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 ‘Gag order’

Shin Bet Restricts Gag Orders, Detainee ‘Disappearances’

Thursday, December 8th, 2011

When I first began writing this blog, a question that always nagged at me was: why?  Why write a blog?  Who does it impact?  What does it change?  Now, these questions don’t bother me as much.  But if I ever needed an answer to them I’d have it now, based on an Israeli security source, who notes that the new Shin Bet chief, Yoram Cohen, has ended (according to his/her claim) the agency’s use of gag orders and “disappearances” of detainees.  The new director appears to have learned a lesson his predecessor, Yuval Diskin, did not: that when they engage in such draconian conduct, they only prove the arguments of their detractors, who say they are among the chief violators of civil liberties in Israeli society.

In other words, the oversight, as meager as it may be, by this blog and many others in Israel of the actions of the security apparatus has an impact.  According to my source (and only time will tell if s/he is right), there will be no more secret arrests of Anat Kamm or Ameer Makhoul or many others whose detentions I’ve exposed here.  Of course, it would even better were these individuals not arrested at all and instead given medals.  But that, alas, is too much to hope for at the present moment.  We have to be content with the fact that the system may have changed incrementally for the good.

Here is an example from the Hebrew press of the way the new system works.  A security arrest is made and announced the same day in the press.  Those arrested are named in the article.

Of course, an agency as set in its ways as Shabak is liable to take a long time to truly change its colors and there may be backsliding to the old ways.  For example and contrary to what the source claims, I’ve noticed cases in which arrestees still either aren’t named or their names are placed under gag order.  Recent examples, are the mosque burning in Tuba Zangariyye and the Peace Now attacks.  In both examples, detainees or suspects were not identified and I named them in both cases.  It’s possible that some of these cases involved the police rather than Shabak and the former may follow different rules.  It’s possible that Shabak is more willing to name Palestinian detainees and less willing to expose Jewish ones.  At any rate, we’ll have to observe for ourselves (and you too will, dear readers) whether they’ve changed their spots.  If they have, we should give credit.  If they haven’t, we will be here to note that as well.

New Truthout Story on Assault on Israeli Democracy and Peace Now Intimidation Campaign

Sunday, December 4th, 2011

I’ve just published a new piece in Truthout giving an overview of my latest reporting on the assault on Israeli democracy underway via the Knesset and Prime Minister Netanyahu.  The piece focuses on the death threats and vandalism directed at Peace Now by Dor Oved, who’s being protected by an Israeli judge’s gag order designed to protect his father, Shahar Oved from exposure since he’s a Shin Bet officer.  I think this is a major abuse of the rule of law in a democratic society and have therefore broken the gag.  I hope, as has happened with other stories of gags I broke involving Anat Kamm and Dirar Abusisi, that mainstream journalists will take up this worthy cause and begin reporting the story as well.  This is the only way the Israeli judicial and media system will think better of this short-sighted policy of protecting the powerful and well-connected.

I was interviewed today on Kol Yisrael by Elihu Ben Onn, the late night talk show host.  The interview starts around minute 23:00 of the program.  A warning: it uses Castup technology which I find extremely annoying.  I can never get Castup video or audio to work on Google Chrome or Firefox.  I recommend using IE, with which it seems more compatible.  The interviewer is a bit intrusive at times and I didn’t succeed in conveying the full breadth of my views given his interruptions, but considering that the show was heard by Israelis not only in Israel but all over the world, it was a useful exercise.

On a totally different subject, my website has had a few hiccups lately which I hope most of you haven’t noticed.  But if you get any error messages when you try to access my site could you e mail me with any information you have when this happens including the message you see.  If you are a subscriber to my daily digest plugin, you may not have received e mail notices of my new posts.  If you used to receive such notices and haven’t on a daily basis, this has to do with a conflict between my web host and the plugin generating the e mails.  I’m working to resolve this issue.  If you begin receiving these messages please let me know.  And if you don’t receive them but believe you should, let me know that as well.

