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Saturday, February 14, 2009

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/washingtondc/la-fg-usiran12-2009feb12,0,3478184.story
From the Los Angeles Times

U.S. now sees Iran as pursuing nuclear bomb

In a reversal since a 2007 report, U.S. officials expect the Islamic Republic to reach development milestones this year.
By Greg Miller

February 12, 2009

Reporting from Washington — Little more than a year after U.S. spy agencies concluded that Iran had halted work on a nuclear weapon, the Obama administration has made it clear that it believes there is no question that Tehran is seeking the bomb.

In his news conference this week, President Obama went so far as to describe Iran's "development of a nuclear weapon" before correcting himself to refer to its "pursuit" of weapons capability.

Obama's nominee to serve as CIA director, Leon E. Panetta, left little doubt about his view last week when he testified on Capitol Hill. "From all the information I've seen," Panetta said, "I think there is no question that they are seeking that capability."

The language reflects the extent to which senior U.S. officials now discount a National Intelligence Estimate issued in November 2007 that was instrumental in derailing U.S. and European efforts to pressure Iran to shut down its nuclear program.

As the administration moves toward talks with Iran, Obama appears to be sending a signal that the United States will not be drawn into a debate over Iran's intent.

"When you're talking about negotiations in Iran, it is dangerous to appear weak or naive," said Joseph Cirincione, a nuclear weapons expert and president of the Ploughshares Fund, an anti-proliferation organization based in Washington.

Cirincione said the unequivocal language also worked to Obama's political advantage. "It guards against criticism from the right that the administration is underestimating Iran," he said.

Iran has long maintained that it aims to generate electricity, not build bombs, with nuclear power. But Western intelligence officials and nuclear experts increasingly view those claims as implausible.

U.S. officials said that although no new evidence had surfaced to undercut the findings of the 2007 estimate, there was growing consensus that it provided a misleading picture and that the country was poised to reach crucial bomb-making milestones this year.

Obama's top intelligence official, Dennis C. Blair, the director of national intelligence, is expected to address mounting concerns over Iran's nuclear program in testimony before the Senate Intelligence Committee today.

When it was issued, the NIE stunned the international community. It declared that U.S. spy agencies judged "with high confidence that in fall 2003, Tehran halted its nuclear weapons program."

U.S. intelligence officials later said the conclusion was based on evidence that Iran had stopped secret efforts to design a nuclear warhead around the time of the U.S. invasion of Iraq.

Often overlooked in the NIE, officials said, was that Iran had not stopped its work on other crucial fronts, including missile design and uranium enrichment. Many experts contend that these are more difficult than building a bomb.

Iran's advances on enrichment have become a growing source of alarm. Since 2004, the country has gone from operating a few dozen centrifuges -- cylindrical machines used to enrich uranium -- to nearly 6,000, weapons experts agree.

By November, Iran had produced an estimated 1,400 pounds of low-enriched uranium, not nearly enough to fuel a nuclear energy reactor, but perilously close to the quantity needed to make a bomb.

A report issued last month by the Institute for Science and International Security concluded that "Iran is moving steadily toward a breakout capability and is expected to reach that milestone during the first half of 2009." That means it would have enough low-enriched uranium to be able to quickly convert it to weapons-grade material.

Tehran's progress has come despite CIA efforts to sabotage shipments of centrifuge components on their way into Iran and entice the country's nuclear scientists to leave.

Iran still faces considerable hurdles. The country touted its launch of a 60-pound satellite into orbit this month. Experts said Iran's rockets would need to be able to carry more than 2,000 pounds to deliver a first-generation nuclear bomb.

And there are indications that the U.S. and Iran are interested in holding serious diplomatic discussions for the first time in three decades. Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said this week that his nation was "ready to hold talks based on mutual respect," and Obama indicated that his administration would look for opportunities "in the coming months."

Hassan Qashqavi, spokesman for Iran's Foreign Ministry, on Wednesday warned the U.S. not to wait for Iranian presidential elections this year, because ultimate authority rests with supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

He also said Iran would be patient.

