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)

Action

Joint Appeal for Peace

(Avi Katz)

Joint Appeal for Peace

Ketubah, Ancona, Italy (1772)

(Jewish Theological Seminary library)

Ancona ketubah

Archive for November, 2009

Obama Israel-Palestine Policy in Ditch

Tuesday, November 17th, 2009

The PA has come up with the most interesting idea in months to advance the prospects of a just settlement of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict: unilateral declaration of Palestinian state within 1967 borders with the approval of the UN Security Council.  To that end, the Palestinians have appealed to the U.S. and Europeans to support their concept.  Never missing an opportunity to miss an opportunity, both have failed the test:

…The Palestinians have put forward a plan to seek United Nations Security Council recognition for a Palestinian state in the lands won by Israel in 1967 without Israeli agreement. Palestinian officials said they have announced the idea in an attempt to break the impasse in peace talks.That initiative suffered a setback on Tuesday…Carl Bildt, the foreign minister of Sweden, which holds the European Union presidency, was not encouraging. He told reporters in Brussels on Tuesday that a bid for international recognition of a state not yet formed would be “somewhat premature.”

The United States and Israel have already signaled their disapproval of the Palestinian initiative. State Department spokesman Ian Kelly said on Monday that the United States supports “a Palestinian state that arises as a result of a process between the two parties.” The prime minister of Israel, Benjamin Netanyahu, has warned that a unilateral move by the Palestinians would “unravel” existing agreements.

I’d like to ask Mr. Kelly how and when a Palestinian state can arise out of a process of negotiation when Israel doesn’t want such a process or an outcome and does everything in its power to prevent it from happening AND the U.S. administration appears powerless to do anything to stop it?

Palestinian laborer prays at site of Gilo settlement construction (Reuters)

Palestinian laborer prays at site of Gilo settlement construction (Reuters)

The beauty of the initiative is that it bypasses the obstinacy and recalcitrance of the Netanyahu government and immediately places it under enormous international pressure to be more forthcoming.  And even if it refuses, pressure will gradually mount as the incipient Palestinian state gains added support and legitimacy over time.  It will serve the purpose of gradually eroding the general Israeli position and the Occupation itself.

What are the alternatives?  Here is an example of what we can expect from Israel behaving with impunity in the face of feeble U.S. and EU opposition:

U.S. ‘dismayed’ at Israel plan to build 900 homes beyond Green Line

The plan – named “Gilo’s western slopes” – will account for a significant expansion of the neighborhood. The planned 900 housing units will be built in the form of 4-5 bedroom apartments, in an effort to lure relatively well-off residents.

The plan was initiated by the Israel Land Administration, and has received an initial green light, but on Tuesday the authorization was finalized.

The additional housing units are only part of the planned expansion of Gilo. In fact, the majority of apartments slated to be built in Jerusalem in the coming years will be located in Gilo. Other building plans in various stages of approval include some 4,000 new housing units in Gilo and adjacent areas.

We could view this as a comic opera with Israel trotting out new settlements whenever it wants to step on the toes of any party having enough temerity to suggest an approach disfavored by that nation.  But it isn’t comic when it destroys the chances of a viable Palestinian state and continues the murderous status quo.  I think we have to declare Israel persona grata in the international community.  Unless the world becomes serious, Israel will never learn a lesson other than obduracy.

This will mean the Obama administration will have to stop with half measures like settlement freezes.  It will have to go to final status negotiatons and threaten Israel with withholding economic and military aid as Joe Klein suggested last week in Time.  While they’re at it, it would an added statement if the administration directed the IRS to review the tax-exempt status of the numerous pro-settler American Jewish fundraising operations funding Judean militias which murder Palestinians.

Mr. Obama: it’s time to put up or shut up.

Washington Times Smears Trita Parsi

Monday, November 16th, 2009

Eli Lake, who covered the neocon beat for the New York Sun before it went belly up, is now in the belly of the beast at the Washington Times.  And he doesn’t disappoint in delivering the goods for the pro Iran war faction in his latest smear of Iranian-American leader, Trita Parsi.  Trita is the founder of the leading Iranian-American political organization, the National Iranian American Council.  He will be speaking at a Seattle conference I’m organizing next month dealing the Iranian nuclear crisis and finding a peaceful way to resolve it.



