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February 11, 2009

Podcast: L.A. City Council candidate Paul Koretz reaches out to local Iranians

Last night Paul Koretz, the Los Angeles City Council candidate for the Fifth district spoke at a fundraiser in Westwood, a local stronghold for various Iranian groups in the city. Last week our podcast program chatted with Koretz about his outreaching to Iranian voters. Koretz, who is also Jewish and a former member of the California Assembly, has been embraced by local Iranian Jews, Iranian Muslims and other Iranians in the area. He is one of the few candidates in the race who has focused on winning support among various Iranian American groups in the district. Interestingly, L.A.‘s Fifth district is home to the largest number of Iranians in the city and Koretz has been heavily campaigning among them.

Listen to our podcast interview with Koretz about his interactions with local Iranians during this race

Koretz campaign officials said he not only plans on speaking to several Iranian synagogues in the area but will also be speaking at a West L.A. mosque in order to reach other Iranian voters in the district. In addition, Koretz has been quick to welcome and outreach to Iranians in the Fifth district whereas the out-going Fifth District Council member, Jack Weiss, neglected local Iranians in the city according to many Iranians in the city. Other local Iranian Jewish leaders are lending political support to Koretz based on his prior City Council support of improvement projects to Temple Beth El, the synagogue of the Iranian American Jewish Federation in West Hollywood.

My recent article about Koretz and the other local Iranian Jewish candidates for Beverly Hills City Council can be found here.

Photo
Koretz during a June 2008 event held by the “30 Years After” organization where he was asking for votes and support for his L.A. City Council race

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Israel Votes 2009 Lieberman Loyalty Proposal Finds Support in U.S.

As Yisrael Beiteinu vaulted into third place in Israel’s elections, capturing an estimated 14 to 15 Knesset seats, several American Jewish organizational leaders defended the party’s controversial leader, Avigdor Lieberman.

Some liberal Israeli and Jewish groups have condemned Lieberman as a fascist — the left-wing Meretz Party even compared him to the late far-right Austrian politician Joerg Haider — for his proposal to require Israeli Arab citizens to sign an oath of allegiance to the Jewish state.

But the Anti-Defamation League, an organization that is quick to spot instances of discrimination, says Lieberman is right to be concerned about apparent acts of disloyalty by Israeli Arabs.

Abraham Foxman, ADL national director, noted with concern the trips by Arab Israeli Knesset members to enemy states and expressions of solidarity with Hamas by Israeli Arabs during Israel’s recent military operation in the Gaza Strip.

“There were a lot of people who said, ‘Hey, that’s disloyal,’” Foxman said in an interview. “That’s what he’s talking about. He’s not saying expel them. He’s not saying punish them.”

Lieberman, 50, has proposed requiring a loyalty oath as a condition of Israeli citizenship. Those who refuse would have their citizenship revoked, though they’d be permitted to remain in the country as permanent residents.

“Arabs have all their rights in Israel, but they have no right to Eretz Yisrael,” Lieberman said last week at the Herzliya Conference, an annual summit on Israeli state and security.

Morton Klein, president of the Zionist Organization of America, said he found Lieberman’s proposal “legitimate.”

Foxman promised to speak out if Lieberman advanced any legislative proposals not in keeping with the spirit of Israeli democracy, noting that the ADL had criticized his proposals in the past.

In 2006, the ADL issued a statement saying it was “disturbed” by Lieberman’s call for the execution of Arab legislators who met with Hamas leaders.

Marc Stern, acting co-executive director of the American Jewish Congress, noted that U.S. Jews historically have been skeptical of or against loyalty oaths. He also pointed out that Lieberman’s proposal would require all citizens to take loyalty oaths, not merely oaths by those seeking to become citizens.

Stern called Lieberman’s proposal “not a serious solution to a very serious problem.”

Ori Nir, a spokesman for Americans for Peace Now, said that expressions of solidarity by Israeli Arabs with the enemies of Israel should be considered protected political speech and that asking Israeli Arabs to sign a loyalty oath only would alienate them further.

