Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Joseph Massad: The rights of Israel / english.aljazeera.net

Joseph Massad: The rights of Israel
May 6, 2011

Israel's "lawfare" against the Palestinian people is rooted in a ficticious narrative of having a "right" to exist.


Israel's "right to exist", and lately its "right to exist as a Jewish state" and the lack of commitment by Palestinians to this basic "right", is a major reason (if not the major one) used by Israel to deny Palestinians the rights accorded to them by international law. Joseph Massad provides excellent analysis around this issue and related ones.

He writes, in part:

"...one of the strongest and persistent arguments that the Zionist movement and Israel have deployed since 1948 in defence of the establishment of Israel and its subsequent policies is the invocation of the rights of Israel, which are not based on international law or UN resolutions. This is a crucial distinction to be made between the Palestinian and Israeli claims to possession of "rights." While the Palestinians invoke rights that are internationally recognised, Israel invokes rights that are solely recognised at the national level by the Israeli state itself. For Zionism, this was a novel mode of argumentation as, in deploying it, Israel invokes not only juridical principles but also moral ones.

In this realm, Israel has argued over the years that Jews have a right to establish a state in Palestine, that they have a right to establish a "Jewish" state in Palestine, that this state has a "right to exist," and that it has a "right to defend itself", which includes its subsidiary right to be the only country in the region to possess nuclear weapons, that it has the "right" to inherit all the biblical land that the Jewish God promised it, and a "right" to enact laws that are racially and religiously discriminatory in order to preserve the Jewish character of the state, otherwise articulated in the more recent formula of "a Jewish and democratic state". Israel has also insisted that its enemies, including the Palestinian people, whom it dispossesses, colonises, occupies, and discriminates against, must recognise all these rights, foremost among them its "right to exist as a Jewish state", as a condition for and a precursor to peace."


To read the full article, go to http://english.aljazeera.net/indepth/opinion/2011/05/20115684218533873.html

Racheli Gai.


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Jewish Peace News editors:
Joel Beinin
Racheli Gai
Rela Mazali
Sarah Anne Minkin
Ofer Neiman
Lincoln Z. Shlensky
Rebecca Vilkomerson
Alistair Welchman
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Jewish Peace News archive and blog: http://jewishpeacenews.blogspot.com
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Jewish Peace News sends its news clippings only to subscribers. To subscribe, unsubscribe, or manage your subscription, go to http://www.jewishpeacenews.net

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Sara Roy: The Impossible Union of Arab and Jew: Reflections on Dissent, Remembrance and redemption

An amazing lecture by Sara Roy. To my mind, a good piece to read (or re-read) during the week when the occupation began, 44 years ago. This is the Edward Said memorial talk, which was given in Adelaide, Australia, roughly 3 years ago. I'll also be thinking about Said a lot this week. He had such a huge influence on me, and is missed, constantly.

Here are a couple of quotes from the lecture:
"Why is it so difficult, even impossible to incorporate Palestinians and other Arab peoples into the Jewish understanding of history? Why is there so little perceived need to question our own narrative (for want of a better word) and the one we have given others, preferring instead to cherish beliefs and sentiments that remain impenetrable? Within the organized Jewish community especially, it has always been unacceptable to claim that Arabs, Palestinians especially, are like us, that they, too, possess an essential humanity
and must be included within our moral boundaries, ceasing to be "a kind of solution," a useful, hostile "other" to borrow from Edward [Said]. That any attempt at separation is artificial, an abstraction. We withhold mutuality and codify difference. Why is it virtually mandatory among Jewish intellectuals to oppose racism, repression and injustice almost anywhere in the world and unacceptable—indeed, for some, an act of heresy—to oppose it when Israel is the oppressor, choosing concealment over exposure? For many
among us history and memory adhere to preclude reflection and tolerance."

And another:

"I have come to accept that Jewish power and sovereignty and Jewish ethics and
spiritual integrity are, in the absence of reform, incompatible, unable to coexist or be reconciled. For if speaking out against the wanton murder of children is considered an act of disloyalty and betrayal rather than a legitimate and needed act of dissent, and where dissent is so ineffective and reviled, a choice is ultimately forced upon us between Zionism and Judaism."

Racheli Gai.


