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

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David Grossman

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Joint Appeal for Peace

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Ketubah, Ancona, Italy (1772)

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Ancona ketubah

Posts Tagged ‘arutz-sheva’

Israeli Settler MK to Huckabee: ‘We’re Connected to This Land No Less Than Your Indians’

Sunday, February 6th, 2011
mike huckabee at irving moskowitz yeshiva

Mike Huckabee addressing Irving Moskowitz's yeshiva in Arab-rein East Jerusalem (Gali Tibbon Getty/AFP)

Mike Huckabee and Israel’s radical settler movement are almost always fodder for a good laugh.  I thank Ofer Neiman for providing one in the form of an Arutz Sheva article, in which settler MK Nissim Zeev brags about his friendship with Mike Huckabee, who he brought to Israel and hosted last week.  Among the other things Huckabee did was tour and nod approvingly at the Judaization project in East Jerusalem’s Palestinian neighborhoods.

In this photo, he’s pictured addressing a settler yeshiva established with the lucre of Miami-based bingo magnate Irving Moskowitz.  Moskowitz is the very one who stole the Palestinian Shepherd Hotel and partially demolished it last week so he can move in some settler families.  I guess no one told Huckabee that this project flies directly in the face of current U.S. policy as does supporting settler thugs guilty of promoting violence and hooliganism against Palestinians and Jews alike.

But I reserve the biggest laugh for Zeev’s recounting of his discussions with his pal, Mike, who the reporter erroneously credits with being a U.S. senator:

I got together with him to pursue two issues: [international] recognition of Jewish refugees from Arab lands and recognition by the UN of Israel with the status of “indigenous.”  It’s unacceptable that after 2,000 years of exile, we are still characterized as “occupiers.”  Since 2007, there are peoples recognized by the UN as indigenous.  The U.S. also recognizes Indians as indigenous and if it won’t return to them their ancestral lands it will offer reparations.  We too require similar recognition.  Our connection to the land appears in the Bible and we are connected to this land no less than the Indians.

In fact, I’d suggest as a terrific photo-op that Mike bring together a settler chief and an Indian chief and they can both compare war stories.  Maybe the settlers can set up shop on a few reservations and teach tribal leaders who to expand their “settlements” by annexing land belonging to white folk, and force the U.S. government to recognize their land thefts.  I’m sure that’ll go over big in Washington.

Ya gotta hand it to Zeev though, he’s a real joker:

MK Zeev noted that Israel has many friends in the UN and Congress who have only to be asked to make the changes he’s proposing.  I visited Congress, where we have many friends, and many told me it was unfortunate that Israel didn’t make this demand [of Congress].

Zeev said that Huckabee promised to do everything in his power to bring this proposal before the UN…

Go ahead, Mike.  What’s stopping you?  You’re a U.S. senator, aren’t you?  Bring forward a ‘sense of the senate’ resolution recognizing Israeli Jews as indigenous.  Maybe one of the long-lost Indian tribes?  And while you’re at it let’s get Congress to allocate a few billions in reparation for Jews who suffered an “Arab Holocaust” and were expelled from their native lands.  A Jewish Nakba.  Of our very own.  Why should only Arabs get to have one?  Just doesn’t seem fair.  If they get to suffer, why not us as well?

Mike’s not above a little mirth as well.  Among the pithy statements he made while in the Holy Land preparing for Armageddon were that he believed in a Palestinian state, just not in Israel.  Which at first glance might appear to be a conventional endorsement of the two state solution…until you realize that Huckabee embraces the settler narrative that all of Greater Israel including Palestine is Israel.  So he’s in effect telling Palestinians and his own U.S. government to move Palestine somewhere like, say Uganda.  Where have we heard that one before?

Settlers Campaign Against Size Doesn’t Matter Video

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010

It looks like there’s a definite split in the pro-Israel community about the Size Doesn’t Matter soft-core video promoting Israeli student tourism.  I wondered why Vimeo, which originally hosted it took it down for “explicit sexual content.”  I blamed the company’s editors for being prudish.  Little did I know it was radical Orthodox settlers who objected to it.  A reader points me to this report in Arutz Sheva bragging erroneously that it got the video pulled:

The Foreign Ministry has taken down a video promotion for Israel that used sexual innuendo after Arutz-7 exposed the campaign on Tuesday. The film was sponsored by the Canadian Council for Israel and Jewish Advocacy (CIJA).The video shows a young couple in bed and uses sexual terms in comparison with Israel. The exposé noted that the video was vulgar and could also be used by anti-Semites in their campaign to discredit Jews and Israel.