"Since a new administration came to power in the U.S., we do not want to burn the opportunity of President Obama and give him time to change the reality on the ground," Qashqavi said.

But experts said Iran was now close enough to nuclear weapons capability that it may be less susceptible to international pressure.

"They've made more progress in the last five years than in the previous 10," Cirincione said.

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Attitudes. The two following items are related. The first, from London, hatefully characterizes Jews as taking joy in the death of Arab children. The second documents the extremist Islamic glee in having their children pursue death for Allah.
Unbelievable. //Mark Finkelstein jcrc@dmjfed.org


New anti-semitic play in London

Commentary by blogger Elder of Ziyon.

[There is]a new ten-minute play called "Seven Jewish Children" where Jewish parents and grandparents teach their unseen charges to hate Arabs.

The climax of the play is where unfeeling Jewish parents literally cheer the deaths of Gaza children:

" Tell her about the family of dead girls, tell her their names why not, tell her the whole world knows, why shouldn’t she know? tell her there’s dead babies, did she see babies? Tell her she’s got nothing to be ashamed of. Tell her they did it to themselves. Tell her they want their children killed to make people sorry for them, tell her I’m not sorry for them, tell her not to be sorry for them, tell her we’re the ones to be sorry for, tell her they can’t talk suffering to us. Tell her we’re the iron fist now, tell her it’s the fog of war, tell her we won’t stop killing them till we’re safe, tell her I laughed when I saw the dead policeman, tell her I wouldn’t care if we wiped them out, the world would hate us is the only thing, tell her I don’t care if the world hates us, tell her we’re better haters, tell her we’re chosen people, tell her I look at one of their children covered in blood and what do I feel? Tell her all I feel is happy it’s not her.


Commentary by Elder of Ziyon: It is pointless to argue that Jews and Israelis don't feel anything like the words spoken here. It is a waste of time to explain that Jews are not happy to see dead Palestinian Arab civilians. And it is beyond the comprehension of the playwright to mention that the only population that unabashedly and joyously celebrates the deaths of innocents are the Arabs that the author of the play is so sympathetic to.

But it is important to point out that the playwright, who pretends to be a liberal, is displaying the worst kind of bigotry possible.

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Palestinian Women Urged To Sacrifice Their Children.


Al-Aqsa TV (Hamas/Gaza), Al-Quds TV (Lebanon) -Granddaughter and Wife of Giants of Terrorism, 'Izz Al-Din Al-Qassam and Abdallah 'Azzam, Urge Palestinian Women to Sacrifice Their Children

Israeli election returns, according to TV channels



All credit to Aussie Dave, http://www.israellycool.com

Monday, February 9, 2009

Remarkable collection of 300 original Holocaust-era letters from major camps and ghettos on display in Cedar Rapids this weekend only.
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The exhibit will be on display at Coe College on February 14 and Temple Judah (Cedar Rapids)on Sunday, February 15. 10:00 am - 3 pm at each venue.
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A one-of-a-kind, award-winning exhibit of hundreds of pieces of World War II era mail and documents related to the Nazi’s attempted extermination of Jews and others will be publicly displayed at Coe College on Feb. 14. The exhibit will be shown from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the Perrine Gallery of Stewart Memorial Library. It is free and open to the public. For information about the exhibit's display at Coe College, contact rpritcha@coe.edu.

For information about the exhibit's display at Temple Judah, contact Prof. Steve Feller at sfeller@coe.edu. Temple Judah is located at 3221 Lindsay Ln SE in Cedar Rapids, IA 52403.

The collection is owned by the Deerfield, Illinois-based Florence and Laurence Spungen Family Foundation, which acquired the extraordinary items to preserve and offer them for public use at Holocaust and genocide educational venues around the world.

“The insured value of the collection is $1 million, but the educational value to future generations is incalculable,” said Daniel Spungen, a member of the board of the Spungen Family Foundation.