SARA ROY: THE IMPOSSIBLE UNION OF ARAB AND JEW: REFLECTIONS ON DISSENT, REMEMBRANCE AND REDEMPTION


http://www.adelaide.edu.au/esml/transcripts/2008/ESML-BY-Sara-ROY-2008.pdf
www.adelaide.edu.au

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Jewish Peace News editors:
Joel Beinin
Racheli Gai
Rela Mazali
Sarah Anne Minkin
Ofer Neiman
Lincoln Z. Shlensky
Rebecca Vilkomerson
Alistair Welchman
------------
Jewish Peace News archive and blog: http://jewishpeacenews.blogspot.com
------------
Jewish Peace News sends its news clippings only to subscribers. To subscribe, unsubscribe, or manage your subscription, go to http://www.jewishpeacenews.net

Sunday, June 5, 2011

War Zone Qalandiya - by Leehee Rothschild

"Two little girls half-fainted from the gas. In their tears the gas and fear mix together. I hug one of them as I put an alcohol pad to her face. Her mother and her sister are on the floor, on the other side of the room. Someone is taking care of them. Several moments go by. They sit and hug, leaning against the wall, trying to breathe, together"

(Leehee Rothschild)


5/6/2011 - Today is Naksa day, and reports are coming in about Israeli forces shooting and killing possibly tens of demonstrators on the Syrian side of the Golan border (http://english.aljazeera.net/news/middleeast/2011/06/20116591150521659.html).
According to journalist Joseph Dana, the Israeli army is also shooting civilians in Qalandiya, between Jerusalem and Ramallah (http://twitpic.com/57f6vp).

Israeli mainstream media's coverage of Palestinian civilian casualties caused by Israeli fire is very laconic. Minor headlines, no photos, no names, and often with the disclaimer of sorts "According to Palestinian sources...".

Would Israeli public opinion change to some extent, if Israelis saw what "riot dispersion" (alternative term - "apartheid enforcement") looks like from the viewpoint of Palestinian girls?

Leehee Rothschild, a young Israeli activist, spent Nakba day (15/5/2011) in Qalandiya, near Jerusalem. Her report, about the suffering of real people, with names and faces, follows.

Ofer Neiman

radicallyblonde.wordpress.com/2011/05/20/war-zone-qalandyia/

War Zone Qalandiya

It is Sunday morning, and I am at the Nakba Day protest in Qalandyia refugee camp. The long and beautiful march with the songs, slogans and high spirit has been dispersed quickly with massive shooting of tear-gas, and all attempts to resume the march have been dispersed as well, with ever growing violence.

I am running away from another salvo as I spot five adolescents carrying someone who was injured. No paramedic can be found in the area, so I run after them, my first aid kit on my back, hoping that I can be of some assistance. They bring him to a room that is open to the street, in a side alley. An ambulance is parked at the entrance, from which two other wounded people are being removed. Five or six paramedics and a single doctor are running around between several people, only thin blankets separating them from the floor, trying, at the very same time, to wave away the people crowding outside, waiting to find out about the condition of the friends that they have carried in earlier. I address the doctor, telling him I have got some basic first aid training, and offer my help. He gives me some instructions, shows me were the equipment lies, and tells me to care for the next wounded person that will be brought in.

The wounded are streaming in incessantly. Every minute, or two, three at most, an ambulance stops by the entrance, and three paramedics rush to it asking "Mutauta" or "Raz"? (Rubber bullets or gas?) While the injured are being carried off. Those in severe condition are carried in on a stretcher, which doesn't leave much space in the narrow room. Then they are clumsily taken off the stretcher. There is not enough time to follow the right procedure of carrying someone who has been wounded. The rest of them are carried in by paramedics and friends, who grab their legs and hands, and more often then not forget to support their heads, and place them on the floor, as close to the wall as possible, to make room for the wounded who are yet to arrive.

At these scarce and numbered moments of recess in the stream of wounded ones, we cut onions, reorganize the room and the equipment table. Piling gauze pads and bandages on one side, alcohol and cotton wool on the other, shaking and straightening blankets, and sweeping away all the onion leftovers that fall from them.

Most of the wounded people fainted from an overdose inhalation of tear-gas. Breathing some fresh air, an open shirt, a fresh onion scale leaf, and some light slapping usually suffice to help them regain consciousness. In the worst cases we bring the oxygen balloon. They lie and sit all around, gasping, coughing, taking short breaths, their eyes shut tightly against the pain, as the tears stream down their cheeks, and we gently try to lift the upper lid, and absorb the remnants of the gas. Others were directly hit by gas canisters and rubber bullets, and as time goes by we see more and more of these injuries.

At some point, we run out of oxygen, not metaphorically speaking. The last balloon is empty, and a guy is choking in our hands, and all we can offer him are a piece of onion, cotton wool, an encouraging touch, and the fear that is written all over our faces, that this time it will not suffice.

Scattered pictures… I am rolling a white bandage around Huria's head. She was hit by a rubber bullet in her temple. She is surrounded by friends, holding her and supporting her… Someone was directly hit by a gas canister in his chest. Luckily, the canister did not break the skin. Nonetheless there are some hectic moments. We can't find the stethoscope, or the blood pressure monitor. He will be fine… Two little girls half-fainted from the gas. In their tears the gas and fear mix together. I hug one of them as I put an alcohol pad to her face. Her mother and her sister are on the floor, on the other side of the room. Someone is taking care of them. Several moments go by. They sit and hug, leaning against the wall, trying to breathe, together. I give them one last look. There are many others that need my caring…. In a sideway look I spot a guy leaning against the wall. None of us has paid any attention to him, because he had already been treated. His head drops, his hand
becomes
limp, I run over to him, hold his hand, and start calling him "Mumtaz, Mumtaz". I am having a basic conversation, using my poor Arabic, trying to make him stay with me, so that he will not lose consciousness. So that we will not lose him… More, and more, and more.

