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Hungary’s Orban Hosts Netanyahu, Vows to Squelch Anti-Semitism – Voice of America

Posted By on July 18, 2017

During a joint appearance Tuesday in Budapest, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban reassured Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that he stands with the Jewish state against anti-Semitism.

The meeting took place amid concerns that Orban's right-wing government was stoking anti-Semitism.

While standing next to Netanyahu on Tuesday, Orban sought to distance himself from comments he made last month in praise of Miklos Horthy, the Hungarian wartime leader and Hitler ally. Orban previously called Horthy who oversaw the deportation of more than half a million Hungarian Jews to death camps during World War Two an exceptional statesman for rebuilding the country after the war.

It is the duty of every Hungarian government to defend its citizens whatever their heritage. During World War Two, Hungary did not honor this moral and political obligation, Orban said during a joint news conference with Netanyahu. That is a crime, because we chose collaboration with the Nazis over the defense of the Jewish community. That can never happen again. The Hungarian government will defend all of its citizens in the future.

'Spiritual brothers'

United by a shared disdain for the left-leaning global order and isolated from Western European politicians for their support for U.S. President Donald Trump, the pair of leaders have been called "spiritual brothers" by Hungarian media. Netanyahu quickly accepted Orban's apology.

[Orban] reassured me in unequivocal terms [about anti-Semitism concerns]. I appreciate that. These are important words, Netanyahu said.

There is a new anti-Semitism expressed in anti-Zionism that is delegitimizing the one and only Jewish state, Netanyahu said. In many ways, Hungary is at the forefront of the states that are opposed to this anti-Jewish policy, and I welcome it and express the appreciation of my government.

Visegrad Group

Netanyahu is the first Israeli prime minister to visit Hungary since the end of the Cold War. On Wednesday, he will be joined by leaders from the Visegrad Group Slovakia, the Czech Republic, Poland, as well as Hungary. The loose group of Eastern European countries are led by right wing nationalist governments and regularly draw diplomatic fire from the rest of the EU for their refusal to accept refugees.

"Hungary does not want a mixed population," Orban said Tuesday, defending his country's refusal to accept the EU's suggested number of refugees from the Syrian crisis. [Hungary] does not want to change its current ethnic makeup. It will not defer to an external pressure."

Orban lumped Netanyahu in with the other ethnic nationalist leaders in the Visegrad group, calling him a great patriot, and noting that success belongs to those who are patriots, who don't push national identity and interests aside.

Countering Soros

Beyond tone, the two leaders also are bound by their shared disdain for George Soros, the Jewish-American financier and philanthropist whom they view as a key component of the liberal global order. In April, the Hungarian government passed legislation that threatens to shutter the Soros-backed Central European University in Budapest. Soros founded the university after the Cold War to advance humanism and liberal democracy in the formerly communist state.

More recently, Orban's government has mounted posters criticizing the Hungarian-born Jewish emigre for his support for refugee resettlement.

The Federation of Hungarian Jewish Federations [Mazsihisz] urged Orban to remove the posters, warning that while not openly anti-Semitic, [the campaign] clearly has the potential to ignite uncontrolled emotions. Many of the posters were quickly sprayed with anti-Semitic graffiti.

Comment from the rights group

Although Israel's ambassador to Hungary initially criticized the posters for evok[ing] sad memories, the Israeli foreign ministry quickly moved to clarify his comments.

In no way was the statement [by the ambassador] meant to delegitimize criticism of George Soros, who continuously undermines Israel's democratically elected governments, said the Israeli foreign ministry.

Soros funds several organizations that operate in Israel, including Human Rights Watch, which is regularly critical of the Netanyahu government.

Orban and Netanyahu drew broad criticism from rights groups.

We urge them to refrain from populist attacks on fundamental rights and return to respecting and protecting these, respect the human rights of all regardless of their political views, including those that voice uncomfortable truth on breaches of law and human rights violations, said Jlia Ivn, the director of Amnesty International Hungary.

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Hungary's Orban Hosts Netanyahu, Vows to Squelch Anti-Semitism - Voice of America

ADL releases ‘Who’s Who’ guide of alt-right and alt-lite extremists – The Times of Israel

Posted By on July 18, 2017

WASHINGTON Highlighting the growing influence of the alt-right movement, the Anti-Defamation League on Tuesday released a roster of its major players people ranging from neo-Nazis to conservative politicians to internet trolls.

The storied anti-Semitism watchdog published a new guide a Whos Who? of 36 activists and leaders of the alt-right and alt-lite, saying they personify these movements at a time of increased public activity.

ADL officials said the lists were needed to help understand and track the movements and the various ideologies they represent, underlining concerns in the Jewish community and elsewhere of the growing prominence of hate groups in the US under President Donald Trump.

The alt-right, an amorphous designation that includes among its ranks white supremacists, white nationalists and neo-Nazis, sprang from obscurity during the 2016 election cycle to one of the most prominent extremist groups in the United States.

The alt-lite is a term created by alt-right leaders to differentiate themselves from right-wing activists who spurn the white supremacist ideology. Many of its adherents, however, are also extremists and traffic in various forms of bigotry.

In the past year, members of the alt right and alt lite have been increasingly at odds with each other, even as they hold public rallies to promote their extreme views, said ADL chief Jonathan Greenblatt. We want people to understand who the key players are and what they truly represent.

ADL CEO Jonathan Greenblatt speaking at the organizations Never is Now conference in New York City, Nov. 17, 2016. (Courtesy of the ADL)

The groups report, which was compiled by its Center on Extremism, aims to increase understanding of these movements central characters and how their behavior and strategies are evolving over time.

While the alt right has been around for years, the current iteration is still figuring out what it is and isnt, said Oren Segal, who directs the ADLs Center on Extremism, in a statement.

This is further complicated by the emergence of the alt lite, which operates in the orbit of the alt right, but has rejected public displays of white supremacy. Both movements hateful ideologies are still somewhat fluid, as are the lines that separate them.

Some people on the list are more known than others to the general public.

Richard Spencer, for instance, the leading ideologue of the alt-right who made headlines last December when he hailed then President-elect Donald Trump as a crowd made Nazi salutes, is included. So, too, is Andrew Anglin, who runs a neo-Nazi website, The Daily Stormer.

Many of those cataloged, like Spencer and Anglin, are staunch supporters of President Trump.

Corey Stewart, then co-chair of Donald Trumps 2016 presidential campaign in Virginia, addresses Trump supporters in a Northern Virginia home on Feb. 1, 2016 for an Iowa caucus watch party. (Eric Cortellessa/Times of Israel)

Corey Stewart, a recently failed candidate for Virginias 2017 GOP gubernatorial primary, is listed. During the 2016 election, he co-chaired Trumps campaign in the state, but was eventually fired for attending an anti-Republican National Committee rally in October 2016. Hes made headlines for seeking to preserve Confederate monuments in the American south.

Milo Yiannopolous is also included. A controversial media provocateur, Yiannopolous resigned as a writer for Breitbart News in February, after he seemed to condone men having sex with boys as young as 13.

Breitbart News, a far-right website, was once run by Steve Bannon, now Trumps senior counselor and chief White House strategist.

During his tenure as executive chairman, Bannon pushed a nationalist agenda and turned the publication into what he called the platform for the alt-right. The ADL vociferously opposed his appointment to a job in the White House.

Many critics, especially the ADL, were disgruntled by President Trumps unwillingness to condemn his alt-right backers as a candidate, which he later did in an interview with The New York Times after he was elected.

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ADL releases 'Who's Who' guide of alt-right and alt-lite extremists - The Times of Israel

Marblehead Graffiti: Reward Offered For Information Leading To Arrest – Patch.com

Posted By on July 18, 2017


Patch.com
Marblehead Graffiti: Reward Offered For Information Leading To Arrest
Patch.com
MARBLEHEAD, MA Following the discover of "disturbing" graffiti on the Causeway wall earlier this month, the Anti-Defamation League's New England branch is offering a $3,500 reward for information leading to the arrest and prosecution of the ...

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Marblehead Graffiti: Reward Offered For Information Leading To Arrest - Patch.com

Zionism: Revisionist Zionism – Jewish Virtual Library

Posted By on July 18, 2017

Revisionist Zionism (Union of Zionists-Revisionists; abbr. Hebrew name, Ha-ohar; later New Zionist Organization) was the movement of maximalist political Zionists founded and led by Vladimir (Ze'ev) Jabotinsky. In the later 1920s and in the 1930s, the Revisionists became the principal Zionist opposition party to Chaim Weizmann's leadership and to the methods and policy of the World Zionist Organization and the elected Jewish leadership in Ere Israel. The initial nucleus of the Revisionist movement consisted of a group of Russian Zionists who had supported Jabotinsky during World War I in his campaign for the creation of a Jewish Legion. Their organ became the Russian-language Zionist weekly Razsvet published in Berlin (192224), later in Paris (192434). This group was joined by other Zionist circles and personalities, such as Richard Lichtheim, Robert Stricker, Jacob de Haas, the Hebrew poet Jacob Cohen, and others, who opposed Weizmann and his policy.

