Page 1,220«..1020..1,2191,2201,2211,222..1,2301,240..»

Limmud Festival: A Feast for Jews From All Walks of Life – Jewish Journal

Posted By on February 12, 2020

The worldwide global phenomenon known as Limmud that offers hundreds of sessions on Jewish life to thousands of participants began with a handful of volunteers back in 1980 in the United Kingdom. Today, you can attend a Limmud conference pretty much anywhere in the world. But the largest is held every year in the last week of December in England, where today it is known as Limmud Festival.

In 2019, from Dec. 20-26, close to 2,500 people from around the globe made the trek to this years festival at the Hilton Birmingham Metropole, to dine on a smorgasbord of Jewish educational opportunities, offered up by over 300 presenters, all of whom (as is the Limmud way) volunteered their time. The 2019 event also coincided with Hanukkah.

With sessions covering everything from How to Write Jewish Satire and Humorous Stories of Chelm, to The Laws of Bikur Cholim (visiting the sick) and Israel and the Jewish-Christian Dialogue, there was something for everyone.

Thats the beauty of Limmud. It continues to find ways to bring in participants from all walks of Jewish life. There was a mixture of both religious and nonreligious Jews and sessions designed to discuss LGBTQ and transgender issues, even down to making certain bathrooms gender neutral, which, in turn, sparked heated debate among those who believed it was a bold and necessary step and those who said they were offended by such a notion.

I hate tolerance with a passion. I think it should be for lactose or the weather, not people. Abby Stein

Limmud began less than two weeks after the U.K. elections and in the midst of the impeachment proceedings against President Donald Trump, so politics on both sides of the pond together with issues surrounding anti-Semitism dominated the festival both in sessions and in casual conversation.

While it is common for presenters to offer around three to four sessions at Limmud, a clear breakout star was 28-year-old transgender activist Abby Stein, who held nine separate sessions. Stein asked the same question in each of her sessions: Who here has had a bar mitzvah? Men would raise their hands. Shed then ask, Who here has had a bat mitzvah? Women would raise their hands. Finally, shed ask, Who here has had both? And shed shoot her hand in the air.

Steins final session based on her memoir, Becoming Eve: My Journey From Ultra-Orthodox Rabbi to Transgender Woman, saw religious and nonreligious alike sitting on the floor, holding up walls, even perched on railings to hear her speak.

Photos courtesy of Limmud

Said Stein, I hate tolerance with a passion. I think it should be for lactose or the weather, not people. She explained that she doesnt want Jewish teens to come out to their parents and have them simply say, I love you, but rather they should say, This is so exciting. Lets have a party. That is how, Stein said, we are taught in Judaism to celebrate people.

A rising star across the Jewish divide, Stein is determined to ensure that all branches of Judaism embrace every single Jew no matter where they are on their journey.

In an extraordinary look at the history of the Jews in Shanghai, Kaifeng and Harbin, 17-year-old non-Jewish presenter Nicholas Zhang explained what drove him to research the history of Chinese Jews. His great-grandmother went on vacation from China in 1949, leaving behind five children. However, while she was away, the Communist Party took over China and closed off the country from the West. She subsequently made her way to New York and worked in restaurants in Chinatown.

For all the sessions and questions and answers within each session, many of the greatest conversations were held in the lobby bar, wandering the hallways or in the vast dining room at meal times.

Then she went north to this area called the Catskills, Zhang said, to much laughter from the audience, and she found a job at the Concord Hotel, owned by the Parker family. They employed her and were good to her, he said, and in the 1980s, when his great-grandmother returned to China, the Parkers eventually sponsored all 20 members of her immediate family to come to America, putting them to work in their hotel and their kosher Chinese restaurant.

Standing room only for Abby Stein; Photos courtesy of Limmud

Thats why, Zhang said, My mother grew up lighting the candles for Hanukkah while burning incense for Chinese New Year.

Educational director of the Elijah Interfaith Institute in Jerusalem, Australian-born Peta Jones Pellach spoke about the importance of women in interreligious dialogue. (Full disclosure: I worked with Jones Pellach two decades ago in Sydney and we reunited at the festival.)

Im really going to do what is recommended here at Limmud and thats [talking about] the struggles Ive had as a woman and on behalf of women, Jones Pellach said. Advocating for women not being brought to the negotiating table when it comes to the Israel-Palestinian conflict, she said, There is not a reason in the world why women should be denied to be part of the dialogue toward peace and security.

Citing a study on the women who participated in negotiating peace between Catholics and Protestants in Northern Ireland in 1998, Jones Pellach said, What we found is women contributed to and perhaps were even the essential ingredient in [that] final peace agreement. They have provided the inspiration for women who want to get involved in interfaith dialogue.

She went on to speak about an initiative in Israel called Women Wage Peace and how it should be unacceptable that the top five members of the current Likud party are all men.

On a lighter note was the participation of Israeli-born Noam Shuster, a 32-year-old peace activist and comedian currently on a fellowship at Harvard University to create a one-woman comedy show about coexistence. Raised in Israels only Israeli-Arab cooperative village, Neve ShalomWahat as-Salam, Shuster joked about her mixed Ashkenazi and Sephardic (Persian) heritage and how she does her stand-up in three languages: English, Hebrew and Arabic.

I was the brown kid with black hair, she said. In second grade, [Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahus wife] Sara Netanyahu and Hillary Clinton came to visit our school. I sang Shir LShalom, (Song of Peace) and Sara said to me, Your Hebrew is so articulate. That was my life, Shuster quipped. This Ashkenazi woman assuming Im an Arab living in this village.

Yet, for all the sessions and questions and answers within each session, many of the greatest conversations were held in the lobby bar, wandering the hallways or in the vast dining room at meal times: think a Jewish Harry Potter, with plastic tablecloths and minus the instantly appearing food and candelabras.

But like Harry Potter, Limmud was, and continues to be, magical.

Kelly Hartog was invited to present at Limmud Festival.

Read the original here:

Limmud Festival: A Feast for Jews From All Walks of Life - Jewish Journal

Communities Around the World Mark 70 Years of the Historical Impact of the Lubavitcher Rebbe’s Leadership – The Jewish Voice

Posted By on February 12, 2020

Gatherings honor a global Jewish renaissance in the aftermath of the Holocaust

By: Chabad.org Staff

From the Old City of Safed to the contemporary metropolis of Toronto and in Jewish communities around the world, tens of thousands gathered to mark 70 years since the RebbeRabbi Menachem M. Schneerson, of righteous memorybecame leader of the Chabad-Lubavitch movement. Building upon the foundation laid by his father-in-law and predecessor the Sixth Rebbe, Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn, of righteous memorywho passed away on the 10th of Shevat, in 1950the Rebbe would go on to engineer a global Jewish renaissance in the aftermath of the Holocaust.

Sharing wisdom from the Rebbe in Worcester, Mass.

