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Sarajevo haggadah

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ceramic bowl

Mohammad Said Kalash, "Offering Reconciliation" exhibit (photo: Ilan Amihai)

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Punch and Judy/Pinchas and Jamila

Avi Katz

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David Grossman

Ben Heine

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Eldrige Street shul

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Dove

Ben Heine

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Two birds

Hoda Jamal

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Israeli and Palestinian boys

from documentary, Promises

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Cat in the Hat

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Daylight through the Wall

Banksy: graffiti art on Separation Wall

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Maurice Sendak's Brundibar set

New Victory Theater (photo: Nan Melville/NYT)

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Daniel Barenboim, West-Eastern Divan Orchestra

Palestinian-Israeli musical ensemble (photo: Kerstin Joensson/AP)

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Great Day on Eldrige Street

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

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Joint Appeal for Peace

(Avi Katz)

Joint Appeal for Peace

Ketubah, Ancona, Italy (1772)

(Jewish Theological Seminary library)

Ancona ketubah

Posts Tagged ‘arab’

Annals of Israeli Judicial Racism

Wednesday, June 8th, 2011
uri shtruzman

Judge Uri Shtruzman, portrait of judge as old racist

James Joyce wrote A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man.  Tonight I’m writing a portrait of a judge as an old racist.

Some readers develop an allergic reaction when I write posts like the one I’m about to.  All I can say is if Israel’s highest professional leadership didn’t believe these things and Israeli journalists didn’t think they were worth publishing then I wouldn’t have a story to write myself.  So rather than complain that I always write about such stories, I’d suggest that Israel’s judiciary develop an ethics code that disciplines judges who so clearly disqualify themselves from sitting on the bench and deciding cases fairly.  While the judge in this case is retired you can be sure that the views expressed informed his attitudes and decisions when he was on the bench.  He is still a respected public figure who served as chief judge of the military court of appeals and as a judge for the chief of staff.  He also serves on the advisory committee of a far right wing Zionist “think tank,” the Institute for Zionist Strategies.  Another key leader of the Institute is Max Singer, co-founder of the Hudson Institute, who I’ve written about here.

A website called Patriotic Israel, which appears to be a settler-supported media outlet profiles Judge Uri Shtruzman, who wants readers of this august publication to understand “the truth” as he sees it (doesn’t it remind you of Jack Nicholson in , when he says: “The truth?  You want the truth?  You can’t HANDLE the truth!”).  I do so love it when right wing Israeli nationalists say emphatically that they want us to know “the truth” about Arabs or about the Israeli-Arab conflict.  It’s always of course the truth as THEY see it.  Which of course is their opinion, their reading of history and an amalgation of facts mixed with opinion–but definitely not the truth.

Judge Shtruzman, a Likud loyalist who, in a 2005 Haaretz article, called for IDF soldiers to refuse orders to evacuate settlements (imagine a judge in the military court system approves of behavior that in any other society would be called mutiny), inveighs in this interview against the “dangerous naivete” of some Israelis and recommends that Israel speak “the truth” to the nations of the world.  That truth means among other things rejecting the notion that it is possible to make possible with the Arab nations.  This notion is naive in the extreme, since the truth is that no peace can be made in “this generation or the next” because the Arab nation is “not ready to accept us.”  That’s because the values of Muslims lag behind those of the rest of the peoples of the world.  Apparently the good judge missed the memo about the Saudi peace initiative, now ten years old, which called for precisely what Shturzman says is impossible.  What he really means is that peace is not possible on settlers’ terms, and therefore it’s not possible at all.

Part of the reason for this Arab intransigence lies in the fact that the Arab world is mired in “the same situation that held sway in Europe hundreds of years ago” in which religious wars were the rule of the day.  Now, Europe has come to the point that it upholds the values of nationalism alongside other values [than religious fanaticism].  Today, Shturzman says:

Israel is destroying itself for the sake of European values of human rights the aspiration to democracy for all.  According to such ideas, equality for all human beings is the order of the day, including a demand that we embrace even those seeking to prey upon us, because they too have a right to life and to eat [!].

