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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

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Eldrige Street shul

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Dove

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Two birds

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Israeli and Palestinian boys

from documentary, Promises

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Daylight through the Wall

Banksy: graffiti art on Separation Wall

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Maurice Sendak's Brundibar set

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Daniel Barenboim, West-Eastern Divan Orchestra

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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 ‘settlements’

Gingrich and Adelson Promise After Settling West Bank, They’ll Colonize Moon

Thursday, January 26th, 2012

I live for nights like tonight.  Newt Gingrich earlier today in an appearance in Florida (home of the space industry) promised that if elected president he’d establish a lunar colony by 2020.  But not just any colony, it will, by God, be AMERICAN.  Did you hear that?  And once it gets 13,000 residents (“13,” as in colonies, get it?), it would be allowed to apply for statehood.  But Newt, I hear some of his Jewish fans say, don’t forget us.  Maybe we can even have a Jewish settlement or even a Jewish state up there.

Finally a people without a moon for a moon without a people!

If you’re a fan of the settler movement, this has to send a frisson of delight through your system.  Imagine: after Gingrich, Adelson, Moskowitz and all their pals get done settling Jewish colonists in the West Bank and expelling the indigenous inhabitants, they can move on to bigger and better things.  Imagine Jewish settlements on the moon.  I’m not sure whether they’ve explored the possibility of indigenous men on the moon who they’d of course have to expel in order to establish ethnically pure colonies of earthlings.  We may also need to update the Tanach in order to expand God’s promise to Abraham of all the land from the Euphrates to the Moon.  That would give this lunar settler movement a strong divine precedent.

I haven’t heard whether Newt and Callista will be among the first colonists but it sure would be swell if they would.  Sheldon and Miriam Adelson may want first dibs on a lunar casino with their own luxury condo overlooking Tranquility Base.

Three Settler MKs Expose IDF Movements to Settler-Rioters Who Assaulted West Bank Army Base

Sunday, January 8th, 2012
mk uri ariel

What's the difference between a settler thug and an MK...like Uri Ariel?

It is so common for Israeli Palestinian MKs to be charged with treason, aiding the enemy, spying, etc. that Israeli Jews not only take it for granted, but accept that the charges are true without any offer of proof.  But it’s a relatively new phenomenon for Israeli Jewish MKs not just to be accused, but to boast that they gave away classified information to settler hoodlums that was used as part of an assault against a West Bank army base in which two senior officers were wounded by bricks and rocks.  Because of the assault. the IDF was prevented from demolishing an illegal outpost, which was the original goal of the settlers.  In most other democratic countries this would be considered akin to sedition.  In Israel, not so much.

It’s bad enough that MKs Zeev Elkin (chair of the ruling coalition caucus in the Knesset) and Uri Ariel admitted that they secured information directly from IDF sources about the mission of military forces that night, and passed this information on to settler activists so they would know where the IDF was liable to strike.   This allowed them to concentrate their forces to do the most damage to the IDF and its mission of evacuating the outpost.  But Nana is now reporting (Hebrew) that senior minister Benny Begin joined in this operation.  He is not just an MK, he is a member of the senior ministerial committee that deliberates on major strategic and policy initiatives (like whether Israel attacks Iran).  Begin is also the son of Menachem Begin, one of the icons of the classical Israeli Jabotinskyian right.  Begin isn’t known as a settler hothead.  So when he too joins in such acts, it carries far-reaching consequences within the Israeli centrist community.  It’s yet another sign of the triumph of ultranationalism in Israeli politicial discourse.

Do you think the Israeli police will dare investigate these MKs, whose loyalty is not to the State or its authorities, but to an unofficial vigilante rabble that is at war with the State they supposedly represent?  This reminds me a bit of the Southern members of Congress in the years leading up to the Civil War.  Their allegiance was increasingly not to the United States, but to their region.  Time after time, they betrayed their country on behalf of their fellow Southerners, which led to deep mistrust and eventual national disintegration.

Israelis and Diaspora Jews wring their hands in frustration claiming that these bad settlers spoil it for all the other good, law-abiding settlers and the rest of Israel.  It’s the old good cop-bad cop routine.  The extreme settlers are the bad cops, the average Israeli citizen is the good cop.  The argument goes: don’t throw the baby out with the bath water.  Remember that Israel is not these bad seed settlers.  If we could only control the bad guys, then all would be well.

This is horse manure.  As I argued in a recent post, the radical settlers aren’t separate from, or opposed to the State.  As far as the West Bank goes, these settlers ARE the State.  Civil and military authorities do their bidding.  Settlers exercise massive control in their domain and no one threatens it, least of all a few rock throwing Palestinians and their do-gooder international activist friends.

