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 February, 2011

Digital Activism in the Age of Revolution

Friday, February 18th, 2011

Remarks I’ll deliver tonight at a conference on the Egyptian Revolution at St. Mark’s Cathedral:

wael ghonim tweetI wanted to make a few remarks on the impact that the Egyptian Revolution will have on relations with Israel, and on Israel’s internal political dynamics, along with some thoughts on how this may impact the U.S. role in the Israeli-Arab peace process.  As a blogger, I also want to focus on the role of social networks, blogs and other forms of digital communication on these political developments.

Creating a non-violent political revolution in the age of the internet takes two forms.  In the pre-revolution period, activists are mostly in defensive mode.  You’re often trying to prevent the worst from happening.  You’re protecting democracy from the depredations of state intelligence, police and military forces.  You’re fending off attacks on free speech and the work of vital human rights NGOs.  You’re fighting what often seems like a hopeless, rear guard action.

To do this you use all the modes of digital communication available: YouTube, Facebook, Skype, Twitter, blogs, Instant Messaging and chats among activists.  You tell and show the injustices to as many as you can, hoping the message will resonate, and begin provoking questions and changing minds.

The beauty of these technologies is that they allow you to a greater or lesser degree to circumvent the strictures of the security state.  They allow you to cross borders to link individuals in the next block, neighborhood, city or nation.

Think about the beauty of Wael Ghonim, employee of a U.S. technology company for whom he worked in Dubai, playing an instrumental role in creating the Egyptian Revolution.  Or that the ideas of Gene Sharp, an 83 year-old American non-violent activist living in a working class neighborhood of Boston, inspired Egyptian youth to topple a dictator.   There are no borders, at least as far as technology and political change is concerned.

Returning to the specific modes of communication, what makes these especially powerful isn’t just the technology itself, but the substance of the communication, the message, the value you’re conveying.

Intelligence agencies and national security states have access to these tools in the same way activists do.  And they try, in their mostly feeble ways to exploit them to advance the interests of the state.  But the narrative they offer doesn’t sell.  The national security state, whether it be Mubarak’s Egypt, Ahmadinejad’s Iran or Bibi’s Israel, represents secrecy, fear and ignorance.  It sells security at the expense of all those values held dear by activists and common citizens alike: freedom, liberty, speech.

It secretly arrested the 16-year-old Israeli Palestinian, Ashraf al-Baladi and put him in Jalameh prison outside Haifa  under Shabak “interrogation” (i.e. torture).  It tied him to a chair, kicked over the chair, busted his head open, broke a rib and punctured his lungs.  It refused to send him to the hospital since he was under secret detention.  It killed him.  And no one in Israel knows except the source who told me and hoped I could spread the word.

Think of this, aside from my source, readers of my blog, and the Shabak, you are the only people in the world who know this happened.  Think of what this means.

Make no mistake, there is little difference between Egypt’s Mukhabarat and Israel’s Shabak or Mossad.  They are the flip side of the same coin.  One speaks with an Arabic accent, the other Hebrew.  But they say roughly the same things both to their victims and their fellow citizens.  They operate in darkness, thrive in secrecy, and die in the light.

To prove my point let’s compare:  Egypt offered the world the Facebook Revolution, Iran in 2009 offered the Twitter Revolution.  What has Israel offered?  The Stuxnet Revolution?  Israel uses technology as it did in the case of the viruses which penetrated the personal computers of Mahmoud al-Mabouh and the Iranian nuclear scientists, to kill.  ‘Nuff said.

What impact might the Egyptian Revolution have for Israel-Egypt relations?  Of course, Bibi Netanyahu, the Israeli right and their advocates here have been raising the specter of a radical Muslim takeover.  Of Iran on the Nile.  When the actual evidence of what happened in Egypt completely contradicts such expectations.  The movement that brought down Mubarak wasn’t especially Islamic.  It was a national political movement, not a religious one.  Of course, there are religious elements in Egyptian politics and the Brotherhood will play a role in any future government.  But they will not control such a government and could not even if they wanted to.

