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New York Public Library

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Sarajevo Haggadah

Mah Nishtanah

Sarajevo haggadah

Antaea Darom

Israeli women's art

Action

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 ‘peace-now’

Sternhell, Bomb Victim, Calls Attack Sign of ‘Disintegration of Democracy’

Thursday, September 25th, 2008
Settler flyer offer reward to murder of Peace Now activists

Settler flyer offers reward for murder of Peace Now activists

If any Israeli politician like Tzipi Livni is listening, the pipe bomb attack, in which the Israeli professor was lightly wounded by three pieces of shrapnel in the leg, should be a wake up call.  It should reinforce the conviction that the government must deal with the settlements in an expedited fashion.  It must craft a peace settlement with the Palestinians that involves withdrawal from most West Bank settlements in return for full peace with all Palestinian factions (including Hamas).

To do anything less, means allowing settler extremists like those who attempted to assassinate Sternhell to take the initiative in the political battle for the soul of Zionism.  I fear that Israel will do “anything less.”  Look what happened when Rabin was assassinated by the same type of individual.  The peace process was set back decades and while the assassin was caught and convicted, the movement he represents is ready to kill again to advance its agenda.

If Israel does not see this as a cancer in its midst and take decisive action, then I’m afraid that not only is Israeli democracy in danger, the entire Zionist enterprise is in equal danger.  Read carefully the words below and ponder their meaning:

ENOUGH!  A prize of 1.1 million shekels ($300,000) is offered to anyone who kills a member of Peace Now. The State of Israel has become our enemy. The time has come to establish a halachic-state in Judea and Samaria! It is time for the Kingdom of Judea!”
–Army of Liberators

“The State of Israel has become our enemy.” That’s a sobering statement. If a violent Jewish extremist group can say this then why doesn’t the state recognize it as a mortal enemy and act appropriately? After 9/11, the west awoke to the danger posed by Al Qaeda. Settlerism is no less a threat in the domestic Israeli context.

Public security minister Avi Dichter released a strong statement:

Dichter described the event…[as] an “assassination attempt” and a “nationalistic terror attack perpetrated, in all likelihood, by Jews, which pushes our society many years backward.”

…”The pipe bomb that was planted yesterday should be viewed as a bomb meant to kill. The law enforcement authorities will not rest until the terrorists are put where they belong in prison.”

But is this nothing more than the typical statement released by a politician faced with such an event?  Or is there any understanding that this is more than just an isolated event?

Zeev Sternhell is one brave individual.  Here is what he said from his hospital bed about the attack:

…If this act was not committed by a deranged person but by someone who represents a political view, then this is the beginning of the disintegration of democracy.”

“The very occurrence of the incident goes to illustrate the fragility of Israeli democracy, and the urgent need to defend it with determination and resolve,” he added.

“On the personal level,” he went on to say, “if the intent was to terrorize, it has to be very clear that I am not easily intimidated; but the perpetrators tried to hurt not only me, but each and every one of my family members who could have opened the door, and for that there is no absolution and no forgiveness.”

Americans for Peace Now has naturally been covering this story intensively and provided the flyer image I used above.  For more of their coverage click here.

There will be rightist apologetics seeking to temporize the meaning of this event.  But let’s not pussyfoot.  Jews have seen their share of fratricide going all the way back to Cain and Abel.  The Sicarii assassinated fellow Jews during the Roman era.  The Macabees killed Hellenizing collaborators.  In the 1920s, left-Zionist leader Chaim Arlosoroff was murdered on a Tel Aviv beach by rightist opponents.  In 1983, a Jewish extremist threw and hand grenade into a Peace Now demonstration killing one of its leaders, Emil Grunsweig.  Yigal Amir assassinated Yitzhak Rabin.  And now this.

Malcolm X said “violence is an American as apple pie.”  We can certainly say that Jewish fratricide in sadly inscribed somewhere in our DNA.  But the question is, what will we do about it?  Will we allow a fifth column in our midst that seeks to overthrow Israeli democracy?  Or will we show resolve and treat those who betray Judaism and the state with the harsh response they deserve?