“One of the most heartbreaking artifacts and historical evidence of Nazi desecration is a torn fragment of a hand-written Hebrew parchment from a Bible scroll (Tanakh). A German soldier used the holy scripture to wrap a parcel he mailed from Russia to Austria in 1942,” explained Spungen. “The sacred parchment was pillaged from a Russian synagogue. Ironically, the portion that was used as wrapping paper has passages from the first book of Samuel about the story of David and Goliath.”

George J. Kramer, chairman of the New York-based Philatelic Foundation, described the scroll fragment as “one of the most important items of Judaic postal history.”
This is only the third public exhibition since the acquisition of the historic items from a private collector was formally announced by the Spungen charitable foundation last September.

Steve Feller, a Coe professor of physics and co-author of the book, “Silent Witness: Civilian Camp Money of World War II,” will present an educational program about Holocaust-related money in conjunction with the exhibit of the collection.

The postal artifacts in the collection are evidence of the torments, ravages and terror of war and genocide in Europe from 1933 to 1945. They also show that many prisoners never lost hope, and the human spirit survived.

“We will be giving educational institutions and museums around the world the opportunity to use the exhibit materials for displays, lectures and research,” said Florence Spungen, Founder of the Foundation. “This is a permanent educational tool for all generations to document this important period of time that cannot be forgotten.”

The Holocaust exhibit was acquired intact from noted researcher, writer and collector, Ken Lawrence, of Bellefonte, Pa., a former vice president of the American Philatelic Society, who began assembling the material in 1978.

Including items contributed by Spungen, the foundation now will be the guardian of the more than 250 envelopes, post cards, letters, and specially-designated postage stamps used exclusively by concentration camp inmates, Jewish ghetto residents and prisoners of war. In addition, the collection includes counterfeit Bank of England paper money created by slave laborers during “Operation Bernhard,” the Nazis’ failed plot to undermine England’s economy and the subject of the recent motion picture, "The Counterfeiters."

Frequently exhibited by Lawrence, the display won awards and medals at stamp shows including an international exhibition in Washington, D.C. in 2006.

“The scroll page that was used for mailing a parcel is the most viscerally disturbing item. Some scholars have told me it is among the most important surviving evidence of Nazi desecration,” said Lawrence. “Chronic, flagrant desecration exemplified by violating that sacred scripture imbued the cultured German nation and historically honor-bound German army with an inhuman attitude toward Jews that made the Holocaust both possible, and given the opportunity, inevitable.”

Some of the ghetto and concentration camp letters have coded or hidden messages about the plight of the senders. Research about the postal materials has led to discovery of a previously unreported undercover address in Lisbon, Portugal, used by Jewish resistance fighters, and the location of two camps in Romania for slave laborers and political detainees.

In addition to the Bible scroll fragment used to wrapping a package, the collection includes:
• Rare examples of mail sent to prisoners and mail sent between inmates at different camps;
• A card sent by an inmate at Dachau soon after it opened in 1933 is the earliest known prisoner mail from any Nazi concentration camp;
• An October 3, 1943 letter to his parents in Rzeszów, Poland from Eduard Pys, a 21-year-old who arrived on the first transport at the Auschwitz concentration camp in May 1940;
• The only known surviving piece of mail sent by Rabbi Leo Baeck, the leader of German Jewry (Reichsvertretung der Deutschen Juden), while he was confined to the Theresienstadt ghetto;
• A postal checking account receipt imprinted with a crude anti-Semitic caricature denoting payment for a subscription to a Nazi propaganda newspaper, Der Stűrmer;
• Mail secretly carried by children through the sewers of Warsaw during the 1944 uprising;
• Mail clandestinely carried from Nazi-occupied Poland to the exhibit Polish Navy headquarters in London and to a Jewish resistance leader in Switzerland; and,
• A December 1945 postal card addressed to Dr. Eugen von Haagen, a Nazi war criminal on trial after the war at Nuremberg, that is the only recorded example of the censor mark of the International Military Tribunal.

Arrangements are being worked out for the entire collection to be housed at the new facilities of the Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center that will open in April in Skokie, Ill.

