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April 2, 2019

Rona Ramon Wins Posthumous Israel Prize

Rona Ramon, the 54-year-old widow of the late Israeli astronaut Ilan Ramon, posthumously won the Israel Prize on April 2.

Ramon founded the Israeli youth leadership nonprofit Ramon Foundation in 2010; her husband, Ilan Ramon died in 2003 when the Columbia space shuttle returned to Earth. Ramon’s son, 21-year-old Israeli Air Force Capt. Asaf Ramon, died in a 2009 training accident. Ramon herself died in December of pancreatic cancer.

“Rona Ramon is an Israeli hero full of giving and light,” Education Minister Naftali Bennett said when he announced the award. “Despite losing two of those dearest to her, Rona chose life and devoted her life to working for society.”

The Ramon family said in a statement, “Our mother was able to take a life which was painful and turn it to a life-long mission that gives other people hope,” adding that the award “does carry a lot of pride.”

Shoham Nicolet, co-founder and CEO of the Israeli-American Council, said in a statement, “The Israeli-American Council offers a heartfelt mazal tov to the family of Rona Ramon, who was an inspiration and shining example of strength for the Jewish people. Her legacy continues through our IAC Gvanim Ramon leadership program, named for Rona Ramon and created to empower Israeli-American and Jewish American female leaders. Rona Ramon’s values endure in the women of IAC Gvanim Ramon, who carry the torch of leadership and community building. We could not think of someone more fitting to receive the Israel Prize.”

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April 5, 2019

 

 

April 5, 2019 Read More »

WeHo City Council Votes Down Measure Halting Screening of Anti-Israel Film

The West Hollywood City Council voted down a measure on April 1 that would have stopped the upcoming screening of an anti-Israel film inside the city council as part of West Hollywood’s Human Rights Speakers series.

WEHOville reports that while Mayor John D’Amico and Mayor Pro Tem Lindsey Horvath expressed skepticism about showing the movie, Councilmembers John Duran, John Heilman and Lauren Meister voted to move on with the April 16 screening as planned. Meister said during the city council meeting that she didn’t think the documentary featured any “anti-Semitic commentary.”

“I received a lot of letters starting with ‘I’m disappointed and angry.’ Well, I have to be honest, so am I,” Meister said.  “I am disappointed and angry and embarrassed that with everything going on in this country that we are seeing this level of intolerance in West Hollywood. I am embarrassed that we are contemplating shying away from controversy because it’s an uncomfortable topic.”

D’Amico wanted to hear more feedback from the community before proceeding with the screening; Horvath questioned why it was necessary for the city to “spend resources” on screening the film when it is shown at various academic institutions across the country.

The co-producer of the film, Cal State San Bernardino media studies professor Ahlam Muhtaseb, said during the meeting that the film was created after talking to a wide variety of people over a span of 10 years. However, some members of the West Hollywood community, such as Los Angeles National Organization for Women leader John Erickson, argued, that it wouldn’t be right to show a film that the Jewish community finds offensive, per WEHOville.

Dillon Hosier, chief advocacy officer for the Israeli-American Civic Action Network, wrote in the April 2 email news blast for The Israel Group, which describes itself as “a nonprofit that protects Israel in the diaspora by developing and launching initiatives to cripple the boycott (BDS) movement against at Israel,” that the pro-Israel community is remaining upbeat despite the council’s decision to go on with the screening.

“Mayor John D’Amico and Mayor Pro Tem Lindsey Horvath voted to review the City’s event sponsorship process, whereas Councilmembers Duran, Heilman, and Meister voted to keep the status quo and allow ‘1948’ to be shown as planned,” Hosier wrote. “Our opposition won a small victory when Councilmembers Duran, Heilman and Meister voted for a pro-Israel film to be screened at some unspecified in the future in an attempt at ‘balance.’”

Hosier added that the “pro-Israel community outnumbered the opposition 10 to 1” at the meeting and that there “were tall stacks of letters and emails that were sent to the councilmembers expressing disgust and anger” at the screening.

“We built a strong and diverse coalition of over a hundred people that we know we can count on in the future, we experienced the importance of showing up and participating in the democratic process, and we showed the City of West Hollywood that we’re here, we’re watching them, and we won’t stay silent,” Hosier wrote.

