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November 18, 2013

Netanyahu offers inquiring U.N. interpreter a job in Israel

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said there will always be a job waiting in Israel for a U.N. interpreter caught wondering aloud at the excessive number of anti-Israel resolutions.

Netanyahu played a video recording of the incident during Sunday’s regular Cabinet meeting and called the unidentified interpreter “brave.”

The interpreter’s remarks came during the Nov. 14 meeting of the U.N. General Assembly’s Fourth Assembly attended by representatives of all 193 United Nations member states. Nine of the 10 resolutions adopted at the meeting condemned Israel.

“I mean I think when you have five statements, not five, but like a total of 10 resolutions on Israel and Palestine, there’s gotta be something, ‘c’est un peu trop, non?’ ['It’s a bit much, no?'],” the interpreter said in English and French in remarks heard live by the delegates. “I mean I know, yes, yes, but there’s other really bad s*** happening, but no one says anything about the other stuff.”

Amid titters of laughter from the delegates, the committee secretary says, “I understand there was a problem with the interpretation.”

“Interpreter apologies,” the interpreter responds.

Netanyahu said, “I would like to tell this interpreter that she has a job waiting for her in the State of Israel. There are moments that tear the hypocrisy off the unending attacks against us, and this brave interpreter did so.”

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Released Palestinian prisoners get P.A. payout, monthly stipend

Palestinian terrorists who were released from Israeli prisons in a goodwill gesture by Israel to restart the peace process were granted large payouts and monthly stipends from the Palestinian Authority.

Upon their release from Israeli prison, each of the prisoners received a $50,000 payment and granted a monthly salary, Israel Radio reported Monday. The prisoners were convicted of killing Israelis.

Some 52 Palestinians convicted of participating in terrorist attacks against Israelis before the 1993 Oslo Accords have been released in recent months. Another 52 are scheduled to be released over the nine months of U.S.-brokered Israeli-Palestinian peace negotiations.

A Palestinian official told Israel Radio that the money is to help the former prisoners restart their lives.

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New wave hatred

Is hostility toward Israel linked to hostility toward Jews? A report on anti-Semitism in Europe, released on November 8–the day before the anniversary of the Kristallnacht pogrom that marked the start of the Nazi war on Jews 75 years ago–addresses this contentious question. While Israel's supporters have long warned of a new strain of anti-Semitism camouflaged in pro-Palestinian advocacy and opposition to Israeli policies, Israel's critics complain that charges of anti-Jewish bigotry are used to silence dissent. Yet the latest study, 'Discrimination and Hate Crime Against Jews in EU Member States,' strongly suggests that 'the new anti-Semitism' is not a propagandist myth but a depressing reality.

The evidence is especially compelling since it comes from a neutral source: the European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights (FRA). The agency surveyed nearly 6,000 self-identified Jews in eight European Union countries (Belgium, France, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Latvia, Sweden and the United Kingdom). While the online survey, publicized through Jewish community organizations and media outlets, did not have a random sample of respondents, it was designed with expert input to be as representative as possible. 

A few findings:

* Two-thirds of respondents said that anti-Semitism was a serious problem in their country; three out of four felt it had worsened in the past five years. 

* One in four said they had personally experienced anti-Jewish harassment in the past twelve months; while this included verbal attacks on the Internet, almost one in five had been harassed in person. 

* During the same period, three percent said they had been targets of anti-Semitic vandalism; four percent reported hate-motivated physical assaults or threats. 

* Nearly half worried about anti-Jewish harassment or violence; two-thirds of those with school-age children or grandchildren were concerned that the children might experience such harassment at school or on the way to school. 

* Close to a quarter said they sometimes refrained from visiting Jewish events or sites out of safety concerns. Nearly two out of five usually avoided public displays of Jewish identity such as wearing a Star of David. 

* Almost one in three had considered emigrating because they did not feel safe as Jews.

