Mahzor

New York Public Library

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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 ‘jewish-telegraphic-agency’

JTA Dredges Up More Obamaphobia

Wednesday, March 26th, 2008

Apparently, some right-wing Jewish individual or group (this smacks of Mort Klein and ZOA or someone of that ilk) has fed yet a new Obama smear story to JTA with which to regale American Jews and plant new doubts in their mind. The latest example of Jewish Obamaphobia involves, you guessed it, Pastor Jeremiah Wright. Apparently his Church’s newsletter reprinted an L.A. Times op-ed column written by a Hamas representative arguing that Hamas should not be expected to recognize Israel before negotiating with it.

Let’s get real here. Many Israeli and American Jewish analysts (including a former Mossad director) agree with the Hamas position here. So what’s the problem? If the L.A. Times didn’t find it was fomenting terrorism and Israel hatred by publishing the original column why can’t the Pastor’s church republish it?

People, this is going too far. As a result of this lunacy, Obama feels compelled to get down on his knees and beg the Jewish community’s forgiveness for something that wasn’t his doing in the first place; and in the second, wasn’t even something that Wright should have to apologize for (unless that is the L.A. Times should also apologize for publishing it in the first place). Here’s Obama’s craven response:

“I have already condemned my former pastor’s views on Israel in the strongest possible terms, and I certainly wasn’t in church when that outrageously wrong Angeles Times piece was re-printed in the bulletin,” Obama said in a statement emailed to JTA late Thursday, and referring to critics who noted that Obama had been in church when Wright had made controversial statements. “Hamas is a terrorist organization, responsible for the deaths of many innocents, and dedicated to Israel’s destruction, as evidenced by their bombarding of Sderot in recent months. I support requiring Hamas to meet the international community’s conditions of recognizing Israel, renouncing violence, and abiding by past agreements before they are treated as a legitimate actor.”

This is a sorry statement which takes us back quite a ways in figuring a way to get Israel and the Palestinians (including Hamas) together to negotiate a way out of their impasse. The Jewish community is forcing Barack Obama to go through ever smaller hoops in order to get, or not to lose its support. Pretty soon the hoop will be as wide as the eye of a needle and neither Obama nor a camel can thread that.

It speaks volumes that JTA thought this story was newsworthy. They’re carrying water for Hillary, McCain or the Republican Jewish Coalition whether they know it or not.

Hat tip to Sam Smith for featuring this story at his blog.

Muzzlewatch-JTA Mutual Admiration Society

Wednesday, December 19th, 2007

Don’t get me wrong here. I like Muzzlewatch. I really do. And I understand that Muzzlewatch is different than Tikun Olam. It is the voice of Jewish Voice for Peace. As such it represents an organizational agenda where my blog represents a personal agenda.

JVP’s website’s weekly newsletter notes with pride that Ami Eden, JTA’s managing editor, would’ve included Cecilie Surasky, Muzzlewatch’s editor in the Forward’s Famous 50 list. I know as outsiders we Jewish progressives are all hankering to influence the mainstream political debate. We’re looking for that good word confirming that what we do impacts the mainstream. Hell, I’m even guilty of that myself. So I know how good it must’ve felt to JVP to get his praise. It means that maybe JVP could leverage such approbation to penetrate a wider audience–to get its voice heard by more people.

I mean it would be great to get onto the list–though you would share it with the likes of Michael Mukasey, Norman Podhoretz, Abe Foxman, Alan Dershowitz, Howard Kohr, Sheldon Adelson, Peter Deutsch (founder of the nation’s first “Jewish” public school), David Brog (Christians United for Israel), Charles Jacobs (David Project), Rita Katz (SITE Institute, anti-Muslim anti-terror group), Ronald Lauder, Michael Steinhardt, and Shlomo Cunin (Chabad). But I can’t help feeling awkward about Muzzelwatch basking in Ami Eden’s praise.

After all, this is the same JTA that published Mort Klein’s fake Desmond Tutu quote that supposedly equated Israel with Hitler. The same Ami Eden who called me a liar because I rightly noted that JTA had not apologized for smearing Tutu’s name. The same JTA which quoted a Maariv report which fraudulently claimed that Hamas called for the elimination of Jews from Palestine and never bothered to correct the report. The same JTA which couldn’t manage to find a single source to defend Danny Rubinstein’s use of the term apartheid to describe Israel’s Occupation policy. The same JTA which recycled fraudulent claims about the research of Barnard tenure candidate Nadia Abu El Haj and again couldn’t manage to find a single source to interview who would defend her. The same JTA which published a Ron Kampeas story about the Walt-Mearsheimer book asking whether they were “on drugs” when they wrote it.