“1948” was originally scheduled to be shown on December 12; it was postponed after Congregation Kol Ami Rabbi Denise Eger spearheaded an effort to have the screening canceled.

On March 19, when the city announced that the film would be shown on April 16, Eger wrote in an email to the city council that she was “shocked.”

“The film ‘1948’ is unbalanced and nothing but propaganda,” Eger wrote.

“1948” was shown at UC Irvine on January 31; Debra Glazer, the Orange County representative for StandWithUs, told the Journal in February that she had attended the screening and the film “demonizes and delegitimizes Israel and Israelis and seeks to undermine the basic rights of the Jewish people to self-determination in their ancestral home” by portraying Israelis as “war criminals and monsters, creating ill will and potentially putting Jews and supporters of Israel in danger.” StandWithUs senior executive Gary Ratner spoke during public comments at the April 1 city council meeting.

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Anti-Semitism No Stranger to Harvard

Harvard University’s current generation of students apparently is being taught that history is a convenient fiction that can be forgotten, manipulated or rewritten at the expense of Jews. The operative word of the version of history is “woke” and is being weaponized against perceived enemies, including the Jewish state of Israel.

Just recently, Harvard’s student government gave over $2,000 to the “Palestinian Solidarity Committee” and its “Israeli Apartheid Week” meant to “raise awareness of Israel’s treatment of Palestinians.” The money came from a grant for an Open Harvard College that’s supposed to fund the University’s “compelling interests” like fighting racism. Jewish students protested fearing that the grant might be used to provide a free ride to campus for BDS instigator Omar Barghouti who supports “the euthanasia of Zionism”. Barghouti had previously received a Gandhi Peace prize at Yale.

Last year, Harvard’s Israel Apartheid Week contribution to improved race relations on campus was achieved by blanketing a dormitory with mock detention notices targeting Jewish students for guilt by association with the mistreatment of “Palestinians in Israel-Palestine.” The false notice was “formally cosigned” by Harvard Concilio Latino, the Harvard Islamic Society, and the Harvard Black Students Association. The Harvard Administration accepted a faux apology.

Also in 2018, CAIR founder Nihad Awad was awarded as an inspirer of “a deeper engagement with critical social issues on campus and in the wider community.” Past recipients included the Children’s Defense Fund’s founder Marian Wright Edelman. Beneath a veneer of interfaith good works, Awad is a supporter of terrorist Hamas that uses the UNRWA schools to brainwash new generations of violent Jew-haters.

Bringing anti-Semitism into the classroom, Harvard’s Center for Middle Eastern Studies imported Ali Akbar Alikhani as a visiting professor from the University of Tehran. In a major paper he authored titled “The Conceptual Characteristics of Post-Zionism,”, Alikhani suggests that criticisms of the modern Israeli state are immaterial given the “historical violence of Zionism. Israel is a country that from its inception was based on force, coercion and oppression of others.”

Until the publicity became too intense in 2016, Harvard President Drew Faust Gilpin stonewalled Jewish students requesting a meeting about her administration’s infrastructure of student clubs dedicated to demonizing Israel. Harvard law student and BDS leader Husam El-Coolaq verbally assaulted former Israeli Minister Tzipi Livni with the question: “How is it that you [ Israelis] are so smelly?”

In 2007, Gilpin, a descendant of New England theologian Jonathan Edwards, succeeded Lawrence Summers as Harvard’s President. Summers was forced out partly for lecturing the Harvard faculty in 2002 about the global upsurge of anti-Semitism. He stated that his gravest concern was that “at Harvard and . . . universities across the country” divestment campaigns were seeking Israel’s destruction.

Those running Harvard’s soaring ivory tower … should take action to protect Jewish … students from today’s bullying wrapped in academic ivy.

As Stephen H. Norwood’s book, The Third Reich in the Ivory Tower (2009) powerfully documents, Harvard’s ugly history of anti-Semitism dates back to 1922 when President A. Lawrence Lowell proposed a “Jewish quota” that was ultimately implemented by means of a euphemistic “geographic diversity” mechanism whose real purpose was to keep out brilliant, but unwanted Boston and New York Jews. In the 1930s, Lowell’s successor, President James B. Conant, talked up meritocracy, but in practice discriminated against Jews in both student admissions and faculty hiring.

