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

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Joint Appeal for Peace

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Posts Tagged ‘gaza war’

Knesset Leader Cancels Visit to Turkey Meant to Ease Tensions

Friday, October 28th, 2011
shaul mofaz

Shaul Mofaz and Israel didn't miss an opportunity to to miss an opportunity to further Israel-Turkey reconciliation

This has to be one of the more bitter ironies of today’s news: Shaul Mofaz, a senior Israeli Knesset leader, was invited by NATO to address an international security conference in Istanbul.  He was to make a pointed appeal for relieving tensions between Turkey and Israel.  He was to offer soft words and encouragement designed to create a more positive atmosphere between the two feuding nations.  Everything was prepared for his trip.  The speech was being written and vetted.

Then Israel intelligence weighed in.  They’d need a score of bodyguards, armored vehicles, hotel rooms, food.  The cost for security alone escalated to $25,000 (which seems a paltry sum to me).  Official Israel began to have second thoughts.  Just how important was this event and Mofaz’s speech?  In the end, the speech and trip were cancelled (Hebrew, with shorter English version here) and yet another opportunity to soothe the waters was lost.  As Abbas Eban used to say in a far different context: never missing an opportunity to miss an opportunity for peace.

Ironic isn’t it, that a gesture meant to bring peace between the parties was torpedoed by the very hostility it was seeking to soothe?  Mofaz couldn’t go to Ankara for fear the very enmities Israel aroused inside Turkey with its Gaza war and Mavi Marmara assault, would endanger him.  That’s of course leaving aside the looming fear that a Turkish prosecutor could submit arrest warrants for Israeli leaders who perpetrated the flotilla massacre, though that doesn’t appear to have played any role in this matter.

Israel, through it heedlessness to the sensitivities to its neighbors, through it narrow focus on short term gain, has lost site of its long-term interests and lost the ability to create new opportunities for peace and reconciliation even if it wanted to do so.  This is the tragedy of Israel’s current regional predicament.

Minneapolis JCRC: Brush Up Your Hasbara

Sunday, September 11th, 2011

The Minneapolis JCRC is trying to push the horse back in the barn after I reported (with the journalistic legwork of Mordecai Specktor) that its staff relayed negative information about Rep. Keith Ellison, the first Muslim-American member of Congress, to Israel’s Chicago consulate.  The Leibowitz transcripts revealed that the local JCRC brought the consulate up to date on Ellison’s travel schedule, including his leading a trade delegation to Saudi Arabia, which was viewed extremely negatively; and his participation in an upcoming post-Cast Lead tour of Gaza with Rep. Brian Baird.  The speakers in the transcript viewed the Gaza trip as antagonistic to Israel and its interests.  Clearly, the JCRC speaker viewed its proper role as monitoring the local Congressional delegation to detect any inkling of statements or activity that might harm Israel’s interests.  And in this case, Ellison’s travel schedule was viewed as proof of his hostility towards Israel.

Here is how Steve Hunegs, JCRC director, tries to weasel out of responsibility:

We were perplexed to read The American Jewish World’s internet story from September 8th repeating a two-year recollection of a Seattle-based blogger about an unnamed Jewish activist heard on a FBI wiretap claiming an affiliation with the Jewish Community Relations Council of Minnesota and the Dakotas (JCRC). To set the record straight, no one authorized to speak on behalf of the JCRC made the negative personal comments about Representative Keith Ellison attributed to the anonymous Jewish activist.

Hunegs isn’t quite accurate.  While I had the transcripts two years ago, I wrote blog posts about them contemporaneously and have a record of what I wrote about this matter, which confirms what I’ve claimed.  What Hunegs has is a two year-old recollection of a conversation with the Israeli consulate in Chicago.  So while Hunegs would like now to take back what was said in the transcripts (who wouldn’t?), he can’t.  Further, it may be that what was said to the Chicago consul was what the speaker thought the consul wanted to hear, and perhaps the speaker didn’t really share the extent of Israel’s negative views about Ellison.  But again, that’s not what’s on the printed page.  There was clear agreement on both sides that Ellison was bad news for Israel and American Jews.