The judge finds there are essential differences between Jews and Muslims.  While Jews attempted to integrate into the societies in which they settled in the Diaspora (he seems to have missed the whole Zionism thing, which rejected precisely this notion that Jews could integrate as minorities within Diaspora lands), Muslims in the non-Muslim Diaspora seek to have their culture, laws and religion dominate [the societies in which they live].  He sees the same phenomenon occuring in the Knesset, with Muslim MKs acting in the interests of themeselves and against the interests of the State and the Jewish people.

The Muslim MKs are members of a people which seeks to destroy the State of Israel, and the idea that they seek the best for Israel because it seeks to do well by them is a dangerous notion that we must recognize as such.  If we do not, Judge Shtruzman says, our end will be like that of Yugoslavia after Tito died.  In other words, someone has to impose some order on this mess otherwise the ‘uppity niggers’ will get the notion that they’re equal to us and will destroy this country just like the Muslims did, Yugoslavia.

Does Delta Airlines Endorse Racial Profiling Against Muslims?

Saturday, May 7th, 2011
imams ejected from airplane

Masadur Rahman and Mohamed Zaghloul interviewed after being ejected from flight for their 'Arab garb' (KCNC)

Yesterday, a pilot for a Delta Airlines feeder flight in Memphis threw two Muslim clerics off his plane saying that some passengers “might” be uncomfortable with them aboard.  Their crime?  They wore “Arab garb.”  That’s the sole criteria used by this pilot to determine it was too dangerous to fly with them:

Two Muslim religious leaders say they were removed from a plane in Memphis on Friday and were told the pilot refused to fly with them aboard. One of the imams, Masudur Rahman, said they had cleared security but were asked to leave their Delta Connection flight to Charlotte, N.C. A Transportation Security Administration spokesman confirmed the incident and said it was not initiated by that agency. Delta Air Lines said the flight was operated by Atlantic Southeast Airlines, which said the inicident is being investigatd. Mr. Rahman said they were told that the pilot refused to accept them because some passengers could be uncomfortable. Mr. Rahman said that he was wearing traditional Indian clothing and that his companion, Mohamed Zaghloul of the Islamic Association of Greater Memphis, wore Arab garb.

I understand a pilot has complete discretion to decide who flies with him and doesn’t have to explain his reasons.  But an airline shouldn’t have to explain firing this dude either.  And if they don’t I think a boycott against Delta Airlines and Atlantic Southeast Airlines is in order.  Against Delta till it cancels its contract with Atlantic Southeast and against the latter for employing this Neanderthal.

If anyone can get me the e mail address for Delta’s and Atlantic Southeast’s CEOs I’d be happy to post them here. Thanks to the reader who researched info about Atlantic Southeast:

Brad Holt, President and Chief Operating Officer
Atlantic Southeast Airlines
A-Tech Center
990 Toffie Terrace
Atlanta, GA 30354-1363

Telephone: 404-856-1000
Corporate Fax: 404-856-1203

Customer Relations: 404-856-1433
Customer Relations Fax: 404-856-1403

I wish I could say this is the first instance of being guilty of flying while Arab, but alas it isn’t.

 

Israeli Rabbis Favor Right of Return…to Saudi Arabia

Tuesday, April 26th, 2011

Israel’s far-right nationalist rabbis have made a major political breakthrough in coming to recognize a Palestinian right of return.  The only problem…where they want them to return to: Saudi Arabia.  Rabbi Dov Lior, chief rabbi of the most extreme of the extremist settlers in Hebron, has come up with a tremendously creative notion to settle the Israeli-Arab conflict.  It involves two simple words: go away.   Go here, go there, go anywhere–just not Israel.  Here’s what the good rabbi told a crowd  of learned gentlemen at a recent conference:

I say we should create incentives–even financial ones, to encourage their return to the “lands of their origin.”  Today, there are many areas of Saudi Arabia and Libya and other places where they could live.  I’m not saying from a humanitarian point of view that we shouldn’t help [them].  Let’s help them [go] there.  If we leave them here and they act against the interests of the [Jewish] people and State of Israel there’ll be no [other] solution.  If this were a normal situation there would be a way to find a solution [short of expulsion].  But the reality is that this problem is so deeply rooted and so difficult that it has no solution [besides expulsion].