What Israel really fears is yet another independent Arab state on its borders, one that doesn’t take orders from Tel Aviv or Washington.  Israel relies on military power and its alliance with the U.S. to dominate the region and impose its will and agenda on its neighbors.  It sees what has happened with a moderate Islamist state like Turkey turning hostile toward its agenda and now foresees something like this happening in Cairo.  And the thought terrifies Israel’s military-intelligence strategists.

The fewer flunkies there are leading Arab nations, the more Israel may be forced to face the cold, hard facts of its brutal Occupation.  Hosni Mubarak was willing to enforce Israel’s siege on Gaza with a blockade from the Egyptian side.  But a future democratic government will likely not serve as Israel’s Arab enforcer against Hamas.  Mubarak was Israel’s bulwark against Islamic radicalism in Gaza.  Henceforward?  Not so much.

If things develop apace as they have in Tunisia, Egypt, now Bahrain, and possibly Yemen and Libya, then you may have the terribly awkward possibility of Arab nations that are freer and more democratic than Israel itself.  Then what happens to the brand: the Only Democracy in the Middle East?

Do you remember the image from Tahrir Square of an Egyptian Copt holding a cross and a Muslim holding the Koran, each of them carried aloft together?  If Arab nations transform themselves into tolerant, open societies in which basic freedoms of religion, assembly, speech and the press are guaranteed, imagine what impact this may have inside Israel?  There you have a dominant Jewish majority whose religion, ethnicity, language, culture, traditions and political power subordinate a Palestinian minority.  Palestinians represent where Egyptians were before the Revolution.  But when Palestinians see that their brothers and sisters in Cairo enjoy freedoms and opportunities they can only imagine, think of the message this will convey.

There could be fierce pressure on Israel to reform itself.  To become what Azmi Bishara called a “national of all its citizens.”

And this is where I wanted to talk about the offensive mode of bringing political change.  I talked earlier of activists mostly on the defensive, attempting to fend off the worst that the state has to offer.

But we’ve seen that events can bring change in the blink of an eye.  One moment you’re running from the police and dodging bullets, the next you’re surrounded by millions cheering your victory.  So my message to Israel is that you’re riding a tiger and there’s very little difference between being on his back one moment and inside his mouth the next.  Things change just that fast in this day and age.

Yes, we’ve had an Occupation since 1967.  Yes Palestinians suffered a Nakba in 1948 from which they’ve never recovered.  Injustices can last decades.  But they can be swept aside in the blink of an eye.  If a dictator can fall after 30 years in power in Cairo, there’s hope for the end to the Occupation regime in Israel.  For any detractors out there, note I did not say the’ end of Israel,’ which is not at all what I meant.

Lately, I’ve been thinking about the title of the Leonard Cohen song, Democracy is Coming to the USA.  I think it’s coming to Israel too, and Bahrain and Libya, and Yemen, and Saudi Arabia and Iran and Syria.  As for Israel’s transformation, it won’t be to the partial democracy enjoyed mostly by Israeli Jews and suffered by Israeli Palestinians, but the full-throated democracy of Egypt on February 11th.

Now, a word about U.S. policy.  Despite the hope many of us placed in Barack Obama to bring change to the region, he’s mainly been a bystander.  His approach to the Egyptian Revolution, which teetered on the brink of irrelevancy thanks to the pressure and blandishments of Saudi Arabia and Israel, finally came down on the right side of history.  But just barely.

Basically, we just don’t get it.  Things changed on February 11th.  And they’ll never be the same.  But we want them to go back to the way we were.  How else can you explain the U.S.’ unseemly bullying of the PA to withdraw its motion in the Security Council denouncing the settlements?  Imagine the U.S. threatening to veto such a resolution, which is totally consonant by the way with U.S. policy, if the Palestinians won’t withdraw it.  Who cares about the U.S. threat of a veto?  Let them veto a resolution that agrees with their own stated policy.  Imagine the egg that’ll be on their faces after they do that.