Why do Trita and NIAC get the right’s dander up?  Because they’re an active, energetic Iranian-American group with opposes the regime but does not support its violent overthrow as the Ledeen-Hoenlein-Aipac-Israel lobby crowd do.  For them Trita is an independent entity and they want to cut such figures down to size in order to render U.S. policy more pliant and malleable in their favor.

NIAC has sued an Iranian, Hassan Daioeslam, for slander.  The case just survived a ruling requiring discovery and depositions.  The defendant in the case is a member of the executive committee of Mujahadeen al-Khalq, an Iranian group named by the U.S. Treasury as a terrorist entity, because it seeks the violent overthrow of the Iranian regime.  Apparently, Daioeslam and his cohort have obtained documents from NIAC which prove…what, I’m not sure.  But neocons will tell you breathelessly that they prove that Trita Parsi is a pawn of the Iranian mullahs, doing their bidding in a valiant effort to allow Iran to develop a nuclear weapon.  The Daioeslam-FrontpageMagazine crowd goes farther and claims that Parsi is a Revolutionary Guard spy and/or  paid foreign agent working to subvert U.S. policy on behalf of the murderous mullahs.

Here’s a the gist of Lake’s claims (and do note the degree to which quotations are fragmented and truncated and accusations are unsupported):

Shortly before Barack Obama took office, leaders of a prominent Iranian-American group in Washington began to fret.

If the new president were to tap former Middle East envoy Dennis Ross to oversee the nation’s Iran policy, they feared their long-running effort to persuade American officials to lift sanctions could wind up in tatters. Patrick Disney, acting policy director of National Iranian American Council (NIAC), summed up the strategy: “Create a media controversy” concerning Mr. Ross, whose support for a tough line on Iran was well-known.

“Those groups that feel comfortable being more aggressive in opposing Ross publicly (possibly Voters for Peace, [Friends Committee on National Legislation] , Physicians for Social Responsibility, others) will do so,” Mr. Disney wrote in an e-mail obtained by The Washington Times, “while others who may have less latitude on the matter will declare their preference for a more agreeable envoy.”

Mr. Ross was appointed anyway and wound up on the National Security Council. But the episode highlights NIAC’s emergence as a major player in Washington and leading voice for engaging Iran and ultimately lifting U.S. sanctions.

Note the unsupported claim that NIAC supports “lifting sanctions” against Iran.  NIAC opposes any NEW sanctions against Iran.  Frankly, I’m pretty sure NIAC (along with almost every other serious Iran analyst) thinks existing sanctions are counter-productive.  But it does not support “lifting sanctions” as described in Lake’s report.

As for opposed Ross’ entry into the government, welcome to the party.  There were literally scores of organizations, blogs and Middle East experts lobbying furiously against Ross (including me).  Are we all agents of the Ayatollahs.

Another unsupported claim:

Now a lawsuit has brought to light numerous documents that raise questions about whether the organization is using that influence to lobby for policies favorable to Iran in violation of federal law.

There seems to be a willful inability for neocons like Lake to distinguish between a policy that “favors Iran” and one that favors the U.S.  NIAC’s policies are not designed to favor the current Iranian government.  In fact, NIAC is opposed to the current government.  But they oppose violent regime change and that is what irks the necons.  NIAC’s positions favor the best long-term interests of Iran-U.S. relations–that is, the greatest good for the greatest numbers of everyday Iranians (not the mullahs).