To show his true humanitarian credentials, Rabbi Lior even said the Bedouin should be treated far better than those who were expelled from Gush Katif, because the Bedouin should be aided financially to facilitate their transfer.  The good rabbi seems to forget that hundreds of thousands of shekels have been expended both by the government and private charities (among them one supported by the sister of The Limited founder, Susan Wexner) to help these settlers find new homes.

rabbi dov lior

Rabbi Lior believes in Palestinian Right of Return

Lior continued in this report by Arutz Sheva:

“There is a struggle against our return to our homeland.  The Arab population opposes the creation of the State of Israel.  They oppose the existence of the Jewish people.  Which is why I don’t see any solution that can satisfy them.  There is a solution that can satisfy them.”  According to the Rabbi, return of territory and concessions will not solve the problem.  ”The subject of  control of land is part of the broader struggle of the Arabs against the Jewish people, the State of Israel–and therefore in my humble opinion there isn’t a solution to the conflict [without expulsion].  They say ‘Israeli-Arab conflict.’ For us there is no conflict with them.   They create the conflict with us.”

You have to admit that the saintly one has a point.  If his devoted followers in Hebron disfigure Palestinians by pouring acid in their faces, rain feces down upon them, and provoke their 8 year olds to smash Palestinian grandmothers heads’ open–how can anyone believe Jews have any conflict with Palestinians?  What a silly notion.  You’d have to be churlish to think otherwise.

The above quotation gives you a measure of the depth of delusion of the settlers and their “spiritual leaders.”  It gives you a sense of the amount of denial that contributes to their world view.  Simply, unbelievable shocking.

Let’s keep in mind that this is the same learned fellow who suggested that Jews not use goyische sperm to conceive because the goyim are depraved and it would create depraved Jewish babies.

An Israeli Palestinian MK responded to the cash for transfer offer with one of his own to Rabbi Lior:

“We are happy to pay for a one-way ticket for him to leave Israel.”

The conference at which he spoke was organized by the far-right Komemiyut organization and addressed the growing ‘menace’ of Israeli Palestinians intermingling with Jews in mixed communities.  The Israel Lands Administration, which is the battering ram destroying indigenous Bedouin communities through its confiscatory land policies, was an honored participant in the event.  Shockingly, the organizers invited Arab and Druze speakers and they didn’t show up for some inexplicable reason (according to the sponsors).

Another participant in the conference, the saintly Shmuel Eliyahu, chief rabbi of Tzfat, had this to say about the Arab usurpers:

Would [you] trust the Arabs whose national identity is Palestinian, who identify completely with Hamas and Hezbollah?” The rabbi added that “they [Arabs] want the whole world to convert to Islam,” and warned that the violence breaking out in the Arab world should be a warning sign about “these cultural standards which we can’t allow to enter Israeli society.”

True to its liberal values, the Jerusalem Post has given this story the exposure it surely ‘deserves.’  Should we expect any less of the settlers’ English language mouthpiece?

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Eden Abergil: ‘I’m B-A-C-K’

Friday, March 18th, 2011

eden abergil death to arabs

Eden Abergil's homicidal Facebook rants: 'Fuck you, stinking Arabs'

Just like a bad penny or Arnold Schwarzenegger’s Terminator, Eden Abergil is back to wreak havoc once more. Several months ago she found notoriety by proudly uploading to her Facebook account pictures of her simpering as an IDF soldier next to blindfolded Palestinian prisoners. She clearly was primping for the cameras and using the prisoners as her own personal props over which she could lord herself and gloat.

She mortally embarrassed the IDF for about 5 nanoseconds and was made to issue a faux-sincere apology:

I apologize if anyone was hurt [by what I did].   I actually took pains to look after prisoners.

Now she’s back, but in much bloodier form. Once again, she’s using Facebook, and once again she’s uploaded the formerly embarrassing pictures of abused Palestinian prisoners.  But now she’s expressing downright homicidal views.  Ido Kenan reports (Hebrew) that she come out swinging against not only the killers of the Fogel family of Itamar, but all Arabs.  In the first posting she writes:

DDDEATHHH to ARABSSSSSS

In the second, she writes:

Fuck you, stinking Arabs!!!

In the third she writes:

C’MON LET’S MAKE AN ARAB SHOAH NOWWWWW!!!!!!!!

