The Deir Yassin Remembered Blog

If Americans only knew…

Posted on February 28th, 2010 at 11:50 pm by

Do you know what it is like to see your father beaten to death?

Do you know what it is like seeing your mother abused at a checkpoint knowing that you can’t do anything to stop it?

Do you know what it is like seeing your child being born in the backseat of a car while a soldier points his gun at you?

Do you know what it is like when you hold your child as she takes her last breath?

Do you know what it is like when a human being is degraded out of his humanity?

Do you know what it is like watching your life being shattered and your dreams stolen?

Do you know what it is like being oppressed and to be deprived of your freedom?

I’m sure you don’t because if you did, you would have never called me a TERRORIST.

Report on Beth Israel vigil 02-20-10

Posted on February 28th, 2010 at 9:12 am by

Will IJAN Challenge Jewish Power?

Below is the analysis of Henry Herskovitz (with Michelle J. Kinnucan) of Jewish Witnesses for Peace and Friends to a recent op-ed by Rebecca Tumposky on the International Jewish Anti-Zionist Network (IJAN).

There are many problems with IJAN, which lead me to doubt the purposes of the group. I first question whether they are a Palestinian solidarity group or yet another group that seeks to shield and preserve Jewish power both in Palestine and in the U.S.

In this writer’s opinion, Jews – if they are acting in a group that represents Jews in the peace movement – should first and foremost challenge what Akiva Eldar and J. J. Goldberg, among others, call the “Jewish lobby” – the powerful people and institutions (and their rank-and-file supporters) who dominate the US discourse and policy regarding Jews and Israel. Often, these are the very people behind the charge of “self-hating Jews” (and for non-Jews, “anti-Semites”) about whom Rebecca Tumposky, national organizer with the International Jewish Anti-Zionist Network, complains. Yet, nowhere in her article does Ms. Tumposky show a disposition to directly do that.

It is perhaps worth mentioning that three originators of IJAN who live in southeast Michigan, including “Invincible,” declined the invitation to stand vigil with us at our Global Vigil Day in 2007 or at any other time. They refused to expose and challenge a local institutional bastion of open, unabashed Jewish support for Israel when they had the opportunity. And yes, I’m the first to admit that standing in front of a synagogue is not the only way to challenge Jewish power, but at the same time ask where does IJAN directly challenge this power using another tactic?

In Tumposky’s op-ed she says IJAN “seeks to challenge the violence and injustice of Israeli apartheid” but she and IJAN are US-based. So, where is her mention, let alone challenge, of the Jewish supremacism/power that allows Jews – less than two percent of the US population – to so effectively steer US policy and resources into underwriting Jewish apartheid in Palestine?

Right out of the box, she shows her hand – Tumposky’s and IJAN’s opposition to apartheid is rooted not in universalistic notions of justice and human rights but in Jewish chauvinism/exceptionalism. Thus, they appeal to Jews on the grounds of “our varied traditions of social justice.” And Tumposky wants to make sure – absolutely certain – that fighting anti-Semitism is prioritized in any work on freeing Palestine from the genocide brought on by the Jewish state. Thus, she writes, “We challenge anti-Jewish prejudice while standing in solidarity with organizations that support Palestinian liberation and historic justice …” In short, IJAN enters the Palestinian solidarity movement with an explicit agenda of highlighting, if not foregrounding, the concerns of Jews, the very people who enjoy Jewish privilege here and in Israel.

Her opposition to Zionism is carefully couched as a subset of opposing colonialism and imperialism, in general: “We share a commitment to participation in struggles against colonialism and imperialism. We therefore oppose Zionism … IJAN, in fact, opposes all imperialist aggression”. She refuses to take notice of the peculiar situation of Zionism – Jewish imperialism – in that Jews lacked a nation-state of their own and, thus, Zionists commandeered other countries, namely Britain and the US, to realize their goals.

Tumposky beats up one or two carefully placed straw men along the way: “We will say it again and again, despite accusations of being ‘self-hating Jews’: Zionism is not Judaism and the Jewish community.” Just who is it that equates Zionism with “Judaism and the Jewish community”? And why is this point so essential for “anti-Zionists” like the IJAN folks? What would Tumposky say to the 757 rabbis – “the largest number of rabbis whose signatures are attached to a public pronouncement in all Jewish history” – who in 1942 stated that Zionism is an “Affirmation of Judaism” and “Anti-Zionism, not Zionism, is a departure from the Jewish religion”?

