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

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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

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Daylight through the Wall

Banksy: graffiti art on Separation Wall

Action

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)

Action

Great Day on Eldrige Street

N.Y.'s klezmer greats celebrate shul rededication (photo: Leo Sorel)

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Joint Appeal for Peace

(Avi Katz)

Joint Appeal for Peace

Ketubah, Ancona, Italy (1772)

(Jewish Theological Seminary library)

Ancona ketubah

Archive for July, 2010

Tablet: Weiss, Walt, Sullivan, Greenwald ‘Agents of Anti-Israel Influence,’ Why Not Me?

Thursday, July 22nd, 2010

tablet magazine logoI’m pissed.  Royally so.  If Phil Weiss, Stephen Walt, Glenn Greenwald, Jim Lobe and a whole host of others can be smeared by Tabloid (er, Tablet) Magazine as anti-Israel agents of influence, why was I left out?  Does it mean I’m not important enough?  Or not anti-Israel enough?  Or not eloquent enough?

This post is gonna give you a kick, to read the “quality” journalism practiced by Tablet, a project sponsored by NextBook and underwritten, according to a little Jewish birdie who’s a maven about Jewish foundations, by the Avi Chai Foundation.  The latter is a major funder of Birthright Israel.  Besides board member “Big Mameh neocon” Ruth Wisse, the foundation shares two major board members with the Tikvah Fund: Arthur Fried (Avi Chai’s board chair) and Mem Bernstein.  Tikvah, along with Shelly Adelson, funds the Likudist Shalem Center (think-tank home of Michael Oren and Natan Sharansky), Jewish Ideas Daily, an enterprise my little Jewish birdie calls a “neocon shtick dreck,” and Jewish Review of Books, a right-wing rip off of the New York Review of Books.  On Tikvah’s board sits none other than…William Kristol.

The Avi Chai Foundation claims as its spiritual godfather, Rav Avraham Kook, also the spiritual godfather of the Greater Israel movement. The philanthropy notes in its guidelines:

Support will only be given to programs or institutions which express a positive attitude towards the State of Israel

Lee Smith

Weekly Standard's Lee Smith, doyenne of Aipac and resident Islamophobe

The slash-and-burn Tablet article is written by Lee Smith who’s written the distinguished Islamophobic title, The Strong Horse: Power, Politics, and the Clash of Arab Civilizations.  He’s the “Middle East correspondent” of, you guessed it, Bill Kristol’s Weekly Standard. How’s that for keepin’ it all in the family?

Smith really has his journalistic chops down. Instead of proving his tawdry claim that these Israel-critical bloggers are anti-Israel “agents of influence,” he quotes from their comment threads(!). Talk about guilt by association. Smith, of course, neglects the fact that the Talkbacks of the Israeli online news media are among the most vicious, disgusting, racist and genocidal I’ve ever come across. Does this mean that we should accuse Haaretz, Ynet and Maariv of favoring the views of their readers? If so, where does it end? Should we bring Amos Schocken, Amnon Denker and all the editors of these publications up on charges of racism and incitement?

Smith even quotes neocon fellow-traveler Jeffrey Goldberg–not criticizing substantively anything written by the above-charged suspects; rather the latter notes the noxious e-mails he claims (without providing any proof) he receives from their readers whenever they write attacking his views. Goldberg also delivers a patently offensive and unsupported claims that Stephen Walt’s is a “Jew-baiting blog.” Yes, this is what passes for journalism at Tablet.

The only proof offered by Smith that Walt’s blog is Israel-obsessed is a supposed factoid that two non-Israel-related posts generated 13 and 58 comments and an Israel-related one generated 350. And then this rather remarkable little diatribe:

These numbers suggest that the purpose of Walt’s blog is to act as a magnet for the animus of a readership hostile not only to Israel but also to American figures friendly to Israel, especially American Jews.

Actually these numbers don’t ‘suggest’ anything of the sort. They suggest that the subject of Israel is hotly debated online and that there are many readers with strong opinions about it, both right and left.

Not a word from any of the accused of course. Not even a claim from the author that he attempted to contact them and they refused to cooperate (something that would’ve been wise it appears if Smith had bothered to ask). We’ve all heard of “smash mouth” journalism. This is smash-mouth Jewish journalism. The Avi Chai Foundation should be proud.

To return to the beginning of this post, I’m pissed. Why couldn’t I be included as an anti-Israel “agent of influence?” Why do Weiss, Walt, Greenwald, etc. get all the fun? I even wrote a semi-facetious e mail to Tablet’s editor offering to write anything they wished that might get me included in any future smear job Smith or any of their other writers might wish to write. What does a guy gotta do to get any respect from the neocon Jewish tabloid press around here?

For many years, I’ve touted my virtual Jewish club, the Spinoza Society, a home for Jews whose views are before their time; Jews who espouse ideas considered so outrageous that they’re ostracized by their fellow Jews, who are too callow and too herd-driven to consider the truth that lies within them.  I welcome all of the smeared as honorary members of my club.

Smith also left out some superb Jewish bloggers who deserve his consideration as fonts of ‘anti-Israel hate’ (please note the irony intended by the quotation marks): there’s Larry Derfner at the Jerusalem Post, Brad Burston at Haaretz, Jerry Haber at Magnes Zionist, Paul Woodward at War in Context, Helena Cobban at Just World News, and Matt Duss at Think Progress among others (and sorry if I’ve left you out and you want to be included among the chosen few). Why do they get short shrift? I guess there’s so much anti-Israel blogging going on and so little column inches to expose it. Maybe if Avi Chair coughs up another couple a hundred thou Tablet could create a new column, ‘Israel Hater of the Week’ or something along those lines. It’s a thought.