Syrian Ambassador Tells Israel: We are Gatekeepers to Peace With Arab World

Wednesday, July 30th, 2008
Syrias U.S. ambassador, Imad Moustapha

Syria's U.S. ambassador, Imad Moustapha

Ori Nir, communications director of Americans for Peace Now, interviewed Imad Moustapha (audio), Syria’s U.S. ambassador, about the current Syria-Israel peace negotiations being brokered by Turkey.  Moustapha made an impressive pitch that confirmed the seriousness of the talks and of Syria’s commitment to their success.  Here he makes the case that Syria not only holds the key to peace on Israel’s northern border, but with other Arab nations as well:

Syria plays the role of the gatekeeper between Israel and the rest of the Arab world.  If Israel wants to make peace with the Arab world, Israel needs to understand this legitimate demand based on the premise of land for peace.

One might quarrel with this assessment and say that he’s overstating Syria’s importance.  But when you realize that Syria holds the key to the involvement of so many players including Hezbollah, and by extension Lebanon, and even Iran, his claim becomes somewhat more credible.

Nir asked Moustapha why U.S. involvement in the talks is so important to his country.  The ambassador replied that he doesn’t expect the U.S. to become involved in the nitty gritty of the negotiations.  But its role would be to help “provide guarantees” and “help create momentum” that would lead to negotiating and signing an agreement.  Because Syria understands that such peace negotiations would lead to a “new paradigm” in relations among the front line states, U.S. engagement is critical to ensure the success of such a transition.  He means that if Syria is to turn away from current alliances with Hezbollah and Iran, that Syria will expect the U.S. to “pick up the slack” by opening trade, restoring relations, and even guaranteeing Syria’s security if attacked by any of its enemies or former friends.

In answer to a question about whether Syria sought a “re-alignment” in relations with the west, Moustapha confirmed that it did:

Syria has always wanted to open up to the west and in partnership with the European Union and to have the best possible relations with America.  We are not enemies to the United States.

…We…are telling the state of Israel that we desire to end the state of war between us, to conclude peace between two states, to recognize each other and to live as peaceful neighbors with each other, within a normalized context. We think this is a very serious proposal (…) here is the grand thing on offer: let us sit together, let us make peace, let us end once and for all the state of war…

Of course, there are Syria-skeptics both in the Bush Administration and among Israeli rightists.  Which is why the following comment from an Israeli academic expert on Syria reinforces the gravity of what Mustapha has to say in this interview:

“These are the most progressive and helpful comments I have heard ever from Moustapha, and I know him quite well and follow what he says all the time,” said Moshe Maoz, a professor of Islamic and Middle Eastern studies at Hebrew University.

For anyone hoping for peace between Israel and Syria, your November vote is critical.  You have one candidate who will energetically push forward such negotiations and another candidate wedded to the discredited policies of the current Administration.  How can anyone be sure what John McCain’s position will be regarding Syria-Israel peace talks given his closeness to Bush’s core Mideast policies?  And given the critical importance of peace to Israel’s well-being, can we entrust such a U.S. role to a president whose views are unclear on the subject?

Thanks to Dan Fleshler for first blogging this story which has also been reported by Haaretz and Bloomberg.

This Passover Don’t Pour Wrath on Goyim, Open Door to Peace

Thursday, April 10th, 2008

This came today in an e-mail from Americans for Peace Now. Those of you planning a Passover seder, perhaps you can incorporate this important drash/prayer into your own:

Reject Hate, Embrace Hope, Recommit to Peace!

AT THE POURING OF THE FOURTH CUP:

Traditionally, we fill this cup to welcome the Prophet Elijah, who heralds the start of the Messianic era. For centuries, we have recited Psalm 79:6-7: “Pour out Your wrath on the nations that do not know you and on the kingdoms that do not call upon Your name. They have devoured Jacob and made desolate his dwellings.”

In the Middle Ages, Jews invoked this fantasy of divine retribution as a poultice for the wounds inflicted during our long history. This bitterness was understandable, if unproductive. Now we live in a time that we are ostensibly free, yet the nations who actually invoke God’s name continue to desolate one another. God’s Holy Land is riven by terror and revenge. Jacob’s forbears, Isaac and Ishmael, remain gripped in the medieval mind-set. Despair makes us yearn for the arrival of Elijah.

