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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

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Eldrige Street shul

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from documentary, Promises

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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

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Ketubah, Ancona, Italy (1772)

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Ancona ketubah

Posts Tagged ‘shalem-center’

Daniel Gordis and the Transferists Among Us

Saturday, November 20th, 2010
daniel gordis

Rabbi Dr. Daniel Gordis, senior vice president of Likudist Shalem Center

Daniel Gordis has yichus.  He comes from the American Jewish élite.  He is a scion of the Gordis family which produced the seminal scholars, David and Robert Gordis, both major figures in Conservative Judaism (David was my Talmud teacher at Jewish Theological Seminary and someone I respected a great deal).  Daniel eventually made aliya and has gone from a centrist political outlook to Likudist over the years.  He is now a senior vice president at the Shelly Adelson-financed, Bibiphile, Shalem Center, where his colleagues are Natan Sharansky and (until he was named Israel’s ambassador to the U.S.) Michael Oren.  It is safe to say that Daniel has politically gone off the family reservation.  He is now a full-fledged Likudist apparatchik with a rabbinical degree.

Because of his Conservative pedigree he has a ready-made American Jewish audience and is a regular on the Jewish speaker circuit at synagogues, Jewish federations and the like.  His writing plays on a reputation for centrism and moderation by making it appear that his views are the height of reason and common sense.  Not so fast.

My friend Jerry Haber has written a critique of Gordis’ latest book, Saving Israel.  The book flirts with the notion that forced transfer of Israel’s Palestinian citizens may be necessary to preserve its Jewish majority and the notion of Jewish self-determination.

Jerry notes that Gordis begins chapter six of his book with this quotation:

Israel cannot be defined as a democratic state.  The only way to make Israel a democratic state is to eliminate its Jewish character.

The Future Vision of Palestinian Arabs in Israel, National Committee of the Heads of the Arab Local Authorities in Israel

There is only one problem.  While the first sentence is in the document (page 9), the second isn’t.  I’ve both browsed through the entire paper and done searches on every phrase in the second sentence and it isn’t there.  So either Gordis confused his sources and has misattributed this quotation or else he’s fabricated it.

I would never claim there are no Palestinians who believe Israel must eliminate its Jewish character to become a democratic state.  But the point is that the document and organization behind this document didn’t publish the words that Gordis put in their mouth.  And in fact, if he’d actually read the entire document he’d realize that considering other arguments that are in the document which call on Israel to recognize the religious rights of the minority, that it would make no sense for them to demand the elimination of the religious rights of the Jewish majority.

What this document does demand is that Israel deny superior rights to Jews in the state it envisions.  There is a huge difference between this and eliminating Israel’s Jewish character entirely.  Only the farthest of the far-left anti-Zionist movement demands this and Gordis has done a deep disservice to Adalah in claiming what he has.  He owes it an explanation and an apology unless he can explain what he did and why.

Menachem Klein of Bar Ilan University argues in his new book, The Shift, that efforts like Gordis’ are part and parcel of an:

Expansion of the conflict to include also the Israeli Palestinians [along with] the misreading of their vision documents by the current Jewish majority.

So what Gordis has possibly done is to engage in a political and intellectual fraud, but it is one that isn’t his alone.  But rather it is part of a deliberate distortion of the actual views of Israeli Palestinian nationalists.  The Shabak, in its campaigns to persecute Israeli Palestinian leaders like Ameer Makhoul, also fabricates a nationalist position that calls for the destruction of Israel, which is not at all what Adalah or Balad believe.

The sixth chapter of Gordis’ book also recounts in that way that ideologues have of tailoring their memories to suit their political agendas, his two years of study at Baltimore’s Episcopalian Gilman School.  He was irked as a Jewish student that the entire student body said the Lord’s Prayer every morning.  He uses this as an allegory for contemporary Israel in which he compares Palestinian Israelis to the well-tolerated Jewish students at Gilman.  His point is that no Jew should’ve expected to be fully accepted or integrated into Gilman because it was a school based in a religious tradition (much as Israel is allegedly).  Any Jew who chafed at this situation had a right to leave (as Gordis did after two years).  In other words, you can’t change a religious institution from within if you’re of a different religious tradition than the founders.  If you don’t like it you should leave.

