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

Eretz Nehederet: Im Tirzu Teaches Kindergarteners the Middle East Facts of Life

Friday, February 11th, 2011

Thanks to Israeli reader Nuriel for sending along a link for this segment from Eretz Nehederet, Israel’s highest rated political satire TV series.  It depicts an education curriculum devised by Im Tirtzu with the Ministry of Education that helps prepare kindergarten children for the “complicated reality” that is life in the contemporary Middle East.  It’s priceless:

Blogging the Revolution: Mubarak Out, ‘Egypt is Free,’ What’s Next?

Friday, February 11th, 2011
mubarak's end

Mubarak has crumbled (Amel Pain/EPA)

History is made.  You are witnessing an event you may rarely see in your lifetime.  A nation erupting in freedom.

News from Egypt that Omar Suleiman has made a 20-second broadcast to the nation announcing that Hosni Mubarak has resigned as president and passed his powers to the army.  No word from the army yet on how it plans to proceed or what it plans to do.  So while hundreds of thousands are cheering in Tahrir Square celebrating with justifiable glee their achievement, it ain’t over yet.  Not by a long shot.  As commentators pointed out on NPR, the military, while respected by the majority of Egyptians, is still a creature of the regime.  It remains to be seen whether the military has gotten the message that the people want a full transition to democracy.

This is a dangerous time for everyone in Egypt.  If the army refuses to get the message and accept the will of the people then we will enter the next phase of this process and could still end up with a similar confrontation to the one Egypt endured till this morning’s announcement of the Mubarak resignation.  The Revolution’s leadership too will have to tread delicately so as not to overstep and alienate the army, in whose hands power now seems to rest.

So we have a soft coup, in which the military is in power.  It is important that this remain a soft coup and that the military not assume permanent control.  In the coming hours and days, Egyptians will be watching closely for signals that the army has gotten the message and is beginning a process of consultation with oppositions parties and forces to begin a transition to a new government that derives from the will of the governed rather than the élite.

Yesterday, on the BBC I heard an analyst note an amazing fact that in the 5,000 years of Egyptian history this is the first time that the people have chosen their own government.  It may be the first time that an Arab nation has chosen its own government.

Mubarak has left Cairo for his home in Sharm el Sheikh earning a well-deserved “rest.”

Now we enter stage 2 of the Egyptian Revolution.  Despite the fact that the ‘fat lady’ has sung, it ain’t over.  It’s just begun.  Let’s hope the army will get the message and act as an honest broker and not attempt to retain power or retain their position of privilege.

Mubarak’s Game of Chicken

Thursday, February 10th, 2011
shoes of disgust against mubarak

Demonstrators raise their shoes in disgust during Mubarak's speech (Dylan Martinez/Reuters)

In the aftermath of Mubarak’s extraplanetary speech in which he seemed to be living in a parallel Egyptian universe to the one inhabited by the hundreds of thousands in Tahrir Square and elsewhere in Egypt, the Father of the People was playing a game of chicken with the nation as the prize.  There are three players: Mubarak, the army, and the people.  The people will clearly not blink first.  They are in it till the end.  But Mubarak appears to be daring the army to intervene and expects that they won’t have the nerve to do so.  If the army does blink first, then what will happen?  Mubarak and Suleiman either unleash their thugs and secret police and thousands die in order to suppress the revolution.  Or perhaps the army joins in and even more die.

Alternatively, suppose the army refuses to blink, calls Mubarak’s bluff and stages a soft coup in order to allow the revolution to move forward toward its democratic destiny.  This is what Mohammed al Baradei has summoned it to do.  But one has to wonder why it hasn’t done so already?  Perhaps division in the ranks between old guard senior officers loyal to their patrons who got them this far, and the younger junior officers who still retain a connection to the street?

You can tell something extraordinary is going on when even I come to admire words from the pen of Tom Friedman.  Even Tom the plutocrat understands the moment we are living and he has returned to his roots as a terrific interpreter of events which he once was so long ago before he was co-opted and bought by the power elites.  Even Tom has this terrific comment about Mubarak’s out of touchness:

This man is staggeringly out of touch with what is happening inside his country. This is Rip Van Winkle meets Facebook.