“We are genuinely excited about the prospect of being the central repository for this remarkable collection,” said Richard Hirschhaut, Executive Director of the museum.

The Florence and Laurence Spungen Family Foundation was established in 2006 to
support charitable and educational causes. Many of the historic artifacts now can be viewed online at the foundation’s Web site, www.SpungenFoundation.org.

Sunday, February 8, 2009

Lubin, Baltzer, and Libels

A Modern-Day Anti- Jewish Libel
 
Rabbi David Jay Kaufman's commentary helps inform readers as to the nature and context of some of the accusations being leveled against Israel. 
 
 
The following is Rabbi  Kaufman's commentary on one current attempt to demonize Jewish Israelis in the Israel Defense Forces and Israel, by extension, by painting a picture of Israelis as Nazis.   Rabbi Kaufman addresses  the current worldwide dissemination of a libelous accusation that an Israeli solder forced a Gazan mother to choose which of her children should be killed --  a projection of the "Sophie's Choice" Holocaust scenario upon Israel. 
 
Summary:
" The sickening nature of this story and of dozens of other equally false and demonizing lies that have been revealed as lies that have come from Gaza over the past weeks should put anyone who cares about the truth on red alert for more. ... It is inconceivable to me, short of reporting [Israeli Jewish soldiers]  drinking the blood of the children or using [blood] for making Matzah, [how anyone ] could have relayed a ...story ...portraying Jews in a more classically anti-Jewish light....  [This story] can only incite hatred and [was] likely created to do just that --David J. Kaufman 
 
This is an important commentary on a topic that should be of concern to all who abhore the sowing of hate and the reinforcement of millenia-old hateful stereotypes.  Unfortunately, the damage is likely irreparable.  There is a ready market of individuals to buy the story, however fallacious -- as there is a coterie of  'equivocationists' who will disavow the veracity of the story but will 'understand' how such stories can possibly be believed due to Israel's alleged evils.  In either case, such hateful or hypocritical reactions must be opposed.  Rabbi Kaufman's commentary is a contribution to that effort.
                                                     //Mark Finkelstein, JCRC Des Moines Jewish Federation.  jcrc@dmjfed.org
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Shalom,
 
As I tend to monitor the hatred being spewed against Israel, I came across I nice ditty from Anna Baltzer quoting Barbara Lubin in what amounts to a Blood Libel, but really is more a Palestinian re-creation of a famous story from the NAZI period. In the version from Baltzer that I saw, she herself compared the story with one from the Nazi period. The story is one in which a mother is forced to choose which of her children should be killed.
 
While I find it sickening, I find it more sickening and disturbing that what is almost assuredly demonizing propaganda was sent around the world wherein it will become fact regardless of its veracity. I have seen this multiple times already in this recent conflict. The UN itself was guilty of this in recent weeks, only finally "correcting" its accusation that Israel had deliberately struck a school and killed those sheltered in it. What I am finding is that the "Peace Community" is sending out all accusations of horrific actions by Israel as if they were true. I'm sure that you will have seen Anna Baltzer's statements from one source or another.
 
I found Baltzer's apology for sending out the blood libel (as if apologizing for linking Jews to Nazis because her friend did it first should somehow be acceptable) at http://www.google-way.com/Palestine-Witness.html. Of course, Baltzer didn't really apologize at all, but instead said something along the lines of "I might have believed it too and haven't written it off as false yet." This, in my mind puts her so far across the line of demonizing Israel that I have no problem calling her a Jewish Jew-hater. Why? Because she is chomping at the bit to declare it true or at least reasonable. Even if it actually happened, it wouldn't be reasonable. It would be one or two very sick soldiers. Yet she acts as if somehow these two would legitimately represent Israel. That thought process alone is enough to cross the line for me.
 
Why not just call her just a critic of Israel? Because she uses her status as a child of Holocaust survivors to directly connect her Judaism to her criticisms of Israel and specifically to connect the NAZIs to the Israelis. Her contention that she is cautious in publicly making connections between the Israelis and NAZIs is laughable and frankly false. Her defense of circulating the modern blood libel was obscene itself.
 
