Author Topic: " Big Tent" strategy/ consensus throws Israeli Settlers under the bus  (Read 466 times)

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Offline eb22

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I highly recommend that you read this article.      This is arguably the worst collective action of the mainstream Jewish "  leaders "   since I became a member of JTF close to 38 months ago:


http://www.thejewishweek.com/news/new_york/consensus_seen_taking_shape_boycotts
Consensus Seen Taking Shape On Boycotts

In wake of Brandeis Hillel action, a new formulation on who’s in the big tent.

Tuesday, March 15, 2011
Stewart Ain
Staff Writer
As the Jewish community struggles to combat efforts to delegitimize Israel and still retain a “big-tent” strategy, a mainstream consensus appears to have taken shape in recent weeks that boils down to this: one can support a targeted boycott of Israeli settlements and even a cultural ban against the West Bank settlement of Ariel — as long as one also supports Israel as a democratic Jewish state.

Helping to crystallize the issue was the Oakland, Calif.-based organization Jewish Voice for Peace, which last week was rebuffed by the Hillel chapter at Brandeis University in Waltham, Mass. Hillel’s board voted to reject the group’s application to come under its umbrella of Jewish organizations because JVP’s support of a boycott of Israeli settlement goods runs counter to a position adopted by it and its parent, Hillel: The Foundation for Jewish Campus Life.

Although the boycott issue was sufficient to place JVP beyond the pale for Hillel, that alone would not have been sufficient for most other Jewish groups, according to Martin Raffel, who is overseeing a multimillion-dollar Jewish communal effort (dubbed the Israel Action Network) to counter Israel delegitimization efforts.

Rather it was a combination of positions and actions that “pushes JVP over the line,” he said.



Among them, Raffel said, is JVP’s “unwillingness to recognize Israel as a Jewish state, its demonstrated support for the BDS [Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions] movement — history has shown it goes beyond boycott of settlements — and the tactics JVP employs of disrupting the speeches of Israeli officials.”

He was referring to the actions of five young JVP Jewish supporters who interrupted Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu last October while he was addressing the General Assembly of the Jewish Federations of North America in New Orleans. They yelled such things as, “The settlements delegitimize Israel,” before they were hustled out of the room.

“Those are positions that are outside the mainstream Jewish positions with respect to Israel,” Raffel said. “Israel is damaged as a consequence of their actions. … I distinguish them from members of our community who are struggling with reconciling Israel’s dual nature as both a Jewish and a democratic state.”

Many younger Jews “growing up in an open, pluralistic America may have a hard time with that concept,” he said. “Although 98 percent of this country is Christian, we would not define it that way. We are all citizens and no one ethnic or religious group has a different status in America. Israel is unique; it has a dual identity. It is a nation-state of the Jewish people and a state that serves all its citizens in a non-discriminatory fashion. We have an obligation to provide education and experiential opportunities to help young people work through the process of becoming comfortable with Israel as a democratic and Jewish state. Birthright is an example of how to do that,” Raffel said, referring to the program that provides free trips to Israel to young Jews.

And if there is any one issue that “removes one from the Jewish communal tent,” Raffel said, it is the refusal to recognize Israel as a Jewish democratic state.

Thus, he said, one can disagree with such Jewish artists as Theodore Bikel and Daniel Barenboim for their boycott of Ariel’s newly opened theater but “not recognizing Israel as a Jewish democratic state is a completely different story.”

Raffel’s thinking on the issue of “settlements-only” boycotts seems to have evolved since the Israel Action Network was formed in December. At the time, he told The Jewish Week, “I don’t know that a consensus has crystallized on this subject.

“If a person believes that Israel ought to do more to achieve peace based on a two-state formula, the question is, will boycotting a settlement advance the day that there will be peace? I’d argue that no, it will only harden positions and be counterproductive,” he said in December, “but being misguided in one’s policies doesn’t mean one necessarily has become part of the ranks of the delegitimizers.”

This week Raffel cited Meretz USA as a group that, though it might fit his earlier description of “misguided,” is safely in the tent, so to speak. The group supports the targeted boycott of Israeli settlement products and the cultural boycott of Ariel, but, Raffel said, “it is fully supportive of the Jewish state and it repudiates the BDS movement.”