At any rate, something will have to give.  Tomorrow will clearly dawn on a nation even more firmly resolved to rid itself of this pestilence.  I only hope the protesters will retain their remarkable sense of discipline.  Just watching their resolve, their steadfastness, their restraint in the face of violent provocation–how can anyone speak of a nation that would descend into chaos if Mubarak falls?  For shame on the autocrats of Saudi Arabia, Israel, the Gulf States and elsewhere who raise the specter of Islamist bloodbaths as if Egypt was in the throes of the Al Qaeda.  Anyone spending a few minutes watching Al Jazeera’s live video feed can see that these are a disciplined people, one that has earned its revolution.  There is no looting.  There are no acts of revenge.  There is are no acts of religious intolerance.

If we can, we must not let anyone take it away from them.

Over the past three weeks I’ve often written here in fear that external powers or events might wrest the revolution from the hands of the Egyptian people.  That Obama might stand aside at a critical moment, that Bibi might insert his strident, irrelevant rhetoric and muddy the waters, that the army or Mubarak might steal the show.  But over the past 24 hours I’ve come to realize that no one can take this victory away from the people.  It is their achievement and they will not be denied.  Whatever happens they will have won and they very likely will come out of this with a result something like what they are now demanding.  It is only a question of how and when, but no longer a question of “if.”

Live Blogging Mubarak’s Speech

Thursday, February 10th, 2011
mubarak refuses to resign

Al Jazeera screen grab of aftermath of Mubarak's defiant refusal to leave

What?  What is this guy thinking?

Over the past few hours the international media has trumpeted the likelihood that Hosni Mubarak will resign.  I’m watching his speech and unless he’s got a rabbit in his hat that he’ll pull out later before he completes it, he seems utterly clueless.  I hear nothing that responds in any substantive way to the cries from the Square and the street.  The rhetoric of this speech is of a man who has completely lost touch (if he ever was in touch) with his people.  Strikes are sweeping through the country.  Crowds surround all the major institutions of the regime.  How can he speak as if none of this is happening?  Yet he does.

Thanks to the double screen Al Jazeera TV provides on its website you can see the crowds responding to the empty rhetoric of his speech.  Shoes are waving, the ultimate insult in Arab society.

Now he seems to be getting to the part of his speech in which he might step down.  But he keeps droning on with meaningless slogans bragging about his past glory on behalf of the homeland.  Meanwhile the crowd chants stridently for his exit.

He has said he will pass power to Omar Suleiman with no date for transfer of power.  An AJ correspondent explained that Mubarak passed only a portion of his executive powers to him.  This will in no way satisfy the crowds which don’t want a continuation of the regime by other means and faces.

We now enter a very dangerous phase.  The army, seen as a decisive force internally, has not stepped in to take control.  Until now, people looked to the army as a force in solidarity with the people.  But everyone must be wondering if anyone’s home there in the military barracks.  It appears that unless the military steps in in a more authoritative way, the crowds, the strikes, the unrest, will only grow.

I don’t know where this is going to lead.  How can a thin elite stand in the way of millions–and by tomorrow tens of millions?  It’s starting to remind me of the Filipino People’s Power movement which overthrew Ferdinand Marcos from power.  They did so by sheer mass of people standing up in unison to eject a hated leader.  But in that situation the army basically turned on the leader and threw in its lot with the people.  It remains to be seen what Egypt’s military will do.

Clearly, many national leaders expected Mubarak to step down.  They said so publicly.  So it’s mystifying that such figures understood Mubarak would resign and yet the man did a U-turn.  Did he agree to resign and then change his mind?

Now, we must also wonder what the U.S. administration will do.  Gone must be the hesitation and dithering exemplified by Hillary Clinton’s statement that the transition must be slow and deliberate, a statement made under severe pressure from the region’s autocratic figures.  As I’ve written here before, the train is leaving the station and we must not be left behind.  Do we want to be a friend of the Egyptian people or a bystander as they travel on their way to destiny?  The nation turns its lonely eyes to you, Mr. President.  What will you have to say?