Baltzer wrote:
 
"The truth is that everyday people of any background in any place are capable of unthinkable crimes. Germans were not born Nazis. Palestinians were not born suicide bombers. When you give 18-year-old boys big guns and tanks and send them into an area full of people they fear (and consequently hate), the result is predictable. It doesn't matter where you come from. The story is not anti-Semitic; it's just one story of many, all testimonies to the dangerous power-dynamic created by unmonitored occupation and ethnocentric nationalism.. And it's a call for us to change the circumstances that can lead to the repetition of history.

Comparing Israel's actions to anything done by the Nazis is something I almost never do, because it is rarely accurate or useful. However, I am tired of pretending that similarities do not exist. Obviously there is no comparison between systematically exterminating 6 million Jews and dispossessing or imprisoning 10 million Palestinians (and killing tens of thousands more). Still, the ghettoizing, the massacres, the humiliation tactics, the torture, the religious and ethnic profiling… they all feel so horribly familiar. I might add that the official definition of genocide extends also to the destruction of a cultural or national identity, something of which Israel is surely guilty. "
 
I continue:
 
Not having the time to deal with the multitude of accusations in the paragraph above or the misrepresentations, I simply put forth her statement just to point out that she specifically notes that "The story is not anti-Semtiic.." Are you kidding? The story is a classic Jew-hatred filled libel. It is Israelis, Jews, as Nazis. It is the worst possible demonization of Israelis and could easily push someone who already is filled with hatred against Jews to act upon that hatred. To circulate it and to defend it is beyond explanation. Lubin and Baltzer's minds must be so full of hatred for Israel that they do not care what impact the spreading of demonization of Israel could have on Jews around the world.
 
Meanwhile, her friend and her friend's organization, MECA whose unconscionable distribution of this libel also belies explanation, now has posted a disclaimer on their website at http://pulsemedia.org/2009/01/24/letter-from-gaza-barbara-lubin/
 
The posting by Lubin now includes the following disclaimer:

"Barbara Lubin and all of us at the Middle East Children’s Alliance believe that we should have confirmed the story about the Gaza woman who was told by an Israeli soldier to choose which five of her ten children should die, and then witnessed their murder. We are doing everything we can now to verify the story, but have been unable to do so. We ask that you do not publish or post this story on the Internet. If you have already done so, please post this statement, as well.

Barbara Lubin went to Gaza to deliver four tons of medicine and other aid to the people there. When she arrived in the immediate aftermath of the Israeli assault the scene she encountered was chaotic and the people traumatized. She heard and retold many horrifying accounts, and saw for herself the devastation to homes, schools, businesses, land and lives.

In these catastrophic circumstances, it’s not difficult to see how Barbara would find this story credible. Unfortunately, we sent it out before taking the time to verify it. "

[I continue...]
 
I must say that I appreciate MECA's follow up. Perhaps, they figured that distributing material full of libelous Jew-hatred might belie their appearance as an organization that cares about all human beings and not just all human beings who are not Israelis. My bet is that someone called them on it.
 
My belief is that Barbara Lubin, like Anna Baltzer, believes that Israelis are hate filled murderers, or at least many are, and therefore was perfectly willing to believe this story. Already seeing Israelis as Nazis who speak Hebrew, it does not take much to make them Nazi murderers who speak Hebrew. I'm sorry, but the sickening nature of this story and of dozens of other equally false and demonizing lies that have been revealed as lies that have come from Gaza over the past weeks should put anyone who cares about the truth on red alert for more.
 
The only path to peace being paved by the work of Lubin and Baltzer in distributing this libel and other propaganda created by Hamas is one that leads through crematoria designed for those who survived the Holocaust. It is inconceivable to me how, short of reporting [Israeli Jews] drinking the blood of the children or using their blood for making Matzah, Lubin could have relayed a more damning story or one portraying Jews in a more classically anti-Jewish light. It frightens me that she did. It frightens me more that Anna Baltzer did. She should know better.
 