This incident has forced Hunegs to eat humble pie and reaffirm his love and devotion to Keith Ellison which, unfortunately wasn’t as much in evidence in 2009.  So perhaps the leopard can change his spots.  But in the passage above he’s not really admitting the truth about those conversations, as I reported them based on those 2009 transcripts.  So I’m not sure he’s turned over a new leaf.  Earlier, when he released another statement in which he in effect conceded that his office did monitor Rep. Ellison on behalf of the consulate, he was speaking more honestly.

What Hunegs can do is start from here on and act and behave more fairly and carefully toward local political leaders with whom the Jewish community may have a complex relationship.  And he may want to have future conversations with the Chicago consulate on a more secure phone line.

Which of the Four Sons are You?

Monday, April 18th, 2011
leonard baskin four sons

Leonard Baskin's Four Sons

First, let’s get out of the way the little problem of there being Four Sons in the Passover haggadah instead of Four Children or–God forbid–Four Daughters.  Let’s just say I’m going to make an editorial decision and use “sons” as interchangeable with “children,” and including “daughters,” in this post.

The Four Sons of the Pesach seder are archetypal figures representing various levels of Jewish identity.  In the haggadah, they are meant to represent differing degrees of affiliation with the Jewish community.  But I think it’s instructive to alter the perspective a bit and use the sons as paradigms for varying Jewish approaches to the Israeli-Arab conflict.

I wrote here last week about the scurrilous attack on Judge Richard Goldstone by a South African Orthodox rabbi who essentially labeled him the Wicked Son.  He did this because the chair of the UN human rights panel on Operation Cast Lead allegedly deserted his people by accusing the IDF of possible war crimes.  But Rabbi Perez got mixed up.  Judge Goldstone isn’t the Wicked Son.  He’s the Good Son.  Why?  Because the good son is the one who wants to understand the Israeli-Arab conflict not on a superficial level, but seeks to plumb its depths through its root causes.  This Son is one who asks probing questions.  In fact, Pesach is meant to be a night of questions (witness, the Four Questions).  A good son asks good questions and isn’t afraid of the answers.  Nor is he (or she) afraid to criticize his (or her) own people when it does wrong; and s/he isn’t satisfied with pat answers.

And since we’re talking about the Wicked Son, who is he or she?  The Wicked Son is David Wilder and every settler who differentiates between good and bad Jews, between Jews who are allies and Jews who are the enemy.  The Son who seeks to impose his narrow-minded racist notions upon not just the State of Israel, but the entire Jewish people.  The Wicked Son is a know-it-all.  He never doubts.  He is always right.  And his enemies, including fellow Jews, are not just wrong, but they are evil.  An evil that must be eradicated from Israel’s midst.  This son is wicked not just because of his bigoted views, but because his certainty, his smugness, his hate endanger his own people and the State of Israel.

David moss four sons

David Moss haggadah, Four Sons

Just as the haggadah says the Wicked Son would not have been redeemed had he been a Jewish slave in Egypt, so today’s wicked son, the one who believes he knows the path to Jewish redemption lies through conquest of land; this Son is dooming himself and his people to oblivion.  A State of Israel that becomes a settler state or makes such alliances with the settlers that it becomes little more than an extension of them, is one that will fail, that will be washed from the pages of Jewish history as a failed experiment.

The haggadah notes two other types of Sons: one who is simple and one who “doesn’t even know how to ask.”  These also correspond to Jewish types regarding the Israeli-Arab conflict.  There are those who simply don’t understand it, who see it as an unending Hatfield-McCoy range war.  The question of the simple son is: “why should I care?”  I have to confess I’m not as good at dealing with these people as I am with people who have a pronounced point of view regarding the conflict.  It requires enormous patience not just to explain it in simple terms to such people, but to do so in ways that will persuade an uninformed Jew that the outcome of this conflict matters to them and to all Jews.

The vast majority of Jews, I’d say, are in the latter two categories.  They are either simple/innocent or can’t even begin to understand what’s going on.  Reaching them is enormously important if we are to find a way to peace.