IDF Needs a Few Good Hasbara Hackers

Thursday, February 10th, 2011
avi benayahu

'It ain't over till the fat man hacks' (Avi Moalem)

A common ad slogan a few years back for U.S. Army recruitment was: “the Army needs of few good men.”  The IDF doesn’t care if you’re a man or you’re good, but they do want you if you’re capable of hacking for hasbara.  This is one of those delightful stories that come along, oh, maybe once in a…week…making Israel advocacy look even lamer than it already is:

IDF Spokesman Avi Benayahu said Tuesday that the army is currently in the process of enlisting “new media fighters”.

Benayahu told a panel on the subject of “the digital medium as strategic weapon” that the army was searching for “little hackers who were born and raised online“.

We screen them with special care and train them to serve the state,” the spokesman told the panel, which was part of the Herzliya Conference.

…”We cannot but be impressed at how Western technology harms regimes at the other end of the spectrum, such as Iran, or at how one cell phone camera can harm a regime more than any intelligence agency’s operations,” he said.

You’d be pardoned if you confused the sentence about training the “little hackers” with a description of how to train K-9 dogs to serve in the IDF.  Perhaps there’s not much difference?  Regarding online hasbara being a “strategic weapon,” you have to wonder if he’s confusing Israel’s nuclear arsenal with the hasbara hackers he hopes to recruit.  Can such an individual really be worth a nuclear weapon in this age of Facebook-inspired political revolutions?

What little fat man (Haaretz characterizes him as having “distinctive girth”) Benayahu forgets is that social networking only works for your cause when you have right on your side as the youth of Tunisia and Egypt did and do.  If all you’re selling is the same old recycled swill, nobody’d gonna buy it no matter how you disguise it.

In the final paragraph above, Benayahu seems to be forgetting that Western technology may harm not just Israel’s enemies like Iran, but also Israel itself.  That Facebook and Twitter, once used to liberate Egypt from the yoke of tyranny might just do the same for the Palestinians.

Israel’s hasbara operation seems premised on the notion that there’s a way to trick, or lull, or persuade people into supporting Israel.  But there isn’t.  The argument doesn’t resonate when you’re arguing against facts and reality, at least as the majority of the rest of the world see it.  Sure, you can persuade yourself and your narrow band of supporters.  But that’s not why you go online to advocate for your cause.  You attempt to broaden your support.

Another interesting element of this effort is that it is entirely defensive in nature.  It will defend Israeli policy.  It will explain why Israel behaves so badly so often.  It will fend off a revolution, not advance one.  It won’t advocate for new ideas, political reform, freedom or anything like what other social movements do online.  This hasbara effort is couched in the negative and I don’t believe this can work on Facebook and Twitter.  You have to represent a vision, something positive, constructive, that will capture peoples’ imaginations.  Can hasbara do that?

Benayahu reveals that Bibi Netanyahu is going to pay $1.6 million to recruit and train 120 of the “little hackers.”  If he paid that money as reparations to Turkey he’d regain a former ally and produce far better results than 1,000 hackers could.

The Ynet article closes with a priceless quote from one of the IDF’s “little hackers” herself, Aliza:

Aliza, a lone soldier from the US, explained about the new unit at the IDF Spokesperson’s Office. “We began to work with new media during Operation Cast Lead. Bloggers are very important and very influential,” she said.

She certainly wasn’t talking about this blogger.

If you have a really dark sense of humor as I sometimes do on this subject, you may get as good a laugh out of this as I did:

“This is about the democratization of information, and about the fact that you cannot stuff information down people’s throats but you can make it more palatable.”

Aliza said the office’s YouTube channel is currently its most successful venture. “Photos catch the eye and constitute visual proof that is better than words,” she said, adding that IDF footage from the flotilla raid became the most-watched videos online and affected “media reports in the world as well as online debates”.

