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August 5, 2014

British government minister quits over Gaza policy

A British government minister — the first Muslim woman to serve in the Cabinet — has resigned over the government’s policy on the Gaza conflict.

Baroness Sayeeda Warsi, senior minister of state at Britain’s Foreign Office and minister for faith and communities, tendered her letter of resignation on Tuesday morning.

“With deep regret I have this morning written to the Prime Minister & tendered my resignation. I can no longer support Govt policy on #Gaza,” Warsi said Tuesday in a tweet.

Warsi, the daughter of Pakistani immigrants, became a member of the House of Lords in 2007. She was named Conservative Party co-chair by David Cameron after the 2010 general election, and her current positions, considered a demotion, were part of a 2012 Cabinet reshuffle.

She said in an interview with the Huffington Post UK published hours after her resignation that the British government had failed to act as an “honest broker” in the Middle East.

“The British government can only play a constructive role in solving the Middle East crisis if it is an honest broker, and at the moment I do not think it is,” Warsi said.

She reportedly is unhappy at the failure of the British prime minister to unequivocally condemn Israel’s Gaza ground operation or the Palestinian death toll.

Warsi said in her resignation letter, which also was published on Twitter, that “our approach and language during the current crisis in Gaza is morally indefensible, is not in Britain’s national interest and will have a long term detrimental impact on our reputation.”

She told the Huffington Post that she also resigned because she wants to see those accused of committing war crimes on both sides of the Gaza conflict punished in the international arena.

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3 videos that PROVE Hamas fires from civilian areas

Photographers at the New York Times may not have any photos of Hamas terrorists due to Hamas's restriction on journalists' freedom of access, but two video journalists have documented three separate instances of Hamas firing rockets from densely populated civilian areas.

On July 31, as France24 reporter Gallagher Fenwick was explaining how Israel's operation (and the ensuing restriction on Palestinians' movement) was leading to food insecurity, his voice was drowned out by the deafening “whoosh” of a rocket being launched. He promptly explained to the camera that he had to leave in case there was a pending Israeli air strike on the location.

On Aug. 4, India's NDTV reporter Sreenivasan Jain, in an extremely risky move, recorded Hamas operatives as they set up a rocket staging area next to the hotel where most reporters stay. According to his Twitter, Jain left the Gaza Strip in the early afternoon of Aug. 5. NDTV put up his clip on YouTube (which concluded with him approaching the site where the rocket was in fact launched from) this afternoon, after he left Gaza.

Also on Aug. 5, France24 put up another report by Gallagher Fenwick showing a rocket launch site right next to a hotel used by many reporters. Whether it's the same site that Sreenivasan Jain was recording is not clear. 

Something tells us that Fenwick and Jain may have trouble getting media credentials from Hamas the next time it breaks a cease fire. Something else tells us that it's no coincidence that NDTV waited to post its video on YouTube until Jain was safely out of Gaza. We wouldn't be too surprised if Fenwick left the territory before France24 posted it's most recent clip.

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Los Angeles City Hall supports Israel

During a press conference at Los Angeles City Hall on Aug. 5, the city’s top leadership expressed solidarity with the State of Israel.

Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti; City Controller Ron Galperin; City Attorney Mike Feuer; City Council President Herb Wesson and President Pre Tempore Mitch Englander; and City Council members Bob Blumenfield; Paul Koretz; Tom LaBonge; and Joe Buscaino appeared at the event, which was held at 9:30 a.m. and kicked off with Blumenfeld – whose office organized the media event – playing the sound of an Israeli air raid siren from a smart-phone app to signify what life is like for Israelis living under Gaza rocket fire.

According to Israel Consul General in Los Angeles David Siegel, who also participated in the event, 4,000 rockets have rained down on Israel since mid-June. Additionally, Israel has sounded off 40,000 air raid sirens during that time, the consul general said.

Israel launched Operation Protective Edge in Gaza on July 8.

L.A. Mayor Eric Garcetti and Israel Consul General in Los Angeles David Siegel. Photo courtesy of the Consulate General of Israel in Los Angeles. 

The event included a moment of silence for Israeli and Palestinian casualties as a result of the current war between Israel and Hamas in the Gaza Strip. Brief remarks from each of the participants followed.

Siegel offered specifics about what he would like to see going forward, on the heels of developments out of Israel in which the IDF has pulled its forces out of Gaza and Israel and Hamas have entered into an Egypt-mediated 72-hour cease fire.