Far from focusing only on the revival of his own flock of Chassidim or even the Jewish people, the Rebbe turned his gaze outward to the world at large, expending thousands of hours meeting and corresponding with people from all walks of life, among them rabbis, statesmen and laypeople, Jews and non-Jews. In the estimated 11,000 hours that the Rebbe spent teaching at public gatherings, he would expound on a diverse range of topics, from in-depth analysis of Talmudic passages to the profound elucidation of esoteric parts of Torah. Hundreds of volumes of the Rebbes teachings have already been published, with still more to come.

Alongside this vast Torah scholarship he would also passionately address the state of the broader societyspeaking on everything from criminal justice reform to social safety nets to the fundamental need for moral and ethical education for all. Twenty-five years after his passing, the Rebbes moral and ethical teachings for the world continue to serve as a guiding force for a generation of Jews and non-Jews seeking to change the world for the better.

Events for women are taking place around the world.

Commonly referred to as Yud Shevat (the 10th day of the Hebrew month of Shevat)and corresponding this year to Tuesday, Feb 4, and Wednesday, Feb. 5the day has become a time of introspection and inspiration for those touched by the Rebbes vision for humanity. The Rebbe formally accepted leadership of the Chabad movement on the first anniversary of his father-in-laws passing, delivering the groundbreaking discourse, Basi Legani, or, I have come to My garden. Expounding upon themes found in his predecessors discourse by the same name, the Rebbe laid out the mission of a new generation: to reveal the G dliness found within the material world and transform it into a garden for G d.

Over the next four decades, the Rebbe would continue the tradition of expounding upon this theme. These discourses, alongside the original one delivered by the Sixth Rebbe, are traditionally studied on Yud Shevat and in the run-up to the day.

Gatherings Worldwide Recall the Rebbes Influence

Dancing on the streets of New Jersey

Communities also often invite rabbis or notable individuals to lead farbrengens, or Chassidic gatherings, to mark the date, especially an anniversary as momentous as the 70th. Among many others, Rabbi Moshe Feller, regional director of Chabad of the Upper Midwest Region based in Minnesota, headlined a massive gathering in Morristown, N.J., while Rabbi Berel Lazar, Russias chief rabbi and head Chabad emissary, joined hundreds in London. Amid the snowcapped mountains of Lucerne, Chabad of Central Switzerland held a lunch-and-learn event in honor of the day with Judge Ekyakim Rubinstein, a former vice president of the Supreme Court and Attorney General of Israel, who shared recollections of the Rebbes profound influence on his own life.

A soulful gathering at the Tzemach Tzedek Synagogue in Safed in northern Israel attracted English-speaking residents and visitors from around the world, while a second program in Hebrew followed, drawing members of multiple Chassidic groups, including the Sanz, Lelov and Breslov communities of the mystical city.

A Yud Shevat farbrengen in Bangkok, Thailand.

We see that in recent times, interest has been piqued in Chabad Chassidut and the Rebbes teachings by other Chassidim, as well as from English-speaking immigrants and visitors to our city from all affiliations and backgrounds, Rabbi Gavriel Marzel, director of the synagogue and the nearby Old City of Safed Chabad-Lubavitch center, told Chabad.org. They learn in their own spheres, but when looking for new, living and deep insights, they want to study the Rebbes teachings.

And across the globe, the UJA Federation of Greater Toronto helped to promote an event titled 70 Years of the Rebbes Leadership, which attracted people from across Torontos vibrant Jewish community. It featured discussions about the Rebbes impact on the world and included teachings about some of the niggunim, deeply spiritual melodies, that were taught by the Rebbe.

In New York City, 70 mitzvah tanks departed from 770 Eastern Parkway, the Chabad movements Brooklyn, N.Y.-based headquarters, for Manhattan. The vehicles were staffed by an international team of students, from Australia to Russia, with eight languages spoken between them.

Events exclusively for women have been taking place in U.S. communities such as Houston, Detroit, St. Paul, Los Angeles, New Haven and Las Vegas, in and cities across Europe, Israel and Asia. More than 2,000 participants have viewed a video lecture by Rivkah Slonim, co-director of the Rohr Chabad Center for Jewish Life at Binghamton University, about the Rebbes ongoing influence on Jewish women.

Throughout the night and day, many thousands of people, Jews and non-Jews, will be visiting the Ohel, in the Cambria Heights neighborhood of Queens, N.Y., the resting place of both Rebbes. In addition to petitions for blessing written at the site, letters from around the world were sent via email, fax and were delivered by others, asking for the Rebbes guidance and intervention on High, in the age-old tradition of written prayer petitions at our holiest sites.

Mitzvah Tanks

Yeshivah students departed from the Rabbinical College of America in Morristown, N.J., with a fleet of 12 RVs, accompanied by 70 rabbinical students and 35 elementary-school students from the colleges day school.

Starting out from Lubavitch World Headquarters at 770 Eastern Parkway in Brooklyn, a parade of 70 mitzvah tanksRVs specially outfitted to bring Judaism to the streetsheaded into the heart of Manhattan. The specially outfitted Mitzvah Tanks have been a fixture on American streets for more than five decades. Crossing over the Manhattan Bridge, the cavalcade made its way down Canal Street, up Sixth Avenue until Central Park, and then down Fifth Avenue, from which they fanned out to areas throughout all five boroughs.

The vehicles were staffed by an international cadre of yeshivah students from more than a dozen countries, including the United States, Russia, Australia and Israel, speaking eight languages between them. In keeping with the Rebbes vision and teachings to make all people agents for good in making the world a better place, the students encouraged others to join in the effort to improve the world by doing a mitzvah: a positive act.

The 70-year anniversary has special poignancy as it comes while the country battles a rise in anti-Semitic incidents. When confronted with rising anti-Semitism, the Rebbes message was one of increasing light. The Rebbe taught us that a little bit of light pushes away much darkness, said Yisroel Lazar, a yeshivah student in New York. The best response to hatred is an outpouring of positivity and light.

Just south of the New York parade, in New Jersey, 100 students from the Rabbinical College of America in Morristown, N.J., took that same message of hope and inspiration in their fleet of 12 mitzvah tanks to the streets of Jersey City, site of the recent anti-Semitic shooting at a kosher grocery store, and other towns across North Jersey.

Throughout the day, students joined the local Jewish community in a celebration of Jewish pride and perseverance.

We want to celebrate 70 years of leadership in the way that the Rebbe taught us, by sharing a mitzvah and doing an act of kindness and positivity that we need so much today, said Yossi Spalter, organizer of the New Jersey initiative. Countless people have experienced some of their heritage for the first time on the street or in a mitzvah tank, with a spontaneous bar mitzvah or impromptu Torah lesson, which has had a transformative and lasting impact on their lives.

Whether mitzvah RVs in the tri-state area, mass Chassidic gatherings in Moscow or added emphasis on Torah study in Coral Springs, Fla., the focus on the 70th anniversary of the Rebbes leadership is on doing more, always more.