Jerry Haber, who was a student at Gilman earlier, also notes that Jews were compelled to attend religious instruction an even more onerous requirement that Gordis doesn’t even mention.  But unlike Gordis, Haber stayed in touch with friends at Gilman and the School itself and watched its remarkable progress in ridding itself of some of the more offensive Christo-centric customs.  It did this because it genuinely wanted to welcome Jews as equal partners in the School.  You won’t see any of this in Gordis’ book because it is distinctly “off message.”

Gordis wants to posit an Israel that has a right to be Judeo-centric and a right to accord superior rights to Jewish citizens.  That is how he even flirts with the Kahanist transferist program advocated by Avigdor Lieberman and the Israeli far-right.  That a mainstream American Jewish rabbi should be speaking about transfer as if it is an unfortunate, but necessary concept that may be necessary to preserve Israel as a Jewish state indicates how far to the right Israel discourse has gone both in the U.S. and Israel.  This rabbi, who speaks favorably of the notion of forcibly expelling hundreds of thousands of Israeli citizens from their homeland, is toying with Jewish fascism.  But you wouldn’t know it by the generous accolades on his book cover from the likes of Cynthia Ozick and Natan Sharansky.

Here is some of Gordis’ writing on transfer:

Therefore, despite the great pain, these potentially agonizing solutions to an undeniable problem have to be raised… Those who seek to restore purpose to Israeli life will have to decide how to preserve Israel’s Jewish majority. For it is that majority that enables Israel to serve as such a beacon of hope for Jews. That, in turn, invariably will entail more than rhetoric. It will require abandoning the pretense that Israel is just like other countries, the charade that claims that Israel can deal with its minorities precisely as other democracies do…If Israelis genuinely believe in that purpose, they will then have to be willing to discuss what they are actually willing to do to protect the existence of the state that has saved the Jewish people.

First, it should be noted that Israel has not lost its Jewish majority and if it completes the negotiation of a Palestinian state soon, this eventuality may not happen for decades.  Second, where is it written that the only way in which Israel can be a beacon of hope to Jews is if there is a Jewish majority there?  Why can’t Israel be a beacon of hope to Jews no matter how many Jews live there as long as there is a strong, protected, vibrant Jewish life there?

Most important here is Gordis riding willingly down that slippery slope from democracy to ethnocracy and worse.  In Gordis’ view Israelis and Jews are naïve if they believe that country can be a democracy as other western nations are.  The Likudist rabbi does seem to believe that somehow Israel will still be a democracy, just one that is “different” that others democracies like the U.S. which treat their minorities on an egalitarian basis.

So, Gordis asks, what ARE you willing to do to protect the superior rights of Jews in Israel?  Transfer?  Not out of the question according to Gordis.  Though Daniel Gordis was never as far left as Benny Morris once was, it seems to me that you’re watching in Gordis the gradual transformation of a plain vanilla American Zionist into a politicized Likudist hack.  One with great yichus and a rabbinical degree to boot.  What a great catch for Shalem!

In all of Gordis’s discussions of Israeli Palestinians there is one glaring omission that topples his whole argument like a house of cards.  Israeli Palestinians are indigenous to Israel.  As Haber notes in his own critique, they preceded Gordis and Haber who are both immigrants.  The Palestinians were there before the ancestors of most current Israeli Jews arrived.  So their tie to the land is deep and inalienable.  Gordis writes about Palestinian citizens of Israel as if they are a nuisance to be tolerated or dealt with.  Read this sample:

The differences between the plights of Israeli Arabs and Palestinian refugees is more an accident of history in 1948 than anything else [!].  Some fled, some stayed, but those who stayed did not do so out of Zionist convictions [!].  They either hoped that Arab forces would derail  the newly formed Zionist state, or thought they could better protect their property by staying.

You will read nothing in that passage or anything Gordis has written about Israeli Palestinians that acknowledges their indigenous rights.  For Gordis, there seems to be no such right at least as far as the territory on which Israel is situated stands.  I suppose he believes that Jews maintain some sort of historical bond with Israel that precedes even the relatively recent Palestinian bond.  But the truth is that I can’t trace my lineage back to ancient Israel in any way that is meaningful to me especially in the sense of feeling an ownership of the land of Israel.

