Muslim and Jewish Women in Nazareth

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

Mahzor

Mahzor

New York Public Library

Churches

Sarajevo Haggadah

Mah Nishtanah

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 ‘norm-maleng’

Seattle Federation Shooting: One Year Later

Saturday, August 4th, 2007

Last Friday marked the first anniversary of the most traumatic day in the history of Seattle’s Jewish community. It was the day that a deranged Naveed Haq barged into the Jewish federation’s downtown offices, proclaimed his anger at Israel for its treatment of Arabs, and began shooting everything in sight. At the end of his rampage Pam Waechter, the campaign director was dead and five other female employees were wounded. The hatred and insanity of this massacre are garden variety as far as the world is concerned–this happens every day. But what isn’t garden variety is this community’s response, including the victims and the family of the perpetrator.

Seattle is a city that prides itself on its openness and tolerance and it proved it in this case. On the day of Pam Waechter’s funeral an Arab-American representative of Haq’s family hand delivered a letter from Haq’s parents expressing profound sorrow and regret to the Jewish community. The victims, in turn, did not shout for vengeance or the death penalty. In fact, several victims families said explicitly and publicly that they did not the DA to file a death penalty charge.

Layla Bush, most seriously injured federation shooting victim (Karen Ducey/Seattle PI)

Layla Bush, most seriously injured federation victim (Karen Ducey/Seattle PI)Layla Bush, most seriously injured federation victim (Karen Ducey/Seattle PI)The most severely injured victim was Layla Bush with bullet wounds to her abdomen and shoulders. One bullet barely missed tearing into her heart. She walks with a cane, cannot stand for more than an hour and has nine therapy appointments each week. Yet these are her feelings now:

“I just don’t want people to forget how much damage hate can do…Nothing positive comes from hatred.” Bush said executing Haq would be “too easy for him.” She reiterated that view Thursday, saying she favored life imprisonment.

In the aftermath of the shooting, “what made me mad is not him, but that someone with a mental history like that can get guns…” Growing up in rural Florida, she completed gun-safety classes and shot beer bottles off fence posts. She once owned a 9 mm Beretta. “I feel that handguns are made for killing people,” she said. “They’re not made for hunting.”

Think what an extraordinary attitude it takes to make the following statement about her volunteer work at Harborview Medical Center:

We answer questions and talk with patients who have just been recently injured,” she said. “It feels good for me to just give back. I feel like I’ve taken so much.”

Norm Maleng, the recently deceased Republican DA did not file a first degree murder charge. He reviewed ten years of Haq’s mental health records and determined that a lesser murder charge was more appropriate.

While one might expect the victims of such a trauma to refuse to return to their jobs almost all have (though several cannot work full time due to their injuries). The federation in turn has raised $1.3 million to entirely redesign the interior of its former offices so that the thoughts of victims or any other community member will not linger on that tragic day and space.

It seems to me that there are many places in the world where hate rages which could learn from Seattle’s example. It is true that shootings of this nature are extremely rare here so one might argue that we have the luxury of being able to respond to such tragedy differently. But are we really that different? I don’t know. It seems to me that a response to murderous hatred that offers more of the same is the easy way out. A response to hate that offers sober reflection and emotional engagement is much harder.

Haq Charged With First-Degree Murder in Jewish Federation Attack

Wednesday, August 2nd, 2006

I was afraid it would come to this. Norm Maleng, Seattle’s prosecuting attorney is not known for showing mercy to criminals, not even to mentally ill criminals. I guess it’s not in his job description. And he hasn’t departed from this record this time either in charging Naveed Haq:

King County prosecutors today charged Naveed Haq with aggravated first-degree murder and five counts of first-degree attempted murder in last week’s shooting at the Jewish Federation offices in downtown Seattle.

Haq is accused of killing Pamela Waechter, 58, and injuring five other women after forcing his way into the federation’s office just after 4 p.m. Friday and randomly shooting employees.

Aggravated first-degree murder is punishable by either the death penalty or life in prison without the possibility of release.

Haq, 30, has also been charged with first-degree kidnapping for holding a gun to the back of a 14-year-old girl to force his way into the building; one charge of first-degree burglary and malicious harassment, the felony charge for a hate crime.

…After Haq’s arraignment, prosecutor Norm Maleng will have 30 days to decide whether to seek the death penalty. Maleng said there appears to be premeditation.

“The world has gotten to be a smaller place,” said Maleng at a news conference this morning. “There’s no place in our community for hate crimes.”

I am disappointed that Maleng exhibited no awareness of Haq’s mental condition. He chose to focus solely on the hate crime aspect of the case and the issue of premeditation. But I want to remind Maleng that Seattle is not Texas or Richmond, VA (the legal venue of choice for the Bush Administration when it tries Muslim terrorists) which might bay for blood in retribution for the heinous act Haq committed. Seattleites, even Jewish ones, believe that while the criminal mentally ill should be judged, they should be judged differently than the mentally competent. It’s no accident that Maleng is a Republican. He appears to be following the Bush Administration’s general line in trying to label this as a form of Muslim extremist hate.

I am not saying that Haq doesn’t deserve justice because he does. But he also deserves the treatment for his illness that he apparently did not receive prior to his crime. If he had received such treatment, he likely would not have gone on his rampage. I say this because I know people with bipolar disorder who are being treated with lithium. It works. Wouldn’t it be better to force Haq into a treatment facility where he will be medicated and not released until he is found not to be a danger to others?

While I can sympathize with the following Maleng comments, I believe he vastly overstates and overdramatizes the true meaning of the crime:

“The attack on these women was an attack on the Jewish community, not only in Seattle, but throughout our nation and the world,” Maleng said.

“The victims were killed and injured, not because of who they were as individuals, but because the defendant wanted to use them as symbols, to strike at members of the Jewish faith everywhere,” Maleng said.

Haq’s crime has little, if anything to do with “the Jewish community throughout our nation and the world.” For God’s sake, the man was deranged. His hate came from his insanity, not from a cool, level-headed anti-Semitic analysis of world affairs. This is not Al Qaeda. This is not Islamic extremism. This is a lone gunman disgruntled at the world for imagined slights and injuries.

Though I understand why the Jewish Federation might make the following statement, I am disappointed that it couldn’t have at least acknowledged that there might be extenuating circumstances worth considering before deciding whether to seek the death penalty. There is nothing wrong with tempering justice with mercy when it is warranted.

At a news conference following the announcement of charges, a spokeswoman for the Jewish Federation of Greater Seattle said the organization supported the charges filed against Haq. When asked if members of the organization supported seeking the death penalty, Robin Boehler, chairwoman of the Jewish Federation’s board, said, “We don’t have a position on the death penalty. Our community is very diverse and there’s no consensus so we won’t be taking a position.”

Thankfully, the family of one of the most seriously injured victims is willing to speak out courageously for tolerance and understanding:

“She [Layla Bush] probably would not be angry at the individual (who did this,)” Kathryn Bush [her mother] said. “If anything, she’d be angry at the causes, perhaps not enough funding for the mentally ill.”

“It would take somebody who was mentally ill to do this,” her father said. “But the world situation probably pushed him (the suspect) over the edge.”

“I don’t feel any blame or anger toward him (the shooter,)” her mother said. Both parents called for tolerance.

“I don’t want to put any prejudice, or harassment of the Muslim community here, especially of the family of the shooter,” her father said. “They (the suspect’s family) must be going through hell right now.”

Can’t we all try to emulate such merciful feelings? Even if we can’t muster the Bushes’ serenity, can’t we at least try to do so?