The notion that IDF videos of the Mavi Marmara massacre constitute “visual proof” of anything is simply beyond belief and beyond words. Who does she think she persuaded? What does she think the world thinks of that disaster? That everyone’s now straightened out, understands and accepts Israel’s narrative?

Another delightful note to add to this, is that the very same IDF fat man, Benayahu told the media that he was recently forced to travel to Britain incognito to prevent nasty disturbances against him and presumably a war crimes warrant for his arrest.  I can’t imagine how someone with as big and ugly a mug as he could think he could disguise himself.  And he certainly won’t the next time he tries this.

What’s even funnier about this guy is that though he’s the IDF’s top spokesperson he’s never fired a shot in his life and his army rank of Brigadier General is entirely honorary. Frankly, I’ve never heard of someone employed by an army holding a rank he never earned.  And can you someone this overweight ever have marched a step in his life?  Frankly, I think part of his hasbara regime should be going on a diet.  He’d make a more convincing spokesperson if he didn’t look like a shlub.

Seattle Evening for Egyptian Revolution

Thursday, February 10th, 2011
egyptian muslims and copts

An Egyptian Muslim and Copt borne aloft in Tahrir Square (Amel Pain/ EPA)

If you live in the Pacific Northwest, I hope you can join us in a program of affirmation for the Egyptian Revolution, which I’ve organized (the program, not the Revolution) with the St. Mark’s Middle East Task Force.  We will report on the events unfolding on the ground as well as what’s at stake for U.S. foreign policy in the region.  I will focus on the impact that Israel is having on formulating our nation’s policy and how a democratic revolution may change the shape of the Israeli-Arab conflict:

Uprising in Egypt: Struggle for Democracy and Challenge to US Foreign Policy

Friday, Feb 18th 7:00-9:00PM
Saint Mark’s Cathedral – Bloedel Hall
1245 Tenth Avenue East
Seattle

This round table will discuss the critical events unfolding in Egypt. This may be the largest non-violent movement in history that has no leader but is truly grassroots.

We will attempt a Skype interview with Alaa Badr from Tahrir Square.

The panel includes:

Steve Niva, Professor of International Politics and Middle East Studies at the Evergreen State College. His primary areas of research and writing include the Israeli-Palestinian conflict; U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East; asymmetric warfare, counterinsurgency and political violence; and critical sovereignty studies. He has written for, and served on the editorial board of Middle East Report , and his recent writings have also appeared in Middle East Policy, Foreign Policy in Focus, Peace Review, Middle East International, Al-Ahram Weekly, The Seattle Times, The Seattle Post-Intelligencer, Common Dreams, and Counterpunch..

Richard Silverstein is a freelance journalist who writes the progressive political blog, Tikun Olam, about Israeli-Arab peace and Muslim-Jewish relations.
He has contributed to Haaretz, Jewish Forward, Los Angeles Times, the Guardian’s Comment Is Free, Al Jazeera English, and Alternet. His work has also been
in the Seattle Times, American Conservative Magazine, Beliefnet and Tikkun Magazine, where he is on the advisory board.

Tarek Dawoud is a student of Quran, a husband, a father, a software engineer and a computer nerd. Originally from Egypt, Tarek has been living in the Northwest for 10 years. He has been a speaker and presenter about Islam and a founding member of the Islamic Speakers’ Bureau of Seattle. He is currently the president of CAIR-Washington.

Ahmed Ayad grew up in Alexandria Egypt and moved to the US in 2000 to obtain a graduate degree in Computer Science. He is a software engineer at Microsoft and lives in Redmond with his wife and two children.