Ron Skolnik, executive director of Meretz USA, agreed, saying that despite “a certain similarity of tools, we are clearly in favor of a two-state solution in which Israel remains democratic and the national home of the Jewish people. JVP doesn’t really specify what end result it prefers.”

Yet he said his organization decided to issue a statement after the action of Brandeis Hillel because it rejects the “idea that a boycott of the settlements in the occupied territories is the same as the delegitimization of the State of Israel. … We believe that a targeted boycott of the settlements (as opposed to a global boycott of sovereign Israel) is a legitimate tool to be used by Zionist organizations and individuals … ”

Cecilie Surasky, JVP’s deputy director, said her group’s emphasis is on “full human rights for both people” and that it would be comfortable with whatever solution Israelis and Palestinians agree upon — be it a two-state solution or a binational state.

“Experts are divided between those who think we have only a few days or minutes left before the two-state solution is dead, and those who think the time is past, largely thanks to entrenched Israeli settlements which have made a Palestinian state impossible,” she said.

Regarding Meretz USA, Raffel, who is also senior vice president of the Jewish Council for Public Affairs, said:

“We just say they are still within our tent and we should discuss with them whether their activities will advance the cause of peace.”

The JCPA and the Jewish Federations of North America late last year created the Israel Action Network to combat efforts to delegitimize Israel, specifically the BDS movement.

William Daroff, JFNA’s vice president for public policy and director of its Washington office, said it “has not been easy struggling with the issue of who should be inside the metaphorical tent of the pro-Israel community. We must have a big tent of organizations and beliefs. Not everyone will agree on many of the specifics. … But we embrace those organizations and individuals who hold core beliefs in Israel as a democratic Jewish state that is the eternal home of the Jewish people.”

Thus, he said, the JVP by “promoting the boycott of goods both inside and outside Israel’s Green Line [pre-1967 border] assaults the legitimacy of the State of Israel. And by refusing to support the concept of Israel as both a Jewish and democratic state, it clearly falls outside the boundaries of being a Zionist organization that is inside the tent of the pro-Israel community. … As we combat the assault on Israel’s legitimacy, our standards should not be so watered down as to be meaningless.”

Surasky insisted that the “single greatest threat to Israel today is the occupation and Israel’s continued settlement expansion. It’s the reason Israel is becoming an international pariah, and it’s what is fueling the deterioration of democracy within Israel,” she said.

There are some Jewish institutions, Surasky said, that “are in denial about the massive and growing opposition to the occupation. … There are young, engaged, smart Jews who feel very deeply about being part of the Jewish community. They were raised with Jewish values of justice and healing and are simply applying them to what is happening in Israel and are saying it isn’t fair. The level of engagement is exactly what we want from this generation of Jews, and they are sending them away.”

In explaining its action against the Brandeis chapter of Jewish Voice for Peace, Andrea Wexler, president of Brandeis Hillel, wrote that JVP’s support of a boycott of Israeli settlement goods contravened a position adopted by both her group and her parent organization. And she said she was mindful that the JVP national organization supports the entire BDS movement.

In December, Hillel: The Foundation for Jewish Campus Life adopted guidelines that clearly state Hillel “will not partner with, house, or host organizations, groups or speakers that … deny the right of Israel to exist as a Jewish and democratic state with secure and recognized borders; delegitimize, demonize, or apply a double standard to Israel; support boycott of, divestment from, or sanctions against the State of Israel; exhibit a pattern of disruptive behavior towards campus events or guest speakers.”

In addition to JVP’s support of a boycott of Israeli goods, Wexler said the campus chapter brought in controversial speakers. Among them was Noam Chomsky, the author and political activist who, she said, told students that “Israel is acting like an apartheid state in its handling of the Palestinian people.”

“We don’t want to support anything that supports divestment or a degradation of the State of Israel,” she said, adding that Hillel’s decision received mixed support on campus.

Lev Hirschhorn, 21, a Brandeis senior and spokesman for its JVP chapter, said the group was established on the Brandeis campus last fall and was officially recognized by the Student Union in February. It was then that it applied for affiliation with Hillel, despite knowing of the group’s new guidelines.

“The admission statement of Brandeis Hillel affirms the necessity of a pluralistic Jewish life on campus with partisanship to none,” he said. “Because Brandeis is a very peaceful campus where there are good relations between the different Israel-related groups, we figured that Brandeis Hillel would live up to its mission statement and welcome us to the table.”