And we claim we want to be honest brokers.  We’re neither honest, nor brokers.  We’re carrying water for the old power brokers in Riyadh and Tel Aviv.  We’re preserving the status quo.  But how long can that last?  Especially in the aftermath of February 11th.

Shabak Alleged to Have Murdered Detained 16 Year-Old Israeli Palestinian Boy

Friday, February 18th, 2011

Important Update: After numerous attempts to confirm the information published here and being unable to do so, I am sorry to say that at best the account is uncorroborated, and at worst it’s possible the information was not correct (or perhaps credible) to begin with.

I will continue my attempts to verify the details.   Meanwhile many thanks to those Israelis who went out of their way to make inquiries on my behalf and apologies to my readers if this story turns out to have been wrong.

An Israeli source confirms the horrifying news that one of the five Israeli Palestinians detained a few days ago in secret by the Shabak has been killed today (or possibly yesterday) in custody in Jalameh prison near Haifa.  The victim was Ashraf al-Baladi of the northern Israeli Palestinian village of Sachnin.  Here is a description of what happened to him: he was bound to a chair, he either fell over or was pushed onto the floor. The fall cracked his head open, punctured a lung, and broke a rib.  The secret police didn’t know what to do.  They couldn’t bring him to a hospital for treatment since he’d been secretly detained.

A doctor was summoned but he arrived too late.  The boy died shortly thereafter.

I have asked representatives of Israeli and Israeli Palestinian NGOs to demand an accounting from the Interior Ministry and Shabak.  So far to no avail.  I’m going to renew my appeal to anyone who can contact either agency to tell us whether they have these individuals in custody, and if so where they are held, and under what charges.  Allow them to consult with attorneys.  And account for the death of a minor child while in Shabak detention.

Can’t all of us human rights activists put our heads together and unravel this mystery and force the secret police to account for their actions?

Israel: Pressures Egypt to Refuse Passage of Iranian Ships Through Suez

Thursday, February 17th, 2011

If you want to know the definition of chutzpah: it’s Israel’s hysteria at the prospect that two Iranian ships might be allowed passage through the Suez Canal on their way to Syria:

Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman said that Israel could not ignore the planned sailing of two Iranian naval vessels through the Suez Canal into the Mediterranean en route for Syria and Defence Minister Ehud Barak labelled the act “hostile”.

“Tonight two Iranian warships are supposed to cross the Suez Canal into the Mediterranean Sea on their way to Syria,” Lieberman told a conference of American Jewish leaders in Jerusalem.

He said an Iranian naval presence in the area was something that had not occurred for many years and was a “provocation that proves the self-confidence and cheek of the Iranians is growing from day to day.”

“The international community has to understand that Israel cannot ignore these provocations for eternity,” Lieberman said.

Apparently, no one’s told Lieberman or Barak that the Canal actually is an international waterway, and not the sandbox of Israel and its allies.  The idea that Israel should dictate or have veto power on which nation may send its shipping through the waterway is alarming to say the least.

The full height of the hypocrisy is that Israel wanted to brag to the world that two of its nuclear attack submarines passed through the Canal in 2009 on their way to patrol sea lanes near Iran, where presumably they would participate in an Israeli attack if such an operation occurred.  So while Israel can use the Canal to further its own war plans against Iran, the latter can’t navigate the same passage.

Haaretz has reported that the Iranian vessels have been denied passage through the Canal, which indicates that Egypt is acceding to the wishes of its erstwhile ally, Israel.  It also reports that Lieberman has now arrogated to himself a role in devising Israel’s defense policy by turning this purely military matter into an international incident.  The chutzpah of the man knows no bounds.

In a related story, Hassan Nasrallah is once again rattling sabers, calling on his army of the faithful to “liberate the Galilee” in light of an Israeli attack on Lebanon.  The odd thing about Nasrallah is that he’s Israel’s worst nightmare precisely because he’s as bellicose and unstable as some of Israel’s own generals and politicians.  A match made in heaven–or Hell.

