29th, 2009

In one of the most self-serving, deceitful and just plain idiotic statements by a Likud official in many a moon, MK Danny Dannon saw the hand of Richard Goldstone in today’s attack on a Sephardic Orthodox synagogue in North Hollywood:

Likud MK Danny Danon…said the attack was the result of a damning United Nations report on Israel’s winter offensive against Hamas in Gaza, compiled by South African jurist Richard Goldstone.

“The criminal attack in Los Angeles is a clear result of the Goldstone report,” he said. “Countries across the world need to reject the report, which brings with it hatred and anti-Semitism, and harms the peace process.”

And we thought the Republicans cornered the market on such nuttyisms.  I guess the Likud is not to be outdone.  The only problem with statements like this is that it attests to the total unreliability of anything said by practically any Israeli politician.  The level of distortion and outright mendacity in public statements from backbenchers desperate for the glare of the public spotlight like Dannon, to prime ministers is very great.  Israel’s politicians are so obsessive and view every development in Jewish life through the prism of Israel’s worth or lack thereof, so that nothing they say can be trusted.  Is it paranoia, delusion, obsession,  desperation–or a combination?

Goldberg Confirms His Own Irrelevance

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009

I have good news and I have bad news.  The good news is that Jeffrey Goldberg is so overwrought about the Israel-Palestine bloggers session at the J Street conference that he has devoted a goodly portion of a post to pissing and moaning about us.  The bad news is that the utter banality of his “analysis” confirms even further his utter irrelevance to the debate over U.S. Middle East policy.

Someone who didn’t even attend the session (Goldberg) has determined through his well-placed proxies that it was a silly waste of time.  I always admire people so sure of their own powers of judgment that they don’t even need to have any first-hand knowledge of an issue or event to expound upon it with authority.  Poor Jeffrey,  he writes as if we gave him an ulcer:

I’m telling people who are worried about the hijinks at the unofficial J Street bloggers’ panel not to become overly bothered by it; it was a clownish event, and the people on the panel were marginal figures except in the rather circumscribed universe of anti-Zionists-with-Jewish parents (where they are giants).

Gee, where have I read that same term used to describe our session?  Oh that’s right, our other good friend on the Jewish right, Michael Goldfarb:

The “independent” blogger panel at J Street’s conference can only be described as clownish.

You can tell where Jeffrey Goldberg gets some of his “best” material.  From his partner in pro-Israel journalism, Goldfarb.

I’m going to come right out and call Goldberg a liar.  I wrote him a personal e mail after his last diatribe pointing out the diversity of our panel and that it contained bloggers with many different perspectives on the issues.  Yet he deliberately ignores what the two co-hosts of the session wrote to him, deliberately ignores the fact that I am a progressive Zionist and that Jerry Haber’s blog is titled The Magnes Zionist, for God’s sake.  This is intellectual bad faith.  Goldberg didn’t even have the courtesy to respond to my e mail.  Jerry, by the way, invited Goldberg to join our panel, which he declined to do.  You see, he’d rather take his marbles go home and complain about what nasty people we are than engaging with us in any sort of serious manner.

Goldberg hated the fact that J Street hosted a panel of Iran pragmatists, who he noxiously describes as “apologists.”  Here is what passes for “analysis” from Goldberg:

The panel featured Hillary Mann Leverett, who, with her husband, Flynt Leverett, is an apologist for the Iranian regime. [and] also included Trita Parsi, who also does a lot of leg-work for the Iranian regime…

I find it interesting that the Mujahadeen al Khalq, the radical Iranian anti-clerical group which supports violent overthrow of the regime and is listed as a terror organization, also agrees with Goldberg, calling Parsi a supporter of the regime.  This is a commonality of which Goldberg should be proud.  Any reasonable person who really heard (as opposed to Goldberg relying on second-hand reports) what Parsi said, and who followed the powerful testimony from Parsi and his group NIAC during the civil unrest that followed the fraudulent Iranain elections in June, would know that what Goldberg says is a despicable lie.  In fact, Parsi called those elections fraudulent at the conference.  I, as opposed to Goldberg, was there and in the room when he said this.  Somehow in the twilight world that is Goldbergland, calling the elections a fraud becomes twisted into apologetics on behalf of the regime.  Besides, you’ll notice that Goldberg never provides a shred of evidence for any of these claims.  Typical.