Middle Eastern Despots Tell Obama, ‘Go Slow’ on Egypt

Wednesday, February 9th, 2011

abdullah and obama

Abdullah and Obama: throwing in our lot with the despots (AFP/Getty)

The NY Times notes that some of the most despotic of the U.S.’ Middle Eastern allies have engaged in a full court press on the Obama administration to persuade it that siding with the Egyptian  Revolution would be a bad move for the U.S. and for them.  Saudi Arabia, Israel, Jordan and the Gulf States have united (and coordinated?) their assault on the former U.S. position that Mubarak had to “go yesterday, to paraphrase administration spokesperson Robert Gibbs of a few days ago:

Israel, Saudi Arabia, Jordan and the United Arab Emirates have each repeatedly pressed the United States not to cut loose Egypt’s president,Hosni Mubarak, too hastily, or to throw its weight behind the democracy movement in a way that could further destabilize the region, diplomats say. One Middle Eastern envoy said that on a single day, he spent 12 hours on the phone with American officials.

There is evidence that the pressure has paid off. On Saturday, just days after suggesting that it wanted immediate change, the administration said it would support an “orderly transition” managed by Vice President Omar Suleiman. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said that Mr. Mubarak’s immediate resignation might complicate, rather than clear, Egypt’s path to democracy, given the requirements of Egypt’s Constitution.

“Everyone is taking a little breath,” said a diplomat from the region, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was discussing private conversations. “There’s a sense that we’re getting our message through.”

While each country has its own concerns, all worry that a sudden, chaotic change in Egypt would destabilize the region or, in the Arab nations, even jeopardize their own leaders, many of whom are also autocrats facing restive populations.

The money quote in this passage is in the last sentence.  This anti-progressive “Quartet” is prepared to sell the Egyptian protest movement down the river on behalf of “regional stability,” which means their own personal power and hides.  What I don’t understand is how this lies in the U.S. interest to retain Mubarak and his pack of cronies and abandon the Revolution.  Saudi Arabian oil?  OK, that’s a consideration.  The Israel lobby?  That too is a consideration Obama has to take into account.

But when you balance that out against the prevailing winds in the Middle East as expressed by the Tunisian and Egyptian movements for political change and the winds that are blowing through other Arab nations like Yemen, Algeria, Libya, etc. it seems that acquiescing in the conniving of the despots puts us clearly on the wrong side of history.  If you look at the broad path of political development in regions like Latin America, central and Eastern Europe, and elsewhere the trends are moving toward political reform, the development of civil societies, and empowering the previously disenfranchised.  While I wouldn’t make this an across the board generalization since there are individual examples that contradict my claim, it seems clear to me that the Middle East (specifically north Africa, Yemen, Turkey and possibly Lebanon) is generally moving in this direction.

If we betray this developing movement for the sake of a the mess of porridge represented by Saudi oil or Israel lobby muscle, it will be not just an opportunity missed, it would mark another nail in the coffin of the U.S. as a major world player whose views are solicited and influential.  The young people in Tahrir Square, for better or worse, expect something from America.  They expect us to live up to our professed values.  If we sacrifice them on the altar of real politick, they will ignore us going forward as having anything relevant to say to them.  If they eventually take power, we will mean little or nothing to them.

Yet another indication of how tone-deaf we have become in this quotation from Hillary Clinton:

“I understand the concerns of everybody in the region,” Mrs. Clinton said Sunday. She said that she had spoken to King Abdullah II of Jordan and that President Obama had made calls to other leaders. State Department officials, she said, were constantly speaking with their counterparts in the region.

Well, no she doesn’t understand the concerns of “everybody” in the region.  She only understands the interests and concerns of the ruling elites, who are increasingly isolated and out of touch.  So if she wants to throw in the U.S.’ lot with them and ignore the actual people who live in those countries and feel betrayed by these same thugs, then be my guest.  But don’t fool yourself into thinking that you actually understand or care about the potential future leaders of these nations once they are on the path of political reform.

This is the type of scaremongering nonsense she’s listening to from the region’s autocrats:

One Arab diplomat likened the democracy movement to a train fueled by university students and human rights advocates.

“Eventually, those students will have to get off that train and go back to school, and the human rights people will have to go back to work, and you know who will be on the train when it finally rolls into the station?” the diplomat asked. “The Muslim Brotherhood.”