In 1933, Harvard’s president refused to provide haven to refugee Jewish professors. On the other hand, in 1934, Harvard rolled out the red carpet for Ernst (Putzi) Hanfstaegl (Class of ‘09), Hitler’s press chief, who had bragged to an American diplomat that the Nazis would destroy “the vampire sucking German blood” by assigning a storm trooper to deal with each of Germany’s 600,000 Jews. The student paper, The Crimson, which years later published a Holocaust Denial ad, insisted that Hanfstaegl be granted an honorary degree. Before, during, and after the 1936 Berlin Olympics, Harvard students and administrators made a point of using German passenger liners to visit the Third Reich where students participated in study abroad programs at Nazified universities like Heidelberg and Goettingen. Not until after Kristallnacht did the Harvard community engage in noteworthy protests against Hitlerite outrages. Yet James B. Conant, president of Harvard, during his service in the 1950s as U.S. High Commissioner for Germany was in the words of Norwood, “ significantly involved in paroling vast numbers of Nazi war criminals, including those engaged in the most heinous atrocities.”

Harvard set a pattern, not only for Ivy League schools, but nationally for institutions of higher learning including Catholic schools and Women’s colleges.

Today, on some of America’s most prestigious campuses the admirable doctrine of “academic freedom” is being abused to indoctrinate students with “anti-Zionist,” anti-Semitic propaganda demonizing the Jewish state and encouraging campus activists to silence those who would speak up for Israel.

Those manning Harvard’s soaring ivory tower should be ashamed for both its past and present sins and take action to protect Jewish-dare we utter-Zionist-students from today’s bullying wrapped in academic ivy.


Rabbi Abraham Cooper is Associate Dean and Director of Global Social Action of the Simon Wiesenthal Center. Dr. Harold Brackman is a historian who is a consultant to the Simon Wiesenthal Center

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Nikki Haley Accepts Humanitarian Award in Beverly Hills

Former United States Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley accepted the Humanitarian of the Year Award from Friends of Magen David Adom – Western USA (FMDA-WUSA) on April 1 at the Beverly Wilshire Hotel.

After accepting her award, Haley sat down for an interview with FMDA-WUSA President Dina Leeds. They discussed Haley’s upbringing by Sikh immigrant parents, with Haley saying her parents urged her to carve a path for herself and never complain. Haley also spoke about her experience serving under President Donald Trump, Israel and women leaders.

“In every aspect in my career there’s never been a line to the women’s bathroom…but I never thought of any of that because I didn’t want to be defined by labels,” Haley said.

On Trump’s foreign policy, Haley praised his decision to withdraw from the Iranian nuclear agreement, saying the past year has shown that concerns that withdrawal from the agreement would have consequences were unfounded.

She also reiterated the current administration’s commitment to its continued support of Israel.

“When you look at the Middle East, Israel is the only bright spot we have,” she said.

Prior to serving in the U.N. from 2017-2018, Haley served as the governor of South Carolina and as a member of the South Carolina House of Representatives. She said her experience in politics has taught her that the truth commands respect. “Truth is power,” she said. “I stood by what I believed and I stood by the truth.”

Asked how she incorporates tikkun olam into her work, Haley discussed the increasing polarization in the country, saying she has traveled around the world and heard firsthand about unspeakable atrocities against women and children.

That’s evil,” she said. “Our political system—it’s just different opinions.”

Other speakers at the event included philanthropist Michael Milken; Consul General of Israel in Los Angeles Eitan Weiss; Pastor Jeff Osborne; and Lawrence Middleton of the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

Students from Yeshiva University of Los Angeles High School, Shalhevet High School, Valley Torah High School, Maimonides Academy and Beverly Hills High School also attended the event.

Following the event, attendee and attorney Sasha Farahi told the Journal Haley was a role model. “I wanted to come out and hear her speak because every time I hear her speak, I feel more empowered to overcome my fears, to stand up for the truth and to fight for what I believe in,” Farahi said.

She was not the only adoring fan in the crowd. During Haley’s remarks, people yelled out, “Nikki for president!” and “Nikki 2020!”