Haber eloquently summarizes the Israeli Palestinian claim to being an equal partner with the nation’s Jewish citizens:

What is particularly striking about [Gordis'] account…is the utter failure to understand why most Israeli Arabs refuse to leave Israel: Their motivation is crystal clear from their writings and their statements: This land, and this state, are their homes in three ways: As natives, it is their home in a way never can be for Rabbi Gordis and myself, who were born and lived much of our lives outside of Israel.  As members of the Palestinian people, with the consciousness of having a common history and identity, this land is their homeland. And finally as Israeli citizens, it is most assuredly their homeland. For despite the best efforts of ethnic nationalists on both sides, there has evolved an Israeli identity shared by native-born Israelis, whether Jew, Arab, and immigrant children of foreign workers.

With all due respect to Rabbi Gordis, neither he nor I can ever be as Israeli as Ahmed Tibi, Emile Habibi, or Azmi Bishara. We are immigrants; they are not. Because it is their home, they want, like ethnic minorities everywhere, to participate in the governance of the state. And the more Israel defines itself as a Jewish ethnic state, the greater and more legitimate their claim for national rights and power-sharing, like ethnic minorities in multi-ethnic societies everywhere.

If Daniel Gordis wants to argue that the only way of saving Israel as he envisions it is to rid the nation of its Palestinian minority that’s a position he’s entitled to.  But he’s no longer entitled to call himself a centrist or mainstream Zionist.  He is a far right nationalist like all of his new friends at Shalem and in the Likud.  Let no American Jewish institution that books his make the mistake that they will hear from an eminently reasonable, common-sensical Israeli-American Zionist.  They will hear from someone wants his audience to think of him that way.  But he’s long gone from the liberal Zionist center where his uncles David and Robert would doubtless would feel much more comfortable.

Rightist Philosophy Lecturer Dismissed by Hebrew University

Saturday, July 24th, 2010
ran baratz

Ran Baratz: victim of Israeli academic political correctness or self-immolated on the altar of right-wing ideology?

The Philosophy department at the Hebrew University recently dismissed Ran Baratz, a lecturer on Greek philosophy.  And ever since, the Israeli media has been in a mini-uproar.  The Knesset’s Education Committee will take up the affair.  According to Maariv and other publications, Baratz was let go because he violated the leftist academic code prevailing in Israeli academic institutions.  Here’s how Maariv breathlessly portrayed Baratz’s “sacking (Hebrew):”

Stormy winds are blowing through the humanities faculty of the Hebrew University after it ended the employment of a popular lecturer.  Dr. Ran Baratz will not return for the coming academic year due to his affiliation with the right-side of the political map…

If you’re right-wing, so the prevailing wisdom goes, you have no hope of a career or academic advancement in Israel.

Let’s examine the facts more closely.  According to a senior faculty member at a major Israeli university who has some familiarity with the case, Baratz taught there as what here in the U.S. would be called an adjunct.  He had a temporary low-level appointment (what is called in Hebrew amit-hora’ah); such appointments are always short-term (usually one year, but in Baratz’s case it was only one semester) and may or may not be renewed, depending on budget and such things.  There’s always considerable flux with these adjunct appointments, especially since the budgets keep shrinking.

Baratz hoped his teaching gig would turn into a tenure-track position. However, a very fine candidate applied, with a strong CV, good list of publications, and was appointed. Baratz himself had no publications and was in no position to compete.

Casting further doubt on Baratz’s claim, the Hebrew University faculty of humanities is not noted for its solidarity with the left and the peace camp.

We should also examine whether Baratz may have his own personal motives for turning this into an ideological, rather than a purely professional decision.  First, he is the “academic advisor” to Im Tirzu, a foul Israeli smear outfit whose goal is to act as mashgiach (a rabbi who determines whether food is kosher) for Israeli professors and their courses according to the level of Zionist kashrut they represent.  The group recently published a strange report which claimed to examine the course syllabi for academic courses for the Zionist or anti-Zionist content of the articles.  Naturally, it found a very high level of the latter in Israeli courses.  And guess who was the academic advisor for this “report?”  The good doctor Baratz.

He is also a regular contributor to Yisrael HaYom, a daily paper also known as Bibi-ton for its slavish adulation of the current prime minister.

He is also a post-doctoral fellow at the Likudist Shalem Center. The Center has created Shalem College, a faux academic program which aims to glorify the place of Israel and Zionism in the western academic canon.  Here is what I wrote about this subject a few months ago:

Concerned that Israeli universities are a hotbed of Israel-hatred and unwilling to develop a ideological cadre of sufficiently pro-Israel students, the Center has applied to the Israeli educational authority for approval to launch its own rightist undergraduate program, Shalem College.

