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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

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Dove

Ben Heine

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Hoda Jamal

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Israeli and Palestinian boys

from documentary, Promises

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Cat in the Hat

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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 ‘i-97’

I-97 Opponents Plan $150,000 Campaign

Tuesday, July 15th, 2008

[Update: Rob Jacobs correctly noted in a comment below that my original title was in error.  it is not Stand With Us that is spending $150,000 to defeat I-97, but rather that amount will be spent to defeat it by those who oppose it (including, but not limited to SWU.]

Opponents of Seattle’s anti-Occupation divestment measure, I-97, announced that they plan to spend $150,000 to fight it in court and on the ballot.  Though I’m no expert in local politics, this seems an extraordinary amount of money to spend for a local Seattle measure.  Of this, $80-90,000 will be spent on hiring an attorney (I’m trying to identify who this is) to represent the group (presumably in court challenges) and the remainder to hire the political consultants, Gogerty Stark Marriott.  Among the latter’s clients have been such conservative corporate clients as Walmart and Weyerhaeuser.  They also represented AT&T in its attempts to topple net neutrality regulations under consideration in Congress.

I recently wrote an op-ed for the local Seattle Jewish newspaper, JTNews, in which I predicted that opponents of the Israel Occupation divestment inititiave, I-97, would pull out all the stops, twisting the meaning of the measure to be anti-Israel.  They’ve gone one better.  In a message to supporters, Stand With Us, the right-wing pro-Israel group leading the campaign, falsely characterizes the Initiative:

…(I-97)…is a Trojan horse, an anti-Israel initiative cloaked as an anti-Iraq War initiative. While proponents claim that I-97 “Divests from War,” two-thirds of the Initiative focuses on divestment from Israel. It would penalize Israel for protecting Israeli civilians from terrorist attacks and Qassam missiles. And it would penalize only Israel and not the Palestinian leadership or Hamas for shooting Qassam missiles at civilian neighborhoods or sending suicide bombers into pizzerias and shopping malls.

Of course, I-97 has nothing whatsoever to do with defending Israel, Qassam rockets or suicide attacks.  I-97 is about the Occupation, period.  It calls for divesting municipal pension funds from U.S. companies that profit from the Israeli Occupation.  At that, only two companies have been mentioned as potential targets: Motorola and Caterpillar.  So much for “penalizing Israel for protecting civilians from terror.”

When you place such a campaign in the hands of right-wing extremists like SWU, you get mendacious, apocalyptic rhetoric like this.  The only question is whether the lies fan the flames of opposition to the measure or whether voters see through the histrionics and are repelled by it.  My hope is for the latter to happen.

I wonder whether the Jewish federation, which is an enthusiastic participant in the opposition campaign, has signed on for such extremist rhetoric.  I, for one, hope that they let the wingnuts rule the roost on this one.  The more extreme the rhetoric the easier it will be to discredit them.

In a side note, Allyson Rowen Taylor, an L.A.-based pro-Israel extremist credits herself as a “founder” of Stand With Us.  It’s interesting to note that she has written that former President Jimmy Carter “clarly [sic] is in cahoots with the radical Islamofacists.”  She’s accused Israel’s major universities, without providing any evidence of course, of supporting faculty members who are “anti-Israel radicals…openly call[ing] for Israel to be annihilated.”

Though I don’t believe she is directly involved in the Seattle campaign, the hate-filled Rowen Taylor symbolically represents the real Stand With Us with whom the local Seattle Jewish community has thrown in its lot.  Rowen Taylor is also Rachel Neuwirth’s best friend and ideological soulmate.  Readers will recall that Neuwirth called a UCLA Hillel rabbi a “kapo.”  Neuwirth recently filed an appeal of her loss in her libel claim against me to the California State Court of Appeals.

Locally, Stand With Us also brags that two local legislative districts considered endorsing the initiative and both voted it down.  What the message neglects to say is that, according to a supporter present at one of the meetings, SWU actually packed the room with opponents who did not live in the district; and on a voice vote they drowned out the actual local residents who supported it.

I’m sorry to report that Brit Tzedek and most other liberal Jewish peace groups, oppose I-97.  Since I’m a member of Brit Tzedek, I have to say that I’m most disappointed in the group’s political timidity.  I think the utterly catastrophic situation which the Occupation has imposed on both the Palestinians and Israel calls for drastic measures instead of calculation and caution.  I’m pleased to say that Jewish Voice for Peace supports it.