It is really tempting to see Ami Eden’s comment as an indicator that Muzzlewatch has heft in the mainstream Jewish media. And it would be great news if this were so. But given JTA’s spotty (to say the least) journalistic record under Ami Eden–a record that predated him to be fair–the praise would give me as much pause as pleasure.

Maariv Mistranslates Hamas, Stoking Fires of Anti-Arab Enmity

Sunday, December 2nd, 2007

Thanks to a joint effort of Jerry Haber, Juan Cole and my reader Amir, we’ve tracked down both the source of the faulty Hamas translation I wrote about yesterday and what the real translation of the statement should be.

To recap, JTA wrote yesterday that Hamas had called for the elimination of Jews from historic Palestine. If accurate, this statement would be both a violation of Hamas charter, which calls for Jews to live in Palestine under a unitary state controlled by Palestinians (which admittedly is a troubling, unacceptable premise for most Jews); and it would be real news since it would mark an even further radicalization of Hamas’ position.

If inaccurate, it would mean that whoever translated this statement either accidentally or purposely stoked the fire of anti-Palestinian enmity by creating a statement that twisted both the Arabic words of the original (which you’ll find here) and the political views of Hamas.

It turns out that the original source for the story was probably Maariv, the major Israeli daily. I’m guessing that JTA has a stringer in Israel who translated the Maariv story into English. The Maariv reporter mistranslated a key portion of Hamas’ Arabic statement as Jerry Haber and Juan Cole have confirmed by comparing the Hebrew translation to the original.

Here is what Maariv claimed Hamas wrote (this is Jerry’s translation from the Hebrew). Disputed passages are italicized:

“Palestine is Arabic Islamic land, from the River to the Sea, including Jerusalem, the Al-Aqsa Mosque, the Churches, the Mosques, the Mountains, and the Beaches.” In Hamas they said, “The Jews have no place in it [Palestine- I.I], and it is a single unity that is indivisible.”

And this is Jerry’s translation from the original Arabic:

Palestine is an Arabic Islamic country from time immemorial, from its River to its Sea, with its Jerusalem, its Al-Aksa, its churches and its mosques, the Jews not having a presence in it. It is a single unity and is indivisible.”

To which he adds this rough translation of a similar statement in Arabic from the Hamas website:

“Hamas affirmed that Palestine is an Arab, Islamic country since time immemorial and Jews have no right whatsoever in the land of Palestine,”

So here’s the problem with the Maariv translation. First, it leaves out the phrase “from time immemorial.” Why is this important? Before we answer that, let’s note that the Hamas claim that Palestine has been an Islamic country from time immemorial is historically inaccurate.

Now, let’s continue. Juan Cole notes in an e mail to Jerry that the “time immemorial” phrase refers to the time before Jews came en masse back to Israel beginning in the 1880s. In other words, the point is to say that for centuries before 1880 Palestine was Arab. This is meant to bolster the current Hamas claim that all of Palestine (including what is now Israel) is legitimately Palestinian. Though it is true that there was only a negligible Jewish population in Israel for centuries after the Roman expulsion and the country was essentially Arab-dominated, it is surely not true, as I wrote above, that Palestine has been Arab from time immemorial.

That is why the phrase “not having a presence in it” is so important. This does not mean, as Maariv translates that Jews have no PLACE in a current or future Palestine. It means that Hamas is claiming that Jews had no physical existence in Palestine before the yishuv period. The purpose of this is to bolster the contention that Jews have no NATIONAL claim to Palestine.

Again, we can argue whether Hamas has a faulty grasp of history. But the main point as far as Jerry Haber and I are concerned is that we not allow Maariv, JTA and the thousands of right-wing commentators who have grasped this botched translation job to argue that Hamas has gone from being in favor a unitary state combining Palestinians and Jews; to an exterminationist position advocating the elimination of Jews from all of Palestine.

Why is this important? Sure, pro-Israel ideologues are going to argue what’s new and who cares. Hamas hates us. The statement whether accurately quoted or not merely confirms this. But I’ll tell you why it is important. What people in political conflicts say matters. When words are put into someone’s mouth that they did not say–this can matter even more. Demonizing Hamas by turning them into genocidaires serves the interests of the pro-Israel right. That’s what JTA and Maariv have done. They may have done so inadvertently or carelessly rather than maliciously. But they have done so nonetheless. And given the powder keg of hatred that is the current Middle East what we don’t need more of is provocation and distortion. Reality is bad enough without introducing incitement into the equation.

Will Maariv and JTA correct the record? Your guess is as good as mine. I hope so but I doubt it. A big hat tip to Sol Salbe, my trusty Australian source, who originally brought this story to my attention.