The Revisionists based their ideology on Theodor Herzl's concept of Zionism as essentially a political movement, defined by Jabotinsky as follows: Ninety per cent of Zionism may consist of tangible settlement work, and only ten per cent of politics; but those ten percent are the precondition of success. The basic assumption was that as long as the mandatory regime in Palestine was essentially anti-Zionist, no piecemeal economic achievements could lead to the realization of Zionism, i.e., the establishment of a Jewish state with a Jewish majority in the entire territory of Palestine, on both sides of the Jordan.

At its inception, the Revisionist program centered on the following demands: to reestablish the Jewish Legion as an integral part of the British garrison in Palestine, to develop the Jewish Colonial Trust as the main instrument of economic activity, and to conduct a political offensive which would induce the British government to adapt its policy in Palestine to the original intention and spirit of the Balfour Declaration.

The Revisionist program soon became more elaborate, asking, in addition to the demand for Jewish military units for the introduction of a whole new system of policy in Palestine, defined as a "settlement regime" a system of legislative and administrative measures (such as land reform, state protection of local industries, a favorable fiscal system, etc.) explicitly designed to foster Jewish mass immigration and settlement. The Revisionists criticized the system of small-scale immigration and settlement based on "schedules" of immigration certificates and on the emphasis of agriculture. Economic and social methods, designed to bring to Palestine "the largest number of Jews within the shortest period of time" should include support of private initiative and private capital investment, mainly in industry, intensive agricultural cultivation of small plots (the Soskin method), as well as compulsory arbitration of labor conflicts and the outlawing of strikes and lockouts "during the period of state-building." While strongly critical of British policy in Palestine, the Revisionists denied being "anti-British." Their conception was that constructive Anglo-Jewish cooperation could be brought about only through determined political pressure on the British government exerted on an international scale.

First Meeting of the World Executive Herut-Hatzohar (Hebrew name, original Revisionist Zionists) Paris, France - 1925

The founding conference of the Union of Zionists-Revisionists took place in Paris in 1925. The first president of the Union was Vladimir (Ze'ev) Tiomkin. At its inception, the movement was an integral part of the World Zionist Organization. It attracted a large following in Eastern and Central Europe, where masses of Jews were waiting to emigrate. From four Revisionist delegates to the 14th Zionist Congress (1925), its representation rose to 52 delegates at the 17th Congress (1931). Subsidiary organizations sprang up under Jabotinsky's leadership: Betar, a mass movement of youth; Berit ha-ayyal ("union of army veterans"), existing mainly in Poland; Orthodox adherents organized in Adut Israel; the women's Berit Nashim Le'ummiyyot; high school students in Masada, and the Nordia sports organization. In Palestine, the Revisionists achieved the position of the second-largest party in the Asefat ha-Nivarim by gaining 17% of the votes in 1931. The Zionist majority, in particular the labor parties, rejected the ideology and tactics of the Revisionists, often attacking them as "fascists." Growing conflicts in the Palestine labor market led to the withdrawal of Revisionists and members of Betar from the Histadrut and the establishment of an independent National Labor Organization in 1934. Bitterness reached a climax in 1933 when two young Revisionists in Palestine were accused of assassinating the labor leader Chaim Arlosoroff. Palestinian courts acquitted both, but the antagonism remained and poisoned the political atmosphere for many years.

From the late 1920s, especially after the enlargement of the Jewish Agency through the inclusion of 50% non-Zionists (1929), Jabotinsky pressed for independent political action of the Revisionist movement in the international field, though the Zionist Executive considered it a breach of discipline. When Jabotinsky urged the secession of the Revisionist Union from the World Zionist Organization, allowing individual Revisionists to maintain their membership in it, he was opposed by members of the Revisionist executive, Meir Grossman, Lichtheim, Stricker, and others. When the internal controversy reached an impasse at the session of the Revisionist Party Council at Katowice (1933), Jabotinsky "suspended" the Revisionist executive and assumed "personal responsibility" until the forthcoming world conference. A plebiscite among the membership endorsed Jabotinsky's move by a large majority, but his opponents seceded and founded the small Jewish State Party, which was represented at the 18th Zionist Congress (1933) by seven delegates, as against 46 Revisionist delegates.

The first large-scale political action of the Revisionist Union was a world petition (1934) addressed by Jewish men and women to Britain's king and Parliament and to the governments and parliaments of the states of which they were citizens. More than 600,000 Jews in 24 countries signed the petition. After the Arlosoroff murder trial, an attempt at a reconciliation between the Revisionists and the Zionist leadership was made in 1934. At the initiative of Pinas Rutenberg, Jabotinsky and David Ben-Gurion met in London and, after lengthy negotiations, signed three agreements. The first enjoined all Zionist parties to refrain from certain forms of party warfare, notably "libel, slander, insult to individuals and groups." The second was a labor agreement providing for a modus vivendi between the Histadrut and the Revisionist workers, including the controversial issues of strikes. The third provided for suspension of the Revisionist boycott against the Zionist funds and a guarantee of immigration certificates for members of Betar. The agreements were welcomed by Zionist public opinion, but the labor agreement was submitted to a referendum of Histadrut members and rejected by a majority.

The atmosphere of goodwill petered out. In 1935, the Revisionists waged a heated debate in the Zionist Organization [ZO] concerning the immediate and public stipulation of the final aim of Zionism. The Zionist General Council rejected their approach and voted to preclude independent political activities of Zionist parties. The Revisionists subsequently voted to secede from the World Zionist Organization and to establish a new Zionist body.

Elected by 713,000 voters, the constituent assembly of the New Zionist Organization (NZO) met in Vienna with de Haas as chairman (September 1935). Jabotinsky was elected president (nasi). The aim of the NZO was formulated as "the redemption of the Jewish people and its land, the revival of its state and language, and the implanting of the sacred treasures of Jewish tradition in Jewish life. These objectives were to be attained by the creation of a Jewish majority in Palestine on both sides of the Jordan, the upbuilding of a Jewish state on the basis of civil liberty and social justice in the spirit of Jewish tradition, the return to Zion of all who seek Zion, and the liquidation of the Jewish Dispersion. This aim transcends the interests of individuals, groups, or classes."

When their approach was rejected, they seceded from the ZO (1935) and established the New Zionist Organization. They returned to the ZO in 1946, explaining that this became possible after the Biltmore Program had proclaimed the establishment of a Jewish commonwealth in Palestine as the goal of Zionism.

In the later 1930s the NZO called for a policy aimed at speedy "evacuation" of the Jewish masses from the "danger zone" in Eastern and Central Europe, based on "alliances" with the governments of those countries. A ten-year plan for the transfer to and absorption in Palestine of 1,500,000 Jews was prepared in 1938. In 193839, the scheme gained the sympathy of Polish government circles, which seemed to be ready to intervene with the British government and raise the problem of Jewish mass emigration at the League of Nations. But Jewish public opinion overwhelmingly opposed the "evacuation plan" as unwarranted and irresponsible publicity, playing into the hands of "antisemitic governments." At the same time, the Revisionists were instrumental in transforming "illegal" immigration to Palestine from a trickle into a mass movement, which brought thousands of European Jews in "illegal" ships to the shores of Palestine until 1940. The NZO opposed and combated the partition of Palestine as proposed in 1937 by the Palestine Royal Commission. Jabotinsky testified in London before the commission, while B. Akzin gave evidence before the Palestine Partition Commission and advocated the "evacuation scheme" before the Intergovernmental Refugee Committee in Evian, France, in 1938.

With the outbreak of World War II, NZO activities ceased in continental Europe and political work was confined to Jerusalem, London, and New York. In 1939. Jabotinsky called for the suspension of the struggle against the British for the duration of the war, the concentration of all efforts to defeat Nazi Germany, and the creation of a Jewish army to fight alongside the Allies, and of a Jewish World Council to represent the entire Jewish people at the future peace conference. Jabotinsky's death in New York (August 1940) deprived the movement of its founder and leader. His successors continued their work, mostly in the United States, by information campaigns intended to arouse the attention of governments and public opinion to the plight of the Jewish people in Europe. They published full-page advertisements in leading American newspapers calling for the abolition of the White Paper and later for the relinquishment of the British Mandate over Palestine. They raised money for the Irgun eva'i Le'ummi (IL) and to help the survivors of the death camps.

