Muslim and Jewish Women in Nazareth

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

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New York Public Library

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Sarajevo Haggadah

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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

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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 ‘max blumenthal’

Hebron Fund Hosts Settler Gala at Mets’ Citi Field

Saturday, November 7th, 2009

Later this month, one of the leading U.S. fundraising groups supporting the most extreme settlement groups, will host its annual fundraising gala at the New York Mets’ new Citi Field. David Ignatius wrote a few months ago in the Washington Post that the Fund and other pro-settler groups raised $33.5-million over a three-year period to support Israeli (Bernard Avishai calls them “Judean”) colonists who live on Palestinian land in violation of international law. Peace Now, the most formidable source for documentary evidence on the subject, estimates that the vast majority of settlements sit on privately-owned Palestinian land expropriated from their legal owners.

Adalah-NY and other anti-Occupation groups have raised their voices against this gruesome party and demanded that the Mets cancel the event. They did the same last year and the midtown hotel which was serving as host ignored the protest and the event went ahead as planned, raising hundreds of thousands more for settler racists. Adalah’s protest largely revolves around the fact that one of the settlers’ primary objectives is to make the land free for Jews and to rid it of Arabs. Given that Jackie Robinson is closely identified with N.Y. Mets history (the stadium rotunda under the club where the gala will be held is named in his honor), a protest aimed at the Hebron Fund’s racist mission is particularly apt.

But Adalah doesn’t mention other salient facts that cause the Hebron Fund and other pro settler fundraisers to violate both U.S. and international law and their tax-exempt status. Some of the funding supports settlement security. In other words, it may be used to buy guns, ammunition, communication gear, dogs, vehicles and other paraphanelia settlers use to terrorize their Palestinian neighbors. U.S. law specifically bars funds from U.S. citizens being used for acts of terror.

Clearly, Jack Teitel, accused settler mass-murderer (of Jews and Palestinians), and others have engaged in such acts of terror. Residents of other settlements have engaged in terror as well. It is high time that we American Jews stop this abuse by refusing to support it and by ostracizing those who do. I am waiting in vain for New York Jewish leaders to call for an end to support for the Hebron Fund and calling on the Mets to eject pro-settler donors from the luxury boxes at Citi Field. It is high time that the IRS review Hebron Fund’s 501c3 status and revoke it if it can be found that their funds were used to support terror.

Max Blumenthal has also written about the Moskowitz Foundation, another tax-exempt pro-settler vehicle for funding the Judaization of East Jerusalem, awarding $50,000 to Ronit Shuker, founder of Shvut Rachel. Shuker is documented on video calling for the expulsion of Arabs from the Land of Israel, which is nothing less than a call for ethnic cleansing. Once again, U.S. taxpayer subsidized funds should not be supporting calls for ethnic cleansing in the West Bank.

Phil Weiss has also documented on audiotape another settler leader, Nadia Matar of Women in Green, calling for the assassination of Mahmoud Abbas during a talk she gave at a fundraiser held for her group, Women in Green, held at a Manhattan synagogue. Yet another example, of settlers supporting terror on our dime. When will we wise up?

2 1/2 Cheers for Historic J Street National Conference

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009

To support my expenses and participation in the J Street conference, please consider, if you haven’t already done so, making a generous contribution.

I’ve just returned from the historic first national J Street conference attended by 1,500 Jewish progressives and peace activists.  I found it to be alternately bracing, challenging, illuminating and infuriating.  During a lifetime when I have been used to feeling in the minority for my political views, it was quite amazing to walk through the halls of the hotel and see hordes of Jews (and non-Jewish allies including Arabs) who shared (more or less) my own particular outlook on the Israeli-Arab conflict.  Coming from a community of 40,000 Jews here in Seattle, it had been years since I had seen that many Jews in one place at one time, let alone progressive Jews.  So yes, it was a heady experience.

J Street has done a great deal to break open the discourse around this subject in the American Jewish community.  No longer do we have to feel like we’re whispering in the dark when we’re calling for a two state solution that offers justice to both Israel and the Palestinians.  No longer does Aipac and the rest of the Israel lobby sit astride the colossus that is American Jewry and crack the party line whip.  No longer does the Israeli government “own” the entire American Jewish leadership enabling it to march in lock step around any particular issue.  There has been more diversity in the discourse in the past 18 months since J Street launched than in the past decade before that.

But I don’t want to paint an overly rosy picture.  J Street is still very much a work in progress.  Can it take advantage of the breakthrough that happened this past weekend to mount a coherent and persuasive alternative political line to the Israel lobby?  Can it open dialogue on this issue on Capital Hill as well?  And in the White House?  I think it has already done so to a small extent.  But J Street is battling a $60 Million Man with perhaps tens of thousands of volunteers throughout the nation and direct access to hundreds of members of Congress and their staff.  J Street is nowhere near that level of power and influence–yet.

But clearly, at least parts of the lobby are deeply frightened of J Street and have let loose the guns in the run-up to the conference.  There was an orchestrated campaign by Aipac to prevent the Israeli ambassador from attending the conference.   A former Aipac staffer known for his smeary reputation penned an article accusing the group of accepting donations from ARABS!  Other “journalists” and bloggers took up other themes designed to raise doubt about J Streets bona fides as a legitimate Jewish organization.