Foreign Ministry spokesman Yossi Levi told Israel National News that the government workers involved in the promo are located in Toronto. “The idea did not come from Jerusalem,” he said.

This story completely contradicts this claim from another MFA spokesperson and the student who claims ownership of the tourism promotion that the MFA had nothing to do with it:

Maya Kadosh, spokesperson at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Jerusalem…said that a conversation with the Israeli consulate in Toronto “indicated that the Consulate had no part in the movie, did not initiate it and did not participate in its planning or its distribution.”

Make up your minds guys. Did you or didn’t you? Is it possible that two different Israeli consular officials could’ve given diametrically opposite statements to the same question? It makes you wonder whether the confusion is based on a lie or simple incompetence. Either way, it isn’t terribly impressive.

Just as important, Arutz 7′s report is simply wrong. The website is up. The video is up. The only way I can justify their claim is that perhaps the MFA was making this available on its own website and it no longer is. But I’d guess it’s simply another lie or bit of incompetence from MFA officials in Israel who haven’t even bothered to check whether what they claim is true. What a way to run a country, eh?

I want to make crystal clear to anyone reading this that my criticism is not of all Israelis nor of the country, Israel.  It is of the twisted policies and world view of the current Israeli government (and any government that would pursued similar policies perpetuating Occupation).  That is why I am so disdainful of the kind of hasbara represented here.  It papers over problems and attempts to hide reality rather than expose it.

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Rabbis for Peace Urge ‘Going Biblical’ to Solve Israeli-Palestinian Conflict

Monday, January 4th, 2010

Rabbis for Peace urge U.S. ambassador to 'go Biblical' on Palestinians (Arutz Sheva)

Thanks to reader Gene Schulman for this unintentionally hilarious story from settler news, Arutz Sheva:

A delegation of the Rabbinical Congress for Peace (RCP) met with U.S. Ambassador to Israel, Mr. James Cunningham, today and called for a reassessment of the entire U.S. policy vis-à-vis the Israelis and Palestinians. The rabbis told Ambassador Cunningham that it was time to try the Biblical approach to the dispute over the Land of Israel.”The past 17 years have proven without a shadow of a doubt that every square inch ceded by Israel to the Palestinians was transformed into a platform of hatred and terrorism,” RCP Director Rabbi Avrohom Shmuel Lewin told the ambassador. “In other words, the ‘land for peace’ formula in the Israel-Palestinian context, besides being a formula that goes against the Divine will, is ineffective, obsolete, and an exercise in futility. Most of all it is a dangerous policy that only leads to bloodshed and instability in the region and harms vital American interests in the region as well,” Lewin said.

What in God’s name (literally) was the U.S. ambassador doing meeting with these Neanderthals?  My heart half went out to him for the suffering he must’ve undergone merely spending 20 minutes in a room with them.

Apparently these Jewish gentlemen must’ve thought that Ambassador Cunningham paid especially close attention to Israeli halachic discourse, which is what explains this oddity:

Rabbi Joseph Gerlitzky, Chairman of the RCP…presented the ambassador with the Halachic (Jewish legal) ruling signed by over 350 prominent rabbis in Israel that it is forbidden to give up even one inch of territory controlled by Israel today because it will bring bloodshed and instability to the region.

I’ll bet Cunningham turned right around and messengered that precious document to the White House where it will be scrutinized for any messages from the Divine which may be augured therefrom. Really, who do these bozos think they are? Because 350 racist Orthodox rabbis can be found who are willing to spill the last drop of Jewish blood to defend the indefensible–that means that America’s president has to hop to it and do God’s will or…what? Fry?

After you read this passage, I’m sure you’ll be convinced too that the U.S. diplomat was as moved as the report indicates:

The ambassador was visibly moved by Rabbi Sholom Gold…who described the suffering that the Jewish People have endured ever since the implementation of the Oslo Accords…”It’s all a play of words, there is no peace process,” he said. “From the day that we started conceding and withdrawing we did not have one day of rest and peace. Why should our enemies want to make peace with us when they see that with terrorism they get what they want? Even the U.S., Israel’s supposedly best friend, sides with them in demanding a freeze and evacuation of settlements. Is the triumph of Arab terror one of American interests?” Gold asked.

“Why, yes certainly,” the ambassador must’ve replied. “We’re in cahoots with those A-rabs against ya.  Didn’t you know that?”