“Once you put them on the spot, by the mere act of doing that you’re going to alienate them in such a way that you will create security challenges to the state,” Nir said. “You will put them on a spot where they will have to make some sort of a decision. That may lead some of them to a situation where they would say, ‘You know what, the heck with you.’”

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Israeli Consulate Election Celebration Draws Crowd

Adriana Martinez and Brenda Larios, two bright teenage students at Franklin High School, showed up at the Israeli Consulate’s election party midday Tuesday to scope out the issues and candidates in Israel’s elections for their political science class.

“I’m interested in international affairs,” said Brenda, who would not divulge which candidate she favored.

The two girls were among some 90 Israelis and Americans of all ages who watched two large screens at the consulate, as Israeli TV channels reported the exit polls for Tuesday’s election.

There was considerable surprise among the group when the polls revealed that Tzipi Livni’s Kadima Party had pulled ahead with 29 or 30 likely seats, followed by Benjamin Netanyahu’s Likud Party with 27 or 28 likely seats, then Avigdor Lieberman’s hard-right Yisrael Beiteinu Party with 14 or 15 seats and Labor trailing with 13.

Official results are not expected to be announced until Thursday, followed most likely by weeks of haggling to form the coalition government.

“The overall trend showed that the Israeli electorate yearned for stability and was less enamored of the smaller parties than in previous years,” Israeli Consul General Yaacov Dayan said.

For instance, the Pensioners Party, which in the 2006 election came out of nowhere to win seven Knesset seats, this time struck out completely.

Dayan and his wife, Galit, agreed that Israeli politicians had adapted some of President Obama’s Internet fundraising and vote-getting techniques. However, said Galit Dayan, the candidates failed to transmit the sense of value and hope that Obama was able to convey to the American electorate.

Yael Solomon, an Israeli ex-pat who runs an avocado ranch with her husband in Temecula, drove 100 miles to join the party. “I would like Bibi [Netanyahu] to win, but I won’t mind if it’s someone else,” she said.

Rabbi Lawrence Goldmark of La Mirada was relieved that Livni was the apparent winner, but, he warned, “She has a long way to go to form a coalition government.”

Among a group of Israeli ex-pats, the consensus was that their political preferences are farther to the right than the apparent election results at home.

“Israelis in Los Angeles focus mainly on the country’s security, while at home they’re also concerned about social and economic issues,” said John Levey, who works for the Jewish Agency.

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Israeli nonprofits honor Stanley Chais for years of charity

For decades, Stanley Chais was a deeply respected Beverly Hills investment manager and a major Jewish philanthropist. His Chais Family Foundation gave $12.5 million annually to Jewish causes here, in the former Soviet Union and in Israel. But then Bernard Madoff was arrested for the biggest Ponzi in history. Chais’ foundation had to close and suddenly he was being sued for $250 million by clients angry that he had invested their money with Madoff.

But on Monday night, some of Chais’ biggest Israeli beneficiaries remembered him for his years of charity. From the JPost:

Far from abandoning him, some 50 of the beneficiaries of his charitable endeavors took up the mantra that has guided his giving. Chais firmly believes that all Jews are responsible for each other. So the leaders of the organizations and institutions in which Chais vested some of that responsibility decided it was payback time; although they couldn’t give him back his money, they could certainly restore his dignity and pride.

In Israel, Chais sits on the boards of the Technion, the Weizmann Institute and the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. He has supported numerous other educational projects and has helped establish start-up companies, especially those that give immigrant scientists an opportunity to realize their potential. His son Mark, who lives in Israel and heads his own venture-capital company, joined Chais in several start-up ventures.

Now ailing, the senior Chais was unable to attend the tribute organized for him at the Jerusalem Music Academy on HU’s Givat Ram campus. But his son was there to hear the outpouring of appreciation, admiration and concern for a man who has done so much not only for higher education and start-up companies, but also for hospitals, museums, cultural institutions and individuals who have been awarded scholarships that he established.

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Madoff’s wife reportedly withdrew $15.5 million before his arrest

The Wall Street Journal reports:

Ruth Madoff, the wife of Bernard Madoff, withdrew $15.5 million from a Madoff-related brokerage firm in the weeks before Mr. Madoff’s arrest, according to the Massachusetts Secretary of State.