In the early 1940s a minor split occurred in the Revisionist Party in Palestine. With the tacit approval of its leadership, one of the members of its central committee, Binyamin Eliav (then Lubotzky), held private talks with the Mapai leaders Berl Katznelson and Eliyahu Golomb, as a result of which a draft agreement between the Revisionist movement and Mapai was prepared and signed by them on the basis of two principles:

(1) a common platform of Jewish war aims, including the establishment of "the Jewish state in the historical boundaries of Ere Israel," and

After the war, when the creation of a Jewish state had officially become the aim of Zionism and "illegal" immigration was conducted on a large scale by the Haganah, while some cooperation was established between the Haganah and IL, the Revisionist leaders decided to rejoin the Zionist Organization, and 42 Revisionist delegates were elected to the 22nd Zionist Congress (1946). In Palestine, two Revisionist representatives signed the Declaration of Independence of the State of Israel on May 14, 1948, but their party was not invited to participate in the Provisional Government.

When the IL disbanded, its veterans founded the new erut Party in Israel (October 1948); it won 14 seats in the First Knesset (1949), while the Revisionist list was unable to seat a single deputy. In the Diaspora, Revisionist groups remained mostly loyal to the old framework, but in 1950 a world union was founded called Berit erut ha-ohar, with erut as its organization in Israel. A Revisionist representative was elected to the Jewish Agency Executive in April 1963 by a majority vote, against strong opposition from the Zionist labor parties. But the rift between the Revisionist and the labor camps was largely healed in the later 1960s, when the Eshkol government decided to transfer Jabotinsky's remains to Mount Herzl in Jerusalem and particularly after erut leaders, as part of the Gaal bloc, joined the government of national unity in 1967. In the 1968 World Zionist Congress, Revisionists accounted for 69 delegates out of 644 (10.7%).

In the 1920s, and particularly in the 1930s, the Revisionist movement maintained a number of newspapers and periodicals in several countries. Apart from Razsvet, a French-language weekly La Voie Nouvelle appeared in Paris. In Poland the Yiddish weekly Der Nayer Veg enjoyed popularity in the mid-1930s, when it was edited by the poet Uri evi Greenberg. In the late 1930s the great Yiddish daily in Warsaw, Der Moment, became closely linked with the Revisionist movement. Robert Stricker's Neue Welt in Vienna served the Revisionist movement as long as Stricker himself was one of its leaders. In London, The Jewish Standard was edited by Abraham Abrahams. In Johannesburg, South Africa, The Jewish Herald is the organ of the Revisionist movement.

In Palestine, the daily Do'ar ha-Yom purchased by Jabotinsky in 1928 had a Revisionist-oriented editorial policy. It continued to be published for about two years. A maximalist Revisionist faction, led by Abba Aimeir, Y.H. Yeivin, and U.. Greenberg published in the early 1930s its own paper azit ha-Am. The daily Ha-Yarden existed in Jerusalem for several years in the mid-1930s but for lack of funds became a weekly and was transferred to Tel Aviv in 1935. In 1938, Ha-Mashkif began to appear again and continued to be published through the period of statehood. The monthly Beitar, edited by Joseph Klausner and B.Z. Netanyahu was published in Jerusalem in the mid-1930s and became the ideological and literary organ of the Revisionist-oriented public in Palestine. In the State of Israel, the daily erut served the movement until its merger with Ha-Boker in 1960 into the daily Ha-Yom. The latter closed in 1970.

INTRODUCTION

The history of the parties of the "right" within the Zionist movement and the development of a society outside that of the General Labor Federation (the Histradrut) is much less known than that of the latter and of the Labor movement. The political dominance and ideology of the latter went unchallenged, both in theory and in practice, at least since the early 1930s. The "national right" or the "radical right"1 was, in this respect, in a much better position than the "liberal" or "civil" right but its historiography nevertheless concentrated on several periods and a succession of events and is far from being complete. The Zionist "right" was generally credited with a monolithic image: for its supporters, the national and political movement was the only one in Zionism that fought, without aberrations, for the establishment of a Jewish State; for its opponents, it was an expression of "reactionary" foundations, a barren movement, whose historical function was negative from beginning to end. Both attitudes are generalizations with a clear ideological coloring. Both hold, but from different starting points, with Leonard Fein that "erut remained faithful to the Revisionist platform"2 i.e., that there have been hardly any changes in the Zionist "right" since its founding in 1925, apart from varied emphases stemming from the changes in status and circumstances of Zionism in the last 50 years, principally in the wake of the Holocaust and the establishment of the State of Israel. Both, to a large extent, ignore one of the questions that interest historians and sociologists dealing with political and social movements, namely, that of the internal dynamic during times of change and the appearance of adaptation or response to changing circumstances.

The rise to power of the Likkud, with erut as the main component of this new political constellation, has created a certain interest in its ideological heritage and political style. This interest focused mainly not on the history of the movement but on the political and spiritual heritage of Ze'ev Jabotinsky, the founder of the Revisionist movement.

Within erut this was an attempt to give credence to actual positions from Jabotinsky's teachings, in order to defend or criticize the political behavior of the government headed by Menaem Begin. An internal dispute broke out in erut following presentation of their Peace Plan, regarding fidelity to the Jabotinsky platform, and reached its peak in January 1978.3 Opponents viewed the government as a condemnable continuation of the Jabotinsky heritage, which was judged as wrong, barren and dangerous. Their intention was to point out that erut and in its footsteps, the Likkud was unable to free itself of the negative tradition of Revisionism in both foreign and home policy. To a very large extent the process of personification of the "right" continued; previously Revisionism had been identified with the personality of Jabotinsky, but the "right" is now identified with that of Menaem Begin.4

The purpose of this article is not to propose chapter headings for a history of the "right" from its inception with the founding of the Revisionist Zionists and Betar in the early 1920s (see "Revisionists , Zionist"), by way of the struggle of Irgun eva'i Le'ummi in the years 193748, and founding of erut and, subsequently, of Gaal (1965) and the Likkud (1973) until Likkud's victory in the elections of May 1977. The intention is to throw some light on a few of the basic problems in the development of the Zionist and Israeli "right," and to concentrate in particular on the above-mentioned question of continuity and change, of tradition and alteration, on both the ideological and socio-organizational levels.

REVISIONISM AND HERUT CONTINUITY OR CHANGE

As noted, it is commonly held that there is an uninterrupted and almost single-minded continuity between the Revisionists under Jabotinsky and erut under Menaem Begin. The avowed fidelity to Jabotinsky's heritage, identical ingredients of leadership and political style, a certain organizational continuity, partial social-demographic identity, and a continuance of fundamental axioms, have created and given root to this. It is, however, clear that the far-reaching changes in the patterns of reality from the time of Revisionism to those in which erut functioned since 1949 should have left some mark of change and alteration. In fact, Revisionism did undergo a process of change and adaptation to the reality of the sovereign Jewish State after May 1948, as did all the other political and social movements in Israel. The Revisionists, however, were faced, at least in theory, with one problem of principle that did not worry the other Zionist and Israeli movements. In 1934, Ze'ev Jabotinsky wrote to David Ben-Gurion: "It is a matter of indifference to me whether the state of the Jews will be an orthodox Jewish state or a socialist state the main thing is that there should be a state." Jabotinsky thus repeated what had been written by J.B. Schechtman in the Russian-language Revisionist organ, Rassviet, in December 1925: "(Revisionism)'s program and ideology contain no socialist or religious aspects that are unacceptable to Zionism as a whole Revisionism is a political movement On socialist questions our opinion, like that of the World Zionist Federation, is neutral." The ideology and declared Revisionist program stressed that they related only to the period of building up a Jewish majority in the Land of Israel as an essential base for the establishment of the State of Israel. But Revisionism did not dissolve in 1948. Revisionism was a social and ideological movement deeply anchored in Jewish public life, and, from its very beginning, had set aims beyond the establishment of a sovereign state. It considered establishment of the state as a partial and incomplete achievement both in terms of its territorial boundaries and from the point of view of its social and cultural image. Revisionism, therefore, had to adjust to the decisive change in reality in the Land of Israel with the transfer from an autonomous society to a sovereign society equipped with the apparatus of statehood. It had to reexamine its philosophy, renew its organizational structure and find new social support.

