Muslim and Jewish Women in Nazareth

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

Mahzor

Mahzor

New York Public Library

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Sarajevo Haggadah

Mah Nishtanah

Sarajevo haggadah

Antaea Darom

Israeli women's art

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Torah as music

Ben Heine

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ceramic bowl

Mohammad Said Kalash, "Offering Reconciliation" exhibit (photo: Ilan Amihai)

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Punch and Judy/Pinchas and Jamila

Avi Katz

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David Grossman

Ben Heine

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Eldrige Street shul

Lower East Side

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Dove

Ben Heine

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Two birds

Hoda Jamal

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Israeli and Palestinian boys

from documentary, Promises

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Cat in the Hat

Yiddish version

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Daylight through the Wall

Banksy: graffiti art on Separation Wall

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Maurice Sendak's Brundibar set

New Victory Theater (photo: Nan Melville/NYT)

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Daniel Barenboim, West-Eastern Divan Orchestra

Palestinian-Israeli musical ensemble (photo: Kerstin Joensson/AP)

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Great Day on Eldrige Street

N.Y.'s klezmer greats celebrate shul rededication (photo: Leo Sorel)

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Joint Appeal for Peace

(Avi Katz)

Joint Appeal for Peace

Ketubah, Ancona, Italy (1772)

(Jewish Theological Seminary library)

Ancona ketubah

Posts Tagged ‘words can heal’

Lobbyists Paid $18,500 a Pop for Ros-Lehtinen Israel Junket Organized by Billionaire Katsof

Monday, December 7th, 2009

An investigative story on the continuing abuse of Congress junkets despite a reform introduced last year contains this gem:

Representative Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, a Florida Republican, on another privately sponsored trip, stayed at the historic King David Hotel in Jerusalem and attended a gala party near the Western Wall as part of a weeklong conference that lobbyists and executives paid as much as $18,500 to attend.

Doheny Global, of Manhattan, used lawmakers as a lure to attract paying attendance at a meeting in Israel.

Last year Doheny, an energy and real estate investment firm, invited private equity and energy industry executives to pay $18,500 per person to hobnob with “an elite cadre” of public and private powerbrokers, including Ms. Ros-Lehtinen, the Florida congresswoman. Doheny paid to fly her and her husband in for the weeklong gathering in Tel Aviv and Jerusalem, and she appeared in a promotional video calling Irwin G. Katsof, the company’s founder, “a matchmaker for business” who “enjoys great credibility in Congress.”

Ms. Ros-Lehtinen declined to comment on the trips.

The invitation to the 2008 event, which also featured Senator Ben Nelson, Democrat of Nebraska, came from a host committee that included registered lobbyists. Depending on how much of a role that committee had in setting up the event, the trip may have violated House rules, which prohibit lawmakers from taking multiday trips “planned, organized, requested or arranged by a lobbyist.”

Her trip was “bought” on her behalf  to the tune of $13,600 by the American-Israel Educational Foundation, the non-profit arm of Aipac created specifically for these political junkets.  All told AIEF funded 12 trips for Ros-Lehtinen totalling $80,000.

Katsof hobnobs at Global Foundation for Democracy event with former Mexican president and uber-crook, Ernesto Zedillo

Katsof hobnobs at Global Foundation for Democracy event with former Mexican president and uber-kleptocrat, Ernesto Zedillo

Doheny Global is owned by the billionaire founder of Aish HaTorah, Rabbi Irwin Katsof.  He has repeatedly organized such trips in the past.  He also has extensive real estate holdings in former republics of the Soviet Union like the Ukraine.  At the company’s website, Katsof describes it as:

…A networking and consulting firm dedicated to initiating international partnerships and creating strategic alliances. Global Capital Associates assisted Israeli and Central/Eastern European start-ups in finding US investors and strategic partners, and developed investment banking relationships by capitalizing on an elite, worldwide contact network spanning a diverse range of industries – from defense to high-tech, from the life sciences to finance.

Katsof’s bio boasts that he also founded another Aish subsidiary which serves as a pro-Israel media watchdog/advocacy outfit, Honest Reporting.  The directors of Honest Reporting and Aish are the brothers, Rabbis Ephraim and Raphael Shore.  Their other brother is a TV writer who created the hit program, House.

I’ve also written before about Katsof’s vanity non-profit project boosted by his Republican friends in Congress (including John McCain), Words Can Heal.  Interestingly, this project designed to improve the tone and quality of the nation’s public discourse seems to overlook the poison that Aish is spewing with its anti-Muslim film series.  Not to mention that Doheny Global’s purchasing of political influence through junkets like these, besides bringing fortune to Katsof and business opportunities to Israel, also promotes a pro-Israel monopoly on political discourse in Congress–of all of which Doheny’s founder would no doubt be proud.