A complaint filed Wednesday by Secretary William Galvin’s office said Ruth Madoff withdrew $5.5 million on Nov. 25 and $10 million on Dec. 10, according to documents from Cohmad Securities, which was co-owned by Mr. Madoff and which the Massachusetts office is investigating. Mr. Madoff was arrested Dec. 11 on allegations of perpetrating a massive Ponzi scheme.

Mrs. Madoff’s attorney, Ira Sorkin, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

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The popularity of Jewish conspiracy theories

Ian Buruma, a journalist who has written extensively about Asian culture, has an interesting article about the popular of Jewish conspiracies in the Far East. Buruma writes:

A Chinese bestseller, entitled “The Currency War”, describes how Jews are planning to rule the world by manipulating the international financial system. The book is reportedly read in the highest government circles. If so, this does not bode well for the international financial system, which relies on well-informed Chinese to help it recover from the current crisis.

Such conspiracy theories are not rare in Asia. Japanese readers have shown a healthy appetite over the years for books such as “To Watch Jews Is To See the World Clearly”, “The Next Ten Years: How to Get an Inside View of the Jewish Protocols”, and “I’d Like to Apologize To the Japanese, A Jewish Elder’s Confession” (written by a Japanese author, of course, under the made-up name of Mordecai Mose). All these books are variations of “The Protocols of the Elders of Zion”, the Russian forgery first published in 1903, which Japanese came across after defeating the Czar’s army in 1905.

The Chinese picked up many modern Western ideas from the Japanese. Perhaps this is how Jewish conspiracy theories were passed on as well. But Southeast Asians are not immune to this kind of nonsense either. The former prime minister of Malaysia, Mahathir Bin Mohammed, has said that “the Jews rule the world by proxy. They get others to fight and die for them.” And a recent article in a leading Filipino business magazine explained how Jews had always controlled the countries they lived in, including the United States today.

In the case of Mahathir, a twisted kind of Muslim solidarity is probably at work. But, unlike European or Russian anti-Semitism, the Asian variety has no religious roots. No Chinese or Japanese has blamed Jews for killing their holy men or believed that their children’s blood ended up in Passover matzos. In fact, few Chinese, Japanese, Malaysians, or Filipinos have ever seen a Jew, unless they have spent time abroad.

So what explains the remarkable appeal of Jewish conspiracy theories in Asia? The answer must be partly political. Conspiracy theories thrive in relatively closed societies, where free access to news is limited and freedom of enquiry curtailed. Japan is no longer such a closed society, yet even people with a short history of democracy are prone to believe that they are victims of unseen forces. Precisely because Jews are relatively unknown, therefore mysterious, and in some way associated with the West, they become an obvious fixture of anti-Western paranoia.

(Hat tip: Yid with Lid)

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Demolition threatens Shanghai’s Jewish ghetto

Several buildings in Shanghai’s historic Jewish quarter, known as Little Vienna, are being marked for demolition as part of a road-widening project, NPR reports. The area, once a safe haven for 20,000 Jews feeling Nazism in the 1930s and 1940s, is once again yielding its Eastern European character as demolition crews tear down facades, revealing signs that have been covered for decades, like the one for the Wuerstel Tenor sandwich shop. 

They will pull down other fading shop fronts at the heart of Little Vienna, as well — those of Cafe Atlantic and Horn’s Imbiss-stube (Horn’s Snack Bar).

“The existing refugee coffee shops [and] restaurants were a shining light in the lives of the refugees, who did not know how long their isolation and misery would last, should they survive,” says Rena Krasno, who has written about her experiences living through World War II in Shanghai.

“In these eateries, they felt they were back in Europe … and for a short time eliminated their painful fate from their minds,” she says.

Dvir Bar-Gal is an Israeli journalist who is writing a book about Shanghai’s Jewish past. He also leads tours around the Jewish quarter. For him, the question is how important it is for a society to keep its past. If the demolitions go ahead, he fears there will be less and less to show visitors, and he fears the little-known story of Shanghai’s Jewish past will be in danger of being completely forgotten.