I’ve written some worthwhile posts for Passovers past which you might find of interest.  I translated a Sholem Aleichem Passover story from Yiddish.  And I wrote a long meditation on the figure of Moses as an allegory for Jewish existence.

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The ‘Herem’ of Judge Goldstone

Sunday, April 10th, 2011
richard goldstone

Richard Goldstone: the Haggadah's 'Wicked Son'

Last year, Judge Richard Goldstone revealed that he would not attend his grandson’s South African bar mitzvah because pro-Israel community leaders had let it be known that they would picket the synagogue during the celebration and generally make his life miserable.  There was a general uproar over this threatening behavior with a number of South African Jews (though not the community’s top leaders) criticizing it in the media including the New York Times.  A short time later, Goldstone announced that he would attend the festivities after all and it appeared that the community had backed down and that the judge’s honor had been vindicated.

What we didn’t realize, and which The Forward recently reported, is that there seems to have been a secret quid pro quo by which the community demanded that it meet with Goldstone privately as the price for quiet during the bar mitzvah celebration.  Judge Goldstone attended a community pow-wow with rabbis and the communal political leadership.  Until now, no one knew what was discussed and what was said to Goldstone.  Now, I can report on at least one of the speeches he was forced to endure.  It is a masterpiece of Jewish guilt.  Baruch Spinoza was subjected to no less during the proceedings of the Amsterdam Jewish community which led to his excommunication (herem).  In fact, the source who provided it to me called it a piece psychological manipulation, in other words part of a communal propaganda offensive designed to intimidate Goldstone into the position he recently adopted in his Washington Post op-ed, in which he uncharacteristically withdrew several key claims of the UN report which he helped author.  The performance in that piece was dreary beyond belief and has to be a low in an otherwise distinguished legal career.

Perhaps the most radical philosophical turnaround in the op-ed is that before, he emphatically rejected the notion that the IDF and State could adequately and fairly investigate their own possible misdeeds.  Now, he claims that Israel has done precisely that.  And makes this claim in the face of evidence which shows that the investigations have been half-hearted and resulted in no significant meting out of punishment or even discipline.

No one can say whether there was an explicit quid pro quo involved in his penning this column.  But it can be no accident that Israel’s Interior Minister, Eli Yishai, has invited Goldstone for a triumphal return to Israel and that the latter has accepted.  It may also not be an accident that he published his apologia in one of Israel’s favorite American newspapers, one which consistently, forcefully advocates Israel’s interests in its editorial pages.

Here is the address of a South African Sephardic rabbi, Laurence (Doron) Perez, to Goldstone during the May, 2010 meeting:

Justice Goldstone -

I am sure that you have had the opportunity many times both as a father and grandfather to be present with your family at the Pesach Seder. I am also sure that you are familiar with the basic narrative of the Haggadah which, as we know, describes the story of Jewish slavery, freedom and redemption. I would like to draw your attention to the famous paragraph about the four sons – the wise one, the wayward [ed. a deliberate distortion of the Hebrew, in which he is called "the wicked son"] one, the simple one and the one who does not know how to ask.  I would like to reflect for a moment on the narrative regarding the wayward son which I believe to be relevant to our discussion today.

The Haggadah states as follows

“The wayward son asks – What is this service to you? (Exodus 12;26). By saying “you” he excludes himself. And since he excludes himself from the peoplehood of Israel (KIal Yisrael), he has denied a fundamental principle of our faith (Kofer be-Ikar). You in turn should blunt his teeth (give a sharp and blunt answer) and say to him – because of what Hashem did for me when I left Egypt, I do this  (Exodus 13;8) – implying for me but not for him.  If he (the wayward son) had been there (in Egypt), he would not have been redeemed?”

This paragraph is most telling as to who the wayward Jewish son is and, further, what our response to him should be. The Haggadah describes the wayward son as the one who sets himself apart from Jewish peoplehood and places himself outside the mainstream Jewish community. His question “what is this service to you” implies that the service does not obligate him in any way. Issues of Jewish identity: – our collective fate, destiny and responsibilities are seen as something which have no bearing on his world view. So much so, that the Haggadah uses the sharp terminology since he has excluded himself from the Jewish people, he has denied a fundamental tenet of Jewish faith.

