Muslim and Jewish Women in Nazareth

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

Mahzor

Mahzor

New York Public Library

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Sarajevo Haggadah

Mah Nishtanah

Sarajevo haggadah

Antaea Darom

Israeli women's art

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Torah as music

Ben Heine

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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

Lower East Side

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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

Yiddish version

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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 ‘gaza-siege’

Martin Kramer, Advocate of Genocide, Infanticide, or Just Plain Anti-Muslim Racism?

Tuesday, February 23rd, 2010

Martin Kramer's view of the Muslim world

M.J. Rosenberg and Ali Abunimah have accused Martin Kramer of advocating genocide (see video) against the Palestinians in Gaza by suggesting that population growth there (and in all the Muslim world) was the primary motivator for terror and that consequently all humanitarian aid aimed at children should be stopped.

If you read quotations like these from the video it’s hard to disagree:

[Declining fertility rates] will happen among the Palestinians…if the west stops pro-natal subsidies for Palestinians with refugee status.  Those subsidies are one reason why Gaza’s population grew between 1997-2007 by an astonishing 40%.  Israel’s present sanctions on Gaza have a political aim…but they also break Gaza’s runaway population growth.

That might begin to crack the culture of martyrdom which demands a constant supply of superfluous young men.  That is rising to the real challenge of radical Islamism and treating it at its root.

But to be on the safe side I called it anti-Muslim racism, which it certainly is.  Perhaps you could even call it advocating infanticide since Gazan children are already malnourished according to multiple UN studies and withholding nutrition and other forms of support can only lead directly to child deaths.  Of course, Kramer would argue that he’s merely seeking to persuade Gazan families not to have so many children and not calling for their death.  But how can anyone doubt that that is what would happen?  Kramer is one of the worst examples of the academic egghead who thinks in abstract terms without caring a whit how his ideas would impact real people.  I guess some of my readers will reply by saying, no, Kramer understands precisely how his ideas will affect real people and that is the lethal effect he intends.  He reminds me in a way of Dr. Strangelove, in love with his ideas and humanity be damned.

Ali Abunimah has kept Harvard’s feet to the fire and helped elicit this reprehensible statement defending Kramer:

“Accusations have been made that Martin Kramer’s statements are genocidal. These accusations are baseless. Kramer’s statements express dismay with the policy of agencies that provide aid to Palestinian refugees, and that tie aid entitlements to the size of refugee families. Kramer argues that this policy encourages population growth among refugee communities. While these views may be controversial, there is no way they can be regarded as genocidal.”

“Those who have called upon the Weatherhead Center to dissociate itself from Kramer’s views, or to end Kramer’s affiliation with the Center, appear not to understand the role of controversy in an academic setting. It would be inappropriate for the Weatherhead Center to pass judgement on the personal political views of any of its affiliates, or to make affiliation contingent upon some political criterion. Exception may be made for statements that go beyond the boundaries of protected speech, but there is no sense in which Kramer’s remarks could be considered to fall into this category.”

Ali absolutely correctly notes that Kramer would not be cheered on so assiduously were he to advocate reducing Jewish population by similar means:

“I wonder how long Mr. Kramer’s views would be tolerated if — all other things being equal — he were an Arab scholar who had called for Jews to be placed in a giant, sealed enclosure which virtually no one is allowed to leave and enter, and deprived of food and schooling for their children in order to reduce their birthrate?”

And need I remind the Weatherhead Center that this is precisely what the leaders of a certain European nation did to that continent’s Jewish children in the last century.  If it was genocide for the Nazis to do this, then it’s hard not to apply the same term to Kramer.  The only difference perhaps is that the Nazis actually killed and starved the children, while Kramer is only advocating starving them.

Here Kramer pouts that Abunimah levelled a complaint against him to his academic superiors, noting that his critic doesn’t seem to believe in freedom of speech.  Hell, if I’d been at Herzliya I’d have heckled Kramer.  Since when do intellectual racists have the right to advocate morally repugnant views while retaining their prestigious academic positions?  If Kramer claimed that Blacks were mentally inferior to whites or that climate change was a hoax or that evolution was a theory, would he still be teaching at Harvard?  We all know the answer to that.  Apparently, at Harvard faculty can advocate causing suffering to Muslims with a clear conscience and no sense that there will be any consequences.  That should tell you something about Harvard, also the home of that other anti-Muslim racist, Alan Dershowitz.

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Rep. Brian Baird: Break Gaza Siege

Sunday, February 14th, 2010


Rep. Brian Baird (D, WA) is now in Gaza speaking truth to power. He in effect told our president: “Mr. Obama, tear down this siege!” What a profile in courage:

A U.S. congressman says the United States should break Israel’s blockade of Gaza and deliver badly needed supplies by sea.

Rep. Brian Baird, a Democrat from Washington state, also says President Barack Obama’s Mideast envoy should visit Gaza to get a look at the destruction cause by Israel’s offensive last year.

The U.S. shuns Gaza because the territory’s Hamas rulers refuse to recognize Israel or renounce violence.

Baird, who has announced his retirement from Congress, spoke Sunday evening to a group of Gaza students.

Israel and Egypt have kept Gaza’s borders largely sealed since 2006, and have not allowed building supplies into the area. Baird said that U.S. vessels should anchor off Gaza and deliver what’s needed.

Here is one House member who has a conscience and isn’t afraid to express it. I should add that for his troubles the Israeli government and its operatives in this country closely monitor his trips to Gaza along with those of Keith Ellison, who has accompanied Baird on previous visits. Thus it is no accident that the recent letter from 54 House Democrats to the president calling on him to pressure Israel to ease the siege has been attacked by the Republican Jewish Coalition and others by falsely featuring Ellison as its author: not true, that honor goes to my own House representative Jim McDermott.

