Showing posts with label Palestine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Palestine. Show all posts

Monday, May 5, 2008

Rabbi Michael Lerner: For Those Who Wish To See Judaism Survive The Twenty-First Century...



Bob Parry's Consortium News dot com features a new essay by Rabbi Michael Lerner which should be read in full; extended excerpts follow:
When I was a child, Zionism was the national liberation struggle of the Jewish people.
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Unfortunately and tragically, we landed on the backs of Palestinians who were already there, and we hurt many of them in our landing.

So scarred were we by our own pain – having just witnessed the death of one out of every three Jews alive on the planet – that we were unable to notice or take seriously the pain that we were causing to the Palestinian people in the process.
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The list of atrocities is long on both sides, and only those who wish to "win" for their side continue to insist that it was they who were innocent and the others were "evil" in intent as well as in action.
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When I look back and watch the irrational and self-defeating behavior of both sides, and when I interview people on both sides of this struggle, one concept shouts out to me: PTSD-Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder.

The trauma on both sides has led people to be unable to think rationally about what is in their own best interests.

For the Palestinians that trauma led them to reject the proposal of a two-state solution that was offered them in 1947, and for them to encourage the surrounding Arab states to reject every offer made by Israel in subsequent decades even after those states were decisively defeated in the 1967 War.

In later decades, starting in the 1980s, it was the Jews who rejected reasonable offers for peace, and instead imagined that their military might would allow them to crush the Palestinian national movement. Illusion after illusion after illusion.
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The organized Jewish community in the United States, prodded on by the Israel Lobby [...] has been one of the major impediments to [...] any peace process that cares equally for both sides.

Barack Obama felt that pressure intensely enough to insert in his now-famous speech on race in Philadelphia a line about the real problem in the Middle East stemming not even in part from the clashes and tensions between Israel and its neighbors and the frustrations of hundreds of millions of Muslims watching as their Muslim brothers and sisters are subjected to systematic violations of their human rights, but only from Islamic fundamentalism.

Not to be outdone, Hillary Clinton warned that were it to attack Israel she as president would "obliterate" Iran.

These are only the latest examples of the incredible power of the Israel Lobby to make clear that loyalty to Israel's policies is necessary for any American politician to avoid political suicide in the U.S. – one can question U.S. policy (e.g. in regard to the current war we are fighting in Iraq, Afghanistan and possibly in Iran), but we dare not question Israeli policy!
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Those of us who wish to see Palestinians freed from subjugation, and Israel living in peace with its neighbors, have to begin to apply the wisdom of Martin Luther King, Jr. and Mahatma Gandhi to the situation in the Middle East.

Efforts to create dialogue, to learn how to express oneself in ways that are supportive and not hostile, to learn how to respond to violence with non-violence, must be coupled with a principled embrace of non-violence and teaching non-violence in our public schools, churches, synagogues, mosques, and religious schools.
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[T]he kind of Zionism that has emerged in Israel is fundamentally incompatible with the highest values of the Jewish tradition, and must be rejected even as we develop a compassionate attitude toward the Jewish people of Israel.

For those who wish to see Judaism survive the twenty-first century, a major first step is to separate the religion from its current identity with the policies of a national state that has lots of Jews living in it and that has succeeded in getting many Jews around the world identifying it as "The Jewish State."

I personally feel tremendous pride in many aspects of what the Jews in Israel have accomplished on the fronts of culture, science, and technology, even as I feel tremendous shame at what they have failed to accomplish in human relations, ethics, and environmental sensitivity.

But I carefully separate my sense of family – which for me is tied quite strongly to the State of Israel – from my understanding of what is required of us to serve God and to preserve Judaism in the contemporary period.

For that latter goal, we must be willing to apply the prophetic tradition and ask Israelis Isaiah's powerful question: "Who asked you to trample in My Courtyard" and to defile the holiness of God's Torah?

Judaism teaches us to "love the stranger," (the Other). There is no more frequently quoted injunction in Torah than variations on the following theme: "When you come into your land, do not oppress the stranger: remember that you were strangers in the land of Egypt."

A Jewish state that has been unwilling or unable to live by that command has no religious foundation and can generate no lasting support from those committed to God and Torah.

Such a state, failing that central commandment, is unlikely to provide safety and security for the Jewish people in any long-term way in the twenty-first century.
Read more from Rabbi Michael Lerner at Consortium News dot com.

Thursday, March 6, 2008

At Least Seven Dead As Gunman Attacks Jerusalem Seminary

A gunman infiltrated a seminary in Jerusalem late Thursday and opened fire in the library, killing at least seven people before he was fatally shot, police said.
This is from CBC; there are other reports of at least eight fatalities.
At least 10 others were wounded, rescue workers said. Officials originally said two gunmen were involved in the attack, but later said there was only one.

A seminary student said he shot and killed the attacker.

In Gaza City, thousands poured into the streets and fired rifles in the air in celebration after hearing news of the attack on the seminary. The militant group Hamas praised the attack but stopped short of claiming responsibility.

"We bless the [Jerusalem] operation. It will not be the last," Hamas said in a text message sent to reporters.
Oh, I'm sure it won't.