After an hour, and dozens, if not more than that, of injured people taken care of, the improvised medical clinic is moving to a different location. I follow the paramedics down the street, as I spot someone falling, I rush over to take care of him. In all the turmoil I lose the others, so I rejoin the demonstration that goes on and on.

And all of that happened before they started shooting LIVE ammunition.

---

(Photos and video available at

radicallyblonde.wordpress.com/2011/05/20/war-zone-qalandyia/ )


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Jewish Peace News editors:
Joel Beinin
Racheli Gai
Rela Mazali
Sarah Anne Minkin
Ofer Neiman
Lincoln Z. Shlensky
Rebecca Vilkomerson
Alistair Welchman
------------
Jewish Peace News archive and blog: http://jewishpeacenews.blogspot.com
------------
Jewish Peace News sends its news clippings only to subscribers. To subscribe, unsubscribe, or manage your subscription, go to http://www.jewishpeacenews.net

Thursday, May 12, 2011

Amy Goodman interviews Tony Kushner

The CUNY board of trustees has reversed its decision to withhold an honorary degree for Tony Kushner.

Amy Goodman interviews Tony Kushner. They discuss the CUNY affair, what it means, and Kushner's real views in regards to Israel.

Racheli Gai.

http://www.democracynow.org/2011/5/10/exclusive_playwright_tony_kushner_speaks_out

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Jewish Peace News editors:
Joel Beinin
Racheli Gai
Rela Mazali
Sarah Anne Minkin
Ofer Neiman
Lincoln Z. Shlensky
Rebecca Vilkomerson
Alistair Welchman
------------
Jewish Peace News archive and blog: http://jewishpeacenews.blogspot.com
------------
Jewish Peace News sends its news clippings only to subscribers. To subscribe, unsubscribe, or manage your subscription, go to http://www.jewishpeacenews.net

Thursday, May 5, 2011

Animus in America

In an unprecedented and crassly politicized decision, City University of New York board members have voted to deny an honorary academic degree to Pulitzer-Prize winning playwright Tony Kushner, who was nominated for the award by CUNY's John Jay College campus this year. Kushner is author of the acclaimed "Angels in America: A Gay Fantasia on National Themes," "An Intelligent Homosexual's Guide to Capitalism and Socialism with a Key to the Scriptures," and many other plays, and he is a co-author of the film screenplay for "Munich."

The CUNY board's decision came after board member Jeffrey S. Wiesenfeld objected to Kushner's statements about Israel, excerpts of which Wiesenfeld claims to have gleaned from various websites (Wiesenfeld's citations have been described by blogger Mitchell Plitnick as having been sourced from the notoriously reactionary pro-Israel propaganda purveyer, Camera.org). Wiesenfeld does not claim to have sought out the original sources of the statements he cites, lending credence to the objection that he willfully has taken Kushner's comments out of context. Wiesenfeld has since argued, in an unrepentent op-ed posted on the Jewish newspaper site Algemeiner.com, that Kushner's views should be labeled anti-Semitic.

What are Kushner's views? As he states in his letter responding to the CUNY rejection -- in which he demands an apology from the board for publicly airing criticism of him without offering him any opportunity to respond -- he is a critic of Israel's policies towards the Palestinians; he rejects Israel's self-definition as a "Jewish" state (rather than as a state of all of its citizens, including the 20% who are Arabs); and he is a proud board member of the anti-Occupation membership organization Jewish Voice for Peace (jvp.org). Kushner, who is Jewish, has said that he does not agree with all of JVP's positions or strategies, but welcomes such disagreements as part of a healthy political debate. He has clearly stated his support for Israel's continued existence (according to The New York Observer), although he evidently advocates a more formally inclusive relation to its religious/cultural minorities and an end to its occupation of Palestinian territories. He sides with right-leaning Israeli historian Benny Morris's views that Israel's founding in 1948 relied on "ethnic cleansing" of Palestinian civilians. He rejects the thrust of the BDS (Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions) movement against Israel and its occupation, which he regards as counter-productive and mistaken in its historical analogies.

These are hardly radical views. Calling such views anti-Semitic, or even anti-Israel, as Wiesenfeld does, is not only a gross distortion but is also a thuggish form of defamation (predictable though such knee-jerk denunciations by established American Jewish institutions such as the ADL have become). The CUNY board's decision to judge Kushner's views on Israel as falling outside of legitimate and thoughtful discourse -- and as outweighing his artistic accomplishments, the presumable reason for his nomination for the honorary award in the first place -- is deeply dismaying, especially as it issues from an academic institution supposedly committed to the promotion of free expression.