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Israeli Supreme Court Justice: ‘Never in My Life’ Saw Case in Which State Refused to Produce Suspect in Court

Wednesday, July 21st, 2010

Israeli Supreme Court Justice Edmond Levy has a very selective memory (Hebrew).  Only when he faces the case of suspected settler terrorist Chaim Pearlman, who has been denied access to counsel by the Shin Bet and was a no-show in court, does he say: “Never in my life have I seen such behavior.”  Apparently, he’s forgotten the fact that the Shin Bet routinely treats its Israeli Palestinian suspects in the same fashion: most recently Ameer Makhoul was honored with such treatment.  But then again, a Supreme Court justice can’t be expected to remember that they are citizens who should have the same rights as Chaim Pearlman or any other Jewish citizen.  That’s what I mean by a selective memory.

Levy is also pissed that the Shin Bet refused to allow Pearlman to be present at his hearing–again treatment routinely accorded Israeli Palestinians (Makhoul among them).  He’s ticked that Pearlman is also held in solitary confinement:

It is not possible that such suspects should be held in isolation from the outside world and unaware of the rights.  I’ve never seen such treatment in my life.

Has he missed the case of Mr. X, the prisoner held incommunicado at Ayalon Prison?  We don’t even know who he is, let alone what he’s done.  And Mr. X has no access to counsel or anyone at all from the outside world including family.  Apparently Levy doesn’t read the Israeli press or he might know what goes on in side the Israeli intelligence and justice system.  I thought that was part of his job as a justice.  I guess a justice can “hear what he wants to hear and disregard the rest.”

It is rather amazing though that the Shin Bet defied even a Supreme Court justice who specifically demanded that a suspect be produced for a hearing.  I can understand their pulling that s(^t with a Palestinian suspect, who would be expected to be accorded lesser rights–but a Jewish one?  Now that takes b(&^)s.

It’s also rather comical in a dark sort of way, that right-wing Jewish terror suspects start sounding precisely like Israeli Palestinian terror suspects.  This is a comment from the brother of a second suspect accused of aiding Pearlman’s terror spree:

Sitbon’s brother, Menachem, said “the Shin Bet couldn’t care less about the judge’s decision. This is dictatorship.”

Another of Sitbon’s relatives said this:

…The Shin Bet’s conduct harms the values of democracy and human rights.”

When right and left agree about the nature of the Shin Bet I don’t know whether to celebrate or weep (or both).  Of course the Israeli far-right believes in democracy–that is a democracy that accords them rights and deprives non-Jewish citizens of the same rights.  So these claims ring hollow.  But it is still interesting that at least nominally they are bedfellows, and strange ones.

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Israeli Activist Interrogated for ‘Hurting Shin Bet’s Feelings’

Monday, July 19th, 2010
yonatan shapira

Yonatan Shapira

Israeli peace activist, Yonatan Shapira has been a busy guy lately. Recently returned from Warsaw, where he spray-painted one of the last remaining vestiges of the Holocaust-era ghetto wall with the slogan: “No more ghettos,” protesting the Gaza siege, Shapira has also been regular protestor at the Bilin anti-Wall (“something there is that does not like a Wall”) demonstrations, and is an active supporter of the BDS movement. Amid this flurry of activity, Yonatan has hurt the feelings of some in the Shin Bet. Apparently, he’s been a bad boy and let the chevra down, who expected more of him as a decorated IDF helicopter pilot.

The secret police are so distressed that they “invited” him to a “friendly” discussion with an agent at a Tel Aviv police station. Yonatan’s narration of his story is alternately funny and infuriating, which is the only way you can describe Israeli politics these days:

Yesterday Rona from the Shabak called me and asked me to come talk to meet her in the police station on Dizengof st. (Tel Aviv). She refused to tell me what was it about, but made it clear I wasn’t going to be arrested, and that this is just an acquaintance or “a friendly talk”…

At five o’clock I got to the Dizengof police station and was sent to the second floor of the rear building, where a guy who presented himself as Rona’s security guard waited for me. I was taken to a room and subjected to a pretty intimate search to make sure I didn’t install any recording device on my testicles. After I was found clean I was let into Rona’s room. She was a nice looking girl, apparently from a Yemeni origin, in her early thirties.

Rona told me that I she knew I was active in the BDS (movement) and (calling for) an economic boycott of Israel, and she wanted to know what else do I do as part of these activities. I told her that everything (that I do) is well-known and published on the internet and in the media, and that I have nothing to add, and that I wasn’t going to talk to her.

Rona emphasized that there is a Knesset bill that might soon make my activities illegal. She went on and tried to get me into a political debate, asking if I know that the BDS is in fact a Palestinian organization.

Rona raised the issue of the graffiti in Warsaw and asked it was my own idea or another part of the BDS. She asked if I understood that I crossed a line and hurt many people’s feelings. Obviously the Shabak’s feelings as well…I offered to her again to listen to interviews and read articles on the issue. She said she did listen and read, but she wanted to know more. I told her I would be happy to give a public lecture to anyone who wants to hear, but not in a Shabak interrogation.

Apart from the BDS issue she asked me if I knew that the demonstrations in Bil’in and Ni’ilin are illegal, and that the entire area is closed for Israelis and internationals each Friday from 8.00 am to 8.00 pm. She went into length explaining how the soldiers feel in these demonstrations and that it irritates them when I talk to them and when I answer them.