We cannot bear to wait any longer. We cannot endure endless war. Elijah seems but a faint hope, not a solution. Tonight, we open the door to our neighbors, to dwelling with one another in quiet and shared delight. As we open the door we raise our fourth cup in a toast to the fresh breeze of renewed commitment, to the rejection of hate, to embracing hope, and to the hard work of making peace. And, we raise our glasses to life. We pray this “LeChaim,” will bring us the longed-for redemption. Let this be the way we welcome Elijah.

By Rabbi Burton L. Visotzky.

Donate to Americans for Peace Now.

Oxford Union, Under Pressure from Peace Now UK, Disinvites Finkelstein from Israel Debate

Friday, October 26th, 2007

Every so often a group you thought was a political ally does something so bone-headed you half wonder who’s side they think they’re on. Peace Now UK is such a group. Their co-chair, one Paul Usiskin, got wind of an Oxford Union debate that was to feature Avi Shlaim and Ilan Pappe supporting the proposition that a one-state solution was the only fair way to resolve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Pappe and Shlaim had arranged for Norman Finkelstein and David Trimble (former Northern Ireland first minister), to argue the contrary position, that the two-state solution was the only proper way to resolve the conflict.

Usiskin began complaining to the Oxford Union that Finkelstein was an enemy of Israel and how could they allow him to represent a two-state position:

When Peace Now-UK co-chair Paul Usiskin saw Finkelstein’s name on the team opposing the motion, he expressed concern that “a far-left detractor of Israel” had been chosen to defend the existence of the Jewish state.

He told the Student Union they were “seeking sensation over substance” and were denying a proper and balanced debate.

Following talks with Oxford Union President Luke Tryll, the union decided to drop Finkelstein and invited Usiskin to participate along with Yossi Mekelberg, an associate fellow of the Middle East program at the Royal Institute of International Affairs, Chatham House, who is also Israeli.

Shlaim and Pappe, who had first urged the Union to invite Finkelstein, rightfully withdrew their participation. Trimble, being a smart politician and not wanting his name blackened by such anti-Israel baiting, backed out as well.

Usiskin, who has bought Alan Dershowitz’ characterization of Finkelstein lock, stock and smoking barrel, somehow believes that Finkelstein was a Trojan Horse designed to allow the other side to win the debate:

“They clearly thought they had it sown up,” said Usiskin. “I believe they’re desperate for another arena in which to deligitimize [sic] Israel, after the failure to begin the academic boycott of Israel – in which all three were key. What they expected was a clear field for a one-state solution as the start of creating that new arena. Those of us who believe in Israel and support a two-state solution remained steadfast and denied them their victory.”

Avi Shlaim, for one, is a brilliant historian and chronicler of Zionist history. To claim that his goal is to “delegitimize” Israel shows the level of hysteria of Usiskin’s views on the subject. I would also demand proof that Shlaim and Finkelstein have been “key” to the campaign on behalf of an academic boycott. I have never even heard of Finkelstein uttering a word on the subject though it’s possible that he has. But even if he has (and I do not concede that point), calling him “key” to the campaign is ridiculous.

And to call Finkelstein “a detractor of Israel” falls into the trap set by pro-Israel groups everywhere who mistake criticism of Israeli POLICIES like the Occupation with denial of the validity of the State of Israel. There is a difference, a huge difference. The fact that Usiskin is so small-minded as to be unable to understand the difference highlights him as a petty, small-minded political apparatchik.

If you don’t think Usiskin went a bit over the top read this comment to the Magnes Zionist post on this matter in which a Peace Now UK member quotes a boastful e mail sent by Peace Now UK to its members:

A very hot update from Paul

Oxford Union -2 State Solution/Peace Now UK – Victory before debate begins

The Oxford Union, internationally acclaimed debating forum witnessed a victory in a contentious Middle East debate even before the debate was held…

What sort of ‘victory’ is it that Peace Now “won?” At best it is a hollow victory. They silenced Norman Finkelstein. They ran Pappe and Shlaim out of the debate. And in the process they made themselves and Peace Now look like bullies and rubes. The Oxford Union itself should come in for its share of opprobrium in this matter. Since when is a debating society afraid of hearing a serious scholar’s point of view in debate? Since when does the Union doubt the bona fides and sincerity of a distinguished academic like Finkelstein in his wish to argue on behalf of two states?