Ashkenazi Questioned by Shabak

Thursday, February 17th, 2011

While Israeli media is reporting that former IDF chief of staff Gabi Ashkenazi was questioned today for four hours by the Israeli Controller, that is, the chief investigative officer of the government, there is an important factor that is under gag and can’t be published inside Israel.  An Israeli source tells me that he was questioned by the Shabak, not the normal police interrogators.

This indicates that the Israeli media are misreporting the subject of the interrogation.  They’re saying it concerns Ashkenazi’s role in the leaked Galant memo, which was forged by an Ashkenazi confidant in an attempt to damage the candidacy of one of his rivals for the chief of staff job.  If that was the real subject there would be no need for the presence of the Shabak, which would allow the police to handle the matter.

But if, however, the investigation concerned the shady arms deals (they too are under gag order) which I’ve reported here that were arranged by Ashkenazi and Harpaz (with them pocketing a hefty commission), then this would certainly rise to the level of gravity needed to bring in the Shabak, since these transactions involved serious violations of national security.

My question is why the story is being framed this way?  It could be that the military censor has told the media if they report the story at all they should report it this way.  Or it could be that the media has chosen itself to report it this way.  What is clear though is that Ashkenazi’s ass is being protected either by the IDF or the media.  Either because of his status as a former chief of staff or because they don’t wish to bring Israel into any more disrepute than it’s already suffered from Ashkenazi’s depredations, they’re allowing the story to be deflected from its real subject.

But we won’t allow that to happen.  At least not here.

Another consideration is that all Israeli former chiefs of staff enter politics.  And when they do they are automatic power brokers in whichever party they decide to join.  So the media may be considering that Ashkenazi is a potential future source with considerable sway and influence, and therefore going easy on him.

Jobs Destroys Jackling House, California Architectural Landmark

Wednesday, February 16th, 2011

Steve Jobs has earned another distinction in his long career of technological innovation: destroyer of architectural history.  He tore down Jackling House, one of the finest examples of Spanish revival home architecture in northern California and he did it in a mere two weeks.  The home was designed by famed California archiect, George Washington Smith, creator of the Spanish Revival style for which Santa Baraba is known.  It was built for copper magnate Daniel Jackling, another ruthless capitalist innovator of his day.

Uphold Our Heritage fought valiantly to preserve Jackling House.  But in the end the Town of Woodside did everything possible to accomodate Jobs and destruction of the architectural treasure; while the California Supreme Court refused to acknowledge this was an important enough part of the state’s historic legacy to be worth preserving.  The Town’s callousness is epitomized by this statement to the San Jose Mercury News from the Manager:

Town Manager George said the demolition of the Jackling House will “close 11 years of history” for the town.

“No matter what you think about the house, it’s nice to get something wrapped up,” she said.

“Smashed up” would be more like it.

As he almost always does, Steve Jobs has won.  He fought a long bloody legal war to demolish Jackling House.  Now he has his Pyrrhic victory.  All that stands now on the property is the chimney, the remains of a 15,000 square foot stately mansion.

Jobs promised us an even more significant architectural statement for the building that will replace it.  But the glaring error in his thinking is that you don’t create architectural distinction by demolishing the history that preceded you.  You build on the past, not destroy it.

If anyone can snap a picture of the ruins I’d very much like to display it here.  But I understand heavy security rings the property.  Steve doesn’t want any pictures of the ruins to mar his reputation any further than it has been.  And he clearly thinks we preservationists are as possessed as he is and that we’ll physically protest and disrupt his act of vandlism.  We’ve protested all we could.  Now Steve has spoken.  All hail Steve, destroyer of worlds, like Shiva.  I don’t know whether karma exists.  But if it does Steve’s earned a whole lotta bad karma.  I pity him.

Rest in peace, Jackling House.  As for Jobs, not so much.