The college’s own mission statement lays out its curricular goals–among them to give:

Expanded attention to Western texts and traditions that permit a more fruitful dialogue with Jewish tradition. The college will relate to a wider selection of Western traditions than has become fashionable in many leading universities, including: treatment of the tradition of Western nation states as a legitimate alternative to expressly internationalist goals and values

No doubt, someone of Baratz’s ideological proclivities would be much more comfortable in this academic setting than at the Hebrew University, where he would have to grapple with some of the “expressly internationalist goals and values.”


Jewish Neocons Gear Up for Midterm Elections…Let the Good Smears Roll

Tuesday, July 13th, 2010


It’s not just Israel that refuses to sign the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.  American Jewish neocons have been proliferating so many hysterically-Islamophobic campaign outfits in the run-up to the midterm elections, you can’t tell the players without a scorecard.  There is of course the granddaddy/zaideh of smearmesiters, the Republican Jewish Coalition.   In the 2008 election, the RJC and Aish HaTorah mated (in spirit if not in body) and produced the Clarion Fund, which flacked for John McCain.  Lately it is touting its new hate-Iran film, the third in an anti-Muslim trilogy.  We can expect it to continue the same type of dirty tricks it exploited in the last election, where it spent upwards of $20-million distributing another of its Muslim-hate films to 28-million voters in swing states.

Eli Clifton and I have written about some other anti-Muslim campaign front groups which have proliferated like weeds after a Negev spring flood: Keep Israel Safe was founded by Gary Bauer and Tom Rose, who deserves credit as the Jerusalem Post editor who first moved it to the hard-right political stance it adopted after decades of centrist mediocrity; and Stop Iran Now, an ideologically wholly-owned subsidiary of Citizens United (yes THAT Citizen’s United, whom the Supreme Court offered a green light to spend countless millions smearing Democratic candidates).  The chief champion of all these groups is William Kristol and his Weekly Standard, election central for the Likudist neocon movement.

Now we have yet another mushroom sprouting after a spring rain: the Emergency Committee for Israel.  The parentage of this cuddly little package is also interesting.  Eli Clifton notes that the group was first promoted during a Campbell Brown CNN interview with Noah Pollak, the group’s executive director.  Brown is married to Dan Senor, a senior Bush apparatchik and likely major player in 2012 Republican election campaigns.

Pollak is a former assistant editor of the Shalem Center’s publication, Azure.  The Center is heavily funded by Las Vegas gambling tycoon, Shelly Adelson, Bibi Netanyahu’s moneyman and funder of the new Israeli daily, Yisrael HaYom (also known unflatteringly as Bibi-ton).  Pollak also contributes regularly to Commentary Magazine, the true zaideh of the Jewish neocon movement.

The Committee’s domain, emergencycommitteeforisrael.com, is registered to Margaret Hoover, granddaughter of Depression-era Pres. Herbert Hoover, and a former high-level Bush operative.  One hopes she will bring better luck to this enterprise than her grandfather brought to the U.S. economy in 1929 & thereafter.  As a consultant for the Republican Israel lobby, she could try a Hoover-era slogan rebutting charges of Israeli starvation of Gaza: “a chicken in every pot.”  Maybe she’ll recommend resolving the Palestinian refugee crisis by creating a series of Hoovervilles.  No wait, that’s how most Palestinians currently live.  She also participated in Rudy Giuliani’s failed presidential campaign, in which Norm Podhoretz was also an advisor who warned Iran was intent on fomenting a world war or something to that effect.  The new group’s board includes…you guessed it…Gary Bauer, William Kristol and Rachel Abrams-Dechter-Podhoretz.

If I were Pollak, I’d keep in mind what happens to mushrooms after the rains dry up: they wither and die just as these pro-Israel hate groups will do after November, and after their donors will have thrown good money after bad in funding these useless vanity campaigns which have absolutely no effect on the Jewish vote, which remains solidly Democratic.  As a test, we’ll watch the Joe Sestak PA. senate race for which the Committee has produced the hysterical campaign ad featured above.

Ben Smith’s reporting on this story for Politico features this incredible quotation from Kristol in which he actually claims that Aipac’s politics are too liberal (a view shared by the way with Shelly Adelson, if you’ve read his devestating New Yorker profile):

“Then there’s AIPAC, which is a wonderful organization, but one that’s very committed to working with the administration, so they pull some punches publicly.”