Surasky said the JVP, which was formed 14 years ago and first hired staff seven years ago, has five campus chapters and another six in formation. The Brandeis chapter was the first to seek Hillel affiliation, she said.

Jonathan Sarna, a professor of American Jewish history at Brandeis, said one of the last times the issue of who is in and who is out in the American Jewish community was debated came after the Yom Kippur War in 1973 when an organization called Breira [alternative] was formed. It advocated making territorial concessions to the Palestinians and said the national aspirations of the Palestinian people should be recognized in order to achieve lasting peace.

“We look back and are surprised that a position that is today [widely accepted] was so controversial in its day,” he said. “Will we look back in 50 years and say the same thing about JVP? I can’t tell you.”

He stressed that Hillel’s decision “does not deny JVP the right to speak out and have meetings on campus. Hillel just said it is not within the tent of those within Hillel. I’m sure there are other organizations like Jews for Jesus that would not fit under the Hillel tent.”

“I can understand that JVP is unhappy about it, but I have to say my own view is that once you start the business of boycotting everybody you disagree with, there is pretty well no end to that,” he added. “I think that Hillel as I know it at Brandeis includes a wide range of opinions, and I can well understand that Hillel wants to limit certain kinds of groups that advance different positions. History will decide whether these people were beyond the pale in advancing something we see as dangerous or whether they weren’t.”

"Israel's leaders seem to be more afraid of Obama than they are of G-d. Now we're getting to the real root of the problem. Secular politics won't save Israel. Denying the divine nature of the Jewish State has brought Israel neither stability nor peace. When that changes Israel will finally be blessed with both in abundance"-----------NormanF   ( Posted on Israel Matzav's Blog )

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Offline eb22

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Re: " Big Tent" strategy/ consensus throws Israeli Settlers under the bus
« Reply #1 on: March 21, 2011, 12:36:10 PM »
The following is a related article.      Good job by ZOA and CAMERA for opposing the position of this hideous mainstream American Jewish ' leadership' :


http://www.jewishjournal.com/nation/article/toward_defending_israel_mainstream_us_jewish_groups_critique_it_20110111/

January 11, 2011

Toward defending Israel, mainstream U.S. Jewish groups critique it
By Ron Kampeas, JTA



Enmeshed in the battle against Israel’s delegitimization, mainstream American Jewish organizations are embracing a strategy of acknowledging what’s wrong about Israel as a way of getting across what’s right about the nation.

The strategy is hardly fresh—the New Israel Fund claims it has been doing this for years. But the recent outspokenness of advocates of the approach reflects concerns among U.S. Jewish establishment organizations that defending Israel in the public arena will not resonate without credibly addressing what some characterize as the deterioration of Israel’s civil society.

The American Jewish Committee and the Union for Reform Judaism have delivered broadsides in recent days against recent Israeli government initiatives targeting nongovernmental groups in Israel that monitor human rights. Last week, the Knesset approved in a preliminary reading a bill that would investigate the funding sources of nongovernmental groups that monitor and criticize the Israeli army.

“The Knesset’s action today contravenes the democratic principles that are Israel’s greatest strength,” AJC Executive Director David Harris said after Israel’s parliament voted Jan. 5 to investigate human rights groups. “Israel’s vibrant democracy not only can survive criticism, but it also thrives and is improved by it.”

Echoing demands from Israel’s left, the AJC and the Reform body instead called for across-the-board transparency in Israel.

In its statement the Reform movement suggested that such actions make it more difficult to defend Israel in other forums.

“The recent initiative undermines Israel’s place in the global community and is a source of concern to the Jewish community throughout the world and to Israel’s friends everywhere,” the statement said.

That was a theme picked up by the Anti-Defamation League, which in a statement posted on its website did not directly address the proposed Knesset law but expressed concerns about the “highly disturbing trend” of “Israeli intolerance.”

“Inflammatory statements have a negative impact on attitudes toward Israel around the world, even in friendly countries like the U.S.,” the ADL statement said. “More important, however, is the impact they have within Israel, undermining the democratic fiber, creating a mean-spiritedness in society and enlarging already significant communal rifts.”