FROM POLAND TO THE LAND OF ISRAEL

Prior to 1939, Revisionism's main strength as a social and cultural movement in Eastern Europe was principally in Poland. There Revisionism quickly developed from a small political faction and a number of youth and student organizations into one of the largest and most crystallized popular movements within Zionism. This base was destroyed immediately on the outbreak of World War II. Revisionism's strength in the Land of Israel was relatively weak; it grew much more slowly and its organization was feeble. But even before the War, and with greater resolution afterwards, the center of gravity of Revisionist activity moved with the founding of the Irgun eva'i Le'ummi. The IL (and subsequently Lei) drew much of their strength from the Revisionist public life in Poland, mainly from Betar, but after 1939 that source was blocked. Henceforth, the strength of Revisionism and of IL were drawn from within the Land of Israel only. After 1944, support for IL in Israel expanded far in excess of the support that the Revisionists had had prior to World War II. Members joined IL who had belonged neither to the Revisionist Zionists nor to Betar.

erut's electorate in the First Knesset in January 1949 was composed of veteran supporters of Revisionism, members of IL and supporters of its struggle between 1944 and 1948. From this point of view erut was a new demographic and social entity, even if its political elite comprised ex-members of IL and Betar.5 erut obtained 49,782 votes in 1949, 45,652 in 1951, 107,190 in 1956, 130,515 in 1959 and 138,590 in 1961. It was only the establishment of Gaal, a union of erut and the Liberals, descendants of the General Zionists, that doubled the number of voters for the new political framework of the "right" to 256,975 in 1965, 296,294 in 1969, 423,309 in 1973, and finally 583,968 in 1977.

The membership of the Irgun eva'i Le'ummi comprised 45% born in Eastern Europe, 17% in Ere Israel and 10% in the countries of Asia and Africa. Following the mass immigration to Israel of the 1950s, erut began to draw more and more supporters from voters from Asian and African countries. It is true that Revisionism had previously gained support from these quarters, but in the 1950s it became the main reservoir for the electoral growth of erut, and this happened without ignoring the continuity of the East European elite, most of whom were members of the free professions, employed and self-employed and with a formal education. In addition to the waves of immigration and the feeling of deprivation and alienation on the part of the manual laborers form Asia and Africa and the sympathy that they held for the nationalist-activist position taken by erut and its political culture, its growth was assisted by the differentiation among the Israeli working classes between the private and public sectors. Both before and after 1948 Revisionism and erut were anchored in Jewish public life, which rejected the philosophy and Zionist-pioneering make-up of its various components both in theory and in practice. The most significant change was that the erut voting public increasingly became manual and white collar employees of a social and economic ilk that differed entirely from that of Jewish society in Poland of the 1920s and 1930s. This affected both the style of the movement, which acquired a new popular image, and the contents of its philosophy. After a difficult internal struggle, erut drew the conclusions from this change and established a faction within the Histadrut the Blue-White faction which expressed radical formulations in wages and in the realm of social policy different from the formulation that had been acceptable to Revisionism in the Mandatory period.6 Fidelity to the ideological tradition and ideological change gave rise to a network of philosophies that, on the one hand, included emphasis on the priority status of the private sector and the demand for maximum reduction of state involvement in the economy while, on the other, there was support for widespread social legislation (minimum salary, national health insurance, etc.). What was described by Revisionism's opponents as "speaking with two voices" was an authentic expression of the internal complexity of erut and the change in its social structure.

FROM PARTY TO UNDERGROUND AND FROM UNDERGROUND TO PARTY

The adaptation to changes was not achieved without a severe organizational upheaval. Even prior to 1944 Revisionism was far from being a one-dimensional movement in terms of the opinions held by its members, and its organizational structure was split as well. There was a big difference between the Zionist Revisionists, the political arm, and Betar, the youth organization, and in 1933 the tension between the various groups caused the first split in Revisionism with the breaking away of a group of veterans headed by Meir Grossman and the founding of the Jewish State Party. Within the party there was a tendency to undermine the basic axioms of Revisionism that expressed a nationalist-activist philosophy and demanded a change in the methods of operation of the movement. The IL grew within Betar in an underground fashion and contrary to the stand of the Betar leaders. Not till 1944 did the IL become the main and most active organization within Revisionism; after Jabotinsky's death and the outbreak of World War II, they disbanded. There were still those within the Zionist Revisionists and Betar who felt that the IL was a temporary entity and that at the conclusion of the struggle against the British its role would be over, and the leadership would be returned to the veterans of the two groups. This attitude gave rise to severe tension among them, but in practice Revisionism as a political movement was eliminated after 1939 and the IL took over. The latter was not the underground arm of a bona fide political party (as was the Haganah), but a sovereign underground organization.

The IL was not merely a new organizational entity but made a break that affected history of Revisionism, a break that came about not only because of the personal identification between the leaders of the IL and the former leaders of Betar, and the fidelity of the IL leaders, not to Revisionism as a movement, but to Ze'ev Jabotinsky as leader and teacher. Jabotinsky and Revisionism believed in the need for the existence of the movement as a bona fide party, functioning on a political plane and believing in the power of moral pressure and in the moral stand of Zionism, and in the force of common interests between Zionism and Great Britain. The IL rejected this attitude and placed its trust mainly on the pressure generated by armed struggle. To a large extent, this was a transition from the political philosophy of Jabotinsky to the revolutionary philosophy of Abba Aimeir which Jabotinsky completely rejected although he understood its roots and motives.

Menaem Begin's personality and activity mark the combination of the political philosophy and the revolutionary, despite the fact that at the Warsaw Convention of Betar in September 1938 he expounded the revolutionary philosophy in opposition to Jabotinsky's legal philosophy. Begin rejected the reasoning of the Loamei erut Israel and linked the revolutionary and political philosophies. Although the IL, under his leadership, didn't believe in the need for joint action by Zionism and Britain and indulged in underground activity for the removal of the British from Ere Israel, his underground activity was largely designed to stress the hardship in which Jewry found itself after the Holocaust and the aspirations of the Jews to realize the moral and historical right to a Jewish state. Contrary to the Lei, the Irgun eva'i Le'ummi was closely linked to Jabotinsky's inheritance, even though its activity was contrary to his philosophy. The spirit of Aimeir and Uri evi Greenberg held great sway in the IL but it was Begin who underscored and strengthened the attachment to Jabotinsky and expressed the ideological continuity between Jabotinsky and Betar, and the Irgun eva'i Le'ummi.

The IL did not go out of existence in 1949, nor did it return the mantle of leadership to the veterans of the Zionist Revisionists and Betar. The Zionist Revisionist leadership brought the party back into the Zionist Federation in 1946 and took part in the Provisional Council of State; three of its members were amongst the signatories of the Scroll of Independence. There was a low of distrust between the leadership of IL and that of the Zionist Revisionists, with the former considering itself as the new leadership. The IL emerged from the underground and established a new political party in the State of Israel, "the erut Movement, founded by the Irgun eva'i Le'ummi. It replaced the Zionist Revisionists and created an amalgamation with the Zionist Revisionists in the Diaspora under the aegis of the Zionist Movement Brith erut-ha-ohar. The veteran Zionist leadership ran independently in the elections to the First Knesset but its list the Jabotinsky Movement Brith ha-ohar gained only 2,892 votes (0.7% of the votes). Part of the veteran leadership joined the erut Movement while others left Revisionism. (Some of them joined the General Zionists, while others, such as Dr. Benjamin Lubotsky, after a short-lived attempt to establish an independent party called Mifleget ha-Am, even joined Mapai.) In the 1950s a significant change took place in the leadership of erut, with some members of the IL and its supporters in Israel and abroad, such as Hillel Kook, Shmuel Marlin, Shmuel Katz and Uri evi Greenberg, leaving the movement, while Revisionists who had belonged to the "moderate" line in Revisionism joined and were included in its Knesset list.

The new party's main problem was twofold: on the one hand it had to establish its right of legitimization as a democratic-parliamentary movement, free of its past as a breakaway underground movement and meriting widespread political support irrespective of any sympathy for its struggle against the British; and, on the other, for the right of legitimacy as a political party in opposition to a political and national structure it considered faulty and negative. In the 1950s, the erut Movement deleted the words "Founded by the Irgun eva'i Le'ummi" and toned down its policy to some extent. The claim-cum-aspiration for Israeli sovereignty over Transjordan was dropped from the party platform, and it adjusted to the rules of parliamentary-electoral contest, particularly after the serious crisis that broke out in the wake of the dispute over German reparations and the violent demonstration against the Knesset in January 1952. Voices were now heard within the erut claiming that it had no chance of defeating Mapai at the polls and that its excessive parliamentarianism was blunting its revolutionary character and turning it into a regular Israeli political party of the establishment. At this point Menaem Begin was the link between the democratic parliamentary approach of Jabotinsky and that of erut as against the revolutionarism and anti-parliamentary tendency within the movement. Victory for his line was complete when several of Lei's former leaders (led by Yiak Shamir, current Speaker of the Knesset) joined the erut Movement. The anti-parliamentary tendencies in erut disappeared completely during the 1950s and the heritage of the underground and the separation of Revisionism and IL faded from the movement's behavioral patterns. During the 1960s the process of legitimization was completed with the establishment of the erut-Liberal Bloc (Gaal).