Kristol also has the chutzpah to claim he’s modeling his effort as a conservative mirror to J Street.  There is of course one major difference between the two: J Street has grassroots support, with tens of thousands of donors and over 100,000 who’ve signed up for its alerts.  The Committee has a bunch of cigar-chomping rich Jewish guys pursuing their political vanity project.

Another curious factoid about Pollak: he’s a moderator of a Porsche car forum (and a member for at least ten years).  That must be where all the lucre Pollak’s earning from Shelly Adelson and his other Jewish neocon fat cat donors is going: into his Porsche collection.  He should keep this concealed from all of his Burlington, VT. neighbors.  That, of course is Bernie Saunders country.  I don’t imagine there are too many Porsches tooling around Burlington’s streets especially not in those harsh New England winters.  I guess it won’t disturb too many of his fellow Jewish neocons that he drives a German car since so many of them are driving Mercedes, BMWs, Audis and the like.

There are additional anti-Iran front groups created by the Jewish community, which seem designed to do Israel’s bidding rather than the Republican Party’s.  Among them is Stand for Freedom in Iran, purportedly a grassroots community coalition which was in truth incorporated by the Jewish Community Relations Council of New York.  Remember too the 2008 campaign fiasco when the President’s Conference booked Sarah Palin to keynote a UN anti-Iran rally when Ahmadinejad was scheduled to address the world body.  That didn’t go over too well with the Obama campaign and most New York Jews, who detested Palin.

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Will Someone Tell the NY Times What is a ‘Mainstream Israeli?’

Thursday, March 11th, 2010
yossi klein halevi

Why does the NYT call this man 'mainstream?'

In an otherwise fairly balanced article about the growing movement of progressive Israelis against the Sheikh Jarrah evictions, Isabel Kershner writes this astonishingly ill-informed passage:

The case of Sheikh Jarrah also presents a predicament for some mainstream Israelis.

Yossi Klein Halevi, a senior fellow at the Shalem Center, a research institution in West Jerusalem, said he opposed a Jewish “right of return” to properties lost in the 1948 war. But he noted that more and more Arabs were buying apartments in the predominantly Jewish neighborhood where he lives.

“It cannot go one way in Jerusalem,” Mr. Klein Halevi said. “I am deeply torn.”

OK, let’s parse this.  First, you’ll note that Yossi Klein Halevi has become a “mainstream Israeli.”  This despite the fact that earlier in his life he was a leader of the Jewish Defense League, wrote Memoirs of a Jewish Extremist, and currently is a fellow of the Shalem Center, a Likudist think-tank funded by Sheldon Adelson and affiliated with such right-wing ideologues as Natan Sharansky.  Once again, this just shows how hopelessly biased and politically out of touch Times reporters in Israel are.  They are attuned to the group think fed to them by the government and its journalistic acolytes like Halevi.  But they cannot provide a nuanced account of many political issues.  Usually Kershner does better than Ethan Bronner.  But in this passage, she falls prey to his sloppiness.

Note also that the Shalem Center is given the honorific “research institution” without noting its Likudist orientation.

Kershner accepts at face value the preposterous claim advanced by hard-right supporters of the Palestinian evictions that Arabs can live in West Jerusalem and are buying apartments there (which is patently false).  In order to test Halevy’s claim you would have to know where he lives in Jerusalem.  If he lives within the Green Line his claim would be bogus.  If he lives beyond it there is some faint possibility that an Arab might be able to buy an apartment in a predominantly Arab Jerusalem neighborhood.  Overall, I find Halevy’s claim preposterous.

But even more than that, we’re talking about the Israeli government ‘legally’ stealing the property of Sheikh Jarrah Palestinians and replacing them with settlers who have even less claim to the property than the Palestinians.  Even if Halevy’s claim of Arabs buying apartments in Jerusalem were true, they would be BUYING them, not stealing them.  So if Halevy does believe in Israel being a democracy, any Arab should have the right to buy property anywhere in Israel including his neighborhood (in fact, they don’t).  The fact that he uses this supposed phenomenon to justify naked theft of Palestinian homes indicates how weak his attachment is to democracy when it comes to his Arab fellow citizens.

I also find it interesting that unlike most N.Y. Times reporters, Isabel Kershner’s name has no e-mail link so you cannot communicate with her directly through her published report.  It seems to me that this is a deliberate attempt to isolate this particular reporter from any readers who may wish to comment on her work.  Behavior I would expect from the Times’ Israel correspondents who prefer to maintain distance between themselves and readers.