In the following passage, Lake actually does accurately characterize Parsi and NIAC’s views in such a way that this directly contradicts his prior breathless statements about NIAC’s agenda of subverting U.S. policy:

Mr. Parsi, a green card holder, has become more critical of Iran’s government since its disputed June 12 presidential elections, urging President Obama to condemn human rights abuses in Iran and to implement a “tactical pause” in efforts to arrange negotiations. But Mr. Parsi’s history suggests a continuing commitment to changing U.S. policy on Iran…

First, Parsi doesn’t want to “change” U.S. policy on Iran.  He wants an effective, productive policy on Iran that resolves conflict, including the current nuclear impasse.  This is precisely what Barack Obama’s policy is.  So there is very little daylight between the two.  The only difference is that NIAC does not support new draconian sanctions against Iran nor does it support a military attack on Iran.  Though Obama doesn’t currently support either option, he hasn’t ruled them out.  That’s it.  Those are the only differences.  So to say that Parsi is committed to changing U.S. policy is at best a distortion, at worst an outright lie.

Lake also mischaracterizes how he obtained the NIAC documents.  He claims they were “made public” as the result of the defamation suit against Daioeslam.  They weren’t “made public.”  They were transferred to Daioeslam who then gave them to Lake.  Actually, Lake is making the documents public out of ideological animus toward NIAC and a desire to support a hard-core neocon position on Iran.

In the following passage, Lake provides little support for the claim that NIAC has violated the Foreign Agents Registration Act:

Law enforcement experts who reviewed some of the documents, which were made available to The Times by the defendant in the suit, say e-mails between Mr. Parsi and Iran’s ambassador to the United Nations at the time, Javad Zarif – and an internal review of the Lobbying Disclosure Act – offer evidence that the group has operated as an undeclared lobby and may be guilty of violating tax laws, the Foreign Agents Registration Act and lobbying disclosure laws.

Lake offers a single internal e mail written by a junior NIAC staffer saying that the latter believed that he and a colleague spent more than 20% of their time lobbying and that therefore they should consider registering as lobbyists.  This is not a memo written by Parsi, the leader of the group.  There is no evidence of what his opinion was on the subject.  And the opinion offered by the junior staffer was not a legal opinion since he is not a lawyer.

The Washington Times muckraker finds further proof of Parsi’s divided allegiance in an entirely different group the latter founded 13 years ago when reformist Mohammed Khatami was Iran’s president.  The earlier group did have as part of its mission to advance Iranian interests and remove U.S. sanctions according to Lake.  Keep in mind, the earlier group’s mission was formulated during an entirely different time in Iran’s political history.  Besides, the earlier group no longer exists.  So Lake would have you believe that Trita Parsi is violating federal law because he is allegedly adhering to the mission of a group that no longer exists and which was created to respond to the reformist movement in Iranian politics which has not been in power for five years.

Here Lake confuses Parsi’s desire to “open up opportunities for trade” with a desire to undermine U.S. sanctions policy:

As early as December 2002, however, Mr. Parsi envisioned that his nonprofit would join with a full-fledged “grass-roots lobby” to push for an end to sanctions on Iran.  He wrote in a memo to Roy Coffee, a former aide to then-Texas Gov. George W. Bush: “Although the mission of the proposed lobby should be to improve relations between the U.S. and Iran and open up opportunities for trade, the initial targets should be less controversial issues such as visas and racial profiling/discrimination.”

In the neocon universe, if you attempt to improve U.S.-Iran relations you are a traitor to U.S. interests and a stooge of Iran.  If you foresee a time when U.S. and Iranian companies would pursue commercial interests, then you’re as good as a smuggler crossing the Straits of Hormuz in a cigarette boat.

This is how Lake describes the lawsuit defendant, who is a confirmed Iranian anti-regime revolutionary:

An Iranian-American journalist from Arizona named Hassan Daioleslam…

How does Daioeslam qualify as a “journalist?”  Why, he writes for Frontpagemagazine don’t ya know.  Why no mention of his affiliation with Mujahadeen al-Khalq?  That would complicate things a bit for Lake, wouldn’t it?  He’d have to explain why he’s relying on an informant who is a leader of an Iranian terrorist group.

Not until the end of his article does Lake say of the evidence for one of his claims, that Parsi arranged meetings between Iran’s UN ambassador and members of Congress:

…The case is not definitive. Two lawyers who read some of the same documents said they did not provide enough evidence to conclude that Mr. Parsi was acting as a foreign agent. Neither of the lawyers agreed to be quoted by name.