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Gaza ‘Like a Bomb Ready to Explode’

Thursday, June 12th, 2008

There may or may not be a major Israeli incursion into Gaza to “root out” (the words are in quotes because the operation cannot possibly succeed, as previous ones have failed as well) Palestinian militants firing Qassams into Israel. Since there is at least a 50% chance of invasion AND the situation on the ground grows increasingly desperate by the day, and because there is very little direct reporting from Gaza by media sources (and none from Israeli papers), I thought it important to feature this Middle East Progress interview with N.Y. Times Gaza reporter, Taghreed El-Khodary. In this climate devoid of hope, with the same bleak news day after day, it is all too easy to lose sight of the real human beings who are suffering there. El-Khodary provides a bracing antidote to that telling us what’s happening to the average Gazan.

And for my pro-Israel readers, don’t expect a whitewash of the situation. El-Khodary is critical of both Fatah and Hamas, along with Israel. Here are some of the most telling passages from the interview:

This is the worst time that Gaza has ever gone through. The situation is deteriorating on a daily basis because of the harsh effects of the closure. It touches every element of daily life in Gaza.

…There are hundreds of students with scholarships to study in different parts of the world. But because of the closure they cannot leave Gaza—they cannot leave through Israel, they cannot leave through Egypt. So they are stuck. The young people are so desperate. Last year they were desperate, this year they are more desperate. They have no goal in life. You have a generation that finished high school but they cannot go abroad if they wish to study, they cannot find a job if they want to work, they cannot go to university at home because their family cannot even afford to send them to local universities. So they are being asked to wait until the situation improves.

People are not starving in Gaza, thanks to UNWRA. The international community has insured basic supplies for every household. But people tell me that they are realizing that life is not all about food. Life is about other things, too. They tell me that they see Hamas has insured internal security and that’s maybe the only thing they have insured. There are no gangs in the street, no people with guns…

But people are saying, internal security is not everything, you need the other elements in life—you need to have a job, you need to see a future for your children. Young people need to plan for their future. They should not feel suffocated.

Should there ever be a really catastrophic incident in Gaza (I don’t even want to conjure what form that might take), remember this statement:

I’ve been meeting with the senior leaders of Hamas the past week and they all are interested in reconciliation, period, there is a sense of desperation from Hamas for reconciliation. Because they know that the effect of the closure has been so harsh that people cannot take it any longer. Gaza is like a bomb ready to explode. It hasn’t yet, and nobody knows when it might finally explode and where that explosion will hit.

Interestingly, El-Khodary notes that the average Gazan is highly critical of the terror attacks against Israel:

The Qassams have definitely been criticized by people in the community, as have all the fighters and the military factions. People cannot understand, for example, why they would be hitting Israeli crossings when these crossings allow for basic supplies and fuel to come into Gaza. It doesn’t make sense. You want fuel from Israel so why hit the checkpoints? It leads to a huge gap between the leadership and the people. One of the senior Hamas leaders came out with a statement for the first time criticizing any group that hits any crossing, because the leadership understands that people know it doesn’t make sense.

The problem is that Gazans feel, rightfully so, that Israel and the U.S. hold all the cards here. Until their predicament eases, they have no interest, motivation, or even ability to take things into their own hands and pressure militants to rein in their attacks.

The Israeli siege reminds me of a donkey owner who decides the best way to get his animal to move is by beating it mercilessly with a stick. Of course, this only makes the animal dig in its heels. Have you ever tried to move a stubborn donkey? It never occurred to the man to try a carrot.

Israel’s Egyptian Bondage and the Gaza Siege, History Repeats Itself

Thursday, January 3rd, 2008

S, one of my esteemed readers, passes along to me media gems and his thoughts on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. He sent this link to a Skye News report from Gaza on the impact the siege is having on the enclave’s 650,000 children. Watch it and weep just a little. What amazes me is that this is Rupert Murdoch’s Skye News after all, not exactly a friend of the Palestinian people if you know what I mean. I guess every once in a while even a right-wing media outlet has to acknowledge reality.

S, an observant Jew, also notes the parallels between the current Israel-induced suffering in Gaza and similar historic suffering endured by the ancient Hebrews at the hands of the Egyptians:

What an irony that just this past week the weekly Torah portion read in synagogues throughout the world was the beginning of the story of the Exodus ( Parashat Shmot) in which the Torah describes the cruelty of the Egyptian regime toward the Hebrews (“And they made their lives bitter with hard bondage, in mortar and in brick, and in all manner in service in the field”) which included also a terrible decree to kill male babies (justified by security reasons, of course…). There were, however, the brave midwives (according to some commentaries they were Egyptian women) who disobeyed the iniquitous commands of King Pharaoh and saved the children (Exodus 1: 17). It is thus a story of both unbelievable cruelty and heroic civil disobedience, with the power to inspire all those who are willing to engage or support civil disobedience today.

To this I can only add the proverbial Jewish liturgical response: Amen.

For my Israeli readers:

January 26 – Direct Action Supply Convoy to Gaza:
On Saturday January 26, human rights activists plan a direct action by bringing a supply convoy to the borders of Gaza. The Israeli government is imposing collective punishment, preventing the Gaza residents from receiving basic, essential products, thereby causing a terrible situation of poverty, on the verge of starvation.

Save the date of Saturday, January 26, for participation in a convoy of “forbidden products” in a joint Israeli-Palestinian direct action from both sides of the border. Details will follow. To help in the preparations and funding 972 -50-8575729 (Yana) 972-50-5733276 (Yakov) 972-50-6709603 (Adam)