In a separate comment on the Sheikh Jarrah protests, it’s interesting that they have re-energized the long dormant Israeli left.  Israelis liberals like David Grossman and Moshe Halbertal, who haven’t demonstrated on behalf of a Palestinian in years I imagine, are mentioned as supporters of this movement.  I know that some of my fellow progressive bloggers like Jerry Haber, Brant Rosen and Phil Weiss have been documenting the wonderful work done there.  I applaud this too.

The only reason that I’ve held back is that there is a tendency among progressives to read too much into a single political phenomenon.  We all would like to see a viable Israeli left.  But there simply isn’t one and no matter how wonderful the work supporting the Palestinian evictees is, this alone will not revive the left.  There are deep structural problems with the Israeli political system that cannot be fixed without radical change.  And Sheikh Jarrah, while it may lay the groundwork, cannot do it alone.  The left died for a reason and it will not come back to life unless it fixes or vanquishes what killed it in the first place.

Liberals like Halbertal and Grossman have a record of fleeing from solidarity movements with Palestinians at the first opportunity.  So I wonder whether, when they inevitably do, Sheikh Jarrah can maintain its momentum.

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Shalem Center: Making Academia Safe for Right-Wing Zionism

Sunday, April 19th, 2009

Woodrow Wilson, when he addressed Congress urging it to commence hostilities with Germany, declared that the war would “make the world safe for democracy.”  Apparently, the pro-Israel neocons at the Shalem Center are engaging in a war of a different sort.

Concerned that Israeli universities are a hotbed of Israel-hatred and unwilling to develop a ideological cadre of sufficiently pro-Israel students, the Center has applied to the Israeli educational authority for approval to launch its own rightist undergraduate program, Shalem College:

The Shalem Center, a conservative-right wing research institute…initiated the establishment of an elite college for the humanities. Last week, the Shalem Center filed an application with the Council for Higher Education in Israel for the opening of an institution of higher learning that would be authorized to grant B.A. degrees in liberal arts. The academic degree would be a multi-disciplinary program in the humanities and economics, and sources familiar with the initiative described the teaching staff as “representing the entire political spectrum of Zionism.”

“The entire spectrum of Zionism?”  Really.  What they really mean is they’ll represent the “entire spectrum” of pro-Israel thought.  Anyone insufficiently ideologically pure need not apply.  Why would any student interested in Zionism not want to study non- or anti-Zionist thinkers?  Wouldn’t you think you’d want to learn what critics of Zionism have written so you could develop your own critical thinking on the subject?

Here is a passage from the College’s mission statement:

Shalem College is designed to be a long-term investment aimed at bringing about a strategic change in the position of the Jewish state and the Jewish people as a whole.  Our goal is the establishment of an elite institution of higher education that will serve as a “College of the Jewish People,” a college which will be devoted to nurturing an entirely different kind of Israeli and Jewish leadership…

Though the College manifesto compares itself to Ivy League schools like Princeton, it is closer in elitist ambition to Milton Friedman’s University of Chicago especially the more right-wing of its programs like economics.

Though the College’s website is extremely careful about disguising its ideological prejudices, you can glimpse them here:

Expanded attention to Western texts and traditions that permit a more fruitful dialogue with Jewish tradition. The college will relate to a wider selection of Western traditions than has become fashionable in many leading universities, including: treatment of the tradition of Western nation states as a legitimate alternative to expressly internationalist goals and values

Calling it Shalem College is much too prosaic.  Since undoubtedly they’ve tapped their major funder, Shelly Adelson (I guess he’s not entirely bankrupt yet), they could call it the Adelson School for Right-Thinking Pro-Israel Zionists.  And since I find it hard to believe there will be students breaking down the door to enroll, they might have to ask Shelly to pay them to do so.  That would be an interesting reversal of the traditional college relationship in which students generally pay for the education they receive.

Let’s take a look at the faculty who will represent the “entire spectrum of Zionism:”

One characteristic of the lecturers listed as the college’s founders is that they are all known to be highly critical of the ‘leftist’ academia and ‘leftist’ intellectual approaches, such as those of post-colonialism and post-modernism. Among the narrow list of lecturers intended to be part of the institution are Professor Yoav Gelber, a historian who opposes the ‘new historians’ in Israel; Dr. Martin Kramer, who wrote many books and articles against the influence of Edward Said; and Professor Yosef Gorni, a historian of the Labor movement and a well known critic of post-Zionism in Israeli academia.