Again, as I wrote above, the rabbi is essentially warning Goldstone that his participation in the Gaza war investigation and the findings he endorsed in it, have caused him to be driven him from the Tabernacle, leaving him to wander in the desert bereft of his fellow Jews.  They in turn told him that due to his abandonment of them, they have ostracized him.

The rabbi continues in a vein that accuses Goldstone of concern only for the suffering of the Palestinian people and of his disregard for the suffering of Israelis that led up to Operation Cast Lead.  Perez tells Goldstone that when Jewish suffering conflicts with Palestinian suffering there is only ONE legitimate choice:

Remarkably, what emanates so succinctly from the Haggadah is the supreme importance of Jewish peoplehood. The community ethic is a core component of Jewish identity. One cannot call oneself a good Jew if one distances oneself from the lot of one’s People and community.

This explains a bewildering question regarding the wayward son – why is he at the Pesach table in the first place? After all, if he is so wicked, why does he want to be part of the Jewish experience? The answer is clear – he does want to have a connection to his Judaism – but he wants this to be without any commitment to and embracing of a collective Jewish fate and destiny. But the Haggadah teaches us that he cannot claim to be a good Jew, whilst at the same time separating himself from the pain and suffering of his own People. Of course, every good Jew must be sensitive to the suffering of all human beings. All are created in the image of G-d. This is without question a core Jewish value. But how can this possibly override the suffering of his own family, community and People? Kindness and charity must never end in the home, but they must most certainly begin there! Indeed, this is a fundamental principle of Jewish faith – the inextricable link between Jewish faith and the People of Israel.

…The answer given to the wayward son in the Haggadah is also most telling. We blunt his sharp criticism by highlighting the following important point – “Had you been in Egypt you would not have been redeemed” i.e. the wayward son needs to decide what side of Jewish History he is on. If his worldview does not contain this deep sense of Jewish peoplehood, then he has missed the point of Jewish identity. Our Sages tell us that many Jews chose not to leave Egypt but rather lost themselves during the plague of darkness. These individual Jews could not come to terms with Moses’ vision of redemption from Egyptian society: to journey to the homeland of their forefathers and to exercise their divine, religious, historical and moral right to self-determination in their G-d given Land. Those who left Egypt committed to this vision of Jewish destiny. Those who chose to rather stay behind in Egypt did not accept this narrative of Jewish history.

In the following passage, Rabbi Perez goes even farther and accuses Goldstone of being almost a traitor to his race by siding with the Palestinians.  Goldstone has, in effect, turned his back on a millennium of Jewish suffering through his advocacy of the UN human rights report.  He sentences Goldstone to oblivion for his actions:

Remaining behind in Egypt and perhaps even prioritizing the suffering of the Egyptians over the tears and pain of over 100 years of slavery and death of their own People at the hand of the Egyptians sidelined them from future Jewish destiny. Instead of becoming influential protagonists of Jewish history, they became a peripheral footnote.

Below, Perez commits a major bit of intellectual mendacity by claiming that Jewish interests and universal justice are consonant when everything he has said above denies it.  Unless of course the rabbi is arguing that the rights of Palestinians, such as they are, are not covered by the terms universal justice or human rights.

In conclusion – there need not be any contradiction between striving for human rights and universal justice and at the same time being loyal to one’s Faith, People and Land. One can be a champion of human rights and at the same time believe in the unbreakable link between the Jewish faith, Land and People of Israel.

Our Rabbis taught us never to give up on any fellow Jew – even when misguided.  After all, it is his actions we assess and never the person himself. We hope and pray that you undo the unfortunate and enormous damage that your report has done to the Jewish people in general and to the State of Israel and her heroic and moral defenders in particular.

Justice Goldstone – the simple question that we all need to ask ourselves is; which side of Jewish history are we on?