Even if the self-selected the pool of respondents was skewed toward those affected by or strongly concerned about anti-Semitism, these are still disturbing results.

The survey also reveals some interesting–and not entirely surprising–facts about the face of anti-Jewish bigotry in 21st Century Europe. Most of those who reported anti-Semitic harassment identified the culprit or culprits as having either 'Muslim extremist views' (27 percent) or left-wing political views (22 percent); only 19 percent said it came from someone with right-wing beliefs. 

This tendency is even stronger for anti-Semitic hate speech, from Holocaust denial to claims that the Jews 'exploit Holocaust victimhood' or have too much power. (The exceptions are Latvia and Hungary, where anti-Semitism is more likely to be of the traditional far-right variety.) Among Western European Jews who reported encountering such slurs in the past year, 57 percent had seen or heard them from left-wingers; 54 percent, from Muslim extremists; 37 percent, from right-wingers; 18 percent, from Christian extremists. Moreover, the most common anti-Jewish comment reported in the survey was that Israelis act 'like Nazis' toward the Palestinians–rhetoric European institutions have repeatedly condemned as anti-Semitic.

Of course criticism of Israeli policies does not equal anti-Semitism: All states are fallible, and the state of Israel is locked in an excruciatingly complex conflict with the Palestinians in which there is very real suffering on both sides. Yet the Israelis-as-Nazis metaphor is a stark illustration of how far such criticism has gone beyond the pale. Such analogies do not get thrown at states with far worse human rights records, such as China or Russia; even South Africa's racist apartheid regime, however reviled, was not routinely attacked as Nazi-like. The Israelis are singled out for this comparison precisely as Jews–the primary targets of Nazi genocide–who have supposedly traded places with their murderers. If this is not anti-Semitism, what is?

Yet such parallels are creeping into mainstream left-wing discourse, even in the United States. The new book, Goliath: Life and Loathing in Greater Israel by Max Blumenthal, heavily promoted by The Nation–the leading magazine of the American left–features such chapter titles as 'The Concentration Camp' and 'The Night of Broken Glass.' (Even Nation columnist Eric Alterman, himself a vocal critic of Israel, has slammed Goliath for, among other things, the 'implicit equation of Israel with Nazis.')

There are even more striking examples of the fusion between Israel-bashing and Jew-bashing. A 2011 tract called The Wandering Who?by Israeli-born British musician and self-styled “self-hating Jew” Gilad Atzmon not only asserts that Israel is “far worse than Nazi Germany” but suggests that historical anti-Semitism in Europe must have been the Jews' fault. Atzmon brags about getting suspended from school as a child for asking the teacher how she knew that Jews didn't really murder Christian babies for ritual use of their blood. He also blames American Jews in the 1930s for provoking Hitler by calling for a boycott of German goods.

While some anti-Zionist leftists and pro-Palestinian activists denounced Atzmon's book, it received a disturbing amount of praise–including a blurb from University of Chicago professor John Mearsheimer, co-author of the controversial book The Israel Lobby and U.S. Foreign Policy. A major British newspaper, The Guardian, carried The Wandering Who? in its online bookshop before pulling it in response to criticism.

In this toxic climate, the lines between 'new' and 'old' anti-Semitism keep getting more and more blurred. Last year, veteran Norwegian academic Johan Galtung, the founder of 'peace studies' and a distinguished professor at the University of Hawaii, came under fire for some eyebrow-raising statements. Among other things, Galtung had described the Protocols of the Elders of Zion, a 1903 hoax 'documenting' a Jewish world domination plot, as a useful tool for understanding the modern world; he had also made outlandish claims about Jewish control of the American media, apparently drawn from neo-Nazi guru William Luther Pierce. 