JTA, Unlike The Who, May Get Fooled Again

Saturday, December 1st, 2007
JTA article ‘hamas: jews out’

I’m going to go out on a limb here a little bit but…I think JTA has once again been hoodwinked by some anti-Palestinian propaganda outfit (possible CAMERA or MEMRI). In an unattributed article based on an unspecified media source (nor does it attribute the quotation to any specific person–all of which are warning signs), JTA writes:

Hamas: Jews Out

There is no place for Jews in the Holy Land, Hamas said.

As Israel marked the 60th anniversary of a U.N. vote approving the creation of a Jewish state alongside an Arab state in what was then British Mandate Palestine, Hamas called Thursday for the 1947 General Assembly Resolution 181 to be rescinded.

“Palestine is one indivisible unit and we will not cede one inch of its soil,” the Palestinian Islamist movement said in a statement, referring to what is now Israel, the West Bank and Gaza Strip.

Palestine is an Arab and Muslim land, from its river to its sea, and there is no place in it for the Jews.”

…In an apparent snub to Hamas’s maximalist rhetoric against Israel, [Palestinian President Mahmoud] Abbas [said at Annapolis]: “The time of extravagant promises by one rival trying to outbid another must pass, and not return. Now is a moment of truth, not of illusion.”

Who in Hamas said this? What “statement” does this article refer to? As my friend Sol Salbe wrote to me, this smells of a rodent.

People’s Daily Online reports what may be the same story but the text quoted is quite different. In addition, People’s Daily notes that the statement was distributed as an unsigned “leaflet” distributed to the news media, making it a less than credible representation of the official views of Hamas:

Islamic Hamas movement on Thursday renewed its rejection to United Nations Resolution No. 181 on the occasion of the 60th anniversary of its adoption, calling it a “resolution of partition.”

The resolution, issued in 1947, a year before Israel was born, called for the establishment of two states on the lands of historic Palestine, one Jewish and one Arab.

Palestine is one unified geographical unit, and can never be partitioned or sliced by resolutions or agreements,” said a Hamas leaflet sent to the press on the occasion of the anniversary, stressing “there is no compromise on the Arab and Islamic characteristics of Palestine.”

The movement, which has been ruling Gaza Strip since June 14, held the UN responsible “for issuing the unfair resolution 181 which divided Palestine and for the suffering and pain our people had passed over the past 60 years.”

“The resolution legalized the partition of the lands of Palestine between its legal residents, who were expelled out of it by force, and the illegal new comers of Jews and Zionists,” said the Hamas leaflet.

To a dyed in the wool anti-Palestinian these statements may appear so similar as to make any distinctions meaningless. But an important point of journalism is to be precise. While I agree with neither Hamas statement, the second version in no way claims there is no room in Palestine for Jews. And in fact, Hamas’ official position has been and continues to be that Jews are welcome to live in a unified Palestinian state. Again, this is not a view I share. But it is a far cry from calling for the elimination of Jews from Palestine or Israel as JTA claims Hamas believes. If we disagree with Hamas can’t we at least do so and quote them accurately? Is it necessary to twist and distort their views to make them appear even more heinous than they are?

Personally, I think JTA is the victim of a faulty MEMRI-type mistranslation (at the least). So I challenge the editors to document this story further or repudiate it. If they cannot document a legitimate source and legitimate translation I’d like to know who was their original source. A few weeks ago they were “had” by Mort Klein who fed them a fake Desmond Tutu “quotation.” I think it’s entirely possible that unlike The Who, who said “we won’t get fooled again,” JTA has been.

JTA Editor Accuses Tikun Olam of Lying

Wednesday, November 21st, 2007

But we’ll let you, dear reader, be the judge.

Ami Eden, the editor of the Jewish Telegraphic Agency has accused me in a series of private e mails of lying about JTA’s coverage of the Desmond Tutu fake quote controversy. You’ll recall that JTA published a fabricated quotation from Tutu that equated Israel with Hitler. The real source of the statement was not Tutu, but Mort Klein of the ZOA who falsely attributed it to the South African Nobel Prize winner.

Both Muzzlewatch and I called JTA’s attention to the fact that they’d been had by Klein. For some reason it took them six whole days to acknowledge anything was wrong–and when they did they could only muster this:

A news release from the Zionist Organization of America, which condemned Tutu’s remarks, cited a report from Ha’aretz that quoted Tutu as saying that “Israel is like Hitler and apartheid.” A transcript of the speech available online does not include the Hitler quote.

This doesn’t state clearly that not only doesn’t the Haaretz article contain the quote, but it never existed to begin with. Do you see the words “mistake” or “apology” or “sorry” anywhere here?