For Jeffrey Goldberg, if you don’t endorse Israel’s vision of an Iran that is an existential threat to Israel and the world, and if you don’t endorse draconian sanctions and the possibility of military attack if they don’t work–then you’re an Iranian apologist.

Here is more distortion from Goldberg:

…The consensus on the panel…was that Iran doesn’t think about Israel, doesn’t care about Israel, and certainly doesn’t want to obliterate Israel.

I blogged yesterday on what Trita Parsi actually said, which was far more nuanced than Goldberg allows.  Parsi, seeking to explain the disconnect among all the players and their delusions about their own importance and their own perceptions of how their enemy sees them, said this:

Israelis think about Iran 90% of the time and think that Iranians think about Israel 90% of the time.  They don’t.

No one on the panel said Iran doesn’t want to obliterate Israel.  No one said it does.  The subject simply was not addressed in that fashion, which would of course annoy Goldberg no end.  Here’s a guy who deals in absolutes who can’t stand when people a lot smarter and better educated on the subject than he, talk in a fashion that allows for far more grey, far more complexity and nuance.

Interestingly, Goldberg also ignores the racism, noted by Hillary Mann Leverett in her presentation on Iran, directed at Iran by pro-Israel apologists:

[They advance] the stereotype of Iranians as chronically duplicitous and unprepared to keep any commitment they enter into. …  Those stereotypes are simply not supported by the historical record. … They are fundamentally racist — if someone were to criticize Israeli diplomacy by referring to rabbis as lying and conspiring behind their beards, as far too many commentators accuse Iran’s mullahs of lying and conspiring behind their beards, we would rightly — and I’d be the first to — denounce that as an anti-Semitic stereotype.

When I first heard Leverett’s comment I thought it was very acute.  Goldberg can’t be bothered to address it.  Instead he misdirects in his response:

Rabbis aren’t in charge of Israel. Mullahs are in charge of Iran. This is a fact that probably does seem relevant to most people, though not to Hillary Mann Leverett.

We might leave aside the fact that fundamentalist rabbis, in fact, ARE in charge of many major aspects of Israeli life, though perhaps not decisions on whether to use nuclear weapons.  But the most important point to note here is, who is to say that Iran’s mullahs are pursuing a policy that is any less rational than Israel is pursuing?  Israel has started two horrific wars in the past three years killing thousands, including many civilians, in two different countries.  It has used sophisticated and powerful weapons of destruction (though not “mass” destruction) that have killed indiscriminately.  It has been sanctioned by international bodies and its own domestic human rights organizations for violations of human rights and international law.

Iran’s record in the past six months hasn’t been pretty either.  Nor are its support for Hezbollah and alleged support for Hamas, laudable.  But if we compare records of the two countries the mullahs appear quite a bit more rational than Israel’s leaders over that same three year period.  How can that be, Jeffrey Goldberg, Zionist champion, Israel’s defender, that Israel has more to answer for than Iran?  You’re worried that Iran wants nuclear weapons, when Israel already has them.  You’re worried that Iran is violating the Non-Proliferation Treaty provisions, when Israel refuses even to sign the Treaty.  Seems to me your concerns are a bit misplaced.  Worry about Iran?  Sure.  Worry about Israel?  Even moreso.

2 1/2 Cheers for Historic J Street National Conference

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009

To support my expenses and participation in the J Street conference, please consider, if you haven’t already done so, making a generous contribution.