Israel is not disintegrating, at least not yet, because the settlers and their allies control all the levers of power that they need to maintain their movement.  Unfortunately, there is no Israeli Lincoln to offer the settlers a final ultimatum.  There is no Ben Gurion willing to face down Begin and fire on the Alta Lena in order to put down a possible insurrection.  Israel needs discipline and internal cohesion on behalf of an overarching principle like democracy.  There is none and no one to impose it.

There is, however, a rising discipline among the far right and a vision of how to impose control over social and political structures that will ensure their permanent majority.  So it becomes a question of time before Israel becomes a far-right state along the lines of Milosevic’s Serbia.  The liberals have been vanquished inside Israel.  There is no loyal opposition.  There is no coherent alternate political philosophy.  The left is not just in disarray but in full-fledged disintegration.  The right is ascendant.  It cannot end well.

My only wish would be for the settlers to secede from Israel–without the IDF to protect them from their Palestinian neighbors.  We could call it the Confederate State of Judea.  It would last for about five minutes, if that.

In a related development, the police arrested four of the activists who trashed the IDF base.  It is the first time in my recollection that anyone has been arrested for any of the price tag violence that has happened over the past few months (except possibly the arrest of Dor Oved for his death threats against Peace Now).  The only reason they were arrested was that they broke a certain social taboo.  You can kill Palestinians in cold blood, even assault your fellow Israelis.  But you cannot touch the IDF.  You cannot assault an army base.  That goes one bridge too far.

My prediction?  The four will be out of jail in days, if not hours.  They’ll be celebrated by their comrades who will sing and dance and lionize them for their heroism.  The rest of Israel will yawn and go on with their lives.  Let the settlers do what they want as long as they don’t bother us here too much.  As for trial and punishment?  Not on your life.  But if (and this is a big ‘if,’ the pogromists were prosecuted for a crime, these MKs should be accessories after the fact.  Begin, Elkin and Ariel aided and abetted serious lawbreaking and injuries to senior IDF commanders.  That should count for something, even in a country in which democracy and the rule of law is going to Hell in a handbasket.  In a real democracy, a senior minister whose leaks cause harm to senior military personnel and the trashing of an army base would resign.  But Israel I guess isn’t that sort of place.  It’s a place in which such behavior is rewarded rather than castigated.

Anat Kamm’s leaks didn’t result in a single injury to a single Israeli soldier.  But Begin’s did.  But who’s been punished and who is walking free?

Santorum: West Bank Residents All ‘Israeli,’ No Such Thing as Palestinian; Arabs Attacked Israel ‘Aggressively’ in 1967

Thursday, January 5th, 2012

Rick Santorum gave several Iowa audiences last week a wow of a tutorial on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict (here is the NYT’s take). Among the other fairy tales he spun, was that all the residents of the West Bank are “Israeli.” Those who call themselves Palestinian aren’t, because there is no such thing; and Israel “owns” the land by dint of war and conquest.

This, of course flies in the face of current Israeli and U.S. policy which recognizes, at least nominally, a future Palestinian state.  Not to mention that it creates a wee, small problem of what to do with the non-Palestinian (under his terms) “Israelis” who don’t consider themselves Israeli.  What would you do?  Consign them to be perpetual invible people in this Greater Jewish State?  Expel them?  You certainly couldn’t treat them as “Israeli” as Santorum infers, since that would confer citizenship on them and an eventual non-Jewish majority inside Israel.  You could conceivably have two categories of “Israeli.”  The “good” Jewish ones, and the less good non-Jewish ones.  The latter presumably would have a status inferior to citizenship, perhaps akin to that of a South African bantustan.  Or you could just send ‘em packing back to wherever the hell they came from (destination TBD).

Santorum also appears to create a new category under international law, “ownership by conquest.”  According to him, any nation that conquers any territory of another is entitled to ownership through war.  In this fashion, he likens Israeli “ownership” of the West Bank to the U.S. conquest of Mexican territory in the 19th century.  According to his claim, if we wouldn’t return Texas to Mexico why should Israel return the West Bank?

It almost goes without saying that Santorum is endorsing a one-state solution, in which Israel would be the only state between the Mediterranean and the Jordan, and Palestinians would disenfranchised and/or stateless.

An equally interesting part of Santorum’s historical framework for understanding Israel’s relationship with the Arabs is the false notion that Israel was attacked “aggressively” by “the Jordanians” in 1967 (he’s confusing the 1967 War with the 1948 War, but no matter, what’s a small historical error among friends?).  That of course makes Israel’s subsequent conquest and “acquisition” of the West Bank legitimate, since Israel merely defended itself and only expanded its territory to create more defensible borders.