A few days after this appeared, JTA’s Ben Harris wrote a more detailed and explicit story about the Tutu affair which allowed Klein to get away with claiming that his only mistake was in not attributing the Israel equals Hitler statement to himself rather than Tutu. As if it somehow would’ve made it more kosher if Mort Klein claimed Tutu equated Israel with Hitler rather than claiming Tutu actually said this himself

Again, nowhere in Harris’ article does he acknowledge JTA made a mistake. Nowhere does he acknowledge the damage done in the Jewish community to Archbishop Tutu’s reputation by this fraud. ‘Sorry’ doesn’t seem to be in JTA’s vocabulary.

In fact, Harris allows the Minneapolis JCRC’s representative to unload another smear against Tutu by claiming that Tutu ‘compares the Jewish lobby to Hitler.’ This statement isn’t rebutted. It isn’t challenged. It’s left hanging out there. JTA managing editor Ami Eden trusts JTA’s readers to make their own judgment and claims they don’t need to have Swiler’s statment “sugar-coated.”

Apparently, Eden isn’t reading the comments published at his own site and in local Jewish newspapers where JTA stories are syndicated. A large number of JTA readers DO believe these ideas about Tutu and don’t have the sophistication Eden attributes to them.

Eden said to me in an e mail regarding my claim that JTA hadn’t properly addressed its mistake:

…It’s a smear to claim that we did not correct the record with our readers about the Tutu story.

Not only did we do a story about Tutu that got the facts right, we wrote another story acknowledging that JTA and other news sources got it wrong — and we explained where the factually inaccurate information came from.

To suggest otherwise is simply lying. Have you been spreading this lie on your blog?

Dear reader, you be the judge. Did JTA “correct the record?” Did JTA “get the facts right?” Did JTA “acknowledge…it got it wrong?”

An additional word of disclosure. When Eden first became JTA editor [note: it is important to Eden that I note he is managing editor, and not editor--hereby noted] a few months ago I wrote to him about my dissatisfaction with JTA’s Mideast coverage. He asked me not to quote in my blog what he wrote to me. I responded that I would honor his request.

During the Tutu affair I forgot my promise and published four one-line snippets of his e mails to me. When Eden pointed out my breach I said I’d made a mistake. Not good enough for Eden since I hadn’t said I was sorry. That was when I asked him whether JTA had apologized for its own boneheaded mistake regarding Tutu. And you know what–he never answered my question.

When he accused me of lying that’s when I informed him that if he didn’t retract the statement my agreement not to quote him was ended. Needless to say, he never did that and that’s why I quote him here. He seemed to think that terms of an agreement, once made, can never be changed even when one party displays bad faith. He seems to think my credibility is at stake because I have changed those terms. I’ll let you be the judge of whether an honorable person accuses another of lying without a shred of evidence.

Why is all this important? Clearly, a spat between a Jewish blogger and a Jewish editor doesn’t’ amount to a hill of beans in this world. But consider this. JTA is not just an obscure news agency. It is a major source of news for affiliated American Jews. Yes, the number of affiliated Jews is declining year by year. But it is still significant (somewhere around 20% I believe). That means that several hundred thousand American Jews at least partially if not largely form their opinions on the Israeli-Arab conflict based on what they read in JTA, which not only maintains its own website but is syndicated in virtually every local Jewish newspaper in the country. Even more significant is that virtually all of the Jewish leadership and Jewish organizations do the same. For better or worse, AIPAC, the ADL, the AJC and President’s Conference determine the communal political agenda in this country. And JTA is their media mouthpiece.

So having a JTA which skews the news about Israel-related matters in a nationalist direction is a serious matter. As we’ve come to understand in the aftermath of the Iraq fiasco, a nation whose sources of information are constrained by ideological blinders and inaccurate assumptions doesn’t have the necessary background to make accurate assessments about what direction U.S. policy should take. Nor does JTA do American Jews a service through its slanted coverage. A cynic will argue that JTA does precisely what its overseers and supporters wants it to do. The distortions and omissions reflect the perspective of the Abe Foxmans, Howard Kohrs, David Harrises and Malcolm Hoenleins of the Jewish world and they wouldn’t permit a JTA that strayed from their own prejudices.

While that may be true, it doesn’t mean that liberal Jews have to stand for it. That’s why I’m going to blog about JTA (and other Jewish media). I’m going to point out their mistakes. I’m going to point out their successes. I’m going to take them to task when they fail the facts and their readers. I’m going to praise them for what they do well. I hope some other progressive bloggers will also do the same.

So here goes:

1. When JTA covered the story of Haaretz’s Danny Rubinstein speaking at a UN conference and calling the Occupation “apartheid” the news agency couldn’t manage to find a single source to either explain or defend Rubinstein’s usage of the term in the Israeli context. Eden contended that there was such a rush to publish the story there wasn’t time to find an alternative source.