The above statements from Peace Now’s Usiskin smearing Finkelstein, Shlaim and Pappe, would be more expected from the mouths of pro-Israel ideologues like Daniel Pipes or David Horowitz. The fact that they’re coming from the mouth of a so-called progressive Zionist boggles the mind. One has to wonder not only what Usiskin was thinking when he made these comments, but what Peace Now UK was thinking in placing him in such a senior leadership position. Is this the type of reputation that the group wishes to be known for? Dragooning the Oxford Union into a campaign to silence Norman Finkelstein when he wishes to support the proposition that a two-state solution would be best to resolve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict?

I for one would love to hear such a debate and hope that one will be organized with the original debating partners both in the UK and here in the States. We deserve to hear these individuals’ views uncensored and unimpeded.

Thanks to Magnes Zionist for alerting me to this travesty.

Support Feinstein-Lugar Israeli-Palestinian Peace Resolution

Monday, June 11th, 2007

A coalition of American Jewish peace groups is supporting a newly introduced resolution written by Senators Dianne Feinstein (D, CA) and Richard Lugar (R, IN), S.R. 224, which reaffirms American support for a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, urges President Bush to appoint a high-level peace negotiator to revive peace talks between the parties, and urges them to embrace the Arab League peace plan.

Americans for Peace Now notes:

The resolution, cosponsored by Senators Dianne Feinstein (D-CA), Richard Lugar (R-IN), Christopher Dodd (D-CT), Chuck Hagel (R-NE), Max Baucus (D-MT), Robert Byrd (D-WV), John Sununu (R-NH), and Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI), reaffirms the Senate’s commitment to a “true and lasting solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, based on the establishment of 2 states, the State of Israel and Palestine, living side by side in peace and security, with recognized borders.” It also calls on President Bush to “pursue a robust diplomatic effort to engage the State of Israel and the Palestinian Authority, begin negotiations, and make a 2-state settlement a priority.” It calls on the President to “consider appointing a Special Envoy for Middle East Peace who has held cabinet rank or is equally qualified, with extensive knowledge of foreign affairs in general and the Middle East region in particular.” The resolution also welcomes the Arab League Peace Initiative and calls on Israeli and Palestinian leaders to “embrace efforts to achieve peace and refrain from taking any actions that would prejudice the outcome of final status negotiations.”

If your senators aren’t yet co-sponsors please visit the Brit Tzedek site and send them an e mail urging them to do so.

Curious what posture AIPAC will take toward this. They surely can’t publicly sabotage it. But privately…? They’ve got to feel the Arab League plan is pure trash. But as Olmert has made sympathetic noises about it (and not done anything beyond that naturally) can AIPAC publicly trash it?

Jewish Peace Groups Discuss Merger

Wednesday, June 6th, 2007

For months, I’ve been following the plans for a possible new progressive alternative to AIPAC being formed within the American Jewish community. I was tremendously excited when George Soros was named as a possible supporter and funder. When he backed out (foolishly in my opinion), I thought the idea was likely dead. But good ideas don’t die easily and others have carried on the discussions:

Merger talks are heating up among three leading dovish Israel advocacy groups in a development that proponents hope will produce a new mega-organization with greater political clout and more money to push for a two-state solution.

Leaders of Americans for Peace Now, the Israel Policy Forum and Brit Tzedek v’Shalom are weighing the idea and are expected to reach a decision by the fall. The discussions are being held within each of the groups and between leaders of the three organizations, under the auspices of several Washington-based activists who are promoting the idea of a pro-peace Jewish lobby.

…Some liberal observers are hoping that a new joint entity could emerge as a counter to the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, the pro-Israel lobby that doves have accused of working against efforts to convince the White House to do more to advance Israeli-Palestinian talks. Organizers of the new initiative are publicly dismissing any talk of weakening or competing against Aipac; at the same time, they insist that the goal is to create a new voice for American Jews.