I’ve just returned from the historic first national J Street conference attended by 1,500 Jewish progressives and peace activists.  I found it to be alternately bracing, challenging, illuminating and infuriating.  During a lifetime when I have been used to feeling in the minority for my political views, it was quite amazing to walk through the halls of the hotel and see hordes of Jews (and non-Jewish allies including Arabs) who shared (more or less) my own particular outlook on the Israeli-Arab conflict.  Coming from a community of 40,000 Jews here in Seattle, it had been years since I had seen that many Jews in one place at one time, let alone progressive Jews.  So yes, it was a heady experience.

J Street has done a great deal to break open the discourse around this subject in the American Jewish community.  No longer do we have to feel like we’re whispering in the dark when we’re calling for a two state solution that offers justice to both Israel and the Palestinians.  No longer does Aipac and the rest of the Israel lobby sit astride the colossus that is American Jewry and crack the party line whip.  No longer does the Israeli government “own” the entire American Jewish leadership enabling it to march in lock step around any particular issue.  There has been more diversity in the discourse in the past 18 months since J Street launched than in the past decade before that.

But I don’t want to paint an overly rosy picture.  J Street is still very much a work in progress.  Can it take advantage of the breakthrough that happened this past weekend to mount a coherent and persuasive alternative political line to the Israel lobby?  Can it open dialogue on this issue on Capital Hill as well?  And in the White House?  I think it has already done so to a small extent.  But J Street is battling a $60 Million Man with perhaps tens of thousands of volunteers throughout the nation and direct access to hundreds of members of Congress and their staff.  J Street is nowhere near that level of power and influence–yet.

But clearly, at least parts of the lobby are deeply frightened of J Street and have let loose the guns in the run-up to the conference.  There was an orchestrated campaign by Aipac to prevent the Israeli ambassador from attending the conference.   A former Aipac staffer known for his smeary reputation penned an article accusing the group of accepting donations from ARABS!  Other “journalists” and bloggers took up other themes designed to raise doubt about J Streets bona fides as a legitimate Jewish organization.

For this reason, J Street has felt it needed to walk the line between a conventional pro-Israel position as defined by the Israel lobby and a more progressive line.  This is where I have often felt myself diverge from the group’s strategy.  There is clearly a minefield through which J Street is walking.  It does not want to be another Aipac, but it also does not want to turn into yet another small, underfunded, short-lived Jewish progressive group along the lines of Breira, New Jewish Agenda or even the late lamented liberal American Jewish Congress.  For that reason, J Street, when it can, attempts to adopt positions that show an independent, maverick streak.  For example, it has endorsed the current Berman Iran sanctions bill being marked up in Congress this week.  This is definitely not a progressive position.  But it an attempt to triangulate between left and right and walk a line that is neither on one side or the other but somewhere between.

Jeremy Ben Ami, the Jewish lobby’s director, gave an interview to Jeffrey Goldberg in which he took quite center-right positions on issues like Iran sanctions, the Goldstone Report, the Law of Return and other matters.  It was a calculated attempt to show the so-called centrist Goldberg that J Street couldn’t be pigeon-holed as a mere extension of the Jewish left.

On the other hand, J Street clearly arose out of a progressive Jewish impulse and knows that this is what makes it unique and important on the current scene.  As but one example, Jerry Haber and I organized a blogger session at the conference.  It was a delicate relationship which began with a frustrating attempt on my part to understand why J Street refused to incorporate the panel into the official program.  But eventually, I began to see this decision as actually good not just for J Street but for the bloggers themselves since it allowed J Street to disagree with us and vice versa.  And that is precisely what happened.  During our panel at the conference bloggers like Max Blumenthal took Ben Ami strongly to task for the Goldberg interview.  And alternately, a Palestinian-American blogger offered the strongest and most heartfelt endorsement of J Street’s two-state solution.

Such a panel allows J Street legitimately to claim that it is open to voices to its left.  Nothing can ossify an organization quicker than forcing a consensus down the throats of members.  Aipac has done this more or less and its positions are about as ossified as they can be.  One of the beauties of J Street is that it is a work in progress.  It has strong positions as well it should.  But it is also open to an evolution of the political process.  This year J Street debated one set of issues.  Next year, new ideas and concepts will creep into the mix.  J Street may never explicitly endorse BDS or the Goldstone Report or any number of issues propounded by the left.  But next year, those issues may at least be debated officially within the halls of the conference.  Perhaps Neve Gordon and Naomi Klein will even be invited to enter the august halls of J Street next year.  That is all we can legitimately ask of J Street.  That they remain open to the free flow of ideas and adapt their political agenda as those ideas become or accepted and enter the mainstream.