“The idea is to create an elite institution in the humanities and social sciences,” Professor Gelber, who currently teaches at the University of Haifa, said on Friday. “I look at the condition of humanities in the universities and the situation is very bad. Humanities are in crisis.”

The post-modern inclinations in academia are a main reason for the drop in the popularity of humanities, according to Gelber. “They teach all the post-modern silliness, and therefore no one is interested in it. If you are talking about a drop in the standing of humanities, then this is also part of it.”

Actually, I think they’re missing a few necessary faculty additions: David Horowitz, Daniel Pipes and Norman Podhoretz really must be included to attain a balanced ideological spectrum running from the mere right to the beyond-Pluto right.

The academic mission of this institution seems a pipe dream:

The plan is for a select group of candidates to be accepted to the college every year – ‘cream of society’ is how those behind the project describe the future students, who are intended to serve as the future leaders in business, governance and social initiatives. Students will be selected on the basis of their exams, intellectual capabilities and motivation to influence.

In other words, they’re attempting to create an academic version of Aipac. The ambition is breathtaking, astonishing and foolhardy beyond belief. Though they certainly will receive accreditation from the current rightist government.

We should keep our eyes open for announcements about which academic propagandists have accepted positions at this new Zionist indoctrination program.

By the way, there are two words you will never see in this institution’s website or curriculum (unless it’s in a derisive context): Arab and Islam.  They will introduce their students to western civilization and its great books.  Ditto for Jewish tradition.  But not a word will be spoken about Islam or Arab civilization–at least if you can believe the website.  This will be an interesting stretch when they have to study Jewish civilization in medieval Spain, since the cross-fertilization between the two cultures was extensive and you can’t understand Jewish Spain without understanding Moorish Spain.  And how will they approach Rambam, a product of such cultural co-mingling who served an Egyptian caliph as court physician and wrote in Judeo-Arabic?

I suppose they could somehow erase any Jewish interaction with Arab culture and Islam.  It would be quite a feat, but certainly not beyond someone of the academic skills of Martin Kramer.

Jewish Right Crying in Their Beer; Adelson’s Las Vegas Sands Near Bankruptcy

Thursday, November 6th, 2008

One of the few silver linings of the current Wall Street financial debacle: thanks to reader John Dickerson for pointing me to news about Sheldon Adelson’s possibly imminent corporate bankruptcy. It seems business has been bad for the gambling industry, dependent as it is on gambler’s discretionary income, which there is very little of these days:

Las Vegas Sands Corp., billionaire Sheldon Adelson’s casino company, fell the most in New York trading since going public after saying it may default on debt and face bankruptcy.

The casino owner, which had $8.8 billion in long-term debt at the end of June, said in a regulatory filing today that it probably won’t meet the requirements of loans arranged by [various banks]

Here’s the company’s own chilling statement:

The casino owner said it doesn’t expect to meet a maximum leverage ratio covenant in the fourth quarter. That would trigger defaults that might force it to suspend development projects and “raise a substantial doubt about the company’s ability to continue as a going concern.”

Adelson spent $475 million of his own personal fortune to avoid violating terms of bank loans as his stock declined 90% through September.  October hasn’t been much kinder.

The company’s troubles may prevent Asian gambling capitals from being graced with Adelson resorts:

The reversal of fortune is a black eye for the 75-year-old Adelson, who was once America’s third-richest man on the strength of his Las Vegas Sands holdings. The Las Vegas-based company’s dwindling cash flow is threatening $16 billion worth of developments in Macau, China, and Singapore…

The Bloomberg story of course neglects to mention Adelson’s considerable clout within the right-wing political world, both in the U.S. and Israel. He is Taglit-Birthright’s only major funder. Plus, he owns the farthest-right Israeli tabloid daily, Yisrael HaYom. He also funds the pro-Likud Shalem Center and is Bibi Netanyahu’s chief donor and supporter. He is also a major (perhaps THE major) funder of the Republican Jewish Coalition.  He was the founder of Freedom’s Watch, a neocon group whose mission was to help John McCain win the 2008 election.

Without Adelson’s largess, the Jewish right will be, if not voiceless, at least considerably quieter. Netanyahu specifically would expect Adelson to step to the plate at this critical juncture with a national election campaign due in February. Without him, the Likud leader will be hard-pressed to replace his financial bounty.