Netanyahu Gags Shabak Director, Subverts Knesset Oversight Regarding Eilat Attack

Sunday, September 4th, 2011
yoram cohen shabak chief

Yoram Cohen, Shabak chief, usually gags others; this time he is gagged

For those of you who harbor quaint notions about Israeli democracy, tonight’s post should further disabuse you of your illusions.  In most western democracies, the legislative branch of government exercises some oversight of military and intelligence functions.  In the U.S., this includes House and Senate committees charged with reviewing, approving and funding the U.S. military and various intelligence agencies, both overseas and domestic.  Though there is always a tenseness in this relationship and the executive branch at times resists such oversight, the legislative bodies have ultimate authority and can use their subpoena power if their rights to oversee their charges are rejected.

Not so in Israel, where civilian bodies, including both the Knesset and even the prime minister, often exercise nominal control of these government functions.  I’ve reported in the recent past, that Defense Minister Ehud Barak refused to allow chief of staff Benny Gantz to testify to a Knesset committee about Israel’s covert programs to contain Iran.  Now, none other than the prime minister himself has directed the Shabak chief to refuse to appear before the same committee to address questions about the Eilat terror attack.  Yoram Cohen, Shabak director, sent an underling in his place who also refused to discuss the terror attack when asked point-blank by the committee, which is chaired by former chief of staff Shaul Mofaz.

Haaretz has only reported the latter fact, that a Shabak officer refused to answer questions about Eilat.  In truth, my own well-placed source confirms that Netanyahu refused to allow Cohen to even appear before Mofaz’ committee.  Perhaps one should even question the Israeli media itself as to why it hasn’t reported that Netanyahu actually refused to allow Israel’s most senior intelligence officer to testify before the Knesset.  Is my source the only one who knows this happened?  Or do other reporters know the truth and can’t or won’t report it?  Frankly, I don’t know the answer.  I only know that Haaretz and other outlets reporting the story are only reporting half of it, which in turn does a disservice to the Israeli public and Israeli democracy (or what’s left of it).

Ynet indirectly affirms the report of my source by quoting Avi Dichter, himself a former Shabak chief and now Knesset MK, as saying that when he was its director he appeared before the Knesset committee Mofaz chairs.  Maariv quotes Dichter using extremely harsh language, labelling the decision a “gag order” placed upon the Shabak director and chief of IDF intelligence.

Clearly, this is an attempt, so far quite successful, by the prime minister to deny a legitimate legislative body oversight of the IDF and intelligence bodies and to review failures when they occur.  If such a thing happened in America, there would be immediate subpoenas filed to compel Cohen to testify and the matter would end up in court.  Eventually, even if the president dug his heels in hard (which rarely happens, these things are usually ironed out), the court would likely find the executive would have to bend to Congress’ will–at least in terms of appearing and answering questions, if not changing policy.

What is truly poisonous about this is that it leaves the executive to police itself and learn from its own mistakes without the benefit of the people’s elected representatives being able to intercede and learn what happened in events like Eilat and how to avoid them in future.  A society whose legislators are bound and gagged when it comes to exercising this function is a society in which the blind lead the blind.  And it’s no surprise that such a nation will repeat its mistakes over and over because no one can come forward from the legislature and say: No, that didn’t work, you’re not going to try that again.  You’re going to try something else.

I’ve posted here that the Israeli approach to the Eilat attack was a fashlah of massive proportions.  When things like this happen you need legislative oversight to uncover what went wrong and prevent it from happening again.  Such activity by the Knesset would reassure the people that someone, somewhere is concerned about the welfare of the nation.  When the prime minister prevents this, it will only erode confidence that the military and intelligence circles can learn from their mistakes.

Can you imagine the aftermath of 9/11 and Pres. Bush refusing to coöperate with the 9/11 Commission?  This is something like what Bibi has done in this case.  He’s thumbed his nose at Mofaz and told him: I don’t owe you nuthin’.  Losing sight, of course, of the fact that in a true democracy the leader does in fact owe a great deal to the legislature.  In a real democracy, the legislature could turn around and reject the next appropriation bill for the agency refusing to coöperate.  The only problem is that in Israel this type of independent behavior is unheard of.  No Knesset member would dream of rejecting an IDF or intelligence appropriation.  In fact, these budgets are so hush-hush that there are hardly any members who know what’s in them.  They ratify them in a pro forma manner with hardly any discussion or debate.

