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Sephardi heritage center honors Spanish politician who said Israel … – Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Posted By on July 24, 2017

(JTA) A prominent Spanish organization that is dedicated to preserving the countrys Jewish heritage awarded a prize to a local politician who had accused Israel of massacring Palestinian children.

The Centro Sefarad-Israel, which was created with government funding in 2006 and based in Madrid, awarded its Crown of Esther prize on Thursday to Maite Pagazaurtundua, a Spanish lawmaker serving at the European Parliament, Europa Press reported. She received the award for her defense of justice and freedom, the report said.

In 2014, Pagazaurtunda co-signed a letter with several other members of theAlliance of Liberals and Democrats the parliamentary bloc to which Pagazaurtundas UnionofProgress and Democracybelongs condemning Israels actions against Hamas in Gaza. It was addressed to Martin Schulz, then the president of the European Parliament.

An immediate ceasefireisneededto put an end to the massacre and the suffering of the civilian population, many of them children, the letter read.

The letter co-signed by Pagazaurtunda, a Basque politician who is known in Spain for denouncing the terrorist activities of the ETA Basque nationalist militia, did not mention Hamas or Palestinian terrorism.

The Spanish Foreign Ministry and the Madrid municipality set up Centro Sefarad-Israel in the framework of efforts to restore sites connected with the Jewish Sephardi presence in Spain that ended in 1492 with the start of the Spanish Inquisition.

Spain and Portugal, which began implementing its own Inquisition in 1536, passed laws in 2013 granting citizenship to descendants of Sephardic Jews. At least 4,500 people have received Spanish nationality, and hundreds more received the Portuguese one. Leaders from both countries said the laws affording nationality to Sephardim were meant to atone for the persecution.

On Tuesday, the SAPO broadcaster in Portugal reported that the French-Israel media mogul Patrick Drahi,who founded the international Israel-based news channeli24news, received the Portuguese nationality.

Municipalities in Portugal and Spain in recent years began investing in preserving their Jewish heritage sites and relevant treasures.

The town of Covilha in Portugal last year placed in City Hall a 400-year-old Torah scroll that had been discovered during renovations, and may have been concealed by Jews practicing Judaism in secret during the inquisition.

On Tuesday, the municipality said it would keep the scroll there indefinitely following the defeat in court of a claim of ownership of the scroll by a local businessman who said he bought the scroll from one of the construction workers who discovered the object, the Lusa news agency reported.

Separately, dozens of Portuguese historians gathered Monday at the southern Portuguese city of Faro for a symposium marking 530 years since the completion of the first book ever printed in Portugal, a Hebrew Bible. A copy of the Bible, known in Portugal as the Pentateuco, was completed in Faro on July 30, 1487, by the Jewish publisher Samuel Gacon.

The book is on display at an Oxford University library. It is believed to have been captured in battle and brought to England following a skirmish between British and Portuguese troops in 1596.

But a researcher speaking at the seminar, Rui Loureiro of the Manuel Teixeira Gomes Superior Institute, a prestigious university based in the town of Portimo near Faro, disputed this theory, the sul Informacao website reported. Citing a paucity of records of the books transfer, Loureiro argued the book was taken by a Jewish person who emigrated because of the Inquisition.

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Sephardi heritage center honors Spanish politician who said Israel ... - Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Rising Anti-Semitism, Ultra-nationalism in Ukraine Raises Concerns – Newsmax

Posted By on July 24, 2017

Non-governmental organizations, civil libertarians, and business leaders warn that Ukraine appears to be sliding toward an increasingly nationalistic, anti-Semitic era characterized by hooliganism, threats, and i,n some cases, outright violence to Jews.

The precise degree of the cultures drift toward a nationalism bordering on fascism -- with a strong anti-Jewish drift -- is difficult to determine. The situation there has been clouded by Russias recent invasion and annexation of Crimea, an act that has drawn support for the Kiev government across Europe and the United States.

But the Simon Wiesenthal Center has complained about the growing anti-Semitism in Ukraine and filed several protests in recent months over the direction this nation of 42.5 million souls appears to be taking.

In May, anti-Semitic Facebook posts attributed to a retired Ukrainian general, Vasily Vovk, shook Ukrainian society and triggered alarm bells in democratic nations around the globe.

I am completely against Jews, Vovk stated. You are not Ukrainians and I will destroy you along with Rabinovich.

Rabinovitch is believed to be a reference to the respected Jewish Ukrainian businessman and politician, Vadim Rabinovich. The promise to destroy Jews generally recalled the dark era of Nazi persecution and the Holocaust.

The Simon Wiesenthal Center responded to that broadside with a letter to Ukraines ambassador to Israel, urging the Ukrainian government to send a clear message that in democratic Ukraine there will be no tolerance whatsoever for anti-Semites and bigots of any type.

The ADL joined calls for Vovk, who holds a senior reserve rank with Ukraine security forces, to be fired.

Concern over rising anti-Jewish bigotry in Ukraine escalated further with the news the Ukrainian capital of Kiev intended to name city streets after Ukrainian nationalists Stefan Bandera and Roman Shukhevych.

According to the Wiesenthal Center, Bandera was a nationalist who at one point cooperated with the Nazis. Shukhevych was a general for the WWII-era Ukrainian Insurgent Army, which has been linked to ethnic cleansing in Nazi-occupied Poland that resulted in at least 76,000 deaths.

The Weisenthal Center responded that We absolutely oppose and condemn any attempt to turn murderers in the service of the Nazis into Ukrainian heroes. Such a policy is not only an insult to the memory of their innocent victims, but an affront to human dignity and historical truth.

As with much of Europe, anti-Semitism has waxed and waned for centuries in Ukraine, where Jews have periodically suffered pogroms, assaults, and persecution.

Based on recent events, watchdogs fear Ukraine may be slipping into another phase of bitter intolerance. Among the incidents underlying those concerns:

Alan Dershowitz, the famed constitutional attorney, has strong ties to Ukraine and follows events there closely. He told Newsmax that anti-Jewish bigotry once again appears to be on the rise in Ukraine.

Ukraine was among the worst areas of anti-Semitism throughout modern history, Dershowitz tells Newsmax, particularly in the western Ukraine. It abated -- there was kind of a moratorium on anti-Semitism more or less from the end of the Holocaust, to fairly recent years.

Were seeing the return of classic anti-Semitism, coupled with hyper-nationalism. With hyper-nationalism also comes denial of complicity in the Holocaust. So were seeing a lot of Holocaust denial in these areas.

Dershowitz blames the current anti-Semitic trend on the rise of nationalism and populism.

I think its dangerous, he says of the growing Ukrainian anti-Semitism. I dont think its Holocaust-dangerous. I dont think its likely to lead to the kinds of acts of silence on a broad governmental scale, because the governments today would stop that.

2017 Newsmax. All rights reserved.

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Rising Anti-Semitism, Ultra-nationalism in Ukraine Raises Concerns - Newsmax

‘Menashe’ presents a rare authentic on-screen depiction of Hasidic Judaism – JNS.org

Posted By on July 24, 2017

By Jane Hanser/JNS.org

In Menashe, which debuts nationally July 28, director Joshua Weinstein has delicately crafted a work that emanates a rarely seen authenticity, tenderness and depth sadly lacking in other mainstream films about Hasidic Jews and their communities.

A Hasidic father named Menashe, who works long hours in a small grocery store in Brooklyn, struggling to make ends meet, has lost his young wife Lea to illness. Their sole child Rieven, an adolescent, has also become suddenly bereft of his beloved mother. Anchored against the resulting father-and-son relationship is Aizek, Menashes former brother-in-law and Rievens uncle, a successful but arrogant property owner who seeks custody of the boy to raise him in his own family.

This heart-wrenching triangulated scenario could play out anywhere. But this is Borough Park, home to numerous Hasidic groups, a world unknownand also misunderstood and misjudgedby many. Filmed on location, this engrossing exploration of love, grief and devotion pulses to the heartbeat of the Hasidic community and its many nuances. In Menashes particular community, children must be brought up in a home with a mother, meaning that following his wifes death, Menashe faces a choice between finding a wife or giving up his son, or violating the communitys tradition.

In the film, spoken almost entirely in Yiddish (with English subtitles), Weinstein sheds layer after layer, and reveals a profound humanity.

The real-life story of the unpretentious Menashe Lustig, who loosely portrays himself in the film, inspired this main character. Lustig is a grocer from New Square, N.Y. Except for Menashes Hispanic co-workers, all of the actors are Hasidim, most of whom have chosen to remain unnamed in the credits. Rieven is portrayed by a boy from London who was learning in an American yeshiva. The casting choices are instrumental to the films authenticity.

As Leas first yahrzeit (death anniversary) approaches, the conflict over custody heats up, framed by the swirling, towering flames of the nights Lag BOmer street bonfires, around which the Hasidim have gathered to celebrate, dance and sing.