Apparently the new presidential flavor of the month hasn’t considered Hitler’s similar “acquisition” of Poland, Austria, France, Czechoslovakia, Holland, Belgium, Norway and half of the Soviet Union during WWII.  I suppose by his logic we had no business fighting a war to undo that territorial conquest.

Those who are gluttons for punishment or more Santorum nuttery, may watch yet another video manifestation of his historical inerrancy here.

Goldberg-Gorenberg Lib-Zionist Love Fest Featured in NY Times Book Review

Sunday, November 20th, 2011

The NY Times made the odd choice of selecting liberal Zionist hawk Jeffrey Goldberg to review Gershom Gorenberg’s new paean to lib Zionism, The Unmaking of Israel.  I’m only surprised that they didn’t assign the review to “Eytan” Bronner, that other Times paragon of lib Zionism, .  Assigning the review to Goldberg is something akin to commissioning Joe Biden to review Barack Obama’s next book.  Though Gorenberg isn’t Goldberg’s boss, they come from the same fairly narrow ideological slice of the Zionist ideological spectrum, with the only difference being that Gorenberg is slightly more critical of Israeli policy and Occupation than Goldberg.  It was to be expected that Goldberg would offer an encomium to someone who’s likely an old pal.  Israel is a very small place.  Gorenberg lives there.  Goldberg lived there for years.  Surely there are webs and networks interconnecting them in this cozy little community of pro-Israel journalists from which they emerged professionally.

There is something slightly off kilter or incestuous about assigning the book to Goldberg, as if one hand washes the other.  We certainly may expect a fullsome blurb from Gorenberg on the cover of Goldberg’s next book or assistance getting Gorenberg’s next article placed in The Atlantic.  I note that Gorenberg’s infamous Why- is-There-No-Palestinian-Gandhi fantasy was supposed to be published by The Atlantic, which passed on it when he submitted it to them.  It was then published in the far more ideologically suitable and pro-Israel Weekly Standard.

Of course, it would’ve been a lot more illuminating, and many more sparks would’ve flown, had they assigned the review to Stephen Walt, Tom Segev (who incisively reviewed Benny Morris’ last book for the Times) or Rashid Khalidi, someone who would’ve truly grappled both with Gorenberg’s ideas, giving credit where it was due and noting their insufficiencies when they arose.  Alas, that didn’t happen.  So we’re left with the ideological clichés that pass for analysis coming from Goldberg’s pen.

So let’s review the review for the little white lies, distortions and intellectual dishonesty for which Goldberg is notorious, starting with this:

Israel is not a fascist state, nor is it a theocracy nor, for that matter, is it a fascist theocracy. It is not an apartheid state, a totalitarian state or, God forbid, a Nazi state.

There is a convenient admixture of the outrageous with the apt, which allows Goldberg to associate off-the-wall descriptors like “fascist,” “totalitarian” or “Nazi” with ones that are quite apt like “theocracy” or ‘apartheid state.”  Israel isn’t a fascist state, but it certainly is rapidly becoming an authoritarian one, as anyone reading the list of Knesset bills up for consideration knows.  Though I wouldn’t have said this till recently, Israel has become a theocracy in everything but name only.  It’s not that rabbi-ayatollahs sweep through the streets stoning immodest women to death as they did and do in Afghanistan.  No, it’s more subtle than that (though there is overt violence against such women) but no less insidious.  Even Gorenberg, an Orthdox Jew, notes the stranglehold the Haredi have over the Israeli political and social system.  No less a figure than former Mossad director Ephraim Halevy said the Haredi threat to Israeli secular democracy was more severe than that from Iran.

Though Israel is not a fascist or totalitarian state, it is a state which honors democracy in the breach, if at all.  Turning to the phrase “apartheid,” since Israel clings insistently to the Occupation, which is a blatant and brutal violation of international law, we have to acknowledge that Israel IS an apartheid state.  If it did not rule West Bank Palestinians and indirectly Gaza as well, then we might argue that the Israeli domestic political system was merely an ethnocracy, but not outright apartheid.  However, the Occupation and the savagery with which it oppresses millions of Palestinians, turns Israel into a state with citizens enjoying full rights (Jews), truncated rights (Israeli Palestinians), and few if any rights (Palestinians in the Territories).  That is, an apartheid state.

Goldberg’s hasbara continues:

It [Israel] is, for its region in particular, a model of Western values, a country in possession of a robustly independent judiciary; a boisterous, appropriately unkempt press; a mature and activist civil society; and an assortment of fearless and effective human rights organizations.