2. When JTA covered the Nadia Abu El Haj tenure controversy, Ben Harris could only muster a single academic who said anything positive about her work compared to multiple sources who denounced it.

After she received tenure, Prof. Abu El Haj e mailed to tell me that Harris had asked her for an interview and asked what I thought of his work. I sent her the link to this story. I guess the interview never took place. And I guess that doesn’t bother JTA much. I should add that I want her to speak to JTA. I want her words to reach a mainstream Jewish audience. I want Jews to judge her for good or ill (and I’m prepared to have them judge her critically) by her actual words rather than fabricated quotations created by Jewish intellectual charlatans and passed on as gospel by sources like JTA. And I would’ve liked to help facilitate such an interview if I could. But what guarantee would she have had that the subsequent article based on her interview wouldn’t have been a set-up designed to take her down a notch or two as the first story did?

3. A current JTA story on the Australian election might lead you to believe that the only issue Australians care about is how “good” the various parties are on Israel. It also leads you to believe there is only one issue on the minds of Australian Jews–you guessed it, Israel. Iraq and the national economy come in for a brief mention. Immigration is nowhere to be found.

There’s also a somewhat incomplete claim in this report (provided thanks to Sol Salbe). Dan Goldberg says:

Michael Danby, the only current member of parliament who identifies as a Jew and who is expected to win re-election in Melbourne…

Sol published this comment on the website:

As a voter in Nicola Roxon’s electorate of Gellibrand I can vouch that Ms Roxon has always been proud of her Jewish heritage. The information about her Jewish father was available on her web site six years ago when I moved into the electorate. What happened two weeks ago was that the Australian Jewish News finally discovered what has been available on the public domain for years.

5. If you try to include a link with a published comment on the JTA site it will likely be rejected (mine have been consistently over several months). At first I thought the webmaster didn’t approve of my critical remarks about some of the JTA reporting and rejected the comments for that reason. Then I realized the site had a glitch. When pointed out to the webmaster and editor, as of the last time I checked, the behavior continued. Is this any way to run an allegedly interactive website?

Stories number 1 and 2 above are not aberrations. You will not find source balance in JTA stories about the Israeli-Arab conflict. You will find conservative sources quoted heavily. Perhaps you might find a liberal source quoted here and there. But the overwhelming slant is to the right. I suggested to Eden that if he didn’t want to use me as a liberal source he should seek out informed opinions from other liberal Jewish bloggers like Phil Weiss, Jerry Haber, Dan Fleshler, Daniel Levy, Eric Alterman or any number of others. Let’s see how long it takes before JTA acknowledges that there ARE liberal Jewish bloggers let alone quotes one of them in a story.

Lest anyone claim that I am solely focussed on JTA, by reviewing this site you will find I have critiqued stories from the Forward, Yediot Achronot and Haaretz. And I will continue to do so.

Columbia Grants Abu El-Haj Tenure

Friday, November 2nd, 2007

nadia abu el hajNadia Abu El-Haj (Barnard College)

The long, arduous journey of Nadia Abu El-Haj, Barnard professor of anthropology, to tenure is finally over. The Columbia administration has approved Barnard’s recommendation and she will become tenured faculty on approval of both institutions’ boards of trustees. Thanks to Sol Salbe for noting the JTA report on this from earlier today. However, a Jewish journalist friend of mine has pointed out a typical JTA error in the copy for the story:

El-Haj is the author of “Facts on the Ground,” a book that attacks the Israeli archaeological establishment for fabricating material used to legitimize Israeli policies.

My friend called this sentence:

a complete and utter distortion of the book, which, of course, the journalist, whoever he/she might be, has not read. What he/she has read is Paula Stern’s petition or Gabrielle Berkner’s New York Sun story. On deadline, people [just] WRITE STUFF. It’s a pity The Sun gets to set the template.

It would have been much more precise to say that Abu El Haj’s book attacks the Israeli archaeological establishment for fabricating ideas used to legitimate Israel’s national identity. She has never accused Israeli archaeologists of fabricating materials or evidence.

I should add that even the notorious neocon NY Sun got the story basically right this time (though of course they refused to include an interview with anyone defending Abu El Haj’s views). They call her:

A Barnard College professor who argues in her scholarly work that archeological evidence has been manipulated to justify the existence of a modern Jewish state…

In the book, Ms. Abu El-Haj, who is a Palestinian Arab, writes that Israeli archaeologists use their research to further an origin myth about the homeland of the Jewish people.