Menashe is defiant that he can be responsible for his son, but the harder he tries to prove his worthiness, the more goes wrong, and the more rebuke and humiliation the principled Menashe is subjected to. We empathize.

Simple affection from Menashes adoring son provides him respite from all these pressures, while Rievens candor and innocence may be all the struggling Menashe needs to be able to reflect, and to become the father his son longs for.

Menashes humble walk-up apartment where Rieven, the Ruv (communal religious leader), Aizek and several other men have come to share in the yahrzeit meal, complete with bachelor-proof kugel, provides the setting for the dramatic climactic scene. Up close and personal, crisp editing masterfully evokes the tensionand high stakesof this meal. With humor and drama, the community has its proudest moment.

From the brilliant opening scene of a dispute over the sale of a head of lettuce in the grocery store where Menashe is employed, to the faint suns rays illuminating the early morning netilas yadayim (ritual hand-washing) or a wordless sunset shared by father and son in the park, the cameras deft touch pulls us into story after story. Weinstein calls these micro-moments.

I think the whole film is like that.How does a small moment tell a big story? the director tells JNS.org in a joint interview with the soft-spoken Lustig.

The many local characters emanate genuineness and a strong on-screen presence. Aware of the challenges Hasidim face today, Weinstein says he understands that when problems happen, its so easy to leaveI wanted to make a character that by definition never even thought about leaving.

Weinstein explains that the goal of Ruben Niborski, who plays Rieven, wasnt to be an actorHe was just a regular boy who was humble, polite and nice, and had no pretenses.

Lustig and Niborski didnt know each other when the filming began, so bridging that emotional distance within the films storyline comes across as real. Lustig exclaims, I told [Weinstein] that if you put the clothes of my son on [Niborski], he looks like my son!The child feels to me very close.

Soulful music by Zusha, a New York-based Hasidic folk and jazz band, vitalizes Menashe with modern wordless niggunim (melodies). The searing melody of a solo violin, scored by Aaron Martin and Dag Rosenqvist, adds color and commentary throughout the film and heightens the mesmerizing closing scene.

When I ask how Weinstein chose the ending, Lustig doesnt hesitate to chime in. My answer is simplethat thats a real story, he says, and the story will continue.

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'Menashe' presents a rare authentic on-screen depiction of Hasidic Judaism - JNS.org

Lesser-known gene mutations may boost breast cancer risk in Jewish women – Reuters

Posted By on July 24, 2017

(Reuters Health) - Jewish women of European descent may be at risk for additional genetic mutations that increase their risk of breast cancer, according to a new study.

Researchers found that around 4 percent of Ashkenazi Jewish women without three well-known mutations in their BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes have other mutations that may increase their risk for breast cancer.

The well-known mutations are called "founders" since they've been inherited from the women's ancestors in Europe. Lead author Mary-Claire King and colleagues write in JAMA Oncology that those mutations are responsible for about 10 percent of invasive breast cancers among Ashkenazi Jewish women.

According to the National Cancer Institute, between 1 in 400 and 1 in 800 people in the general U.S. population has one of these founders mutations - but that number increases to about 1 in 40 among Ashkenazi Jews.

In women who don't carry one of those mutations, the risk of having another mutation that increases their risk of breast cancer is unknown, King's team writes.

For the new study, the researchers analyzed blood samples collected between 1996 and 2000 from 1,007 Ashkenazi Jewish women who were diagnosed with invasive breast cancer and were being treated at one of 12 cancer centers near New York City.

Genetic testing showed 903 women did not have those founder mutations in their BRCA1 or BRCA2 genes.

But seven of these women - nearly 1 percent - had a different mutation in those genes and 31 women - nearly 3.5 percent - had mutations in other genes that might have increased their risk for breast cancer.

The researchers point out that about half of the women with these genetic mutations did not have a family history of breast cancer. So, making genetic counseling available only to women with a family history of breast cancer might miss about half of the women with mutations.

Ashkenazi Jewish women who have not been tested for genetic mutations tied to an increased risk of breast cancer should be offered testing for all mutations, they write.

"Given that complete sequencing of all breast cancer genes is now straightforward and inexpensive, its use as the primary testing tool offers a uniform approach for women of all ancestries and precludes the need to consider additional testing for Ashkenazi Jewish women with negative results for only BRCA1 and BRCA2 founder allies," they add.

The hope is that such testing would allows healthcare providers to prevent cancer or find it early, said Leigha Senter, a licensed genetics counselor at The Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center in Columbus.

"That is a clear pathway to action," said Senter, who wasn't involved in the new study.

She said a positive finding could lead to women getting more screenings, for example.

"If were going to look for the founding mutations, its no more difficult to look for these other mutations," said Senter.

She cautioned that some of these other mutations don't increase the risk of breast cancer to the same extent as the founder mutations, however.

Senter said women should be proactive and tell their doctors about any history of breast cancer on either side of their family. Additionally, she said, it's important to keep checking on the current screening recommendations.

"Those screening recommendations as we know them now, might be very different a couple of years from now as we learn more," she said.

SOURCE: bit.ly/2uQTcwu JAMA Oncology, online July 20, 2017.

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Lesser-known gene mutations may boost breast cancer risk in Jewish women - Reuters

American Sephardi Music Festival Comes to the Center for Jewish History – Broadway World

Posted By on July 24, 2017

Dynamic and diverse performances by world-class artists will be heard at the first American Sephardi Music Festival. Hosted by the American Sephardi Federation and directed by David Serero, the Festival will take place on three days: August 24th, 27th and 28th 2017 at The Center for the Jewish History (15 W 16th Street, New York City).

PROGRAM:

August 24th:

7pm: GERARD EDERY - Three Religions, Three Faiths

9pm: FRANCOISE ATLAN - An Intimate Evening of Andalusian and Sephardi music

August 27th:

1pm: SARAH AROESTE - Ladino Music Transformed from Yesterday to Today

3pm: GERARD EDERY - Treasures of World Song

5pm: NASHAZ - Arabic Jazz Ensemble

7pm: ADAM MAALOUF and the Future Tribe - Where the Ancient meets the Modern

9pm: STEVEN CHERA and the Bob Kaye Trio - A Sephardi on Jazz!

August 28th:

7pm: ITAMAR BOROCHOV - Jazz between Middle Eastern Traditions

8:45pm: David Serero - A Sephardi on Opera!

Tickets are from $20 to $40.

$20 of the $40 ticket is a tax-deductible donation to further ASF's mission to preserve and promote the rich mosaic culture of Greater Sephardic Communities.

Tickets: http://www.brownpapertickets.com or 1.800.838.3006

All the concerts will take place at the Center for Jewish History located at 15 West 16th street (between 6th and 5th avenue), New York 10011.

"The Mission of this festival is to bring talents from all over the world who showcase the Sephardic music from yesterday but with a modern touch. I'm very proud to bring this variety of Sephardi music presented from pure the Sephardic songs performance, to the mix of Arabic and jazz, Jazz in a Sephardi style, to Sephardic influence in Opera. That's the way I love doing and presenting Classics!" said Serero, who selected the artists to be part of this unique Music Festival.

"David has brought together world-class performers to showcase the vibrant variety of Sephardi sounds, ranging from Andalusian ballads and Ladino love songs to Israeli maqamim. ASF is proud to host this festival and hopes it will join the New York Sephardic Film Festival as a major, annual cultural event," said Jason Guberman-P. Executive Director of the American Sephardi Federation.

About the American Sephardi Federation:

The American Sephardi Federation, based at the landmark Center for Jewish History, preserves and promotes the history, traditions, and rich mosaic culture of Greater Sephardic communities as an integral part of the Jewish experience. ASF hosts high-profile cultural events and exhibitions, produces widely-read online (Sephardi World Weekly, Sephardi Ideas Monthly) and print (The Sephardi Report) publications, supports research, scholarship, and the National Sephardic Library, and represents the Sephardi voice in diplomatic and Jewish communal affairs as a member of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations and World Jewish Congress.

Please visit us at http://www.americansephardi.org.

Like us on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/americansephardifederation

About the Artists:

David Serero Artistic Director / Producer

Show on August 28th at 8:45pm: A Sephardi on Opera! (Followed by the Wine & Cheese Closing Party).

French opera star and Actor David Serero has performed over 1,200 concerts worldwide, recorded over 20 albums and played in more than 100 films and TV series. His repertoire ranges from Opera, Musicals, and World Music. He enjoys bringing his Sephardic origins in Classics. Last season, he starred as Shylock and Othello's title role both adapted in a Sephardi style. Upcoming roles are Cyrano (Rostand's Cyrano of Bergerac) in April 2018 and Don Giovanni (Mozart's opera) in June 2018. Among his various recorded albums, he has released "Sephardi", an album of Sephardi music and recently "Baritone Opera Arias." http://www.davidserero.com. TICKETS: August28DavidSerero.bpt.me or 1.800.838.3006

GERARD EDERY: August 24th 7pm: Three Religions, Three Faiths & August 27th 3pm: Treasures of World Song.