Rona said she was there herself and that stones were thrown at her, and that it war really unpleasant. She said that the fact that Israelis are present there makes the Palestinians more violent, and that I have to think how the poor soldiers feel, and that all she is trying to do is for the good of the country and out of her will to defend the people living here.

I answered that all I do is out of a will to defend the people living here as well, and I asked where did she get all the information on my activities and whether they are listening to my phone. She said that she can’t answer this, but that generally speaking the Shabak has more important things to do, so I asked her what I was doing here and why was I invited to a kind political interrogation if they have more important things to do.

I asked again if they are listening to my phone calls and Rona said she can’t answer that.

She asked me not to publish the content of our conversation because she wasn’t the type who wants publicity… I answered that as a person committed to a non-violent struggle against the occupation I would talk and publish anything I can, including the content of this conversation and future ones, if these will be such.

I documented the entire conversation on a piece of paper until Rona started discussing this paper and what I was writing down. Eventually she confiscated the dangerous piece of paper, claiming that I was not allowed to have any recording device in, and that what I was doing was illegal.

Luckily I remembered most of the conversation and Rona hasn’t confiscated my memory yet. Maybe (it will happen) in our next meeting.

That’s it. There might have been more details but from what I get these were the main issues. I understood that what they were after was our involvement in the BDS, and that they might even be preparing files for the moment the new law is passed.

Yonatan

A few notes and observations: in the U.S. no one in their right mind in Shapira’s shoes would willingly agree to an FBI meeting and certainly not without their lawyer.  I don’t know what, if any consequences there might’ve been for him if he’d refused, but clearly the civil liberties-free speech protections are considerably weaker in Israel.

Note the “intimate” body search Shapira experienced before he was allowed to meet “Rona.”  This surely happened because Chaim Pearlman managed to record 20 hours of audio conversations with another Shin Bet agent, Dada, who incited him to assassinate Sheikh Ra’ah Salah.  A well-informed Rotter member says that Dada has lost his job because he couldn’t manage to prevent himself from being recorded by his target.  I guess Rona wanted to keep her job and avoid the same fate.  Rumor has it that Dada will be treated well and probably end up as a private security guard somewhere where he’ll be out of the way and no longer embarrass the agency.

Another astonishing aspect of this interrogation which could never happen in the U.S. is that Shapira is essentially being warned that he will be prosecuted by the secret police if the Knesset passes a law criminalizing Israeli support for BDS.  This is an a priori warning that his behavior will (they hope) become illegal and end with his prosecution.  I was always under the impression that the secret police in a democracy enforced the laws on the books.  I didn’t realize they could warn people that behavior that was perfectly legal would shortly become illegal and subject them to arrest.  And this from the Only Democracy in the Middle East.

The global BDS movement is an entirely legal and legitimate form of protest against the Occupation.  It does not threaten the Israeli State any more than the divestment movement threatened the South African state.  The last I checked there was still a South Africa.  The only thing that country lost was a racist, immoral political system that dispossessed its majority and favored its minority.  If the aims of the BDS movement are achieved Israel will not be destroyed.  It will be different.  And last I checked it was perfectly legal to try to change the immoral nature of a political system without mounting a coup against the government or destroying the State.  We did this ourselves in the 1960s.

Further, I was shocked that the Shin Bet would haul a suspect in for questioning because their activities “upset” people.  Again, I always thought you needed a violation of law to intrude upon a citizen’s life in the way they did to Shapira.  Apparently, in Israel pure pique can result in getting on the wrong side of the authorities.

Those great kidders at the ‘intelligence’ agency released this statement paraphrased by Haaretz:

The Shin Bet said in a response, that it is authorized as part of its duty to preserve state security and democracy from terror threats, sabotage, subversion and espionage, to receive and to gather information…

So which one was Shapira guilty of?  Terror?  Sabotage?  Subversion?  Or espionage?  Or none of the above?  And do they really expect us to believe that they hauled him in in order to preserve Israeli democracy???

The paranoia of the Shin Bet reminds me a great deal of the COINTELPRO era of the 1960s, in which the FBI ran roughshod over civil liberties because it truly believed that the Black Panthers, SDS and others were a genuine threat to the Republic.  This allowed them to bug, arrest, harass, threaten, beat and even kill activists mostly going about their perfectly legal business.  The difference between here and Israel is that we have a constitution and checks and balances that require accountability from every branch.  There will always be violations and overreaching by one branch or another.  But the pendulum always swings back to a more stable equilibrium.  This is what does not happen in Israel.  There is no check on the Shin Bet–not judicial, not political.  They have carte blanche to haul pretty much anyone they like in for questioning.  The only check on their power, and it is a small one, is the media–or those in the media who are not in cahoots with them or who are not so cowed that they refuse to cross them.

On an entirely frivolous note, a young Israeli pop singer, Aya Korem, went to art school with Shapira and apparently had a playful crush on him and wrote an absolutely wonderful song called Mom Didn’t Know Yonatan Shapira.  The funniest line in the song is: “Yonatan Shapira, make me babies.”  It was a smash hit in Israel a few years ago.  This is the guy the Shin Bet wants to hound.