Sympathy for the Palestinians, who are seen as Third World victims of pro-Western colonialists, has led many on the left to condone anti-Jewish attitudes presumably driven by anger at Israeli oppression. Take Alterman, the anti-Goliath polemicist, who in a recent blogpost writes that he himself has often been attacked and tarred with the anti-Semitism brush by Israel sympathizers. I am one of those polemicists, and I regretfully admit that in a 2005 column I made some inappropriate comments about Jewish self-hatred. Yet there remains the fact that Alterman has written off anti-Jewish violence by young Arab immigrants in France as a backlash against the Israeli occupation of the West Bank (rather than real anti-Semitism) and defended a British Muslim group's decision to boycott a Holocaust remembrance event. Whatever the motive, such excuses effectively amount to enabling anti-Semitism. And as long as such enabling continues, the problem will keep getting worse.
 

Cathy Young is a contributing editor at Reason magazine and a columnist at The Boston Globe. She is the author of “Growing Up in Moscow: Memories of a Soviet Girlhood.” Reprinted with permission, featurewell.com.
 
This originally appeared at RealClearPolitics.com. Reprinted with permission.

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The Vantage Point

To be afraid, means that you are unwilling to see the possibilities of your future. It means you are beholden to the thoughts that surround your mind, the irrational ones that threaten the very future you are so afraid of running into. It means you are standing in a dark tunnel watching the light dance, rather than dancing in it yourself.  That fear can be strong. It can cripple you into believing you will never achieve true freedom from your own paralyzing thoughts. It takes away your vantage point, and has you believing that you are frozen in this moment, unable to see past the tip of your nose. There is no real wide space that can possibly get rid of this fear, for the space that consumes your mind is all that, small, cramped, restricting, a confining corner that one can't escape.

This past week I had the opportunity to confront some of those fears. Lead by a fearless named Daniel Luria who is the head of an organization named “Ateret Kohanim,” a non profit organization strengthening Jewish roots in and around the Old City of Jerusalem, I had no real indication of what I was in for when I showed up for his very exclusive tour. Little did I know that what awaited for me around the corner was the darkest secrets of the Old City that that very few are privileged to discover.  Usually it takes months to get a tour with Daniel, yet here I was somehow right there at the Jaffa Gate about to embark on an exclusive adventure with “The Gatekeeper” himself. I thought we were going for a stroll, instead, I realized Daniel was about to transport us to another century of time, where the shadows of our deep rich Jewish past laid awake amongst the walking dead.

“So we goin on a tunnel tour or what,” I asked.

“Oh Chava, we are going on a deeper tour than that, past the tunnels, in the neighborhoods where Jews aren’t wanted, that’s exactly where we’re going- we’re going to the Arab quarter.”

To say I was scared was sort of an understatement. The last place you want to be found is in a small narrow winding street with nothing but strangers who don’t like you very much surrounding your every breath.  And yet the intrigue of walking into the very place I was not welcomed, yet where I belonged, where stares and unvocal looks of hatred would be met eye to eye, was exactly where I was headed into and where I needed to be to let go of my provoking fears that makes me lie awake at night. Located in the Muslim section in Jerusalem, I took my last deep breath I’d have for the day, and entered through the forbidden quarter in the old city. Very few Jews get the privilege of going on this tour, in fact I'd say the mere fact I was given this opportunity could only be explained as a fluke, or as I like to call it, “Divine Intervention.”  For what is the very thing a person who walks in fear needs, but a dose of reality where fear has been present for centuries to learn how fear really works.