The Forward article notes a bold funding initiative for the new group which is impressive if they can bring it off:

Proponents of the merger aim to raise $10 million — double the combined annual budgets of the three organizations — to help launch the new initiative. Part of the money would come from contributors who already back the three existing groups, but most of the $10 million — if the goal is reached — is expected to come from donors who currently do not give to Jewish organizations or to other pro-Israel groups. Among the potential donors being targeted are Jewish figures in Hollywood, as well as young liberal Jewish philanthropists who currently focus their giving on non-Jewish causes

As a Jewish communal fundraiser, I’d hate to be dubious about such a potentially wonderful venture, but this sounds like the pipe dreams that lots of progressives have about finding funding. The truth is usually that the money comes from those who are committed and I don’t see Hollywood Jews or those who don’t currently give to Jewish causes as strong prospects. There’s a reason why they don’t give to Jewish causes (alienation and remoteness) and they’re not likely to make an exception for this one.

But hey, prove me wrong. It won’t bother me a bit.

One of the sticking points has been the structure of the new entity:

According to sources familiar with the talks, the organizations are being asked to choose between two options: instituting a formal merger that would create a joint pro-peace organization under which the three existing groups would continue to operate, or creating a separate new body that would raise funds independently and provide financial assistance and backing to projects directed by the existing groups.

This is confusing. How do you have a “formal merger” in which the three groups would continue to operate? Unless each of the three groups would focus on a single distinctive area of operation like research, lobbying and outreach, say–but all within one over-arching organization. I’m agnostic on the idea of creating a funding mechanism that would support the three separate groups. It seems a bit cumbersome to have 3 groups fundraising separately and then have a fourth raising money for all of them.

A friend who works for one of the groups gave it a 50/50 chance of ever getting off the ground. I’d say that’s still about right. But we need such a new venture. We need a bolder, stronger, better funded voice to combat the hidebound notions of AIPAC. Israel is in desperate straits and needs to hear a voice of encouragement and friendship, but also one of realism and pragamatism from the American Jewish community. Separately, these groups have had much success. But in a joint venture there is much more that could be achieved.

We aren’t doing enough. The situation is very bad. It calls for more from us. But can we give it? Do we have it in us?

American Jews Favor Israel-Syria Talks, Secure Independent Palestinian State

Wednesday, June 6th, 2007

Americans for Peace Now and the Arab American Institute released a Zogby poll (full results–pdf) of American Jews and Arab Americans which provides some interesting new data on attitudes toward Mideast peace. One of the most important findings is that both groups track very closely on almost every question asked (with a few exceptions). This indicates there are no significant gaps between American Jews or Arabs on questions of war and peace which both hold vital.

The poll also confirms what many of us have known for years–that American Jews diverge strongly from the views of their leaders and the Israeli government when it comes to Israeli-Palestinian peace.

90% of American Jews support a “secure, independent” Palestinian state.
88% of Arab Americans support a “secure, independent” state of Israel.

34% of Jews believe that Arab Americans support a secure independent Israel.
60% of Arabs believe that Jews support a secure independent Palestine.

87% of Jews and 94% of Arabs support a negotiated two-state solution.

68% of Jews and 64% of Arabs would be more likely to vote for a Presidential candidate who advocated strong engagement in the Mideast peace process.

20% of Jews and 21% of Arabs found George Bush’s policy “effective” in “handling the Arab-Israeli peace process.”

73% of Jews and 79% of Arabs feel it is vital to engage in diplomacy to resolve the Iran nuclear standoff.

21% of Jews and 30% of Arabs feel “optimistic” about Middle East peace.

40% of Jews and 66% of Arabs feel the U.S. should “steer a middle course” between Israel and the Palestinians.

58% of Jews and 59% of Arabs said they would be more likely to support a Presidential candidate who supported peace negotiations between Israel and Syria.

81% of Jews and 84% of Arabs support Israeli-Syrian negotiations.

89% of Jews and 92% of Arabs believe it is important for both communities to work together for Israeli-Palestinian peace.

65% of Jews and 89% of Arabs believe it is imperative to end the Israeli Occupation.

63% of Jews and 77% of Arabs believe in a settlement freeze.

70% of Jews and 82% of Arabs support the Arab League initiative.

80% of both Jews and Arabs agree with the Iraq Study Group report that finding a comprehensive solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is necessary for advancing U.S. Mideast policy goals.