For this reason, J Street has felt it needed to walk the line between a conventional pro-Israel position as defined by the Israel lobby and a more progressive line.  This is where I have often felt myself diverge from the group’s strategy.  There is clearly a minefield through which J Street is walking.  It does not want to be another Aipac, but it also does not want to turn into yet another small, underfunded, short-lived Jewish progressive group along the lines of Breira, New Jewish Agenda or even the late lamented liberal American Jewish Congress.  For that reason, J Street, when it can, attempts to adopt positions that show an independent, maverick streak.  For example, it has endorsed the current Berman Iran sanctions bill being marked up in Congress this week.  This is definitely not a progressive position.  But it an attempt to triangulate between left and right and walk a line that is neither on one side or the other but somewhere between.

Jeremy Ben Ami, the Jewish lobby’s director, gave an interview to Jeffrey Goldberg in which he took quite center-right positions on issues like Iran sanctions, the Goldstone Report, the Law of Return and other matters.  It was a calculated attempt to show the so-called centrist Goldberg that J Street couldn’t be pigeon-holed as a mere extension of the Jewish left.

On the other hand, J Street clearly arose out of a progressive Jewish impulse and knows that this is what makes it unique and important on the current scene.  As but one example, Jerry Haber and I organized a blogger session at the conference.  It was a delicate relationship which began with a frustrating attempt on my part to understand why J Street refused to incorporate the panel into the official program.  But eventually, I began to see this decision as actually good not just for J Street but for the bloggers themselves since it allowed J Street to disagree with us and vice versa.  And that is precisely what happened.  During our panel at the conference bloggers like Max Blumenthal took Ben Ami strongly to task for the Goldberg interview.  And alternately, a Palestinian-American blogger offered the strongest and most heartfelt endorsement of J Street’s two-state solution.

Such a panel allows J Street legitimately to claim that it is open to voices to its left.  Nothing can ossify an organization quicker than forcing a consensus down the throats of members.  Aipac has done this more or less and its positions are about as ossified as they can be.  One of the beauties of J Street is that it is a work in progress.  It has strong positions as well it should.  But it is also open to an evolution of the political process.  This year J Street debated one set of issues.  Next year, new ideas and concepts will creep into the mix.  J Street may never explicitly endorse BDS or the Goldstone Report or any number of issues propounded by the left.  But next year, those issues may at least be debated officially within the halls of the conference.  Perhaps Neve Gordon and Naomi Klein will even be invited to enter the august halls of J Street next year.  That is all we can legitimately ask of J Street.  That they remain open to the free flow of ideas and adapt their political agenda as those ideas become or accepted and enter the mainstream.

Returning to the blogger panel, Blumenthal had one of the more memorably funny quotes of the day criticizing Elie Wiesel’s address to Pastor John Hagee’s Christians United for Israel national event (the joke refers to Wiesel’s investment losses with Bernie Madoff):

The last person Elie Wiesel trusted this much was Bernie Madoff.

The blogger panel was slimed by Michael Goldfarb in his bile-filed post in the Weekly Standard.  Among the more objectionable passages in his report was a description of Gaza Muslim blogger Laila El-Haddad as “hijab covered.”  I wonder why Goldfarb didn’t comment on Jerry Haber, an Orthodox blogger and co-host of the panel, wearing a kipah.  The comment was clearly Islamophobic and shameful.  Goldfarb seems to fancy himself an expert on Arab religious head gear, but hasn’t a clue what a hijab really is. A scarf, which Laila wore, is not a hijab.

Rachel Barenblatt offers a fuller report on the panel discussion at Velveteen Rabbi.

Another denizen of the right-wing Jewish deep slime, Hillel Stavis, crashed the panel, taking pictures of the panelists and attendees without authorization and had to be escorted from the room.  Since he was a registered conference goer, J Street allowed him to remain in the hall even though he wrote a scummy report at his own blog complaining of his “shabby” treatment.

What follows is a combination of an outline of the most interesting ideas I heard from speakers at the conference combined with my critique of the ideas when they really impressed or disgusted me.

There were several discussions about settlements.  At one, Akiva Eldar of Haaretz recounted a great story about a settler leader named Elitzur who told the reporter:

The Land of Israel is my wife.  The State of Israel is my cleaning lady.  If I have to make a choice, I choose my wife.

On a similar theme, Bernard Avishai has come up with what I think is a brilliant new term that distinguishes the settlers from your average Israeli.  He calls the former “Judeans.”  This too frames them as tied to the ancient land of Israel and also ancient, outmoded Biblical notions of Jewish nationhood.  Avishai is interested in a definition of Israel that is modern and like unto the nations and not yoked to hide-bound notions of God-given rights to the land.  That is why he has called his new book, The Hebrew Republic, to separate it from the settlers’ notion that Israel is Judaic religious entity (in the sense that a settler would use the term “Judaic”).