I certainly hope that our local peace communities are smart enough to treat such accusations with an understanding that stories such as this can only incite hatred and were likely created to do just that.
 
 
David Jay Kaufman
Rabbi,  Temple B'nai Jeshurun
Des Moines, IA
515-274-4679

Overview: Understanding Israel on the eve of its election

An interpretation of Israel's domestic situation on the eve of the Israeli elections to be held February 10, 2009 by a respected analyst.

Israel’s Election in International Perspective

by Barry Rubin, GLORIA, Feb. 8, 2009

Barry Rubib, GLORIA

Prof. Barry Rubin, GLORIA

Many people don’t understand what’s happening now in Israeli politics, so here’s a brief, and non-partisan, appreciation. Compared to the past, there’s far less difference between the three main parties. This is largely due to the objective situation, which is rather inflexible.

It is easy to characterize some as rabid right-wingers who throw away chances for peace and others as rabid left-wingers who are ready to make too many concessions. Neither argument is correct except for the fringes, which are not going to shape Israeli policy. I am tempted to add that abroad, the left thinks we’re evil, while the right thinks we’re stupid. All of this has little to do with reality.

The dominant theme in international media coverage is to say Israelis are moving toward the right. Yet this is both misleading and misinterpreted. On the first aspect, the real Israeli move has been toward the center, which is represented not only by Kadima and Likud but also by Labor. The great majority of Israelis are about to vote for parties close to centrist positions than at any time in history.

The left-wing mantra is peace, though how we can reach peace with Iran, Syria, Hamas, and Hizballah is rather hard to see. With the PA the situation is a more complex but, briefly, it doesn’t control Gaza, is still full of radical elements, and has weak leadership.

The PA is nowhere near being able to make peace on a realistic basis. Everyone in the PA and in Israel’s leadership knows this; few in the Western media and academia seems close to comprehending it. A lot of governments understand the situation privately but talk quite different in public.

The right-wing mantra is victory, though how Israel is going to replace the Iranian and Syrian governments, or destroy Hamas and Hizballah is equally hard to see. Israel has minimal to no international support for these goals and lacks great alternatives to what exists at present.

What have Israelis learned over the last decade that shapes their thinking?

We discovered that Palestinians and Syrians are unwilling and unable to make peace.

We saw that Fatah is still full of extremism and its leadership is too weak and too hardline itself to make a comprehensive peace agreement.

We viewed the rise of Hamas as a group dedicated to permanent war with Israel and its seizure of one-half of the Palestinian-ruled territories, using land from which Israel withdrew as a base for attacks.

We experienced the continuing hatred of the Arab world and Muslim world toward Israel, largely undiminished by Israeli concessions.

We observed Iran’s rise as a power, potentially nuclear armed, whose regime explicitly seeks Israel’s extinction.

We noted the world didn’t reward Israel for making concessions and taking risks. Indeed, the more Israel gave, the higher the degree of slander and hostility rose in many sectors.

As a result of this, there has arisen in Israel a national consensus around the following points:

–Israel wants peace and will make real concessions for true lasting, stable peace and a two-state solution

–Few think the Palestinian leadership—PA, Fatah—is willing or able to make such an agreement for decades. The same applies to Syria.

–As a result, any real changes on Jerusalem, the Golan Heights or West Bank settlements are far off.

–No deal can be made with Hamas. But Hamas isn’t going to disappear either. The same applies to Hizballah.

–The key point is to defend Israel and its citizens so they pursue their normal lives.

–Iran is a real danger and when it appears about to get nuclear weapons, a big decision will have to be made on attacking these facilities.

As a result of this national consensus—accepted by Labor, Likud, and Kadima, along with many others—the next government can be a national unity government. Whoever becomes prime minister would do well to bring in one or both of the other two main parties. What is Israel’s consensus policy for the next government?