On Tuesday, Siegel spoke of a “fragile cease fire in place as of this morning, Middle East time,” between Israel and Hamas.  He said he would like to see “billions of dollars” go into funding the rebuilding of the Gaza Strip but that Israel would need “iron clad guarantees” that Gaza will be demilitarized, Hamas will be disarmed and any money going into Gaza from outside countries would be used for the “people of Gaza [not on tunnels].”

Israel has discovered 32 terror tunnels underneath the Gaza Strip as a result of its latest military effort.

Siegel said the death tolls in Gaza, more than 1,700 Palestinian civilians, are a “product of Hamas using civilians as human shields. Employing terrorism is what Hamas is.”

Blumenfield’s office organized the event, “City Leaders Stand With Israel, For Peace,” as a way to send a message that L.A. stands behind Israel, according to Blumenfield spokesperson Jason Levin.

Levin explained that it was a symbolic ceremony and that the council member does not plan to take any additional action, such as passing a city resolution, toward supporting Israel as of yet.

“There’s no resolution because this was about today taking a moral stand more than it was about any council action,” Levin said. “It’s a complex issue.”

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Living in History: Haftarat Nachamu, Isaiah 40: 1-26

The Haftarah cycle now begins the “six Hafatarot of consolation” in the wake of Tisha B’Av. And sure enough, Isaiah starts out:

Comfort My people, comfort them, says your God;

Speak tenderly to Jerusalem,
Say to her
That she has served her term,
That her sin is pardoned
For she has received from the hand of the Eternal
More  than enough punishment for her sins.

Well, that’s nice enough. Finally! But then we get an idea of what this “comfort” is:

All flesh is grass,
And all its grace like a flower in the field;
Grass withers and flowers fade
When God’s breath blows on them.
Yes, the people are grass:
Grass withers and flowers fade;
But our God’s word holds good forever….

Why, the nations are but a drop in the bucket,
No more than dust on a scale;
To God, whole islands are but fine dust!

This isn’t really what people expected when they are told that they are to be “comforted”: “you are nothing but dust and ashes!”  (Note to Isaiah: don’t give up the day job.).

The Haftarah’s notion of “comfort”, then, diverges sharply from our current understanding. In doing so, it reveals something profound about the prophet’s understanding of the meaning of our lives – and how that understanding deeply challenges our own.

Why would people be comforted by the notion that all flesh is grass but God’s word holds forever? That would seem to make our own lives insignificant. Isaiah, however, turns the implication on its head.

Much modern literature on happiness focuses on the idea of having life projects, things that will make one’s life meaningful. This literature also argues that the process of achieving these projects must be edifying: it cannot all be about deferred gratification. Thus, “> Tal Ben-Shahar, “when we derive pleasure and meaning while spending time with our loved ones, or learning something new, or engaging in a project at work. The more our days are filled with these experiences, the happier we become. That is all there is to it.” Ben-Shahar explicitly rejects the notion that these experiences have objective meaning: he spends a good bit of his book Happier helping the reader figure out what would be these experiences for her or him.

Isaiah demurs: if my focus is on what I find worthwhile, he suggests, then that is just grass that will wither and fade. We might be happy, but this happiness will be false because it will carry no lasting meaning. It thus sharply challenges the contemporary notion of individual self-actualization as the purpose of life.  Rather, if we focus on God’s word, Isaiah argues, our projects will transcend our own lives and our own time.

Should we care about transcending our own time? We already do. People have children because they want some part of themselves to live on after them, to create a legacy for the future. (This also creates problems because people too often attempt to live vicariously through their children). Talk to anyone who fundraises for charity: “naming opportunities” matter because people want to live after they are gone.

This natural human desire makes Isaiah’s argument particularly powerful.  We could conceivably create a work of individual world-historical genius. But in the overwhelming majority of cases, we play our roles in history by being part of a broader trend, movement, or organization. We participate in campaigns such as the Civil Rights movement, or build community institutions. The human psyche seeks to acquire meaning by engaging in something bigger than itself.

This presents Jews with an extraordinary opportunity: simply by participating in the collective life of the Jewish people, we are engaging in a historically meaningful process. The Jews are a tiny people, but in terms of our civilizational, cultural and spiritual influence we punch vastly above our weight. The story of the Jews is the story of large swathes of human civilization, and contributing to that story means playing a key role in that civilization. And because our community is relatively small, that means that each of us actually can contribute to that story.

This hardly means simply continuing the Jewish past or submerging oneself in stultifying consensus: anything but. Instead, it suggests transforming it in creative ways. The legal philosopher Ronald Dworkin came up with an arresting analogy concerning judicial decision-making. Imagine, Dworkin wrote, that when confronted with the precedents of the past, you are writing a chain novel, much like a chain letter but in literary form.  You must make sense of the previous materials so that the novel has coherence, but you are free to write your own chapter.