I also had an interesting chat with Avishai about his debate with Jeffrey Goldberg about the Law of Return.  He favors dropping the Law of Return in favor of a standard set of immigration procedures like all other countries have.  Within those procedures there would be provisions for accepting as immigrants any Jews facing life-threatening danger or anti-Semitism.  But once admitted to Israel these immigrants would have to wait a requisite period to become citizens just as in other countries.  This is precisely the type of normalization of Israeli life I too believe in.  As long as Israel is home to Jewish exceptionalism, it will not find its rightful place in the region or the world.

J.J. Goldberg participated in two panels and for me it was two too many.  At The American Jewish Left and Israel he made a series of strange statements that showed he had long since eschewed his mantle as a hero of the radical Jewish student movement of the 60s and 70s and become a cranky old Yid.  Among his more memorable statements (I paraphrase):

* The American Jewish left has a problem with guns.  This is a problem Israel can’t afford.

* 20 years ago J.J.’s lefty Jewish friends were beaten up by Jewish goons from the JDL and the like.  Now, he thinks they were beaten up by the wrong people but for the right reason.

* the younger generation of American and Israeli Jews has been traumatized by 9/11 and the second intifada.

As for the last point above, J.J. has got it precisely wrong.  He himself and those who think like him have been traumatized by 9/11 and the Intifada.  Young Jews, on the contrary have not been affected nearly in the same way.  In fact, polls by American Jewish pollsters show that young Jews in this country are increasingly alienated from Israel not because of the events the Forward editor lists, but because of Israel’s harsh, unyielding REACTION to them.

The conference featured an excellent panel on developments in Iran headlined by Trita Parsi, founder of the National Iranian American Council (and a guest speaker at the Seattle conference I’ll be hosting in December) and Hillary Mann Leverett.  These are two of the clearest thinking, most pragmatic Iran analysts in this country.  Their voices were fresh and a delight.

Both argue against sanctions.  Parsi pointed out that due to existing American sanctions, Microsoft had already closed down its own Instant Messaging service before the disputed Iranian elections in June.  Facebook was about to do so when the violent uproar occurred in the streets of Teheran and people massed in their tens and hundreds of thousands using sites like Twitter and Facebook as their social networking Bibles.  The Iranian activist was pointing out the utter counter-productiveness of using sanctions like a sledge-hammer rather than the scalpel that is needed to make any progress on these issues.

Parsi argues that America tends only to think of punishments for Iran not behaving as it would like.  Instead, we must think of what we can offer the Iranians that would act as motivators for them to change their behavior or compromise on issues of importance to the U.S.  Sticks do not work without carrots.  Iran wants to normalize relations with the U.S.  Then why don’t we hold this out as a possibility if Iran compromises?

To point out the level of delusion and mutual misunderstanding that exists among the various major parties to this conflict, Trita noted that Iranians think of the U.S. 90% of the time and believe that Americans think of Iran 90% of the time.  They don’t.  Israelis think of Iran 90% of the time and believe Iranians think of Israel 90% of the time.  They don’t.

Leverett called for a major U.S. opening to Iran, likening it to Nixon’s breakthrough trip to China in 1972.  Back then, Nixon was willing to reconcile with a Chinese leader who had just killed 3-million during the Cultural Revolution, who had recently tested an atomic weapon, and who was threatening Japan, a major U.S. ally.  Despite all these issues, Nixon did not waver in his commitment to open a relationship with the Communist regime.  As a result, relations now, while not always tension-free, are on a much more stable footing than they ever were since the Communist takeover in 1949.

In this scenario, Israel plays a similar role to Japan.  Leverett contends that a grand opening to Iran could have precisely the same results that Nixon’s opening to China did in vastly improving U.S. relations with Iran and the latter’s relations with Israel.

J Street has adopted a confusing position regarding sanctions.  While it supports the Berman bill, Ben Ami said during a discussion with Rabbi Eric Yoffie that it supports diplomatic engagement, but does not YET support sanctions.  I can’t reconcile those two positions.  In addition, I asked whether J Streeters, when they lobby on Capital Hill tomorrow will be talking about sanctions.  The answer I heard was No.  Imagine the importance of such an issue in the possible lead up to a military attack against Iran and J Street has chosen to sit on its hands.

Sooner rather than later, J Street’s leadership will come to understand that sanctions are not a wedge issue like the ones Republicans exploit for partisan gain.  Rather they are part of a possible scenario that could lead to scores, hundreds or even thousands losing their lives in attacks and counter-attacks involving Iran, Israel and their respective allies.  Thus, sanctions must soon demand a pure moral response rather than a tactical political one, as reflects J Street’s current position.  Otherwise, the worst could happen, and by then it will be too late for progressive Jews to weigh in with a principled position.

One of the important achievements of the conference was a panel composed entirely of Palestinians who shared their vision of what they wanted a peaceful future to look like.  Bassim Khoury, the recently resigned PA economics minister (he resigned in protest of Mahmoud Abbas’ shelving of the Goldstone Report), reported that no one could argue any longer that Jerusalem was a “united” city.  In fact, he claimed, the Holy City was characterized by apartheid in which the Jewish section of the city received a vastly superior percentage of resources and services compared to the impoverished Arab section.  The numbers, when Khoury flashed them on the screen in Powerpoint slides, were chilling.

He had another memorable line:

The Green Line is a red line.