At the gathering in 1951 during which the Rebbe formally accepted the mantle of leadership, he sounded a theme that he would repeat countless times in the decades to come: The work of bringing about the revelation of the inherent goodness within humankind, of perfecting the world and of bringing Moshiach, could and would not come about on its own.

Making this world into a dwelling place for G d was the mission, the Rebbe told the gathered at that first gathering, saying, Everything now depends only on us.

(Chabad.org)

Go here to read the rest:

Communities Around the World Mark 70 Years of the Historical Impact of the Lubavitcher Rebbe's Leadership - The Jewish Voice

The Vexed History of Zionism and the Left – The Nation

Posted By on February 12, 2020

A Bundist rally in Brussels, circa 1935. (From the archives of YIVO, the Institute for Jewish Research, New York)

That Zionism and the left were once on better terms is by now a familiar story. In the years after the Holocaust, leftists in Europe and the United States supported Israels founding. The Soviet Union was an early backer and enabled the provision of crucial military aid during the 1948 war (though the Soviets soon switched to backing Israels Arab adversaries). Labor Zionism, the ideology of the kibbutzim, spoke of building a model socialist society, and many radicals in the West saw Israel as proof that a socialism gentler than the Soviet variety was possible. Under David Ben-Gurion and his successors, the countrys hegemonic political culturethat of its political and military elitewas expressly secularist and socialist, though more vlkisch than Marxist. As late as 1972, Prime Minister Golda Meir was feted by her comrade leaders in Vienna at the 12th Congress of the Socialist International.1Ad Policy Books in Review

Such good feelings were not to last. Things changedand quickly. Starting in the late 1950s and early 60s, radicals in the West began to redirect their attention and allegiance to the anti-colonial movements taking wing in Algeria, Cuba, and Vietnam. Israel, which had partnered with the old European powers in the 1956 Suez Crisis and then with the United States in the 1960s, fell on the wrong side of these revolutionary struggles. The war of 1967 and its outcome only hardened this view. Now Israel occupied the Gaza Strip, the Golan Heights, the West Bank, the Sinai Peninsula, and East Jerusalem. The dispossession and colonization of the Palestinians began much earlier, of course, but for many on the left, 1967 cast Israel-Palestine in a new light. Israel was now the oppressor, the Palestinians now the oppressed. In a generation, Edward Said observed, the Israelis had been transformed from underdogs into overlords.2

But it was not simply that radicals in the West gave up on Israel; Israel also moved to the right. Victory in the Six-Day War, as Amos Oz later recalled, unleashed a mood of nationalistic intoxication, of infatuation with the tools of statehood, with the rituals of militarism. Rather than subsiding, this mood became part of the general attitude of a country engaged in perpetual occupation and war. In 1977, the election of former Irgun commander and right-wing revanchist Menachem Begin ended nearly three decades of uninterrupted Labor Zionist rule. Since Begins election, Israeli politics have swung further rightward. Labor Party leaders have led the country for less than eight years total since 1977Shimon Peres for roughly three, Yitzhak Rabin (assassinated in 1995 by a right-wing extremist) for slightly longer, and Ehud Barak for less than two.3

Israel transitioned from a semicorporatist social democracy to a neoliberal economy, as well. Labor, like many social democratic parties at the time, moved away from its socialist roots, embracing austerity and economic liberalization. Peres and Rabin oversaw the privatization of state-owned industries and limitations on the power of the countrys trade union federation. The kibbutzim were privatized and converted into Jews-only gated communities. The countrys leaders began to speak less about building a hevrat mofet, a model just society, and more about a so-called start-up nation specializing in high-tech exports and cyberwarfare. Decades of military rule in the West Bank, combined with the failure of the Oslo Accords and the violence of the second intifada, seemed to remove peace from the national political vocabulary. Perhaps no figure exemplifies these changes better than Benjamin Netanyahu, a commando turned management consultant turned prime ministerand Israels longest-serving premier.4

How Zionism and the left came to be so at odds is the subject of Susie Linfields most recent book, The Lions Dena work, she explains, aimed at reckoning with her double grief. First, she writes, I am grieved by the contemporary Lefts blanket hatred of Israel. Second, I am grieved by the trajectory of contemporary Israel. For her, however, the first grief is far more the subject of the book than the second. A collection of profiles of intellectuals who debated the Zionist Question in the second half of the 20thcenturyHannah Arendt, Arthur Koestler, Maxime Rodinson, Isaac Deutscher, Albert Memmi, Fred Halliday, I.F. Stone, and Noam ChomskyThe Lions Den devotes only cursory attention to Israeli history and politics. Instead, its an extended critique of what Linfield considers the shortcomings in many of these intellectuals views on Israel, in particular, their reluctance to criticize Palestinians as stridently as they do Israelis. She is also critical of how their ambivalence (and occasional hostility) toward Zionism and Israel have become central to the politics of the contemporary left.5

If the book has a grand claim or central argument, it is that the left moved from defining itself as anti-fascist to defining itself as anti-imperialist. As a result, Western leftists, including many of the intellectuals Linfield profiles, abandoned Israel and aligned themselves as a subsidiary ally of what she calls the anti-colonialist struggle. She recognizes that anti-imperialist politics on the left are not particularly new; everyone from Marx and Engels to Luxemburg and Lenin criticized Western empire, and anti-imperialism and anti-fascism have often gone hand in hand. But her main concern is how these intellectuals embrace of anti-colonialism and their growing criticisms of Israel reflect a significant divergence, in her view, from the lefts long-standing commitments and ideals.6

Linfield offers detailed, often probing readings of how her subjects adjusted their analyses and ideologies to the complex and ever-shifting political terrain of Israel-Palestine. Yet the cumulative effect is to call into question her overarching claim. Rather than elucidate the reasons the left and Zionism suddenly parted ways, her profiles reveal the tensions that have long existed between Zionisms exclusionary nationalism and the lefts egalitarianism and internationalism. It is not that the left suddenly abandoned Israel and Zionism but rather that left-leaning intellectuals (though not all of Linfields subjects are of the left) have struggled to reconcile themselves to the injustices that the founding of Israel entailed.7Current Issue

Subscribe today and Save up to $129.

