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Whither American Jewry?
The Jerusalem Post ^ | November 19, 2009 | Caroline Glick

Posted on 11/21/2009 4:01:45 PM PST by rmlew

During a recent speaking tour in Canada, MK Nahman Shai (Kadima) shocked some of his hosts when he said that his primary goal in politics today is to bring down the Netanyahu government. Although indelicate, Shai's comment was not surprising. Kadima is in the opposition. And like all opposition parties in all parliamentary democracies, the primary goal of its members is to bring down the government so that they can take power.

Given that this is the case, it is unsurprising that until this week, Kadima leader Tzipi Livni tried to blame Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu for US President Barack Obama's hostility towards Israel. Far more newsworthy than her criticism of Netanyahu was her public rebuke of Obama this week for his attempt to strong-arm Israel into barring Jewish construction in Jerusalem's Gilo neighborhood.

On Wednesday Livni said, "Gilo is part of the Israeli consensus... and it is important to understand this for all discussions of borders in any future agreement."

Indeed. There is an Israeli consensus. The Israeli consensus regarding Jerusalem is based among other things on the understanding that no nation can give up its capital city and survive.

Livni wants to be prime minister one day. For that to happen, Israel must survive until she wins an election. And Israel will not long survive if it surrenders its right to its capital.

One might have thought that American Jews could be counted on to stand by Israel on this issue. But then, one would be wrong.

FOR THE past six years, Republican Senator Sam Brownback has repeatedly submitted a bill to the US Senate that, if passed into law, would revoke the presidential waiver that has allowed successive presidents to refuse to implement the 1995 law requiring the State Department to move the US Embassy to Jerusalem. This year Brownback co-sponsored his bill with Independent Senator Joseph Lieberman. As luck would have it, the Brownback-Lieberman bill was submitted two weeks before Obama launched his latest campaign against Jewish building in Jerusalem.

In the 1980s and 1990s, American Jews lobbied hard to get the embassy moved to Jerusalem. But now some American Jewish leaders recoil at the very notion. In response to the Brownback-Lieberman Jerusalem Embassy Relocation Act of 2009, the Kansas City Jewish Chronicle published an editorial last Friday titled, "Bad move, Senator Brownback."

The newspaper's editors condemned their retiring senator and called his bill, "a cheap, grandstanding move by a conservative Republican on his way out the door, playing to Jews and Christian Zionists while trying to throw a monkey wrench into President Obama's diplomatic spokes."

According to Sen. Brownback's office, the paper never had any criticism of the same bill when he submitted it during president George W. Bush's tenure in office. But now, as Israel's government and opposition stand shoulder to shoulder protecting Israeli control over Jerusalem from assaults by Obama, Kansas City's Jewish newspaper's editorial board willingly bucked what it acknowledged are the wishes of "Jews and Christian Zionists," in order to stand by their man in the Oval Office.

Some of Israel's most high-profile supporters in the US are conservative talk radio and television hosts like Rush Limbaugh, Mark Levin, Sean Hannity and Glenn Beck. But rather than thank them for their support, the Anti-Defamation League, which is supposed to be dedicated first and foremost to defending Jews from anti-Semitism, published a special report this week where it insinuated that they cultivate a climate of hatred and paranoia which could endanger Jews among others.

The ADL report, "Rage Grows in America: Anti-Government Conspiracies," dubbed Beck the "fearmonger-in-chief," for his opposition to Obama's domestic and foreign policies. It similarly castigated the so-called "tea party" movement which has attracted millions of Americans opposed to high taxes, and the townhall meetings this past summer where millions of Americans peacefully argued against Obama's healthcare policies.

The ADL's decision to issue a special report attacking Obama's political opponents and insinuating that Americans who oppose him cultivate an environment in which paranoid and dangerous fringe groups feel comfortable operating is strange given that the ADL never put out a similar report against parallel anti-Bush movements. As Commentary's Jonathan Tobin noted this week, the ADL was more likely to see overt and vicious anti-Semitic statements and placards being waved around at anti-Iraq war rallies than at anti-Obama healthcare and tax policy demonstrations.