When Hussein Ibish took up what he called the “red herring” argument advanced by Bibi Netanyahu that Palestinians must accept Israel as a Jewish state, I thought how insane it would be for Mahmoud Abbas to insist that Israel recognize Palestine as a Muslim state.  Clearly, what Netanyahu is trying to do is head off the claims of those who advance the Palestinian Right of Return.  If Israel is accepted by Palestinians as a Jewish state then presumably they have just dispensed with their right to demand a return to their ancestral homes and homeland.

Gen. Jim Jones, Obama’s national security advisor, gave the keynote speech and I’ve rarely heard a less illuminating, more canned speech.  It told us absolutely nothing new except that the Obama administration, if Jones’ remarks are a true reflection of current policy, are based on wildly optimistic assumptions about the actions of all the major players.  Just as an example, Jones acted as if he believed it was possible to get Russia and China around a sanctions regime against Iran.  I see no evidence this is yet remotely possible.

But the speech I most objected to followed Jones and was delivered by Rep. Robert Wexler, who was Barack Obama’s court Jew during the election campaign.  Wexler had no clue what audience he was addressing.  He shreyed at us like we were residents of a  Jewish old age home in Boca Raton, his home district.  He kept harping on the issue of Israel’s security repeating three times that U.S. and Israeli forces were at that moment engaging in military exercises.  Did Wexler really think this was a message that would resonate at a J Street conference?  Did no one at J Street brief him on his remarks?  Wexler reminded us that Hamas were nothing but terrorist thugs and that President Abbas and prime minister were the great white hope of the Palestinian people.

The Florida congressman even had the chutzpah to say that Jordan’s King Abdullah simply wasn’t doing enough for peace when he pointed out to the Obama administration that the 2002 Arab League peace initiative was on the table and Israel should accept it before the Arabs can be expected to reciprocate.  What did Wexler demand in return from Israel?  That it accept a settlement freeze.   There is a fundamental disconnect in pro-Israel people like Wexler who don’t stop to understand the differences in their respective expectations of Israel and the Arab states.  Essentially, Wexler expects the Arab states to normalize relations with Israel. In return, Israel has to freeze settlements.  Not, return to ‘67 borders.  Not, share Jerusalem. Not, accept the Right of Return.  Just freeze settlements.  There is a fundamental imbalance there.

Obama’s top Jew parroted the Aipac line that Iran must give up all uranium (which when he pronounced the word came out sounding like “Iranium”) enrichment and live up to the requirement of the Non-Proliferation Treaty.  The only problem with this line is that according to NPT, Iran is entitled to enrich uranium as long as it doesn’t do so to weapons grade.  Wexler comes across to me as a wind up toy you program and then let loose on whatever audience you want him to tackle.  There is no finesse, no intelligence.  Just canned talking points brayed in an insistently loud voice as if he was imploring you to believe him.

Believe it or not, Wexler has just announced his resignation from Congress in order to take up the presidency of the Middle East Foundation for Peace and Economic Cooperation.  One wonders how someone who knows so little about the issues can successfully take up such a portfolio.

There was some consternation among progressive attendees at Rabbi Eric Yoffie’s address to the conference.  He spent a good deal of time launching rather vicious personal attacks on Judge Richard Goldstone and his report on the Gaza war.  One of Yoffie’s main claim was that it was shameful for Goldstone to allow himself to be used as a Jew by such an anti-Israel body as the UN Human Rights Council.  To my shock, Yoffie’s dyspeptic statements were booed three times by the audience.  The last time, the moderator, Jane Eisner, publisher of The Forward, invited those booing to leave the room.  What I don’t think she understood was that there were probably more people in the audience who were disgusted by Yoffie’s attack than supported it.  One could easily argue that it was Yoffie who was showing chutzpah rather than the audience.

I wondered why the Reform movement’s leader would come to J Street propounding such an antagonistic position.  I realized that Yoffie, who attacked J Street during the Gaza war for insufficient pro-Israel patriotism, had to cover his own right flank.  By attacking Goldstone he could argue on returning to the Reform fold that he went into the lion’s den to tell the “Jewish leftists” how a good pro-Israel Jew sees these issues.  In that way, Yoffie allows himself to say that he’s willing to talk to the Jewish left and he can tell the Jewish right he only went there to tell off the leftists.

One of the most disappointing Israeli speakers at J Street was former Kadima Knesset leader and convicted sex offender, Haim Ramon.  He is clearly a very smart, very rigid Israeli politician who comes with a clearly programmed Diaspora speech praising the two state solution and warning how quickly Israel will face a dreaded one-state solution if it does not act to end the Occupation.  The only problem with this rap is that Ramon served as a senior minister in numerous governments (most recently under Ehud Olmert) who had their chance to end the Occupation and chose to squander it on useless wars in Lebanon and Gaza.

Ramon even had the temerity to boast of being one of the prime movers of the unilateral Gaza withdrawal.  That worked out quite well, didn’t it?  He claimed that Israel should adopt the same policy and, if necessary unilaterally withdraw from the West Bank.  Hearing this left me scratching my head: if it didn’t work the first time why would it work the second??