One of his Facebook Friends jokingly warned her that the new images might end up on TV.  To which she replied:

Death to Arabs.  Let ‘em!

This is the true face of Israeli youth.  At least a large slice who harbor barely concealed homicidal rage against all Palestinians that needs only the spark of a terror act to rear its ugly head.  No recognition, of course, on the part of Ms. Abergil that her own actions as an IDF soldier in abusing prisoners under her “care” did their share to fuel fires of hatred.

It shouldn’t be any wonder that one of the “lucky” Palestinians to have himself degraded before the world in these pictures, was sentenced this week to 7 1/2 years in prison for allegedly arranging for the preparation of suicide vests.  It didn’t assist the convicted man that he claimed he’s actually persuaded a would-be suicide bomber not to carry out an act of terror.  Such claims are automatically discounted in the face of Shabak “evidence.”

H/t to Dena Shunra.

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.

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.

America’s Multiracial Baby Boom, Coming to Israel…Ever?

Monday, January 31st, 2011

The NY Times reported this week on a rising demographic phenomenon in American life: multiracialism.  One in seven new marriages in the U.S. in 2009 involved members of different races.  Multiracial Americans are one the fastest growing groups:

Many young adults of mixed backgrounds are rejecting the color lines that have defined Americans for generations in favor of a much more fluid sense of identity…

They are also using the strength in their growing numbers to affirm roots that were once portrayed as tragic or pitiable.

“I think it’s really important to acknowledge who you are and everything that makes you that,” said [Laura] Wood.

…Optimists say the blending of the races is a step toward transcending race, to a place where America is free of bigotry, prejudice and programs like affirmative action.

Warren Olney’s To the Point covered this story today.  A pollster noted that 80-90% of Americans under the age of 30 would have no problem with a close family member marrying someone of another race.  Among those 65 or older the level of acceptance was 30%.

bad faith interracial film

'Bad Faith' film poster: 'She's Jewish, he's Arab. They're expecting...'

This reminded me of a shattering annual survey of Israeli attitudes toward democracy.  46% of Israelis said they would not want to live next door to an Israeli Palestinian.  The numbers were only slightly better when you substituted “gay,” “mentally ill,” or “foreign worker.”  You can imagine what the number would’ve been had the question asked about a child marrying an “Arab.”

In this country, imperfect as race relations may be, you can see things are generally moving in a positive direction.  In Israel, not so much.  I don’t recall poll results broken down by age, nor do I recall a specific question about multi-ethnic or biracial couples, but I’d be willing to bet that there is only marginally more acceptance among young Israelis than old of this phenomenon.

And let’s not forget the learned rabbis shreying about assimilation when Arab men steal ‘our women’ and take them back to the village where they’ll be victimized, assaulted, and brainwashed in the ways of Islam.  Not to mention all the “Ahmed ben Sarah” babies they’ll be producing.

While I am proud of my Jewish identity, you have to face the fact that if you want Israel truly to thrive there must be lots more Ahmed ben Sarahs.  One of the best ways for Israeli Jews to understand their fellow Palestinian citizens is for their children to marry each other.  But think about what such couples face in contemporary Israel.  Something like the ostracism and outrage that greeted mixed race couples in America in the 1960s.

And let’s face the issue of bi-racialism.  Will it harm Jewish or Palestinian identity?  Why should it?  Not to mention: don’t we want an “Israeli identity” to emerge just as much or more than a purely Jewish or Palestinian one?  It is a fatal error to conflate “Israel” with “Jewish.”  It is and must be both.

If this troubles you overly or you’re geshreying about the end of the Jewish race, then you must face the fact that Palestinians can have little place in your vision of Israel.  Might as well send them away (transfer) as Abraham did Hagar and Ishmael.

Israel and its supporters in the Diaspora must learn to walk the democratic walk and talk the democratic talk.  Otherwise, it’s just window dressing.