Poor Jim Cunningham.  Read this and imagine what it must’ve been like for him to have to sit through this utter misery.  And while I’m not a policy analyst, if I were Barack Obama I’d be signing Rabbi Gerlitzky up for a senior staff position in Washington:

Ambassador Cunningham told the rabbis that he does not see how the problem can be solved “without taking into consideration the Palestinians,” to which Rabbi Gold remarked: “Ever since we started taking the Palestinians into consideration the situation only worsened.”

The ambassador asked the rabbis, “So what is your solution to the problem?”

Rabbi Gerlitzky replied: “You must switch the entire approach to the situation. We all believe in the Holy Bible and up until now we tried every formula except for that which is delineated in the Bible. Let’s try it and who knows, Mr. Ambassador, maybe this is your defining moment, that G-d Almighty has placed you in this capacity in order to precipitate a new course which will bring a true peace to the entire region.”

What Biblical formula can he be referring to? Possibly God and the Jewish people wiping out Amalek? That would constitute a Biblical formula for dealing with the problem, wouldn’t it? And I’ll bet I’m not far off.

Ben Gurion University President Calls for Professor Supporting Israel Boycott to Quit

Sunday, August 23rd, 2009

The only democracy in the Middle East™ seems to honor its democratic values only in the breach.  So much for academic freedom and freedom of speech Israel-style, when it comes to the case of Prof. Neve Gordon of Ben Gurion University.  He wrote an opinion piece in the L.A. Times this week, Boycott Israel, which announced his support for the Boycott Divestment and Sanctions movement.  While it hasn’t stirred any revolutionary fervor on the left, Gordon has struck a nerve on the Israeli right and among its fellow travelers here in the U.S.

CAMERA, the pro-Israel advocacy group, has called for the professor (“a veteran defamer of Israel”) to be put in the stocks and flogged (not literally).  The Israeli consul in Los Angeles has slyly encouraged a fundraising boycott against Ben Gurion among U.S. Jewish donors.  Arutz Sheva (“All Settlers All the Time”) notes that MKs “across the political spectrum” (translation: from the right to the extreme right) have called for Gordon’s head on a platter.

All this has apparently made BGU’s president quake in her boots.  University presidents are notoriously squishy when it comes to maintaining any strong sense of principle in the face of public attack.  Rivka Carmi is no exception.  Realizing she can’t fire Gordon, who has tenure (and chairs his academic department), she does the next best thing by inviting the ungrateful bastard to do a Pappe-Reinhardt (they were two Israeli professor-peace activists so ostracized within their universities that they were forced to secure teaching positions in England and New York respectively).  If you don’t like it here, get the hell out, she declares.  Then BGU would be well rid of the snake in the grass nipping at its heels.

Carmi shows remarkably little understanding of the meaning of the term “academic freedom” when she lets loose this quip:

BGU President Prof. Rivka Carmi called Gordon’s views “destructive” and an “abuse [of] the freedom of speech prevailing in Israel and at BGU.

“We are shocked and outraged by [Gordon's] remarks, which are both irresponsible and morally reprehensible…

Since when is a professor publishing a legitimate point of view on a subject that falls within his academic specialty an “abuse” of free speech?  I would think she would recognize that this is precisely the epitome of it.  I also fail to see how supporting the boycott can be “morally reprehensible.”  She is again confusing a legitimate (albeit controversial) political-academic argument with morality.  This is a failing of reason on her part.  When one of her faculty publishes a political text with which she agrees and brings acclaim to BGU, then it is morally wholesome.  But when Gordon publishes a view Israeli politicians detest, then it becomes immoral, when in truth it has nothing whatsoever to do with morality.

I also found oddly counter-productive, the spin of BGU’s PR flack, who seemed to exaggerate the extent of the fundraising boycott against the University:

…The backlash to Gordon’s article…had…turned into a campaign for donors to pull funding from the university and was “snowballing…”

First, there is no indication whatsoever, except in a vague statement by Israel’s consul in L.A., that anyone was contemplating withholding funds from BGU.  Second, my impression always was that public spokespeople were supposed to put an institution’s best foot forward no matter what.  This statement would appear to violate Rule #1 of flackery.

Like her boss, BGU’s spokesperson has a faulty concept of freedom of speech:

“We’re proud to have a full range of political views at the university, and I want to live in a country that protects freedom of speech, but Gordon’s remarks are beyond the pale.

Isn’t the whole point of freedom of speech that there is no such thing as “beyond the pale” unless you’re advocating killing someone or some other serious crime?  And why is advocating a targeted boycott “beyond the pale?”  Who decreed that such a view was outside the norm of polite public discourse in Israel or the world?