Jeffrey Goldberg on J Street and the Blogger Panel

Saturday, October 24th, 2009

Jeffrey Goldberg has finally broken his silence on J Street.  Well, not exactly silence, since he’s spoken glancingly about the national conference, though not in any detail.  He kept his powder dry for a story he published today which consists of an interview he did with Jeremy Ben Ami.  My initial reaction is complicated but mostly favorable.

First, a bit of background.  Goldberg is a bellweather Jewish journalist.  He buys into what I call the corporate Jewish consensus and has a lot of the bad habits that such Jewish I-P journalists have which I’ve written of here.  But he’s sophisticated enough that he sometimes has a trenchant and provocative perspective on issues and takes an independent view of things.  So his type of journalist plays a large role in the Jewish community.  If he hates you then it gives the radical right a license to kill.  If he holds his fire or even speaks favorably, then a whole host of enemies are disempowered.

So I think that Jeremy has done well by engaging Goldberg and attempting to explain J Street to him.  And Goldberg, considering the drawbacks to his reporting, has done a pretty decent job in this interview (with a few exceptions–more on that later).

I’d like to focus mostly in this post on the points where I take issue either with Goldberg or Ben Ami.  They begin with a discussion of the Walt-Mearsheimer book and Walt’s support for the J Street conference.  While Jeremy does well refusing to renounce Walt’s support, both Goldberg (who I expected) and Ben-Ami (who I didn’t) seriously mischaracterize the book’s central tenet.  Here is Goldberg:

Stephen Walt and John Mearsheimer blame the organized American Jewish community for starting the Iraq War and even helping cause 9/11? It’s a statement of fact, it’s in their book.

This is a typically lazy Goldbergism.  You reduce an argument to a slogan or sound byte.  The authors of The Israel Lobby don’t blame “the organized Jewish community” for the Iraq war.  They blame “Jewish neocons” for the war.  That is even overstating it.  They blame Jewish neocons for providing some of the key intellectual underpinning for the movement leading to the war.  And they claim that the reason for such Jewish neocon support was a sense among them that this would support Israel’s aims in the region.  Now, you can argue with this thesis from various angles.  But it seems to me that it is at least in part accurate and certainly deserving of serious debate instead of derisive dismissal.

As for blaming the American Jewish community for “helping cause” 9/11, that too is reductionist.  Walt and Mearsheimer say that the festering nature of the unsolved Israeli-Arab conflict has allowed Islamist extremism as represented by Al Qaeda to flower.  If there was no Arab-Israeli conflict, there might still be an Al Qaeda, but one of its strongest recruiting tools would be eliminated.  That’s what these authors really say.  You can compare that to Goldberg’s mischaracterization and see how far he is from the truth.

Jeremy too wildly mischaracterizes the Walt-Mearsheimer thesis in this passage:

…When the analysis of that lobby…essentially says that all of American foreign policy is controlled by this one lobby and this one interest group, to me, personally, this does smack of the kind of conspiracy theories contained in the Protocols of the Elders of Zion. This notion that somehow Jews control this country, they control our foreign policy, that there is some diabolical conspiracy behind the scenes, this is when you cross that line.  I believe that the analysis in the Walt and Mearsheimer book and article crossed that line…

Personally, I think Jeremy should be ashamed.  Apparently he hasn’t read the book.  If so, he should.  At least then he could speak more intelligently about it.  The book argues not that all of U.S. foreign policy is “controlled” by Jews (that WOULD be anti-Semitic).  Rather it argues that U.S. policy relating to Israel has been largely controlled by the lobby.  As for the claim that Walt-Mearsheimer says Jews control this country, that’s astonishingly dumb.  I know it sounds good for Jeremy to say this to Goldberg’s audience who has preconceived notions about the book.  But currying favor with such an audience doesn’t mean you’re entitled to take liberty with the facts.

I myself have taken issue with certain elements of the Walt-Mearsheimer thesis here.  So I’m not saying it is torah l’Moshe mi’Sinai.  No, it is fallible in some parts.  But it remains a serious thesis worth engaging.  And the problem is that neither Goldberg nor Ben-Ami nor virtually any of their pro-Israel critics engage it seriously or factually.

I can understand too why Ben-Ami felt compelled to defend the Law of Return given who his audience was for this interview.  But Bernie Avishai has it right on this one, I’m afraid.  There should be a carefully defined, limited Right of Return which can be exercised under certain conditions.  But aliyah should be an immigration process as it is in all other countries.  It should not automatically be a right of any Jew who wishes to exercise it to become a citizen immediately on arrival.  Though there certainly should be cases in which such a Right would be exercised.

If the Law of Return IS an automatic right then I simply don’t see how you can ask Palestinians to constrain their own Right of Return.  Once again, this is a question of two competing rights.  If you want to achieve an equilibrium between peoples and respective rights, then both sides will have to accept compromises of their basic rights.

I have to admit that on reading Jeremy Ben-Ami’s account of our blogger session at the conference, I felt a little like Jesus, when he finds out he’s been denied by the apostle Paul; not to mention that Goldberg completely misrepresents our effort:

JG: On another subject, you’re giving some space at your conference to a group of bloggers who range from the anti-Zionist Max Blumenthal to the anti-Zionist Helena Cobban.