We walked through narrow streets, where countless pogroms once soaked the blood of my Jewish ancestors. Walls that carried the shadows of Mezuzahs that once lined these streets now carried empty skulls of grooved stone where scribes that once read “Hear oh Israel the Lord our God, the Lord is One” were imbedded in.  Daniel took us to a quiet tucked away treasure, the Kotel HaKatan, which is part of the Western Wall, but located farther away from the well-known Kotel plaza. Small and unheard of, totally concealed from Jewish life in the Arab quarter, it has yet to see the light of day, but has only recently started getting visitors as Ateret Cohanim has been raising awareness of the historic site and said they hope to attract even more people to the location.  Infact this wall is an even holier treasure for it is located even closer to the holiest site of the Jewish people's history, the “Holy of Holies”, where Gd's spirit once rested here on earth during the reign of the first and second holy temple. He took us to the steps of the Temple Mount where the Jewish holy Temple once stood, and showed us how we could not walk past the third step, for Jews were still forbidden by that area as sanctioned. “Try it Chava, Try walking past that third step, see what happens,” Daniel urged. I didn't have to try it to notice another group of Americans were turned away, only Muslims were allowed to walk through the gates to the Temple Mount. We walked into Ariel Sharone’s apartment where Mark Twain once stayed and where I imagined he stared through the same small window that led to the cobblestone narrow street surrounded by the old stone walls that once barred the markings of old Mezuzahs as well and where he contimplated the complexity of human survival, racism, and probably the delicate dance of fusing various beliefs on the same cobble stoned corner.

We walked past newly Jewish owned apartments that were once attacked so long ago by pogroms that had exchanged hands by force over and over again through the years, but had miraculously ended up back in Jewish ownership. Blood still stained the rattled stone floor. And as we approached a dark tunnel with no familiar face in site, no friendly neighbor wishing us Jews well, and we came out of the bend, Daniel led us to a locked door, which took us to a small Jewish owned courtyard, which led to winding stairs that he had us climb to the very top floor. The top of the roof gave us a vantage point of being able to see all of Jerusalem. The very vantage point in life I was hoping to finally see! I felt like a baby exiting a womb filled with blood making my way up to the tipping point of light. The Jerusalem I saw at that moment was filled with love, light, clouds of glory- possibilities that made me realize, I have nothing to fear at all but fear itself. For when you climb the top and have the advantage of seeing past all those fears inside your mind, you can truly be victorious in conquering the trepidation that has concerned you and surround yourself with a new charge of knowing that all of life's battles are there to lift you up past your own potential.  For what I realized in walking through those small streets surrounded by the “Fear” was that the true guide to this tour was G-d himself. The true guide in life is our creator, helping us to see our vantage point, guiding us all the way. All one has to do is look up to know we are but shadowed by the Grace of G-d Himself to realize that our true potential lies in the belief that we can overcome even the greatest of obstacles that lies in the narrowest streets beyond the agitation of one’s self.

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Iran is a Tough Gap for Israeli and American Jews to Bridge

Mutual disappointment of Israelis and US Jews is almost unavoidable when there is a clash between Washington and Jerusalem. It is unavoidable as Israelis will always feel that US Jews should be “doing more” to subvert American policies, and as American Jews will always feel that Israelis keep forgetting that they are Americans first, supporters of Israel second. It is unavoidable, but not always severe when the clashes concern policies related mostly to the interests of Israel alone. The mutual disappointment becomes much more problematic when the clashes are between core interests of the two countries.

Thus, the clash over Iran might be the toughest gap ever to face these two communities of Jews.

Think about other issues that might cause friction between Israeli and American Jews:

Who is a Jew? – When this issue comes up Israel is usually willing to withdraw any new legislation proposals or initiatives which US Jews actively oppose. Pollard? –A heartbreaking story of one man that has been in prison for much too long, but his release is hardly an existential issue for Israel. Settlements? – A majority of Israelis and a majority of American Jews agree on a two state solution and in both communities most people don't have much hope for an agreement any time soon, so debates and disagreements can be pushed aside. The Western Wall? – As soon as Israel realized that this is becoming an issue that seriously damages its relations with US Jews it began taking care of it. And honestly, it is an issue that was blown out of proportion anyhow (because of Israel’s bad behavior).

Iran is different from all of the above and from all other issues of possible contention. Iran is the issue that Israel (the government and most Israelis) deems existential. It is also an issue that is truly at the top of the American agenda. When we talk about Iran we are talking about an issue at the heart of American grand strategy, not the marginal shenanigans of a State Secretary that's a little too eager to bring about peace in the Middle East. Iran is where what Israel wants might stand in contrast to what the American government wants, to what American voters want, and to what most American Jews seem to want.