There are two issues here. First, the academic issue: Columbia, in granting her tenure has reaffirmed its commitment to considering tenure and advancement decisions based on a scholar’s academic record and free from political interference. In this regard, the decision arrived at was the only one Columbia could’ve made if it wanted its academic reputation to be intact.

Second, is the political issue. Campus Watch, Frontpagemagazine, the David Project and their allies among Barnard alumni who campaigned against Abu El-Haj have lost this round. I say round because to them this clearly is a never-ending ideological war. No doubt they will be back when the Barnard professor publishes her next research into Jewish genetics and genealogy. No doubt they will be trolling for the next Abu El Haj to whom they can take an ax. But the good news is that they have been stopped here. Academia finally said to them: here and no farther.

JTA describes Columbia’s statement:

[It] said El-Haj had passed the college’s “rigorous” tenure process and expressed confidence in her ability to contribute to scholarship and learning at Barnard.

“Tenure, together with the norms of academic freedom that pertain to all faculty, gives scholars the liberty to advance ideas, regardless of their political impact, so that their work may be openly debated and play a critical role in shaping knowledge in the scholar’s academic field,” the statement said.

There will be a temptation by the Foxmans of the Jewish world to pile on Columbia. I hope they resist the inclination. But if they don’t we will be there to call them for their cynical manipulations of issues like academic freedom and anti-Semitism.

It’s both instructive and entertaining to read Paula Stern’s delusional ramblings on the defeat of her campaign against the Barnard anthropologist. Poor Nadia is likened to those who have hung nooses and swastikas lately on the doors of other Columbia professors:

This is a warning to Jewish students at Barnard and Columbia – you will now have one more professor to avoid, one more purveyor of hate in your ranks. Already the lowest forms of life are crawling out amid the ivy. A swastika was painted on a door of a Jewish professor at Columbia, a noose on the door of a black professor, more swastikas in other places – think you that there is no connection?

Barnard president Judith Shapiro comes in for her share of opprobrium:

Shapiro can have little doubt that many will remember her for the seeds she planted long after she is gone from Barnard. These are the seeds of hatred and racism.

Here Stern acknowledges that she took a Columbia course from one of the great Zionist teachers of the 20th century:

While at Columbia, I took an amazing class, the History of Zionism, with Rabbi Arthur Hertzberg. It was an enlightening class by a brilliant man. He put forth the idea that you should not fight a battle unless you know you can win. To lose, he told us, is to damage yourself more. Better not to fight at all.

I disagreed then, and I disagree now. You fight evil. You fight injustice. Even knowing you will likely lose – you fight it so that the next time, the fight will be easier and perhaps in the next battle, those who fought against evil will triumph.

She of course distorts Hertzberg’s views as she has distorted Abu El Haj’s. Hertzberg was one of the great fighters against evil and injustice. In fact, he was one of the most principled and vociferous Zionist doves regarding the Israeli-Arab conflict precisely because he understood the injustice done to Palestinians in creating the Jewish state. He would doubtless stand aghast at the views and behavior of his former student, if not disown her.

Here Stern lumps together those of us who supported Abu El Haj’s tenure bid with the big bad anti-Semit’n:

The anti-Semites think they have won – and they are painting their glory across the campus with swastikas. This too is a sign that Columbia has lost its way.

Should anyone need proof that Stern has taken leave of her senses, read this:

Though our hearts are heavy, victory goes to those who fought a good fight, a clean fight, an honest one.

Sure, if you leave out the lies, distortions and fabrications it was one helluva good, clean, honest fight.

Here is more of Stern’s ‘clean, honest’ lies:

As for El Haj, let her be warned – the fight will continue to be waged. She can deny Israel’s right to exist all that she wishes and attempt to rewrite Israel’s history

Stern never provided a single example during her entire campaign of Abu El Haj “denying Israel’s right to exist.”

Finally, I would add that for those who disagree with Abu El Haj in a principled way there is the time-honored tradition of academic debate in the world of ideas. I urge them to follow her work; critique it; argue with it; don’t accept it at face value. But do so while remaining true to the standards of evidence and debate. Read her work. Quote it properly. Marshal counter-evidence. Publicize your findings. But do not smear; do not lie; do not use intellectual short cuts.

There will no doubt be calls to boycott Columbia’s fundraising program by alumni. I urge Columbia alumni (like myself) to contribute to Columbia and Barnard even more than you have in the past. Show the Daniel Pipes, Paula Sterns and Diana Muirs of the world that for every chnyuk who boycotts Columbia another one of us will step forward to take their place.