Gerard Edery received his Bachelor and Master of Music degrees from the Manhattan School of Music in New York City. Recognized as a leading musical folklorist and a master singer and guitarist, Gerard Edery has at his command a remarkable range of ethnic folk styles and traditions from around the world. He has been honored with the Sephardic Musical Heritage Award and is the recipient of a Meet the Composer grant for his original songs. Highlights of Edery's extensive performing career have included performances at Zankel Hall (Carnegie Hall), Alice Tully Hall, Lincoln Center, Merkin Concert Hall, Florence Gould Hall, and The United Nations in both New York City and Geneva, Victoria Hall in Geneva, The Kimmel Center in Philadelphia, Royce Hall in L.A., The Smithsonian Institute in Washington D.C., Seiji Ozawa Hall at Tanglewood, the Fez International Festival of Sacred Music in Morocco, the Festival Cervantino in Mexico, the Jewish Music Festival in Amsterdam, the Vilnius International Folk Festival, the Pax Sacred Music Festival and the Klaipeda Concert Series (with chamber orchestra) in Lithuania; in Poland at the International Folk Music Festival, the Zachor Music Festival in Bialystock and at the Warsaw Music Academy, among others. In addition to his busy concert schedule, he has released 17 CDs on the Sefarad Records label as well as the acclaimed Sephardic Songbook. http://www.gerardedery.com

"Gerard Edery, a master of Sephardic song..." - New York Times. TICKETS: August24GerardEdery.bpt.me and August27GerardEdery.bpt.me

FRANCOISE ATLAN: August 24th 9pm - Intimate performance of Andalusian and Sephardic Songs

Invited by international major scenes such as the Carnegie Hall in New York, the International Festival of Mexico, the La Monnaie Theater of Brussels, the Sacred Music Festival of Fes, the South of Arles and the Opera Festival, Franoise Atlan has signed many successful collaborations with great musicians and ensembles, and recorded several critically acclaimed recordings - Diapason d Or, Choc du Monde de la Musique, FFFF Tlrama, Grand Prix de l'Acadmie Charles Cros among others. An artist with a double culture, endowed with a vocal expression, a style and a unique technique, her Judeo-Berber roots naturally led her to become passionate about the Mediterranean vocal heritage, in particular the Judaeo-Spanish and Judeo-Arab traditions, while pursuing her career as a lyric singer.

"Ms. Atlan's songs - in Arabic, Hebrew, Spanish and the Sephardic language Ladino - followed the diaspora of Jews expelled from Andalusia in the 15th century. They were about earthly and divine love, alluding to the mystical Jewish Kabbalah tradition. Ms. Atlan sang them with refined passion connecting the limpid elegance of Renaissance song with the elaborate ornaments of Middle Eastern music." New York Times (by John Pareles)

"Ms. Atlan's vocal style was a matter of combinations. Instead of following current theories that medieval vocal production may have been earthier than modern singing, and perhaps a bit reedy, Ms. Atlan produced the lustrous, velvety soprano tone that today's audiences admire. In a way, she offered the best of both worlds: complete fluidity in the music's exotically winding, intricately melismatic lines, along with an entirely contemporary suppleness in both phrasing and dynamics." The New York Times (by Allan Kozzin). TICKETS: FrancoiseAtlan.bpt.me or 1.800.838.3006

SARAH AROESTE: August 27th 3pm - Ladino Music Transformed from Yesterday to Today.

International Ladino singer/songwriter Sarah Aroeste weaves stories from her personal family history, together with song, in this multi-media interactive presentation. Using sound clips, videos, and live music, Aroeste will give a taste of how her work is pushing the Ladino envelope today. Aroeste demonstrates with her unique linguistic interpretations, modern technologies, and contemporary musical arrangements how Ladino music and culture is developing and still has a vibrant life ahead.

International Ladino singer Sarah Aroeste travels the globe fusing both original and traditional Judeo-Spanish folk songs with her unique blend of rock, pop, and jazz. Drawing upon her family roots from Greece and Macedonia (via Medieval Spain), Aroeste works tirelessly to bring Ladino music back to life for a new generation. Aroeste has released four Ladino recordings: A la Una: In the Beginning (2003), Puertas (2007), Gracia (2012), and Ora de Despertar (2016), the first ever all-original Ladino children album and animated cartoon series. She will be releasing Together/Endjuntos. The first bilingual Ladino/English holiday album, to come this fall 2017. In 2014 Aroeste won the Sephardic prize at the International Jewish Music Festival in Amsterdam, and in 2015 she represented the USA in the International Sephardic Music Festival in Cordoba, Spain.

NPR has featured Aroeste as one of the most boundary-pushing Latin artists today, and she has garnered wide critical acclaim for her efforts to help revitalize a tradition by introducing Ladino music to wider audiences. Visit http://www.saraharoeste.com for more information. TICKETS: SarahAroeste.bpt.me or 1.800.838.3006

NASHAZ: August 27th 5pm - Arabic Jazz Ensemble

Nashaz is an expression of Brian Prunka's lifelong devotion to both Arabic music and jazz. Through his oud playing, improvisations and compositions, Brian finds common threads and natural sympathies between the disparate traditions of jazz and the maqam music of the middle east and North Africa, resulting in an organic new sound: melodic and spirited, ranging from wistful contemplation to kinetic intensity.

Prior to moving to Brooklyn in 2003, Brian Prunka was living and performing in New Orleans, where he spent his musically formative years honing his musical skills immersed in the jazz community. Always drawn to a wide range of music without regard to boundaries, national or otherwise, when fate introduced him to the oud he had an instant and profound connection with this storied instrument. A chance conversation led him to study with his mentor, the renowned virtuoso Simon Shaheen, who was impressed enough by his sincere passion for Arabic music to invite Prunka to perform with him on tour. He founded Nashaz to bring together his love of jazz and Arabic music.

He has performed throughout the U.S. and internationally with Simon Shaheen, Michael Bates, Ravish Momin, the New York Arabic Orchestra, the Vancouver International Orchestra, Zikrayat, the Near East River Ensemble, and others. Other members of Nashaz joining in this concert will be Matt Darriau on clarinet and saxophone (Paradox Trio, Klezmatics), Kenny Warren on trumpet (Slavic Soul Part, Sway Machinery), John Murchison on bass (Zikrayat, Ensemble Fanaa), and Dan Kurfirst on percussion. TICKETS: Nashazensemble.bpt.me or 1.800.838.3006

ADAM MAALOUF and the FUTURE TRIBE: August 27th 7pm - Where the Ancient meets the Modern

As a specialist in pantam (handpan), cello, & percussion from around the world, Adam's unique interpretation of World Music is channeled through genre-bending compositions for solo and ensembles.

"Future Tribe" is an ensemble of global instrumentalists that take listeners somewhere new. The Tribe's music is found where the modern meets the ancient, where the Pantam (or handpan) meets ancient or traditional styles of music from around the globe. Pantam is the name of the "flying saucer" instrument invented in year 2000, and the word stems from the combination of the Pan from Trinidad, and the Ghatam (clay pot drum) from South India. Maalouf's music is presented with a range of traditional musicians playing Indian Tabla, Arabic Vocal, Bansuri Flute, Middle Eastern Percussion, Guitar, Trumpet, Turkish Oud and Nay. TICKETS: AdamMaalouf.bpt.me or 1.800.838.3006

STEVEN CHERA: August 27th 9pm - A Sephardi on Jazz Music

Steven Chera comes to you LIVE at the Center of Jewish History singing classics with a fresh, new, jazzy sound of tunes from his most recent album, The Classic Standards - Volume 1. Known for performing American songbook classics while adding his crooner touch, Chera has captivated audiences nationwide for over two decades. Chera's newest album comprises all tracks performed by his inspirational icon, Frank Sinatra.

With the help of legendary Sear Sound Studios in NYC, Grammy nominated engineer Jack Mason, Producer & Creative Director AJ Molaee, pianist and Music Director Bob Kaye (prominently affiliated with Buddy Rich and Dizzy Gillespie), The Classic Standards Volume 1 intermixes a collection of the Great American Songbook, classic standards from the early part of the 20th century. TICKETS: StevenChera.bpt.me or 1.800.838.3006

ITAMAR BOROCHOV: August 28th 7pm - Jazz between Middle Eastern traditions

Israeli-born, Brooklyn-based trumpeter & composer Itamar Borochov connects lower Manhattan to North Africa, modern Israel and ancient Bukhara, celebrating traces of the divine that he finds in elegant sophistication, Middle Eastern tradition and downhome blues.

Israeli-born, Brooklyn-based trumpeter & composer Itamar Borochov connects lower Manhattan to North Africa, modern Israel and ancient Bukhara, celebrating traces of the divine that he finds in elegant sophistication, Middle Eastern tradition and downhome blues. Borochov brings a unique sound with him wherever he goes. Deeply immersed in the jazz tradition, Borochov's search for his personal roots resulted in an ever-expanding love for Arab and Pan-African musical sensibilities a natural palette for a trumpeter-composer raised in Jaffa, an integrated Muslim-Jewish-Christian city.