Consider Syria, and see how Americans and Israelis differ in their outlook: American voters were overwhelmingly against American military action in Syria. Israelis believe that what happened in Syria was a pathetic and worrying demonstration of a lack of American resolve. In other words: Americans want minimal or less involvement in the Middle East, Israelis want American leadership.

Now consider again the more complicated issue of Iran: Americans understand that Iran is more problematic than Syria – the “nuclear issue” makes it so. That’s why on the one hand they overwhelmingly support diplomacy and believe that Iran can be “contained for now”, yet on the other hand a majority of them still believe that a military attack should be launched if necessary  in order “to prevent them from producing a nuclear weapon” (you can see different polls on Iran here).

The US-Israel battle, then, is one that is basically about the framing of the subject at hand: The administration wants to convince Americans that a diplomatic solution is feasible. Israel is trying to build on the deep suspicions of Americans and convince them that they are being duped by Iran. The US administration's advantage: Americans are weary of war and of involvement in the Middle East. Israel's advantage: Iran is the least favorable country in the world in the eyes of Americans.

And what about Israel's chance to prompt American Jews to be more active against the brewing agreement with Iran? The rules of the game are clear: Jewish Americans are generally like all other Americans. On most issues, they are more liberal. When it comes to Israel they can be slightly more hawkish than liberal-non-Jewish-Americans – but still less so than non-Jewish-hawkish-Americans.

Jewish Americans tend to support Israel when such support doesn't put them at odds with the American public- that is, when the public has views similar to those of most Jews, or when the subject is too marginal for the public to care. Moreover, Jewish Americans don't really like to have confrontations with the White House over Israel. They didn't like it when the US had a republican president, and they like it even less when the president is the man a vast majority of them voted for just a year ago.

Israelis can distrust Obama as much as they want (and they don’t trust him). Still, most American Jews generally do trust him, and approve of his foreign, economic, and domestic policies. They also approve of the way he is handling Iran – according to two recent polls by the American Jewish Committee and by Pew. It should be noted that these two polls were taken prior to what we currently know about the likely agreement. But it should also be noted that a significant gap between the way Israeli Jews and American Jews view Obama is hardly a new phenomenon.

Presented with these realities, a high ranking Israeli official asked not long ago: does this mean that for us to have the backing of US Jews we have to first win over all other Americans? It’s even simpler than that, he was answered: Convincing American Jews that Israel got it right and that the administration is wrong is similar to convincing other Americans of such a reality. In other words, American Jews are a valuable and accessible litmus test: by measuring the support Israel gets from them, it can also quite accurately assess what chances it has of getting the support of the rest of America, the public and its politicians.

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November 18, 2013

The US

Headline: Strains With Israel Over Iran Snarl U.S. Goals in Mideast

To Read: According to Graham Fuller, the slipping of the US' global standing isn't necessarily such a bad thing-

 New states are emerging across the global scene with increased skills and abilities of their own. Are their interests in the future shape of the world truly contrary to our own essential interests? Is it all a zero sum game? Shouldn’t they bear some of the burden we so long cherished? Can’t we unleash the real and constructive talents of America in ways that serve ourselves and broader humanity instead of ceaselessly patrolling the world for miscreants on street corners?

Yes, the world is changing, and we are falling ever further behind trying to operate our old model. The Right is right: It is scary. Historical transitions are never smooth. But looking backward is no way to move forward. And those allies that loved our old way of doing things – well, they may be part of the problem too.  

Quote: “[the report is] absolutely, 100 percent false”, WH spokesperson Bernadette Meehan denying Israeli reports about how the US and Iran have been secretly working on a deal for the past year.

Number: 5000-7000, the number of Libyan security force members the US military is planning to train.