Of course, there are calls for cutting the defense budget heard when belts need to be tightened.  But invariably, all it takes is one terror attack for those voices to be quashed, but good.

IDF Arrests Jenin Freedom Theater Actor, Audience Now Awaits Godot…and Pozzo

Sunday, August 7th, 2011
rami hwayel

Rami Hwayel, arrested Freedom Theater actor playing Pozo in Waiting for Godot (Freedom Theater)

The Jenin Freedom Theater, whose founder Juliano Mer-Khamis was murdered several months ago, is about to perform Waiting for Godot under famed Israeli director and human rights activist, Udi Aloni.  But after arrest of one of the production’s leading actors, it will now be waiting for Pozzo as well.  Over the past week, the IDF has arrested the Theater’s manager, the board chair, and now one of its young actors.  Today’s arrest of 20 year-old Rami Awni Hwayel at a West Bank checkpoint, indicates that Israeli authorities are less interested in finding Mer-Khamis’ killer/s than they are in destroying the Theater itself.

The Theater released this statement:

Today at approximately 15:00 hrs one of the third-year graduating students at The Freedom Theatre was taken by the Israeli army at the Shave Shomeron checkpoint between the Palestinian cities, Jenin and Nablus. The student’s name is Rami Awni Hwayel, age 20. He was travelling from Ramallah to Jenin together with his fellow students.

Batool Taleb, one of the female acting students who was in the car with Rami describes what happened: “When they got to our car, they took all our IDs and when they saw Rami’s ID they told him to get out of the car.  Once he was out they immediately handcuffed and blindfolded him and put him in the army jeep.”

The students had been rehearsing for their final graduation project directed by the Israeli-American Director Udi Aloni in Ramallah.

“This is devastating.  Rami is playing the main role in ‘Waiting for Godot’ and doing an amazing job, he’s so dedicated to the work. He just left rehearsals today for the weekend to see his family for Ramadan.

It’s terrible, we want our Pozzo back!”, says Udi Aloni.

Rami is the third member of The Freedom Theatre taken by the Israeli army recently. On the 27th of July at 3:00AM the Head Technician, Adnan Naghnaghiye and the Chairperson, Bilal Saadi, were captured by a large group of Israeli soldiers.

The consequences of these actions only result in more damage to The Freedom Theatre. The theatre once again calls on its friends and supporters around the world to act in order to stop this outrageous harassment by the Israeli army against a cultural establishment.

When I heard of the arrests last week, I didn’t know what to think.  But I presumed that they might have something to do with finding Mer-Khamis’ killer.  But with the arrest of the leading actor of the ensemble’s current production it’s becoming clearer that there is no urgency or even interest on the Israeli side in solving the crime.  This is no longer a homicide investigation if it ever was one.  It has become a campaign of sabotage against the fierce artistic resistance to Occupation represented by Mer-Khamis and his Theater.

In fact, one has to begin to wonder whether given the army’s interest in undermining everything the Theater represents, that his murder might have been commissioned or approved by the Shabak.  To those who scoff at this notion I say: much stranger things have happened.  To this I also add, that authorities who seek to solve a murder do not harass the victims of the crime, as the IDF is doing.  They only do this if they believe the victims themselves are calling too much attention to the inadequacy of the police or the investigation; or that they stand in the way of the army’s maintenance of Occupation itself.

When I heard that Mer-Khamis’ nanny, who witnessed the killing, had been whisked to Israel in order to protect her from the alleged Palestinian killers, I felt some comfort that she was being protected.  But now this news becomes more ominous.  What if Israel had spirited her out of the country to their jurisdiction to influence her testimony against those it sought to railroad for the crime?  If you doubt this possibility then you simply know very little about the Shabak and how it operates.

Add to all this, that the IDF has placed the news of Hwayel’s arrest under strict gag and Israeli media may not report it.  This has to be the worst kept gag order in Israeli history as Israeli journalists and activists have been posting Facebook updates and tweeting about it for hours.