Note he says that Israel is for its region a model of Western values.  Which implies that if Israel was not in this region it wouldn’t be such a sterling example of these values.  But returning to the passage, Goldberg either doesn’t know much about what’s really happening in Israel, or he’s willfully blind to the Israeli reality.  The Israeli judiciary, far from being robust, is catatonic when it comes to national security cases.  It’s taken five years for the IDF to honor several Supreme Court rulings to move the Separation Wall.  When the same Court prohibited targeted killings of unarmed Palestinians and an IDF general carried out one, the Court did nothing to enforce its ruling, even allowing the promotion of said general to become deputy chief of staff.  If that’s robust, then my grandpa was an Olympic decathlete.

As for the press being “boisterous, appropriately unkempt,” the terms are curiously besides the point in portraying the current Israeli media reality in which a TV station is being destroyed because it aired an exposé embarrassing to the prime minister; and that, following the same TV station’s abject on-air apology to Sheldon Adelson for airing an exposé embarrassing to him.  Hundreds of gag orders and military censorship hem in the best of Israeli investigative journalists, preventing them from doing their jobs properly.  Not to mention the silencing of an Israeli-Palestinian radio station, All for Peace, because it held such “subversive” views like embracing a two-state solution and women’s rights.

Goldberg’s descriptions of “activist civil society” and “fearless, effective human rights organizations” also seriously distorts the Israeli reality in which the prime minister has only just now withdrawn laws which would effectively defund all Israeli NGOs receiving foreign funding (which is virtually all).  To any Israeli apologists who claim that the withdrawal of the bill is a victory for democracy, look again.  Haaretz acknowledges the only reason for the withdrawal was the outcry from foreign governments like the EU and U.S., who warned of the opprobrium Israel would suffer on the world stage for such punitive measures against the human rights community.

This is the same Israel which summons human rights activists to Shin Bet interrogations and warns them if they continue with their activism, and the Knesset enacts new laws which the spooks expect, that what he is now doing will become criminal and that they will pursue him vigorously.  It’s the same society which routinely assaults human rights activists at places like Sheikh Jarrah, Jalud and Anatot, breaking bones, assaulting women sexually, etc.

Make no mistake, I am a champion of the Israeli human rights community.  But I do not delude myself into believing that it will or can save Israel from itself.  At best, these NGOs are impeding Israel’s gradual decline into moral and political chaos.  They are a stopgap, but not a solution.  They can’t single-handedly prevent the inexorable descent.

Though one should credit both Gorenberg and especially Goldberg for embracing some severe and justified criticism of Israel, neither goes far enough, especially not Goldberg.  Take this statement:

The majority of Israelis say they support a two-state solution…But the majority is powerless in the face of the relentless settler minority.

What does this mean?  How can a majority be “powerless” in the face of a minority?  Has that minority fed the majority a disabling drug that renders them unable to effectively oppose the bad deeds of the minority?  Has the majority lost its will through some catastrophe?  Of course, none of this is true and Goldberg is talking utter nonsense.  The Israeli majority may not have much sympathy for the settlers, but they are not willing to confront them.  The Israeli majority elects Knessets which form governments which actually support the settler movement.  So saying the majority is powerless against settlements is patently false.  The majority tacitly and even directly supports the disaster unfolding in the Territories.  We can argue and psychologize this phenomenon till the cows come home.  But we’ve got to tell it like it is.  This is not Svengali stuff.  Israelis are to blame for the mess into which the settlers have gotten them.

As an example, take this odd locution chosen by Goldberg to describe Israeli conquest of the West Bank during the 1967 War: he calls it “a sudden acquisition of new land.”  That’s one way of putting it.  What Israel did was far from “acquisition” and such language masks the nature of the ongoing crime in the same way that Israelis mask awareness of the Albatross that the Occupation is around their collective necks.

Gorenberg and Goldberg both target the settlements as the poison fruit that has embittered Israeli discourse.  And of course they are both right.  But they don’t go far enough.  Take this passage from the review which portrays the ways in which Israel allowed a patently illegal settlement process to become de jure legal, at least in Israeli terms:

How did it happen that a country of laws — Israel’s Supreme Court justices are renowned around the globe — came to be so lawless in one corner of the territory it ruled?

We can argue later about whether or even when last, Israel’s justices were “renowned” around the globe–but the notion that the lawlessness of settlements is a phenomenon of only “one corner” of Israel is again wishful thinking.  Israel is a country basically without rule of law, especially regarding national security.  There is no accountability for crimes and violations of laws and guidelines either by the police, IDF or intelligence agencies.  Take this hot off the presses from Maariv.  One of only two IDF officers facing charges for murdering civilians during Operation Cast Lead will face no criminal charges according to the military prosecutor.  Corruption is endemic.  Ethnic discrimination, even against Jews and certainly against non-Jews, is rampant.  Israel enjoys the fifth largest gap between rich and poor among OECD countries.  It is one of the most stratified nations in the world with a tiny number of oligarch-like families controlling immense portions of the national commercial and industrial infrastructure.  There is one law for the 99% and another for the 1%.  Lawlessness does not afflict only one corner of the nation.  It afflicts the entirety of it.