–To stress that we want peace, are ready for a Palestinian state, aren’t responsible for the conflict and violence continuing.

–To maintain deterrence and defend ourselves.

–To preserve the best possible relations with the United States, Europe, and other countries as long as it does not involve risks to Israeli national interests and citizens.

–Security cooperation with the PA to prevent terrorist attacks on Israel in exchange for helping them economically and against Hamas to ensure that it doesn’t take over the West Bank. Without illusions regarding Fatah and the PA, this effort seems to be working.

–To decide when to strike back at Hamas—and potentially Hizballah—based on any attacks on us. Precise response depends on timing, opportunity, and their behavior.

–To work for the isolation of Iran, Hizballah and Hamas.

Where are the main differences among the leading parties? They are more atmospherics than real: offering small concessions; making small demands. If much of the election revolves around personalities that is because strategy and policy are not hugely different among them. Bibi isn’t going to embark on a settlement-building campaign; Tzipi isn’t going to give away east Jerusalem.

And that’s a good thing for whatever faults they have, this trio is basically making appropriate responses to the situation.

Barry Rubin is director of the Global Research in International Affairs (GLORIA) Center and editor of the Middle East Review of International Affairs (MERIA) Journal. His latest books are The Israel-Arab Reader (seventh edition), with Walter Laqueur (Viking-Penguin); the paperback edition of The Truth About Syria (Palgrave-Macmillan); A Chronological History of Terrorism, with Judy Colp Rubin, (Sharpe); and The Long War for Freedom: The Arab Struggle for Democracy in the Middle East (Wiley). To subscribe to Gloria Center publications for free, write profbarryrubin@yahoo.com.

Friday, February 6, 2009

Sign at peace protest didn't convey peace



Peace groups that tolerate calls to destroy Israel don't seek peace! 
 
This message is to the sponsors of the January 16 peace rally at Nollen Plaza:    Middle East Peace Education Project -- AFSC, Catholic Peace Ministry; DMCW; Veterans for Peace –DM; Methodistfederation for social action— DM chapter; DM Palestine group; Islamic Center of DM; Socialist Workers Party; Students Activist Against War—Drake University; International League for Peace and Freedom -- DM
 
Sponsors: Work for a permanent, two-state solution for a Jewish Israel and an Arab Palestine. Repudiate those groups -- including Hamas -- whose stated goal is to destroy Israel.  Theirs is not the road to peace.   Do not tolerate signs calling for Israel's destruction in your rallies.  Repudiate those signs now!  Publicly.
 
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Here's what the  peace groups  tell the media ......
 

But does the following match their message?
 

 
 

If not, the sponsors of the rally must repudiate the blatent rejection of peace that is part of their message.

 

http://www.desmoinesregister.com/article/20090206/OPINION04/902060341/1038/Opinion

 
February 6, 2009  Letter to the Editor, Des Moines Register

Sign at peace protest didn't convey peace 

The peace groups that regularly hold demonstrations in Nollen Plaza should be ashamed of tolerating in their Jan. 16 rally a sign that implicitly called for the destruction of Israel. The homemade sign read: "Gaza will never die. But Israel will."

The triumphalism expressed by that sign, carried apparently by a student from the West Bank, should repel all who desire a real, lasting and honorable peace to be reached by the current adversaries, based on mutual, and enforceable, acceptance.

One would hope peace groups would support the making of peace in which both parties may live in peace (a goal supported by the Jewish Federation), and not turn a blind eye in rallies to those whose ultimate goal is to expect the other party to be obliterated .

That's not peacemaking. For peace groups to align themselves with this ideology, siding politically with Hamas, is abhorrent.

Demonstrations are scrutinized by the public to discern underlying motivations. Whatever the reasons for their tolerating the sign's display, the sponsors have an opportunity to repudiate the anti-peace sentiment expressed on the sign.

To maintain their integrity, they should take that opportunity.

- Mark S. Finkelstein, community relations director, Jewish Federation of Greater Des Moines, Des Moines   

comments to jcrc@dmjfed.org

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