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Tom Segev Critically Reviews Benny Morris’ new book, ’1948′

Monday, July 19th, 2010


“1948: A History of the first Arab-Israeli War” by Benny Morris – A War of Necessity

Translated from English: Yaacov Sharet. Published by Am Oved

In his new book, 1948, Benny Morris presents his readers with a readable, well-edited story…The writer focuses on the fate of the Palestinians…but his attitude toward their tragedy is troublesome in terms of both humaneness and morality.

Review by Tom Segev [translated by Dena Shunra]


Benny Morris’…attempt to author a popular history of the War of Independence is praise-worthy, and as a former journalist he is skillful at taking into account the limits of his readers’ patience. The story he tells is well-edited, the translation from English flows well, and, and the general picture takes shape clearly.

But Morris is now also a history professor, and unfortunately he – like his colleagues – writes primarily about decision-making and processes, armies and military maneuvers, and tends to ignore the people behind the documents. His book therefore demonstrates what the books written by his colleagues tend to prove: it is generally not a good idea to abandon a good story to history professors. Like everything else Morris writes, this book is also very political, and for this reason, too, it is worth reading. Like the books by his colleagues, it also demonstrates that history is written by the winners: Morris’s position about the tragedy of the Palestinians is shameful on both humanistic and moral terms.

Securing the Homeland

The basic thesis appears in the very first sentence: “The 1948 war was an almost inevitable result of nearly half a century of friction and disputes between Arabs and Jews.” In the next 40 pages Morris takes his readers on a whirlwind tour beginning in 1200 B.C. and ending at the end of the British Mandate over Palestine…

Morris focuses on the fate of the Palestinians, and that is indeed the main story. Like other historians, he divides the War of Independence into two primary stages: from the Partition Decision, on November 29th 1947, until the declaration of independence, on May 15th, 1948; and from the invasion of the armies of Arabia until the armistice agreements in 1949. Morris calls the first stage a “civil war” for some reason, as do others. This is a spurious term because even at this stage there was no political dispute between citizens of one state but rather, a national confrontation between two nations. For some reason Morris found it important to prove that the Arabs of the country were not a nation but just “a nation”. He uses quotation marks a great deal: the Arab Rebellion was not a rebellion but a “rebellion”, the Arabs did not have a plan but only “a plan”, a promise made by an Arab prime minister is only “a promise”. The land of Israel is the land of Israel, but Palestine is only “Palestine”, of course, and the justice sought by its Arab residents was not justice but only “justice”.

Most of the Arabs in the country, approximately 400,000, were chased out and expelled during the first stage of the war. In other words, before the Arab armies  invaded the country. According to Morris, the expulsion of the Arabs was meant to safeguard the homeland before the invasion of the armies of Arabia. This explanation is problematic, first because according to Morris himself, David Ben Gurion was not at all afraid of the Arabs of Israel, and for good cause: they were almost powerless. Ben Gurion was afraid of an invasion by the Arab armies. Moreover, Ben Gurion was not certain that they would invade Israel. On May 7th 1948 he wrote in his journal: “Will the neighboring countries fight?” Ben Gurion could not know this for certain because, according to Morris, the Arabs themselves hesitated until almost the very last moment. Be that as it may, Morris states that the invasion plans by the Arab armies played no role [in the thinking and decisions of] the Arabs of the land of Israel.

This brings the discussion back to the question of why 400,000 Arabs were expelled before these armies had taken even a single shot at the IDF, and the possibility arises that it did not happen because the Arabs had attacked Israel but vice versa: the Arab states attacked Israel – among other reasons – because it had chased out and expelled 400,000 Palestinians. It is doubtful if any person knows more about this subject than Morris. The thesis which transpires from his book is that almost everything happened as the result of an error: the Jews exaggerated the force of the Arabs and were afraid of another Holocaust. In fact, they did not correctly estimate their weakness and were unjustifiably afraid of them. It seems that it was for this reason that they expelled them, with no justification. But Morris wishes to justify the expulsion of the Arabs: he says that they started the attack, but the concrete information that he brings forth about their harassment of the Jewish settlements cannot explain great extent of the expulsion.

Naturally, the question arises: were the Arabs expelled in order to get rid of them. Morris states at as early as December 1947, at least, which is nearly half a year before the Arab armies invaded, two goals were at the forefront for the Jews of the land of Israel: expanding the territory designated by the United Nations resolution for the founding of a Jewish state; and reducing the number of Arabs living in that territory. And that was what they did. Historiographically, that is sufficient, but Morris brings his readers into an old dispute about a subject with which he is also well-familiar: the Zionist movement’s yearning to transfer the Arabs of the country, or at least some of them.

This idea has accompanied the Zionist movement since the time of Herzl himself. It took center stage in the thinking of the leaders of the Zionist movement, including Chaim Weizmann and David Ben Gurion. But Morris makes a great effort to detach the chasing out of the Arabs from the idea of transfer. A similar measure of logic could detach the founding of the state from the Zionist vision.

The rest of the Arabs [300,000 more] were expelled during the war and thereafter. What Morris says about the frontline conditions does not demonstrate the military need to expel the population, especially as Israel’s military power was much greater than the armies of Arabia within two or three weeks, and the remaining Arab population did not constitute any kind of threat to the country. The question of why they were expelled remains without an answer in this book. Morris says that they wanted to throw the Jews into the sea and states: “The Arab expulsion clearly derived from the Zionist transferist thinking in the 30s and 40s.” This is a perplexing statement, as Morris goes out of his way to prove the marginal status of transferist thinking.