“People will stop coming. There will be no interest in the almost forgotten story of the 1940s, the people who were saved here from the Nazis,” he says.

While the Chinese government declared 70 acres of the Jewish ghetto a conservation zone in 2005, the buildings slated for demolition within the zone aren’t designated protected buildings. Officials say they’re trying to balance urban growth with historical conservation, but fear of “catastrophic” traffic seems to be winning out over the preservation of Jewish history in China. The area’s famous Ohel Moshe Synagogue, which has become the Shanghai Jewish Refugees Museum, is being spared, said Chen Jian from the Hongkou district government, but he isn’t optimistic about the future of the former restaurants, cafes and clubs of Little Vienna.

“We’ll do our best to remove and save some of the most valuable artifacts, if feasible,” he says. “But that’s not to say that we won’t demolish these buildings.”

 

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The Israeli Election Goes Down to the Wire

Four months ago, shortly after appearing to make it to the top of the Israeli political pyramid, Tzipi Livni stumbled.

Ehud Olmert had resigned as prime minister and Livni had won the Kadima Party primary election, but she was having trouble assembling a coalition government. Unable to get a key Kadima coalition member, the Shas Party, to stay in the government, Livni was forced to call for new general elections.

On Tuesday, Livni celebrated her vindication — but yo-yo-ing election returns kept her early claims of victory in check .

Scoring a surprsing come-from-behind level of success—if not a sure victory—at the ballot box, Livni, at press time Tuesday afternoon, edged Likud Party’s Benjamin Netanyahu, who had been the front-runner for nearly the entire race, to win an estimated 29 or 30 seats for Kadima, according to Israeli exit polls. (For updated results visit Jewishjournal.com.)

Now with a bare national mandate, the question Livni faces is whether she can leverage her new political standing to quickly assemble a coalition government. With Israel’s right wing also having scored significant electoral gains Tuesday, the task will not be easy.

Livni’s apparent eeked-out victory was aided by the splintering of the right-wing vote. Avigdor Lieberman of Yisrael Beiteinu Party drew key votes from Netanyahu on the right, even as the right-wing Knesset mandate soared. Likud grew to an estimated 27 or 28 seats from 12, and the Yisrael Beiteinu Party increased its share to 14 or 15 seats from 11. Labor fell to 13 seats from 18.

Meanwhile Kadima, which had 29 seats before the election, held steady.

Kadima’s lead means Livni, currently the foreign minister, will have the first shot at assembling the minimum 61-seat majority needed to govern. If she fails to put together a coalition, Netanyahu would have his chance.

Livni based her campaign on three central elements: establishing her credentials as a national leader, attacking Netanyahu as a prime minister who had failed once and would fail again for the same reasons and presenting her policies as the best prescription for Israel’s long-term survival.

She described the election as being about whether Israel should go for peace, casting Tuesday’s vote as a choice between hope and fear and emphasizing that negotiations on a final-status peace deal with the Palestinians must continue.

“Israel must, as she has in the past, combine military might with diplomatic initiative,” Livni said last week at the Herzliya Conference, an annual summit on Israeli state and security. He who thinks Israel can have “security without some kind of peace process is fooling himself, fooling the public and doesn’t understand the world we live in.”

“I believe that standing on the sidelines and not doing anything is not an option; it’s a bad option,” she said. “And if we don’t put a plan in Hebrew on the table, we will be forced to accept a plan in Arabic, French or English. And all these plans never will reflect Israel’s interests as Israel understands them.”

Livni started her campaign many months ago as Mrs. Clean, when government corruption was high on the national agenda and while Prime Minister Olmert and other leading politicians were embroiled in scandal. Livni promised politics without corruption or coalition wheeling and dealing and with a new, more functional system of government.

But the 22-day military operation in Gaza and the urgency of Israel’s relationship with the Palestinians made the issue of political corruption virtually irrelevant in the abbreviated campaign, which went into full gear only once the fighting in Gaza ended in mid-January.