The CUNY board has already come under sharp fire for its decision. According to Salon.com, noted historian Ellen Schrecker of Yeshiva University is now seeking to return the honorary degree she was awarded previously by CUNY, and CUNY's own faculty union has strenuously objected to the board's decision, calling it "perverse."

Here is a link to Kushner's response letter to CUNY, excoriating its board for presenting caricatured and one-sided criticisms of him in a forum that precluded his offering a response.

http://www.scribd.com/doc/54643560/Letter-to-CUNY-Trustees-05-04-11

--Lincoln Z. Shlensky

From the Huffington Post:

CUNY Rescinds Request For Tony Kushner's Honorary Degree

Pulitzer-Prize winning playwright Tony Kushner will not be receiving an honorary degree from the City University of New York this year due to his views on Israel, The Jewish Week reports.

The Week called the move "rare" and reported that Jeffrey S. Wiesenfeld, a member of CUNY's board of trustees, led the charge against John Jay College's request to bestow the degree upon the playwright, which would guarantee him a speaking slot at commencement.

The New York Observer has more on Kushner's Israel views:

Kushner has criticized Israel's treatment of the Palestinians, but has also said that "I want the state of Israel to continue to exist. I've always said that. I've never said anything else. My positions have been lied about and misrepresented in so many ways. People claim that I'm for a one-state solution, which is not true."

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/05/04/cuny-rescinds-tony-kushne_n_857711.html


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Jewish Peace News editors:
Joel Beinin
Racheli Gai
Rela Mazali
Sarah Anne Minkin
Ofer Neiman
Lincoln Z. Shlensky
Rebecca Vilkomerson
Alistair Welchman
------------
Jewish Peace News archive and blog: http://jewishpeacenews.blogspot.com
------------
Jewish Peace News sends its news clippings only to subscribers. To subscribe, unsubscribe, or manage your subscription, go to http://www.jewishpeacenews.net

Monday, April 25, 2011

Young Mizrahi Israelis' Open Letter to Arab Peers / 972mag.com

Young Israelis of Mizrahi descent (that is: of North African and Middle Eastern origin) write an open letter to their Arab peers, calling for an opening of a dialog and evoking
a past in which Jews, Muslims and Christians were all part of a thriving Arab culture.

They acknowledge the need to move Israel towards real democracy: "We believe that, as Mizrahi Jews in Israel, our struggle for economic, social, and cultural rights rests on the understanding that political change cannot depend on the Western powers who have exploited our region and its residents for many generations. True change can only come from an intra-regional and inter-religious dialog that is in connection with the different struggles and movements currently active in the Arab world. Specifically, we must be in dialog and solidarity with struggles of the Palestinians citizens of Israel who are fighting for equal political and economic rights and for the termination of racist laws, and the struggle of the Palestinian people living under Israeli military occupation in the West Bank and in Gaza in their demand to end the occupation and to gain Palestinian national independence."

Her/his place (or places) of origin follows each person's signature. This highlights the connection felt to places and cultures that the Zionist narrative has attempted to erase.


Ofer Neiman recommends Orly Noy's excellent take on the Amos Oz - Barghouti affair, which is on a related subject. (Noy is one of the signatories on the open letter.) See Ofer's translation from Hebrew below the letter.)