Cleansing – without quotation marks

About six years ago Benny Morris said that Israel had not expelled enough Arabs. In an interview with Haaretz’ Ari Shavit, he stated that if Ben Gurion had carried out a full, rather than just a partial expulsion he would have stabilized the State of Israel for generations. It would eventually transpire as his fatal error, warned Morris at the time. He does not repeat this opinion in his current book, but he describes Ben Gurion as an obsessive “generalissimo” who is not always aware of the goings on around him.

Morris’ obliviousness to the story of the people behind the documents he quotes is also revealed by an almost complete avoidance of describing the suffering of the refugees. It seems that in his opinion at least some of them, especially the residents of Lyd and Ramleh, should have been grateful for the expulsion: “there is no doubt that after they had experienced battles, massacres, and Israeli occupation, many of the residents wholeheartedly wished to leave and move to areas controlled by Arabs,” writes Morris. In his opinion, the loss of their homes was not so terrible for them: “The Palestinians, a mostly rural nation, used to living outdoors, exhibited resilience,” he says, wishing to soothe his readers. The decision not to permit the refugees to return is also acceptable to Morris, and in a footnote he states that most of the refugees are not refugees at all, as they had been permitted to remain in the land of Israel, in the West Bank and in the Gaza Strip.

Deir Yassin murdered

The murdered of Deir Yassin

He exhibits a great deal of understanding for a series of atrocities which went along with the expulsion. He describes some actions which were meant, among others, for the expulsion of residents – as cleansings, with no quotations. This is embarrassing and indeed, in the American original, quotations were added to this phrase in one case. At the same time, he carefully states again and again that Arabs, including prisoners of war and civilians, including women and children, were “executed”. Jews, on the other hand, were generally “murdered”, as he puts it. The civilians who were killed by Arabs in Gush Etzion were murdered in a “massacre” writes Morris. This was after the events of Deir Yassin, but the Deir Yassin incident is not one that he defines as a massacre. Even those of the villagers who were shot after the battle were, as he put it, “executed.”

He directs his readers to a footnote in which he complains that the Commissioner General “believed exaggerations” when he cabled his superiors about women and children being stripped, stood in a row, photographed, and then massacred by automatic gunfire in Deir Yassin. Morris sarcastically comments that “it seems like the British were prepared to believe everything that is said about the Etzel and the Lehi.” Horrifically, the State of Israel conceals to this day photographs taken in the course of the attack on Deir Yassin and prevents their publication. The Haaretz newspaper has appealed to the Supreme Court of Justice in this matter, and the State explained that making these photographs public could damage not only the country’s foreign relations but also “the dignity of the deceased.” Having seen the photographs, the Supreme Court justices decided that the State was correct. For this reason it would perhaps be better to wait a bit with the guess about the Commissioner General having “believed exaggerations.”

Do not forget Saddam Hussein

…It is customary to say that the Israelis won, being “a few against many”, thanks to their fighting spirit, the sense that they have no other country, and the remembrance of the Holocaust. The victory cost the lives of nearly 6,000, nearly 1% of the Jewish population in the country. Morris does not ignore all of these factors, but he tends to focus more on the professional quality of the IDF…The defeat of the Arabs does not, for this reason, come to be seen as a “miracle.”

Morris wishes to persuade his readers that the primary cause which led the Arabs to attempt to throw the Jews into the sea was religious and anti-Semitic. In his opinion, this is not an Israeli problem but rather, a global struggle between the Muslim Orient and the West. In doing so, he meticulously gathers up every Arab call for a Jihad against the Jews. At least in one case, he adapts his source to his own needs, using an ellipsis: Kind Abdul Aziz Ibn Saud did indeed write President Roosevelt about the religious hostility between Jews and Muslims and mentioned the “treacherous conduct” of the Jews toward the Prophet Muhammad [Peace Be Upon Him], but where Morris placed an ellipsis the king suggested that the religious issue be put aside and stated that even without it, the land of Israel could not resolve the problem of the Jews. And indeed, the Arabs did not need the Quran in order to object to the intention by the Zionists to take over the land of Israel. The expulsion of the Palestinians proved to them that they had been right.

Morris knows what he does about the Arabs, primarily from having read the reports of the Hagana intelligence service. This is a doubtful source, as according to Morris himself, the foundational perceptions of the Jews about the power of the Palestinians and the Arab armies were entirely mistaken. His choice of sources to quote is sometimes odd. In one case he quotes a news item, translated into English, which had appeared in German in a Swiss newspaper, which stated that hundreds of Jews had been murdered in Egypt. It is not clear why Morris did not find a better source for this than the Basle National Zeitung, and he states in a note to this that there apparently were not hundreds of casualties.

To remove any doubt that the Arabs are really scoundrels, he also gets carried away and quotes the Palestinian National Covenant of 1964 and does not forget Saddam Hussein. A long line of such quotes reminds one of Morris’ own scolding of the Palestinians: they do not have serious historiography.

The bottom line is this: the IDF won because it was stronger than the Arabs of the land of Israel and the Arab armies put together, it carried out more atrocities than the Arabs, some of which were perpetrated in order to cause the Arabs to escape and to expel them, but not to worry: “a total number” of approximately 800 Arab citizens and prisoners of war were murdered in the war, writes Morris; the war crimes in Yugoslavia and Sudan are worse.