Thus Occupation, though it may’ve been the root of the evil that came to bedevil Israel, is now just another symptom among many of the country’s ills.  But unlike both Gorenberg and Goldberg, I believe that Israel’s Original Sin, just as it America’s, is racism.  In Israel, that Sin began with the 1948 Nakba and continues to this day with the oppression and neglect suffered by Israel’s indigenous non-Jewish citizens.  Just as Martin Luther King argued so powerfully about American sin, tying it to racism and slavery, so Israel’s is the primal injustice of expulsion of nearly 1-million residents of the country.  This, as much as or even more than Occupation, is the “unmaking of Israel.”

You won’t find Goldberg touching this with a ten-foot pole and likely Gorenberg would feel the same way.  Nakba is the third-rail of Israeli politics.  You simply can’t go there.  From Nakba flows an analysis of the fundamental, systemic inequities of Israeli life.  The suppression of the rights of Palestinian citizens, tolerance of the virtual abandonment of whole segments of the Israeli population to poverty, illiteracy, poor health, and crime.

If there is one thing among many that separates my views from those of the liberal Zionist pair it is this:

 …It is Jews who created many of the problems the Jewish state faces today, and it is Jews who must fix them.

I used to believe this, even fervently.  But I no longer believe it.  Israel is not capable of fixing the mess into which it has gotten itself.  Like Serbia-Kosovo or Rwanda or any number of horror-show situations, Israel is paralyzed.  It cannot expiate its sins or whatever one wishes to call them.  The benefits Israelis derive from Occupation are too attractive for them to give them up willingly.  There may be those who know what has to be done to resolve its conflict with the Arab states, but there aren’t enough of these citizens and they aren’t powerful enough to impose their vision on the rest of society.

Finally, Goldberg and Gorenberg, despite the partial clarity of vision they have concerning the mess in which Israel finds itself, are little better than temporizers.  They want to ameliorate the situation rather than engage in the fundamental transformation of Israeli society that is necessary for it to become truly democratic and accepted into the mainstream of nations.  For them Israel can only be a Jewish state.  And by that I mean a state rewarding the majority ethnic group superior rights over the minority.  You call such a state an exclusivist and supremacist Jewish state.  But it is one in which some citizens, by virtue of the religion into which they were born, gain better jobs, education, health care, housing, and social treatment.  That is simply not acceptable.  It wasn’t acceptable to the authors of the Israeli Declaration of Independence, nor is it acceptable today.

As I’ve written many times, there is nothing wrong with Israel being a state in which Jews are a majority.  There is nothing wrong with Israel being a state in which Jews practice their religion, speak their language, learn their heritage, and engage with their Diaspora brethren.  In other words, Israel must be a place in which religious traditions are respected.  But it may not be a place that rewards one religion over another.  That is where I fundamentally part company with Goldberg and Gorenberg.  And it’s why Gorenberg finds me such a dangerous opponent that he was willing to lie about my views and call me an anti-Zionist.  He doesn’t know what to do with those who support Israel, but find his vision imperfect.  To him, he’s a perfect liberal and a conscience of humanity.  Doesn’t he criticize his own nation for the sins it’s committed against Palestinians?  What more, he thinks, do they expect of me?

We expect someone who is a serious intellectual and observer of his nation to plumb the depths of the evil that afflicts it.  Something Gorenberg hasn’t yet done.  He has gotten part way there, but not all the way.

Matt Lee Takes It to State Department’s Nuland Again

Thursday, November 3rd, 2011


The AP’s Matt Lee is going to make himself a mini wonk-celebrity for his habit of making mince-meat of the State Department’s Victoria Nuland during her press briefings.  Yesterday, he took her on over the UNCESCO defunding and Israel’s announcement it would be building 2,000 new settlement housing units and withholding PA tax revenue in punishment for the UN organization’s vote to accept Palestine as a full member.

If you think about what has happened along the lines that Lee does, the UNESCO vote does not really cause any substantive change in Palestinian status in the international arena.  It doesn’t harm Israel in any specific, tangible way.  Yet in response to the vote the U.S. has ended its funding for one of the most important international bodies there is, Israel is withholding potentially hundreds of millions of dollars in Palestinian tax revenues, and Israel will build 2,000 new housing units on illegally held Palestinian territory.