What is truly tragic about Judge Goldstone’s turnaround is that he has now embraced his people, but turned his back on an entire career of advocacy on behalf of peoples afflicted by genocide and egregious violations of human and national rights.  Unlike Rabbi Perez and Judge Goldstone, I do believe that universal human rights and Jewish values are not antithetical.  And unlike them, I do not believe that Israel’s behavior in maintaining the Occupation meets standards of Jewish or universal human rights.  You can have it both ways, but only if you understand that Israeli values are not necessarily kosher Jewish values in this case.

Many of us Jews who have political, philosophical or ethical beliefs that diverge from the so-called consensus have experienced this sort of herem.  I call it the Spinoza Society to denote those honored Jews who break from the pack to stand for values that should the mainstream but often aren’t.  Unfortunately, Judge Goldstone craves the acceptance of the Jewish greybeards and mandarins.  Others of us have known what it is like to have to endure this sort of treatment in order to uphold our own Jewish values.  Thankfully, many of us haven’t felt the need to cave to the pressure.  Perhaps we have less at stake than he does.  But I’d like to think that a man as eminent as Judge Goldstone should’ve done a better job of upholding these values, even in the face of the relentless pressure he undoubtedly faced.

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IDF Needs a Few Good Hasbara Hackers

Thursday, February 10th, 2011
avi benayahu

'It ain't over till the fat man hacks' (Avi Moalem)

A common ad slogan a few years back for U.S. Army recruitment was: “the Army needs of few good men.”  The IDF doesn’t care if you’re a man or you’re good, but they do want you if you’re capable of hacking for hasbara.  This is one of those delightful stories that come along, oh, maybe once in a…week…making Israel advocacy look even lamer than it already is:

IDF Spokesman Avi Benayahu said Tuesday that the army is currently in the process of enlisting “new media fighters”.

Benayahu told a panel on the subject of “the digital medium as strategic weapon” that the army was searching for “little hackers who were born and raised online“.

We screen them with special care and train them to serve the state,” the spokesman told the panel, which was part of the Herzliya Conference.

…”We cannot but be impressed at how Western technology harms regimes at the other end of the spectrum, such as Iran, or at how one cell phone camera can harm a regime more than any intelligence agency’s operations,” he said.

You’d be pardoned if you confused the sentence about training the “little hackers” with a description of how to train K-9 dogs to serve in the IDF.  Perhaps there’s not much difference?  Regarding online hasbara being a “strategic weapon,” you have to wonder if he’s confusing Israel’s nuclear arsenal with the hasbara hackers he hopes to recruit.  Can such an individual really be worth a nuclear weapon in this age of Facebook-inspired political revolutions?

What little fat man (Haaretz characterizes him as having “distinctive girth”) Benayahu forgets is that social networking only works for your cause when you have right on your side as the youth of Tunisia and Egypt did and do.  If all you’re selling is the same old recycled swill, nobody’d gonna buy it no matter how you disguise it.

In the final paragraph above, Benayahu seems to be forgetting that Western technology may harm not just Israel’s enemies like Iran, but also Israel itself.  That Facebook and Twitter, once used to liberate Egypt from the yoke of tyranny might just do the same for the Palestinians.

Israel’s hasbara operation seems premised on the notion that there’s a way to trick, or lull, or persuade people into supporting Israel.  But there isn’t.  The argument doesn’t resonate when you’re arguing against facts and reality, at least as the majority of the rest of the world see it.  Sure, you can persuade yourself and your narrow band of supporters.  But that’s not why you go online to advocate for your cause.  You attempt to broaden your support.

Another interesting element of this effort is that it is entirely defensive in nature.  It will defend Israeli policy.  It will explain why Israel behaves so badly so often.  It will fend off a revolution, not advance one.  It won’t advocate for new ideas, political reform, freedom or anything like what other social movements do online.  This hasbara effort is couched in the negative and I don’t believe this can work on Facebook and Twitter.  You have to represent a vision, something positive, constructive, that will capture peoples’ imaginations.  Can hasbara do that?

Benayahu reveals that Bibi Netanyahu is going to pay $1.6 million to recruit and train 120 of the “little hackers.”  If he paid that money as reparations to Turkey he’d regain a former ally and produce far better results than 1,000 hackers could.