Linfield charges that these intellectuals, unlike the liberal Zionists with whom she identifies, have refused or failed to understand Israel-Palestine without ideological distortionswhich for her means that they did not find the Palestinians just as deserving of their opprobrium. For Linfield, this is not because of a sensitivity to relations of power, a commitment to principles of anti-oppression, or even her mostly Jewish subjects anger about the nature of a state that claimed to speak on their behalf. Instead, she argues, it is because of their blind adherence to dogmatism, fantasy, and manipulation and their failure to abide by what she calls, somewhat condescendingly, the reality principle.8

Cloaking false equivalences and ideology in the language of realism has long been a hallmark of liberal Zionist argument. Liberal Zionists often insist that one cannot condemn Israeli militarism and occupation without an equivalent condemnation of Palestinian rejectionism and irredentism, and they generally maintain that the two-state solution is the only realistic and desirable outcome for Israel-Palestine. They have held to this line even as the two-state solution has become ever more unlikely, and they have done so by eliding the differences in power between occupier and occupied.9

Linfield wants to position herself among those brave realists who are willing to criticize both sides in equal measure and are equally committed to a two-state solution. Yet in doing so, she demonstrates precisely what she finds objectionable in her subjects: a readiness to substitute ideology [and]wishful thinkingfor reality. The Lions Den, it turns out, is less about how the left fell out of love with Zionism than about how liberal Zionists, wedded to their own illusions, fell out of love with the left.10

Linfield begins The Lions Den with a lengthy chapter on Hannah Arendt. The German-Jewish thinker, as Linfield notes, came to politics through Zionism and to Zionism through Hitler. Arendt, notably, never identified with the left, but Linfield nonetheless uses her story to narrate how a major postwar thinker fell out with Zionist politics. In the 1930s, Arendt worked for a group called Youth Aliyah, which took young Jewish refugees to Mandatory Palestine, before fleeing to the United States in 1941. Her early Zionism was born of a frustration with what she perceived as the Jewish peoples collective refusal to act as agents in history and to defend themselves as Jews. (The willed powerlessness of Jews would remain a preoccupation of hers throughout her life.) But if in the run-up to World WarII, Arendt embraced a Zionism of necessity, her commitments shifted during and after the war. Facing Europes destruction, she concluded (wrongly) that the era of the nation-state had ended and that a sovereign Jewish nation-state in the Middle East was a belated, utopian ideal that could not guarantee Jewish safety. For Arendt, a binational commonwealth or federation in Mandatory Palestine was the only way to avoid a new cycle of protracted bloodletting. She saw in political Zionism not only acquiescence to the idea of anti-Semitism as an eternal, immutable force in the world but also an ideology that had internalized, even to an extent accepted, some of the Nazis depictions of European Jews.11Books & the Arts

For Linfield, Arendts criticism of Zionism and post-1948 Israel offers a warningthough not against Zionism or the nation-state, as she thought and as her contemporary admirers believe. Instead, it exemplifies the perils of imposing abstract political theories, even brilliant ones, on a distinct political problem. Linfield argues that Arendts analysis is marred not only by her extreme contradictions but also by her having retreated into political sentimentality and magical constructs: her hope for a post-nation-state arrangement and her belief that the competing territorial claims of Arabs and Jews could be reconciled in a federal or binational state. To criticize a thinker like Arendt for being an insufficiently hard-boiled state strategist perhaps misunderstands the function of Arendts kind of writing, for she was concerned with the ethical consequences of Zionism. But for Linfield, it is ultimately indicative of what she finds troubling with the lefts approach to Israel and Zionism more generally, the desire to impose theories on the realities of Israel-Palestine.12

From Arendt, Linfield moves to Arthur Koestler in what is arguably the books best chapter. Born in Budapest in 1905, Koestler was a journalist, novelist, and peripatetic revolutionist. He was also a man who, in the words of historian Timothy Snyder, exposed his mind and body to the fearful spectrum of twentieth-century ideology like a healthy man volunteering for a life of radiation therapy. As a student in Vienna in the 1920s, Koestler joined a right-wing Revisionist Zionist fraternity that wore military uniforms and challenged proto-fascist Austrian nationalist clubs to duels. He became a fervent follower of Revisionist leader Vladimir Jabotinsky and, after graduation, Jabotinskys personal secretary. Koestler moved to Mandatory Palestine to live on a kibbutz in the Jezreel Valley and hated it. He returned to Europe, arriving in Berlin in 1930, where he joined the Communist Party. By 1940, he had left the party and written Darkness at Noon, his classic novel set during the Stalinist show trials and written from the perspective of a condemned Old Bolshevik. He then became a fervent anti-communist and returned to Zionism.13

Linfield charts Koestlers Damascene-like reversals with sensitivity and skill. Chronicling his journey from Revisionist Zionism to communism, anti-communism, and then a late obsession with speculative histories about the origins of the Ashkenazi Jews, she situates Koestlers relationship to Zionism within a far wider history, one that includes many of its ideological rivals and that restores a degree of historical specificity to a set of ideas that contemporary debates too often lack.14

Unlike Arendt, whose relation to Zionism was mainly that of an engaged critic, Koestler was, for a time, a true acolyte, and so it is through him that Linfield most directly deals with canonical Zionist ideas, thinkers, and texts. Considering H.N. Bialiks poem In the City of Slaughter, which he wrote after the 1903 Kishinev pogrom, she observes how the idea of shlilat hagolahthe Zionist notion that Jewish emancipation would come only through the negation of diaspora Jewryran throughout Zionist writings at the turn of the century. She does not shy away from detailing the enormous condescension, even disdain, with which figures on both the right and left flanks of Zionism viewed their fellow Jews. She also gestures toward why, for many European intellectuals, Zionism proved so difficult to disentangle from or fully embrace. As Europes skies darkened, Zionism proposed that Jewish settlement in Palestine could end two millennia of Jewish dispossession and subjugation, that a Jewish state could provide the answer to the Jewish question. The emergence of a Jewish state, however, marked the failure of the early Zionists very proposition; instead of solving the Jewish question once and for all, Israels founding ensconced it in the realm of geopolitics.15

The chapter on I.F. Stone, the intrepid American journalist, is another of Linfields strongest profiles and picks up on the paradoxes of Zionism and the challenges they posed to those who remained on the left in the postwar years. Like Koestler, Stone was born in the early years of the 20th century, and his biography maps onto the American Jewish experience in ways that parallel Koestlers European one. Like many Jews of his generation, he shifted from a Yiddish-inflected Popular Front leftism that saw Jewish liberation as part of the broader international struggle for working-class liberation to an urgent Zionism of necessity at the end of World War II. In his 1947 Underground to Palestine, he joined Holocaust survivors in their harrowing boat trip from displaced persons camps in Europe to British-controlled Haifa and came to see Israels creation as integral to Jewish security. In the postwar years, however, his narrative diverged from Koestlers. Stone never renounced his socialism, but he became increasingly critical of what Zionism came to look like in practice. Writing shortly after the 1967 war, Stone lamented the rising militarism and Lilliputian nationalism of Israeli culture, which he believed were at odds with his universalist Jewish leftism.16

Despite her clear respect for Stone, Linfield is unsparing on this last turn in his political trajectory. She diagnoses him as a victim of a narcissistic fallacy: the belief that everyone shares your essential aims and worldview and chastises him for being unable to see that many Palestinians, and their allies in the Arab world, did not want peacethough he accused Israeli leaders of precisely that. Stone, Linfield charges, failed to engage, or even notice, the irredentist strain of the Palestinian movement and the larger Arab world. Though she may have other left-wing writers of the period in mind, these denunciations of Stone dont quite hold up to scrutiny. Stone, after all, criticized the refusal among some circles of Arab activists to engage with Israel, and in his 1967 review of Claude Lanzmanns special Israel-Palestine issue of Les Temps Moderneswhich Linfield harshly criticizesStone shows a clear understanding of the popular attitudes toward Israel and Jews in many Arab countries at the time, expressed, as he puts it, in the bloodcurdling broadcasts in which the Arab radios indulge.17