A fair journalist would have acknowledged this from the very beginning of the piece and not made such an unequivocal claim in the beginning.  But neither Lake’s nor the Washington Time’s job is to use standard practices of professional journalism like fairness and balance.

Once again at the end of his article he provides this comment from a Congressmember who totally disputes the notion that Parsi was engaging in lobbying when the member met with the Iranian ambassador:

Mr. Gilchrest, a Maryland Republican who left office in 2009, said he remembered meeting with Mr. Parsi but did not consider him a major player in his efforts to meet Iranian officials.

“Trita was one person that we would use as a source of information. But I would not say we viewed Trita as a lobbyist,” Mr. Gilchrest said. “He was a small part of our circle who wanted to meet with Iranians.”

Here, Lake offers further evidence of NIAC’s alleged lobbying activities:

NIAC boasted about the media campaign in a grant application to private foundations for a proposed “U.S.-Iran Media Resource Program.”

The application said NIAC “succeeded in putting Iran’s 2003 Grand Bargain offer onto national headlines,” noting that Mr. Parsi’s efforts had generated 37 “pieces of analysis,” a feature on CNN and 80 newspaper mentions.

The application credits NIAC for thwarting what Mr. Parsi said was “the Bush administration’s push for a military confrontation with Iran.”

So NIAC’s publicizing the Iranian “Grand Bargain” in the U.S. media constitutes lobbying?  I’ve written about the Grand Bargain.  Should I register as a lobbyist?  And you’ll note that the closest Lake gets to proving NIAC actually had any impact on U.S. policy toward Iran is Lake’s characterization of NIAC as “taking credit” for influencing policy.  The reporter doesn’t even provide any documentary evidence or a quotation from the application that supports the claim.

Besides, the Bush administration refused to attack Iran for reasons having little or nothing to do with NIAC.  George Bush decided that such an attack was not in U.S. interests.  Believe me, he didn’t listen to NIAC’s views in making that decision.  There were far more important voices he was listening to like his own father and members of his father’s inner circle like Brent Scowcroft.  Who knows, maybe Condi Rice actually had something sobering to say on the subject to counter the pro-war rumblings of Dick Cheney.

Unfortunately, Lake also neglects to mention that Daioeslam conspired with neocon regime-change hawk, Kenneth Timmerman in a campaign to smear Parsi: The former wrote an e mail to the latter during the presidential campaign with that in mind:

“I strongly believe that Trita Parsi is the weakest part of the Iranian web…I believe that destroying him will be the start of attacking the whole web. This is an integral part of any attack on Clinton or Obama.”

It was their hope thereby to damage the realist approach to U.S.-Iran relations and thereby aid and abet the drumbeat to military force, if not war.  Instead of worrying about whether Trita Parsi is a mullah mole Eli Lake should be asking himself why his neocon friends supporting regime change are conspiring with Iranian dissidents who support terror.

Religion vs. Politics in Middle East

Monday, November 16th, 2009

awn columbia talkTonight, Dean Peter Awn spoke to the Columbia University alumni chapter in Seattle.  I attended Columbia’s School of General Studies, for whom Awn has served as dean for 13 years.  He is also a professor of religion specializing in Islam.  His topic tonight was the Obama administration’s Middle East policy, which of course was right up my alley and why I attended.

Awn gave a terrific talk that focussed mainly on the history of the Shia-Sunni split and the cultural, political and religious differences between the two sects.  Along the way though, he covered all the main stops on the Middle East tour including the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and the Iran nuclear impasse, topics I blog about regularly.

I asked Awn about the nexus between religion and politics and how that fuels the Israeli-Arab conflict.  He replied with some interesting comments which reflect closely my own feelings.  He believes that the Israeli-Arab conflict is essentially political, rather than religious.  Not that there isn’t a religious element to the conflict.  But that political extremists on both sides exploit religion as an accelerant in the conflict.