The Ynet article closes with a priceless quote from one of the IDF’s “little hackers” herself, Aliza:

Aliza, a lone soldier from the US, explained about the new unit at the IDF Spokesperson’s Office. “We began to work with new media during Operation Cast Lead. Bloggers are very important and very influential,” she said.

She certainly wasn’t talking about this blogger.

If you have a really dark sense of humor as I sometimes do on this subject, you may get as good a laugh out of this as I did:

“This is about the democratization of information, and about the fact that you cannot stuff information down people’s throats but you can make it more palatable.”

Aliza said the office’s YouTube channel is currently its most successful venture. “Photos catch the eye and constitute visual proof that is better than words,” she said, adding that IDF footage from the flotilla raid became the most-watched videos online and affected “media reports in the world as well as online debates”.

The notion that IDF videos of the Mavi Marmara massacre constitute “visual proof” of anything is simply beyond belief and beyond words. Who does she think she persuaded? What does she think the world thinks of that disaster? That everyone’s now straightened out, understands and accepts Israel’s narrative?

Another delightful note to add to this, is that the very same IDF fat man, Benayahu told the media that he was recently forced to travel to Britain incognito to prevent nasty disturbances against him and presumably a war crimes warrant for his arrest.  I can’t imagine how someone with as big and ugly a mug as he could think he could disguise himself.  And he certainly won’t the next time he tries this.

What’s even funnier about this guy is that though he’s the IDF’s top spokesperson he’s never fired a shot in his life and his army rank of Brigadier General is entirely honorary. Frankly, I’ve never heard of someone employed by an army holding a rank he never earned.  And can you someone this overweight ever have marched a step in his life?  Frankly, I think part of his hasbara regime should be going on a diet.  He’d make a more convincing spokesperson if he didn’t look like a shlub.

Izzeldin Abuelaish, the Love That Conquers Hate

Wednesday, January 19th, 2011



Tonight, I heard a great man.  I witnessed brilliance.  I heard love and grace.  Love that conquers hate.  Hope that vanquishes cynicism.  Dr. Izzeldin Abuelaish spoke tonight at Seattle’s Town Hall on his national tour, which will take him to around 20 American cities between this month and April. The above is a video filmed by Todd Boyle at Bellevue’s Temple Bnai Torah two days ago. Thanks to him for performing such a good deed.

On January 16, 2009 (today is three days after the second anniversary of the massacre) Dr. Abuelaish and his family were sheltering in his home from the IDF assault on Gaza.  He had just left his daughters room when an Israeli tank shell tore through his home killing his beloved eldest daughter, Bissan and two younger daughters.  His niece also died.  One of his daughters survived, just barely, along with another niece. The day after the massacre, Israel accepted a ceasefire and the war ended.

abuelaish daughters for life

Abuelaish daughters on Gaza beach


On September 16, 2008, only three months earlier his wife had died of leukemia.  With her death, Abuelaish not only lost a beloved spouse, but the mother of his children and the anchor of his family.  It was a devastating loss for all of them.

Only two weeks earlier, just before the war began, he had taken his daughters to the Gaza beach for a break from the despair of twelve weeks of mourning for their mother.  At the sea, his daughters wrote their names in the sand.  Thankfully, he managed to take a picture of the three of them enjoying their time there.  It would be one of the last happy times they would have together.

Just after the second shell hit, when Dr. Abuelaish was most anguished, his youngest son, 12, said to him:

izzeldin and abdullah abuelaish

Dr. Izzeldin holds his son, Abdullah, after the death of his daughters (Ben Curtis/AP)

Daddy, don’t be sad, now my sisters are with Mommy and they are all happy together.