Jewish National Fund Bulldozers Destroying Al Araqib Village Cemetery

Wednesday, February 16th, 2011


Alarming, devastating news that the battle of the Al Araqib Bedouin to remain on their village lands has taken an ominous turn. This from Israeli peace activist, Michael Warshavsky:

Shooting and heavy violence in Al-Arakib: The people of Al-Arakib encircled in the cemetery

The 17th violent eviction of Al-Arakib is now under way.

Special squads unit used heavy violence to force people into the cemetry area. Several people have been wounded; one of them, a child, was taken to hospital, others would not leave the place, fearing they may never return.

The special units shoot into the cemetry area, sowing fear and seeking to provoke people to retaliate, an excuse to break in. Meanwhile, bulldozers are obstructing the exit from the cemtery in the direction of the village.

We have no images from Al-Arakib at the moment, but please spread the word, protest and circulate the video of the previous eviction

And this is from Yaaela Raanan of the Negev Bedouin support group:

It seemed that there were “red lines” even for the police brutality against the Bedouins of the Israeli Negev – while destroying homes that had no possibility for acquiring building permits, arresting people on their village lands in order to make room for JNF trees, beating activists who dared request to see the official papers allowing the brutality – all seemed to be “ok”. but until today – even for the police – the cemetery and the people waiting in the cemetery for the police to leave – were off limits. no more.

After destroying the tents of the village – yet again, the JNF (yes!) bulldozer approached the gate of the cemetery attempting to run it down and destroy it. this was too much for the village people, who are sitting in their community’s cemetery, watching as their village is once more destroyed. As the bulldozer approached the gate, the people went to stop it with their bare hands. Several are injured, including children. They are being evacuated at this moment by ambulances.

The bulldozer has backed away from the gate, and the police and bulldozers are now a few yards away from the cemetery, re-thinking their next move.

Do all you can to stop this horrible escalation of the treatment of the Arab citizens of Israel!!!

How can the Jewish National Fund collaborate in such a pogrom? Yes, what else can you call it? Organized state violence against a helpless minority. Do we not remember how it felt to be treated this way ourselves?

How can JNF’s donors here in the U.S. and elsewhere in the Jewish Diapsora not blanch in shame? This must end. Otherwise, we must do all we can to inform JNF’s donors of what is done in their name to indigenous inhabitants and citizens of the State of Israel.

The Wages of Stuxnet Are Havoc

Wednesday, February 16th, 2011

While the wages of sin are reputed to be death, the wages of Stuxnet will be unforeseen havoc for years to come.  Several interesting reports out about the cyberweapon, which outgoing Israeli chief of staff Gabi Ashkenazi took credit for in his farewell party yesterday.  Those who read my blog carefully may remember two points I tried to make about Stuxnet at the height of the attack.  First, no matter how much damage was done, the relative impact would be short-term and not severe.  Just to be clear, I wrote this not because I want Iran to have a nuclear weapon, but rather because I thought the idea of sabotaging its nuclear program was wrong in ways moral as well as pragmatic.

Second, I wrote that the model of cyberattack represented by Stuxnet would let loose a whirlwind of potentially destructive attacks against any party responsible for it.  In a way, Stuxnet is like the proverbial gun in a play, about which Chekhov says: if you see a gun in the first act it will be fired by the third.  In other words, the damage wrought by Stuxnet might be confined to Iran’s nuclear program at first, but there is no possible way to prevent that gun from being fired again once you’ve seen it used.

The N.Y. Times published a story a few weeks ago revealing that Israel and the U.S. collaborated on creating Stuxnet.  I’d say that we live in an industrial-technological glass house.  So why we threw that rock at Iran’s nuclear program is beyond me.  Did we think that some smart set of hackers or a foreign intelligence agency might not use the mojo against us sometime?  Do we think that our nuclear power plants, electric grid and industrial systems are so secure that someone might not arrange for our own comeuppance?

Personally, I think whoever originally derived this concept and approved it wasn’t thinking straight.  They were going for immediate, short-term gain (damaging Iran’s nuclear facilities) and giving short-or even no-shrift to the far-range implications.