She also plays a Left Zionist game when she attempts to distinguish the ‘types’ of Zionism, claiming that “the Zionism we oppose is not a longstanding cultural or religious expression”. She conveniently ignores the fact that when push came to shove, all the Zionists – Left, Right and Center – gave their blessings to destroying Palestine.

In the first chapter of his book Image and Reality of the Israel-Palestine Conflict, Norman Finkelstein challenged the myth that any of the Zionist tendencies (Labor, Religious, etc.) were ever benign. In short, the only thing about Zionism that really matters is that it “is a form of racism and racial discrimination,” as the UN General Assembly correctly identified in 1975.

Tumposky’s definition of Zionism is also problematic – “the 19th century ideology that led European Jews to work with imperialist powers to displace and ethnically cleanse the Palestinian people, which continues today.” It is folly to imply that Jews were passive objects of that “ideology”. Zionism was created, implemented, and popularized by Jews. Are readers supposed to believe that it was the imperialist powers that Jews only “worked with” that committed this crime? Isn’t it more accurate to say that Jews led these imperialist powers by the nose – as they still do today – to have non-Jews die for the Jewish state?

When she writes “Israel and its U.S. lobby helped pushed us toward the Iraq war and are exerting similar pressure to attack Iran”, readers need to be cognizant of what she omits – EVERY major constituent group of the organized Jewish community pressed for war on Iraq, and there’s a list of at least two dozen Jewish individuals – in powerful government or media positions – who also pressed strongly for war.

Tumposky touts “Jewish visions of collective liberation and traditions of social justice”, but doesn’t give us any proof that this tradition ever existed, other than in the minds of Jews who want their image spit-shined, if not outright falsified. More than 300 years ago, Benedictus de Spinoza, who is often upheld as a great Jewish intellectual, observed that Jews had in fact nothing to commend themselves as superior to others, had acted in such a way as to “incur the hatred of all“, and that this hatred was the glue that bound Jews together. Other than, perhaps, a few years during the Civil Rights struggle (and Benjamin Ginsberg casts doubt on even this), Jews collectively have acted in concert NOT for universal well-being, but for the benefit of Jews. IJAN does not seem to be an exception.

Distinguishing IJAN from AIPAC, J-Street and Tikkun, might make good reading, but doesn’t let them off the hook. Once again, I’m reminded of Paul Eisen’s words: “The crime against the Palestinian people is being committed by a Jewish state with Jewish soldiers using weapons displaying Jewish religious symbols, and with the full support and complicity of the overwhelming mass of organized Jews worldwide. But to name Jews as responsible for this crime seems impossible to do.” It seems obvious to me that IJAN and similar organizations exist, in no small part, to prevent the naming of Jews as responsible for the Jewish-led genocide against the Palestinian people.

Protest Obama … or Not

This writer has recently been in touch with a number of anti-war activists, including at this week’s Ann Arbor planning meeting for the US Social Forum to be held in Detroit this summer. Curiously, at this time, there does not seem to be much enthusiasm for protesting outside the Big House (aka Michigan Stadium) when War President Barack Obama comes to town. And it appears that some peace movement activists are reluctant to change their May Day plans to take advantage of anticipated national press coverage that will surely follow when Obama is in town. But time has a way of changing hearts, and we hope to convince these groups to help us “petition the Government for a redress of grievances on Saturday, May 1st.