JTA: Foxman As Defender of Tutu’s Free Speech Rights

Thursday, October 11th, 2007

I finally heard back from Ami Eden, managing editor of JTA about their coverage of the cancellation of Desmond Tutu’s speaking engagement at University of St. Thomas. All I can say is that relations between JTA and this blog and much of the rest of the liberal Jewish blogosphere aren’t going to improve anytime soon. I admit I don’t take kindly to JTA’s often slanted, unbalanced coverage of Israel-related issues and write about such sloppiness here. But I think they’ve shot themselves in the foot on the Tutu story even when they attempted to rectify their omissions and errors. And when I brought the matter to their attention they reacted testily and frostily.

When JTA ran a story quoting a ZOA press release saying Tutu had said: “Israel is like Hitler and apartheid” I fired off an e mail to Ami notifying him that this was a fraud. He was on vacation. He replied he hadn’t followed the issue but would when he returned. When JTA “corrected” the mistaken report and still acknowledged the ZOA attribution was a ‘quote’ that they hadn’t been able to verify rather than a fake or non-quote, I also noted that to Ami.

I also noted yesterday that Ben Harris’ JTA story about the ZOA fakery didn’t acknowledge I (and at the same time Mitchell Plitnick of JVP) had discovered the fraud nor did he interview either of us for the story. In his article, Harris writes that he did an internet search to discover whether the “quotation” was legitimate and who had used the quotation previously. The only reason he did this was because I and possibly JVP (though I haven’t confirmed this with them) had pointed out the questionable status of the quote by doing the exact same research before him and publishing my research.

Further, Harris quotes the Minneapolis JCRC rep, Julie Swiler as concatenating the Tutu smear by introducing a new smear in which she says that the Nobel Prize winner compares “the Jewish lobby to Hitler.” Harris doesn’t think to challenge the assessment nor interview anyone else who might challenge it.

JTA bestows laurels on Abe Foxman for regaining Tutu’s speaking invitation (“…The national director of the Anti-Defamation League, Abraham Foxman, sent Dease a letter urging the school to reissue its invitation to Tutu. The next day, Dease announced he was reversing himself.”) without acknowledging the national campaign waged by JVP asking St. Thomas to reconsider. JVP’s campaign was featured in a Minneapolis Star Tribune op-ed and a story on the AP wire, and it was instrumental in The Forward’s editorial against the cancellation. One could credibly argue that without JVP Foxman never would’ve touched the story (strange as that may sound). Yet you won’t hear that at JTA.

This is an example of a news agency that isn’t doing its job well enough, isn’t challenging its reporters or interviewees to broaden their coverage to incorporate all points of view in this critical debate about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Instead Ami Eden takes umbrage at my critique and labels my work substandard without qualifying how or proving it is.

I know criticism is hard to take. I know JTA has played a central, almost monopolistic role as a national Jewish agency for decades. It’s not easy to have the new kids on the block take (what it perceives as) pot shots at you. But instead of swatting at us like flies and contending we’re illegitimate, JTA might actually try to listen and appreciate the criticism. It might make them do their jobs better.

[Note: The original version of this post contained several short quotations from e-mails Ami Eden wrote to me on this matter. He reminded me later that he had originally asked me not to quote here anything I wrote to him. I forgot this and at Ami’s request have deleted those passages to rectify my mistake. However, I also note that I no longer have such an agreement with him due to his showing what I consider bad faith in suggesting I might be a “liar” in my coverage of JTA.

University of St. Thomas Relents, Tutu to Speak, Minneapolis JCRC Claims Tutu ‘Compares Jewish Lobby to Hitler’

Thursday, October 11th, 2007

In a remarkable turnaround brought about by a campaign of Jewish Voice for Peace’s Muzzlewatch blog and with a small assist from Tikun Olam, the University of St. Thomas has backed away from its previous rejection and reinvited Archbishop Desmond Tutu to speak on campus. Muzzlewatch originally reported that the university had disinvited him because the Minneapolis Jewish Community Relations Council had told school administrators that he was “anti-Israel” and had made remarks likening Israel to Hitler. Today’s Minneapolis Star Tribune carries an opinion column by JVP staffers Mitchell Plitnick and Cecilie Surasky criticizing St. Thomas’ position prior to its reversal.

We should applaud St. Thomas for finally seeing reason on this issue. Their boneheaded, tone-deaf orginal decision simply put them in an untenable predicament making an academic body appear to stifle the free exchange of ideas on controversial subjects like the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Unfortunately, the Jewish Telegraphic Agency is giving the lion’s share of the credit to Abe Foxman (“ADL: Let Tutu speak at university”), who wrote a letter to the University’s president asking him to reconsider his rejection of Tutu. It is slightly maddening to have the single Jewish leader most guilty of stifling free speech over the Israel-Palestine issue get credit for gaining a platform for Archbishop Tutu. But one thing I have to say about Foxman is his PR instinct is impeccable. He’s taking huge amounts of flack for pressuring various venues to deny speaking opportunities to Tony Judt and Stephen Walt and John Mearsheimer among others. Here, in a single moment he looks like he’s on the side of the angels by embracing a Nobel laureate and endorsing his right of free speech. But we can see through this self-serving motivation.