Racheli Gai


http://972mag.com/young-mizrahi-israelis-open-letter-to-arab-peers/

Sunday, April 24 2011|+972blog
Young Mizrahi Israelis' open letter to Arab peers
Translated from Hebrew by Chana Morgenstern | Arabic version here
In a letter titled "Ruh Jedida: A New Spirit for 2011," young Jewish descendants of the Arab and Islamic world living in Israel write to their peers in the Middle East and North Africa
We, as the descendents of the Jewish communities of the Arab and Muslim world, the Middle East and the Maghreb, and as the second and third generation of Mizrahi Jews in Israel, are watching with great excitement and curiosity the major role that the men and women of our generation are playing so courageously in the demonstrations for freedom and change across the Arab world. We identify with you and are extremely hopeful for the future of the revolutions that have already succeeded in Tunisia and Egypt. We are equally pained and worried at the great loss of life in Libya, Bahrain, Yemen, Syria, and many other places in the region.
Our generation's protest against repression and oppressive and abusive regimes, and its call for change, freedom, and the establishment of democratic governments that foster citizen participation in the political process, marks a dramatic moment in the history of the Middle East and North Africa, a region which has for generations been torn between various forces, internal and external, and whose leaders have often trampled the political, economic, and cultural rights of its citizens.
We are Israelis, the children and grandchildren of Jews who lived in the Middle East and North Africa for hundreds and thousands of years. Our forefathers and mothers contributed to the development of this region's culture, and were part and parcel of it. Thus the culture of the Islamic world and the multigenerational connection and identification with this region is an inseparable part of our own identity.
We are a part of the religious, cultural, and linguistic history of the Middle East and North Africa, although it seems that we are the forgotten children of its history: First in Israel, which imagines itself and its culture to be somewhere between continental Europe and North America. Then in the Arab world, which often accepts the dichotomy of Jews and Arabs and the imagined view of all Jews as Europeans, and has preferred to repress the history of the Arab-Jews as a minor or even nonexistent chapter in its history; and finally within the Mizrahi communities themselves, who in the wake of Western colonialism, Jewish nationalism and Arab nationalism, became ashamed of their past in the Arab world.
Consequently we often tried to blend into the mainstream of society while erasing or minimizing our own past. The mutual influences and relationships between Jewish and Arab cultures were subjected to forceful attempts at erasure in recent generations, but evidence of them can still be found in many spheres of our lives, including music, prayer, language, and literature.
We wish to express our identification with and hopes for this stage of generational transition in the history of the Middle East and North Africa, and we hope that it will open the gates to freedom and justice and a fair distribution of the region's resources.
We turn to you, our generational peers in the Arab and Muslim world, striving for an honest dialog which will include us in the history and culture of the region. We looked enviously at the pictures from Tunisia and from Al-Tahrir square, admiring your ability to bring forth and organize a nonviolent civil resistance that has brought hundreds of thousands of people out into the streets and the squares, and finally forced your rulers to step down.
We, too, live in a regime that in reality—despite its pretensions to being "enlightened" and "democratic"—does not represent large sections of its actual population in the Occupied Territories and inside of the Green Line border(s). This regime tramples the economic and social rights of most of its citizens, is in an ongoing process of minimizing democratic liberties, and constructs racist barriers against Arab-Jews, the Arab people, and Arabic culture. Unlike the citizens of Tunisia and Egypt, we are still a long way from the capacity to build the kind of solidarity between various groups that we see in these countries, a solidarity movement that would allow us to unite and march together–all who reside here–into the public squares, to demand a civil regime that is culturally, socially, and economically just and inclusive.
We believe that, as Mizrahi Jews in Israel, our struggle for economic, social, and cultural rights rests on the understanding that political change cannot depend on the Western powers who have exploited our region and its residents for many generations. True change can only come from an intra-regional and inter-religious dialog that is in connection with the different struggles and movements currently active in the Arab world. Specifically, we must be in dialog and solidarity with struggles of the Palestinians citizens of Israel who are fighting for equal political and economic rights and for the termination of racist laws, and the struggle of the Palestinian people living under Israeli military occupation in the West Bank and in Gaza in their demand to end the occupation and to gain Palestinian national independence.
In our previous letter written following Obama's Cairo speech in 2009, we called for the rise of the democratic Middle Eastern identity and for our inclusion in such an identity. We now express the hope that our generation – throughout the Arab, Muslim, and Jewish world – will be a generation of renewed bridges that will leap over the walls and hostility created by previous generations and will renew the deep human dialog without which we cannot understand ourselves: between Jews, Sunnis, Shias, and Christians, between Kurds, Berbers, Turks, and Persians, between Mizrahis and Ashkenazis, and between Palestinians and Israelis. We draw on our shared past in order to look forward hopefully towards a shared future.
We have faith in intra-regional dialog—whose purpose is to repair and rehabilitate what was destroyed in recent generations—as a catalyst towards renewing the Andalusian model of Muslim-Jewish-Christian partnership, God willing, Insha'Allah, and as a pathway to a cultural and historical golden era for our countries. This golden era cannot come to pass without equal, democratic citizenship, equal distribution of resources, opportunities, and education, equality between women and men, and the acceptance of all people regardless of faith, race, status, gender, sexual orientation, or ethnic affiliation. All of these rights play equal parts in constructing the new society to which we aspire. We are committed to achieving these goals within a process of dialog between all of the people of Middle East and North Africa, as well as a dialog we will undertake with different Jewish communities in Israel and around the world.
We, the undersigned:
Shva Salhoov (Libya), Naama Gershy (Serbia, Yemen), Yael Ben-Yefet (Iraq, Aden), Leah Aini (Greece, Turkey), Yael Berda (Tunisia), Aharon Shem-Tov (Iraq, Iranian Kurdistan), Yosi Ohana (born in Morocco), Yali Hashash (Libya, Yemen), Yonit Naaman (Yemen, Turkey), Orly Noy (born in Iran), Gadi Alghazi (Yugoslavia, Egypt), Mati Shemoelof (Iran, Iraq, Syria), Eliana Almog (Yemen, Germany), Yuval Evri ((Iraq), Ophir Tubul (Morocco, Algeria), Moti Gigi (Morocco), Shlomit Lir (Iran), Ezra Nawi (Iraq), Hedva Eyal (Iran), Eyal Ben-Moshe (Yemen), Shlomit Binyamin (Cuba, Syria, Turkey), Yael Israel (Turkey, Iran), Benny Nuriely (Tunisia), Ariel Galili (Iran), Natalie Ohana Evry (Morocco, Britain), Itamar Toby Taharlev (Morocco, Jerusalem, Egypt), Ofer Namimi (Iraq, Morocco), Amir Banbaji (Syria), Naftali Shem-Tov (Iraq, Iranian Kurdistan), Mois Benarroch (born in Morocco), Yosi David (Tunisia Iran), Shalom Zarbib (Algeria), Yardena Hamo (Iraqi Kurdistan), Aviv Deri (Morocco) Menny Aka (
Iraq),
Tom Fogel (Yemen, Poland), Eran Efrati (Iraq), Dan Weksler Daniel (Syria, Poland, Ukraine), Yael Gidnian (Iran), Elyakim Nitzani (Lebanon, Iran, Italy), Shelly Horesh-Segel (Morocco), Yoni Mizrahi (Kurdistan), Betty Benbenishti (Turkey), Chen Misgav (Iraq, Poland), Moshe Balmas (Morocco), Tom Cohen (Iraq, Poland, England), Ofir Itah (Morocco), Shirley Karavani (Tunisia, Libya, Yemen), Lorena Atrakzy (Argentina, Iraq), Asaf Abutbul (Poland, Russia, Morocco), Avi Yehudai (Iran), Diana Ahdut (Iran, Jerusalem), Maya Peretz (Nicaragua, Morocco), Yariv Moher (Morocco, Germany), Tami Katzbian (Iran), Oshra Lerer (Iraq, Morocco), Nitzan Manjam (Yemen, Germany, Finland), Rivka Gilad (Iran, Iraq, India), Oshrat Rotem (Morocco), Naava Mashiah (Iraq), Zamira Ron David (Iraq) Omer Avital (Morocco, Yemen), Vered Madar (Yemen), Ziva Atar (Morocco), Yossi Alfi (born in Iraq), Amira Hess (born in Iraq), Navit Barel (Libya), Almog Behar (Iraq, Turkey, Germany)