This could be good news for Tzipi Livni, who may have to face a little bit less mud slung at her from the right without Adelson’s intervention.

I can’t say any liberal Jews are going to be crying in their Manishewitz cups over Adelson’s financial problems.  In fact, it couldn’t have happened to a more deserving fellow.

Michael Oren Joins Evangelical Extremist Hagee

Sunday, October 26th, 2008

I can’t begin to tell you how many times right-wing readers of this blog (including that inimitable self-described “liberal,” David Abitbol, of Jewlicious “fame”) have told me Michael Oren, doyenne of the Wall Street Journal and Shalem Center fellow, is an Israeli political moderate.  This despite the fact that Shalem is a wholly owned “subsidiary” of Sheldon Adelson and his “good friend” Bibi Netanyahu.

Well, any thought of Oren’s being a moderate have gone out the window with news that he is the featured speaker at tonight’s Sukkot/Night to Honor Israel celebration at John Hagee’s San Antonio church.  Hagee, you’ll recall is the evangelical bozo (I’m not saying, by the way, that all evangelicals are bozos–only that this one is) who said that the Holocaust was a part of God’s plan to bring Jews back to Zion and lead to the Second Coming.  Hagee’s ranting earned a stern censure from Rabbi Eric Yoffe, leader of world Reform Jewry, and a warning that no Jews should cooperate with Hagee’s profoundly right-wing religious-political project, Christians United for Israel.  Which is, of course, precisely what Oren has done.  I’m guessing Oren was paid a handsome speaker fee.  I don’t know what else bring him to speak to such an audience.

I would’ve e-mailed Oren to ask him, but curiously his website doesn’t offer any means of contacting him directly.  I guess he’s too important a personage to have unmediated contact with the hoi polloi.  The only contact link offered is the e mail address of the Shalem Center communication director for those who wish to book him as a speaker.  Nice work if you can get it, Michael.  One thing I will give him though, he does actually have more academic bona fides than Walid Shoebat, who also rides a similar right-wing Jewish talk circuit.

If anyone can locate the video of Oren’s speech I’d like to upload it to YouTube and offer it here.

Thanks to Joel Katz of Religion and State in Israel for word about this.

Scandals at Shalem Center; Pro-Israel Academic Partisanship at George Washington University

Friday, November 30th, 2007

I just plain don’t feel much like writing a full blown post today. But I’ve been reading some terrific material at other blogs and would like to point you to some important reading.

First, Muzzlewatch reports on the odd development at George Washington University of an Israeli visiting instructor quitting in a huff when her students (some Jewish) accused her of being a pro-Israel partisan instead of a dispassionate academic. It seems that the University has accepted funding for several positions (including this one) from a foundation run by notorious pro-Israel ideologue and former AIPAC staffer, Mitchell Bard.

Jerry Haber does some terrific sleuthing to discover that Hannah Diskin, the instructor in question, is not affiliated with the Hebrew University as the original Washington Jewish Week story contends. Rather, she is affiliated with the West Bank’s Ariel College, an unaccredited Israeli institution.

I would like to know who are the sugar daddies funding Bard’s academic positions. Could it be that they might be AIPAC megadonors, which would mean that AIPAC is surreptitiously (and indirectly of course) attempting to slant the teching of Israel and Zionism in the college classroom. Perhaps a view of the Foundation’s IRS 990 form might tell us something on that score (I haven’t done this yet).

Sol Salbe links to another terrific piece of investigative journalism by Daphna Berman (who broke the Other Israel Film Festival story recently) in Haaretz. She investigates a juicy scandal simmering at the Shalem Center, home of American-Jewish neocon demi-god and Wall Street Journal darling, Michael Oren. After reading this, it seems to me that Shalem is nothing more than a warmed over version of the Hudson Institute. The most riveting fact (besides the inter-office sex and director’s directives about the precise angle at which to staple reports) in this expose is the worship by the three Shalem founders of Meir Kahane during their college days at Princeton. How can such an institution command any respect with this intellectual/political pedigree?

I just read Jerry Haber’s recap of this article and he has one hilarious comment on the hot sex at Shalem:

Of course, there is the usual nepotism associated with family businesses. Yoram’s brother, David, worked there for twelve years in an executive position…until he was forced to leave because of an affair he conducted with one of his subordinates. (At the time he was working on a book on the Ten Commandments – or maybe, for him, the Nine)

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