In his talk tonight, Dr. Abuelaish said many things that in the mouth of another speaker might’ve come across as cliches.  Coming from a man of such deep humanity as him, they came across as not only genuine, but profound and deeply moving.  He talked about hate as poison, as a fire that consumes the hater.  When a Palestinian during the Q&A asked how he could speak of love in the face of the murder the IDF rains down on the Palestinian people, the doctor made one of the most moving statements of his entire talk.  He said:

My daughters were the most important thing in my life.  My duty in life is to them and their memory.  If the Israelis would bring to me the soldier who lauched the shell that killed my family and said I could do anything I wanted to him, if I killed him would I bring back my daughters?  No.  So I thought, what can I do for my daughters?  That’s what I want to do with my life.

As a result, he has established a foundation that will provide scholarships to girls to pursue their education and realize projects that make the world a better place.  He plans to award scholarship to girls of all nations of the Middle East including Israel.  His eventual goal is to open a school in Gaza.  He sees women as the key to the future, the key to peace.  That’s natural since he’s a gynecologist and infertility specialist.  But this is not a professional matter for him.  It is personal, deeply so.

The Gaza doctor spoke of a life steeped in suffering from his birth in a Palestinian refugee camp.  Growing up, his family had so little.  Life was hard.  In the past few years, since Israel began its siege in 2006, all of Gaza suffered.

But his overriding message, one that he delivered with overwhelming conviction, was on behalf of hope, on behalf of love.  But please do not get the impression that this was touchy-feely or passive or weak.  Not at all.  He says:

Be angry. Be angry at injustice. But do not let it turn into hate.  Don’t despair.  Don’t give up hope.  Do something.  The best antidote to despair is success.

As I said, one should not confuse this with weakness.  Dr. Abuelaish is a fierce opponent of the Occupation and Israeli policy.  And the power of his opposition is only amplified by his message of love and non-violence.  This is not the love of romance.  It is the love of justice.  One that embraces active resistance to injustice.

Another important point of his talk is that Israel and Palestine must not be alien, they must not be strangers.  Rather, they are conjoined twins.  Their fate is entwined.  The justice of which he speaks is not justice for only one side.  There is no such thing.  If we save the lives of Palestinians, we are saving the lives of Israelis as well.  What is good for Palestine is good for Israel and vice versa.

There is much nonsense out there, reflected in Gershom Gorenberg’s essay in the Weekly Standard, asking where is the Palestinian Gandhi.  With the implication being that Palestinians have betrayed their cause by lapsing into hate and violence instead of rising to the best traditions of Gandhi and Martin Luther King.  I’ve always hated this notion that Palestinians owe it to themselves and the rest of the world to rise above their human impulses.  As if someone who hasn’t suffered has a right to tell someone who has how they should respond to it.  Would we allow a German to tell Jews how their ancestors should’ve acted in the face of the Holocaust?

But Izzeldin Abuelaish is a truly great figure in that tradition.  He represents the finest values of not just the Palestinian or Arab nation, but all humanity.  He was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize last year.  Unfortunately, the wrong man won (Barack Obama).

For a deeply moving profile of the Gaza doctor read Rachel Cooke’s story from the Guardian.  Hear him if he comes to a city where you live.  If not, read his book.

I noticed that the usual Stand With Us crowd waltzed into the hall led by its Pied Piper of Hamelin, David Brumer.  He may’ve even brought with him a few of the SWU’s young IDF hasbara representatives who make the rounds of schools spreading the Gospel According to Bibi. I said with disgust to my friend Assaf Oron: “Omigod, they’ll try to harrass him.”  Assaf said they wouldn’t dare.  He was right.  Brumer walked out in the middle of the talk.  I think, as Assaf suggested, even he realized that Abuelaish was outside his league.  He and SWU simply have nothing to say in the face of his message.  How can hate resonate in the presence of such a man?

Gaza Doctor Whose Family IDF Killed During Cast Lead on National Speaking Tour

Saturday, January 15th, 2011

Dr. Izzeldin Abuelaish Interview.

Dr. Izzeldin Abuelaish, whose wife and three daughers were killed by an Israeli tank shell during Operation Cast Lead, is in the midst of a national speaking tour (see list for cities and dates) and promoting a new book he’s written on his life and the lessons he’s learned from the tragedy.  Though 1,400 were killed in Gaza, the doctor’s suffering was especially keenly felt as he had been a correspondent for Israeli TV reporting regularly on the assault.  Just as the TV news anchor called him, the shell hit and you can hear the wailing of Dr. Abuelaish as he realizes what’s happened.  It is some of the most heart-rending footage you will ever see or hear.  Subsequently, his story was told around the world including extensively in this blog and in the NY Times.