Amos Oz's Blindness
by Orly Noy

The Israeli left rushed to the defense of Amos Oz, who only wanted Marwan Barghouti to understand "our story". But its acceptance of the "our" bit is the real problem here.

The eternal candidate for the Nobel Prize for Literature, Amos Oz, has created a storm in a teapot, by sending a copy of his book "A Tale of Love and Darkness" to imprisoned Palestinian leader Marwan Barghouti, with the dedication "This story is our story, and I hope you read it and come to understand us better". When the news of his "bold, subversive" act broke, there were those who protested Oz's planned participation at a gathering in honor of outstanding physicians at "Assaf Harofe" hospital, and the event was canceled as a result.

Prima facie, all this might seem like yet another negligible tale of a writer with perennial pretensions to have a meaningful say in politics, the same writer who has never uttered a word to which he did not receive the blessing of all the Labor Party's elders. Well, it's Amos Oz; even the right wing's knee-jerk enlistment against this pseudo-leftist was embarrassingly predictable. What did disappoint me somewhat, and this reaction seems quite naïve and childish in retrospect, was Gideon Levy's Haaretz article on the affair:

http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/opinion/who-is-sick-enough-to-censor-amos-oz-1.352008

Levy protests the persecution of Oz ("witch hunt"), and he is appalled precisely because Oz is a devout Zionist and a committed patriot. He recognizes the fact that Oz has never been a radical, and he even mentions the latter's shameful support for Operation Cast Lead. However, the only point which somehow eludes Levy's critical scrutiny is Oz's mere pretension – pompous, narcissistic, and megalomaniacal – to portray his book as "our story". OUR story. Whose exactly? I cannot speak for Levy, but my grandmother never beat her bed sheets every morning to shake off the Levant; members of my family never lived on streets that would eventually be named after them, and no, even our relation to this region has not been derived from the Holocaust trauma, and from the havoc it wrought on the souls of the survivors.

All this comes as no surprise, of course, regarding Oz himself; his literary work has consistently reflected his scorn towards Arabs and Mizrahi Jews. It is Levy's response which embodies the most important aspect of this affair: The absolutist tribalism of the Israeli left. Oz's nationalist, sanctimonious conformism will not stand in Levy's way, even though the latter is a genuinely critical person, and it will not prevent him from adopting Oz's story as "our story", out of utter blindness towards the fact that about half of the Jewish population in Israel has been totally left out of this story. After all, and more than anything, Oz and Levy share a common story which is THE official narrative of this country

This is also the message conveyed to our Palestinian neighbors: if you wish to figure out what's going on here, whom you're dealing with, and who holds the keys to your case, you must study "our story". And this message, as it turns out, runs deep: "A Tale of Love and Darkness" was translated into Arabic thanks to the initiative and financial support of Adv. Elias Khouri, a dear man and a bereaved father who dedicated the project to the memory of his son, also with the belief that the book would constitute a key to the understanding of "their story"; an Arabic translation of a Hebrew book which cries out in Yiddish.