This -- an unprovoked attack on civilians that leaves five or ten people dead -- is the sort of thing that happens to Palestinians all the time, and we never see a big story like this, let alone a photo.

I deplore random violence, and I mourn the loss of innocent lives everywhere. But I can't help wondering how many thousand Palestinians the Israelis will "have to" kill in order to "even" the "score".

Friday, June 15, 2007

Larisa: The Wrath Of A Nation Harboring Terrorists Will Be Directed At Us

Larisa Alexandrovna has posted a good foreign policy roundup, which she summarizes as follows:
Failure in Pakistan, that is, to continue to push for a criminally insane military dictator while his own people are trying to overthrow him is going to follow us home - because where is Al Qaeda and its spin-offs operating from? And when Pakistan crumbles while we stand next to Musharraf, the wrath of a nation harboring terrorists will be directed at us, again.

Failure to reach out to Palestine forced the nation toward an extremist government and then punishing the Palestinian people for voting for their own best interests - minus an actual Western alternative - has created a very dangerous situation. Adding to that our role in pushing for the Israel Lebanon war and our attempts to silence any and all criticism of Israel while openly supporting a corrupt government in Israel robbing its own people blind, is likely NOT to make us any friends on either side of this long standing conflict.

Throw in the proxy war against Lebanon using terrorist groups, arms sales to Gulf nations, funding Sunni extremists against the Shia in order to wage an illegal covert war against Iran, and we have quite literally made sure to destabilize the entire region. I will not be surprised if all of these various and angry factions get together and take down once and for all the House of Saud, and with it, our own economy. And finally to make matters worse, we are creating a hostile relationship between Russia, whom at this moment seems to have far more international support than we do. Imagine a monster like Putin seen as a hero on the world stage. We have quite literally created a Russia-China-Iran triangle of massive military and economic might and at the same time managed to create chaos in Lebanon, Iraq, Afghanistan, Israel, Palestine, and even the Sudan through yet another proxy war.
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But this is what happens when our national policy is based on corporate profits and interests and not on actual national advancement, achievement, progress, etc.
One thing I've noticed about Larisa: She doesn't usually mince words.

Thursday, May 10, 2007

Monday, March 19, 2007

Scattered Notes From Around The Internets

I don't have time to do much blogging today, so I thought I might post a few leads which you can explore, if you find them interesting...

Australian Gary Hicks talks about his experiences in captivity: Australian describes torture in U.S. custody
"It put me in such fear that I just knew I would 'cooperate' in any way with the US."

The US may talk to "individuals" in the new Palestinian unity government; Israel rejects the lot of them: U.S. and Israel split over new unity government. Among the stumbling blocks: by insisting on the Palestinians' "legitimate right" to resist occupation "by all means", the new Palestinian government has allegedly "failed to step up to international standards".

Carlotta Gall reports on Afghanistan's silent plague of AIDS in an article with a heart-breaking introduction.

A suspect in the failed 7/21/05 London "bombings" testifies that he was not trying to hurt anyone, just trying to make some noise: July 21 attacks planned year before, court hears

Secretary of Rogue State Condoleeza Rice says the "sacrifice" in Iraq was "worth" it even though mistakes were made early in the war: Rice: Iraq War 'Worth the Sacrifice'. The Washington Post leads with coverage of her remarks but dwarfs them with real news from the real Iraq. More heart-breaking stuff, as expected.

In Pakistan, unrest continues to spread 10 days after General President Pervez Musharraf sacked the country's top judge. (In the photo top right, a lawyer in a suit returns a tear gas canister fired into a peaceful gathering by Pakistani police.) As usual, how you see it depends on where you stand: Protests mount against Musharraf attempt to sack Pakistan’s chief justice and Is this Pakistan’s Democratic Revolution? Why does this matter halfway around the world? In Pakistan there are nuclear weapons, a ruthless "intelligence" agency, extensive terrorist connections (even within the government), intense animosity toward India as well as the USA and the GWOT, and now -- suddenly -- an unstable government. As the man says: "Add 'em up. Account for luck. You never know."

Finally, Edgar Steele cracks me up with his "nickel rant", Obama? Yomama!, but Brain Worms might be even better.

I'll be in a meeting all afternoon, hopefully back online sometime this evening. In the meantime, this is as Open a Thread as you'll ever see here without a cartoon.

Saturday, March 17, 2007

Israel Refuses To Deal With Palestinian Unity Government Again

This just in from CBC News: Israel again rejects Palestinian unity government
As Palestinian politicians convened on Saturday to endorse a new unity cabinet, Israel reiterated that it would not deal with the coalition formed by Fatah and Hamas.

Israel's vice-premier, Shimon Peres, said the international community should stand firm in isolating the Palestinian government.
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Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh of Hamas presented his government's platform at a parliamentary session held via video link set up in Gaza City and Ramallah. Palestinian leaders cannot meet in one place because of Israeli travel bans.
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After the speeches, the unity government won a confidence vote in parliament.

After the 83-3 vote was announced, politicians jumped up for a standing ovation. In all, the Palestinian parliament has 132 members, but 41 are in Israeli detention.
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[see also]

Big surprise! US cool on Palestinian government

Lost in the spin: Freed Hamas leader shuns terror tactics