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Israel’s Fresh Forum Bans Me and Post About ‘Outing’ Shin Bet Agent

Saturday, July 17th, 2010

While I didn’t know that much about Israel’s Fresh forum before this happened, frankly I’m astonished to report that I published a post there in the Army/Security section linking to my post which identified the chief of the Shin Bet Jewish terror department.  Israeli far-rightists outed him in retaliation for the arrest of Chaim Pearlman, charged with the murders of four Palestinians over the years.  In my Fresh post I did not identify the agent by name or provide any other information that would violate any gag order.  I merely gave a summary of the post and a link.

At first, a moderator moved the post from the popular Army-Security section to the much less popular Politics section (10% of the number of threads).  I wrote an e mail complaining that my post was security related and shouldn’t have been moved.  Within 10 minutes, I had been banned from Fresh.  Not just that I couldn’t post using my profile, I couldn’t even access the site.

Last night, my post was still accessible at the Politics section.  Now it is gone.  No one from Fresh has responded to any of my e-mails.

So for publishing a post that violated no Israeli law or gag order the post was deleted and I was banned.  I guess some Israelis may say: “Welcome to Israel, land of the free.”  But I’m still just a bit shocked.

The funny thing is that Rotter, where members tend to be very right wing and where I have been vehemently denounced for my posts, at least doesn’t ban me or delete my posts.  Rotter is much more popular than Fresh.  Wonder why…

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Join Bill Kristol and Liz Cheney, Stand With Israel!

Friday, July 16th, 2010

stand with israel petitonAs I wrote a few days ago, the Republican/neocon pro-Israel advocacy groups are sprouting like mushrooms after a spring rain.  Not to be outdone, Bill Kristol (responsible for many of the mushrooms either directly or indirectly) has joined with Liz Cheney’s Keep America Safe to start a Stand With Israel petition on her site.

Before I quote the ad copy take a look at this boilerplate organization info at the bottom of her website’s main page:

Keep America Safe is a newly formed, non-profit, non-partisan organization described in Section 501(c)(4) of the U.S. Internal Revenue Code. Donations to Keep America Safe are not tax-deductible as charitable contributions for US federal income tax purposes.
There are no donation limits or restrictions for contributions to Keep America Safe.

Now tell me how Kristol-Cheney can publish this with a straight face and claim it’s not hard-line pro-Republican advocacy:

Since taking office, Barack Obama and officials in his administration have repeatedly rebuked, condemned, and pressured an Israeli government that is standing strong and defiant in the face of continual threats from terrorist groups and the regimes that sponsor them. The administration has repeatedly sought to engage Israel’s authoritarian enemies while demanding ever more concessions from the democratically elected government in Jerusalem. In just the last month this administration has twice stood by as international organizations have targeted Israel for condemnation. In May the Obama administration consented to a Final Document from the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty Review Conference that singled out Israel as a threat to the current non-proliferation regime while making no mention of the grave threat posed by Iran’s illegal pursuit of nuclear weapons. And in June the administration refused to block a presidential statement from the United Nations Security Council as Israel was besieged by an international lynch mob for exercising its legitimate right of self-defense.

Neither Kristol nor Cheney are stupid so they must realize that they have no hope of eating into the massive American Jewish alleigance to the Democratic Party.  No American Jew who supports the Party will be convinced by any of this narischkeit to switch parties.  But what such a campaign does do is identify for these Republican partisans American Jewish donors who already support their cause but who aren’t on their lists or whose pockets haven’t yet been picked.  There are, of course many wealthy Likudist Jews who are ripe pickings for the likes of Kristol and Cheney.  And to fuel their media campaign they’ll need  millions from  such donors.  This petition is one of the ways they can troll for such individuals, getting them to self-identify.

Regarding my last post about the new Emergency Committee for Israel, begun with the help of former Bush political operative and great granddaughter of Herbert Hoover, Margaret Hoover, Eli Clifton notes that ECI’s office is identical with those of Randy Scheunemann, who was John McCain’s senior foreign policy advisor.  Commentary’s Michael Goldfarb (where Noah Pollak also contributes–keepin’ it all in the family) is an advisor to ECI and works for Scheunemann’s consulting firm.  Goldfarb told Justin Elliott that ECI will be opening an independent office next week (can’t wait) but that “given the urgency of our cause” in pointing out Joe Sestak’s anti-Israel perfidy, they thought a new office could wait.  Gee, for a second reading about the “urgency of their cause” it might make you believe they actually had something important to say.

Another note about all these pro-Israel fungi growing in the Republican forest: let’s remind the growers that many mushrooms are toxic if ingested.

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Landau Advocates Boycotting Knesset

Friday, July 16th, 2010

David Landau tends to be a bit of a prima dona as he proved when he urged at a private dinner that the U.S. “rape” Israel by imposing a peace settlement on it against its wishes.  That little bit of grandstanding helped cost him his job as editor of Haaretz.

global bds logoBut despite or perhaps because of his flair for drama, he’s penned a provocative and probing op-ed in Haaretz urging the world to boycott Israel’s Knesset if it finalizes plans to criminalize the advocacy of boycotts against Israel by those Israelis who oppose the Occupation:

I hereby call for a boycott of the Knesset.A bill proposed by coalition chairman Ze’ev Elkin (Likud ) and the chairwoman of the Kadima faction, Dalia Itzik, together with MK Aryeh Eldad of the National Union, would punish any Israeli calling for a boycott of any Israeli individual or institution, whether in Israel or in the territories. The fine is NIS 30,000, plus any damages that can be proven. The bill passed its preliminary reading on Wednesday.