HISTORICAL RIGHT AND NATIONAL SOVEREIGNTY OVER WESTERN PALESTINE

The various groups and schools of thought within Revisionism had no uniform position with regard to the Arab problem. The conclusion, however, was the same: Revisionism, IL and erut stood for the historical right of the Jewish people to national sovereignty over Western Palestine.7 Up to the Six-Day War, the erut Movement was the only Israeli political party that maintained in its manifestos the necessity for the "wholeness of the homeland." The policy and ethics of the "iron curtain" were acceptable to Revisionism and erut, both of whom felt that the Arabs would come to terms with the Jewish state only after it became clear to them that it was an existing and organic fact in the Middle East. However, while Jabotinsky felt that the main point was that the Arabs of Palestine were a national minority living in a territory where the Jewish national majority ruled and that within this context they were entitled to the full legal rights of a national minority, the erut Movement spoke about civil equality of rights of the Arabs of Palestine, not in a separate autonomous framework.

Following the Six-Day War the principle of national sovereignty over Western Palestine became the main issue in Gaal's platform and the moderate Liberals also adopted it. From this point of view, the traditional position of the Liberals had become more extreme, but from a different point of view it created unity in the Gaal framework, and subsequently moderation in that of the Likkud in positions of the erut Movement, for the 1977 election manifesto no longer explicitly determined the need to apply Israeli sovereignty forthwith to Judea and Samaria.8 In this area a gradual process of withdrawal can be detected initially a retreat from the demand for sovereignty over Transjordan and subsequently a tactical renouncement of the demand for the introduction of sovereignty over Western Palestine. Begin's Peace Plan was anchored in Jabotinsky's political program by offering provisional autonomy to the Arabs of the territories, but not in the context of Jewish sovereignty. The question of national sovereignty over Judea and Samaria remained open, at least theoretically, although there was a declared objection to the application of any other

sovereignty over these territories. There was therefore opposition to the Peace Plan within erut. In effect, Begin's opponents of various hues within erut accused him of deserting the fundamental principle of Revisionism, i.e., that there should be no retreat from the public declaration concerning Israel's right of sovereignty over all of Western Palestine. This opinion supported by that of Revisionism maintains that for Zionism to relinquish, even with reservations, any part of Western Palestine, would be tantamount to recognizing the legitimacy of another national claim over it. The Premier, on the other hand, considered his Peace Plan as taking due account of current political facts as well as of Jabotinsky's political heritage, inasmuch as it proposed autonomy for the Arabs of the territories but opposed the introduction of any other national sovereignty over them. The debate revealed to a large extent not only the unique reliance of erut on the Jabotinsky heritage but also the current ideological hangover from the ideological struggle of the thirties and forties. As Prime Minister, Begin continued to practice Jabotinsky's belief in the power of the moral claim, of historical right and cooperation based on common interests with the Western Power (the U.S.A. replacing Britain), but not Jabotinsky's philosophy that Zionism does not need to conceal the full scope of its national and political aspirations. It is an irony of history that the argument between Begin and his opponents within his movement recalls to a certain extent the dispute between Jabotinsky and Mapai at the 17th Zionist Congress in 1931. Jabotinsky had demanded that the Congress publicly declare that the aim of Zionism was to establish a Jewish state in Palestine and Transjordan, while the leaders of Mapai considered such a declaration dangerous and superfluous and preferred a vague formulation.9

PRIVATE ECONOMY AND STATE INVOLVEMENT

Jabotinsky failed in his attempt to gain the political cooperation of the "civilian" parties in the Yishuv and Zionist movement. From this point of view, the establishment of Gaal in 1965 was something Begin achieved where Jabotinsky failed. This amalgamation was not based solely on the assumption that only a unification of the camp of the right would be able to overcome the continued hegemony of the Labor movement. It was created because erut and the Liberals shared the same platform in their economic and social ideology. Revisionism, and subsequently erut, considered the private sector and private initiative as the main motivating force of the economy, in which they demanded a minimum of state involvement. Both parties considered this involvement as strengthening the base of the ruling party. Jabotinsky, more than any other Zionist leader, accredited the bourgeoisie and private initiative with moral justification and moral validity within a comprehensive socio-economic theory that had no room for partisan-class interests. However, the cooperation with the Liberals, based on an appreciation of, and belief in, the primacy of the private sector and a reduction of state involvement, was accompanied in erut by the demand by some sections for state involvement in various social and economic areas that were contrary to the Liberal program, such as the introduction of a minimum wage, national health insurance, etc. The tension between erut's bourgeois ideological foundation and its etatist tendencies was accentuated as a result of the increase in the number of organized workers in erut, principally after the establishment of the Blue-White faction in the Histadrut. This internal tension was blunted to a great extent because erut was in the position of being a critical opposition with whose political nationalist outlook employees could identify, and also because it was a vehicle for expression of socio-economic bitterness, frustration and deprivation. During the first year of the Likkud rule, this internal tension did not surface, but it can be clearly seen as one of the most difficult problems of the Likkud as the party in power, having to honor both ideological commitments and its loyalty to the ideological heritage of Revisionism and Jabotinsky as well as its electoral commitments to the voting public at large. erut has absolutely opposed the socio-economic structure of the Israeli economy and society as they took shape during the period of Labor Movement hegemony, but the ideological tradition and commitment to work for a basic change of this structure has not yet been realized.

SETTLEMENT AS A STATE FACTOR

During the Mandatory period, Revisionism did not attach political importance to the pioneering settlement activity and strategy adopted by the Labor Movement. It viewed collective settlement as an element that channeled to itself vast amounts of money from the capital, beyond the degree of its importance, which were thus wasted on superfluous collectivist experiments. Collective settlement was seen in the main as the great rival of the private economy and its victor over the monies of the limited resources of national capital. The advantage of the various forms of agricultural settlements was judged by the criterion of how many jobs they could ensure. On the political level, Revisionism believed that political facts should be determined by political negotiations, their commitments, and not by the creation of settlements. This inimical attitude softened after the Six-Day War, with erut and the Likkud supporting, morally and politically, Jewish settlements and settlement activity in Judea and Samaria, and applying political and moral pressure on the government to guarantee their existence and expansion. This support stemmed mainly from recognition of the fact that in view of the Alignment government's preparedness for territorial compromise in Judea and Samaria, settlement in the territories was the most outstanding and concrete expression of the Israeli demand for sovereignty over them. The Gaal and Likkud manifestos declared that Jews have the right to settle in Judea and Samaria and demanded that the government increase the settlement momentum. The testing point of the Likkud after it came to power was in keeping the promises and fulfilling the expectations in all aspects of settlement. The Likkud Peace Plan did indeed ensure urban and rural settlement throughout Judea and Samaria, but political circumstances have caused a freeze on settlement activity. This was interpreted by those favoring settlement within the Likkud and its supporters within Gush Emunim and The Land of Israel Movement (see 9: 41ff; 2: 774; 6: 575; 14: 1291; 10: 840), as an expression of the old tradition of Revisionism which had not valued pioneering settlement and had not accorded it any supreme political or Zionist value.

THE WEIGHT OF PERSONALITY

Ze'ev Jabotinsky and Menaem Begin were dissimilar both in character and in the projection of their intellectual and emotional world. The degree of esteem in which Begin held Jabotinsky is unique, far in excess of what is usual amongst political leaders. For Begin, Jabotinsky was the only true leader and guide in his generation, both as an ideological authority and by personal example.10 For many years both of them wielded a large degree of authority in the movement that overcame many internal divisions and tensions. The personal trials that Begin underwent during his period of Zionist activity were much harsher than those of Jabotinsky, and the political and human decisions which confronted him, particularly during the struggle against the British, were of a nature that Jabotinsky never had to face. In terms of their political standing within their own movement (outside it both were leaders who were held in disrepute and reviled in a more extreme and bitter way than any other Zionist leaders), Begin has the same position of authority held by Jabotinsky, although the political patterns are entirely different. It would nevertheless appear that the connecting link between them is not merely that of continuity, but rather in the fact that the ideological, political and moral authority of Jabotinsky's achievements were the main factor that turned a social and political movement into a stable and ongoing political and social entity; Begin with his personality serves not only as the main connecting link to the Jabotinskian tradition of the past, but, like Jabotinsky, he is the cement binding together the various elements in the party. In the figures of Jabotinsky and Begin can be found a revelation as to the great weight of personality in history, for it would be difficult to understand how the continuity was created between Revisionism and the IL and erut without Begin, since the status of Revisionism was irrevocably dependent on the figure of Jabotinsky and that of erut on the figure and personality of Begin. It is a case of a social and political movement which, although its roots are deep, needs an authoritative personality in order to exist.