The world must demand of the IDF: what are you doing and why are you doing it?  Solve the crime and if you can’t do that–hands off the Freedom Theater.  FREE Rami Hwayel!  Find the telephone number of the nearest Israeli consulate or embassy and call them demanding Rami’s freedom.  It’s bad enough that Freedom Theater will never see Godot in this production.  Let them at least see their Pozzo.

IDF Castrator Earns Second-Highest National Award

Wednesday, July 6th, 2011

One of Israel’s most decorated and veteran officers, Amos Horev, recently earned the ‘Security of Israel Prize’ for Lifetime Achievement (Hebrew) in a ceremony presided over by Pres. Shimon Peres and defense minister Ehud Barak. This is the second highest national award offered after the Israel Prize. Among his achievements, he was also president of the Technion and a trusted booster of the Israeli armaments industry. Those of you who read this blog regularly may remember that Horev was among the younger of the octogenarians and nonagenarians appointed to the Turkel Commission, which did its duty by whitewashing the Mavi Marmara massacre, finding Israel’s siege of Gaza was just and the killings aboard the Turkish humanitarian vessel likewise justified.

But one of the most infamous incidents in Horev’s military career goes all the way back to the mid-1940s, when he served in the Palmach at a time when a notorious sexual assault occurred in which the victim of the attempted rape was a Jewish kibbutznik. Through intelligence data, the authorities identified a local Israeli (then Palestinian) Arab they believed had committed the crime. Presuming that legal justice would be insufficient to punish the alleged perpetrator, and that the Biblical dictum of an eye for an eye and a penis for a rape would better apply, Horev commanded a unit which kidnapped the man and castrated him on the spot, after they learned the proper medical procedures from an Israeli medical doctor [!].

Not only was the incident not suppressed, it became the subject of a famous pop song whose lyrics (though bowdlerized to protect the sensitive ears of Israeli womanhood, I suppose) were on the lips of all Israeli Jews, much as those of Justin Bieber are on the lips of all impressionable young American girls.

Horev certainly earned his award for whitewashing the Mavi Marmara and thereby doing a great service to his country. But the notion of offering Israel’s second most prestigious national award to a man made famous for castrating an Israeli Palestinian leaves the bitterest of tastes in one’s mouth. If truth be told, Amos Horev engaged in state-sanctioned terror way back when, and his nation he rewarded him handsomely for it. Can you imagine Lt. William Calley being awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom? I say it reeks.

At the time of his appointement to the Turkel inquiry, I wrote this:

…The next time any supporter of Israel’s draconian policies rants about Arab terror, let them consider for a moment the rather sordid past of some of Israel’s current élite. If those who engaged in acts of terror like Horev can play major roles in their nation’s subsequent history, there is no reason why those Israel currently labels dangerous, murderous terrorists cannot do the same in Palestine.

idf prize bestowed on mystery woman

Unnamed IDF prize bestowed on unnamed woman for unnamed reason (Arik Hermoni/ministry of defense)

At the same time as Horev received his award, the IDF also bestowed an award (Hebrew) on a “mystery woman” whose identity, rank, and service branch were under gag. The reason she earned her prize was under wraps. Which prize she earned was verboten too. She even wore civilian clothes so as to conceal her entire military identity. The author of the Ynet article even believes the name under which she was called to the podium was false. But he does note that she received her award among others bestowed on military intelligence, so that may be inferred as her service branch.

As my friend Dena Shunra writes:

“Somebody. Got a prize. For doing something. But we can’t tell you what, ’cause of a gag order. Aren’t you happy she’s out there doing nothing we can talk about?”

Given the rising hemline and leering glances offered by Pres. Peres and IDF chief of staff Benny Gantz standing across from her, and the fact that she’s connected to intelligence, one wonders whether she’s a honeypot of the type who captured Mordechai Vanunu and a number of other men wanted by Israel.