Writing our own chapter of Jewish history – and thus world history – takes much the same form. We must use the materials of the Jewish past to tell a coherent story, and then tell our own tale. Dworkin was a legal theorist, but contemporary Jews can and must tell our stories in our way, whether it be through political activism, spiritual practice, innovative parenting, creative writing, music, art, or any one of a variety of cultural and social activities. The key is to relate these activities to our past and thus build another chain link, which will then be built by the next generation.

A good example might be Living in History: Haftarat Nachamu, Isaiah 40: 1-26 Read More »

Breaking (NOT): GOP hopes Jews vote for GOP

There may be chaos in the world, with an Ebola epidemic in West Africa, the specter of war in Ukraine and a seemingly endless cycle of violence in Gaza, but the earth continues to turn, the sun continues to shine, and Republicans continue to think Jews are about to turn Republican. Some things never change.

The Hill newspaper trots out another installment in the longrunning series suggesting that this may finally be the time that Jews break with the Democratic party. In fairness to The Hill, the frame it presents is, no doubt, quite accurate — “Republicans believe that the deepening crisis in Gaza could ultimately loosen the grip that the Democratic Party has traditionally held upon American Jewish voters.” And to prove it, they proceed to quote a number of Republicans (two, to be precise), saying that this may indeed be the time that Jewish voter disgust boils over about Israel and sends them into the Republican camp. (Surprisingly, neither of these Republicans is Matt Brooks of the Republican Jewish Coalition, whose never-diminishing optimism typically makes an appearance in these stories. Perhaps he was on vacation.)

To be clear, I don’t doubt that many Republicans believe that Jews will, indeed, start voting Republican. By the same token, I’m sure my rabbi believes I’ll start showing up regularly for services and my wife thinks I’m going to start cleaning around the apartment. Hope springs eternal.

And, to be sure, it is indeed possible that Jewish votes may start to go Republican. As the article notes, from the 2008 to the 2012 presidential elections, Obama’s percentage of the Jewish vote, according to exit polls, dropped from 78 percent to 69 percent, a more significant drop than in his overall level of support. It’s also the lowest percentage of the Jewish vote to go Democratic since 1988.

That said, there have been false dawns before — when George W. Bush ticked up from 19 percent to 24 percent from 2000 to 2004, some observers hailed it as a sign that the long-awaited shift was under way. Before that, between 1976 and 1988, the Democratic candidate only broke 70 percent once. But the long trend persists — no Republican has reached 40 percent of the Jewish vote since Warren G. Harding in 1920. As Tevi Troy, the former Jewish liaison to the younger Bush administration ruefully tells The Hill (well down in the story), “I have been around many blocks and I’ve heard it so many times: ‘Now is the point that it’s all going to change.’ And it never happens. It’s like ‘Waiting for Godot.’”

Conservative columnist Philip Klein, of the Washington Examiner, dispenses with the latest outbreak of GOP optimism quite nicely: Jews don’t vote only on Israel, Jewish views on social and economic issues are more aligned with the Democratic Party, and Jewish views on Israel actually line up pretty well with the priorities of Obama and most other Democrats (i.e. support for a two-state solution).

He also points out, quite rightly that the factor most likely to push Jews towards the GOP is not Israel but demographics — Orthodox Jews vote Republican at a much higher rate than non-Orthodox Jews and are also growing at a much faster clip than any other portion of the Jewish population. (I would, however, quibble with his point about intermarriage — studies have indicated that intermarried, unaffiliated Jews vote just as Democratic as other non-Orthodox Jews.)

So someday, Jews may indeed start to vote more Republican. But if that happens, it probably won’t be Israel that drives the shift. And it probably won’t become apparent for many years to come.

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Ebbing support for Israel among key groups stirring alarm

If the results of a recent focus group and polls are any indication, the gap is growing between Congress and young Americans when it comes to support for Israel.

Polls conducted in late July by Gallup and the Pew Research Center found that support for Israel is weaker among younger Americans and Democrats than among Americans generally. Add to that the results of a recent focus group culled from 12 congressional staffers — a small but very influential cohort — and pro-Israel activists are worried about the long-term sustainability of broad U.S. support for Israel in Congress.

Last Friday, a select group of Jewish institutions was sent a confidential summary of the staffers discussing the recent Gaza conflict. The tone of the summary, which was obtained by JTA, was one of alarm.