Source: Ya'akov Shavit and Joseph B. Schechtman, Encyclopaedia Judaica. 2008 The Gale Group. All Rights Reserved. Photo provided by Lola Franckel, Alexander S. Franckel and Philip L. Franckel, Esq.

Link:
Zionism: Revisionist Zionism - Jewish Virtual Library

Macron Denounces Anti-Zionism as ‘Reinvented Form of Anti-Semitism’ – New York Times

Posted By on July 18, 2017

President Franois Mitterrand, who worked as a low-level Vichy administrator before joining the Resistance, declared in 1992 that the French state was the Vichy regime, it was not the Republic. He argued, as his predecessors had, that the only legitimate representatives of France were in exile with Gen. Charles de Gaulle, who ran the wartime Resistance from London.

Ending decades of equivocation, President Jacques Chirac formally admitted Frances collective responsibility for wartime crimes, declaring in 1995: the criminal folly of the occupiers was seconded by the French, by the French state.

But the issue has not gone away. In April, Marine Le Pen, the far-right National Front leader whom Mr. Macron defeated in a May runoff election, declared that France was not responsible for the Vel dHiv, denying French responsibility and setting off a furor.

Ms. Le Pen later said that she considered the Vichy regime illegitimate, and believed that General de Gaulle had the legitimate power.

Mr. Macron condemned that argument. Admittedly Vichy was not all of the French, he said, but it was the government and the administration of France.

Mr. Macrons comments came during a period of resurgent anti-Semitism in France, fueled by right-wing nationalism and by fundamentalist Islam.

Mr. Macron recited the names of victims of recent anti-Semitic and other extremist violence. Among them were Ilan Halimi, a young man who was tortured and killed in 2006; four people killed in 2012 at a Jewish school in southwestern France; and four people slain at a kosher supermarket in Paris in 2015. He also called for an investigation into the death of Sarah Halimi, a 66-year-old woman who in April was thrown from the window of her Paris apartment, which some suspect an anti-Semitic motive.

In his remarks on Sunday, Mr. Macron went further than his predecessors in linking attacks on Jewish individuals with attacks against the Jewish state, calling anti-Zionism an updated version of anti-Semitism.

We will yield nothing to the messages of hatred, he said. We will yield nothing to anti-Zionism, because it is the reinvented form of anti-Semitism.

The French president called on Israel and the Palestinians to renew peace talks and warned that ongoing construction of Jewish settlements threatened the regions chances for peace.

I call for a resumption of negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians in the framework of the search for a solution of two states, Israel and Palestine, living in recognized, secure borders with Jerusalem as the capital, Mr. Macron said.

Follow Russell Goldman on Twitter @GoldmanRussell.

Aurelien Breeden contributed reporting.

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Macron Denounces Anti-Zionism as 'Reinvented Form of Anti-Semitism' - New York Times

Haaretz editor declares war on Zionism – Arutz Sheva

Posted By on July 18, 2017

Haaretz editor declares war on Zionism

: Olivier Fitoussi /FLASH90

An editor of the left-wing Haaretz daily chastised French President Emmanuel Macron for calling anti-Zionism a form of anti-Semitism, praising anti-Zionism as resistance against racism and apartheid.

Asaf Ronel, the world news editor for Haaretz, criticized Macrons recent statement that anti-Zionism was a reinvention of anti-Semitism.

We will never surrender to the messages of hate; we will not surrender to anti-Zionism because it is a reinvention of anti-Semitism, said Macron on Sunday.

Responding to Macrons comments via Twitter, Ronel rejected the comparison, and denounced Zionism as being inherently racist. Ronel also praised anti-Zionism for resisting the evils of modern Zionism.

Dear president Emmanuel Macron, you are wrong anti-Zionism is resisting the racism inherent in todays Zionism. Its not antisemitism.

In a back and forth with French-Israeli foreign policy expert Emmanuel Navon, Ronel later accused Zionism of apartheid.

Do you know what is the difference btwn blaming Zionism 4 oppression&apartheid & believing the protocols of the elders of Zion, Ronel asked rhetorically, later answering his own question by writing that as opposed to the mythical Protocols, Zionist apartheid was reality.

But unlike many radical left-wing critics of Israel, Ronel did not cite Israels 1967 liberation of Judea and Samaria as an example of the alleged apartheid, instead denouncing the very establishment of the Jewish state in 1948.

& the apartheid refers to 48, not 67.

On Monday, Ronel took to Twitter again to complain about criticism of his comments after Honest Reporting documented his aforementioned tweets.

Pro-Israel activists attack my newspaper for something I wrote. Explains a lot about their understanding of free media & freedom of speech.

Ronel raised the issue again with a tweet Tuesday morning, attacking the conflating of anti-Semitism and anti-Zionism, while accusing Israel of whitewashing Zionist anti-Semites.

Conflating antiSemitism w antiZionism only hurts the fight against antiSemitism. Also true for Israel's whitewashing of Zionist anti-Semites.

Link:
Haaretz editor declares war on Zionism - Arutz Sheva

Opposing Zionism not racism: Scottish court rules – Press TV

Posted By on July 18, 2017

Activists from the Scottish Palestine Solidarity Campaign protest against Israel outside the Glasgow Sheriff Court in Scotland, on 10 July 2017.

A pro-Palestinian organization in Scotland has clinched a landmark victory in a UK court that ruled in favor of its members, who were accused of racism for having participated in a protest against Israel three years ago.

Glasgow Sherriffs Court announced on Friday its verdict in favor of two members of the Scottish Palestine Solidarity Campaign (SPSC), which supports Palestinian issues in Britain.

The members of SPSC Mick Napier and Jim Watson had been facing charges of racism and aggravated trespass for a protest against an Israeli firm in September 2014.

The two were arrested in a shopping center back then when they refused to leave the demonstration, which was held against Israeli company Jericho cosmetics that operates in the occupied West Bank and had been involved in Israels 2014 military offensive against Palestinians in the Gaza Strip.

Napier said they were accused of being motivated by hatred of Israelis rather than opposition to Israels repeated massacres, apartheid across the whole of Palestine and genocidal violence in Gaza.

The prosecutor in Scotland claimed that the two were recycling an ancient anti-Semitic Jewish blood libel by speaking about Israels murdering of Palestinians.

Napier said these claims were being made in support of the Israeli regime, while the people of Gaza were still looking for ice-cream freezers and vegetable refrigerators in which to store the bodies of children killed by Israels military.

When the Scottish government joined in by denouncing the deep inhumanity of the Israeli massacre, Napier said, the Scottish procurators were working hand in glove with pro-Israel lobby groups to silence voices of Palestine solidarity.

The SPSC has been under pressure from pro-Israel lobbyists and Scottish prosecutors who were trying to criminalize their actions in support of Palestinians.

Last year, two employees of the pro-Israel Community Security Trust made allegations against SPSC members but that was also thrown out by a court.

Excerpt from:
Opposing Zionism not racism: Scottish court rules - Press TV

The City: Week of July 21 – Cleveland Jewish News

Posted By on July 18, 2017

Singles Scene

Saturday, July 22

Crossroads for Jewish Singles of Cleveland dinner at Blazin Bills Restaurant, 7 p.m., 12891 Main Market Rd. (Rt. 422), Burton. RSVP to Ken at 440-498-9911 by July 17.

Saturday, July 29

Crossroads for Jewish Singles of Cleveland dinner at Abuelos Restaurant, 7 p.m., 26100 Hardvard Rd., Warrensville Hts. RSVP to Carol at 440-442-3430 by July 24.

FRIDAY, JULY 21

Outdoor Yoga series with the Mandel JCC, 6:45-8 p.m., Safran Park, 26001 S. Woodland, Beachwood. Free and open to community. Bring a mat. For more info, contact Kate at ktoohig@mandeljcc.org or 216-831-0700 x1365.

Cleveland Clinic VeloSano 4 kickoff party, 4-9 p.m., Mall B, E. 9th and W. 3rd, Cleve. For more info, visit bit.ly/2uvHq9I.

Clevelands Founders Day celebration, noon-2 p.m., Wade Oval, 10820 East Blvd., Cleve. Free, birthday cake and ice cream served. For more info, visit bit.ly/2vuHmED.