The Jerusalem Post article closes with this passage which is meant to criticize Gordon, but fails to hit the mark:

Multiple attempts were made to reach Gordon on Sunday, but calls by the Post were not answered and messages were not returned.

Gee, I wonder why Neve might not be interested in talking to one of Israel’s nastiest and most right-wing scandal sheets?  Could it be he was concerned they might manipulate or distort his remarks?

The Post’s editorial on the subject (yes, an Israeli newspaper devoted an entire editorial to a single op-ed published in a U.S. newspaper) is all over the map.  It calls on BGU donors not to boycott the school.  But rather urges a different response:

The most apt response would be for contributors to endow a chair in Zionist studies in Gordon’s department, and for the university to fill it with a Zionist scholar of world renown.

The placement of the adjective “Zionist” is quite instructive: not a “scholar of Zionism” but a “Zionist scholar.”  Indeed, I would say there cannot be such a thing as a Zionist scholar for this is a violation of the detachment necessary for academic studies.  Certainly there can and should be scholars of Zionism.  But someone who is a Zionist scholar has already betrayed fundamental principles.  Must someone teaching Chinese studies be Chinese?  Must someone teaching Jewish studies be Jewish?  Of course not.  In fact, any school which set out such a rule would be blasted for it.  So the Post’s calling for the appointment of a scholar who is a confirmed Zionist should make BGU into a pariah.  But given the politicization of Israeli academia it will pass unremarked by all but bleeding hearts like Gordon, a few of his academic colleagues, and this writer.

Why Did Jewish Terrorists Target Zeev Sternhell?

Friday, September 26th, 2008

Neve Gordon sent me an e-mail earlier today regarding incitement that might have inspired the would-be assassins of Prof. Zeev Sternhell.  The question I have is why, when and how did the settler extremist movement target him?

Clearly, Sternhell’s receipt of the 2008 Israel Prize in political science sent them over the edge and this was the immediate precursor that motivated the pipe bomb attack.  But why?

I found an article on the pro-settler Arutz Sheva site by Gil Ronen, Israel Prize to go to Pro-Terror, Pro-Civil War Prof.. Among the professor’s “crimes” are two statements from his past that are singled out for special opprobrium. In 1988, he wrote in the former Labor Party organ, Davar:

In the end we will have to use force against the settlers in Ofra or Elon Moreh. Only he who is willing to storm Ofra with tanks will be able to block the fascist danger threatening to drown Israeli democracy.

There are many Israelis and others like me who would consider that statement prescient considering what happened during the Gaza withdrawal.  Indeed, the police did use force to remove settlers.  The only thing they didn’t use was tanks.  That is because thankfully the settlers chose not to use weapons to defend themselves.  One could justifiably ask what might happen if an Israeli government DOES attempt to withdraw from West Bank settlements.  Would they use weapons to resist?  If so, then we might yet see real violence (though hopefully it will never get bad enough to require tanks).

Amidst a statement that was critical of Palestinian militant attacks on Israeli civilians within the Green Line, Sternhell wrote in Haaretz in 2001:

Many Israelis, possibly the majority of voters, do not doubt the legitimacy of the armed resistance in the territories proper. If the Palestinians had a little sense, they would have concentrated their struggle against the settlements and would not hurt women and children, fire rockets on Gilo, Nachal Oz and Sderot, or plant explosives on the Western side of the Green Line. In this manner, the Palestinians would themselves draft the solution that will be reached in any case.

Settlers view such rhetoric as incitement on Sternhell’s part against them.  But if you examine the bare bones of his argument, Sternhell is merely granting to Palestinians tactics that Jewish nationalists assumed in their effort to end the British Mandate and create an independent state.  Pre-state Zionists engaged in armed resistance to advance their goals.  And rightist groups did not even confine their acts to civilian targets.

I think the main point of contention between Sternhell and the settler extremists is that the latter view themselves as an integral part of Israel proper.  As such an Israeli settler or an IDF officer serving in the Territories is no different than an Israeli civilian within the Green Line.  Sternhell argues that the Occupation is a cancer on the body politic and the single largest obstacle to peace with the Palestinians.  As such attacks on targets in the Territories should be considered legitimate acts of resistance.

Finally, the reason Sternhell is a bete noire of the settler movement is that he is one of its harshest, most passionate and most incisive domestic critics.  You have only to read his most recent Haaretz article, Zionism’s dying between Hebron and Yitzhar, to understand what an intellectual threat this man poses to the settler enterprise. In addition, Sternhell does not criticize them as an anti-Zionist outsider.  Rather, he criticizes them from within the Zionist movement, which has to drive the rightists crazy.  Similarly, I often think that the severity of some of my pro-Israel opponents derives from my refusal to allow myself to be characterized as an enemy of Israel.