Lee points out that Palestinians are suffering tangible material harm to their interests, while Israel suffers no punishment for its violations of the status quo and stated U.S. policy.  We offer $3 billion per year to Israel and yet we’re not willing to withhold a single penny when Israel contravenes our own policies regarding settlements.  What is the message Israel takes away from this:

…How is it U.S. policy to encourage peace talks if you’re unwilling to do anything against either side when they continue to ignore you and, in fact, not just to ignore you but to make matters worse, is what you said. You’re a parent. You have two spoiled children who are doing things that you don’t like. What do you do to get them to stop that behavior? You don’t do nothing. You punish them. You take some kind of action. You have, or you did have, leverage with the Israelis because you gave them $3 billion a year. You do have, or did have, leverage with the Palestinians because you give them millions of dollars a year. And yet, you’re not going to do anything with that?

…Is the Administration upset or embarrassed at all by the fact that two relatively tiny groups of people are running roughshod over American foreign policy?

…You do believe that your involvement in UN organizations such as UNESCO…that that’s an American national security interest or in an American interest. And you’re prepared to allow these two small groups of people to make you forfeit your national interests in international organizations. That’s what you’re saying to me.

The AP reporter does everyone a tremendous service by calling the Obama administration the emperor with no clothes.  He even uses the term “impotent” at one point.  If I lived in DC I might go there just to watch the fireworks.

I don’t envy Nuland.  She’s not given much to work with.  All she can continually say when pummeled by reporters is the U.S. is committed to the road map and Quartet process, components which are DOA as far as any serious observer of the process can tell.  If the State Department spokesperson wasn’t such a cold fish, you might actually feel a twinge of sympathy for her.

Returning to the press briefing, another reporter gets Nuland to tacitly concede that Hillary Clinton hasn’t had a substantive contact with an Israeli or Palestinian leader in the past six weeks, aptly summarizing the level of commitment of the administration to the issue.  This stasis of course works only to Israel’s advantage because it want to preserve the status quo as long as possible.

The reporters generally note that the U.S. election season is likely to continue to render our efforts pointless because no candidate, including the president would be willing to exercise any robust or muscular intervention in the process.  This means another year of paralysis and ineffectiveness, which is music to Israel’s ears.

Israeli Peace Activists Appeal to Supreme Court for Right to Return to Anatot

Monday, October 31st, 2011

Those brave Israeli peace activists who protested twice at Anatot and got the stuffings knocked out of them for their trouble, have notified the police they intend to return to demonstrate yet again.  They began by joining a Palestinian farmer whose access to his land is denied by residents of the Anatot settlement.  When the farmer unfurled a Palestinian flag settler thugs flocked to the site, smashed his skull sending him to the hospital and went on a rampage destroying all of his farming equipment.  Peace activists returned that night for a second protest in which the settlers were even more violent, which included a knife attack and sexual assault.

Not to be intimidated, Assaf Sharon (whose nose was broken by a settler thug), the leader of the Sheikh Jarrah Solidarity movement applied for a permit to return to Anatot.  The police denied it.  Now he is appealing (today) to the Israeli Supreme Court for the right to do what people in any democratic country may do–demonstrate their views in public.  I hope that the hearing will vindicate the protesters and make the Israeli authorities realize that the whole world is watching the pogromists of Anatot and the State that is dancing to their tune.

Jalud: Another Day, Another Pogrom

Tuesday, October 25th, 2011

The High Holiday liturgy includes a moving prayer called Eyleh Ezkerah (“These I will remember”), which portrays the martyrdom of rabbis at the hands of the Romans in their struggle to suppress the practice of Judaism during Jewish revolts against Roman rule.

jalud palestinian pogrom

The hooded face of the Jew Klan, settler pogromists about to wreak mayhem

Today, we have our own litany of Jewish pogroms in the West Bank to memorialize: two weeks ago it was Anatot, this week it’s Jalud.  In Anatot, settlers, a number of whom were Israeli police and residents, beat the living daylights out of peace activists.  This included broken limbs, sexual assaults and an attempted stabbing.  This week’s latest involved a brutal assault on a 61 year-old Israeli peace activist, A, who joined with fellow activists of Combatants for Peace.  He suffered broken ribs and fingers, and a trip to the hospital.  He is still quite tender and recuperating at home.  Here are excerpts of his testimony:

Last Friday, we arrived at the Palestinian village of Jalud to participate in an olive harvest with a group of Palestinian farmers from the village. Joining us were a group of international peace activists and members of a Palestinian agricultural cooperative from the Hebron area. We climbed a hill in order to begin with the harvest…

No more than five minutes passed from the time of our arrival, when four or five masked Jewish settlers arrived on the scene, accompanied by an armed security guard  in civilian clothes. Except for the guard, they all covered their faces with white cloths – except one who covered his face with a black cloth. Seeing the direction that they came from, I assumed that they came from the illegal Jewish outpost of Esh Kodesh (“Holy fire”).