I therefore call for a boycott of Ze’ev Elkin and Dalia Itzik as individuals, and of the Knesset as an institution. I call on parliaments throughout the democratic world, and interparliamentary associations, to boycott Israel’s parliament, once the pride of the Jewish people, until it buries the bill and recovers its democratic heritage.

…I am hastening to call for this boycott because I want to be the first person prosecuted under the new bill when it becomes law…I want to earn a footnote in Jewish history: He tried…to stand against the wave of fascism that engulfed the Zionist project. I’m ready to pay NIS 30,000 for that.

Beyond that little vanity, perhaps a call to boycott the Knesset, if it gained any traction, could puncture that most smug and pernicious piece of propaganda: that Israel is “the only democracy in the Middle East.”

Israel is a democracy for Jews. “We’ll deal with your presence in the Knesset later,” MK Ofir Akunis, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s longtime aide, informed Arab MK Ahmed Tibi ominously, unashamedly. True, he was admonished by the Knesset Speaker, Reuven Rivlin. But Rivlin the democrat is a mere fig leaf now, a holdover from another age.

I call this legislation Neve’s Law because, contrary to Landau’s machinations, it seems primarily directed against Ben Gurion University Prof. Neve Gordon and those like him who advocate the global BDS movement, contrary to the wishes of the Israeli political and academic élite.

While the boycott call is admirable along with Landau’s willingness to face the legal assault sure to follow, I note he doesn’t call for his own profession, Israeli newspapers to boycott the Knesset and deprive it of the oxygen of PR which it needs to fuel this political machine promoting intolerance and anti-democracy.  Even a single day of boycott from the Israeli press of all news involving the Knesset would work wonders to bring home the point.  Imagine if the Israeli phone company turned off the phones at the Knesset for a day.  Or if Israeli constituents turned their backs on their elected representative for a day.  The politicians would surely die for lack of adulation and the accompanying self-preening that is like swimming to a shark: if they don’t do it, they die.

As is standard with Landau, he must throw into an otherwise perfectly fine column an incendiary device which is also thrown Neve Gordon’s way.  While Landau claims to stake out the high ground, he wishes to make clear that professors like Gordon are beneath his contempt:

I deprecate and despise the people calling for boycotts of Israeli universities. I most especially disdain them if they themselves remain faculty members of those same universities. Israeli universities do not deserve to be boycotted.

Landau clearly has an excellent mind and probing intellect.  But he wastes it on such triviality and narischkeit which only demeans and detracts from his main argument.  In addition, I note his further undermining of his premise when he concedes that his beloved grandchildren live in a settlement.  I guess what this proves is that even the so-called “good” (and I intend a double-edge meaning in Landau’s case) Israelis are implicated in the machinery of Occupation.  There is no way of escaping every Israelis’ participation in this evil.  And I include in this, contrary to Landau, the Israeli university system, which participates both intentionally and unintentionally in perpetrating the Occupation.  No one is blameless.  All are implicated.  No less a moral philosopher than Martin Luther King said this about American racial injustice and it is true in the Israeli context as well.

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Jewish Terrorist, Charged With Multiple Palestinian Murders, ‘Outs’ Chief of Shin Bet’s Jewish Terror Department

Friday, July 16th, 2010

Jewish rightist site claims this is Avi Arieli, chief of Shin Bet's Jewish department

The Israeli police have arrested an alleged key Jewish settler terrorist, Chaim Pearlman, charging him with involvement in multiple murders and woundings of Palestinians going back as far as 12 years.  As part of Pearlman’s counter-campaign to impugn the Shin Bet, he released transcripts of 20 hours of conversations with an agent of the Shin Bet’s Jewish terror section.  He and his supporters have also outed the chief of the unit in a post at the pro-settler site, HaYamin, claiming he is Avigdor (Avi) Arieli and lives in the settlement of Kfar Adumim.

Haaretz reported in May, 2010 that two women and their 11 children from the far-right Kahanist settlement of Yizhar, were detained when they demonstrated outside the agent’s home in the settlement.  I simply find it unbelievable that people would place their own children in such a situation and exploit them in such a way.

HaYamin also posted the image below of another Shin Bet agent whose nickname was Dada, and who Pearlman claims attempted to entrap him as reported in this Haaretz article.

An Israeli source reports that an Avigdor Arieli works in the prime minister’s office (of which the Shin Bet is a part) and joined a delegation of security officials who attended a 2007 NATO meeting.  While I don’t profess to be an expert on how the Shin Bet and Mossad parse their relationship, I find it odd that a senior Shin Bet agent would attend a NATO conference.  That would seem to be the bailiwick of the Mossad.  But perhaps things are looser in Israel than in the U.S. intelligence community, where I think it would be doubtful an FBI agent would attend such a conference unless it directly related to a U.S. domestic security issue.

Pearlman’s transcripts are riveting and reveal Dada to be a overbearing, almost transparent provocateur, which is confirmed by the fact that Pearlman transcribed so many of their conversations likely suspecting his interlocutor was an agent.  Among the main thread that the Israeli media has focussed on is Dada’s solicitation to assassinate Sheikh Ra’ad Salah, one of the leading Israeli Palestinian Islamists:

HaYamin also accuses this man it calls 'Dada' of being a Shin Bet agent

In the recordings released Thursday, the alleged agent can be heard saying that only an “extreme move” could change public opinion, citing the assassination of Sheik Ra’ad Salah as one such extreme move.

“I could do it,” the agent can be heard saying, referring to the proposed killing of the Islamic Movement leader, saying that Salah’s security would prevent him from succeeding, adding that if he were Pearlman he would commit the assassination.

