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 ‘independent-jewish-voices’

‘A Time to Speak Out’ On Sale

Friday, September 19th, 2008

I just received in the mail today 10 fresh new copies of the new Independent Jewish Voices essay collection, A Time to Speak Out.  It’s hot off the press and now available for purchase.  I contributed one of the chapters, The Blogging Wars.  The book goes on sale at bookstores on October 6th.  I now have copies for sale via this website or you can click the bookcover/Powell’s link to the right and order online from them.

If you’re interested in purchasing a copy from me, please remit $19.95 plus $3 for shipping by clicking the above Paypal button.  Include your name and mailing address.  I will get the book out to you in the mail within 24-48 hours.

Even if you’re not interested in purchasing the book, I gratefully accept donations from readers to support the costs involved in maintaining this site.  You can contribute via the Paypal button.

‘A Time to Speak Out’ to Be Published October 6th

Tuesday, August 5th, 2008

I’ve contributed an essay about the role that blogs and the internet play in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict that will be published in A Time to Speak Out.  It is a collection of essays by Independent Jewish Voices, an English initiative spurred by the Lebanon War, which was originally hosted by The Guardian’s Comment is Free.  In fact, IJV is how I first became familiar with CiF and how they first became familiar with me when they published my first essay there.  I believe I am the only American included among the contributors.

If you are a book reviewer or know someone who can review the book or promote it in any way, please contact me or Clara Hayworth at Verso Books (clara at verso dot co dot uk).  If you are a journalist, please consider writing a piece about it or including a reference to it (or an interview with me or one of the editors) in a story you might write about the I-P conflict.

Independent Jewish Voices Protests Gaza Siege

Thursday, January 31st, 2008

independent jewish voices ad
Brian Klug sent me today Independent Jewish Voices‘ ad published in yesterday’s Times of London protesting the siege of Gaza and the Qassam attacks on Israeli targets. The ad read:

The siege of Gaza is causing devastating social and economic consequences and threatens a humanitarian catastrophe…The collective punishment of the people of Gaza is illegal under international law. We condemn all attacks on civilians, including the rocket attacks on the people of southern Israel.

We call upon the Israeli government to lift the blockade of Gaza, for both sides to observe a ceasefire as a first step toward a just, comprehensive settlement, and for the international community to bring the isolation of Gaza to an end.

We need to do something similar for the American media. Anyone willing to join me?

‘Cracks in the Wall’ Published at The Guardian

Saturday, February 10th, 2007

comment is free screenshot
I’ve been marveling at the wonderful essays published at the Guardian’s Comment is Free blog on the Independent Jewish Voices initiative. I’ve especially noted the similarity of issues facing independent Jews in both England and America regarding the Israel-Palestinian debate. So I asked the editor if he’d consider publishing a few of my reflections. To my delight, they accepted a piece I’d been working on which incorporates some of the troubling incidents I’ve been writing about here over the past few weeks in which the mainstream Jewish leadership has been stifling the free flow of ideas on the conflict.

Cracks in the Wall has just been published at the site. I hope you go over and take a look. I’m trying to stay detached from the comments thread. But I’ve noted in other essays there, that the right wingers seems to predominate. So if you are of a mind too, and there’s anything particularly outrageous in the comments thread, let your views be known.

British Jews Rebel Against Leadership’s ‘Rubber Stamp’ of Israeli Policy

Monday, February 5th, 2007
independent jewish voice adIndependent Jewish Voice Times ad

Sol Salbe just sent me a new Guardian article announcing the creation of the group, Independent Jewish Voices. Nearly 200 British Jews have had their fill of a leadership that seems to support Israeli policy and the Occupation unswervingly. That’s why they’re declaring their independence:

Independent Jewish Voices will…call for a freer debate about the Middle East within the Jewish community. Among the more than 130 signatories are Stephen Fry, Harold Pinter, Mike Leigh, Janet Suzman, Gillian Slovo and Nicole Farhi, as well as leading academics such as Eric Hobsbawm and Susie Orbach.

“We come together in the belief that the broad spectrum of opinion among the Jewish population of this country is not reflected by those institutions which claim authority to represent the Jewish community as a whole,” the letter says. Jewish leaders in Britain, it argues “put support for the policies of an occupying power above the human rights of an occupied people” in conflict with Jewish principles of justice and compassion.

It lists the founding principles which inform the group’s mission:

1. Human rights are universal and indivisible and should be upheld without exception. This is as applicable in Israel and the occupied Palestinian territories as it is elsewhere.

2. Palestinians and Israelis alike have the right to peaceful and secure lives.

3. Peace and stability require the willingness of all parties to the conflict to comply with international law.

4. There is no justification for any form of racism, including anti-semitism, anti-Arab racism or Islamophobia, in any circumstance.

5. The battle against anti-semitism is vital and is undermined whenever opposition to Israeli government policies is automatically branded as anti-semitic.

Here is a full list of signatories.

Brian Klug, an Oxford philosophy professor, penned a masterful accompanying column which expands upon the rationale for the initiative:

…Today an oppressive and unhealthy atmosphere is leading many Jews to feel uncertain about speaking out on Israel and Zionism. People are anxious about contravening an unwritten law on what you can and cannot discuss, may or may not assert. It is a climate that raises fundamental questions: about freedom of expression, Jewish identity, representation, and the part that concerned Jews in Britain can play in assisting Israelis and Palestinians to find their way to a better future…

The Board of Deputies of British Jews (which calls itself “the voice of British Jewry”) devotes much of the time and resources of its international division to “the defence of Israel”…All of which suggests that British Jewry, speaking with one voice, stands solidly behind the Israeli government and its military operations.Two things are wrong with this suggestion. First, it’s false. Jews were deeply divided over Israel’s campaigns in Gaza and Lebanon last year. Certainly, there were those who shared the sentiment of the chief rabbi, Sir Jonathan Sacks, who…said: “Israel, you make us proud.” Others felt roughly the opposite emotion.

…We reject any attempt to suppress legitimate public debate and we abhor the culture of vilification.The slur of “traitor” or “self-hating Jew” is especially noxious. For, if we feel compelled to protest against injustice to Palestinians, this is partly because of the lessons of our own history: the Jewish experience of marginalisation and persecution. Furthermore, when the language of human rights is spoken, many of us (secular and religious) hear the voices of those Hebrew prophets, rabbis, writers, activists and other Jewish figures down the centuries for whom Judaism means nothing if it does not mean social justice.

So, when we speak out against Israel’s occupation of the West Bank and Gaza, or the bombing of Lebanon, or discrimination against Palestinians within Israel itself, we are not turning against our Jewish identity; we are turning to it. Some of us, recalling that nearly 40 years have passed since Israel’s occupation began, hear a resonance. This was the length of time the Israelites wandered in the wilderness, near the end of which Moses gave them a directive: “Justice, justice shall you pursue” (Deuteronomy 16:20). It is a compass bearing for all humanity, especially when we are trying to find our way – or help others to find theirs – to a better future.

It is refreshing to know that in many Diaspora Jewish communities including here in the U.S. and Britain cracks are appearing in massive, age-old glaciers, which are slowing beginning to fall into the sea. It is our role to ensure that our communities become more open, more flexible and more pragmatic around our relationship to Israel. Our leaders, as the Independent Jewish Voices initiative asserts, have not done Israel or their respective communities a service in marching in lock step with the worst of Israeli policy toward the Palestinians and Israel’s other Arab neighbors. We look forward to a future of more broad-minded leadership here at home and one that provides hope for Israelis and Palestinians to live in peace.

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