Maxime Rodinson and Isaac Deutscher are treated to similar criticism. Rodinson, born in Paris to Jewish communist parents who were murdered in Auschwitz, was a Marxist scholar of the Middle East and, in particular, Islam. He wrote about Israel-Palestine and Jewish politics and contributed an influential essay to Lanzmanns Les Temps Modernes issuetitled Israel, a Colonial Fact?that helped popularize the anti-colonial analysis of Israel-Palestine in Europe and the United States.18

Deutscher, born in southern Poland, was an independent Marxist intellectual and former Talmud prodigy whose family, like Rodinsons, was destroyed by the Nazis. Best known for his three-volume biography of Leon Trotsky, Deutscher also wrote several important essays, including reportage, about Israel-Palestine. A committed internationalist, he was never a Zionist, yet nor was he an anti-Zionist. Even in his harshest critiques of Zionismfor example, in a June 1967 interview with the New Left Reviewhe offered insights into Jewish history and suffering with a deep sense of intimacy.19

Yet for Linfield, Rodinson and Deutscher are guilty, too, of downplaying Arab opposition and of focusing disproportionately instead on Israeli aggression and the excesses of Israeli nationalism. She writes that when it came to the Arab worlds reaction to the founding of Israel, Rodinsons reasoning went askew; he blamed the Arab countries eliminationist fury specifically on Israel. Yet this is hardly the impression one gets from Rodinsons work. In Israel and the Arabs, for instance, he writes with great awareness of the structural reasons for the reactionary and all too frequently anti-Semitic tendencies in Arab societies at the time. Seeing himself as a friend of Arab liberation, Rodinson sought to aid the Palestinian movement by countering Arab misconceptions and myths about Jews (for example, in his article Arab Views of the Israeli-Arab Conflict). Contrary to Linfields description, Rodinson was not an unreasoning anti-Zionist but rather a committed socialist, internationalist, and atheist who rejected the nationalist chauvinism of Zionism and hoped that it would eventually pass from the scene.20Related Article

More familiar than any of the books other subjects with the most conservative, restrictive, and chauvinist forms of Jewish politico-theological expression, Deutscher, when he visited Israel, recoiled from Zionisms nationalist mysticisma mysticism which is not free of the old Chosen-People-racialism. He saw in the need for a Jewish state and in its successful creation a terrible tragedy, a reminder that the European working class, in which he had once so deeply believed, not only failed to defeat fascism but also joined in the fascist destruction of Europe and, with it, European Jewry. Israel would remain for him, as he wrote in 1954, a melancholy anachronism.21

Linfields frustration with the lefts criticism of Israel and opposition to Zionism increases as she turns to the post-1967 period. Her chapter on Noam Chomskywho perhaps more than any other American left-wing intellectual has come to represent the New Lefts legacy of anti-imperialismis the most unduly vicious one in the book. For Linfield, the moral astigmatism she ascribes to Arendt, Stone, Rodinson, and Deutscher is even more acute in Chomskys writing about Israeli militarism, the Palestinian national movement, and Israels occupation of the West Bank and Gaza.22

Linfield opens her chapter by briefly charting Chomskys political evolution, from his cultural Zionist upbringinghis father was a Hebrew grammarianto his teenage identification with Hashomer Hatzair, a socialist-Zionist youth movement, to his belief in binationalism until roughly 1975 to his current view that two states remain more realistic than one. And yet this chapter reads less like a survey of Chomskys views than a frontal assault on them.23

At times, Linfield is merciless in her tabulations of what she takes to be Chomskys damning mistakes, from opposing NATO intervention in the Balkan wars to his various factual missteps over the years. She mocks his pedantic tendencies, the self-referentiality in his books, and most of all what she terms a crippling ideological rigidity that prevents him from, time and again, apprehending what is happening in the world around him. Chomsky, Linfield charges, is so detached from reality, so buried beneath the reams of his writings that he lives trapped in his own private worldwhat Linfield calls Chomskyland. And so pernicious are the intellectual exports of Chomskyland, she continues, that their producer has become a nightmare of the American left, guilty of misleading generations of young people.24

The accusation of detachment from reality is one she levies against many of her other subjects: Arendt for her dogged opposition to a Jewish state, Rodinson for his rigid Marxist internationalism, Stone for his humanist wishful thinking. According to Linfield, no one except Albert Memmi, a Tunisian-born French intellectual, and Fred Halliday, an Irish exNew Leftist, have read reality correctly. But it is in her chapter on Chomsky that the deficiencies of Linfields overarching project come into clearest view.25

To be sure, Chomskys style and tone can be frustrating. He can be prone to overstatement and oversimplification. On the politics of Israel-Palestine, he is, after all, a popular writer. And as is to be expected of someone who has written for more than half a century, he has made mistakes, political as well as factual, some of them serious. Yet he has also been one of the most consistent opponents of US empire, military interventions, and unjust wars, at times when the cost of doing so was high. Chomsky is perhaps one of the best examples to refute Linfields repeated claim that the postwar left sacrificed its commitment to equality, anti-capitalism, and anti-fascism in favor of anti-imperialism. If anything, he has embodied the unwavering link between a socialist egalitarianism and an anti-imperialist internationalism when few self-described left intellectuals dared to fly the flag of either. Like Deutscher and Stone, he has consistently emphasized the connection between inequalities of wealth at home and abroad, and he has focused as much energy on exposing the United States repressive measures against its own citizens as on the US militarys violations of human rights and international law overseas.26

In the light of history, Chomskys recordagainst the Vietnam War, Israels occupation, neoliberalism, and the surveillance stateoutshines those of many of his New Left contemporaries, some of whom, by the 1990s and early 2000s, had embraced so-called humanitarian intervention and championed US war-making in the Middle East. Far from a nightmare, Chomsky has been among the American lefts most consistent moral beacons.27

For Linfield, the cases of Arendt, Stone, Rodinson, Deutscher, and Chomsky are all meant to prove that an insufficient realism has led the left to disregard history and even to justify terrorism and illiberalism. In her view, this is what separates Memmi and Hallidayher two heroes in the bookfrom the rest of her subjects: They allowed history to matter and based their political positions on history rather than vice versa. But as one reaches the end of The Lions Den, this assertion becomes not only a platitude but also the mark of an unsteady ideological framework in its own right. All of Linfields subjects were responding to history, even if their responses do not align with her political preferences and even if, at times, they got their historical moments wrong. While the conviction, shared by Arendt and Deutscher, that the age of nation-states ended in Auschwitz proved to be incorrect, it was based on their histories of exile and dispossession. The same is true for Rodinsons rejection of the idea that Jewish suffering in the Shoah justified the subjugation of the Palestinians; he did not want the memory of his dead parents enlisted in such a cause. Stone and Chomsky, too, are thoroughly historical thinkers who adapted their positions to the Middle Easts complex reality.28