JB: There’s a lunch. They’ve asked us that, since there is a lunch, can we have a room where we who are bloggers on this issue can sit and talk to each other? I mean, give me a break, I’m not giving them any approval whatsoever, and there’s no sanction to their beliefs.  I’m just saying, sure, there are seven free rooms on the floor, use one. I’m not going to say, “No you can’t eat lunch together.” I mean really.

JG: They’re not eating lunch together. They’re having a program.

JB: I don’t even know what the program is. They can go into a room – wait, who’s speaking?

JG: Helena Cobban and a bunch of others, I think.

JB: Oh man, come on, Jeffrey. I’m letting them have a room for lunch.

First, Goldberg as usual falls into what I call the lazy journalist’s habit.  Instead of doing any research or thinking for himself, he accepts a characterization he’s read somewhere or makes a snap judgment that enables him to dismiss a phenomenon that deserves more attention than he’s willing to give.  Helena Cobban certainly is not a Zionist, but neither would I call her an anti-Zionist in the sense that she is opposed to the existence of the State of Israel.  While I’ve never queried Max Blumenthal specifically on his views, I’ve never read him to express anti-Zionist views.  Goldberg is simply slapping a label on someone so he can put them in a box and be done with them.  Unfortunately, the reality of their views is more complicated than he’s willing to allow.

Not to mention that Goldberg lists only two of our twelve bloggers, who range from me, a progressive Zionist to Jerry Haber, an Orthodox Jew and supporter of Judah Magnes and Martin Buber’s views on resolving the Israeli-Arab conflict.  Our panel will also include Dan Sieradski, another progressive Zionist who just finished a stint working for JTA.  We will also have a Gazan blogger, Palestinian-American, and two Israelis.

I wrote this in an e-mail to Goldberg:

You seem to have focused on the panel members who would support a preconceived notion you have about the ideological danger of this panel.  But you’ve left out the true diversity of this panel, which is what makes it a significant event.

Which brings me to a major problem I have with your work sometimes.  It can be lazy and reductive.  Instead of probing an issue you often take shortcuts and use slogans…Instead of attempting to understand what we might be trying to do you dismiss it with the vague claim that there will be anti-Zionists on the panel.  That prevents you from having to actually grapple with the issues we will discuss.  And that is unfortunate.

I feel a bit sad that Jeremy Ben-Ami felt he had to deny us in order to protect J Street.  But it doesn’t bother me terribly much.  I think our panel stands on its own two feet and doesn’t require public recognition or acceptance from the group.  In fact, Jeremy in the interview gave us all the recognition that is necessary.  The fact that they have allowed us to use a room during the conference is all that we need.  Our effort at illuminating the role that the blogosphere plays regarding the I-P conflict will stand on its own and the utility of what we do will prove itself.

Let me also praise what I found a masterful answer Jeremy provided to a provocative question often asked by the pro-Israel right, which claims that by attempting to understand why Palestinians turn to violence against Israel, we are essentially justifying it.  I’ve always found this claim noxious and J Street’s director lays it to rest:

JG: …You once said Israel is treating Palestinians in a way that forces them to become terrorists. Could you go into that a little bit more?

JB: …Ehud Barak, in 1999, when he was running for prime minister, said “If I was a young kid growing up in the Palestinian territories, I’d probably be a terrorist, too.” There is a sense of hopelessness, there’s a sense of a lack of future in the Palestinian territories and particularly in Gaza. When an Israeli kid grows up, he wants to launch the next big start-up, they want to make a billion dollars by having an IPO out of their garage, by having the next great idea, right? In Gaza, the kids are growing up wanting to be the next great suicide bomber, and that’s where martyrdom comes in, that’s where fame comes, that’s where family honor comes from, because there’s no other path. So we have to recognize that this is a part of the climate in the Palestinian territories. This is not blaming Israel for terrorism.

JG: Well, it is.

JB: No, it’s not blaming–

JG: Israel is creating conditions for the Palestinians to become terrorists, you’re saying.

JB: In order to solve a problem, you must be able to rationally analyze its causes and discuss the best solutions. And if we can’t have an open and an honest conversation about the role that the conditions in which kids are growing up in the territories plays in their development and what they’re growing up to be, then we’re not going to solve the problem. I’m not casting blame. This is a terrible conflict and there is really absolute hatred and anger about suicide bombing and rockets and terrorism and violence — that is not the way to achieve your hopes and your dreams and your aspirations, and I condemn it and we condemn it, but that’s not enough to really solve the problem. And then I can just close up the doors and say, ‘Well we solved the problem because we condemn the tactics of the other side’ — no, we actually have to solve the problem, so we say, ‘Okay, let’s talk about the problem.’

Here, Goldberg actually asks a very sharp question and Jeremy answers it beautifully:

JG: Are you surprised, pleased, unhappy with the level of controversy that this conference is obviously generating in the Jewish universe?