Another Fine Presentation by local Palestinian

Jamal presented “Al-Nakba II – The Zionist Conquering of Palestine” last Sunday and his talk concentrated on the ethnic cleansing that occurred between February and March, 1948. He focused on exposing the myth of a “Land with people …” by clear photos and videos which detailed a thriving existence in Palestine well prior to the Catastrophe (al-Nakba) that occurred in 1947-1949. See http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FKYJ2WD79RE&NR=1

Eight Vigillers
Read the Goldstone Report
Henry Herskovitz
Jewish Witnesses for Peace and Friends
#

Report on Beth Israel vigil 02-13-10

Posted on February 22nd, 2010 at 8:20 am by

New Document Supporting JWPF Online

A much belated response to the infamous clergy letter of 2004, in which some benighted Ann Arbor religious leaders denounced our nonviolent vigils, went online this past Monday. We’re pleased to report that this independent effort is off to an auspicious start with the Rev. Dr. Stephen Sizer having graciously and courageously agreed to provide the first signature on “Religious Leaders Support Jewish Witnesses for Peace and Friends” (text at bottom of this report). The Rev. Dr. Sizer is the vicar of Christ Church in Virginia Water in Surrey, England but moreover he is a respected scholar who literally wrote the book on Christian Zionism. In fact, he wrote two of them: Christian Zionism: Road Map to Armageddon and Zion’s Christian Soldiers. We thank the Rev. Dr. Sizer for his adding his good name to this effort and look forward to seeing the signatures of other religious leaders soon. To learn more or to view or sign the document please go to: http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/religiousleaderssupportjwpf/ To download a printable version of the document in PDF format go to http://www.a2vigil.org/religious-leaders-support-JWPF.pdf

A Meeting with James Petras

Two members of Jewish Witnesses for Peace and Friends traveled to Binghamton, New York, and were greeted at the home of scholar and author James Petras. Drawn by his book The Power of Israel in the United States, and his recent article “Bended Knees: Zionist Power in American Politics”, we thought we’d have a supportive colleague in Prof. Petras, and went away from our 3-hour meeting not a bit disappointed. Never before interested in self-identifying as an American, and not supporting nationalism in general, James has come to the conclusion that his country has been hijacked by people loyal to a foreign country.Some citizens of that country – like Rahm Emanual – hold powerful positions in American government, and control virtually all decisions as they relate to US Middle East policy.

He agreed with the notion that Zionist Jews in the peace movement, acting as fifth columnists, are rightly classified as part of the “Zionist Power Configuration”, a term coined by Petras. He repeated the observation in his article that the ethnic (Jewish) label is attached to “positive” writings and intellectual activity by Jews, but that label is downplayed when the activity involves Jews as financial swindlers and espionage agents. We invited Jim to visit the memorial of the 1948 massacre of the villiage of Deir Yassin in Geneva, NY; he hope to make the short trip this summer. See our picture below and here if the photo doesn’t load.

Little Handala Loses Another Round

The vigilance of Zionist power cannot not be overstated: JWPF placed an order from a different postage stamp provider to purchase stamps with Handala’s image. Really, how can the image of a ten-year-old be that threatening to the Zionist Power Configuration? What message does this little fellow convey to the world that they fear so much? The ZPC works tirelessly to remove his image from the public’s mind for the crime he commits: He symbolizes the Palestinian Right of Return and is a reminder of Al-Nakba. And we can’t have that, can we?

Three years ago, after printing and delivering an initial run of several hundred stamps, Zazzle.com banned Handala from its stamps. This past week another US Postal Service-approved vendor declined to print our Handala stamps. Their response: “We are unable to process your Stamps.com order because it did not meet our content guidelines”

Nine Vigillers
Peace or a Jewish State?: Everyone’s choice
Henry Herskovitz
with editing assistance by Vigiller M
Jewish Witnesses for Peace and Friends
#

Religious Leaders Support Jewish Witnesses for Peace and Friends

February 15, 2010

… the question is not whether we will be extremists, but what kind of extremists we will be. Will we be extremists for hate or for love? Will we be extremists for the preservation of injustice or for the extension of justice? –- The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. “Letter from Birmingham Jail.” 1963.

Since September 2003, a small group of determined people of conscience and faith have held weekly nonviolent vigils outside Beth Israel Congregation in Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA, on the Jewish sabbath. Members of Jewish Witnesses for Peace and Friends stand vigil to protest and draw attention to the synagogue’s open and unabashed support for apartheid Israel. As Rabbi Robert Dobrusin said in the Ann Arbor News on January 21, 2007: “Beth Israel Congregation affirms without any
hesitation or equivocation the legitimacy of the existence of the State of Israel as a Jewish state …” As with any other supremacist state, a “Jewish state” can never fully include, nor respect the rights of, non-Jews living under its rule, let alone the millions of Palestinian refugees whom Israel prevents from returning home.