Indeed, the brittleness of Linfields Zionist realism is fully evident in the books final pages, where she is most direct about her criticisms of the left. Realism, in her framework, does not mean fidelity to what has happened on the ground. Rather, it is a set of fixed commitments, far more limited in scope than those the left has traditionally held. In lieu of an egalitarian internationalism premised on solidarity with all those fighting against oppression, Linfield suggests that realistic Western leftists should withhold their solidarity from those whose means of struggle they decry. Insteadof recognizing differentials of power as part of any judgment about the legitimate use of force, she proposes that the violence of the oppressor and the oppressed should be opposed in equal measure. As a result, Linfields political preferences lead her to see equivalences where none exist and to flatten complicated and evolving relations of power.29

The insensitivity of this approach is clearest in her treatment of the Palestinian Nakba, the expulsion of roughly 700,000 Palestinians from their homes by Jewish forces during the 1948 war and thereafter. At various points throughout the bookfor example, when she characterizes the Arab worlds rejection of partition as a world-historic mistake of unforgivable proportionsLinfield writes as if the Nakba were something the Arab states brought on the Palestinians. It is necessary, she notes, to document, and condemn, Zionist atrocities during the 1948 Arab-Israeli War, and yet she adds that there is no use in evading the fact that the war was instigated by five Arab states, which invaded Israel. This is realism as a rhetoric of cruelty: the implication that the invasion of the Arab armies somehow justified the displacement of entire Palestinian cities, like Lydda, or the massacres, like the one at Deir Yassin, that frightened many others into fleeing.30

Likewise, when Linfield discusses the situation in Israel-Palestine today, she recognizes that the chances of a two-state solution are slim to none yet then concludes that, regardless of what is realistic, those who advocate a binational one-state solution are living in cloud-cuckoo-land, a term she borrows from Koestler. She warns her readers in the chapter on Halliday that realism must be the assertion, not the surrender, of humane and even revolutionary values. Realism is what enables those values to move beyond theory into lived actuality; it is the enactment rather than the betrayal of principle. And yet Linfields own reality principle has led her here to suspend the very humanist principles she professes.31

Linfield is not wrong that realism raises questions of both principle and necessity when it comes to Israel-Palestine. Today there are two one-state outcomes that appear as likely to prevail as a two-state solution, if not more so. The first is apartheid, the status quo made permanent, a regime that enforces separate legal systems and hierarchies on the basis of ethnoreligious identity and that systematically denies basic rights to roughly half the people living under its control. The second is a single democratic binational state that guarantees equal rights to all people living within its borders. Those who still hold out hope for a two-state solution must at least recognize that it has long ceased to be the most likely outcome, given the facts on the groundand that if a two-state solution and a democratic binational state both require considerable upheaval, a massive rebalancing of political forces, and sweeping shifts in culture, then neither position can really be called more realistic than the other.32

And yet liberal Zionists continue to insist that the only possible outcome is a two-state solution, premised on exclusionary and inegalitarian understandings of citizenship and nationality. This intransigence forces them into ideological contortions: They want to be liberal democrats, and yet they enlist themselves in defense of a country that is currently neither liberal nor a democracya country that has codified discrimination against roughly 20 percent of its citizens and that for more than half a century has imposed a brutal military regime on millions of people. They want to be realists, yet what they propose is as much an idealistic fantasy as the binationalism they reject. Linfield defines Zionism as the belief in a democratic state for the Jewish people, without acknowledging that a Zionist state cannot be both democratic and Jewish if it guarantees differential rights and privileges on the basis of ethnoreligious identity, denies basic rights to millions of people, and carries out policies according to the racist logic of a demographic threat.33

It is a testament to the quality of Linfields research and prose that The Lions Den is ultimately a valuable book despite itself. Whether inadvertently or not, she has provided an accessible and compelling introduction to the work of an eclectic group of thinkers who grappled, often courageously, with the enduring tensions between their leftist commitments and Zionist sympathies across the tumult of the 20thcentury. Many of these intellectuals should be better known to English-speaking audiences than they are today. And while there are many voices left outremarkably, the book doesnt profile a single Palestinian thinkerLinfield has created an anthology of sorts for a new generation of Jews looking to understand how those who came before them criticized Israel, the occupation, and Zionism. They will find much to argue with in The Lions Den. But they will also, if they read carefully, learn a lot from it.34

See original here:
The Vexed History of Zionism and the Left - The Nation

Ayelet Shaked to Arutz Sheva: ‘Other parties are trying to trample religious Zionism’ – Arutz Sheva

Posted By on February 12, 2020

Former Justice Minister MK Ayelet Shaked spoke to Arutz Sheva at the launch of the Yamina partys campaign on Wednesday evening.

The current trend in the political system is to try to hurt her party, she said. "We notice that all the parties are trying to reduce, weaken and trample religious Zionism and everyone wants to eat away at us. I say to religious Zionists: We will not agree to have half the number of seats of the Joint List, and that is the situation right now."

"Our goal is for ten thousand volunteers to come out on election day, to get people out of their homes, to persuade people at the polls, so that we become big and meaningful," Shaked added.

Shaked also noted that "there are enormous challenges for both the right and religious Zionism in the coming years. We have a great challenge to achieve 61 seats and we will only do so if we are able to raise the percentage of votes."

Shaked pointed out that in the last election, religious Zionism voted in percentages lower than it usually votes. "It can't happen again. We need to raise the voting percentage with all our might. I hear people from religious Zionists who want to vote for Likud. I wonder - why should Sarah Beck be outside the Knesset but number 33 or 34 in the Likud will be in the Knesset? It makes no sense. Why shouldn't Orit Strook be in the Knesset? I call on everyone who voted for us in the past and who belongs to religious Zionism or the ideological secular right - put our wonderful women into the Knesset."

Go here to read the rest:
Ayelet Shaked to Arutz Sheva: 'Other parties are trying to trample religious Zionism' - Arutz Sheva

Iranian Armed Forces spokesman: Zionist state will disappear from Earth – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on February 12, 2020

Israel will soon disappear from the Middle East, Brig.-Gen. Abolfazl Shekarchi of the Iranian armys public relations sector said on Tuesday. He was speaking to veterans in Zarandieh in northeastern Iran.Commemorating fighters on the anniversary of the Islamic Revolution, he spoke with passion about how Irans resistance was confronting the US and Israel.He discussed the missile attack by Iran on Ayn al-Assad base in Iraq, where up to a hundred US soldiers are now suffering from traumatic brain injuries. He said it represented Irans abilities to defeat enemies.He reminded those present of the resistance forces, including Hezbollah, Kataib Hezbollah in Iraq, Hamas and others. In his estimation, the Zionist regime will soon disappear.Other spokesmen for the armed forces said today we are in a state of war with the enemy, and we must have smart choices for those running the parliament and send people to parliament who are willing to be martyrs. Elections are on February 21.The rhetoric against Israel is nothing new from Iran but the list of resistance factions is part of Irans worldview that increasingly sees Hezbollah, Shiite militias in Iraq and Palestinian groups like Hamas as all part of the same force.In this view, Iran is the great leader of a mass of fighters across the region, all arrayed against the US, Israel, Saudi Arabia and some other states. Irans rhetoric seeks to instill into a new generation this imperial impulse to dominate the Middle East via these factions and to see them all as not only allies but directed from Tehran.