“It’s not about hitting him [Salah] and getting in trouble. It’s about coming over, hitting him, and see you later, like that guy in Bar Noar” the alleged Shin Bet agent can be heard saying, referring to the killing of a counselor and a teenager at a Tel Aviv gay center last year.

The agent continues to explain how he would carry out Salah’s assassination, saying Pearlman would have to “use another person for that”…

“You don’t really want to do it,” Pearlman can be heard as saying, with the alleged Shin Bet agent replying: “Says who? Says you? What are you relying on? Can you check me? Come check me, I’m ready.”

When Pearlman asked if the alleged Shin Bet agent understood the ramifications of such an act, and if he would be willing to take responsibility for it, the agent said: “sure, why not.”

“How long will the noise continue? Will it lead to war? Won’t there be war without it happening?” the agent can be heard asking, adding that “war has casualties.”

“Listen I don’t have a problem [inaudible] someone who takes a life once and gets that feeling…. I would never do it to a Jew. It would be hard,” the alleged Shin Bet agent said, adding, “but I wouldn’t have a problem with one of those.”

After again discussing the risks such an action would entail, Pearlman can be heard asking if the alleged agent even knew where Salah lived, with the agent answering: “somewhere in the North, in one of the villages in the North.

“Look, it shouldn’t be much of a problem. The car passes. You shoot a burst. Chances are the driver will get killed,” the agent added, saying that Pearlman would have to either “finish him with one burst, or a few split ones.”

The alleged agent continues his description of the potential assassination, saying that it would not be the kind of operation where one would “come in close.”

“You need to be as far away as you can in this kind of situation. Or put a bomb in the car. That’s the classic one. Nothing’s left, everything goes everywhere,” the agent added, saying Salah would then “go to all hell.”

Clearly, Pearlman is accusing the Shin Bet of entrapment.  He goes so far as to claim that he was a Shin Bet agent, which the agency confirms, though it claims this was for a short period in 2002.  Pearlman will of course attempt to claim that any acts for which he is charged were carried out with the connivance of the intelligence agency.

There will be those on the left who will take Shin Bet literally and believe it wanted Pearlman to assassinate Salah.  Though I do not necessarily believe this, I’m nevertheless concerned by having an agent plant ideas in a violent terrorist’s mind upon which he might act.  It would be in the nature of the Shin Bet to believe they could stop him before he acted.  But what’s to stop a nutcase like Pearlman from escaping their surveillance and carrying out the murder?  They’re essentially activating a Golem and expecting they can control him.  But remember the fate of the actual Golem, who ran amok and had to be killed by his creator, Rabbi Judah Loew of Prague.  It’s the height of hubris for the Shin Bet to plant the seeds of murder in Pearlman’s mind.

In fact, the Shin Bet did something very similar in 1994, supplying rifles to two Israeli brothers knowing they planned to use them to murder a Palestinian.  They came very close to succeeding thanks to the weapons supplied to them.  And the victim recently received a paltry settlement from the State for his trouble.  In fact, I believe the Shin Bet cared as little about the fate of the victim in this case as it does about Sheikh Salah.  What would it matter to them if Pearlman had taken up the gun and actually succeeded in killing him?  It would only matter in the sense of a possible embarrassment about being implicated in the incident.

I also wonder how the Shin Bet would deal with a potential Palestinian terrorist and whether they would go so far as to suggest targets and offer arms to carry out attacks.  I don’t know the answer, but I would imagine they would treat a Palestinian differently out of deference to their Jewish targets.

Returning to Pearlman, his attorney is Adi Keidar, who works for the far-right terror legal defense organization, Honenu.  They also represent Yigal Amir and lobby intensively for the legal pardon of convicted settler murderers.

As part of its coverage of this story, Haaretz published an eye-opening story explaining why the Shin Bet fails so miserably in tracking, preventing, and prosecuting Jewish terror:

When compared to the terrorist attacks carried out by Palestinians…the percentage of Jewish terrorist cases that have been solved is far from being impressive. The rate at which cases are solved is also different. More often than not years pass before any arrest is made.

…To a great extent it boils down to resources. The main role of the Shin Bet security service is to foil terrorism aimed against Israelis

Chief among the reasons I would note is a failure of will.  The Shin Bet’s views are so close to those of the settlers that they may not even want to stop them.  And even if they do, they show an amazing unwillingness to prosecute them fully.  Finally, those who are convicted and sent to jail  almost invariably receive presidential pardons: an expectation Palestinian terrorists somehow never realize.

It’s also interesting to note that Judge Leah Lev-On, hearing Pearlman’s case, was asked by the Shin Bet to place a gag order on the proceedings.  Astonishingly, she agreed but limited it–allowing publication of Pearlman’s name.  This threw the security agency into turmoil.  In fact, once she allowed publication of the accused’s name the Shin Bet was forced to seek removal of the entire gag in order to reply to Pearlman’s accusations against it.  Israeli judges almost never reject such applications.  They certainly never do in the cases of Israeli Palestinians accused of security threats.  They also did not in the case of Anat Kamm.  Either there was something in this particular judge that made her unwilling to be an accomplice to the Shin Bet; or perhaps she felt a certain affinity for Jewish suspects which few Israeli judges would feel for Arab suspects.  Whatever her reasoning, she shocked the secret police out of their pants.  They almost never lose on these motions and they likely did not expect to have to defend themselves and explain their behavior in such a public setting and so quickly after the accused terrorist’s arrest.

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