“Congress is supposed to be our fortress,” wrote authors Jennifer Laszlo Mizrahi and Meagan Buren, the founder and a former top aide, respectively, at The Israel Project. “While Israel faces Hamas tunnels, it appears that the negativity and lack of support among young people is tunneling its way into congressional offices, even while the congressmen and senators remain steadfast on the surface.”

Among the statements the dozen congressional staffers agreed on: “Israel attacked Gaza in a wild overreaction.” “It’s Groundhog Day every 18 months, perennial conflict, doesn’t seem like anyone wants peace anymore.” [The Israeli government is] “not peace loving.”

Several JTA interviews with staffers for pro-Israel lawmakers suggested that the Mizrahi report’s conclusion is on target.

“On the Hill and with some people with whom I have spoken who are robust Israel supporters, people are concerned if not angry,” one of the staffers, a Democrat, told JTA. All the staffers spoke to JTA on condition of anonymity to freely discuss the sensitive subject.

They cited a combination of factors alienating the once solid pro-Israel base among Democrats, including the distance from Israel’s era of crises in the 1960s and 1970s, anger at how the Netanyahu government has handled its relationship with the Obama administration, weariness of a decade of U.S. involvement in wars and the plain orneriness of younger people.

The Mizrahi report was distributed on the final day of a week of pro-Israel initiatives on Capitol Hill.

Late that day, 20 minutes short of 10 p.m. Friday, members of the U.S. House of Representatives headed to the floor for a roll call on $225 million in extra funding for Israel’s Iron Dome anti-missile system.

It was the end of the session, time to head home for the August recess. Last trains had gone, flights were missed, aides were busy booking Saturday travel, but few Congress members would dare miss a critical pro-Israel tally. The appropriation passed 395-8 at 10:03 p.m.

Earlier in the day, down the hall in the Senate, Democrats and Republicans set aside partisan differences and stripped away wish-list amendments from their own versions of the Iron Dome appropriation to pass it as a stand-alone. At the end of the day, the $225 million was seen as too critical to subject to the polarization that besets just about every other congressional initiative.

In other pro-Israel actions last week, the Senate and House of Representatives unanimously passed non-binding resolutions condemning Hamas for firing its missiles from among civilians, and the Senate unanimously passed a resolution condemning the U.N. Human Rights Council for launching an inquiry into Israel’s conduct in the war. The measure had bipartisan backing of the Senate leadership.

Meanwhile, the results of the Mizrahi focus group and recent polls suggested that support for Israel during the war was far weaker among younger Americans and Democrats.

In a Gallup poll conducted July 22-23, two weeks after the launch of the latest Israel-Hamas conflict in the Gaza Strip, older Americans were much likelier to say Israel’s actions were justified: 55 percent of those over 65; 53 percent of those aged 50-64; 36 percent of those 30-49; and just 25 percent of those 18-29. Just 31 percent of Democrats said Israel’s actions were justified; 49 percent said they were not.

In a Pew poll conducted July 24-27, 29 percent of adults aged 18-29 held Israel more responsible for the conflict and 21 percent blamed Hamas. Liberal Democrats were evenly divided, with 30 percent each assigning blame to Israel and Hamas.

For now, one Democratic staffer told JTA, the influence on Capitol Hill of AIPAC, the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, guarantees traditional levels of support for Israel in the foreseeable future.

“The way politics is played, you’re not going to see changes short and middle term,” the staffer said. “In the very long term, I fear you won’t have pro-Israel lawmakers as much as lawmakers who follow expedience.”

The key, veteran Democratic pollster Mark Mellman says, is educating younger Democrats.

“We’ve seen for quite a while that young people and Democrats are less supportive than others,” Mellman said. “That doesn’t mean they’re anti-Israel. It means they’re less pro-Israel, less knowledgeable.”

Mellman said Democrats were likelier than Republicans to recoil at the images generated by the recent Gaza fighting.

“The threshold among Democrats for the use of military force is much higher,” he said. “That’s a function of general attitudes toward war, and what many Democrats think have been failed enterprises in Iraq and Afghanistan.”

AIPAC would not comment for this article but is aware of the vulnerability of the pro-Israel outlook among Democratic constituencies. Earlier this year, the organization hired from within its ranks Marilyn Rosenthal, a former deputy political director for the lobby, as its national director for progressive engagement.

AIPAC’s pitch to students is more apt to include pro-Israel students from traditionally black colleges, Obama voters and feminists, said a former senior Senate aide who is familiar with the lobby’s strategies.

“They know they have a problem; they’re working on it,” the former staffer said. “Go to their events for students and you’re likelier to see a female rabbi who identifies as progressive. You’ll see black pastors.”