Awn pointed out that Osama bin Laden isn’t particularly interested in the Israeli-Arab conflict nor even in toppling the west or establishing a Muslim caliphate.  What he really wants to do is topple the Saudi regime, which is largely a political goal.  He shamelessly exploits the Israeli-Palestinian conflict while not caring a whit for the plight of the Palestinians.  Similarly, Awn feels that Americans make a serious mistake when they claim that bin Laden wants to destroy the U.S.  The 9/11 attacks were an attempt to get U.S. forces out of Saudi Arabia and the Gulf.

The real danger in political conflicts like the Israeli-Arab dispute is that religion will be injected into it and raise the level of hysteria.  Political violence is bad enough.  But adding religion and turning it into sacred violence infinitely raises the stakes.

So as troubling as Jack Teitel or Nidal Hassan are, Dean Awn views them and their religious fanaticism as symptoms of a conflict that is political.  He does not view religion as the root cause nor should we.

In the “you shall know them by their enemies” department, you can be assured of Dean Awn’s bona fides knowing that the fake anti-jihad “expert,” “Hugh Fitzgerald” has attacked him in Frontpagemagazine, certainly the Good Housekeeping Seal of Approval if there ever was one.

Laila Abu-Saba, the Dove, May Her Memory Be for a Blessing

Sunday, November 15th, 2009
Laila Abu-Saba <i>zichrona l'vracha</i> (may her memory be for a blessing)

Laila Abu-Saba 'zichrona l'vracha' ("may her memory be for a blessing")

Laila Abu-Saba was a great soul.  If she had been Jewish (she was married to a Jew) she would have been a tzadeket.  But she was a Lebanese American Christian.  That doesn’t make her any less of a saint for sure.

Like me, Laila blogged about the Israel-Arab conflict, she at Dove’s Eye View.  And like me, she blogged about much more than that: about Lebanese cuisine, writing, her poet father.  Unlike me, she had breast cancer.  And it killed her.  But the cancer didn’t kill her really.  Nothing could kill her spirit, a spirit that yearned for all that was good and decent and kind.

I got the distinct impression that Laila didn’t want to be defined by her cancer.  She wanted to write her blog about the things in life that gave her joy and not be burdened by things that did not.

I don’t remember how exactly I came to meet her.  But when I first began blogging in 2003 I searched high and low for anyone blogging on a subject remotely close to my own.  Back then, I had an immense need for solidarity and community.  That’s how I found Laila.  It was so refreshing. Here was an Arab-American with roots in the Middle East who was free of partisanship, rigid ideology.  She was just a human being.  She didn’t denounce Jews or Israelis though she did stand up for justice.  She didn’t embrace any hard political position.  She just wanted peace.

As you know, I sometimes have a politically confrontational style.  That was the only thing that divided us after she became ill.  I would send her a link to some particular outrage I’d written about and she’d reply in her loving way: please, I need to stay positive. I don’t want to hear about the bad things.  Tell me about the good.  It meant that we corresponded a bit less.  And that is the reason I didn’t know that she passed away on October 8th.  When I learned of her death a few minutes ago I felt like I’d lost something precious.  And this is a person I never even met in person.  So don’t let anyone tell you that online relationships are any less powerful that face-to-face ones.

At one point, Laila and I were planning to get together on my next trip to the Bay Area.  I so looked forward to meeting this powerful, pure voice for good.  That won’t happen now.  But that just means that I will have to internalize a part of Laila and her loving spirit inside myself.  It will be hard because she was so good and so pure.  But I will try.

Here is a passage Laila wrote on returning a year ago from a trip home to Lebanon.  It will quicken your pulse:

“So please, friend, bless what you have and let go of fear for the future. Today is the only day you have got. You are breathing. Enjoy your breath. You are alive. Enjoy your life. You have a daughter and parents. Love them. Bless everybody who comes across your path. And the work? Whatever. Bless your work, too. Bless your town, your bills, your possessions. You are lucky to be here for all of it. If some of it gets taken away, well fine, something else will take its place. You are an amazing confluence of billions of variables and nobody else is having your life right this minute.

Enjoy! And don’t worry about hope. Just breathe and appreciate your breath. Everything arises from that.”