After working with such legendary artists as Curtis Fuller and Candido Camero, and having served as arranger and co-producer for acclaimed world music sensation Yemen Blues, Borochov set out on his own path. His critically acclaimed debut recording Outset (2014) was included in the New York City Jazz Records Best of 2014 List, and his forthcoming album Boomerang was chosen as "revelation of the month" on Jazz Magazine. Audiences worldwide are falling for his enchanting sound and virtuosic expression. TICKETS: ItamarBorochov.bpt.me or 1.800.838.3006

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American Sephardi Music Festival Comes to the Center for Jewish History - Broadway World

Ten Myths About Israel – Center for Research on Globalization

Posted By on July 23, 2017

Particularly, in the US and some European States, the Israeli and Zionist versions of history are widespread. Israels narrative relies on a collection of myths aimed at bringing the moral right and the ethical behavior of the Palestinians into twilight and making their claim to their country appear as illegitimate. Israels negation of Palestinian existence in the Land of Palestine is, however, a falsification of history.

Ten Myths About Israel came out in Germany in 2016 under the title Whats wrong with Israel? The Ten Main Myths of Zionism. The mainstream media ignored it, which could also be the case in the US. Its sad but that how media power works in favor of Israel.

Israeli historian Ilan Pappe, who lives in exile in Britain, deals in this book with the myths of Zionism and exposes them as legends consisting of half-truths and fabrications of history. The Zionist narrative has only little to do with historical reality and truth.

The Running Gag of the Zionist historical narrative is the story of the empty land of Palestine, into which people without a land had finally returned after 2000 years of exile. The slogan of a country without a people, for people without a country, is the most prominent expression of the Zionist mythology. For Pappe, its less important whether the Jews existed as a people, rather than that the Zionists deny the existence of a Palestinian population but simultaneously claim that the State of Israel represents all the Jews of the world and does everything for their benefit and acts for them. Such a claim is just as daring as the identification of Zionism with Judaism because it takes Jews hostage for Israels despising policy.

The Zionists presented the colonization of Palestine with biblical rhetoric; this served only as a means to an end. The highest prophet of Zionism, Theodor Herzl, even considered Uganda and other places instead of the Zionist Promised Land. Finally, they found their roots in Palestine. From then on, the Bible became both the justification and the guideline of the Zionist colonization of Palestine, writes Pappe. He describes Zionism as a colonial settler movement and Israel as a Settler Colonial State.

The author points out that the expulsion of the Palestinians in 1947/48 was ethnic cleansing. Likewise, the 1967 June war, which is also called the Sixth Day War, was not an act of self-defense of the little David against an overpowering Goliath, but an Israeli attack on which the Israeli security establishment has minutely prepared for years.

The claim of being the only democracy in the Middle East is put in the right perspective. Israel resembles rather an ethnocracy than a democracy in the classical sense of the meaning. The peace process, which was highly praised by the Western political establishment ended in the acceleration of the colonization of Palestine and in the establishment of Palestinian regime that has to do the dirty work for Israeli occupier.

In his book, Ilan Pappe gives his backing for the historical truth that the Israeli political establishment must face if it is interested in peace. Israels security establishment abuses Judaism because it equates its Zionist expansionist and oppressive policy with Judaism. Enlightenment is, therefore, more than a necessity, which the book does excellently by deconstructing the mythological web that surrounds the history of the State of Israel.

This book is an absolute must for an interested public, the political and the media class to understand what Israel is all about.

***

Title: Ten Myths About Israel

Author: Ilan Pappe

Publisher:Verso (May 2, 2017)

ISBN-10:1786630192

ISBN-13:978-1786630193

Click here to order.

Featured image fromVerso

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Ten Myths About Israel - Center for Research on Globalization

My attorneys demand letter to Bnai Brith (re …

Posted By on July 23, 2017

For the story of Bnai Briths effort to keep me out of Canada based on their false and libelous assertions, see:

Bnai Brith libelously calls me holocaust denier, wants me banned from Canada

Kevin Barrett, Veterans Today Editor

The Quds Day rally in Toronto, where I hope and expect to be speaking this Saturday

Bnai Brith of Canada

Marty York, Daniel Koren:

Dear Mssrs. York and Koren:

I am the United States-based attorney for Dr. Kevin Barrett, who you and Bnai Brith of Canada have recently attacked and targeted by way of a video and apparent mass electronic mailing. Demand is made that you publicly retract the following accusations made against Dr. Barrett based on their falsehood and the intent to injure Dr. Barretts freedom to travel and his livelihood. Dr. Barrett is receiving a bcc of this message.

First, you have called Dr. Barrett a notorious Holocaust Denier. Your entire campaign to prevent him from entering Canada for a presentation scheduled for Saturday, June 24 is predicated on that accusation. That is an accusation that cannot be supported, even from your own materials. Dr. Barrett has indicated that there are serious questions about the historicity of a critical trinity of three (unspecified) elements of the Holocaust narrative, but he specifically stated he was on the fence regarding the Holocaust in the video clip used in your own mailing. Demand is made that you publish a retraction of your slur and a clarification to all recipients of the message.

While you and other members of the Jewish community or Canadian community might be upset that Dr. Barrett has not simply blindly accepted standard Western accounts of the Holocaust, or that he has not devoted the time necessary to become a World War II scholar, that does not make him a denier; and it certainly does not mean that his views and speech may not be heard in the kind of free and tolerant society that Canada aspires to be.

That Dr. Barrett referred (in another highly-edited extract of one of his presentations) to the Anne Frank story as a sub-myth and in that context to the Holocaust myth also does not make him a Holocaust denier. As most scholars recognize (Dr. Barrett has a Ph.D. in African Languages and Literature analyzing Moroccan myths and legends), the term myth is used to signify a sacred foundational narrative that members of a particular culture hold to be true and beyond dispute. The foundational stories of the great religions, and similarly the story of the founding of the United States of America, are well-known examples. Calling these stories myths thus does not imply that they are false; on the contrary, it implies that the relevant cultural in-groups insist that they are true and sacred.

Dr. Barretts reference to the Anne Frank sub-myth was made during his discussion of the Anne Frank tree being planted at the 9/11 Ground Zero site in New York. Based on more than a decade of intensive scholarship, Dr. Barrett believes the official narrative of 9/11 is a monstrous, genocidal lie. His conclusion is shared by thousands of experts and professionals on the record (http://patriotsquestion911.com) and is also widely accepted in high level circles off the record (http://www.globalresearch.ca/ex-italian-president-intel-agencies-knew-911-an-inside-job/7550). Dr. Barrett notes that when he said the Anne Frank tree is hopelessly tainted by lies, he was referring to its assimilation into the big lie of 9/11 by way of the ritual planting of the tree at the 9/11 commemoration site. He has never called the official narrative of the Holocaust (nor the Anne Frank story) a lie. By taking Dr. Barretts remarks out of context, Bnai Brith deceptively tried to buttress its false claims that Dr. Barrett is a denier by appealing to a widely admired figure from the resistance to Nazism.

(Here I point out the terminological problem that is presented whenever someone uses the term Holocaust denier. The Holocaust has no standard historiographical definition and while it is often used as a shorthand for the use of genocidal gas chambers which Dr. Barrett is not accused of denying it is generally understood as a multi-year aggregation of acts and events and policies, variously linked with specific intentionality. The use of the term Holocaust denier is inherently pejorative and polemic, and therefore it should ordinarily be avoided in favor of more specific allegations in the course of academic or highly-charged social discourse).

Too, there is absolutely NO basis whatsoever for your statement that Dr. Barrett has repeatedly questioned the murder of six-million Jews by Nazi Germany. You are hereby challenged to produce any writing or oral statement proving your statement, or any statement in which Dr. Barrett has referred dismissively to the murder of six million Jews, let alone where he has done so repeatedly.

Finally, it is utterly false for you to state that Dr. Barrett has argued that the widespread Holocaust denial in Muslim countries such as Morocco somehow confirms that the Holocaust was fabricated to promote self-serving Zionist assertions.' Dr. Barrett in fact protests that the historicity of an event cannot be determined based on the relative number of adherents to historicity that it may have in any given setting, or how shrill they might be in their insistence. Genuine contemporaneous documents and credible testimony are the pivotal elements in determining historical fact. Again, demand is made that you retract these particular unfounded statements about Dr. Barretts reference to deniers in Muslim countries unless you have proof in the form of a writing or transcript or video clip that Dr. Barrett has said such a thing.