A third Democratic staffer said pro-Israel groups had to quit their centrist comfort zone when it comes to both parties.

“It’s a huge mistake for the mainstream pro-Israel community to abandon outreach to progressive Democrats and, for that matter, libertarian Republicans,” the staffer said. “Those are the grassroots activists, and today’s grassroots activists are tomorrow’s candidates.”

The tensions between the Obama and Netanyahu governments have been counterproductive, a senior Democratic strategist added.

The congressional staffers interviewed by JTA talked about several ways to increase pro-Israel sentiment among their ranks, such as recruiting young leaders for trips to Israel. They also said it’s vital not to assume ideological identification with Israel just because Israel and the United States have shared values.

One staffer noted the effectiveness of Israeli U.S. Ambassador Ron Dermer’s practice during the war of beginning meetings with congressional staffers by displaying a phone app that sounds each time an incoming rocket alarm is sounded in Israel — and leaving it on for the duration of the meeting, during which it would sound several times.

“These are staffers that grew up in an anti-war climate and are not seeing the same threats the Israeli people do every day,” the staffer said. “Hearing the red alert on his phone, that really speaks to staffers and members.”

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Spicy summer steak and potato salad

Grilling season is still in its prime. Take those leftover steaks and turn them into this quick and delicious cold summer salad. Another bonus? It's a one plate meal!

Ingredients:

1 pound Grilled steak

12 small red potatoes

2 – 3 cloves of garlic, to taste

2 Tablespoons finely minced ginger

1 Tablespoon finely minced fresh chives

4-5 ounces baby arugula

Dressing:

4 Tablespoons melted unsalted butter (or margerine)

¼ Cup white or red wine vinegar

Cracked black pepper and sea salt, to taste.

Directions:

1. Rinse potatoes under running water. Slice in half, but do not peel. Boil until just tender and drain.

2. While the potatoes boil, melt the butter. Rapidly whisk vinegar into hot butter. Whisk in cracked black pepper and salt to butter/vinegar mixture.

3. While the potatoes are still hot, slice in half or quarters and marinate in salad dressing.

4. Slice cold grilled steak into thin strips about two inches long. Mince chives, garlic and ginger. Gently stir steak, chives, garlic, and ginger into potato mixture and chill until cold.

5. Mix in baby arugula and serve immediately with your favorite bread and sliced melon.

For more recipes, visit: http://holy-food.org/

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Israel says it has arrested suspect in killing of 3 teenagers

Israeli authorities said on Tuesday they had arrested a Palestinian suspected of being involved in the kidnapping and murder of three Israeli teenagers in June.

Hussam Kawasme, a 40-year-old resident of the West Bank city of Hebron, was arrested on July 11 in connection with the killing of Israelis Gilad Shaar, Naftali Frenkel and Eyal Yifrah, who went missing on June 12 and were discovered dead a couple of weeks later.

Their kidnapping sparked a cycle of violence that led to the month-long conflict between Israel and Palestinian militants in the Gaza Strip.

Kawasme's arrest was made public for the first time on Tuesday in a document from an Israeli court case over whether houses belonging to him and two other suspects – who remain at large – should be destroyed as a punitive measure.

The lawyers listed as representing Kawasme were not reachable for comment.

The court document said Kawasme had admitted to helping to organize the kidnapping – securing funding from the Hamas Islamist group in Gaza and purchasing weapons which he passed on to the two other suspects who carried out the attack.

Kawasme also helped to bury the bodies of the teenagers in a plot of land he had bought a few months earlier, it said.

Israel has named the other two suspects in the case as Marwan Kawasme and Amar Abu Aysha.

Reporting by Ari Rabinovitch; Editing by Gareth Jones

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Italy expelling Moroccan imam who called for killing of Jews

Italy is expelling a Moroccan imam who called for Jews to be killed.
Raoudi Aldelbar, the imam of a mosque in the town of San Dona di Piave, near Venice, was filmed during a sermon there last month saying, among other things, “Oh Allah, bring upon [Jews] that which will make us happy. Count them one by one, and kill them one by one.”
The video clip of the sermon was posted on the website of the Middle East Media Research Institute and later shared on social media.
Interior Minister Angelino Alfano said he had ordered the “immediate expulsion” of Aldelbar “for seriously disturbing public order, being a danger to national security and for religious discrimination.”
The decision was made after counterterrorism, police and other security experts had examined the video and investigated.
Alfano said it was “unacceptable to pronounce a speech of clear anti-Semitic tone, containing explicit incitements to violence and religious hatred.” He said his decision to expel the imam would serve “as a warning to anyone who thinks that in Italy one can preach hate.”

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