May her memory be for a blessing.

Will Torture Taint Al Qaeda Prosecutions?

Sunday, November 15th, 2009

One of the ongoing mantras of the left during the Bush torture years was that, aside from the fact that torture produces little in the way of reliable intelligence, torturing Al Qaeda suspects might cause a future court to throw out the cases against them.

There is one wonderful thing and one frightening thing about Eric Holder’s announcement of civilian trials for the main Qaeda suspects at Guantanamo: this development marks the close of the Bush doctrine which argued that terror suspects should be tried before military tribunals with truncated rights.  Bush’s claim was a betrayal of American constitutional values.  Largely ending the practice, means we can turn our jurisprudence back to a more normative mode.  Terror is no longer a war and no longer a matter solely for military consideration.  Terror is no longer an existential threat.  Instead, it is a criminal matter, a very serious one, but not one that threatens the Republic with extinction.

This is a repudiation nine years in the making and it couldn’t come a moment too soon.  Many of us have been concerned by the Obama administration’s overly sympathetic approach to some remnants of Bush era thinking when it comes to constitutional, human rights and terror matters.  This new tack will send the pendulum back in a direction that makes us more comfortable.

But this is what’s frightening:

Mr. Mohammed’s initial defiance toward his captors set off an interrogation plan that would turn him into the central figure in the roiling debate over the C.I.A’s interrogation methods. He was subjected 183 times to the near-drowning technique called waterboarding, treatment that Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. has called torture.

If we tortured Mohammed and torture is illegal and unconstitutional, then do we lose the right to try him for his crimes?  Might he go free simply because we betrayed our own constitutional values?  And if the courts somehow figure out a way to finesse this issue and find that his rights (however those might be defined) were NOT infringed, then aren’t we still betraying our values?  This would certainly not be a betrayal on the magnitude of Bush’s since it would be motivated by the desire to prosecute Mohammed in a civilian and constitutionally protected setting.  But how do we get around the fact that whatever the motivation for torturing him, that it was unconscionable and more importantly for the court system, unconstitutional?

No one in this country wants Khalil Mohammed to go free.  But how do you try him while acknowledging the injustices that were committed against him?

Killing in God’s Name

Sunday, November 15th, 2009

On the morning of the [Ft. Hood] shootings, he [Maj. Nidal Hassan] stopped by the home of another neighbor, Lenna Brown, as she was sharing coffee with a friend. He gave them both brand new copies of the Koran…

“I asked him where are you going, and he said Afghanistan,” Ms. Brown said. She asked him how he felt about that, and he paused before answering.

“I am going to do God’s work,” he replied.
New York Times

* * * * * *

“It was a pleasure and an honor to serve my God,” said [Jack] Teitel [accused settler murderer] at the Jerusalem courthouse. “I have no regret and no doubt that God is pleased.”

Haaretz

keefe god eat god world cartoonWhen people believe they are acting in God’s name or the name of their particular religion they can do horrible things.  Those of us who believe that bad acts are only done in the name of one religion like Islam must remember that all religions (including Judaism) produce such hate.  No religion has a monopoly on righteousness or moral purity.  Anyone who believes that Judaism and Jews are always victims and never victimizers is doing themselves and their religion a deep disservice.

To be clear, there are those eager to claim that Nidal Hassan was purely a Muslim terrorist.  I don’t believe this.  I believe he was mentally ill and used his religion as a crutch or catalyst for his latent violent mental condition.  On the other hand, no media report from Israel has suggested that Jack Teitel has any such mental condition.

What I’m trying to get at here is not the degree to which religion motivated these killers.  I’m merely looking at what they themselves said and believed in regard to their actions.  And the fact that both believed virtually the same thing about their actions (i.e. that God blessed their work) tells us both how deluded human beings can be, and how capable we are of using religion to justify the worst of human behavior.

Those of us who are Jewish or Muslim must stand up and say that we will not let our respective religions be hijacked (whether the hijacker is mentally ill or entirely lucid and competent) by such insanity.  We must condemn not only the killers, but the spiritual leaders and movements who lay the groundwork for their hate whether their names be Omar Abdel-Rahman, Anwar al-Awlaki or Yitzchak Shapira, Dov Wolpe, Ariel Sokolovsky or Herschel Schachter.