JB: …I’m very pleased about the controversy. One of the goals of J Street is to open up debate and discussion on these issues, to be able to talk about some very difficult things openly, that there are a lot of people who would prefer you not to talk openly. So the fact that this is actually getting such play means we’re actually fulfilling our mission, so I think that is terrific. What I’m not happy about is that I think it is very bad for our community, very bad for the Jewish people, that some of those who don’t want us to be having this conversation have gone over the line in the way in which they personally attacked and used lies and smears to try to make their point.

In this closing passage of the interview, there are several problematic issues that deserve addressing:

JG: The thing I’m worried about with the conference is that I think most of your supporters are well-meaning, left-of-center Jews who love Israel and are tortured by the various dilemmas, who do stay awake at night worrying about this. But there are others who are glomming on to you guys as a cover, just using you to advance another agenda entirely.

JB: I hope that we have a very strong left flank that attacks us, that Jewish Voice for Peace and other groups that are consistently upset with us for backing Howard Berman’s sanctions plan and for refusing to embrace the Goldstone report and for standing up for the right of Israel to defend itself or for its military aid — I hope we get attacked from the left because I would characterize J Street as the mainstream of the American Jewish community.

I find the italicized sentence to be noxious.  I presume Goldberg is talking precisely about our blogger event and some of our panel members.  To say that we are exploiting J Street’s success in order to promote an anti-Israel agenda is objectionable.  That isn’t what our program is about.  It is about finding solutions to the conflict that actually provide Israel with security and stability instead of the current slow bleed and daily doses of murder and mayhem.

Regarding Jeremy’s reply to the question, I also object to it.  He is using Jewish Voice for Peace as a convenient foil thus allowing him to say to those on his right: “See, we’ve dissociated ourselves from THEM.  Aren’t you glad we’re not them?”  That does a terrible disservice to the legitimate role that JVP places in this debate.

The very bona fides that Ben Ami raises in this passage to prove J Street’s pro-Israel, Zionist street cred are the points I find most disappointing about the group.  Its embrace of Iran sanctions is unconscionable because they simply will not work and J Street has to know that they will not work.  There comes a point in political issues when life and death is at stake and you have to stop grandstanding.  On the Iran sanctions issue, J Street is triangulating instead of dealing in pragmatic policy.

I can accept a certain amount of tactical maneuvering from the group in order to prevent itself from being demonized by Aipac, the rest of the Israel lobby and the Jewish neocons like Goldfarb.  But the tactics and maneuvering must not be allowed to become the whole show.  There has to be a moral core that J Street upholds and on which it will not compromise.  To my mind, it has not done so.  And I view our role as keeping it honest in that regard.

Feel the Hate in Tel Aviv: New Blumenthal Video

Monday, July 13th, 2009


Max Blumenthal is back with a new video in the Feel the Hate series.  The first was recorded in Jerusalem and featured mostly drunken American Jews spouting racist cliches about Barack Obama.  The video was denounced by the usual right-wing pro-Israel suspects, but also by erstwhile progressives like Gershom Gorenberg who found it distasteful.  The hasbara brigade was on YouTube like fleas on a dog to ban it and they did.  Vimeo banned it too. So much for freedom of expression in Google world (which owns YouTube).

Among the highlights of the new video are the Israeli who calls Barack Obama a kushi (“Nigger”) and proudly admits he is a racist. He charges the U.S. president with not liking Jews because he is Muslim. A Jewish Tel Aviv University student charges that Israeli Arab students demonstrating against an Israeli law that would criminalize observance of Nakba Day “have all been in prison” and are “traitors.”

Blumenthal’s critics claim that he has an anti-Israel ulterior motive in featuring the lowest common denominator in Israeli society. They seem to believe that most Israelis are nice, white liberals like they are and wish the videographer would reflect back themselves in the mirror he holds up to Israeli society. The only problem is that those he interviews ARE entirely representative of the the Israeli Jewish “street.” Public opinion surveys validate these racist attitudes within Israeli society.

Although their are no racist obscenities as in the first video, you better watch the second video here before the hasbaraniks get YouTube to ban the new one too. Max writes a long post which is quite instructive, answering critics of his previous video.

Only one minor quibble about the video. One of the interviewees calls himself a giz’an (“racist”) which Max transliterates incorrectly as gezan.

YouTube Bans Blumenthal’s ‘Feeling the Hate’ Video

Friday, June 19th, 2009


What is YouTube afraid of? They’ve taken down Max Blumenthal’s stunning video, Feeling the Hate in Jerusalem because it’s offended the sensibilities of some frightened Jews who believe it stirs anti-Semitism. Imagine that, showing the world that there are Jews who actually hold hateful, racist views of Arabs and their own African-American president might provoke anti-Semitism. And the best way to confront this hate is not to denounce it or combat it or even address it. The best approach is to kill the messenger and suppress the video. Of all the stupid things I’ve heard Jews do this is one of the stupider, and alas, more predictable ones.

Here’s how Max describes what’s happened to the video:

it is clear there is an active campaign by right-wing Jewish elements to suppress the video by filing a flood of complaints with Youtube. At the same time these elements have attempted to paint me as a self-hating Jew determined to foment anti-Semitism.

In a way, these timorous souls have given Max a gift. Instead of the hundreds of thousands who’ve seen it on Youtube before it was banned, now millions will see it thanks to the publicity they’ve inadvertently generated.