There are a number of troubling features of your campaign as a whole, starting with the failure of Bnai Brith to recognize the importance of nuance and free speech when it comes to matters of controversy in history and social analysis. These troubling features include your apparent belief that the Canadian government should yield not to its own established law and regulations but to a goaded and perhaps frenzied anti-speech mob based on the pressure that it can exert on government officials. There is no suggestion in your message that Dr. Barretts presentation this week in Toronto would represent a security risk in any way, absent attacks that could be launched from your constituents, and you show no sensitivity to that point at all. We are in touch with Canada-based counterparts, and while we acknowledge that citizens of Canada have the right to contact their public servants, we urge that you be scrupulous about ensuring that they have correct, non-inflammatory information before they do. With that in mind, you are asked to convey this letter to the Border Security authorities who you are in contact with, who themselves are reminded that any claims of inadmissibility must be based not on innuendo but thoroughly-investigated fact. There is NO basis whatsoever, except the impermissible bases of hatred, bias and prejudice, for excluding a scholar such as Dr. Barrett from fulfilling his invitation to speak in Toronto.

Dr. Barrett has previously been allowed admission to Canada, as recently as August 2015 (despite what may have been a trumped-up charge that initially impeded his entry, which was later resolved in his favor). Therefore, if he is not allowed admission now, his exclusion and consequential economic injury will be deemed entirely the responsibility of Bnai Brith.

I am copying this message to President Gary Saltzman and other individuals who are part of the leadership of Bnai Brith International in the United States, who are invited to hold their correspondent organization in Canada accountable to the facts and to the better ideals of free speech which however more developed they are in the United States than in Canada are norms held in high regard throughout the world.

Thank you for your consideration of all these points and I look forward to hearing from you.

Bruce Leichty

Attorney

Originally posted here:

My attorneys demand letter to Bnai Brith (re ...

Hasidic Neighborhood Exposed As Top Section 8 Beneficiary …

Posted By on July 23, 2017

There are many misconceptions as to which communities actually benefit the most from public assistance and federal subsidies such as Section 8 and welfare. This Daily News expose sheds some light on the answer to that question and it definitely isnt the Black and Latino communities many Republicans love to accuse of getting all the free hand outs! Check it out below and let us know what you think.

The annual spring ritual marks the first day of Passover in the Hasidic Jewish enclave of South Williamsburg, Brooklyn, where daily life is built on ancient laws and religious devotion. But the insular community depends on outside money to survive federal subsidies to help many low-income Hasidic families cover the rent.

New York Citys 123,000 vouchers make this the largest Section 8 voucher program in the country. Reluctant landlords and rising rents are making vouchers nearly impossible to use in many areas of the city. Tenants, especially larger families, are often relegated to the edges of Brooklyn and the Bronx. Thats why this cluster of Hasidic households stands out.

The neighborhood is home to one of the highest concentrations of Section 8 housing vouchers in the city, according to federal data analyzed by WNYC and the Daily News. In several of its census tracts, Section 8 tenants compose more than 30% of residents, a level reached only in scattered pockets of the Bronx.

The difference: In Brooklyn, the Section 8 tenants live smack in the middle of one of the citys hottest real estate market.

The juxtaposition happened over years, not overnight. Leaders leveraged longstanding political connections to win favorable zoning changes. Local developers bought and built to meet the need. Residents organized to get in line for rental subsidies. Block by block, the community created a de facto free market, affordable housing plan.

Its only possible in a tight-knit community where the haves help the have-nots, said Rabbi David Niederman, a community leader and local power broker.

We have people keeping the price lower, said Niederman, executive director of United Jewish Organizations of Williamsburg. Even a person living on Section 8 can pay the monthly rentals.

Skeptics suggest an off-the-books economy has underpinned development within this community. Many residents bank informally and property is regularly swapped between family members and holding companies.

Theres a cash economy and things are not done strictly according to law, said Marty Needleman, executive director of Brooklyn Legal Services and a community advocate who has clashed with the Hasidim for years over fair-housing issues.

All sides agree the community is clamoring for affordable housing, a demand fueled by one of the highest birthrates in the city. Ultra-Orthodox Jewish couples typically marry in their late teens and have many children.

This Hasidic community has mastered the art of acquiring the highly coveted but hard-to-get Section 8 homes.

Vouchers are particularly concentrated into what some call New Williamsburg, where the Hasidim have expanded into formerly industrial areas and historically black and Latino Bedford-Stuyvesant.

In the late 1990s, Hasidic developers quietly began to petition the city to let them convert old factories and warehouses bought cheap into housing.

Building by building, the Board of Standards and Appeals, a little known quasi-judicial agency, granted the zoning variances in Williamsburg and Bed-Stuy.

An analysis by Brooklyn Legal Services found the board approved buildings containing more than 500 apartments between 1995 and 2000, more approvals than any other area in the city.

In 1999, Legal Services unsuccessfully sued to stop the conversions, arguing the standards board was subverting zoning rules and violating anti-discrimination laws. The suit also claimed the large apartments were designed for Hasidic families and were advertised only in Yiddish-language newspapers, leaving black and Latino residents out in the cold. via dailynews

If you live in New York, dont watch FOX News or have any type of awarenesss about you, this should come as no surprise. This article is mainly for those who love to stereotype Blacks and Latinos as being leeches of the system. If youd like to read the rest of this eye-opening article, click HERE

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Jewish American Heritage Month, 2017 | U.S. Embassy in Israel

Posted By on July 23, 2017

By the President of the United States of America During Jewish American Heritage Month, we celebrate our Nations strong American Jewish heritage, rooted in the ancient faith and traditions of the Jewish people. The small band of Dutch Jews who first immigrated in 1654, seeking refuge and religious liberty, brought with them their families, their religion, and their cherished customs, which they have passed on from generation to generation. The moral and ethical code of the Jewish people is inspired by their spiritual vocation of tikkun olam the charge to repair the world. Through that vocation, the Jewish people have left an indelible mark on American culture. Today, it is manifested in the towering success Jewish people have achieved in America through a unique synthesis of respect for heritage and love of country.. More

When the Maccabeats formed at New Yorks Yeshiva University in 2007, its members did not imagine that one day theyd sing at the White House and reach millions with songs inspired by traditional Judaism. The joke is that we started at Yeshiva University, whose sports club is the Maccabees, so when we didnt make the basketball team, we started a singing group, said Julian Horowitz, the groups musical director.. More

By U.S. Mission Israel | 10 May, 2017 | Topics: Culture, History, News, U.S. & Israel | Tags: Jewish American Heritage Month

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Jewish American Heritage Month, 2017 | U.S. Embassy in Israel

Avishai’s prophetic ‘Tragedy of Zionism’ was denied by Jewish community 32 years ago – Mondoweiss

Posted By on July 23, 2017

The Tragedy of Zionism Bernard Avishai (1985, 359 pp)

Bernard Avishai is a keen observer of the Zionist venture. I know him from his fine writing in the New Yorker, The Nation, the New York Review of Books, and other periodicals. I thought it was high time to take a look at his book length writings.

I start with the Tragedy of Zionism. Avishai has said that when the book was published in 1985, it cost him a tenured position at MIT. Perhaps he anticipated what was coming: he looks out from the back jacket of the book, arms defiantly crossed, looking very Abby Hoffmanesque. But the hysterical response was reactionary. See, e.g. Kirkus (the book is desperately seeking controversy). In fact, the book is a wonderfully readable and objective account of Zionism from its origins in the late 19th century, up to the eve of the first intifada (1987). Thirty two years after its publication, The Tragedy of Zionism remains an excellent overview for anyone interested in the topic of Israel, and its judgments are more valid than ever.

The intervening years have deepened the tragedy: there have been three intifadas, three Gaza wars, a second Lebanon war, more settlements, and the construction of prison like walls to isolate Gaza and to cut off and manage Israels occupation of the West Bank. Thirty-two years on, democracy in Israel is in more danger than when the book was published. Its high time that the American Jewish community, which could not stand to listen to Avishais message 32 years ago, take another look at this book and open their minds to its message.

Heres a synopsis.

Part I: Origins to 1931

Avishai starts with a short, almost poetic, sketch of Eastern European Jewry in the 19th century: from 1807, the year Napoleon emancipated the Jews, through 1825, the year Czar Nicholas I intensified persecution of the 1.5 million Jews living in the Russian empire, to 1835 and the start of greater conscription of young Jewish men into the Czars army, to economic changes wrought by industrialization and mass migration to the cities, to disruptions resulting from the emancipation of Russian serfs in 1861, to the assassination of Alexander II in 1881 and the Jewish pogroms that followed.

Zionism was born of necessity and circumstance, suggests Avishai, but the path was not obvious:

The flow of Jews to the cities turned into a flood. By 1897, the Jewish population of Minsk was 47,562; it was 32,400 in Dvinsk. In Minsk, the Jews finally comprised 52 percent of the whole population; in Bialystock, 63 percent. . . In time the total Jewish population swelled to nearly 5 million, and hundreds of thousands were intimidated and went hungry. Young Jews felt themselves caught between the lure of modern life and a new age of barbarism, unable to go forward and unable to go back. Most were seized with the desire to act dramatically in defense of Jewish interests. . . ; they became increasingly impatient, radical, nationalist. Yet their miserable life did not make the value of a Zionist movement seem obvious. To many, the ideal of a Jewish national home in biblical Eretz Yisrael only mocked their condition.