We must declare that God does not want us to kill on His behalf.  God does not hate anyone who is Muslim (if you are a Jew) or Jewish (if you are a Muslim).  And anyone who makes such a claim must be ostracized, told in no uncertain terms that our religion does not countenance such hateful rhetoric.  Now, it’s easy for me to say these things.  But I expect our own religious leaders to say them as well.  And they don’t.  I know for a fact that Jewish rabbinic leaders largely do not reject publicly and forcefully such expressions of hate in their midst.  If you could review the content of rabbinic sermons delivered the Shabbat after Jack Teitel’s arrest, I’d venture to say no more than a handful if that would’ve referred to him and the implications of his alleged crimes for Judaism.  For most rabbis, Jack Teitel and his actions are “out there,” and not relevant to “our” Judaism.  I assume the same may be true in the Muslim community.

I’m not claiming this is universally true.  Of course there are pockets of tolerance in both Islam and Judaism.  There are rabbis and imams who do denounce the haters.  But I maintain they are the exception rather than the rule and what I’m calling for is for denunciation of hate and intolerance deriving from our midst that is full-throated and universal.

Wiesel, NGO Monitor Board Member

Saturday, November 14th, 2009

I was just reading a Haaretz story about the orchestrated Israeli government campaign against Human Rights Watch in response to the latter’s support for the Goldstone Report.  The article noted that Elie Wiesel signed a letter to the Guardian which praised Robert Bernstein’s bitter, disjointed diatribe against HRW in the NY Times Op Ed section.  But this passage really stood out:

Human Rights Watch said that the criticism has come from right-wing blogs, but also from Israeli non-profit groups, such as NGO Monitor in Jerusalem, which is funded by U.S. donors and includes Elie Wiesel on its advisory board.

I can remember when I was a teenager in the 1960s, my rabbi took me to hear Elie Wiesel speak at local synagogues throughout the N.Y. metropolitan area.  In those days, Wiesel was viewed as a cross between a Jewish saint and seer.  Night had just come out and he was THE Jewish witness to the unspeakable horror of the Holocaust.

But Elie Wiesel has long since ceased serving that role.  He is morally conflicted about opposing the Occupation fearing that his opposition will be used against Israel by anti-Semites or some such.  This perspective has long ceased to have any legitimacy if it ever did.

The news that Wiesel sits on the board of one of the most odious far-right Israeli NGOs seals the deal as far as I’m concerned.  Wiesel might as well be a Likudnik  (maybe he is).  Henceforth, I will consider him such.

Here are the other NGO Monitor board members with whom Wiesel is keeping company : Judea Pearl, Alan Dershowitz, Martin Gilbert, James Woolsey AND Elliot Abrams.  You know what happens when you lay down with dogs like these…

Could Army Have Offered Hassan Way Out Short of Deployment?

Saturday, November 14th, 2009

In my first reporting on the Ft. Hood shooting I noted how counter-productive the Army’s regulations seemed in this particular case in which you had an officer desperate to leave the service but who couldn’t because of the service’s financial commitment to him.

NPR’s Liz Halloran has taken up a similar angle in a report on the use of conscientious objector status in similar situations.  Apparently, Maj. Hassan contacted the Center on Conscience and War to ask whether the Army might honor such an application from him.  The answer was negative for reasons explained in the NPR report.  But what I found especially interesting was the Center director’s comment on the damage that was done in Ft. Hood because the service did not have a means to respond to this particular individual’s religious needs and convictions:

McNeil argues that if Hasan’s concerns about fighting Muslims had allowed him a different path in the military — even short of a conscientious discharge — last week’s events may have been avoided.”If he had been told that they were going to put a mark on his record, and keep him from advancing but never deploy him, they would have had an extremely well-trained psychiatrist still working for them,” she says, “and they wouldn’t have a bunch of dead bodies in Fort Hood.”

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