“No, that’s not going to happen,” Haley said. She did not rule out, however, that she would stop by the U.N. to support Israel.

“I told Danny Danon,” she said, referring to Israel’s representative in the U.N., “don’t be surprised if I show up one day and defend him.”

This article was updated on April 3.

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Eight California Groups Attend Annual Hakhel Conference

Hakhel, the Jewish Intentional Communities Incubator, concluded its annual conference at the Isabella Freedman Jewish Retreat in Center Falls Village, Connecticut, bringing together leaders of 80 of its global Jewish communities from 25 countries across six continents.

Eight community groups from California participated at the conference, including Career Up Now (Los Angeles), Or Gavoah (Encino), RuJuLa (Chatsworth), Urban Kibbutz SD (San Diego), Beth Jacob Irvine Community (Irvine), The Organic Yeshiva of Sacramento (Sacramento), Urban Kibbutz SF and Batlanim (from San Francisco).

The community leaders who attended the conference are focusing not only on creating inclusive and welcoming communal spaces for themselves and their peers but also on social projects that make the broader Jewish community stronger, according to the organization.

“I signed up for the Hazon’s Hakhel Fellowship because I am currently building the Career Up Now community in Los Angeles which is asking the question how do we build a multi-generational community at the intersection of Jewish wisdom and career advancement,” co-Founding Director of Career Up Now Bradley Caro Cook said. “I was struck by how many different types of communities there were. And through my conversations with other community leaders, I discovered we all had a common thread—a deep love and passion for Judaism and a desire to be connected with one another.”

Founded in 2014, Hakhel is the first and largest global incubator for Jewish intentional communities. According to its website, its mission is to “spark and support new expressions of Jewish life in the Diaspora by nurturing the growth of intentional communities with mentorship, seed funding and network building.”

“The world is transitioning from hierarchical and centralist structures to networks and shared economies and Hakhel is at the forefront of implementing this spirit of innovation in Jewish life,” Hakhel General Director Aharon Ariel Lavi said in a statement. “The conference provided the tools to help our leaders continue to grow their communities.”

Hakhel operates in partnership with Israel’s Ministry of Diaspora Affairs, which works to strengthen Jewish life in the Diaspora and connection to Israel.

Community leaders from the United States, United Kingdom, Canada, France, South Korea, Johannesburg, Argentina, Germany, Austria, Hungry, Ukraine, Russia, Lithuania, Australia, Kyrgyzstan, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Spain, Amsterdam, Italy, Switzerland, Uruguay, Brazil, Mexico, Peru, Panama, Chile and New Zealand attended the conference.

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Jewish, Christian and Muslim Panelists Discuss the Role of Religion in American Politics

“We are here to learn something about the distinctive insights and perhaps the helpful wisdom that Judaism, Christianity and Islam can bring to this crucial conversation of religion and politics based on the long history of each of these religious traditions.”

This is how Reinhard Krauss, executive director of the Academy for Judaic, Christian and Islamic Studies, introduced a panel discussion on March 27 held at the American Jewish University campus.

The event was part of the speaker series, “Let’s Talk About Religion,” which features interreligious conversations that highlight the similarities and differences between Judaism, Christianity and Islam.

Krauss served as the moderator on a panel titled “God in the Voting Booth? The Role of Religion in American Politics.” The event drew around 40 people and the panel featured Rabbi Adam Greenwald, director of AJU’s Miller Introduction to Judaism Program; Jonathan Chute, senior pastor at Rolling Hills United Methodist Church and Aziza Hasan, executive director of NewGround: A Muslim-Jewish Partnership for Change. 

 Hasan said religion and politics have always intermingled, noting how America’s first president, George Washington, addressed a synagogue about religious freedom and how former Rep. Keith Ellison (D-Minn.) was sworn in to the U.S. House on Thomas Jefferson’s Koran.

Greenwald said the sacred texts of the three monotheistic faiths do not prescribe policy positions. “So I believe one can be motivated by good religion and be a Democrat and one can be motivated by good religion and be a Republican,” he said. “The question is, are they both responding to the call of religion to be aware of the social ills?”

While religion has been used as a tool to oppress, Chute said the most sustainable religions are those that ask people to look inward. 