Read the original here:
Iranian Armed Forces spokesman: Zionist state will disappear from Earth - The Jerusalem Post

Netanyahu endorses pro-settler slate in World Zionist Congress elections – The Times of Israel

Posted By on February 12, 2020

WASHINGTON (JTA) Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and other top Likud party officials have endorsed the pro-settler Zionist Organization of America slate in the World Zionist Congress elections, currently underway, amid a push by a left-wing slate trying to stop settler funding.

They have been courageously defending the Jewish people and the State of Israel, without hesitation, without apology. They stood up proudly for the rights of our people and our state, Netanyahu said in a 30-second video.

The Congress controls about $1 billion annually in funding for Zionist institutions, and has a role in naming the top professionals in those institutions.

Get The Times of Israel's Daily Edition by email and never miss our top storiesFree Sign Up

ZOAs campaign this year is aimed at countering a push by the Hatikvah slate to double its representation. Hatikvah is expressly campaigning to steer funding away from West Bank settlements.

A vote for ZOA, its campaign says, means assuring the Jewish peoples rights to our land.

Online voting for the American Jewish portion of the next World Zionist Congress, 152 seats for a five-year term, about a third of the Congress, is underway until March 11.

A separate ZOA video endorsing its right-wing slate features other leading figures in Likud, such as former Jerusalem mayor Nir Barkat and Foreign Minister Israel Katz.

The ZOA list currently holds seven of the 145 seats in the American portion of the outgoing World Zionist Congress, and Hatikvah controls eight. The vast majority of the American seats are controlled by the Zionist affiliates of the Reform and Conservative movements, respectively Arza and Mercaz.

The number of apportioned seats changes from Congress to Congress, depending on demographics. Another third of the Congress seats are assigned to the non-American Jewish Diaspora, and the final third is apportioned to Israeli political parties based on Knesset election results.

Notably, a hefty portion of the main ZOA campaign video features the World Likud chairman, Yaakov Hagoel, speaking in Hebrew. There are two slates this election competing for the increasingly influential Israeli-American community, Israel Shelanu and Kol Israel.

Visit link:
Netanyahu endorses pro-settler slate in World Zionist Congress elections - The Times of Israel

Iran to give crushing response to any stupid move by Zionist regime: FM spox – Mehr News Agency – English Version

Posted By on February 12, 2020

Turning to the terrorist and occupying nature of the Zionist regime, he added, the nature of the Zionist regime over the past 70 years has been founded on occupation of the Palestinian land and neighboring states, killing, looting, assassination and aggression.

Irans presencein Syria isat the invitation and agreement of theSyrian government, aimed at fighting against terrorism backed by the US and Zionist regime, he said, adding, Iran will not compromise and hesitate for a moment to defend its presence in Syria and also defend its national security and regional interests. Consequently, Iran will give a decisive and crushing response to any aggression or stupid act by the Zionist regime.

He then stressed thatIran will pursue the warmongering remarks and threats made byIsraeli officialsagainst the Islamic Republic in the international communities.

MNA/4851751

The rest is here:
Iran to give crushing response to any stupid move by Zionist regime: FM spox - Mehr News Agency - English Version

How Trumps foreign policy is shaped by the Bible – Vox.com

Posted By on February 12, 2020

When President Donald Trump authorized the drone strike that killed the powerful Iranian general Qassem Soleimani, he wasnt just flexing Americas muscle in the Middle East.

He was also acting on the advice of a politically powerful group of evangelical Christians who believe the US and Israel are part of the Bibles plan to bring about the second coming of Jesus.

Once considered a fringe element of the religious right, evangelical Christian Zionists are playing an increasingly visible role in Republican politics. Today, unprecedented access to the Trump administration has given them an opportunity to reshape the Middle East.

Watch the video above to learn more about how the Bible is influencing this politically powerful group of American Christians.

You can find this video and all of Voxs videos on YouTube. And if youre interested in supporting our video journalism, you can become a member of the Vox Video Lab on YouTube.

Follow this link:
How Trumps foreign policy is shaped by the Bible - Vox.com

One Great Reason to Vote for the Hatikvah Slate: Funding for Progressive Zionist Youth Movements – Jewschool

Posted By on February 12, 2020

There has been a lot of handwringing in the Jewish community about the growing number of unaffiliated Jewish families and young people who are not identifying with Judaism or Israel.One great antidote are the progressive Zionist Youth movements: Hashomer Hatzair and Habonim Dror. These organizations nurture a strong sense of community in their members and a connection with Judaism and Israel.They attract families who are looking for a connection to Judaism but are not necessarily interested in organized religion.And, like the majority of American Jews, these movements support a strong Israel but also believe there must be a truly viable Palestinian state.

While the youth movements serve an incredibly important role in the Jewish community, they are typically underfunded and operate on very small budgets.The World Zionist Congress, which will be meeting next October, will be allocating over one billion dollars to various organizations in Israel and in the Diaspora each year for the next five years. That $5 billion in funding is one of the reasons these youth movements have united with other progressive Jewish organizations to run as a unified ticket calledHatikvah: the Progressive Slate.They are hoping that Hatikvah will receive enough votes from the Jewish community in America to send a strong slate of delegates to the World Zionist Congress to ensure that their movements will receive the resources they need to thrive.

Children who join youth movements learn an appreciation of Jewish culture and history and an awareness of the importance of Israel as a homeland for Jews, as well as developing critical leadership skills.The influence of the youth movements has always exceeded their numerical strength, and they have enormous impact in community organization, education, political awareness and Zionist consciousness.Graduates of the youth movements often go on to assume leadership roles in the Jewish community at large, building on the skills they learned in their youth movements.

The two youth movements included in the Hatikvah slate each have their own unique niches and ideologies, but they are united in a belief that Israel must fulfill the founders vision of a country based on justice and equality.They want to see an end to the occupation, the establishment of a Palestinian state, religious pluralism in Israel and equal rights for all of Israels citizens.Most of all, they want to provide a strong education in leadership and Jewish values so the next generation of young people will be prepared to take their places in the Jewish community.

