Archive for February, 2007

Hillary Clinton and Barak Obama on Israel

I’m delighted to introduce a new blogger at Semitism. Rasheeda will be posting on her own here, but, for now, I’m including a missive she sent on the Democratic presidential candidates:

Speaking at an AIPAC dinner on February 1, Hillary Clinton said she would not rule out attacking Iran:

The regime’s pro-terrorist, anti-American, anti-Israeli rhetoric only underscores the urgency of our response to the threat we face. US policy must be clear and unequivocal. We cannot, we should not, we must not permit Iran to build or acquire nuclear weapons. And in dealing with this threat, as I have said for a very long time, no option can be taken off the table.

But Iran is a threat not only because of the hateful rhetoric spewed by its president, not only because of its nuclear ambitions, but because it uses its influence and its revenues in the region to support terrorist elements that are attacking innocent Israelis, and now, we believe, attacking American soldiers.

What struck me even more is her response to a question by Anne Miller, director of New Hampshire Peace Action:

Anne Miller: I asked her about the comments that she had made at the AIPAC meeting earlier in the week and asked her if she really would leave all options on the table and how could she threaten, in effect, other countries’ children with nuclear genocide. She looked me right in the eye, and she said, “No options are off the table. We cannot abide by a nuclear-armed Iran. It would be an existential threat to the United States.”

What I found really interesting in that comment, in that use of the word “existential,” is that isn’t a word that’s used very much in US political discourse, but it is used in Israel’s political discourse.

So my question to Hillary: Are you campaigning for the presidency to serve US interests or Israeli interests?

That’s from Ellen. Richard Silverstein of Tikun Olam has been blogging at The Guardian, and he’s also weighing in on Hillary and Barak:

Besides what (Obama) is, one of the most compelling aspects of his candidacy is what he is not. He is not Hillary. She seems to represent, at least at this stage, centrism at its most stolid.

One of the most conventional elements of her campaign is her position on Israel. She marches in lockstep with AIPAC and the rest of the Israel lobby…

That’s why, at least at this point, Barack Obama’s views on Israel are such a breath of fresh air. Unlike Hillary, he hasn’t entirely swallowed the AIPAC line. While he defends Israel as strongly as any candidate, he also speaks to the suffering of the Palestinians. And normally, presidential candidates either can’t or won’t express sympathy for anyone but Israelis during a campaign.

For my part, if I support any Democrat, it will be Kucinich. It seems to me the Democrats, for the most part, are worse than the Republicans on Israel. Notice the total silence from both parties regarding Recommendation 17 of the Baker Commission Report on Iraq:

The United States will not be able to achieve its goals in the Middle East unless the United States deals directly with the Arab-Israeli conflict…

Concerning the Palestinian issue, elements of that negotiated peace should include:

  1. Adherence to UN Security Council Resolutions 242 and 338 and to the principle of land for peace, which are the only bases for achieving peace.
  2. Strong support for Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and the Palestinian Authority to take the lead in preparing the way for negotiations with Israel.
  3. A major effort to move from the current hostilities by consolidating the cease-fire reached between the Palestinians and the Israelis in November 2006.
  4. Support for a Palestinian national unity government.
  5. Sustainable negotiations leading to a final peace settlement along the lines of President Bush’s two-state solution, which would address the key final status issues of borders, settlements, Jerusalem, the right of return, and the end of conflict.

Brandeis (the Judge) vs. Brandeis (the University)

Andrew’s mom here again…
The flap continues about Carter’s talk at Brandeis University. According to The Jewish Week it is possible that major donors to the university have withdrawn their financial support because of the school’s decision to invite former President Jimmy Carter to speak. The university stands to lose a considerable amount of money because these people were among the wealthiest givers to Brandeis. Although the figure of five million dollars is quoted in the article, this amount has not been confirmed. In addition, the school’s senior vice president for communication, Lorna Miles, denies knowing anything about it and contends that she has “not heard anything from donors.” However, the article notes that a student member of the faculty-student committee that invited Carter claims Miles was the person who provided him with the information that the school had “already lost” the $5 million, and at a February 5th faculty meeting, the school’s chief fundraiser referred to a “brewing problem” with donors.
Rebecca Spence, writing in The Forward, reports that Brandeis administrators have now refused permission to student groups who want to bring Norman Finkelstein, noted left-wing professor who is critical of Israel, to the campus, while a committee formed to deal with the issue of visiting speakers on Middle East politics has “put a hold” on an appearance from Daniel Pipes, a right-wing pro-Israel hawk.
The university’s policy vis-a-vis criticism of Israel has been, at the least, highly ambivalent. In spite of considerable ire from mainstream Jewish organizations, Brandeis awarded an honorary doctorate to Tony Kushner, another outspoken critic of Israel. But on another occasion President Reinharz (who managed to be out of town when Carter appeared) removed an art exhibit that included some paintings by children from Palestinian refugee camps which were clearly unflattering to Israel.
It is a cliche to say that universities ought to serve as venues for the open exchange of ideas. The many justifications for defending free speech on this and other campuses don’t need enumerating here. But since this is Brandeis University, it could be useful to imagine how Justice Louis D. Brandeis himself might have regarded the “balagan” (Hebrew for mess, uproar, major muddle) that his university finds itself in. Judge Brandeis was a leader in the early Zionist movement in the United States. His Zionism was rooted in the liberalism of his times; he saw it as a movement that would serve to embrace all Jews, whether they chose to live in their as-yet-to-be-established Jewish “homeland” or not. When, in July 1918 the Zionist Organization of America met at its convention in Pittsburgh to formulate the seven “resolutions” that would frame its policy in pursuit of this homeland, Brandeis was a highly influential contributor to the final result. The first of these resolutions informs us that one of the tenets of the Jewish homeland would be “Political and civil equality irrespective of race, sex, or faith, for all the inhabitants of the land.” (Whoops!! Has anyone told the current ZOA leadership about this?) The second resolution affirms the establishment of ownership and control of the land and of all public utilities by “the whole people.” If one accepts the premises of the first resolution, then of course it follows that “the whole people” must include all those living in the Jewish homeland, “irrespective of race, sex or faith.” (Whoops again, ZOA people.) And so on. The only one of the resolutions which specifically allots primacy to the “Jewishness” of the state is the last one, which specifies that Hebrew shall be the language of public instruction.
Some further quotes from Brandeis might help us imagine more fully what he might have to say about the current flap at his eponymous university.