 

Israel

Headline: Hollande presses Israel on talks, but calls for Palestinian gestures too

To Read: Shimon Shiffer is not impressed by the French President's declarations of love in Israel-

 Indeed, Hollande has promised to remain our friend forever. But the complicated history of our relations with France teaches us one lesson: Things could change. Remember what de Gaulle said about Israel in November 1967: “An elite people, domineering and sure of themselves.” Yesterday's allies became today's rivals.

When it comes to relations between countries, one must not be impressed by embraces and declarations of love.

Quote: “We are not the United States of America, of course, and believe it or not they have more capabilities than us. But we have enough to stop the Iranians for a very long time”, Israel's former national security adviser Yaakov Amidror, talking about the military option against Iran.

Number: $50,000, the amount of money given to each released Palestinian prisoner by the Palestinian authority.

 

The Middle East

Headline: Huge blast rocks Syria government building

To Read: FP's Column Lynch examines the UN's dilemma with Assad, who has been consistently restricting humanitarian aid to those who support him. Should they denounce him or opt for cooperation?-

Security Council diplomats say that Amos, a British national who was put forward for the U.N.'s top humanitarian job by her government, is concerned that the pursuit of a more confrontational approach toward Syria will backfire. She worries that it will feed a perception in Damascus that the U.N. aid effort is linked to the Western powers' attempts to bring about the fall of the regime. She has tried to encourage the combatants' allies — including Russia, Iran, and Saudi Arabia — to use their influence on the fighters to permit the delivery of relief. “The U.N. doesn't want to be perceived as being politicized,” said one Security Council diplomat. The U.N. relief agency, the diplomat said, is concerned that it could be accused of “playing politics with the West.”

Quote: “That’s the problem — no one has attempted this before in a civil war, and no one is willing to put troops on the ground to protect this stuff, including us”, and American official commenting on the difficulty of getting the chemical weapons out of Syria.

Number: 1250 miles, the range of Iran's new drone, which was unveiled yesterday.

 

The Jewish World

Headline: Rabbinate signs 'pact' with Diaspora rabbis

To Read: Rabbi Nathan Lopes Cardozo muses about the problematic state of Jewish education in our times, a problem most religious Jews don't even recognize-

 Jewish education today is, for the most part, producing a generation of religious Jews who know more and more about Jewish observance but think less and less about what it means. This is even truer of their teachers. Many of them are great talmudic scholars, but these very scholars don’t realize that they have drowned in their vast knowledge. The more they know, the less they understand.

Just as a young child may think it is an act of kindness to lift a fish out of an aquarium and “save” it, so these rabbis may be choking their students while thinking they are providing them with spiritual oxygen. Doing so, they rewrite Judaism in ways that are totally foreign to the very ideas that it truly stands for.

Quote:  “And I loved nothing more in life than my pictures”, Cornelius Gurlitt, son of the Nazi who looted the much talked about looted paintings.

Number:  NIS 80 million, the budget the Hungarian government has allocated for a new Holocaust museum in Budapest.

November 18, 2013 Read More »

A new leading woman, American Football, a life changing device and more…This week from Israel!

Jews, Israel and diaspora at the JFNAGA

This past week, the Jewish Federations of North America’s annual General Assembly (JFNAGA( took place right here, in Jerusalem. Distinguished guests from all around the world participated in the big event, where they discussed the changing nature of the American-Jewish community within the context of Israel-Diaspora relations. Between one panel to another, the participants were introduced to various pro-Israel organizations such as StandWithUs and the World Zionist Organization, and also enjoyed the company of one another.

Read more “>here.
 


The new Jewish import to Israeli football

Avraham Dov Rosenblum, a 6’2”, 200 pounds, 20-year-old, dark-skinned African American, is definitely not the most common-looking person in Israel. The Jewish football player is the new addition to the Ramat Hasharon Hammers, an Israeli football team. He moved here from Albany, California to join the semi-pro Israel Football League.

Read more “> here