We, the undersigned religious leaders, affirm the tactic of protesting outside a place of worship as appropriate and consistent with our prophetic and religious traditions. In the Christian tradition, Jesus chased moneychangers from the Temple. The prophet Jeremiah stood “in the gate of the LORD’S house” and rebuked Israel. The prophet Amos told Beth Israel (literally, “the House of Israel”) in the Lord’s name: “I hate, I despise your festivals, and I take no delight in your solemn assemblies”; he commanded them to “Take away from me the noise of your songs.” Why? Because Israelites had turned “justice to wormwood” and brought “righteousness to the ground.” And because they hated those who rightly criticized them, abhorring “the one who speaks the truth.” As the late Rabbi Abraham Heschel wrote, the prophets knew that “Worship preceded or followed by evil acts becomes an absurdity. The holy place is doomed when people indulge in unholy deeds.”

Religious people cannot legitimately use their religiosity as a cloak to support evil or to shield themselves from deserved criticism. Publicly holding religious people and their leaders accountable to the high standards that faith and conscience demand is a praiseworthy undertaking. We pray for an end to the idolatry of political power and military might. We uphold Jewish Witnesses for Peace and Friends as an example for people in other communities. We pray and work for the peace and safety of Jewish Witnesses for Peace and Friends, the people of the Middle East, and all humanity — God’s children everywhere. Finally, we join in the call of the prophet Amos: “Let justice roll down like waters, and righteousness like an ever-flowing stream.”

Posted on February 15th, 2010 at 12:44 am by

Two of our scholarship recipients, Aya Bustami and Khulud Abu Askar, have finished the previous semester with honors. Aya is attending Bethlehem University and Khulud is attending The Islamic University in Gaza City. We are very proud of both these young women.

Steve Beikirch

Deir Yassin Remembered Scholarship

Report on Beth Israel vigil 02-06-10

Posted on February 13th, 2010 at 8:19 pm by

No Response From City Attorney’s Office

Our letter to Ann Arbor’s City Attorney’s Office of December 28 remains unanswered. Last week, in a one-time only agreement between that office and Jewish Witnesses for Peace and Friends, two signs were displayed on Washtenaw Avenue in addition to the ones held by vigillers. We had hoped to hammer out a more permanent understanding with the City over their apparent previous violation of our 1st Amendment rights, but as of close-of-business on Friday, the City had missed another of its self-imposed deadlines to respond.

Santa Claus is Coming to Tree-Town*

In less than three months, the Leader of the Free World, aka Barack Obama (or Barracuda Gobombthem, if you prefer) will deliver the spring 2010 commencement address at the University of Michigan Stadium, aka the Big House. Has his team of experts assessed that the Anti-War movement in Tree-Town, has been so spent, co-opted and Zionized, that it’s safe for a war-monger – I mean Nobel Peace Prize Recipient – to thumb his nose at the comatose peace movement?

Will the most popular “peace” groups in SE Michigan, i.e. Michigan Peaceworks and the Interfaith Council for Peace and Justice, mount effective protest campaigns against a man who breaks more promises than he’s made? Or will they join in with U/M College Republicans who “ …say they’re looking forward to welcoming the president to campus – though they may not agree with his message.”

JWPF notes that the address will be given on the Sabbath, so we will already be assembled to march on Michigan Stadium. We would hope (pardon the expression) that anyone who has ANY interest in peace and justice for Palestine would be outraged at the visit of this outright apologist for Israel (and war) and will join us in exercising our First Amendment Right “to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances”.

Any group planning on coming to Ann Arbor to protest this War President is invited to contact this writer, or to post comments on our DYR blog site.