The Times article takes pains to note that Joe Biden gave Suleiman a tongue-lashing for dissing the calls for democracy of the Cairo demonstrators.  But the problem with this is the same one we had when we threw in our lots with South Vietnamese dictators during the Vietnam War.  They may be sons of bitches, but they’re our sons of bitches.  And once they’re your son of a bitch, they’re an albatross around your neck as well.  You have little leverage over a Suleiman when you tell him he must renounce the very structures which enable him to cling to power.  He doesn’t see his role as you do.  You may see him as a transitional figure.  But there’s nothing in his political vocabulary to account for that and he won’t stand for it.  As witness this clueless statement in which Suleiman threatens a military coup unless protestors go home:

Mr. Suleiman warned the protesters, most of whom are opposed to any negotiations while Mr. Mubarak is in power, that the only alternative to talks is a “a coup.”

“And we want to avoid that — meaning uncalculated and hasty steps that produce more irrationality,” he said, according to the official news agency.

“There will be no ending of the regime, nor a coup, because that means chaos,” Mr. Suleiman said. And he warned the protesters not to attempt more civil disobedience, calling it “extremely dangerous.” He added, “We absolutely do not tolerate it.”

Is this really the wagon to which we want to hitch our star?  Do we want to be on the side of such a bloody disaster when it happens?  Do we really think we have enough leverage with these tin pot dictators that we can stop them from perpetrating mass carnage if they perceive themselves under threat or in jeopardy?  I wouldn’t put my money on it if I were Joe Biden, Hillary Clinton or Barack Obama.

Here is what the real Egypt wants and expects from us:

Many at the protests buttonholed Americans to express deep disappointment with President Obama, shaking their heads at his ambiguous messages about an orderly transition. They warned that the country risked incurring a resentment from the Egyptian people that could last long after Mr. Mubarak is gone.

Do we have the guts to recognize this and act accordingly?

If not, we’re sentencing ourselves and Egypt to a future cataclysm which will rid, or at least attempt to rid, the nation of the same thugs it is now trying to eject.  The only difference will be that you will have the example of this failed revolution before your eyes and people will want to ensure they do everything possible not to lose next time.  That may mean rivers of blood in Tahrir Square, not just charging camels and horses, but tanks plowing down thousands of protestors.  It may mean a truly revolutionary cabal organizing against the regime and using violence to take power.  It opens the political space to all sorts of potentially bad actors exploiting the deep-rooted frustrations of the nation’s masses.  Yes, perhaps even Al Qaeda-like forces.  But they key is to recognize we’re not there yet.  We’re in a potentially good space and should make the most of it while we can.

There are neocon voices speaking of Obama “losing” Egypt to the Islamists.  But the truth is that Egypt is his to lose if he does nothing now to embrace democracy and the opening toward reform.  The problem is Obama isn’t a politician who sees into the future.  He’s focussed on short-term interests.  And that is a tremendous weakness of his presidency and his politics.  Whatever you want to say about Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger, they were smart enough to map out a sophisticated global strategy in their foreign policy which resulted in the tremendous achievements of the opening to China, among others (OK, let’s leave aside Chile which wasn’t so good).  Obama displays none of that forward-thinking needed in this situation.  And our country and Egypt will suffer for that.

Israel too plays an interesting role in this Quartet.  Though it is not ruled by the same types of despots as Saudi Arabia and the Gulf States (or Jordan for that matter), it has the same retrograde interests in maintaining a status quo that oppresses the broad masses of the populaces of these nations.  Israel, at least as its current elite sees its interests, needs to keep a lid on the aspirations of the common man and woman because Israel senses that democratization will hurt them.  It will establish new allies for the Palestinian cause and further isolate Israel in the region.

Of course, a more proactive Israeli policy seeking rapprochement with the frontline states and resolution of the Israeli Palestinian conflict would put Israel in a commanding position as a potential regional economic leader.  And Israel’s democracy, if it were ever fully realized, could also serve as an example.  Instead, I’m sorry to say, Israel is frittering away these prospective advantages with rear-guard actions like the ones outlined above, which only increase the chances that it will be further marginalized should the winds of political change continue as I expect.