The awards committee which bestowed the awards was composed of the best and worst of the IDF officer corps. It included Uzi Elam, who has consistently voiced strong opposition to an Israeli attack on Iran. It also included Doron Almog, the infamous commander who approved orders to asssassinate Salah Shehadeh despite the fact it meant murdering almost a score of civilians as well. This was also the incident about which then air force chief Dan Halutz said, the murders disturbed his conscience about as much as the dropping of a bomb on its target disturbs the flight of the plane. It caused him “a slight shudder” was the way he so infamously put it.

One wonders whether the conscience of mystery woman was similarly disturbed by whatever intelligence operation she starred in.

Rape Triumphant

Sunday, June 26th, 2011

Israel anti-rape activists report the sad, frustrating, angering news that Yoav Even, accused rapist of P., has been reinstated as health reporter for Channel 2.  It’s a huge shondeh.  Can you imagine the local health reporter of your TV station being charged with rape and put back on the air as if nothing had happened?  It’s the triumph of impunity, the triumph of sexual violence.  The trampling of the body and soul of Israeli women by accused rapists and their judicial and prosecutorial accomplices.  And no Israeli still can say publicly what crime he was accused of because of an apparently permanent gag order.  One wonders whether perhaps it might be lifted sometime after his demise.

For those who can bear to look at him, here’s his first reporting for Channel 2 since he sodomized poor P. and left her bleeding.  It would’ve been much more appropriate, I think, to have his first story deal with the wholesale importation and use of date rape drugs in Israel, since he appears to be quite familiar with the subject.

He is not the only one of course.  Haaretz and Yediot employ the Israeli poet, political commentator and accused serial rapist Yitzhak Laor, as if he’d done nothing untoward either.  Moshe Katsav was only convicted because feminists raised holy hell and because the idiot refused a plea bargain that offered him a sweetheart deal.

If you are Israeli, please go to the Channel 2 website and write to the editor and the ombundsman protesting this atrocity.

Protest Closing of Rape Case Against Yoav Even

Wednesday, June 1st, 2011

israeli protest against sexual violence

'If a case falls in the prosecutor's office and no one hears, was there no rape?' (Rotem Cohen)

Join hundreds (I hope) of Israelis opposed to sexual violence against women, who will be protesting the prosecutor’s closing of the rape case against Yoav Even.  The demonstration will be on Thursday, June 9th at 6PM in Tel Aviv outside the prosecutor’s office, 1 Henrietta Szold Street.  The poster alludes to the lack of security for Israeli women, thus setting up an implict comparison with the near-obsession the state has for national security.  You can guess who comes out on the short end of the stick in this comparison.

The poster notes the statistic that 80% of all cases involving sexual violence are dropped due to “insufficient evidence or lack of public interest.”  In a perverse way, it’s supposed to comfort us I suppose that P’s case falls within that 80% majority.

H/t Dena Shunra and Itamar Shaaltiel.

Protest the Even Rape Gag Order

Tuesday, May 31st, 2011

lift the gag order protecting yoav even from rape chargesThanks to Michael Levin for creating a stellar new poster protesting the gag order protecting Israeli TV reporter, Yoav Even from facing public accountability for charges that he raped P.  Israeli feminists will be demonstrating against the gag order in early June in Tel Aviv, and if you’re there I urge you to join in protesting the protection offered by the Israeli judicial system to powerful male figures charged with crimes against women.

Please circulate this poster as widely as possible and I hope it helps P. get the justice she deserves.

I’ve learned the ugly truth that there are actually entire websites devoted to exposing the identity of rape victims.  They call what they do “male advocacy.”  Wow, I bet you didn’t know rapists needed advocates, did ya?  And they’ve been sniffing around this story for a week or more, promising to expose P’s identity because she, don’t ya know, likely cooked the whole thing up.  Since we all know that women do this all the time and face no consequences from doing so (wink, wink, nudge, nudge).

Now, they’re hanging out in my comment threads like puppy dogs wagging their tails, looking for approbation and recognition for their ‘good deeds.’  They make me feel dirty, perhaps as dirty as I felt when I read P.’s account of her rape.

I don’t understand the psychology behind this.  Either these people hate women or they’ve been accused of rape themselves.  But they’ve got to be twisted souls.

Performance Optimization WordPress Plugins by W3 EDGE