This poll tells us a number of interesting things. It reinforces the absolute divorce between the views of average American Jews and their leadership and the leadership of the State of Israel. AIPAC and other other groups constituting the Israel lobby do not support Syrian-Israel negotiations, are highly suspicious of pursuing a diplomatic strategy regarding Iran, oppose the end of the Occupation, oppose a settlement freeze, and are dubious about the Arab League Initiative.

One somewhat distressing finding was that only 34% of Jews believe that Arabs support a secure Israel, while in fact 88% do. This, of course, indicates the sorry, violent state of affairs in the Middle East today and also the drumbeat of negativity that is inculcated into American Jews by the local Jewish media and the Israel lobby.

A hopeful finding also was that fully 40% of American Jews believe that a “middle course” is the best road for American policy in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. I recall the Republican Jewish Coalition attempting to excoriate the Democrats in the last election because they allegedly are in favor of such a “middle course.” Little did the Repubs know that an equal number of American Jews favor a middle course (40% + 1% who favor tilting toward Palestine) to those who favor a tilt toward Israel (44%). Despite the enormous efforts of AIPAC to drive a stridently pro-Israel agenda the effort has failed, at least at the grassroots level.

I hope that the Democratic Presidential candidates will also wake and realize that the majority of American Jews don’t want a candidate who will kowtow to AIPAC’s hardline, no compromise agenda. The vast majority, in fact, want a candidate who strongly supports a peace process with both the Palestinians and Syrians. You wouldn’t know this from everything coming out of the mouths of Clinton, Obama and the rest.

Bishara as Rorschach Test for Israeli Democracy

Tuesday, April 24th, 2007
azmi bishara cartooncartoon: Ben Heine

The reactions from Israeli journalists and politicians to Azmi Bishara’s Knesset resignation provides a sort of Rorschach test for Israeli attitudes toward democracy. The first lesson you must learn about the attitudes of the majority of the 75-80% of Israelis who are Jews is that both the State and its democracy exists primarily for them and only secondarily for anyone else (that is, the Arab minority which comprises 20-25% of the population). And since the State has accorded citizenship to its Arab minority while according them second (or third) class status, one cannot really call Israel a democracy. Israeli political scientists like Yoav Peled have adopted the term ethnocracy to describe Israel’s peculiar political system. That is, a system that awards superior rights to a majority ethnic group while according vastly diminished status to the ethnic minority.

For most Israeli Jews, Arabs are a royal pain in the ass. The center of the political spectrum tolerates them while the right longs for the day when they can be transferred out of Israel. Most Israelis would vastly prefer a homogeneous state composed only of Jews. A former progressive like Benny Morris is characteristic of this attitude in wishing that Ben Gurion had actually forcibly expelled a much larger proportion of Israel’s 1948 population than he did. Even some on the left adopt a profound mistrust of the Arab minority.


What all of the above neglect to understand is that an Israel shorn of its minority would no longer be a democracy since it would’ve forcibly extirpated a part of its polity. And a State which doesn’t expel this minority but continues to refuse to accord it full equality still cannot call itself a true democracy. A fragmented or not-quite democracy perhaps but not a democracy full stop.

Let’s take a look at a JTA article about Bishara’s resignation and an interview with Yossi Alpher, viewed by some as a center-left analyst of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. The latter is published at no less progressive a source than the Americans for Peace Now website:

Israeli tolerance for Bishara’s views has been remarkable.

This is quite a remarkable statement considering that the Knesset has twice stripped Bishara of his parliamentary immunity in order to compel him to face criminal investigations, NONE of which resulted in a court case being filed. Remarkable too in light of the fact that the government attempted to prevent his party from running in one election for its refusal to accept the primacy of the Jewish state.

Two elections ago, the High Court of Justice reversed Electoral Commission determinations that Balad’s political platform violated the constitutional demand that all parties recognize Israel as a Jewish and democratic state, thereby allowing him to run. His frequent visits to Syria and Lebanon, including during war-time–where he met publicly with Bashar Asad and Hassan Nasrallah, praised their policies and condemned those of Israel–were also tolerated by the security community, to the extent that some Israeli Arabs concluded that Bishara must be a collaborator.

Notice that a supposedly progressive analyst has the temerity to slip in this imputed charge of “collaboration” without any proof whatsoever of the charges. And to say that Bishara was “tolerated” by a security establishment which has investigated him multiple times seems far-fetched to say the least.