SATURDAY, JULY 22

Mayfield Relay for Life, 12:30-9:30 p.m., 6100 Marsol Rd., Mayfield Hts. For more info and to register, visit relayforlife.org/mayfieldoh or email lauren.sweet@cancer.org.

CWRUs Foraging at the Farm class with Ryan Bennett, 10 a.m.-1 p.m., Squire Valleevue and Valley Ridge Farm, 37125 Fairmount Blvd., Hunting Valley. $65. Register at 216-368-0274 or email patty.gregory@case.edu.

Latinos and Baseball: In the Barrios and the Big Leagues Smithsonian collecting event, 10 a.m.-2 p.m., Baseball Heritage Museum, 6601 Lexington Ave., Cleve. Free. Register at bit.ly/2uC2Krd.

Meet and Greet with Kenny Lofton, 1-3 p.m., Hard Rock Rocksino Northfield Park, 10777 Northfield Rd., Northfield. Open to the public. For more info, call Vivian at 330-908-7771.

SUNDAY, JULY 23

B'nai B'rith Health Run, 8:30 a.m., Rascal House Pizza University Heights, 2255 Warrensville Center Rd., University Hts. $10 advanced, $20 day of the event. Register at bnaibrithhealthrun.org. For more info, call 216-309-0515.

Mosaic Outdoor Club kayak outing, 10:30 a.m., Hinckley Lake, Hinckley. Followed by lunch. RSVP to Elizabeth at 216-932-4806.

Workmens Circle Ohio District Hunger Walk, noon-5 p.m., Notre Dame College, 4545 College Rd., South Euclid. Registration is free but required at bit.ly/2umPQQQ. Sponsorships are available starting at $100. For more info, visit workmenscircle.org.

MONDAY, JULY 24

The Jews Reaction to Muhammads Claims of Prophecy with professor Shari Lowin, 10 a.m., Landmark Centre, 25700 Science Park Dr., Beachwood. Free for Siegal Lifelong Learning members, $5 for nonmembers. Register at bit.ly/2tEpyJy.

Abrahams Discovery of God with professor Shari Lowin, 7 p.m., Landmark Centre, 25700 Science Park Dr., Beachwood. Free for Siegal Lifelong Learning members, $5 for nonmembers. Register at bit.ly/2tEvpyC.

TUESDAY, JULY 25

The Cleveland Foundation and The City Club of Cleveland presents The Challenge of Success as part of the For the Love of Cleveland lecture series, noon, Public Square, Cleve. Free. For more info, visit cityclub.org.

Shaker Square: Its past, present and future forum, 7-8:30 p.m., Shaker Public Library Main Branch, 16500 Van Aken Blvd., Shaker Hts. Free. For more info, email teachingcleveland@earthlink.net.

WEDNESDAY, JULY 26

Siegal Lifelong Learning class Emma Goldman: Revolution as a Way of Life with Siegal Exec. Dir. Brian Amkraut, 10-11:30 a.m., Landmark Centre, 25700 Science Park Dr., Beachwood. $30 for members, $40 for nonmembers at bit.ly/2r1knCj.

THURSDAY, JULY 27

Lake County Arthritis Expo by Lake Health and Cleveland Shoulder Institute, 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m., TriPoint Medical Center Physician Pavilion, 7590 Auburn Rd., Concord Twp. Register by calling Lake Health Best of Health at 800-454-9800.

Telling Life Stories Through Guided Autobiography course with Susan Bond & Ramona Charles, 1-3 p.m., Landmark Centre Building, 25700 Science Park Dr., Beachwood. $90 for Siegal Lifelong Learning members, $110 for nonmembers at bit.ly/2tkMrl7. Thursdays thru Aug. 31.

The Cactus League and the Integration of Spring Training event, 7 p.m., Baseball Heritage Museum, League Park, 6601 Lexington Ave., Cleve. Free. RSVP at bit.ly/2tkM1uM. For more info, call 216-789-1093.

FRIDAY, JULY 28

Outdoor Yoga series with the Mandel JCC, 6:45-8 p.m., Safran Park, 26001 S. Woodland, Beachwood. Free and open to community. Bring a mat. For more info, contact Kate at ktoohig@mandeljcc.org or call 216-831-0700 x1365.

The 6th Annual Clean Transportation Cruise-In, 4-9 p.m., Edgewater Park, Metroparks, Cleve. Free. For more info and ways to get involved, email Christina at cyoka@earthdaycoalition.org or call 216-281-6468 x231.

SATURDAY, JULY 29

The Cactus League and the Integration of Spring Training presentation, noon, Baseball Heritage Museum, 6601 Lexington Ave., Cleve. For more info, call 216-789-1083.

Case Western Reserve Universitys Foraging at the Farm class with Ryan Bennett, 10 a.m.-1 p.m., Squire Valleevue and Valley Ridge Farm, 37125 Fairmount Blvd., Hunting Valley. $65. Register at 216-368-0274 or email patty.gregory@case.edu.

Tribute Weekend honoring Holocaust Survivors, 9 a.m., Oheb Zedek-Cedar Sinai Synagogue, 23749 Cedar Rd., Lyndhurst. For more info, call 216-382-6566 or email office@oz-cedarsinai.org.

SUNDAY, JULY 30

Artsyism fundraiser event, noon-4 p.m., Backyard garden of Donald Bingham Schmitt, 1579 Compton Rd., Cleve. Hts. Free. VIP brunch at 10 a.m. for $40 at bit.ly/2sLfeit. For more info, call Andrea 216-272-1084 or Shari at 216-408-8418.

University Hospitals Partnership for Families Together We Make a Family benefit dinner, 7-11 p.m., The Country Club, 2825 Lander Rd., Pepper Pike. For more info, contact Jeanne McMahon at 216-844-0413 or email jeanne.mcmahon@uhhospitals.org.

Community Breakfast with guest speaker Irene Marocco, 10 a.m., Oheb Zedek-Cedar Sinai Synagogue, 23749 Cedar Rd., Lyndhurst. For more info, call 216-382-6566 or email office@oz-cedarsinai.org.

TUESDAY, AUGUST 1

Crohns and Colitis Foundation of Americas Warrensville Heights support group, 7- 8:30 p.m., Warrensville Heights Library, 4415 Northfield Rd., Warrensville. Free. For more info, contact Denise at neohio@ccfa.org or 216-524-7700.

Crohns and Colitis Foundation of Americas Toledo and Surrounding Area support group, 7- 9 p.m., St. Lukes Hospital, Classroom #1, 5901 Monclova Rd., Maumee. Free. For more info, contact Jan at 419-636-1423.

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 2

Siegal Lifelong Learning class Emma Goldman: Revolution as a Way of Life with Brian Amkraut, 10-11:30 a.m., Landmark Centre, 25700 Science Park Dr., Beachwood. $30 for members, $40 for non-members at bit.ly/2r1knCj.

Mark Nizer juggling performance, 1 p.m., Alma Theater, 14591 Superior Rd., Cleve. Hts. $15 in advance, $18 DOS and free for children under 2 and sitting on a lap at 216-371-3000 or ticketmaster.com.

FRIDAY, AUGUST 4

Outdoor Yoga series with the Mandel JCC, 6:45-8 p.m., Safran Park, 26001 S. Woodland, Beachwood. Free and open to community. Bring a mat. For more info, contact Kate at ktoohig@mandeljcc.org or call 216-831-0700 x1365.

See the article here:
The City: Week of July 21 - Cleveland Jewish News

Does Judaism See Solar Eclipses as Bad Omens? – Chabad.org

Posted By on July 18, 2017

I have been reading articles about the upcoming solar eclipse. It is being billed as the first solar eclipse in over a century that will be visible in the the contiguous United States. Some claim that eclipses are a bad omen of things to come.

In light of this, what is the Jewish perspective on eclipses?

Also, is there any blessing recited upon witnessing an eclipse? I found blessings for all sorts of phenomena such as lightning, thunder, rainbows and earthquakes, but I see no such blessing for witnessing an eclipse.

The sages of the Talmud state, When the luminaries are stricken [i.e., eclipsed] it is an ill omen for the world. A parable to what is this matter comparable? It is akin to a king of flesh and blood who prepared a feast for his servants and placed a lantern before them to illuminate the hall. He became angry at them and said to his servant: Take the lantern from before them and seat them in darkness.

The Talmud then goes on to describe how the luminaries are stricken due to our sins.

You can now understand why you were unable to find any blessing for witnessing an eclipse. The Lubavitcher RebbeRabbi Menachem M. Schneerson, of righteous memoryexplains that since eclipses are meant to be opportunities for increasing in prayer and introspectionas opposed to prompting joyous blessingswe do not recite a blessing when witnessing one.