What excited most of these people was not any movement but an impulse to motionthat is, the passage of ships from Odessa to New York. Between 1881 and 1914, 2.5 million Jews emigrated from the Russian Empire. Of these, 2 million settled in America and only 30,000 made their way to Palestine. American democracy was, and remains, Zionisms great rival in providing for the safety of Jews.

Avishai traces the growth of early nationalist Zionism through such men as Leo Pinsker, Theodore Herzl, and Vladimir Jabotinsky. All of these men had attempted to assimilate, says Avishai, and all of them shared the conviction that Gentiles would never let Jews assimilate. Individual Jews might try to do so, but common prejudice and anti-Semitism would keep the Jews a people apart.

Monist Nationalism

Pinskers and Zabotinskys vision for Zionism was steeped in the European far right miasma of Ernst Haeckel, Oswald Spengler, and Enrico Ferri. See Eran Kaplans The Jewish Radical Right. For Pinsker, says Avishai, nations were produced by subtle fellow feeling, by psychological, not cultural ties; nations emerged inevitably from the worlds competitive, abrasive conditions, its inherent national antagonisms. For these monists, seize the day is what was called for, not visions of universal rights and equality. For these men, the ideal of international harmony, continued Avishai, was nothing more than a dangerous illusion. Jews had to overcome moralistic hallucinations that kept them from seeing what Darwin saw: that only the fit survive, that weakness inspires attack. These men were not democrats.

A group of young Jewish intellectuals set about doing what needed to be done. They moved to Eretz Ysrael in a spontaneous show of revolutionary zeal; they founded Rishon LeZion and Zichron Yaacov. Others joined inspired by Tolstoy and his ideals: they wanted to become a Hebrew peasantry and live autonomous lives on their native soil. By 1890 there were 3,000 Jewish agricultural settlers in Palestine, says Avishai, and they were working towards a communal, self-contained, Hebrew culture.

Meanwhile, in Basel in 1897, Herzl organized the First World Zionist Conference. It, too, offered a secular national vision. German Jews renounced the communitarian works of Eastern Orthodoxy in favor of an individualist faith, observed Avishai. Their concern was not the preservation of Judaism as a communal religion. In fact, a mere four years before the Basel conference Herzl entertained the idea that the solution to the Jewish problem could be the mass conversion of Jewish children to Christianity. It was the trial of Albert Dreyfus in Paris and the rise of anti-Semitism at the dawn of the 20th century that turned Herzl into a community organizer and propagandist for Zionism.

Herzl shallowly imagined this Zion as a liberal, cultured outcrop of Europe a Europe for Jews.

Cultural Zionism

Others looked at Herzls secular dreams of assimilation and recoiled in horror. Writers like Alexander Zederbaum-Erez and Peretz Smolenskin, and the historian Simon Dubnow, reports Avishai, were steeped in their parents Torah culture. They sought to bring a more communal and traditional vision of Judaism to a new land in Zion. If political Zionists wanted Jews to take up the challenge of more powerful men, says Avishai, the cultural Zionists wanted an answer for Judaism.

Orthodox seclusion had produced a common aesthetic sense, a year shaped by festivals and a singsong Hebrew liturgy. There was an oral tradition of legends and heroes, a diet of permitted foods, not to mention the unifying intellectual experience of studying the classical texts and rabbinic literature. Impressed by this ambiance, the people who became cultural Zionists perceived the Jewish predicament not from what was ominous about the Gentile world, but from what was most compelling about the Jewish traditionlanguage, text, prophesy.

These cultural Zionists set about to establish a cultural life worth fighting for. They wanted that sense of continuity from communing with the places of Jewish national origins. Like the monist nationalists, the cultural Zionists were secular. They had no more respect for Arab or Muslim religious culture than for Jewish Orthodoxy. But unlike nationalists, who looked to displace the local Arab population, cultural Zionists remained open to bi-national arrangements with Palestines native inhabitants.

Asher Ginzburg, born in Kiev in 1856, and assuming the pen name of Achad Haam, advocated for a Jewish state, and not merely a state for Jews in Palestine. But its a curious kind of Jewish state that Haam envisioned, one divorced from metaphysical conceptions of Gods will, but one full of superior scientific and artistic cultures expressed in their unique language. Start-up nation, David Grossman, Amos Oz, the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra, and young Hebrew speakers in shorts and tank-tops holding hand on Rothchild Boulevard would have pleased Achad Haam, suggests Avishai.

Achad Haam was a utopian. A reader of Herbert Spencer, he believed that reason and scientific knowledge (not the rights of man) would perfect man, and cause man to ultimately find no greater pleasure than in working for the good of others. The practice of religion, in Hebrew, in accordance with reason would be instrumental to usher in this messianic age. The cultural Zionism of Achad Haam would include the study of Torah, halakha [religious law], Talmud, blessings and prayers, and the entire oral tradition of Judaism as a training regimen for Jewish minds on the way to naturally finding no greater pleasure than in working for the good of others.

Dont ask Gazans how that worked out.

Labor Zionism

Labor Zionism turned out to be the right tool for building the state. In 1897, the same year as the Basel conference, and the founding of the World Zionist Organization, the Jewish labor movement the Allgemeiner Judischer Arbeiterbund was formed. Highly successful, and initially staunchly anti-Zionist, the movement did nevertheless spin off a number of dynamic leaders to Palestine, like Nachman Zyrkin and Ber Borochov, who founded the first labor Zionist movement in Eretz Israel.

Socialism made immigration a one-way valveworkers would not be tempted to leave in an economic downturn; socialism allowed farms to be self-sufficient without hiring Palestinian labor; and socialism provided cohesiveness for the building-up of militias and the propagation of Hebrew. From class (a Jewish labor class in Palestine) to Nation, is how one of David Ben-Gurions slogans had it.

Avishai covers the thinking and advocacy of such early Labor Zionist leaders as Ber Borochov, Nachman Syrkin, Aaron David Gordon, Arthur Ruppin, and their contemporary Orthodox rabbi Abraham Isaac Kook, David Ben Gurion, and Chaim Weizmann among many others.

There was Kook:

[Kook] conceived of the advent of the Zionist labor movement as a strengthening of the vessles for Ruach Elohim, the spirit of God. The secularists will realize in time, he assured himself, that they are immersed and rooted in the lifeland, language, history, and customsbathed in the radiant sanctity that comes from above. Kook would say: We lay tefilin, the pioneers lay bricks.

The Orthodox, says Avishai, defined themselves in a long-standing relationship with Labor Zionism, exploit(ing) the chalutzims political successes, and liv(ing) off their produce. But this relationship was not healthy for the long-term democratic prospects for the state, suggests Avishai. These men were not democrats.

Like the nationalist Zionists, the Orthodox envisioned a world without Arabs, and they looked to military power for holding off potential pogromists. But unlike Herzl, they imagined that the state would ultimately incorporate halakhah directly into the states constitution, says Avishai.

The Orthodox disdained Herzls celebration of national sovereignty, just as they lacked affinity for the secular Hebrew culture championed by Achad Haam, both of which they saw as a challenge to the sovereignty of God. None of them prioritized democratic ideals.

The most powerful force among Jewish immigrants to Palestine between 1920 and the declaration of the state, however, became the Histadrut, the trade union organization headed by David Ben-Gurion. The Histadrut monopolized many of the service functions of the pre-state community, and controlled many of the means of production. The Histadrut was egalitarian but authoritarian; it was blessed by idealism and marked by a lack of corruption; and it enjoyed broad-based support among the workers. The Histadrut was essential for building up the Jewish state. It did not however, develop standards designed for a democratic state.

Part II: The Contradictions of Self-Determination

In Part two of the book, Avishai examines some of the contradictions inherent in the structures of the young state, and how these structures held back a full flowering of democracy based on equal opportunity and rights under law, and a recognition of universal rights.

Was There a Potential for Co-existence with the Arabs?

The power of the Histadrut came not just from its numbers, but from the fact that it carried out various economic, social, and cultural services directed toward building up the Jewish national home. It did this by excluding Arabs. Even those Jews who worked for private employers agitated for the hiring of Jews, not as a consequence of bigotry, but as an instrument of cultural revolution.

In cultivating a kind of socialist separatism, Histadrut institutions secured for Palestinian Jews their Hebrew national culture. The Labor Zionists did not . . . merge with the Arab elites, neither with the urban notables connected to the Ottoman bureaucracy, the ayan, nor with the great land effendis. It is precisely because Zionists feared becoming a colonialist class that Israelis now have roots of their own. (If we do not till the soil with our very own hands, Gordon warned, the soil will not be ours.)