“I believe one can be motivated by good religion and be a Democrat and one can be motivated by good religion and be a Republican. The question is, are they both responding to the call of religion to be aware of the social ills?” — Rabbi Adam Greenwald

“I tend to feel that a healthy religious impulse is one that is more critical and actually more specifically self-critical and one of the differences between what I think of as a healthy religious expression and something that is more reflective of a cult is its capacity for self-criticism,” Chute said. 

Each speaker spoke about the importance of people of various political beliefs listening to one another. Hassan said she was struck by a recent article in USA Today that said an increasing amount of people feel like their way of life is being threatened by America becoming more diverse.

“If people are feeling like their values, their way of life is going to be threatened because minorities are taking over, we better start listening really quickly,” she said. 

She added she was heartened that following the 2018 shooting at the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh, people of diverse political beliefs came together for a vigil at the Federal Building in Westwood.“We all got to grieve that night,” she said.

Similarly, Greenwald said that the same groups that turned out to support each other after the Tree of Life shooting came out to express solidarity following the recent shootings at the mosques in New Zealand.

Greenwald connected ideas about religion and civic life to the Passover story, including how Egypt is a place of constriction. The journey to the Promised Land is a “tough one and the only way to make it is together,” he said.

Chute spoke about the Johnson Amendment, a provision in the U.S. tax code that prohibits nonprofit organizations from endorsing or opposing political candidates. 

“I’m comfortable working not to violate that,” he said.

While Greenwald said it is inappropriate for a rabbi to advise others on how to vote, he is comfortable sharing his opinions on the issues of the day. He added it is natural for elected officials to share how their religious beliefs inform their political positions, noting religion is how they bring their “full selves” to their work.

While the speakers said religion is a force for good in political and civil life, Krauss said religion was not always aligned with causes including the Civil Rights movement and figures such as Martin Luther King, Jr.

During the Q-and-A, an audience member asked about Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.), who has made anti-Israel statements on Twitter. Hasan, who was raised in Jordan by a Christian-American mother and a Muslim-Palestinian father, denounced the rise of “anti-Jewish sentiment.” She said the controversy surrounding Omar’s anti-Israel statements has furthered her education about the many forms of anti-Semitism.

“I can see tropes I was blind to before and it’s been a journey,” Hasan Said.

When an audience member said that clergy who use their pulpits to express political positions bothered him, Chute agreed. “I try to preach in a way that invites people to ask their own questions and to wrestle with things that I think are substantive and important,” Chute said, “but I really seek to avoid proscription and partisan pronouncement.”

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LA Playwright Wendy Graf Named 2019 Gold Medallion Winner

Los Angeles playwright Wendy Graf has been named the inaugural Gold Medallion winner by the Moss Hart & Kitty Carlisle Hart New Play Initiative for her play “Exit Wounds.”

Graf is a member of the Ensemble Studio Theatre/LA and Pacific Resident Theatre writing units, and of the Dramatists Guild of America. Her work was one of two Silver Medallion winners that beat out 1,241 plays from five countries and 43 states submitted to the Hart Initiative.

“I’m thrilled and honored. It’s been a long journey but I’m thrilled,” Graf told the Journal. “I learned so much about the pay along the way and I want to especially thank the actors who were so game and tremendous and helped me learn about the play. I hope it will go on to have another life because unfortunately, I don’t think the subject is outdated.” 

There were 23 semi-finalists resulting in two Silver Medallion winners, “Exit Wounds” and “Confederates” by Suzanne Bradbeer. Both plays were being produced at the Grove Theater Center in Burbank last fall.

“I was honored and thrilled to be on the same bill as [Bradbeer] because she is a mensch,” Graf said. “That’s the best way I can put it. We were very supportive of each other. We have a friendship that will last a lifetime.”

Graf’s other works include “Unemployed Elephants–A Love Story”; “Please Don’t Ask About Becket”; “All American Girl”; “Closely Related Keys”; “No Word in Guyanese for Me” and “Behind the Gates” — to name a few.

Her latest winning piece, “Exit Woundsexplores the effect a horrific tragedy can have on three generations of a family.

“There were times in my life where I couldn’t breathe but it paid off,” Graf said touching on her writing process. “You never know what you’re gonna have each step of the way but the reaction I got was so incredible and so intense. People were thinking about it for days and they would email me after they saw it and tell me they were still thinking about the play. If I can accomplish that, what better gift can you give to a playwright?”