Upon their arrival, I immediately started filming them. They started arguing with the Palestinian farmers and shouted: “Get out of here! This is our land!”, “You haven’t been here for 10 years, haven’t farmed the lands, now they belong to us”. A shouting match developed, but at that point it did not become anything more than that.

…[Then] suddenly I saw the armed guard and one of the masked men approaching me. I heard a sudden, loud explosion and I realized that one of them threw a shock grenade to where the people were harvesting. Immediately after the explosion I heard a round of shooting.

…At this point three or four of the masked men approached me quickly. I was convinced that when they would realize I was an older man and that if I would identify myself as Israeli, nothing would happen. When they approached me, they initially thought I was Arab and told me: “Jib al-hawiya” (“Give your I.D”). I tried to tell them: “Calm down, guys, I’m Israeli, no need for violence.”  At this point the man with the black cloth pulled my camera and tried to take it. I argued with him: “Aren’t you ashamed? Why do you act violently? I’m old enough to be your father!” As soon as the words came out of my mouth, I felt a blow to my head, followed by the feeling of blood gushing out of the wound. I fell to the ground and they continued to beat me with clubs. I yelled at the top of my voice: “Help! Someone stop this!”, but no one heard me.

…On the way I met A. and M., who was also covered in blood, and I realized that she had been beaten by the masked men at the beginning, right after the shock grenade exploded. After we met, we started walking down the hill, towards the village, while tear gas grenades were falling all around us, shot from a military jeep which was parked under the hill. I believe a second jeep was firing at us from the left side of the hill;

The masked men managed to grab the still camera from my hand, and took my backpack which had the video camera, cassettes and my glasses in it. When I tried to fight back to take my camera, I was again beaten, this time on my wrist. At this point they ran away with my belongings, while I was left bleeding and beaten, but with full consciousness and completely aware of my situation and of what had just happened. The truth is that at this point the actual beatings didn’t hurt as badly, and I was more worried about the amount of bleeding. In addition, I was completely in shock, and was in disbelief that this had just happened to me.

…Somehow, between the falling grenades, we managed to get of the hill and we stopped about 50 meters from the military jeep. A…kept yelling at the IDF soldiers to stop firing at us and that people were wounded – but they just kept firing. When we arrived at the edge of the field, close to the road which leads to the village, the second military jeep approached. It was a border police jeep with the word “Police” on it, and it stopped about 20 meters from us. E’ or A’ yelled: “Come help us, there are wounded people here!”. A soldier emerged from the jeep, I was sure he was coming to help us. But instead, he walked to the back of the jeep, extracted a tear gas grenade and shot it at us. The grenade fell about five meters from us, but the wind was blowing in the other direction and the Palestinians told us to stay where we were and let the gas blow in the other direction. At this point I was continuing to bleed from the wound in my head and one of the Palestinians tied his kaffiyah (head cloth) around my head in order to stop the bleeding. M’, who was standing next to us, was also bleeding profusely.

…When we arrived at the Tapuach junction, we waited for some time before the military ambulance arrived. An Israeli police car arrived with it and the policeman started to ask questions about what happened. The military paramedic tried to speed up the questioning, so the policeman came on to the ambulance with us in order to continue with the questioning until we arrived to the Ariel junction. The policeman, accompanied by an officer, followed us in a car to the Ariel junction and informed us that an investigator had already been sent to the area of Esh Kodesh to investigate. One of the policemen said that after we receive medical treatment, they will contact us to continue collecting our testimonies. From there we were evacuated to Belinson hospital in the Madah ambulance.

A formal complaint has been registered by the activists with the Israeli police, who are more likely to charge them with disturbing the peace than they are to prosecute the Judeonazis who perpetrated this pogrom.  All of A’s personal property was stolen including still and video cameras, film, and glasses.  Similar thefts and vandalism occurred in Anatot, none of which will be prosecuted.

One of my readers posted a comment in which he wrote that there were over 500 political killings in 1920 and 30s Weimar Germany.  Only 60 resulted in any charges being filed and even fewer were convicted and served jail time.  This, in a country so afflicted by economic, social and political chaos that even if the authorities had wanted to maintain order, they couldn’t.  That’s not the case in Israel.  In Israel, the authorities clearly approve of the pogromists and in many cases the authorities ARE the pogromists (as in the case of Anatot in which policemen were the worst perpetrators of violence).  They exercise control when they choose to and they choose not to regarding the settlers.