Returning to the blogger panel, Blumenthal had one of the more memorably funny quotes of the day criticizing Elie Wiesel’s address to Pastor John Hagee’s Christians United for Israel national event (the joke refers to Wiesel’s investment losses with Bernie Madoff):

The last person Elie Wiesel trusted this much was Bernie Madoff.

The blogger panel was slimed by Michael Goldfarb in his bile-filed post in the Weekly Standard.  Among the more objectionable passages in his report was a description of Gaza Muslim blogger Laila El-Haddad as “hijab covered.”  I wonder why Goldfarb didn’t comment on Jerry Haber, an Orthodox blogger and co-host of the panel, wearing a kipah.  The comment was clearly Islamophobic and shameful.  Goldfarb seems to fancy himself an expert on Arab religious head gear, but hasn’t a clue what a hijab really is. A scarf, which Laila wore, is not a hijab.

Rachel Barenblatt offers a fuller report on the panel discussion at Velveteen Rabbi.

Another denizen of the right-wing Jewish deep slime, Hillel Stavis, crashed the panel, taking pictures of the panelists and attendees without authorization and had to be escorted from the room.  Since he was a registered conference goer, J Street allowed him to remain in the hall even though he wrote a scummy report at his own blog complaining of his “shabby” treatment.

What follows is a combination of an outline of the most interesting ideas I heard from speakers at the conference combined with my critique of the ideas when they really impressed or disgusted me.

There were several discussions about settlements.  At one, Akiva Eldar of Haaretz recounted a great story about a settler leader named Elitzur who told the reporter:

The Land of Israel is my wife.  The State of Israel is my cleaning lady.  If I have to make a choice, I choose my wife.

On a similar theme, Bernard Avishai has come up with what I think is a brilliant new term that distinguishes the settlers from your average Israeli.  He calls the former “Judeans.”  This too frames them as tied to the ancient land of Israel and also ancient, outmoded Biblical notions of Jewish nationhood.  Avishai is interested in a definition of Israel that is modern and like unto the nations and not yoked to hide-bound notions of God-given rights to the land.  That is why he has called his new book, The Hebrew Republic, to separate it from the settlers’ notion that Israel is Judaic religious entity (in the sense that a settler would use the term “Judaic”).

I also had an interesting chat with Avishai about his debate with Jeffrey Goldberg about the Law of Return.  He favors dropping the Law of Return in favor of a standard set of immigration procedures like all other countries have.  Within those procedures there would be provisions for accepting as immigrants any Jews facing life-threatening danger or anti-Semitism.  But once admitted to Israel these immigrants would have to wait a requisite period to become citizens just as in other countries.  This is precisely the type of normalization of Israeli life I too believe in.  As long as Israel is home to Jewish exceptionalism, it will not find its rightful place in the region or the world.

J.J. Goldberg participated in two panels and for me it was two too many.  At The American Jewish Left and Israel he made a series of strange statements that showed he had long since eschewed his mantle as a hero of the radical Jewish student movement of the 60s and 70s and become a cranky old Yid.  Among his more memorable statements (I paraphrase):

* The American Jewish left has a problem with guns.  This is a problem Israel can’t afford.

* 20 years ago J.J.’s lefty Jewish friends were beaten up by Jewish goons from the JDL and the like.  Now, he thinks they were beaten up by the wrong people but for the right reason.

* the younger generation of American and Israeli Jews has been traumatized by 9/11 and the second intifada.