Jewish Voice for Peace, whose members discovered the video had been taken down by YouTube, has just begun a mass petition campaign to protest YouTube’s censorship. Tell YouTube that you’re not frightened of a little dose of truth; that you can handle hate by acknowledging it and fighting back against it. Tell YouTube that no matter how many timid Jews there are out there who are offended by this video, that it serves an important educational purpose. We want the video back!

If you’re able to do more call David Drummond, chief legal officer of Google at 650-253-0000 to complain about YouTube’s overreaction. E-mail YouTube’s press office to demand an explanation. Ask them to talk to Max about the video before banning it.

UPDATE: Other YouTube members have uploaded Max’s video via their own accounts and they are available for viewing. But Max’s original video is still banned. Our goal is for YouTube to unban Max’s account and his video. I presume that the other videos may be removed at any time.

Michael Levin made me aware of another YouTube controversy during the Gaza war in which the service banned a series of IDF videos of air strikes against Gaza targets. After the Israeli government and the hasbara crowd organized a campaign on behalf of the videos they were reinstated.

It would seem to me that if YouTube can reinstate videos portraying possible Israeli war crimes (targeting civilian targets) that the least they can do is reinstate a video which contains nothing more offensive than a few drunken American Jews spouting racist taunts.

More Jewish Monsters Among Us

Tuesday, June 9th, 2009

Feeling The Hate In Jerusalem — The Censored Video from Max Blumenthal on Vimeo.


Max Blumenthal’s recent street video, Feeling the Hate in Jerusalem, has generated lots of heat from center-right pundits like Ron Kampeas of JTA and Jeffrey Goldberg. I think it’s safe to say they consider it cheap-shot, ambush journalism slightly higher in ambition than TMZ’s stakeout and harassment of Hollywood celebrities in order to catch them in embarrassing moments.

There is perhaps an element of truth in this. Blumenthal and Joseph Dana, with whom he produced the video, picked young, drunk, hate-filled American Jews who were ripe for satirizing, ready for a fall. I think Blumenthal knew what he was getting and was just as happy to allow these Jewish boors to implicate themselves in their own sleaziness. It would perhaps have been more enlightening to invite these same individuals to talk to when they weren’t inebriated and could sustain more than a few words without an expletive. But I have little doubt that the sentiments wouldn’t have been almost the same, though perhaps cleaned up a bit.

This video, however, is what it is and there is nothing wrong–contrary to Kampeas’ and Goldberg’s contentions–with it. Claiming that interviewing geshikert Jews is somehow unfair to them is bogus. These kids hold virtually the same views stoned or sober. To argue differently is to be divorced from reality. Anyone who reads this blog knows that such racism and hate lurks not just under the surface, but right out in the open within Israel and in certain pockets of right-wing pro-Israel American Jewry. Read the vile genocidal words of Chabad Rabbi Manis Friedman published in Moment Magazine. Read the warning of a Yeshiva University dean that Ehud Olmert should be hung if he gives up an inch of Jerusalem in a future negotiation. Read racist IDF t-shirts boasting of raping Ismail Haniye and shooting young Gaza children. Remember the hooligan pogroms by extremist Jewish settlers in Hebron in which a Palestinian family was almost burned to death in their home.

This is not a bad dream. This is not something that can be dismissed with a wave of the hand. This is not a few bad apples. This is a seam that runs right through the bedrock that is modern Israel and American Jewry. The challenge I have to the Kampeases and Goldbergs of the Jewish world is: what are you going to do about this? Are you doing to dismiss it as testosterone-infused teen-aged horseplay; or are you going to engage in combat with this infected stream of nationalist Zionist thought?

Huffington Post has already given Blumenthal its answer. After he uploaded the video to its site, the editors took it down claiming it had no news value. Similarly, HuffPost refused to publish the post I wrote for them about the IDF racist T-shirt episode. It seems that for some liberal political websites posting material that is too embarrassing for Israel is treif, even if it is Israelis or Jews themselves who are doing the embarrassing.

Here are a few of the more articulate passages of the video worth considering:

Interviewee: I think it’s really fucked up that he’s going to all the Arab states and not coming to Israel. Oh, he’s a Muslim for sure. And who even knows if he was born in the United States. We haven’t seen his birth certificate yet. Bullshit. He’s not from the U.S. He’s like a terrorist. What is he doing for this country so far? Nothing. And I’m a political science major so I know my shit.

Interviewer: Do you know who Benjamin Netanyahu is?

Interviewee: No. Is he the Israel prime minister or something? I don’t know who he is. Who’s Benjamin Yahoo?

Interviewee 2: You’re all about talking to the Arabs, going to Cairo, making a speech to the Muslim world, trying to get them to love you. What about the Jews, man? What are we, chopped liver? You don’t care about us? Are we nothing to you? Do we matter? Do you care if we get driven into the sea? Do you care if we get nuked? Are we even on your–do you even care about us?

My grandmother was in Auschwitz, Obama. We’re not gonna take any Nazi bullshit. Listen man, my grandma’s number was 1268493. I remember her number on her arm, dude. And listen, Never Again will we deal with this. Never again. Bring it on, motherfuckers.