Hashomer Hatzair, the oldest of the existing Zionist youth movements, is working to broaden its profile in the United States where it operates a summer camp and has activities throughout the year.In discussing the impact of Hashomer on his life, 16-year-old Eilam Ben Tzvi wrote: There I improve, and there I expand, there I strengthen my Jewish identity and shape my connection to Israel in a critical way.I would like Hashomer Hatzair to have an impact on many other young minds, so that slowly but surely, the world will be filled with smart, independent thinkers, with responsible and understanding people, and with kind and fun souls.For Hashomer Hatzair to continue to grow and prosper, it needs more resources to update and renovate its camp, and to fund outreach and an array of activities.In the past, when the kibbutz movement was thriving, Hashomer received much of its funding from Israel.Today, while it still benefits from staff sent through world movement, it funds most of its US operations on its own.

Habonim Dror, which has been operating in North America since 1935, currently runs six summer camps and eight year-round activity hubs across the continent, reaching 1,200 campers and 300 counselors every year. Habonim Dror depends on funding from Israel for such programs as Habonim Dror Workshop, the longest-running gap year in Israel, but funding has dwindled in recent years, making such programs less financially accessible to participants. In reflecting on their experiences in Habonim Dror, Erica Kushner, 22, who is on the leadership team at Camp Galil in Pennsylvania, said, Through my education in Habonim Dror, my passion for Judaism blossomed. Its a very important place because there you can have an opinion that is both progressive and supportive of Israelwhen so many other people will either just write Israel off or will say theres no way to be pro-Israel and pro-peace. Habonim Dror is a place where you can do that.

A 2013 study by Steven M. Cohen & Steven Fink suggests that Ericas experiences are not unique: it found that Habonim Dror alumni demonstrate remarkably high Israel engagement, communal engagement, and progressive values. Yet Habonim Drors ability to produce those results depends on it receiving the funding it needs.

Resources allocated through the World Zionist Congress would make a critical difference to all these organizations.To support the Zionist youth movements and progressive values, go towww.zionistelection.org, register to vote, and vote for Hatikvah: the Progressive slate, number 8 on the ballot.

Minna Elias is the Chair, Governance Committee of Hashomer Hatzair, Inc. (USA); Joel Winograd is chair of the board of Habonim Dror North America.

View original post here:
One Great Reason to Vote for the Hatikvah Slate: Funding for Progressive Zionist Youth Movements - Jewschool

University of Illinois Student Government Set to Vote on ‘Divisive’ BDS Resolution – Algemeiner

Posted By on February 12, 2020

The Alma Mater statue at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. Photo: ilovebutter / Flickr / CC BY 2.0https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/

JNS.org The student government at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (UIUC) is scheduled to vote on a BDS resolution on Wednesday that calls on the university to divest from companies that profit from human-rights violations in Palestine and other communities globally, as well as from firms that provide weaponry and technology to US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), according to a copy of the resolution obtained by JNS that includes endorsements from the student governments leadership committee.

The BDS resolution names companies such as Elbit Systems Ltd., Northrop Grumman and Raytheon as involved in human-rights violations and violations of international law, including the confiscation and destruction of Palestinian lands, criminalization of immigrants and communities of color, and other human rights violations, and therefore make UIUC complicit in these crimes.

The resolution was co-authored byDuniaGhanimah, president of the universitys chapter of Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP), and has 22 sponsors, including Academic Affairs chair Sihah Reza.

It has endorsements from half of the student senatesleadership committee, including its director, Marissa Finley; Kirsten Peterson, chair of Community & Governmental Affairs; internal affairs chair Katrina Rbeiz; campus affairs chair Alexis Perezchica; financial affair chair Jessica Tiggelaar; Bugra Sahin, chair of Sustainability, Resilience, and Environmental Justice; and Shelby Sears, an event management student ambassador at the universitys division of intercollegiate athletics, according toher LinkedIn profile.

February 12, 2020 3:38 pm

A hostile environment for Jewish students on our campus

UIUC Hillel Executive Director Erez Cohen called the measure divisive, and said that the Illinois student body is not interested in being manipulated by the BDS movement.

The divisive BDS resolution that was proposed by Students for Justice in Palestine is a clear attempt to emotionally blackmail student senators and create a hostile environment for Jewish students on our campus, he said. The resolution refers to Israel 11 times more than any other country mentioned. This is a continued attack on our growing community of Israeli and Jewish students at the University of Illinois.

StandWithUs Executive Director of Campus Affairs Rena First called the resolution unsurprising, considering that the student government passed a resolutionin October that was introduced by SJP, which reprimanded the universitys chancellor, Robert Jones, forcondemninga streak ofantisemitic incidents, including a swastika being found on one of its buildings and an antisemitic presentation at a mandatory meeting for the schools residential living team.

The October 2019 a slideshow presentation for the schools residential living team, titled Palestine & Great Return March: Palestinian Resistance to 70 Years of Israeli Terror, which was hosted organized by a student involved in SJP, includedincluded libelous statementsabout the history of the Arab-Israeli conflict, that Chancellor Jones said incited division, distrust and anger among students.

This is unsurprising coming from the same student government that shamefully denied any connection between anti-Zionism and antisemitism earlier this year, said First. A body that disregards the voices of Jewish students has no legitimacy to vote on issues affecting the Jewish community.

Alums for Campus Fairness Executive Director Avi Gordon echoed First, saying, This resolution, being voted on by the senate of the Illinois Student Government, is the latest in a series of incidences at UIUC that have endorsed hate and discrimination against Jewish and Zionist studentsincluding the passage of a resolution that attempted to separate anti-Zionism from antisemitism.

In response to the latest BDS measure, AMCHA Initiative Co-Founder and Director Tammi Rossman-Benjamin noted that the intended consequence of this resolution, and all BDS resolutions, is to purposely incite hatred and divisiveness on campus, and that while these votes carry zero weight in the eyes of the university, they are invariably linked to the harassment of Jewish and pro-Israel students on campus and pose a serious threat to their safety.

Academic institutions across the country are plagued by Jew-hatred, and student groups like SJP are the primary driver of it on campuses. The University of Illinois is not an exception, said Club Z Executive Director Masha Merkulova. Instead of responding to each incident in a vacuum, we need to have a better strategy to stop SJP and SJP-like groups from poisoning our society.

The Jewish community must prioritize actual Israel education, how antisemitism manifests today as anti-Zionism, and what we can do to actively combat it. Students and faculty must come together to send a clear message that all forms of antisemitism will not be tolerated, she added.

The Jewish United Fund of Chicago also criticized the resolution.

The bill is being promoted by its proponents as if it is not a BDS resolution, a tactic designed to trick students into believing it is about human rights, said Emily Briskman, the organizations assistant vice president for campus affairs.

In fact, Israel or the Israeli Palestinian conflict are mentioned three times more than any other country in the bill. There is no hiding what this is, she continued. Despite the student body voting overwhelmingly against BDS in two previous referenda, proponents continue their efforts to demonize Israel.

Briskman warned that if the resolution is adopted, the result will only be further isolation of the Jewish community and softer ground for even more virulent antisemitism.

Link:
University of Illinois Student Government Set to Vote on 'Divisive' BDS Resolution - Algemeiner


Page 1,220«..1020..1,2191,2201,2211,222..1,2301,240..»

matomo tracker