Caterpillar Kills Israelis Too

Thursday, July 3rd, 2008
What hath Caterpillar wrought? (BBC)

As I heard the terrible news of the terror attack in Jerusalem carried out by an East Jerusalem construction worker, I thought what an irony it would be if the bulldozer used was made by Caterpillar.  Yesterday’s NY Times coverage confirmed my thought:

Witnesses said they saw the vehicle, a large Caterpillar front-end loader, set off close to midday from a building site at one of the busiest intersections in the predominantly Jewish, western half of the city…

Caterpillar equipment has a special resonance among Palestinians. Human rights activists have lobbied the company to stop selling its heavy vehicles to the Israeli military out of concern that they have been used to demolish Palestinian homes, uproot orchards and construct Jewish settlements in occupied land.

Though perhaps the terrible irony of this incident will be lost on Israeli Jews, it will not be lost on Palestinians who are made to suffer the brunt of the terrible destructive power of the Caterpillar bulldozer, the “engine” of the Occupation.  We should add to this, that a similar vehicle by the same company killed Rachel Corrie.

Seattle’s Initiative 97, which calls for divestment from companies like Caterpillar which profit from the Israeli Occupation, takes on a whole new meaning in light of this attack.  The bulldozer not only harms Palestinians, but Israelis as well.

Israeli politicians are once again baying for collective blood-vengeance against East Jerusalem residents despite that fact that a single individual was responsible.  They have conveniently forgotten that collective guilt violates not only international law, but Jewish law as well.

Attorney General Menachem Mazuz informed Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and Defense Minister Ehud Barak on Thursday that rulings made by the High Court of Justice over the years clarify there is no constitutional barrier to demolishing the home of a terrorist, although there are legal obstacles in both the local and international arenas that must be considered.

Mazuz arrived at this ruling after in-depth discussions…over the question of whether Israel is permitted under the law to demolish the home of the East Jerusalem man who plowed a bulldozer into a string of vehicles in downtown Jerusalem on Wednesday and killed three people.

Olmert’s political hatchet man, Haim Ramon, concedes the demolition will have absolutely no impact on future terrorism and thereby concedes the utter bankruptcy of the government policy.  But not only does he propose demolishing the home, he also demands (and this is a new and insidious proposal) that ALL residents of neighborhoods where terrorists live should be collectively punished by being cut off from Jerusalem:

Vice Premier Haim Ramon (Kadima) told Army Radio on Thursday morning that Israel should treat the East Jerusalem neighborhoods of Jabel Mukaber and Zur Baher as Palestinian villages, and revoke the permanent residency status of their residents.

Wednesday’s attacker came from Zur Baher, and Jabel Mukaber was the home of the Mercaz Harav terrorist. In the aftermath of both attacks, Ramon called for the two neighborhoods to be entirely cut off from Jerusalem.

“One of the main reasons that the attack was carried out yesterday with such ease was because there are Palestinian villages that for some reason are called Jerusalem – Jabel Mukaber and Zur Baher. They need to be treated as we treat Ramallah, Bethlehem, Jenin and Nablus,” Ramon told Army Radio.

Such a policy would give Israel the best of all possible worlds.  It can annex East Jerusalem as it did taking control of Palestinian territory, while surgically removing specific residents and neighborhoods from the benefits of being annexed to Israel.  Israel still controls their land, but no longer has any responsibilities toward the residents.  A strange and, as I said, an insidious policy.

The cluelessness of Israeli policy is most evident in this statement:

Ramon also told Army Radio that he felt, as opposed to the prime minister and his fellow ministers, that demolishing the home of the terrorist’s family would not prevent the next terror attack. However, he said that the house should be demolished anyway, if the law allows it.

“I doubt that demolishing the house will achieve what it aims to achieve, though if possible, the house must be razed. The laws must be made to fit the policy and we mustn’t give up,” Ramon said. “What we are permitted to do, we must do as soon as possible.”

Interesting that Ramon seems so concerned about maintaining the semblance of legality to the housing demolition scheme, while being someone convicted of sexual assault.  How can someone who broke the law and paid for it convince anyone that he’s concerned about what the law says in this case.  The only thing more icily and darkly ironic would’ve been if Olmert had named Ramon justice minister after his sentence was completed.

My impression of political policy was that it should be efficacious.  It should achieve some result.  Here there is no result.  There is only an appearance that the government is doing SOMETHING to respond to terror when in reality it is doing nothing.  This reflects a political system that is bankrupt & political leaders who are rudderless.  Days like yesterday and statements like these make me feel utterly hopeless that there can ever be any good that comes out of this Godforsaken conflict.