Stand With Us’ Assault on the Jewish Peace Movement

Tuesday, February 8th, 2011
estee chandler jvp leader threatening flyer

JVP-LA organizer, Estee Chandler, and threatening flyer left at her home (JVP)

Why is Stand With Us assaulting American Jews?  I use the term “assault” both in its figurative and literal sense.  In tactics that echo those of the Israeli right-wing advocacy group, Im Tirzu, Stand With Us members have engaged in verbal and physical confrontations with activists from Jewish Voice for Peace in San Francisco-Oakland, Los Angeles and Seattle.  I too have been verbally harrassed locally here in Seattle.

SWU appears to have appointed itself the watchdog of Zionist purity among the American Jewish community.  It has singled out for special attention the fast-growing Jewish peace organization, Jewish Voice for Peace and attacked its activists both verbally and physically.  At a San Francisco demonstration a few months ago, SWU activists on video were heard warning the JVP marchers that they would disrupt their family lives.  Then a few weeks ago, at a JVP meeting in Berkeley, an Israeli-flag clad SWU leader Robin Dubner pepper-sprayed two JVP attendees in the face.

In Los Angeles, JVP is organizing a new chapter.  The lead organizer, Estee Chandler, who is relatively new to Israeli-Arab peace organizing has already had an education it takes many of years to earn.  An anonymous stalker left an ominous threatening flyer at her home displaying her picture, her employer, and names of child family members with the caption:

WANTED
Treason & Incitement Against Jews

The above-named suspect is wanted in connection with…acts of fomenting hatred…against the Jewish people and the Jewish State of Israel as the lead Los Angeles area organizer for the notoriously anti-Jewish and anti-Israel…Jewish Voice for Peace.

In this…capacity, the subject proudly uses her own presumed Jewishness as a weapon against the Jewish people and the Jewish State of Israel while conspiring with other well known anti-Israel groups to assist in Israel’s destruction and to otherwise engender hatred and incite…violence against the Jewish people and the Jewish State of Israel.

Suspect has been know to…consort with known antisemites [sic] and take care of her nephew xxx and neices [sic] xxxx.

There are several Los Angeles right-wing Jews who I can think of who would engage in such despicable behavior.  One who comes to mind and who has bragged in the past of her involvement in similar acts is Allyson Rowen Taylor, a former associate director of Stand With Us who describes herself as “a founding member” of that group.  She and others have been known to haunt left wing circles in Los Angeles and publicly harrass Jews they see as traitors to their race and Arabs they see as fellow travelers with Muslim terrorists.  I’ve written about her public outbursts several times earlier here.  Once at a public screening of the film about Daniel Pearl’s widow, A Mighty Heart, at which she trashed CAIR.  One of her earliest acts of online stalking involved asking Adam Horowitz provocatively, who worked then for American Friends Service Committee:

Why do you hate being a Jew, why are you in favor of murdering Jews?

Of course and to be clear, I can’t conclusively prove that Rowen Taylor is behind this threat against Estee Chandler and JVP.  But the language of the flyer and the brazen provocativeness of the act are of a piece with her past behavior and those of some of her individual personal allies.

I’ve written here that a past leader of the Seattle chapter of Stand With Us, David Brumer, wrote in an e mail that I should be spanked for my views.  The latest Stand With Us-related attack, came from Robert Wilkes, who describes himself as an “Advocate at Stand With Us.”  The SWU website lists him as a member of its media committee.  In last week’s edition of the JTNews he wrote:

Israelis have awakened with heavy hearts from their delusion. They understand the self-evident reality that they can do nothing by themselves to reach a formal peace with the Palestinians. The Palestinians will not abide it short of annihilation of Israel as a Jewish state.

Those who think differently remain afflicted with the Oslo Syndrome. Many Americans do, and many of them are Jewish. They support pro-Palestinian groups and the BDS movement (boycott, divest and sanction), and seek to delegitimize Israel. They employ tropes such as “apartheid” and “Israeli-Nazi war machine” to create a smokescreen of twisted facts and history giving currency to Lenin’s adage, “A lie told often enough becomes the truth.”