Returning to my first point above, the Washington Post reveals a new study by the Institute for Science and International Security, which uses video footage compiled by IAEA cameras inside Iran’s nuclear facilities, to confirm that Stuxnet did a relatively small amount of damage overall to Iran’s plants at Bushehr and Natanz.  At most, 10% of the centrifuges were destroyed and these were rapidly replaced.  Iran’s overall output of enriched uranium in 2010 didn’t even decline.  So you remember Meir Dagan crowing about how Iran’s nuclear ambitions had been humbled by his brilliant cyberploy, and the Iranian bomb had been pushed back to 2015?  Forget about it.

While the majority of the ISIS report sounded extremely persuasive to me, this bit of magical thinking didn’t:

…The worm almost certainly exacted a psychological toll, as Iran’s leaders discovered that their most sensitive nuclear facility had been penetrated by a computer worm whose designers possessed highly detailed knowledge of Natanz’s centrifuges and how they are interconnected, said David Albright, a co-author of the report.

“If nothing else, it hit their confidence,” said Albright, ISIS’s president, “and it will make them feel more vulnerable in the future.”

I have no idea why Albright would say this.  While Stuxnet certainly was a crisis for Iran’s nuclear program, given how successfully it defended against the crisis and recovered from it, why would Iranian scientists or security experts be quaking in their boots?  If anything, it will make them even more determined not to allow such a breach in the future.

And on the contrary, I’d say that now it is the U.S. and Israel who will have to be looking over their shoulders knowing they’ve unleashed the god of cyberdestruction on the world.  Iran has already been hit and absorbed the worst of it.  But we haven’t and our security experts should be runnin’ pretty scared I’d think imaging ways in which our own industrial processes could be compromised and the immense damage it could cause us.  This October, 2010 article from the Post delves into some of the ways in which the worm and its descendants could bring us to our knees.

Finally, FoxNews notes that a group of sophisticated computer hackers, angry at a security firm which supposedly attempted to infiltrate its ranks, penetrated the company’s e-mail system and exposed a modified version of Stuxnet, which they promptly unleashed online.  Don’t worry, our electrical power grid is not about the go down.  The version of the worm they released is not an exact duplicate of the real thing and probably can’t do much immediate damage to anyone.  But my point is that once you let this genie out of the bottle you’ll never get him back in it.  You don’t know who will get hold of Stuxnet next and what they might to with it.  And the article makes very clear that there are versions of Stuxnet out there and that some very enterprising hacker or foreign computer intelligence agent will be able to make use of it–someday.  And we’ll have only ourselves to blame because we thought we were being oh so clever when we birthed Stuxnet and bestowed in on our Iranian friends

Remember karma?  What you do comes back to you.  And in ways unforeseen.   Oh, and incidentally, you won’t hear about any of this in Clarion Fund’s new ‘hit’ movie, Iranium…

Salon Mazal Video Conference: Digital Activism in the New Middle East

Tuesday, February 15th, 2011

salon mazalTomorrow I’ll be talking to Salon Mazal in Tel Aviv about digital activism and the struggle for political change in Israel and the Middle East.  So much to talk about: the Egyptian Revolution, Facebook, the Green Revolution, Twitter, exposing the dark secrets of the national security state, afflicting the comfortable and comforting the afflicted, etc.  I’ll be sharing some of the my latest scoops about Gabi Ashkenazi and Muhammad Danef, barring any intervention by the censor.  The talk itself will involve use of digital technology to reach across borders as I’ll be talking via video hookup.  I’m really looking forward to it.

If you live in or near Tel Aviv, the address is 32 Yitzhak Sadeh Street.

Here is a bit about Salon Mazal’s mission:

Salon Mazal is a unique center in Israel, spreading information and raising awareness of a wide variety of issues related to social change, including human rights, animal rights, the environment, globalization, social and economic oppression, consumerism, feminism and gender issues and many more.

Salon Mazal has a lending library, a shop and a space for meetings, lectures, workshops and film screenings. Salon Mazal is run by an open, non-hierarchical collective of volunteers.

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