Because of the Hebrew University professor’s mastery of the literature and practice of fascism the world over, he successfully relates Israel’s settler enterprise to this broader context.  In short, Sternhell seems to know them better than they know themselves.  In certain pathological circles, it might be considered self-evident that you’d want to eliminate such a troublesome enemy.

At any rate, if we want to look for the intellectual author of the assassination attempt against Zeev Sternhell we have to look no farther than right wing media outlets like Arutz Sheva or a site like Steven Plaut’s IsraCampus, which published Sternhell and the Debasement of the Israel Prize.  From the titles alone, you can project the level of vitriol that could inspire a twisted mind to take actions like what happened yesterday.

Similarly, this is the type of moral debasement that characterizes the leadership of the extremist settler movement regarding this attack:

Itamar Ben-Gvir, an activist with a fringe settler group calling itself the National Jewish Front, said Sternhell was an irrelevant figure and that he did not believe settlers were behind the attack. “I don’t denounce this incident…” Ben-Gvir said.

Why is Shin Bet Afraid of Rabbi Menachem Froman?

Thursday, July 6th, 2006
rabbi menachem fromanWhy is the Shin Bet Afraid of this man? (photo: Rikard Larma/AP)

Menachem Froman is an extraordinary person. He is an Orthodox rabbi who lives in the West Bank settlement of Tekoa. He was a co-founder of the right-wing Gush Emunim movement, yet broke with it after Baruch Goldstein’s rampage massacre. Despite this past history, he has very close relationships with Hamas. In fact, he negotiated for the release of Sheik Ahmed Yassin (later assassinated by Israel) from an Israeli prison, later becoming fast friends with him. He’s met with Mahmoud al-Zahar and the group’s leaders seem to like and genuinely trust him. He is a key figure in Jerusalem Peacemakers whose goal is to create an interdenominational dialogue involving spiritual dimensions of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

All of these qualities make Froman a very dangerous guy to Israeli intelligence. Here’s how Arthur Neslen described what happened to Froman’s promising initiative by which Israeli peace activists and Hamas leaders would have jointly called for the immediate release of kidnapped IDF soldier Gilad Shalit:

The day before the tanks rolled into Gaza, Froman had been due to launch an extraordinary peace initiative at a news conference in Jerusalem with Muhamed Abu Tir, the Hamas MP, Khaled Abu Arafa, the Palestinian minister for Jerusalem, and three Israeli rabbis.

The panel was to have made a collective call for the release of Corporal Gilad Shalit, the beginning of a process to release all Palestinian prisoners, and the immediate start of negotiations with Hamas on the framework for a peace deal based on 1967 borders.

They would also have announced that Jewish and Muslim religious leaders could achieve peace where Israel’s politicians had failed.

But the response from Israel’s security establishment was crushing.

Hours before the meeting was due to start, the Shin Bet detained Abu Tir and Abu Arafa and warned them not to attend the meeting. The news conference’s organisers were forced to contact the other rabbis — who were already on the road to Jerusalem — and tell them not to come.

Instead of a triumphant statement of mutual respect and dialogue, a subdued and gently defiant three-man panel fended off aggressive questioning from an unruly Israeli press pack.

Nelsen continues by pointing out that Froman’s efforts at finding common ground with Hamas is truly threatening to the Israeli government because it would put pressure on it to negotiate in good faith and make real concessions in order to achieve peace:

Two days after the news conference, Abu Tir and Abu Arafa were kidnapped by Israeli forces, along with a third of the Hamas cabinet. Four days later, Israel revoked both men’s citizenship and residency rights in Jerusalem. As the Jerusalem Post headline put it: Shin Bet foils Hamas-Jewish meeting.

An even more accurate headline might have been the one Israel National Radio’s Arutz Sheva website ran a few days later, pertaining to another story: The peace process is a bigger danger than Hamas.

In this opinion piece, Ted Belman said that “the threat of rockets raining down on Israel from Gaza isn’t nearly the threat that the peace process was and is” because peace talks would require Israeli concessions.

To give some perspective, Belman, one of the powers behind right-wing pro-Israel blog Israpundit actually finds the Qassam rockets fired into Israel useful in some warped way since it means (according to him) that there will be less pressure on Israel to negotiate with the Palestinians.

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