Hebrew original:

http://www.haokets.org/2011/03/28/%D7%A2%D7%9C-%D7%94%D7%A2%D7%99%D7%95%D7%95%D7%A8%D7%95%D7%9F-2/


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Jewish Peace News editors:
Joel Beinin
Racheli Gai
Rela Mazali
Sarah Anne Minkin
Ofer Neiman
Lincoln Z. Shlensky
Rebecca Vilkomerson
Alistair Welchman
------------
Jewish Peace News archive and blog: http://jewishpeacenews.blogspot.com
------------
Jewish Peace News sends its news clippings only to subscribers. To subscribe, unsubscribe, or manage your subscription, go to http://www.jewishpeacenews.net

Saturday, April 16, 2011

Daniel Breslau: A leftist has been murdered: Attack the left! / ZNet

For "Israeli mainstream, the murder of Juliano Mer-Khamis is the perfect parable: naive leftist meets his death at the hands of the inherently hateful Palestinians whose dark side he willfully denied. The Palestinians are evil and the left is in denial. What better way to justify continued oppression of four million than to hold that they are undeserving of human rights and that those who advocate for them are hopelessly deluded?"

Racheli Gai.

Ofer Neiman adds: Following the murder of Vittorio Arrigoni in Gaza, we should brace ourselves for another round of selective sanctimonious lecturing. The lecturers will surely ignore the tremendous outcry of grief, anger and condemnation coming out of Palestinian society. Instead they will teach us that the Salafist groups in Gaza are a significant and representative Palestinian voice.

About the Salafi, see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salafist_jihadism
Also, below Breslau's piece find a post from the International Crisis Group, including a link to their full report about radical Islam in Gaza.

[As of today, April 16, some Salafi groups in Gaza denied a role in the murder of Arrigoni. - RG]


A leftist has been murdered: attack the left!
By: Daniel Breslau
Znet
13 April 2011

http://www.zcommunications.org/a-leftist-has-been-murdered-attack-the-left-by-daniel-breslau

When a unique figure in the struggle for Palestinian rights, a unique kind of leftist, was gunned down in Jenin, most commentators pointed out the senselessness of the crime. Ha`aretz colmnist Ari Shavit saw the tragedy as a wonderful opportunity to attack the left (http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/opinion/israel-s-left-needs-to-wise-up-to-middle-east-reality-1.354548

Of course Israeli pundits can find in any death, or even unseasonable weather, an occasion to bash the left. But how was Shavit provoked by the assassination of Juliano Mer-Khamis to write a piece that would make Avigdor Lieberman proud, attacking a group of his fellow citizens?

With no evidence, Shavit claims the left has fallen silent, overcome with moral confusion, in the face of the murder in Jenin. Leftists can only conceive of evil emanating from Israel or Western forces. So when a `peace hero` is murdered by Palestinians, their brains short circuit. This invention launches Shavit into a tirade on the left`s selective morality and denial of `the forces of evil in the Arab-Muslim world.`

But Shavit has fabricated a description of `the left`s` behavior in order to support his attacks. Any quick survey of responses to the murder will show that his charge of confusion and silence is ridiculous. Mer was `killed in cold blood` (Combatants for peace - Hebrew), his murder was `a crime against humanity` and the result of `religious fanaticism` (The Left Bank - Hebrew), and these poignant words from his friend, Natan Zahavi (Hebrew):

`Juliano was murdered by cowardly maniacs beside the theater that he founded for the children of the refugee camp, `Freedom Theater` he called it. Five bullets made orphans of the 150 children of the theater, as they lost the man who tried to teach them the word`s most original form of warfare, war on the stage without bloodshed. Blessed be his memory.`

Some clues to Shavit`s animus can be found in other comments that make the same point without Shavit`s vagueness and code words. Less diplomatic was Asaf Golan (Hebrew) in the right-wing Makor Rishon (the online paper that brags that it is `unbiased, and unabashedly Jewish and Zionist.`):

`This disturbing and simple truth is hard for many students of the western liberal school to digest, as they try in various ways to please the Islamic demon, in order to open up a dialogue with him. However, in practice this approach only strengthens the darkest dictatorships in the world, and produces tragicomic situations, in which a moral army like the IDF is presented as war criminals, while hideous murderers like Moamar Gaddafi, Bashar Al-Asad, and Mahmoud Ahmadinejad are presented as exemplary human beings.`

Still more direct was a publicist named Yehuda Drori (Hebrew), who gives us a full translation of Shavit`s thesis into plain language:

`I have no doubt that Juliano Mer fell victim to murderers representing the very group of people that he was trying to help. But in plain terms, he lived among snakes, and one of them killed him with its bite. … Now I believe that Juliano Mer is of greater value in death than in life, because he proves to us once more that there is no one to talk to, there`s no one there to work with toward `peace` and we must be extremely wary of them, and of all the do-gooders who believe that it is possible to build a bridge to peace with that rabble.`

If you find this message is still too subtle, here`s self-styled journalist Dudu Cohen on Mako (Hebrew), the website of Israel`s commercial channel 2, finally doing away with niceties:

`Not that I didn`t already know this, but the barbaric murder of Juliano Mer just reminded me of whom we are dealing with. ... The murder of Juliano Mer demonstrates that opposite us stand human animals. A civilized people that seeks peace? Don`t make me laugh. A poor oppressed people that just wants to live with us in peace beneath the olive trees? Get real. A moral, kind, and humane people that is only looking for a chance to make the world a better place? Yeah, right. What is funny is that many among us Israelis, particularly from the liberal-humanist department, paint the Palestinians with such flattering colors. The Palestinians themselves refuse to fit that image, and are driven mostly by hatred of others, discrimination against women, lack of democracy, and values that are completely opposed to those of the world of humane values.`

In all of these comments racism is tightly coupled with attacks on the left. The belief that the Palestinians suffer from inherent moral and cultural deficiencies, and that the left makes things worse by ignoring this self-evident fact, are two sides of a single discourse. From this outlook, which is that of the Israeli mainstream, the murder of Juliano Mer-Khamis is the perfect parable: naive leftist meets his death at the hands of the inherently hateful Palestinians whose dark side he willfully denied.The Palestinians are evil and the left is in denial. What better way to justify continued oppression of four million than to hold that they are undeserving of human rights and that those who advocate for them are hopelessly deluded?

Political repression, violent Islamic political movements, oppression of women: are these phenomena better understood by those who insist they be denounced as `forces of evil` or by those who see them as having historical causes, as not inherent to a race, religion, or culture? Which of these demonstrates an `ability to see historic reality as a whole, in all its complexity`? There are countless studies, essays, and commentaries by people on the left that relate the rise of Islamic violent movements to a set of historical circumstances that include autocratic regimes, Western imperialism, the distortion of the political space by autocrats and occupiers, and the repression of secular alternatives, among other factors.

But Juliano Mer himself is perhaps the best refutation of the slander of Shavit and his more straight-talking allies. This fighter for Palestinian rights knew he was simultaneously fighting religious and political repression in Palestinian society. Those who use such phenomena to confirm their sense of superiority and to blame the victims of oppression cannot claim to understand the problems of that society better than Juliano Mer.

An International Crisis Group's post about the Salafi from 6 weeks ago w/ a link to their report:

http://www.crisisgroup.org/en/regions/middle-east-north-africa/israel-palestine/104-radical-islam-in-gaza.aspx

INTERNATIONAL CRISIS GROUP - NEW REPORT

Radical Islam in Gaza

Ramallah/Jerusalem/Brussels, 29 March 2011: The dangerous escalation between Israel and Hamas demonstrates once more the need for both a fresh approach toward Gaza and a better understanding of Hamas's relationship with rival Islamist groups.

Radical Islam in Gaza, the latest report from the International Crisis Group, examines the impact of Salafi-Jihadi groups in Gaza. Adhering to a more militant brand of Sunni Islam than Hamas, these groups pose both a practical and an ideological threat to the movement. As progress toward normalising life, engaging the world or achieving a prisoner exchange stalls, the uncompromising outlook of the Salafi-Jihadis becomes more appealing to militants.

"These groups are comprised mostly of former members of Hamas and other established factions. Many of their recruits are disaffected younger activists who see Hamas as compromising with Israel while getting very little in return", said Nathan Thrall, Crisis Group's Middle East Analyst.

Local Salafi-Jihadi groups emerged primarily after Israel's 2005 withdrawal from Gaza and expanded their activities during the subsequent fighting between Hamas and Fatah. Over time, Hamas's relationship with them has shifted from cooperation to antagonism: since taking over Gaza, Hamas has limited their freedom of manoeuvre. Clashes with Hamas security forces killed dozens and, in one case, in effect wiped out one of the largest groups.

The influence of Salafi-Jihadis is not preponderant, but nor is it negligible. Although their numbers are few, they are responsible for a significant proportion of rockets fired at Israel. Moreover, they accuse Hamas of laxity in enforcing religious mores, a charge that resonates with many movement supporters and leads the government to greater zeal in applying Islamic law.

"The policy of isolating Gaza and ignoring Hamas has only exacerbated the problem", said Robert Malley, Crisis Group's Middle East and North Africa Program Director. "As the international community seeks a new way to address political Islam in the wake of the Arab upheaval, Gaza would be a good place to start".


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Racheli Gai
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