Regrets

It was reported that none of the hyperlinks contained in last week’s Report actually worked. We apologize for any inconvenience, but can report that the errors have been corrected on the posted Report found on the Deir Yassin Remembered blog: https://blog.deiryassin.org/?p=141

Seven Vigillers
Two States: An Apartheid “solution” to an Apartheid problem
Henry Herskovitz
Jewish Witnesses for Peace and Friends
* Ann Arbor, Michigan
#

Report on Beth Israel vigil 01-30-10

Posted on February 7th, 2010 at 4:46 pm by

Many Grains of Truth in new WJN Articles

Remember Victor Lieberman’s short-lived communication to Jewish Witnesses for Peace and Friends? His offer to negotiate was retracted upon receipt of our counter-offer, as he opined: “As regards your counter-offer, I’m afraid it would elicit no interest. Most congregants regard the vigil as no more than a trivial nuisance with which they long ago came to terms.” This quote was contained in our “Report on Beth Israel vigil 01-02-10”. Vic also added in that email exchange: “…the congregation will simply continue to put up with what is by now a largely invisible presence”. As we reminded our readers in that report, “Victor is then hard pressed to explain, if JWPF is the trivial nuisance he claims, why the Jewish community would recognize our group in a front-page, 3,500-word article in its most recent edition of the Washtenaw Jewish News.”

This week, we report that Vic might well wish he’d never underestimated his own community to recognize, yet again, the importance of our witness every Saturday morning. Two members of the Ann Arbor Jewish community – including a former member of JWPF – continue to cast doubt upon Vic’s assessment that we are the invisible presence he wishes we were.

The Washtenaw Jewish News has published two articles in their February 2010 edition that contain an additional 4,533 words (but who’s counting?) and some additional compliments for our group: From “The few and the just”, we find Laurel Federbush describing her joining our group as a way to “acknowledge my Jewish heritage, and I thought this was a way to do it”. Nice. She also writes, “I had always thought the Middle East situation was complicated, but I learned from the group that the situation was simple.” Thanks.

And … “There was truly no shortage of colorful characters in our group: strong personalities, individuals who came into conflict time and time again. In fact, with such strong clashes of egos, it’s amazing that our group held together at all. But the point is, it did.” Yes it did, and continues to remind the general public that “Israel” continues its ongoing genocide of the Palestinian people with their tax dollars.

Not to be content wallowing around in second place, Stephen Pastner weighs in with compliments of his own, albeit some grudging ones: “Another broader group to which many [JWPF members] are tied is the International Solidarity Movement (ISM), which is prominent in many of the global ‘boycott Israel’ attempts in domains as diverse as film festivals, academia and grocery stores.”

”Then there’s Friends of Sabeel/Sabeel International, an international organization founded by Palestinian Protestant priest Naim Atek [sic].” (We are proud to remind readers that Rev. Ateek supported the Middle East Task Force of Ann Arbor’s protest of the Batsheva Dance Company last year.)

Dr. Pastner also alludes as to how our group reminds the public of “USS Liberty Remembered”, “Deir Yassin Remembered”, and promotes the excellent web site “Electronic Intifada”. JWPF does not keep bad company, according to Pastner, and we thank him for reminding us and our readers what outstanding work these groups accomplish. He appears to support JWPF by writing: “I’ll conclude by reiterating what many already understand: that criticism of specific Israeli policies is sometimes both warranted and legitimate.” We couldn’t agree more, and offer an additional thank-you!

Ten, Again

This time a friend of Vigiller F pushed us into double digits, and our spirits were buoyed by the return of Vigiller J. Weather conditions still present a challenge, though it’s not clear that it dampens (or freezes, as the case may be) our commitment to speak truth to Power.

Free Speech and our Street Signs – Update

We report that the City Attorney’s office has not responded to the letter they have received from JWPF, in spite of an anticipated response by Friday, January 29. We’re promised a reply this coming week.

Quotable

”In his ten months in office Obama has authorized more drone attacks and killed more Pakistanis, Afghans and others inside Pakistan than did George Bush in eight years.”

Graham Usher, “Pakistani Anvil”, Al-Ahram Weekly

End Jewish Supremacism in Palestine
Henry Herskovitz
Jewish Witnesses for Peace and Friends
#

DYR Scholarship in the UN’s NGO Action News

Posted on February 6th, 2010 at 8:32 pm by

The Deir Yassin Remembered Scholarship is featured in last week’s UN’s NGO Action News. Check it out here.

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