Kahanist Orthodox Right Seeks to Make Israeli Commerce Arabrein

Wednesday, January 26th, 2011

lehava kashrut certificate

Lehava's 'Kashrut' certificate: making racism kosher

In Germany, Nazis were proud to empty important segments of society of Jews and make them Judenrein.  Ridding the nation of the noxious influence of Judaism became an idée fixe, an obsession and ideological underpinning of the fascist movement.  I’ve noted here in the past, most recently with the rabbinic editorial calling for death camps to be established for Palestinian Amalekites, how a similar obsession has crept into the consciousness of the radical right Israeli Haredi community.  This is nothing less than a campaign for the same type of racial purification embraced by Nazi Germany.

Reader Cicero forwarded me an extraordinary story in Walla which documents a Jerusalem conference convened by a new rightist group, Lehava (“Flame”) to rid Israeli commerce of the presence of Arabs.  They even created a Kashrut certificate, comparable to ones indicating a restaurant or food product have been produced under Rabbinic supervision.  The certificate is astounding.  The text reads:

Lehava: for the Prevention of Assimilation in the Holy Land

This is to certify that the owner of this business employs only Jews, and not the enemy.

He is faithful to the verse: “Your brother shall live with and among you,” and a partner in the war against assimilation in the land of Israel.

Hebrew Labor [a reference to early Zionist efforts to teach Jewish pioneers manual trades and professions they could never learn in Europe]

One of the conference conveners were quoted as saying:

The majority of instances of young Jewish girls wedding Arabs occurs because they (Arabs) are employed by Jewish businesses…We must force employers to fire the many “enemies” (Arabs) who endanger our daughters.

The initiative is part of a campaign among Israeli markets against employment of Arab workers.  Organizers plan to demand that major retailers honor such a boycott in order to retain their Orthodox customers.  Another slogan offered by organizers is:

Ahmed ben [son of ] Sara: we are obligated to prevent this!

german town judenrein

A German city declares itself Judenrein

From the great geshrei going up from the radical Rabbinical right you’d think miscegenation was an existential plague threatening the very existence of the State, religion and race.  Frankly, I’ve read or heard no figures which indicate that this is a prevalent phenomenon or anything that concerns any Israeli academic specialists, demographers, or any serious observers.  It seems akin to Republican wedge issues like abortion and gay marriage designed to whip the faithful into a frenzy and so retain their loyalty.

This general effort coincides with, and reinforces another major far-right Rabbinic initiative seeking to prohibit religious Jews from renting apartments to Arabs in Israel.  Taken together all of these initiatives recall nothing less than Nazi era racialism rearing its ugly head inside Israel.  Some have gone back to the Nuremberg Race Laws to find eerie echoes in the new Rabbinic promulgations.

One can argue that Israel is a nation composed of secular Jews who want nothing to do with this meshugas.  And that is true.  But the plain fact is that such racist attitudes are a reflection of the views a majority of Israeli Jews and not just the extremists among them.  I wrote here about a national poll that documented the astonishingly racist attitudes among all sectors in Israel, not just the Orthodox.  So in a sense one can argue that the Kahanist Haredim are the “early adopters” of these poisonous views.  But the rest of Israel is not far behind them.

The fact is that Israel’s Orthodox rabbis are political animals.  They know how far they can go before breaking societal taboos against racism and genocidal incitement.  They would not advance these ideas and insist that Orthodox Jews obey them were they not sure that the rest of Israel sympathizes with them to a greater or lesser degree.  The State of Israel could easily quash this nonsense if it had the will or interest in doing so.  These rabbis are wards (er, employees) of the State receiving stipends and salaries for the work they do.  Fire a few of their asses and you’ll see how quickly all this simmers down.  But the current government (and no government I could currently envision) would dare do that.  First, the ministers themselves by and large agree with such views.  And they know that a good share of their voting constituency does too.  So what’s in it for them?  Nothing.

There will be those Jew haters out there who will say to this: “You see, we told you so.  This is what the Jews are.”  To that I say most emphatically, No. This is not what all Jews are. This is what a very small minority of Jews in the world are.  These odious notions derive from an Israel which has enslaved itself to Occupation and hatred of the Palestinians living among them and next door.  This is a boil that must be lanced and the toxins drained off.  This is not a terminal condition for all of Judaism or even all of Israel (though this may be in doubt).  So let’s not make the mistake of joining with the Institute for Historical Review and David Duke in celebrating such sad developments.  For they bring no joy to me and should bring no joy to anyone.

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