As for the last point above, J.J. has got it precisely wrong.  He himself and those who think like him have been traumatized by 9/11 and the Intifada.  Young Jews, on the contrary have not been affected nearly in the same way.  In fact, polls by American Jewish pollsters show that young Jews in this country are increasingly alienated from Israel not because of the events the Forward editor lists, but because of Israel’s harsh, unyielding REACTION to them.

The conference featured an excellent panel on developments in Iran headlined by Trita Parsi, founder of the National Iranian American Council (and a guest speaker at the Seattle conference I’ll be hosting in December) and Hillary Mann Leverett.  These are two of the clearest thinking, most pragmatic Iran analysts in this country.  Their voices were fresh and a delight.

Both argue against sanctions.  Parsi pointed out that due to existing American sanctions, Microsoft had already closed down its own Instant Messaging service before the disputed Iranian elections in June.  Facebook was about to do so when the violent uproar occurred in the streets of Teheran and people massed in their tens and hundreds of thousands using sites like Twitter and Facebook as their social networking Bibles.  The Iranian activist was pointing out the utter counter-productiveness of using sanctions like a sledge-hammer rather than the scalpel that is needed to make any progress on these issues.

Parsi argues that America tends only to think of punishments for Iran not behaving as it would like.  Instead, we must think of what we can offer the Iranians that would act as motivators for them to change their behavior or compromise on issues of importance to the U.S.  Sticks do not work without carrots.  Iran wants to normalize relations with the U.S.  Then why don’t we hold this out as a possibility if Iran compromises?

To point out the level of delusion and mutual misunderstanding that exists among the various major parties to this conflict, Trita noted that Iranians think of the U.S. 90% of the time and believe that Americans think of Iran 90% of the time.  They don’t.  Israelis think of Iran 90% of the time and believe Iranians think of Israel 90% of the time.  They don’t.

Leverett called for a major U.S. opening to Iran, likening it to Nixon’s breakthrough trip to China in 1972.  Back then, Nixon was willing to reconcile with a Chinese leader who had just killed 3-million during the Cultural Revolution, who had recently tested an atomic weapon, and who was threatening Japan, a major U.S. ally.  Despite all these issues, Nixon did not waver in his commitment to open a relationship with the Communist regime.  As a result, relations now, while not always tension-free, are on a much more stable footing than they ever were since the Communist takeover in 1949.

In this scenario, Israel plays a similar role to Japan.  Leverett contends that a grand opening to Iran could have precisely the same results that Nixon’s opening to China did in vastly improving U.S. relations with Iran and the latter’s relations with Israel.

J Street has adopted a confusing position regarding sanctions.  While it supports the Berman bill, Ben Ami said during a discussion with Rabbi Eric Yoffie that it supports diplomatic engagement, but does not YET support sanctions.  I can’t reconcile those two positions.  In addition, I asked whether J Streeters, when they lobby on Capital Hill tomorrow will be talking about sanctions.  The answer I heard was No.  Imagine the importance of such an issue in the possible lead up to a military attack against Iran and J Street has chosen to sit on its hands.

Sooner rather than later, J Street’s leadership will come to understand that sanctions are not a wedge issue like the ones Republicans exploit for partisan gain.  Rather they are part of a possible scenario that could lead to scores, hundreds or even thousands losing their lives in attacks and counter-attacks involving Iran, Israel and their respective allies.  Thus, sanctions must soon demand a pure moral response rather than a tactical political one, as reflects J Street’s current position.  Otherwise, the worst could happen, and by then it will be too late for progressive Jews to weigh in with a principled position.

One of the important achievements of the conference was a panel composed entirely of Palestinians who shared their vision of what they wanted a peaceful future to look like.  Bassim Khoury, the recently resigned PA economics minister (he resigned in protest of Mahmoud Abbas’ shelving of the Goldstone Report), reported that no one could argue any longer that Jerusalem was a “united” city.  In fact, he claimed, the Holy City was characterized by apartheid in which the Jewish section of the city received a vastly superior percentage of resources and services compared to the impoverished Arab section.  The numbers, when Khoury flashed them on the screen in Powerpoint slides, were chilling.

He had another memorable line:

The Green Line is a red line.