This development of the Yishuv did not necessarily displace Arab residents from their country, but every large estate appropriation by the Jewish National Fund did displace Arab tenant farmers, and helped encircle Arab towns. In fact, as the Jewish population rose in Palestine during the first half of the 20th century, so did the Arab population. Between 1922 and 1948, the Arab population roughly doubled to 1,200,000. Productivity and yield of the Arab agricultural sector in Palestine rose during the British Mandate era; so did the average consumption of commodities; infant mortality rates dropped 27 percent; expenditures on education in the Arab sector doubled between 1931 and 1939 and literacy increased (although still very lowabout 25 percent on the eve of World War 2).

There was promise, in other words, for the possibility of two side-by-side states, suggested Avishai.

The Failure of Evian

In the summer of 1938, the Western democracies met in the French resort of Evian-sur-bain on Lake Geneva to consider how Jewish refugees might be given asylum, but to their everlasting discredit, said Avishai, the democracies failed to come up with any serious plan for Jewish refugees. The Jewish Agencys representative, Golda Meir, was no better. Once Britain had the question of Palestine dropped from the agenda of the Evian Conference . . . (Meir) was content merely to observe the proceedings without uttering a word. (Zionist leaders in Palestine were concerned about upsetting the Peel commission applecart.)

This judgment, of course, is made with hindsight of what happened next: the holocaust. But if we judge Evian in light of what was known at the time, is it any worse than our collective failure to act to alleviate the plight of todays 22 million refugees, or 10 million stateless persons? Golda Meir offered the following excuse in her memoir: I didnt know then that not concentration-camps but death-camps awaited the refugees whom no one wanted. As if concentration camps would have excused her silence! The judgment of everlasting discredit holds for Evian, as much as it does for our inaction today.

In March 1939, the British government informed the Zionist executive that Zionist rights under the Balfour Declaration were abrogated and that the offer of a Jewish state was rescinded. . . . A new British White Paper conceived of a majority Arab state in an undivided Palestine and limited future Jewish immigration. The discovery of oil and competition with Germany had changed the calculus.

The Fervor of War

War unites as well as kills. In the case of the Yishuv it allowed the Jews to organize militarily, with support of the British; it allowed them to expand factories and manufacture war materials for the British; the fervor of war greatly increased both the industrial base and the agricultural output of the Yishuv. The Jewish population grew to over 500,000; more than fifty new villages were founded. The value of Jewish industrial production, says Avishai, increased nearly fivefold, from 7.9 million Palestinian Pounds to 37.5 million (value was pegged to the British Pound Sterling).

At the Biltmore Conference of 1942, two years after Jabotinskys death, Ben-Gurion endorsed the Revisionists program: a Jewish state in the whole of Palestine.

Avishai questions whether Ben-Gurion had turned towards the idea of a Jewish state from the river Jordan to the Mediterranean (Revisionist Zionism) based on conviction, or whether he was forced into it. Ultimately, of course, it doesnt matter. What matters is how it has played out. And our judgment of how it has played out is affected by the failure of Oslo, the ongoing expansion of Jewish settlement of the West Bank, and the fact that the Occupation has just turned 50 years old.

The Holocaust

By 1942 word about the Holocaust was out. In April 1943 the German Army annihilated the Warsaw ghetto. By the summer of 1944, the death camps had taken 2.5 million Jews from Germany, Austria, France, Belgium, Holland, Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia, Rumania, and Greece. In the killing fields of the Eastern front three and one half million Polish, Russian, and Ukranian Jews perished. The sorrow and resolve of the Yishuv was absolute.

After VE Day tensions rose in Palestine. The British clamped down on the Haganah and the Palmach, the Yishuv militias fighting against immigration quotas. The Irgun, led by Menachem Begin, retaliated by blowing up the British headquarters in the King David Hotel, killing 91. Ben-Gurion called a meeting of the World Zionist Organization in Paris, and a plan was again publicly announced to accept a Jewish state in only so much of Palestine as was necessary for a viable state. The UN passed its partition plan for Palestine, Resolution 181 on November 29, 1947. The British mandate ended and Ben-Gurion announced the formation of the Jewish and democratic state of Israel on May 14, 1948.

The Contradiction of Co-existence

And, without warning or fanfare, Avishai turns to the controversial thesis of his book:

While a viable democratic Jewish state might have arisen in a climate of peace, without Palestinian refugee, the war (of 48-49) did underline the latent contradiction between the national Jewish majority envisioned by Zionism and Israels secular democratic goals. How could a Jewish state at war with the Arab worlda state which aimed to ingather exiles and exert the natural right of the Jewish people to be master of its fate in Eretz Yisraelalso guarantee the complete equality of social and political rights to all of its citizens, including hundreds of thousands of Arab residents who bitterly opposed its creation?

Its a rhetorical question, of course. That circle cant be squared.

What was so tragic about Ben-Gurions actions at this crucial time was that, as the war (of independence) dragged on through October, he worked to establish a firm hold on state power without any further concessions to constitutional principles. He invested his growing prestige in efforts to consolidate the military, and presided over a state of emergency under which ninety-eight ordinances were enacted. He did not work seriously to develop a climate conducive to enacting the promised constitution, and in fact, many of the emergency ordinances of the Provisional Council of State were still in force twenty years later.

Avishai describes the early discussions around a possible constitution, but ultimately Ben-Gurion did not force the issue. It was not at all clear where on a secular-orthodox scale the character of such a constitution would have landed. But the result of no constitution was that, by default, the land laws stayed in the hands of the Jewish National Fund (exclusionary and discriminatory against Arabs), there was no bill of rights, and no secular state authority over marriage and divorce, and many other civil areas. There was no formal separation of religion and state. By default emergency powers remained in place for decades, deeply entrenching a discriminatory system against Arab citizens of the young state. The lack of a bill of rights enabled the lawand ongoing practiceof confiscating abandoned Arab property. A democracy was established, with parties, the right to vote for all, including Arab citizens, freedoms of the press and of speech inherited from the British mandate legal system, and an independent judiciary, but the democracy was flawed in important ways.

The Tragedy of Arab Rejectionism

The Palestinians call Israels war of independence the Nakbathe catastrophe. It was a disaster for the Palestinians, including approximately 700,000 Palestinians who were uprooted by the war. Their property in Israel was confiscated. They and their offspring, now numbering more than 5 million, continue to languish stateless in refugee camps. Soon to be two million live in a virtual prison in Gaza. Two and one half million live under military dictatorship in the West Bank.

Ben-Gurion was a pragmatist. He accepted partition. In February 1950 the Israeli government discreetly negotiated a draft treaty with King Abdullah of Transjordan, says Avishai. Abdullah too was a pragmatist. In April 1950 he annexed the West Bank and East Jerusalem to Jordan, creating the united Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan. This was consistent with the Peel commission (1937) recommendation, which Abdullah had accepted. Abdullahs ability to make peace with Israel, however, was constrained by staunch Arab League opposition, and on July 20, 1951, Abdullah was assassinated by a tribal member of the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem (Husseini).

The assassination of leaders can alter the course of events. Arguably, the assassination of King Abdullah in 1951 was as pivotal as the assassination of Prime Minister Rabin in 1995. Instead of moving towards peace and normalization, the Palestinians embarked on a campaign of cross-border raids and terrorism, and the Arab League engaged in aggression and belligerence that eventually led to the 1967 Six Day War. Its a tragedy that continues to reverberate today, and continues to be perpetuated by Hamas.

The Devolution of Zionism into Politics

Avishai traces the politics inside Israel through the decade leading up to the Six Day War. Zionist rhetoric implied something like this: that Israelis should be strong and united against the outside world; that religious spats and class conflicts must be suppressed for the sake unity; . . . that the Jewish state was every Jews patrimony; . . . that the Law of Return was not merely an immigration law promulgated for refugees but the highest expression of the centrality of Israel to Diaspora Jews. But by the mid-60s, suggests Avishai, this Zionism had devolved into a normal, fractious competition of diverse visions and interests, subject to the normal forces of politics.

By the early 1960s Zionism, which had been conceived as a national solution to the chronic difficulties of the Diaspora (anti-Semitism and assimilation), had shrunk to the notion that Diaspora Jews should want to participate in solving the chronic problems of the national center. But the chronic problems of the national center, suggests Avishai, were very different from the problems of Judaism in Diaspora. For most American Jews, Judaism now implied a tradition to help them adjust to a public realm of English liberal democracy, a tradition of historical disquisition, ethics, and texts, that was very different from the aesthetic, legal, and linguistic norms of the Hebrew nation.

By the eve of the Six Day War, Zionism had devolved into the politics of a secure nation state: Israel. If all of its parts did not fit together neatly, there was comfort in the fact thatgiven the recession, the peaceful borders, the routines of middle-class lifeit [presumably Zionism?] was not to be taken all that seriously.