Details on the next cycle of the Moss Hart and Kitty Carlisle Hart New Play Initiative will be announced later this spring.

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Rosner's Domain Podcast

Special Election Panel 3: Knesset Member Avraham Neguise and Gil Hoffman

On our third and final election panel, Knesset member Avraham Neguise, Gil Hoffman and Shmuel Rosner try to predict who will be in charge of forming Israel’s next government, what parties will be involved and more…

Avraham Neguise is an Israeli politician and activist for the Falash Mura community. Neguise is a member of the Likud party and is the Chairman of the Committee for Immigration, Absorption and Diaspora Affairs.

Gil Hoffman is the chief political correspondent and analyst for The Jerusalem Post.

Avraham Neguise and Gil Hoffman

Follow Shmuel Rosner on Twitter.

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ADL CEO Calls NYT Piece on Israel ‘Off Base and Offensive’

Anti-Defamation League (ADL) CEO Jonathan Greenblatt called a recent New York Times article about Israel and the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) “off base and offensive” in an April 2 tweet.

The tweet, in full, states, “.@NathanThrall’s piece is off base & offensive. It entirely blames Israel for a complex conflict b/w two parties. It ignores inconvenient truths & bars engagement. We need a constructive strategy to reach a two-state solution w/ security & dignity for all.”

The March 28 piece, written by Nathan Thrall and titled “How the Battle Over Israel and Anti-Semitism Is Fracturing American Politics,” details the rising support for the BDS movement inside the Democratic Party. The piece describes the BDS movement as believing that the Israel-Palestinian conflict is a Palestinian “struggle against apartheid” and “racism.” The article also states that part of the reason why Democrats are largely unwilling to argue against “changing longstanding policy toward Israel” is due to “megadonors.”

“Of the dozens of personal checks greater than $500,000 made out to the largest PAC for Democrats in 2018, the Senate Majority PAC, around three-fourths were written by Jewish donors,” the article states. “This provides fodder for anti-Semitic conspiracy theories, and for some, it is the elephant in the room.”

The piece quotes former White House deputy foreign policy adviser Ben Rhodes, who served in the Obama administration, as saying, “The Washington view of Israel-Palestine is still shaped by the donor class. The donor class is profoundly to the right of where the activists are, and frankly, where the majority of the Jewish community is.”

Greenblatt is not the only Jewish leader to criticize Thrall’s article.

“There’s another code word for BDS, that is rarely used and that is DOI, Destruction of Israel,” Simon Wiesenthal Center Dean and Founder Rabbi Marvin Hier told the Journal in a statement. “Despite its lack of use, the latter is the real objective of the leaders of the BDS movement.”

Hier added, “It was not a right-wing Israeli government official, but Abba Eban, the labor party foreign minister, who correctly said, an Israeli withdrawal to the June 1967 borders would be a withdrawal to the ‘Auschwitz lines.’ Israel, surrounded by fanatical regimes, including Iran, Hezbollah and Hamas, could not possibly survive with such indefensible borders.”

“Any fair person looking at a map would see why,” Hier continued. “They would see the 11,200 square miles that make up the current State of Israel, including the West Bank compared to the more than 5 million square miles that makeup Israel’s Arab neighbors. That’s why every Jew when you hear the word BDS understand that the real code is DOI.”

David Brog, executive director of the Maccabee Task Force, told the Washington Free Beacon, “To Thrall, Israel can do no right and the Palestinians can do no wrong. He condemns Israel’s ‘occupation’ while barely mentioning Israel’s repeated offers to exit the territory — and the serial Palestinian rejections of these offers. He criticizes Israel’s security measures without ever acknowledging the Palestinian terror that necessities them. He can’t even bring himself to admit that the Palestinian Arabs launched the 1948 War in an effort to destroy Israel — he writes that the war ‘erupted.’ The list goes on. I’d expect more balanced and thorough reporting from a high school newspaper.”

The Free Beacon also notes that Thrall is the director of the International Crisis Group’s Arab-Israeli Project; according to the International Crisis Group’s financial records, the organization received $4 million from Qatar’s Foreign Affairs Ministry.

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