Livni shifted her focus to the need to press ahead on Israeli-Palestinian peacemaking and cast her main rival, Netanyahu, as on a likely collision course with the Obama administration in Washington.

For his part, Netanyahu tried to portray Livni as lacking the experience and gravitas necessary to be prime minister.

“Tzipi Livni? It’s too big for her,” Likud’s campaign poster said.

Livni, who normally insists on keeping her public persona and private life separate, opened up a bit on the campaign trail, talking about the home in which she grew up.

Both her parents were members of the underground Irgun, which fought British forces in prestate Palestine. Her father, Eitan, was a commander and later a Likud Knesset member. Her mother, Sara, also was a well-known Irgun fighter and inspired one of the militia’s fight songs, “Up to the Barricades.”

Livni herself once opposed any notion of trading land for peace. But not unlike other prominent sons and daughters of the founding Likud elite, including Olmert, Livni gradually changed her position to support the idea of territorial compromise.

A former lawyer, Livni started her professional career as a Mossad agent. Since her election to the Knesset on the Likud list in 1999, Livni, under the tutelage of mentor Ariel Sharon, enjoyed what often is referred to in Israel as a “meteoric” rise. She has held various political offices, serving as the minister of regional cooperation, immigrant absorption, justice, housing and infrastructure and most recently, foreign minister.

With her reputation for straight talk, intelligence and political moderation, Livni has managed to capture something of the popular imagination in an Israel weary of corruption and grandstanding among its politicians.

But it appeared to be the Israelis’ weariness with the politicians of the past — specifically with the ex-Prime Minister Netanyahu — that drew crucial support away from Netanyahu in the final days of the race, giving Lieberman’s party a boost and handing the victory to Livni.

JTA managing editor Uriel Heilman, senior political analyst Leslie Susser and Israel correspondent Dina Kraft contributed to this story.

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Reviewing ‘My Jesus Year’ for Christianity Today

Back in November I wrote two reviews of Benyamin Cohen’s “My Jesus Year.” The first, for The Jewish Journal, ran in the second week of the month and coincided with Cohen’s speaking at L.A.‘s Celebration of Jewish Books. The second review, for Christianity Today, disappeared for a few months but was published online today. It’s significantly different than the other review I wrote and talks more about my Jewish journey, which I had written about for The Journal right after Yom Kippur.

Here’s an excerpt that touches on my family’s Jewish history and why I joined The Journal, both themes I’ve blogged about before:

I had anticipated reading Cohen’s memoir since learning of it in the spring. I saw in its premise, and in Cohen’s portrait, a mirror image of myself. Bizarro Brad, if you will.

Borrowing a characteristically short phrase that Cohen repeats throughout his book: Let me explain.

Both my grandmothers were Jewish. So too was my paternal grandfather, from whom the name Greenberg comes. But my mom was confirmed Catholic and my dad never became bar mitzvahed. When I was young, my parents met at Protestantism, and I continue today to be a God-fearing, church-going Christian.

Last year, though, I joined The Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles, making the move from the Los Angeles Daily News with an impetus as personal as it was professional.

I had been fascinated since becoming a religion reporter a few years before with understanding my split identity: To the outside world, I was Jewish, but to anybody who knew me, I was Christian. I thought working in the Jewish community would help me sort myself out.

“Be careful, man,” a Daily News colleague told me. “That community will change you more than you’ll change them.”

I considered that an unfair warning. For one thing, I wasn’t looking to change anyone but myself. I’m not with Jews for Jesus; I’ve never felt called to evangelize Jacob’s children in particular. As a Christian, I would like to see the whole world come to a saving knowledge of Jesus, but evangelism wasn’t the job for which I was hired, and I considered using my employment to do so as professionally indefensible.

Instead, I saw the new gig as an opportunity to grow culturally as a Jew while strengthening my understanding of what it meant to be a Christian. I did this mostly in subtle ways: reporting on Christian Zionists and their close relationship with Jews, immersing myself in Jewish culture and history and learning to see the world through that lens, walking the Holy Land, watching Jon Stewart.

You can read the rest here.

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