The significance of such statements was in their bearers—mainstream American Jewish organizations, which are more accustomed to slamming Israel’s critics. In the past, these groups have targeted manifestations of bigotry by marginal Israeli groups, Israeli government discrimination against non-Orthodox religious streams and, in some cases, remarks by Israeli officials about the country’s Arab citizens.

What’s new is the concern by U.S. Jewish groups that discrimination and a diminishing of democratic values is becoming mainstream in Israel.

These American Jewish groups remain dedicated to defending Israel. Indeed, representatives of the same groups will attend conferences in Miami later this month aimed at combating boycotts and delegitimization of Israel.

But they are no longer holding back on criticizing Israel—criticism they view as constructive.

“There are things that Israel can and should do to make it a better country,” said William Daroff, the Washington director of Jewish Federations of North America.

“Diaspora Jewry has an obligation to stand up. People should not be hasbara agents,” he said, using the term for public relations.

A spokeswoman for the New Israel Fund, Naomi Paiss, said it’s about time.

“For a long time, there was probably the misconception that supporting Israel meant enabling bad behavior,” she said. “It’s becoming clear that supporting Israel means calling it to account when its most anti-democratic trends cannot be ignored.”

On Sunday in Washington, a slate of local representatives from national Jewish organizations—including pro-Israel stalwarts such as B’nai B’rith International and the Orthodox Union—joined Israel’s embassy in sponsoring a day’s discussion on “challenges and opportunities” for Arab citizens of Israel.

Noam Katz, a public diplomacy officer at the embassy, launched the proceedings with what participants said was a candid assessment of the discrimination still facing Israeli Arabs. That helped those in the audience who otherwise may have felt the reflex to protest criticism of Israel to listen and contribute, said Rabbi Sid Schwartz, who helped organize the conference.

Schwartz, also the founder of Panim: The Institute for Jewish Leadership and Values, said the event, which included Israeli-Arab activists, helped convey a sense that this was an area that American Jews could influence.

“If American Jews start to take note of this issue, we can have more impact on policy in Israel than we can have on the peace process,” he said, suggesting that peacemaking is subject to vicissitudes beyond the reach of American Jews.

Anne Clemons, a local community activist who is active with the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, among other groups, said she helped organize the event in part to push back against the delegitimization of Israel.

“I felt the community would benefit, the young generation and the press would benefit from learning what Israel was doing to help its Arab citizens,” she said.

Clemons said she believes the American Jewish community also has a responsibility to raise the issue with Israel’s leaders.

“The American Jewish community is supportive, but when we see there are issues that may need changing, we bring it up with the leaders within the Israeli government,” she said.

Not everyone is on board: The Zionist Organization of America issued a statement lauding the crackdown on human rights groups operating in Israel.

“These groups have also shown clearly by their actions that despite their protestations of seeking to serve Israel democracy, they actually seek to bypass Israeli democratic institutions and the Israeli public square by pressing for international pressure on Israel and its democratically elected government by corrupt, dictatorship-dominated bodies like the U.N. Human Rights Council,” ZOA said in its statement.

The Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting in America quoted Im Tirtzu, an Israeli group that opposes human rights groups, as saying the issue at hand was foreign funding for such groups, many of which are Israeli.

“The organizations that call themselves human rights groups actually belong to the extreme left and seek to force their radical values on others through foreign funding,” said the Im Tirtzu statement quoted by CAMERA in an e-mail exchange Tuesday with The Washington Post.

The targeted rights’ groups say the claim of foreign funding is a red herring, noting that the bill does not pretend to examine groups that receive foreign funding but that back government policies. In any case, the targeted groups say, they are transparent about their funding.


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"Israel's leaders seem to be more afraid of Obama than they are of G-d. Now we're getting to the real root of the problem. Secular politics won't save Israel. Denying the divine nature of the Jewish State has brought Israel neither stability nor peace. When that changes Israel will finally be blessed with both in abundance"-----------NormanF   ( Posted on Israel Matzav's Blog )

.....................................................................

http://jtf.org/

Offline Secularbeliever

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Re: " Big Tent" strategy/ consensus throws Israeli Settlers under the bus
« Reply #2 on: March 21, 2011, 02:39:50 PM »
What sc---ags.  Throw their brothers under the bus to save their own skins.  How about accepting a boycott that only affects North Tel Aviv and the wealthy parts of Haifa.
We all need to pray for Barack Obama, may the Lord provide him a safe move back to Chicago in January 2,013.