Among them are Seattle blogger Richard Silverstein, Rabbi Michael Lerner of Tikkun, Naim Ateek of Sabeel Institute, Noam Chomsky, Norman Finkelstein, the International Solidarity Movement — the list goes on. They hyperbolically depict Israel as a Nazi state inflicting a Shoah on the Palestinians. Well meaning? I cannot assume otherwise. Deluded? Without doubt.

When my wife first read this, she may’ve presumed I wanted to ignore it.  There is so much idiocy out there and so little time to rebut it all.  But given that this was written in the community’s local Jewish media outlet I felt it was important to do so.  I contacted the editor hoping and presuming he would allow me to reply.  The answer wasn’t reassuring.  So I contacted a federation board member, who clearly hoped she didn’t have to get involved.  Then I contacted the newspaper’s board chair.  He too passed the ball back to the editor.  Finally, I offered a deadline for a reply and said I was willing to convene a beyt din if I didn’t have the opportunity to respond.  That did the trick.  My reply will be published in this week’s issue.

Needless to say, I affirm almost none of the views attributed to me above.  In fact, those who read my comment rules know that I am very careful to prohibit almost all uses of Nazi-related terminology to describe Israel or its actions, by me or other commenters.  That’s why Wilkes’ claims above are beyond ludicrous.  Here is a portion of my reply to be published this week:

I have never written, nor do I believe Israel is a “Nazi war machine.”  As a Zionist, I don’t believe in delegitimizing Israel.  That’s just a slogan tossed around by extremists like him with no substance.  Nor have I ever written or do I believe Israel “inflicted a Shoah on the Palestinians.”

As a teenager, I sat in my grandmother’s living room in Washington Heights asking about her family I never knew.  She told me of her brothers and sisters who perished in the Holocaust.  One heartbreakingly returned to Poland after emigrating here, telling her in disgust: “T’iz a genayvushe land!”

I once published an oral history of a Hungarian survivor of Auschwitz in the Los Angeles Times.  I participated in, and was a technical advisor to Pierre Sauvage’s award-winning PBS documentary, Yiddish: Di Mameloshn.

Unlike Robert Wilkes, I don’t abuse the Holocaust to score political points.  The memory of the six-million are too sacred for that.

Robert Wilkes doesn’t know me.  If he’s bothered to read a single word I’ve written he hasn’t understood it.  I’d prefer to think he hasn’t, and bases his calumnies about me on what others have told him.

But before I criticize the views of others I do due diligence and read what they’ve written.  I quote their words and then critique them.  Wilkes didn’t bother to do me that favor.

There is an odious, intolerant, violent process of demonization in this country that led to the shooting of Rep. Gabrielle Giffords.  It’s also played out in the furor over the so-called Ground Zero mosque.  Listen to Glenn Beck on any given night and you’ll hear about Jewish bankers, or Nazi leftists, or jihadi Muslims or similar venom against the feared minority du jour.

That’s what Robert Wilkes represents.  He wants to turn me into a cartoon, a demon, someone you can hate as he does.

We Jews have given the world so much learning, culture, music, language, ideas.  Do we have to give the world hate as well?  Is that our legacy?

Judaism values one’s good name above all else.  Someone who lies about another’s beliefs commits a grave form of gossip called motzi shem ra.  Robert Wilkes has stolen my good name and I won’t let him do it.  I want my good name restored to me.

Estee Chandler wants her good name restored to her as well.  For the love of God, when will the Jewish community stop giving a megaphone to these haters?  When will it stop encouraging them and turn a blind eye when they commit the kinds of acts they did against Chandler?  What will it take for us to realize that Stand With Us, at least in its current form as represented by many of the acts enumerated above, is a poison?  Will it take someone getting shot?  Or will Jewish leaders even then take the position that FoxNews did after Glenn Beck incited death threats against a 78 year old politics professor, saying that the network had no responsibility for any of the hate spewed against her?

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