When Hussein Ibish took up what he called the “red herring” argument advanced by Bibi Netanyahu that Palestinians must accept Israel as a Jewish state, I thought how insane it would be for Mahmoud Abbas to insist that Israel recognize Palestine as a Muslim state.  Clearly, what Netanyahu is trying to do is head off the claims of those who advance the Palestinian Right of Return.  If Israel is accepted by Palestinians as a Jewish state then presumably they have just dispensed with their right to demand a return to their ancestral homes and homeland.

Gen. Jim Jones, Obama’s national security advisor, gave the keynote speech and I’ve rarely heard a less illuminating, more canned speech.  It told us absolutely nothing new except that the Obama administration, if Jones’ remarks are a true reflection of current policy, are based on wildly optimistic assumptions about the actions of all the major players.  Just as an example, Jones acted as if he believed it was possible to get Russia and China around a sanctions regime against Iran.  I see no evidence this is yet remotely possible.

But the speech I most objected to followed Jones and was delivered by Rep. Robert Wexler, who was Barack Obama’s court Jew during the election campaign.  Wexler had no clue what audience he was addressing.  He shreyed at us like we were residents of a  Jewish old age home in Boca Raton, his home district.  He kept harping on the issue of Israel’s security repeating three times that U.S. and Israeli forces were at that moment engaging in military exercises.  Did Wexler really think this was a message that would resonate at a J Street conference?  Did no one at J Street brief him on his remarks?  Wexler reminded us that Hamas were nothing but terrorist thugs and that President Abbas and prime minister were the great white hope of the Palestinian people.

The Florida congressman even had the chutzpah to say that Jordan’s King Abdullah simply wasn’t doing enough for peace when he pointed out to the Obama administration that the 2002 Arab League peace initiative was on the table and Israel should accept it before the Arabs can be expected to reciprocate.  What did Wexler demand in return from Israel?  That it accept a settlement freeze.   There is a fundamental disconnect in pro-Israel people like Wexler who don’t stop to understand the differences in their respective expectations of Israel and the Arab states.  Essentially, Wexler expects the Arab states to normalize relations with Israel. In return, Israel has to freeze settlements.  Not, return to ’67 borders.  Not, share Jerusalem. Not, accept the Right of Return.  Just freeze settlements.  There is a fundamental imbalance there.

Obama’s top Jew parroted the Aipac line that Iran must give up all uranium (which when he pronounced the word came out sounding like “Iranium”) enrichment and live up to the requirement of the Non-Proliferation Treaty.  The only problem with this line is that according to NPT, Iran is entitled to enrich uranium as long as it doesn’t do so to weapons grade.  Wexler comes across to me as a wind up toy you program and then let loose on whatever audience you want him to tackle.  There is no finesse, no intelligence.  Just canned talking points brayed in an insistently loud voice as if he was imploring you to believe him.

Believe it or not, Wexler has just announced his resignation from Congress in order to take up the presidency of the Middle East Foundation for Peace and Economic Cooperation.  One wonders how someone who knows so little about the issues can successfully take up such a portfolio.

There was some consternation among progressive attendees at Rabbi Eric Yoffie’s address to the conference.  He spent a good deal of time launching rather vicious personal attacks on Judge Richard Goldstone and his report on the Gaza war.  One of Yoffie’s main claim was that it was shameful for Goldstone to allow himself to be used as a Jew by such an anti-Israel body as the UN Human Rights Council.  To my shock, Yoffie’s dyspeptic statements were booed three times by the audience.  The last time, the moderator, Jane Eisner, publisher of The Forward, invited those booing to leave the room.  What I don’t think she understood was that there were probably more people in the audience who were disgusted by Yoffie’s attack than supported it.  One could easily argue that it was Yoffie who was showing chutzpah rather than the audience.