As a result, the doctor, who had been a gynecology specialist at an Israeli hospital and beloved by patients and staff there alike, left Gaza and moved to Toronto, where’s he raises the three other daughters who survived the attack.  The tank unit which massacred Dr. Abuelaish’s family has received no discipline of any kind.

He will be speaking at Seattle’s Town Hall on Wednesday, January 19th at 7:30PM.  He will also speak on Steve Scher’s KUOW show at 10AM on January 17th. If you live in the Pacific NW I urge you to hear a truly remarkable man, someone who has suffered enormously, but who manages to project a vision of peace that remains possible for these two peoples who have caused each other such pain.

His new book is I Shall Not Hate and is reported in this Guardian story.  If it’s half as extraordinary as the example this man has set, it is must reading.  Dr. Abuelaish’s tour began in Los Angeles on January 12th and will take him to a score of U.S. cities by April 1st.  If you have a chance see him it’s a wonderful opportunity.

Wikileaks: IDF Chief of Staff Preparing for New Missile War Against Hamas, Hezbollah

Sunday, January 2nd, 2011
shihab missile

Iran's Shihab missile, capable of hitting Israel 12 minutes from launch according to IDF chief of staff Ashkenazi

A new Wikileaks cable published in the Norwegian newspaper Aftenposten, recounts a meeting between IDF chief of staff Gabi Ashkenazi and a U.S. Congressional delegation headed by then-House armed services chair, Ike Skelton. The newspaper offers an overview of the meeting:

Documents of the talks between the Ashkenazi and Skelton, as well as numerous other documents from the same period of time that Aftenposten has gained access to leave a clear message: The Israeli military is in full swing to prepare for a new war in the Middle East…in the same areas where previous wars took place, namely in Lebanon and the Gaza Strip…

“I’m preparing the Israeli army in a major war since it is easier to scale down to a smaller operation than to do the opposite,” he told his American interlocutors.

“Israel is also on a collision course with Hamas,” [he warned]….In the next war Israel could not accept any restrictions on warfare in urban areas, continued Ashkenazi. During the war in Gaza…the Israeli army made mistakes, but never attacked civilians deliberately, he claimed.

Ashkenazi told the Congressional delegation he was more worried about the threat from Hamas and Hezbollah, whose rockets could blanket virtually all of Israel, than Iran. However, he did note that Iran had 300 Shihab ballistic missiles that would give Israel only 12 minutes warning before striking. All of this was designed to emphasize the IDF’s focus on missile defense in its strategic doctrine.

The Israeli general boasted of close U.S.-Israeli intelligence cooperation:

The Israeli army also has a very good cooperation with the NSA, the American intelligence organization, [he said].

In a separate briefing among Sen. Kirstein Gillenbrand, Gen. Yoav Galant, and unnamed Israeli intelligence officers, the following mendacious sophistry was offered:

Representatives of Israeli intelligence claimed that in the Gaza war [the IDF] had shown great restraint: During Cast Lead, the IDF operated with limited power and without [any intent] to occupy territory in Gaza. It was decided also not to go into the main urban areas. The result was that an operation that could have lasted three days, took three weeks, said the Israeli General Yoav Galant.

Also, the U.S. estimate of the Hezbollah rocket arsenal is half that of the IDF estimate: 20,000 compared to 40,000.  There seems to be a standard IDF intelligence policy of exagrerating the threat posed by Israel’s enemies.  The scary warning that a Shihab would hit Israel 12 minutes after firing seems of a piece with this alarmism.  Note too, Israel’s continually moving target date for Iran to become nuclear-ready.

One wonders whether any of the U.S. elected officials privy to these meetings believed anything they were told.  I presume the fact that they attended meant they attached at least some crediblity to the words of their Israeli interlocutors.

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