Apparently, Israel is such a country where the families of Arab terrorists are not allowed to mourn their dead, as Haaretz shows video images of Israeli police tearing down in disgust the mourning tent erected by the family of the bulldozer driver.  Has it come to this that we can’t allow our enemy to engage in the fundamental human act of mourning the dead?  We aren’t talking about making a hero out of the man, but merely allowing his family to mark his passing.

For those of you who want to read a few twisted screeds from the Jewish-Israeli press on this incident (and I don’t recommend this for the faint of heart) read Bradley Burston’s Kahanesque rant in a Haaretz that should’ve been embarrassed to publish it and Jonathan Mark’s equally vile ranting in Jewish Week.  After you’ve done this you must read Bernard Avishai’s moving commentary that puts both of the above pieces of excrement to shame with its profound humanity.

Seattle I-97 Divestment Campaign Against Israeli Occupation

Tuesday, June 10th, 2008

The debate about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is about to heat up considerably here in Seattle. Peace activists have taken a page from the Presbyterian and Methodist churches, which have proposed resolutions divesting church funds from companies that benefit from the Israeli Occupation. Initiative 97 would ask the city to divest its pension funds of companies which “do business with Israeli settlements or in disputed territories” (see full text in pdf here). If Israel attacks Iran, the city must withdraw any funds invested “with the Israeli government.” I’m assuming this means Israeli bonds.

I’m aware that this issue, like the issue of the academic boycott against Israel, is fraught with conflict. Israel’s supporters in the local community will take great umbrage at this perceived assault on the State of Israel.

But before that happens, there are several things everyone should know:

Divestment is not the same as a boycott and the two should not be confused. Divestment only involves ending investment in companies that benefit from the Occupation. It doesn’t even directly effect Israel (except in case Israel attacks Iran). Boycott is an entirely different animal.

Divestment is not a tool meant against Israel as a state. It is a tool directed at the Occupation. It is one thing to attack a government’s policy and another to attack a nation’s existence. This initiative does NOT do the latter. Anyone on the anti-initiative side who raises this claim is doing a disservice to I-97 and their own campaign.

Divestment is not meant to prevent Israel from protecting itself. It is not meant to attack the IDF. Rather, it is meant to tell American companies and Israel that its settlement policies and policies of subjugating the Palestinians are not acceptable to the citizens of Seattle.

That is why I support the concept of divestment and this initiative. I want to make clear that I am a supporter of Israel, but a critic of the Occupation. I do not relish supporting any measure that might cause harm to Israel even indirectly. But we all should admit that the situation is dire. Protests and pressure on Israel to advance to final status talks have not worked. The Occupation is just as entrenched as when it first began 41 years ago.

International criticism of Israeli works. It gets the government’s attention. Otherwise, the lion’s share of the local Jewish organizations would not be up in arms over this. I would say to them: if you don’t like divestment become more proactive in making your views known to Israel’s leaders. Instead of sitting back and watching as Israel and the Territories burn, do more. Protest. Tell President Bush that we need bold action and not the pablum we’ve gotten over the past seven years. Again, Israel listens when the Diaspora makes its views known. If local Jewish groups don’t, you can’t blame the outside world when it decides it has had enough.

However, I should add a few additional points:

I think the Initiative overstates its argument here: “The World Court in The Hague has ruled that the…separation barrier built by Israel in the occupied Palestinian territories is illegal under International Law…placing those who plan, participate in, and profit from its erection at risk of…prosecution, and liability both financially and socially, even more than in apartheid South Africa.”

While I agree with the general argument, I’m not sure why it speaks so broadly about culpability for construction of the Wall. Does the Initiative have to be phrased such that an architect or general contractor might be tried for violating international law? There may be legal reasons I’m not aware of relating to the city’s investment policies causing this statement to be added.

The comparison of the Occupation to South Africa seems gratuitous and unnecessary. Does it matter whether the Occupation is worse or less bad than apartheid South Africa? The Occupation is bad. Shouldn’t that suffice?

The Initiative specifically targets Caterpillar because they sell their armored bulldozers for use in demolishing Palestinian homes. Another company mentioned as benefiting from the Occupation has been Motorola (though it is not specifically referenced in the Initiative text). It will not affect Boeing because the company is not involved in any commercial enterprises in the settlements.

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