In fact, all this took place in the name of Israeli pluralism and based on the assumption that it was better to have internal critics of Israel’s existence, however extreme, out in the open than to drive them underground. But there can be no mistake that Bishara has become clearly identified by the Jewish public as an enemy of the state. His association with the most reactionary and oppressive of Arab leaders in Syria and Lebanon and his readiness to level outlandish accusations against Israel–e.g., “in the entire history of mankind there have never been acts of plunder like those carried out by Israel”–clearly belie his rhetoric about democracy and equal rights.

Here Alpher has run off the rails. Bishara has identified himself with the two closest Arab neighbors to Israel’s northern Arab communities: Syria and Lebanon. But who is to say that Hezbollah and Syrian leaders are “the most reactionary and oppressive Arab leaders?” Worse than the Saudi dynasty or Egypt’s Mubarak or Iran’s mullahs or Iraq’s Hussein? This is an entirely specious argument. Bishara’s alliance with Hezbollah and Syrian is mostly geographic. And who would Alpher have him make an alliance with who would have him? Doubtless, Jordan’s King Abdullah would not be interested since he values good relations with Israel and wants to wash his hands of continuing intra-Arab strife. So who’s left for Bishara to turn to for support outside Israel?

One useful aspect of Alpher’s interview is that he further confirms information I published here from the Palestinian news agency Maan about the specific nature of the charges against Bishara:

A former associate at Bir Zeit University in Ramallah, where he taught for several years before going into politics, told me that Bishara had received large sums of money from Syria and Hezbollah for use by his political party and had apparently kept them for himself: this could explain both the criminal and the security components in suspicions against him.

But I would strongly caution that this is terribly vaguely and inauthoritatively sourced. And even if it is true that Bishara accepted funds from Syria, it is quite another thing to prove in a court of law that he acted corruptly in retaining funds for personal use. That’s the Shin Bet’s job and they’ve by no means proven their case. In fact, in keeping it secret they’ve done precisely the opposite: allowed people to believe that the secrecy conceals a weak case.

Bishara’s legacy in Israeli politics is a negative one: greater polarization between Arabs and Jews and closer ideological proximity between Israel’s Arab community and the most extreme elements in the Palestinian national movement.

Now, that would depend entirely on whose viewpoint you represented. Do you think that Israel’s Arab minority agrees? It is preposterous to blame Azmi Bishara for the polarization between Arabs and Jews in Israeli society. What about the 2000 massacre of defenseless protesting Nazareth Arabs by Israeli Border Police who were never even charged for their criminal behavior? Alpher doesn’t even come close to acknowledging that the radicalization represented by Bishara might stem just as much from Israeli intransigence in the face of Israeli Arab demands for their rights and Palestinian demands for theirs. Yossi Alpher may not be a flaming leftist but he’s no fool as an analyst of Mideast politics. That’s why the blinders he wears in this exchange are very instructive regarding the utter lack of awareness even intelligent Israeli Jews have of the democratic contradictions represented by the Arab minority in their midst.

The Jewish Telegraphic Agency has a mixed record of Jewish journalism. On domestic issues it publishes solid, reliable reporting. But when it comes to Israel, often it might as well have come from the AIPAC press office. That’s a wee exaggeration perhaps for effect, but not much. Let’s take Dan Baron’s article on Bishara. I tried earnestly to get JTA to write a story about Bishara’s secret Shin Bet investigation speaking with their DC correspondent for some time. Unfortunately, Baron’s article is JTA’s feeble coverage of the story. I’d call the following journalism by sloganeering:

Israeli Arab lawmaker Azmi Bishara has abruptly ended a parliamentary career built on denouncing the Jewish state from enemy capitals and then dodging charges of sedition at home.

That is the extent of Bishara’s career? Not the penetrating slogan: “A state for all its citizens,” which has resonated far beyond the Israeli Arab minority as a reasonable democratic demand.

For many mainstream Israelis, it was goodbye and good riddance.