Junket purgatory: Aipac key indicating how 'painful' itinerary stops are on its Congressional junkets

Junket purgatory: Aipac key indicating how 'painful' itinerary stops are on its Congressional junkets

Katsof appears to be a serial founder of vanity non-profits.  The Global Foundation for Democracy caters to his need to see himself as a champion of democracy in the Third World including the former Soviet Republics, where he does much of his business.

Though he brings Democrats and Republicans to Israel the overwhelming preponderance of his support goes to Republicans.  The beauty of these junkets is that he can mix politics and business.  Introduce lobbyists and corporate executives to new business opportunties, introduce them as well to Congress members with power to impact their corporate agenda, while “educating” business leaders about Israel’s “needs.”  It’s a beautiful operation as far as Katsof is concerned.  There is an old saying: doing well by doing good.  In Katsof’s case, he does well by doing well.  The “good” he does is purely in his own mind.

Katsof lives in the ultra-Orthodox enclave of Monsey, N.Y.

The NY Times article from which the above passage is quoted notes the seamy underpinnings of these trips and their funding:

Lobbyists themselves are not allowed to pay for trips, but their corporate clients can. And lobbyists are permitted to give huge sums to nonprofit groups that can sponsor travel. They can also travel to destinations and meet the lawmakers once they get there, though they cannot go on the same plane….The companies finance much of this travel indirectly, getting around the spirit of the rules by giving money to nonprofits, some of which seem to exist largely to sponsor trips. In fact, the rules may have had the unexpected effect of obscuring who is actually paying for a lawmaker’s junket.

…The universe of regular sponsors has been reduced to fewer than a dozen big foundations and associations…Many of the trips are sponsored by organizations with ideological and policy agendas, rather than commercial interests. Most of those rely, at least in part, on corporate financing to underwrite trips for lawmakers.

So there you have it.  Aipac sees itself as doing Lord’s work in bringing legislators nearer to God, er Israel.  And they’re willing to skirt the edge of propriety to do so because, well they’re doing God’s work and what’re a few rules bent in service to the Lord, anyway?

What Do Aish HaTorah, Rabbi Irwin Katsof, Rick Davis, the Ukraine and John McCain Have in Common?

Saturday, October 25th, 2008

Thanks to some interesting research by a reader who wishes to remain anonymous, I’ve pieced together some interesting speculative conjectures about relationships between Aish HaTorah and the McCain campaign.  The reason I’ve done so is for several weeks I’ve been trying to figure out why Aish HaTorah and its anti-Muslim political front group, Clarion Fund would be using their films, Obsession and Third Jihad in thinly veiled attempts to help John McCain’s presidential campaign.

Here are some of the interesting relationships I’ve uncovered:

Several months ago Huffington Post reported that Rick Davis, McCain’s campaign manager and lobbyist at Davis-Manafort, not only consulted for the pro-Russian Ukrainian political party, but that he also had substantial real estate holdings in Ukraine which had done very well for him.

One of Aish HaTorah’s founders is Rabbi Irwin Katsof, a billionaire international business consultant who also has substantial real estate holdings in Ukraine.  Katsof runs several companies–the Doheny Global Group, AVest Ukraine, Dohenyavest, and Global Capital Associates.  I have not yet been able to discover under what company name/s Davis has been investing in Ukraine or whether there is any overlap between his interests and those of Katsof.  If there is, this would be an obvious reason for Katsof/Aish/Clarion to be advancing Davis’ and McCain’s political interests.

The Doheny website publicizes a tour of Israel and the Ukraine to mark Israel’s 60th anniversary.  “Special guests” on the trip that took place June-July, 2008 were Republican luminaries Tom Ridge, Ileana Ros-Lehtinen and others.  Clearly, Katsof-Doheny’s business dealings with Republicans are long and deep.

John McCain and Joe Lieberman are honorary co-chairs of Katsof’s charity, Words Can Heal.  In his book, Powerful Prayers, for which he collaborated with Larry King, John McCain was one of those noted Americans who contributed an “intimate prayer” which the authors explored.  Clearly, Katsof’s relationship with McCain specifically is also “special.”

Sarah Posner reports at American Prospect that a new group called the National Republican Trust PAC has been trumpeting the mendacious claim that Barack Obama has no right to run for president since his supposedly unfound birth certificate would show he was not born in the U.S.  Also, it claims Obama would provide driver’s licenses to terrorists and illegal aliens.  What’s interesting here is that a co-founder of this group is Peter Leitner, a long time Republican bioterror specialist at the Pentagon.  Leitner, through his company, MaxWell Biocorporation, sits on the board of the U.S.-Ukraine Business Council.  Also, on this board is Katsof business partner (at Doheny), Jacob Rheuban.

Will Evans has reported in greater detail on Leitner’s group at NPR.