Muslim and Jewish Women in Nazareth

'We can live in peace'...John Lennon (photo: Dafna Tal)

Mahzor

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

Posts Tagged ‘david-saperstein’

Saperstein Attempts to Dampen Dovish Jewish Lobbying Effort to Counter Aipac

Sunday, October 15th, 2006

JTA and Shmuel Rosner of Haaretz have been reporting about a nascent Jewish effort to organize a dovish lobbying counterpart to Aipac. Each of them got key parts of the story wrong. I’m not sure whether their errors are due to their own prejudices against the effort or misinformation provided to them by their sources.

I have a confidential source who attended the initial meeting and provides some interesting background about the politics and other bickering that accompanied this worthy effort. My source tells me that the JTA report’s inference that George Soros has already committed to the effort (Soros to support dovish Jews seeking an alternative to AIPAC?) is premature. The fact that Mort Halperin, Soros’ chief aide attended the meeting implies great interest, but nothing more than that.

Most of the individuals and groups represented at the meeting are “very strong” on the notion that they must confront Aipac in some way as part of their effort. But David Saperstein, representing the Reform movement at the meeting, is absolutely petrified at this notion and will do everything possible to stop it. My source colorfully notes that he’s about as willing to criticize Aipac as Ahmedimejad would the Prophet. This person says about Saperstein:

He will do everything he can to weaken this effort. His liberalism ends where Israel is concerned, always has.

I believe that either Saperstein or someone representing his views has fed information to Kampeas and Rosner, some of it wrong. Contrary to what the former reports:

There were a number of representatives at that meeting who have directly challenged what they believe is AIPAC’s hawkishness. Others at the meeting said confronting AIPAC would be counterproductive.

Subsequently, those participants who favored a more direct confrontation with AIPAC dropped away, though it was unclear whether they were disinvited or simply chose not to continue participating.

No groups have fallen away from the effort; and certainly not groups who were in favor of confronting Aipac. I believe that Saperstein or whoever the source is is trying to trumpet their efforts to moderate the anti-Aipac tone of the participants. And if Rosner is right that David Elcott of Israel Policy Forum has written to Aipac’s Howard Kohr to reassure him that the group is no threat to the latter group, then one of the former’s motivations must be to mollify the Sapersteins of the Jewish world. The ones who swear an oath to liberalism every day, but leave those principles at the door when it comes to Israel.

What is welcome news is that my source doesn’t feel that Saperstein has “veto power” over the group’s agenda or existence. The key as far as that’s concerned is probably Soros. Is he in or is he out? My source says he hasn’t yet weighed in which would prove Rosner’s take on the matter correct.

And finally, the source says that after attending the meeting he doesn’t have high hopes for the project. Which is all the pity. What the American Jewish community and U.S. Mideast policy need more than almost anything else is a counterweight to Aipac’s noxious uber-Israel propaganda. So many similar efforts in the past which started out as exciting visions in the minds of their organizers ended up fizzling after a week or month or year. It would be a shame if this was yet another example of fizzle. The disaster that is currently afflicting that corner of the Mideast is so potentially catastrophic that someone of Soros’ stature and capacity must weigh in. Soros is a man of principle who cares about whether the world goes up in flames. There is no more likely powder keg to set off such a conflagration than our little part of the Mideast.

So if Soros, Halperin or anyone from the Open Society Institute reads this, here is one peace activist who’s been dedicated to this issue for 40 years. Please do what you can to help. Israel and its Arab neighbors will eventually be grateful. And if you’re a Reform Jew, you might want to write to your national Reform leadership and tell them to get on the peace bandwagon instead of trying to weigh it down with objections.

There is one clear hindrance to Soros’ engagement. He surely sees how reviled other prominent academic and political figures are by the ultra-Israel crowd. He reads about Tony Judt’s disinvitation to speak at the Polish consulate. He reads about Juan Cole’s disinvitation to teach at Yale. He knows that Walt and Mearsheimer have essentially given up on the possibility of academic advancement within their fields due to their controversial essay. While I am certain Soros has thick enough skin to take such abuse (as he’s experienced it many times before both in business and his political efforts), who in their right mind would want to face the level of abuse that the pro-Israel warriors will mount against him. It’s not something he would relish, but it will happen nonetheless.

For anyone who threatens Aipac’s hegemony will be treated harshly not just by Aipac, but by other pro-Israel groups like the ADL, American Jewish Committee and Conference of Presidents. They’ll dig up dirt on him. They’ll ask how he survived the Holocaust while his fellow Hungarian Jews perished. They’ll impugn his Jewishness. They’ll call him anti-Israel and anti-Zionist (that’s already happened). They’ll question his patriotism. It won’t be pretty.

Getting Your Child Into Kindergarten: the Anxieties of Parenthood

Thursday, March 30th, 2006

People who don’t have children will roll their eyeballs at this post thinking: “Just another obssessed parent worrying about getting Johnny into Harvard at age 6.” But those of you with young children will understand the anxiety induced by the prospect of getting your child into a good kindergarten.
Jonah
Jonah just turned 5 and will enter kindergarten next year. He’s now at the Secret Garden preschool in Capitol Hill in a program we adore. We’ve agonized over what to do next year. Many parents we know are sending their children to private schools like Seattle Country Day School or St. Joseph’s. But Janis and I are products of public school education and we want our son to have the experience of learning with children of wide-ranging ethnic and socio-economic backgrounds. Not to mention the extraordinary expense of private schools these days. So we resolved if at all possible to send him to public school.

TOPS at Seward SchoolTOPS at Seward

We spent weeks visiting those schools we wanted him to attend. Our final list included (in order of preference) TOPS, Montlake, Stevens, Orca and John Hay. Our catchment school was Madrona. But after a horrible run-in with the principal we resolved that we’d send Jonah to private school before we sent him there.

When we ranked the schools we did so with great trepidation. TOPS is a fine school, but enrollment is based on a lottery and the number of children who get in is very small. Montlake is also very good, but it is in danger of closing in the next year or so and it didn’t have many open slots. Stevens is also a good school (though we didn’t like it quite as much as the first two) and had plenty of open slots. So we ranked it third and used it as our wait list school (in case you don’t get into your first choice school you get wait-listed).

Notices are sent out the first week of April letting parents know which school their child will attend. Two days ago, one of Jonah’s preschool classmate’s moms called us to say she’d heard from Montlake that Ava had gotten in there. We realized that all the schools might know who got in and so called TOPS first thing this morning. With baited breath, Janis waited as the secretary got the “list.” She asked our child’s name. “Jonah Silverstein,” Janis repled. “Oh sure, he’s here,” she replied. And with that we discovered that we’d secured our heart’s desire: getting Jonah into a very fine school. What’s more, TOPS is K-8, so we don’t have to go through this for another nine years! Furthermore, Seattle guarantees that siblings can attend the same school as the eldest child so Miriam and Adin can attend TOPS too. We couldn’t have asked for a better outcome.

All this was terribly welcome news for us. You see, lady luck has not been shining on us lately. Janis was fired from her law firm two months ago. Yes, it was horrible and the managing partner was shall we say, a less than stellar human being about the whole thing. Last weekend, during the celebrations of Jonah’s birthday, Janis got a detached retina. And yes, it IS as terrifying as it sounds because you really don’t know whether you’re losing your eyesight. Dr. David Saperstein, a retina specialist at the UW Medical Center, did a superb job performing laser surgery and reattaching the retina and Janis is on the mend. Now if we could only get that call from the major downtown law firm which we’re hoping will hire her!