Part III: New Zionism and the Trial of Israeli Democracy

For a generation leading up to the Six Day War (1967), says Avishai in Part 3 of the book, sentiments favoring a Greater Israel had been evolving as a statist myth among the young, among newcomers, and military figures impatient with Labor Zionist ideas. Within six months (of the war) it was widely thought that Golan was inseparable from Galilee, and that a great part of the West Bank could never be, in Moshe Dayans word, abandoned. By years end, Jewish settlers sought to establish permanent control over all these territories, and the Israeli government actively encouraged the efforts of squatters.

In the absence of a liberal-democratic constitution, a generation of compromise between the secular government and the rabbinate, had produced a rhetoric that frankly justified Israeli national rights in terms of Orthodox claims. The clear reasons for the Zionist revolution having faded (anti-Semitism and fears of assimilation in Diaspora), a new Zionism emerged, said Avishai. This new Zionism was marked by maximalist territorial claims justified by an appeal to ancient Jewish history.

The hubris was infectious: There was Jerusalem, prosperity, unity. If the victory could not, strictly speaking, be called a miracle, was there not something mysterious and wonderful about Jewish history that they had missed, says Avishai describing the doubts of Old Labor Zionists post 67.

Israelis began to view the conquered lands as their own, suggests Avishai. Israelis toured the Sinai, camped on the Gulf, and dove to view the coral along the Red Sea coast. They visited Jericho and Hebron like privileged tourists, developing tastes for quaint old restaurants and Persian antiquesalso for souk, the glitter, the bargain. The French educated laureate of the Labor Zionist Yishuv, Natan Alterman, joined the front ranks of of HaTnua LeMann Ertz Yisrael HaShlemah, the Whole Land of Israel Movement, (and) advocated outright annexation of conquered lands, for the sake of completing Zionism.

Golda Meir, who served as prime minister from March 69 through June 74, was confronted with four big questions: 1) the fate of the occupied territories and Jewish settlements, 2) the style and structure of the economy, 3) the identity of the disaffected Second Israel, and 4) the lingering question of whether the Zionist institutions (touching on religion and state, and status of Israeli Arabs) should be retired. Mrs. Meir proved wanting in vision, on these questions says Avishai. By default she served the maximalist New Zionist cause. By the time she left office, several settlers had built homes all over the West Bank, the Golan Heights, and North Sinai. When in the summer of 1970, the U.S. secretary of state William Rogers proposed a plan for Israel to accept UN Resolution 242 in exchange for peace and recognition, Meir rebuffed his overture by adopting Menachem Begins strategy of demanding direct negotiations without preconditions, and she made it plain that Israel would never withdraw from Jerusalem and other territories, says Avishai.

Meir generally did nothing to integrate Israeli Arabs. She refused to approve a petition of Palestinians evacuated temporarily from a village until it was safe to return during the War of Independence to return to their villages, 20 years later.

By 1977, the year Likud came into power, it was apparent that the Labor Party had created a crippled, incompetent, highly inflationary capitalism which was hard on the workers and middle-class wage earners who had once been Labors natural constituency outside the workers agricultural settlements, said Avishai.

The West Bank Tragedy

By 1981, the year Begin won a second term, Israeli occupation of the West Bank was well entrenched. Some 20,000 Jewish settlers had begun to live in the territories, says Avishai.

Occupation brought some improvements. Jordan had ignored development of West Bank after it annexed the territory in 1950. Thus the East Jerusalem population of 60,000 stayed the same between 52 and 67, while Amman grew from 108,000 to 250,000. Although 40 percent of West Bank Palestinians were engaged in agriculture in 1967, the Israeli army reported they only found 67 tractors in the whole territory. Under Israeli occupation the number of tractors rose to well over a thousand by 1972, infant mortality was cut in half, and classrooms increased from 6,167 (1967) to 11,187 (1980).

Yet this progress did not extend to democratic institutions. Thus in 1974 Peres expelled (newly formed) Bir Zeit College president in Ramallah, along with other young West Bank nationalists. Peres also stepped up repression of the Palestinian nationalist newspaper al-Fajr. When a pro-PLO slate of mayors with liberal views of a two-state solution was elected in 1976 West Bank municipal elections, instead of embracing them as an opportunity, Peres doubled down with signals that Israel would not relinquish the West Bank. The mayors were sidelined during the Camp David accords (Begin-Sadat-Carter). And Israel signaled that it would not relinquish control of the West Bank by continuing to build settlements and giving voice to hardliners in the settlement movement, and announcing that Israel would always retain control over the West Bank water resources, and would control immigration into the West Ban and Gaza.

It was Zionisms greatest tragedy, suggests Avishai, that the disciples of mainstream Labor Zionism, for all their faults, were thrown out of power by Menachem Begin and the Likud in 1977, in the name of a new Zionism of Greater Israel. Once the Likud came to power, it refused to take seriously any solution to the Palestinian question based on partition.

In November 1981 Ariel Sharon installed a civilian administration in the West Bank, headed by professor Menachem Milson. A month later, the Israeli government formally annexed the Golan Heights. During that winter, Milson deposed the pro-PLO mayors in the West Bank, he closed down two Arab newspapers and Bir Zeit University, a center of Palestinian national sentiment. The Palestinian flag had long been banned. It marked a turning point: Milson transformed the incoherent policies of the labor government into a regime of outright repression.

In the meantime, Sharon announced plans for 120,000 settlers by end of 1985. Young Israeli couples were offered low-interest mortgages to live in new West Bank projects, and to build private villas. Settlers formed vigilante groups. Prospects for democracy in the West Bank were squashed.

Democracy or Zionism

Labor Zionists reasoned that by superseding the repressive legalism of Orthodoxy, Zionism would usher in a fully democratic and secular Hebrew society, said Avishai. But this may have been nave, he suggests, because democratic does not flow easily or naturally from Judaism.

Judaism has a historic common yearning for freedom, but this historical and traditional vision did not include concepts of individual rights and democracy, says Avishai. Jewish tradition sought the freedom to strive after the sacred: to worship Godto keep his lawsand to build the Promised Land. These freedoms championed by Judaism are communal freedoms: freedom from oppression, freedom from foreign rule, freedom from slaveryalso from idol worship. But these communal freedoms are not the freedoms of individual rights that are at the heart of a liberal democracy.

Looking back, said Avishai, Zionism evolved from a Histadrut (trade union) movement, to statism that aspired to be Jewish and democratic, and from this statism that aspired to be Jewish and democratic to a new unabashedly undemocratic Zionism.

After 1967 the initiation of legal reforms towards democracy halted. By 1984 Israel still had no formal constitution, no developed tradition of parliamentary courtesy and ministerial responsibility, no effective check on the executive, no checks on parliamentary authority, and no routine contact between electors and elected. There was censorship of the arts and media. For example, Jesus Christ Superstar and M*A*S*H were both censored in Israel. Rabbinic courts have jealously guarded their new jurisdictions over marriage, divorce, and burial. By 1984 a poll of young Israeli Jews indicated that 60 percent of them were ready to curtail the rights of Arab citizens, and 57 percent thought Arabs in the occupied territories who refused Israeli citizenship ought to be expelled. Most favored annexation over territorial compromise. When asked (in 84) if the Arabs of the West Bank and Gaza should be given the right to vote in the event of annexation, little more than 3 percent of high school students said yes. Surely this is not unrelated to the fact that there is no legal mechanism for an Arab to marry a Jew in Israel, suggested Avishai.

Achad Haam thought that the ways of tolerance were imbedded in Judaism, said Avishai. The Hebrew concept of cherut (freedom) might also have implied a considerable measure of personal liberty. To worship the ineffable Name, after all, was to worship an enigma, and this required scope, doubt, reasons. But for Achad Haam, said Avishai, Zionism was also necessary to redeem the Jewish spirit, to consolidate the Hebrew language, to nurture the instinct for national self-preservation, and none of this naturally leads to a notion of citizenship and universal rights in the liberal democratic sense.

Israeli schools have taught children much more about the tribes of Israel than they have about the Enlightenment, says Avishai. The Hebrew language presents democracy as a mere technique of social organizationthe best technique to be sure, but like other advanced commodities from abroad, perhaps more than Israelis can afford, says Avishai. For Zionists, democracy has seemed like an added luxury that free people enjoy, not a synonym for freedom itself. That Hebrew democracy has not yet fully come into being is Zionisms tragedy, says Avishai, not its requirement. In other words, Zionism can thrive on military occupation without democracy, but its a shame not to have Hebrew culture and democracy.

A Zionism without democracy, asserted Avishai, is tragically obsolete. The question he posed in 1985 was whether democratic tendencies in Israel will prevail against the anachronistic institutions which Labor Zionists once made, and against the new Zionist ideology of a Greater Israel. Thirty years on, the question is more pointed than ever and the trend line is not good.

For Avishai, writing in 1985, Ben-Gurions plan to partition the land was still the key for Israeli democracy. The fact that Israelis today seem less open both to partition and to democracy may prove the tragedy of Israel, he concluded.

This post first appeared on Roland Nikless blog last week.

Read more:
Avishai's prophetic 'Tragedy of Zionism' was denied by Jewish community 32 years ago - Mondoweiss


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