Israel is entering a new, more bloody, ugly and more repressive phase.  It retreats ever farther from any Jewish or Zionist values I’ve ever known.  It is as if Israel were doppelgänger twins–the good and the evil.  Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.  Today’s Israel is increasingly becoming the evil twin, the monster.

There may be those who seek to distinguish between the mass of Israelis who do not support such brutalism and the radical settlers.  But I think this is increasingly becoming a meaningless distinction.  In a society infected by evil, when the majority ignores it and even colludes with it, all are guilty.  Israeli authorities have every opportunity to maintain order and the rule of law in the Territories and choose not to do so.  They’ve made their choice.  Now the world must make its own.  Does the world let this horror continue indefinitely or does it step in before slaughter happens on a massive scale as happened in places like Rwanda, Bosnia, and now in Arab nations shaking off the shackles of repressive rule?

Shin Bet Slaps Gag Order on Safed Mosque Burning Investigation

Tuesday, October 4th, 2011
mosque burning

Village mosque of Tuba Zangariyye after being torched by suspected Jewish extremists (Oded Balilty/AP)

An Israeli source has told me there is a gag order concerning any reporting on the Shin Bet’s investigation into the mosque burning in the Israeli Palestinian village, Tuba-Zangariyye, just outside Safed.  This is the fifth or sixth mosque arson attack in recent past and no charges have been brought in any cases.  Despite a recent Israeli police claim, there are no legitimate suspects for the recent attack either.

Just after the arson attack, at about 5AM police in Ariel arrested a settler named Yisrael Katz, age 18 or 19 and a resident of Yitzhar, one of the most radical of the West Bank settlements.  Though he’d started his trip from a town not far from Tuba Zangariyye, given that it would’ve taken him two or perhaps three hours to make the drive, it means he likely could not have been present when the arson began.

But he was wanted for investigation on a different matter and the police arrested him.  He and twelve other Yitzhar residents had been under a police restraining order forbidding them from entering Yitzhar for four months, due to suspicion that he’d been involved with several mosque fires allegedly set by residents of the settlement.  Once the police discovered the mosque attack, they attempted to link him to it.

In attempting to make their case, the police and Shin Bet requested that his remand be extended by ten days, but the judge only agreed to a three-day extension.  My source tells me that it’s clear to anyone who knows the facts about this case that the alleged suspect isn’t connected to the case.  But since the police need to say they have a suspect in custody, he’s the patsy they picked.  In a few days, as soon as the furor surrounding the incident dies down, he’ll be released.

The police have also impounded a vehicle from Yitzhar that may (or may not) be connected to the latest mosque arson.

This village is near Safed, whose chief rabbi, Shmuel Eliyahu, is known as one of the most strident of the Muslim-hating rabbis in Israel.  When asked about this attack, he pointedly said he could not criticize such an act.

Israeli police and Shin Bet are notoriously bad at solving cases involving Jewish terror.  Partly this is due to the fact that the Jewish underground is locked up tight and hard to penetrate.  Partly it is due to a lack of will or even sympathy the security services may have with the general goals (though perhaps not the tactics) of the radical settler right.  Note that no one has been arrested for the terror spree at the Tel Aviv gay community center a few years ago, though I’ve heard they suspect Jack Teitel‘s involvement in that.  You’ll recall that Jack conveniently and rather suddenly developed a serious “mental condition” that freed Israel from actually trying or convicting him for any crime.

At any rate, this most recent mosque torching is unlikely to be solved, and such hooliganism will continue unabated until one of the perpetrators does something really stupid that brings him to the attention of the police.  In Teitel’s case, he was found putting up incendiary fliers on a public street calling for a bounty on the heads of Peace Now activists.  If the terrorists are smart they may never be caught, and who knows to what level of proficiency and mayhem their acts will rise in the interim.

Bibi Netanyahu, Shimon Peres and Abe Foxman have all decried the mosque arson since it happened within the Green Line.  When such arsons happen in settler land outside the Green Line, there is less enthusiasm for defending Muslim holy places.  If these three Jewish eminences really want to make a statement, let them join Ahmed Tibi in a pilgrimage to this village where they should pay their respects at the mosque that was attacked.  This would speak volumes to Jewish terrorists and Israeli Palestinians.  I’ve e-mailed Tibi to suggest this.

Jewish terrorists like this not only want to annex the West Bank and drive its Palestinians residents out, they want to do the same for Israel’s Palestinian citizens.  That’s what a pogrom like this means.  Israel has to decide whether it wants its Arab citizens or not.  If it does, then it will have to give them full, equal rights with Jewish citizens and protect them as well as it does Jews.  If it does any less, then incidents like this will continue ad infinitum.

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