What is puzzling, however, is that eclipses are natural phenomena that are highly predictable. We can easily calculate any eclipse for the next couple of hundred years. This leads to the obvious question, how can we say that an eclipse is a bad omen that is caused by our sins, if it is a completely natural phenomenon?

The predictability of eclipses was already well known in Talmudic times (the Talmud was completed in the 5th century in Babylonia). And aside from the prevalent scientific knowledge of the day, the sages of the Talmud were well aware of how to calculate eclipses due to their meticulous and complex astronomical calculations for sanctifying the new Jewish month. (Trivia: A solar eclipse can only occur around the time of a new month on the Jewish lunar calendar.)

Furthermore, the Midrash Pirkei dRabbi Eliezer, which predates the Talmud, both indicates that eclipses are a natural astronomical phenomenon and warns that they are a bad sign.

So what exactly does it mean that an eclipse is a bad omen?

Some, most notably Rabbi Yonatan Eibeshitz (16901764) in his work Yaarot Devash, explain that the Talmuds mention of stricken luminaries does not refer to eclipses, but rather sunspots and other such phenomena that darken the sun and do not have a pre-set schedule or determinable cause.

While this makes for an intriguing theory, there are a number of difficulties with this explanation (besides for the fact that it does not quite fit into the wording and context of the Talmud): a) the Talmud speaks about the moon being stricken as well, not just the sun; and b) sunspots themselves are predictable. Additionally, in the analogy the Talmud gives, the king says, Remove the lantern from them and let them sit in the dark, i.e., the luminaries being stricken results in our sitting in darkness.

Many explain that when the Talmud says, When the luminaries are stricken it is an ill omen, it means that when an eclipse occurs, it is a sign that this time is dominated by a mazal ra bad luck, or literally, an evil constellation.

The Talmud similarly states that certain times are a better opportunity to take specific actions (for example, Most of a persons wisdom is achieved only at night), and furthermore, that being born under a certain constellation creates a predilection for a specific mode of behavior, for good or for the opposite.

Now, what does this mean? The Talmud itself stresses that man always has free will. Freedom is granted to every person whether to be righteous or the opposite.

Thus, it is impossible that ones innate predisposition should draw him immutably to something; rather, the sign under which one is born merely creates within him a slight partiality toward certain things. If one works on himself, he can overcome his natural tendencies, and even transform them.

The same is true regarding eclipses and other signs in the heavens. When Gd created the world, He created signs in the heavens for people to be aware of times when there would be a greater predisposition for sin and punishment. But the eclipse itself does not necessarily mean that people will act on that predisposition and actually sin, thereby causing punishment.

In the creation story at the beginning of the book of Genesis, the Torah states, And Gd said, "Let there be luminaries in the expanse of the heavens . . . and they shall be for signs and for appointed seasons and for days and years. The classic commentaries explain that they shall be for signs is a reference to eclipses. Thus, we learn that these phenomena are meant to be a sign for us.

At the same time, the prophet Jeremiah proclaims, Hearken to the word that the Lrd spoke about you, O house of Israel . . . So says the Lrd: Of the way of the nations you shall not learn, and from the signs of the heaven be not dismayed . . .

In other words, these are indeed signs in the heavens, yet the prophet tells us that we should not fear them, for, as the sages of the Talmud explain, as long as one acts properly, there is nothing to fear.

See the original post here:

Does Judaism See Solar Eclipses as Bad Omens? - Chabad.org

Orthodoxy and Reform – Israel National News – Arutz Sheva

Posted By on July 18, 2017

ORTHODOXY & REFORM

Q. Why doesnt orthodoxy accept that the Reform movement is a valid option in Judaism?

A. It never happened that every Jew thought like every other Jew.

Two Jews three opinions is an expression of reality that goes even further than Elijah, who said, How long will you hesitate between two opinions?

It resonated through the ages, with dissident sects and competing ideologies, bitter conflicts and reluctant compromises.

There has always been diversity in Jewish life. Even the problem of the orthodox versus the non-orthodox is not a modern invention.

The problem is not whether the question is new, but whether anyone has discovered a way of solving it.

Rabbi Joseph B Soloveitchik distinguished between brit goral, the covenant of fate which binds all Jews regardless of their opinions, and brit Sinai, the covenant of faith which unites those who uphold the Revelation on Sinai.

It is a useful approach, but it creates its own new problems.

The second arm of the thesis allows orthodoxy to maintain Sinai-based halakhic Judaism as the authentic tradition which defines a Jew, but leaves unspoken the status of the Conservative movement, which also claims to be halakhic, and that of the Reform movement which, whilst not claiming to be a halahic movement often claims halakhic legitimacy on the basis of a Talmudic statement that both Bet Hillel and Bet Shammai are the words of the living God.

There is a difference between, on the one hand, the secular Jews who have no room for God in their Jewish identity and come within brit goral but not brit Sinai, and on the other hand the three religious groups, Orthodox, Conservative and Reform, who believe in God (though there are apparently some Reform rabbis who are not certain about Him).

The words of the living God assessment is in Eruvin 13b. The passage informs us, For three years Bet Shammai and Bet Hillel were in dispute. One side said, The halakhah is in accordance with us. The other said, The halakhah is in accordance with us. Then a heavenly voice said, These, and these, are the words of the living God, but the halakhah is in accordance with Bet Hillel.

Two things emerge from the discussion: one, that there can be several ways of interpreting a law, and two, that in behavioural matters there is no room for halakhic indecision.

To think that the first statement sanctions pluralism is illusory. In the Bet Hillel-Bet Shammai dispute, both sides are within the halakhic loop. It is not that one is inside the halakhah and one outside it. Both are wholeheartedly halakhic. Both accept the authority of the mitzvah, but each has a different emphasis or nuance.

One cannot use this passage to say that halakhah and the abrogation of halakhah are both Judaism. It is like saying that kosher and non-kosher are both kosher. Neither Bet Hillel nor Bet Shammai can be used to lend support to this position.

Bet Hillel did sometimes reverse a view they had espoused in favour of one advocated by Bet Shammai, but neither was outside the halakhic loop.

Orthodoxy has no choice but to say that whilst they respect followers of the Reform movement as part of brit goral, Reform as an ideology cannot be counted as part of brit Sinai.

SCHOLARS MAKING PEACE

Q. How can the Siddur say, Scholars increase peace in the world? How can study bring peace?

A. You shall teach them (the words of the Torah) diligently to your children (Deut.11:19) is the basis of the Jewish stress on education.

Initially the command must have been addressed to parents in relation to their own children, but Rashi explains, Pupils are called children and the teacher of Torah is called a father. So the relationship of teacher and pupil is as holy as the relationship of parent and child.

Pupils and teachers are referred to in the Talmudic passage (Brachot 64a) that you quoted from the Siddur: Torah scholars increase peace in the world, as it is said, And all your children (pupils) shall be taught of Hashem, and great shall be the peace of your children (Isa. 54:13). Do not call them banayich but bonayich.

The banayich bonayich play on words is usually explained as Do not call them your children but your builders, because boneh is a builder. Alfasi, however, derives bonayich from a root that means to understand, and hence the sages were saying that great peace comes from being a person of understanding.

How do Torah students bring peace? The subject-matter first: the patterns set out in the Torah create a just, stable, equitable society. As the Book of Proverbs says (3:17), Its ways are ways of pleasantness and all its paths are peace.

The method of study: sitting with others and learning Torah together starts by pointing up differences of opinion, but ends either by coming to a position of peaceful agreement or at least peacefully agreeing to disagree and to acknowledge that there can be peace when there is respect for difference. Even a person who studies alone can help to attain peace because when you discover and grasp the truth you are at peace with yourself, with the world and with God.

Rav Kook points out in his Ein Aya that the Talmud does not say, make peace but increase peace.

The Talmud is full of passages in which the Torah scholars are in sharp disagreement within the parameters of halakha and belief in Hashem.One might have thought every rabbinic debate would end with someone drawing the strands together and making a compromise, but would be unfair to the protagonists, who are all sincere in their opinions and interpretations and as a matter of principle cannot resile from their positions even to give an appearance of peace.

Rav Kook says, The increase of peace occurs when all the angles and opinions that exist in wisdom are seen and it is clear how each one has a place. When there is a compilation of all the parts, details and opinions that look different, through them will be seen the light of truth and justice. Torah scholars increase peace in the world by widening, explaining and producing words of wisdom with different facets.

True peace does not require papering over or removing differences but the recognition that they exist. Peace is when they live together in mutual respect and trust.

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Orthodoxy and Reform - Israel National News - Arutz Sheva


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