“The constitutional right of free speech has been declared to be the same in peace and war. In peace, too, men may differ widely as to what loyalty to our country demands, and an intolerant majority, swayed by passion or by fear, may be prone in the future, as it has been in the past, to stamp as disloyal opinions with which it disagrees.”

“If there be time to expose through discussion the falsehood and fallacies, to avert the evil by the process of education, the remedy to be applied is more speech, not enforced silence.”

“Fear of serious injury alone cannot justify oppression of free speech and assembly. Men feared witches and burnt women. It is the function of speech to free men from the bondage of irrational fears.”

“No danger flowing from speech can be deemed clear and present unless the incidence of the evil apprehended is so imminent that it may befall before there is an opportunity for full discussion. Only an emergency can justify repression.”

“In the frank expression of conflicting opinions lies the greatest promise of wisdom in governmental action.”

My guess is that Justice Brandeis would not be pleased with what is happening at Brandeis University right now. And those donors who in the past have given to the school because it bears his name, dishonor him now by witholding funds only because the university has chosen to allow the exercise of free speech he so eloquently defended in the quotes above. Furthermore, the donors seem to have forgotten that they are giving to an educational institution, not to an organization that exists for the purpose of promulgating a particular ideological position.

Of course, it’s easy to wax indignant about the issue of the donors at Brandeis, and the potential ramifications of the university’s caving in to that pressure. But how about the issue of the attempted boycotts of Israeli universities by European academics? The first of these was initiated in England, in 2002, and although that one and the others that have arisen periodically since then (in 2005, e.g.) have been variously debated and ultimately voted down, it is an issue that continues to crop up. Mona Baker, an Egyptian professor at the University of Manchester in England who publishes two journals, did succeed in “firing” two Israeli professors from her editorial board. Juan Cole, writing in The Chronicle of Higher Education provides many clear and well reasoned arguments as to why “the shunning of Israeli academic institutions” is wrong — one of which is that academics of ALL
political persuasions are thereby punished for what their government is doing. Although the donors’ witholding of funds at Brandeis is not precisely analogous to academics denying the opportunity for contact and communication to their counterparts in Israel, in both cases there is a constriction placed on encounter with opinions and positions different from one’s own. Isolating any academic institution involves obstructing face-to-face contacts, denying presentation at conferences and the dissemination of journal articles that allow one to argue that one’s position has merit. This does not mean that every ideologue need be provided with an audience for his/her vitriol. But both individual institutions and the collective academic community have an obligation to make space for dialogue, for the transmission and evaluation of information, ideas and research findings through open exchange. Academic institutions have an obligation to expose students to conflicting ideas, to help them live with ambiguity, to stimulate them to ask questions and seek answers in non-dogmatic ways. The donors at Brandeis think they can use their money to exercise control over the university’s mission. The academics who promote boycotts use what I’m sure they think is the moral high ground to exercise inappropriate control over the mission of academia in general. Neither should prevail.

New Blogs at Jewish Voice for Peace

It you’ve not found them already, there are a couple of great new Israel-Palestine blogs sponsored by Jewish Voice for Peace.

Muzzlewatch is something we’ve needed for a long time - a blog devoted specifically to tracking and combating efforts by the right to stifle free debate on Zionism and the occupation among American Jews.

It’s managed by the inimitable Cecilie Surasky, who manages to track everything going on in the Jewish community by the hour, post several times a day, and keep up a running battle with wingnuts in the comments section.

Come join the fray - we need you!

I should also mention that Cecilie has been kind enough to invite me to contribute some material to Muzzlewatch. There’s a satiric piece of mine up there called “Moses: the First Jewish Anti-Semite (or How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the AJC)” that Semitism readers might enjoy.

Plus, you can take a quiz to find out if you, yourself, are a liberal anti-Semite.

The other new JVP blog is The Third Way, Mitchell Plitnick’s knowledgeable and interesting analysis of Mideast politics.

It’s great to have new voices in the Israel-Palestine blogging arena. I hope readers will visit these sites, subscribe to the rss feeds, and comment there - it’s what keeps bloggers going, you know.

The Most Delightful Thing on the Web

The most delightful thing on the web right now is Natalie d’Arbeloff’s collection of cartoons, The God Interviews. Her alter ego, Augustine - already the heroine of several graphic novels - converses with God on topics ranging from love and death to weight loss.

I found out about this from Rachel, who has written a great review of the collection on her own site, Velveteen Rabbi.

Natalie’s cartoons are innocent, subtle, web-savvy and utterly charming. Did I say wise? They’re wise, too.

You can see a few of them by scrolling through her blog, but you should really get her book. It’s twenty-five dollars, on Lulu. Did I mention it would make a great gift?

No, really, it is marvelous stuff. Remember how much pleasure you got from reading Kliban, or early Doonesbury, or Calvin and Hobbes? Or - in my case, anyway - Sylvia? It’s like that.


About

You are currently browsing the semitism.net weblog archives for the month February, 2007.

Longer entries are truncated. Click the headline of an entry to read it in its entirety.