I wondered why the Reform movement’s leader would come to J Street propounding such an antagonistic position.  I realized that Yoffie, who attacked J Street during the Gaza war for insufficient pro-Israel patriotism, had to cover his own right flank.  By attacking Goldstone he could argue on returning to the Reform fold that he went into the lion’s den to tell the “Jewish leftists” how a good pro-Israel Jew sees these issues.  In that way, Yoffie allows himself to say that he’s willing to talk to the Jewish left and he can tell the Jewish right he only went there to tell off the leftists.

One of the most disappointing Israeli speakers at J Street was former Kadima Knesset leader and convicted sex offender, Haim Ramon.  He is clearly a very smart, very rigid Israeli politician who comes with a clearly programmed Diaspora speech praising the two state solution and warning how quickly Israel will face a dreaded one-state solution if it does not act to end the Occupation.  The only problem with this rap is that Ramon served as a senior minister in numerous governments (most recently under Ehud Olmert) who had their chance to end the Occupation and chose to squander it on useless wars in Lebanon and Gaza.

Ramon even had the temerity to boast of being one of the prime movers of the unilateral Gaza withdrawal.  That worked out quite well, didn’t it?  He claimed that Israel should adopt the same policy and, if necessary unilaterally withdraw from the West Bank.  Hearing this left me scratching my head: if it didn’t work the first time why would it work the second??

Israeli Consul Smears J Street

Saturday, October 24th, 2009

We’re used to seeing smears of J Street by right-wing pro-Israel Jews in the press and blogosphere.  One of the more outrageous is Isi Liebler’s outrage in the Jerusalem Post calling for an international meeting of the Jewish people that would label peace activists like those of J Street or Jewish Voice for Peace as “non-Jewish Jews” and “Jewish renegades.”  One of the memes of the smearmongers has been the claim that the progressive peace lobby group has accepted donations from Arabs.  Imagine the chutzpah of Arab-Americans believing they had the right to donate to such a cause!  Imagine the chutzpah of J Street thinking it had the right to accept “dirty money!”

What we haven’t seen yet is such smears emanating from the Israeli government.  Yes, Ambassador Oren unwisely rejected the group’s invitation to keynote its conference.  Yes, the foreign ministry wagged its finger at the group and lectured it about what was and was not properly pro-Israel and where J Street was deficient.  But now a source informs me that one of Israel’s consul generals told an American Jew that J Street is accepting donations from not just Arabs, but “Arab and Palestinian extremists.”

One of those ‘extremists’ is undoubtedly Rebecca Abou-Chedid, the former director of outreach at the New America Foundation’s Middle East Task Force and former national political director at the Arab American Institute.  She writes an eloquent defense of an Arab-American right to participate in the struggle for a sensible U.S. policy for the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and asks this cogent question:

…Why on earth should J Street be ashamed to have the support of Arab-Americans like me? And why should Arab-Americans worry that participating in the political life of their country and exercising their freedom of speech might — simply because of their ethnicity — harm the candidates and causes they hold dear?

She explains in a manner that is simple, yet utterly clear her approach to the conflict as an Arab-American:

It is possible to be both pro-Israel and pro-Palestine, not out of some blanket support for either government, but out of a sincere belief that peace is in both people’s best interests.

Lenny Ben David, a settler and former Aipac and Israeli embassy staffer (M.J. Rosenberg penned a delightful evisceration of Lenny ), advances the dubious notion that a pro-Israel organization may not accept money from Arabs (he even counts 30, count ‘em, 30 such donations on J Street’s Federal Election Commission disclosure form).  The notion is absurd on its face.  But apparently Israel’s consul general agrees as he has told a high-level prospective donor to J Street that this individual should not give to it.  Clearly any Jewish group that accepts money from such extremists cannot be a friend of Israel.

The smears get lower and lower and they emanate from sources higher and higher in the pro-Israel world.  I don’t know if this indicates a desperation from the pro-Israel lobby that it is losing the campaign for America’s hearts and minds; or whether this is merely the pro-Israel right doing what comes naturally to them.  Whatever the reason, these sulphurous fulminations only discredit their authors and enhance the reputation of J Street in the minds of everyday Jews who care about real solutions rather than smears that pass for real analysis.

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