When I read the original Muzzlewatch report my BS meter went off the charts when I read this reputed Tutu quote: “Israel is like Hitler and apartheid.” Turns out the alleged quote was fabricated by the ZOA’s Mort Klein. After doing some research I wrote this blog post and pointed out the mistake to JTA and they did a piss poor job of “correcting” the mistake, only acknowledging that they hadn’t been able to verify the ‘quote’ (which it isn’t), but not that it was fake (which it is).

Now, Ben Harris has written a bit more explicitly about the incident and allowed Klein to claim that the quotation attributed to Tutu should’ve been attributed to him and that it was a simple mistake. In addition, one portion of Harris’ article is a virtual recapitulation of what I’ve written here about the incident. On October 5th, I wrote:

..>Where did this fraud emanate from? The ZOA first manufactured the quotation for an April, 2002 press release. David Horowitz (of course) repeated it in Frontpagemagazine in February, 2003. Charles Jacob of the David Project repeated it here in August, 2007. The popular rightist Powerline blog also repeated it here in November, 2006. The National Christian Leadership Conference for Israel repeated it here. This smear is like a deadly virus. Not deadly in the sense that it destroys one’s body or property. But deadly nevertheless in that it attempts to destroy a reputation and credibility of a political opponent. Mort Klein manufactured the virus in his hate lab. But all those who spread the virus deserve a share of blame and their credibility must also be questioned.

Harris writes on October 9th:

An Internet search reveals that the “Israel is Hitler” quote found its way into other publications, including Front Page Magazine, which published an article in January 2003 by John Perazzo citing the quote.

Charles Jacobs, president of the Boston-based David Project, cited it in a column in August warning about Tutu’s visit to Boston later this month. And David Horowitz, Front Page’s editor, used it in an article slamming the divestment movement. Numerous bloggers also have cited the quote.

I sent links to my posts on this subject to Ami Eden so he and Harris had to be aware of what I was writing. Yet Harris makes no mention of this blog nor did he speak to me about this article. When I attempted to make note of some of this in the JTA’s comment thread for the article my comment was rejected. I’ve written to Ami Eden, the managing editor about the incident. We’ll see what he has to say.

UPDATE: I just discovered that Cecilie Surasky has been negotiating with JTA all week about how they would cover the story. I didn’t know about this when I first wrote to Ami.

A few errors continue to propagate both in the University’s and JCRC’s comments about the incident. Here St. Thomas’ president says:

I spoke with Jews for whom I have great respect. What stung these individuals was not that Archbishop Tutu criticized Israel but how he did so, and the moral equivalencies that they felt he drew between Israel’s policies and those of Nazi Germany, and between Zionism and racism.”

Once again, the alleged “moral equivalency” that the JCRC felt Tutu drew between Israeli policy and Nazi Germany simply does not exist.

JTA also allows the JCRC rep to repeat another inaccuracy about Tutu’s views on Israel:

Swiler told JTA that after the university approached the JCRC for an opinion about Tutu, she discovered a speech he delivered in Boston in 2002 in which he compared the power of the “Jewish lobby” to Hitler,

Again here is the full text of this portion of the speech and as anyone can see if anything Tutu was comparing the apartheid regime to Hitler:

“People are scared in this country to say wrong is wrong because the Jewish lobby is powerful — very powerful. “Well, so what? This is God’s world. For goodness sake, this is God’s world! We live in a moral universe. The apartheid government was very powerful, but today it no longer exists. Hitler, Mussolini, Stalin, Pinochet, Milosovic and Idi Amin were all powerful, but in the end they bit the dust.”

But truly what Tutu was doing was speaking in general about a whole host of unjust regimes, one of which happened to be Nazi Germany, which gave way to more just and democratic forms of government. He was saying that the Israeli Occupation will also give way to a system that respects both Israeli and Palestinian rights to national self-determination.

Julie Swiler further distorts Tutu’s record with this statement:

Swiler said, “I think most people in the Jewish community would find comparing the quote-unquote Jewish lobby to Hitler offensive,” she said.

This of course does Mort Klein one better. Instead of Klein’s fabrication claiming Tutu compares ISRAEL to Hitler, Swiler fabricates a Tutu claim that the JEWISH LOBBY is like Hitler. Wow, how far can we go even after supposedly clearing Tutu of guilt for anti-Semitism and endorsing his right to speak, in not only reviving the smear, but making it worse.