You’ll notice the lazy man’s ‘many’ used by many to propound a questionable argument. Who are the “many?” What would’ve been far more accurate would be to say that “goodbye and good riddance” was the response of Israel’s far right politicians, one of whom even called for the Shin Bet to kidnap Bishara and return him to Israel for trial on charges of treason! How’s that for democracy??

Bishara stood out for his especially provocative antics.

To how many Jewish politicians would Baron attribute the dismissive label “antics?” And I’d like to remind you that southern Whites labeled Martin Luther King’s Montgomery bus boycott or Malcolm X’s speechifying in precisely the same terms. You dismiss what you fear and do not understand. But you do so at your peril because dismissing it will not make the issue or person go away.

Bishara overcame repeated attempts to have him tried for fraternizing with Israel’s enemies, invoking his parliamentary immunity from prosecution.

This is misleading if not downright inaccurate. Bishara’s immunity was stripped twice by the Knesset thus enabling the legal system to charge and try him. But it never did. Why not? Because they could not build a case. Why blame Bishara for shielding himself from prosecution when the state and its organs have done everything in their power to dismantle his political power?

Some moderate Israeli Arabs also sought to distance themselves from Bishara, so astounded by his temerity as to suggest it was all an elaborate cover for a role as an Israeli spy or covert diplomat.

Isn’t it interesting that we see the “Israeli spy” charge once again. But who gains from circulating such an unfounded charge? The Israeli right and Shin Bet of course. So we have to ask whose bidding are Alpher and Baron doing even if unintentionally? The forces who seek to diminish Bishara and Israeli Arab nationalism. I believe it is shameful journalism to disseminate a charge without having any credible source to back it up.

Baron leaves the most interesting and useful portion of his article for the very end of course. You wouldn’t want to include material favorable to Bishara in any other portion of the article now, would you?

Yaron London, saw in Bishara a sort of latter-day version of the Diaspora’s old political mavericks — the revolutionaries and utopianists.

“I once said to Azmi Bishara that he is more Jewish than I,” London said. “The heart of a Jew, even one who lives among Jews in their state, is the heart of a minority figure, but a Christian Arab who is a citizen of the Jewish state is an island within an island, a minority within a minority.”

“Bishara, a brilliant and arrogant intellectual, bossy and stormy, charming and easily offended, has no time to waste. He realized that the Jews would not accept his vision unless they were greatly weakened — and therefore they must be weakened.”

This is one of the truest and most incisive characterizations I have read in all my research on Bishara over the past two weeks. It is a statement that should be taken to heart by Israelis especially Bishara’s enemies in the Shin Bet and government. Think of all the political insurgents who were hated in their day only to return to glory leading their country or at the least playing a significant role in its political future.

I do not make a judgment on Bishara’s political views one way or the other except to say that they must be grappled with. And to those who falsely believe they have seen the end of Azmi Bishara, I say to you: “You ain’t seen nothin’ yet.” Think of DeGaulle in exile, Washington sulking in the snow at Valley Forge, Martin Luther King in the Birmingham jail, Mandela on Robben Island. The list goes on. Their causes eventually triumphed.

Finally, let’s explore the responses of the Israeli right to Bishara’s resignation. Predictably, they are overjoyed. I wrote that Yuval Steinitz wants the Shin Bet to forcibly return Bishara to Israel to face proper justice. What we should learn from all these responses is that the right cares not a whit for democracy. All that matters for them is that Israel is a Jewish State. Israel could be a Jewish version of Putin’s Russia, the People’s Republic of China or Mugabe’s Zimbabwe for all they care. When they talk of rights they are talking of Jewish rights. No other rights matter. Is this the model of a Jewish state which we wish to embrace? Many would say no. But if you take the logic of the Baron’s and Alpher’s to their end point they take you perilously close to the Israeli right. For our two journalists, the only acceptable Israeli minority is one that is quiescent, that accepts its subordinate role, that doesn’t grasp too insistently or aggressively for its rights. But is this a reasonable expectation? No, of course not. And once we accept that Israeli Arabs will no longer be quiescent isn’t the logical end point a Lieberman-Kahane like forced transfer, thus ridding Israel of its “fifth column” and creating a homogeneous Jewish state?

I hope and believe this will not happen. But the only thing to prevent it will be for well-meaning Israelis to realize that the Israeli Arab minority and its rights cannot be dismissed or swept under the rug.