Ironically, the ADL has a specific institutional interest in combating leftist paranoia. A recent movie attacking the ADL called Defamation, by leftist, anti-Israel Israeli filmmaker Yoav Shamir, is currently hitting the film festival circuit in the US and Europe. A major hit among anti-Israel activists and regular anti-Semites on the Left and Right, Defamation accuses the ADL of exaggerating the Holocaust and anti-Semitism to justify what Shamir views as its nefarious aims. Apparently, tribal loyalty to the Left trumps the institutional interests of the ADL.

It certainly trumps the interests of New York University's Hillel director Rabbi Yehuda Sarna. As James Taranto reported on Wednesday in The Wall Street Journal, this week Sarna called for NYU's Jewish community to join NYU Muslims at a rally that both commemorated the massacre at Ft. Hood and denounced NYU professor Tunku Varadarajan for writing a column in Forbes magazine. In his article, Varadarajan committed the crime of stating the obvious fact that Ft. Hood terrorist Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan was motivated by his Islamic beliefs when he shouted Allahu Akbar and shot some 40 people, killing 13.

Given that people and groups like al-Qaida and Hamas that share Hasan's views assert that all Jews should be killed, it would seem that the good rabbi would not feel the need to attack professors who point out that Hasan's views are dangerous. But then, it is no longer strange to see Hillels on American university campuses behaving in a manner that is not in line with what might be considered the interests of either the American Jewish community or the Jewish people as a whole.

Take UC Berkeley's Hillel center, for example. Since Ken Kramarz, Hillel's regional director for Northern California, started his job in June 2007, Berkeley's Hillel has adopted a hostile view towards Judaism and Israel. As pro-Israel community activist Natan Nestel notes, in the past year alone, Hillel held a dance party on Yom Hashoah, and it held a Cinco de Mayo barbecue on Remembrance Day for Fallen IDF Soldiers. It has also failed to hold community Seders for the past two years. Instead, last year, its members hung signs in the Hillel building declaring, "Matza sucks."

Beyond its derogatory treatment of Jewish and Israeli holidays, Berkeley's Hillel has allowed an extremist group called Students for Justice for Palestine to participate in its organizational meetings.

SJP calls for Israel's destruction through unlimited Arab immigration. It also advocates for UC Berkeley to divest from Israel. Edgar Bronfman, Hillel's International Chairman, has characterized SJP umbrella organization as "anti-Israel... anti-Semitic [and] alarming..."

No doubt owing in part to Berkeley Hillel's decision to permit SJP members to spread their propaganda at its organizational meetings, Hillel's student leaders and members participated in SJP's Israel Apartheid Week this past March.

The student meeting that SJP participated in at Berkeley's Hillel was sponsored by a group called "Kesher Enoshi."

This group describes itself as "a progressive Jewish community that engages directly with Israeli civil society. We do this by educating ourselves and others about the day-to-day struggles of people in Israel by making direct connections with human rights/social change organizations in Israel, linking their struggles with those on campus and in the wider community, and building a community of active participants in social change in Israel."

This mission statement, which says nothing about Zionism, sounds an awful lot like the goal of the New Israel Fund. This month, three Arab "civil society" groups supported to the tune of hundreds of thousands of dollars by the NIF published a poster depicting an IDF soldier touching the breast of an Arab woman with the caption, "Her husband needs a permit to touch her, the occupation penetrates her life every day."

The poster was issued to publicize a conference in Haifa called "My Land, Space, Body and Sexuality: Palestinians in the Shadow of the Wall," whose purpose was to demonize Israel using post-modern jargon.

Unlike Hillel, NIF is widely recognized as a far-left fringe group. But as Arab Israeli NGOs use the dollars of American Jewish NIF donors to advance their "civil society" programs aimed at delegitimizing Israel's right to exist, the Reform Movement - which is not a fringe group - decided unanimously two weeks ago to criticize and pressure Israel for what its leadership views as Israel's unfair treatment of its Arab citizens.

As this column goes to press, if its board members don't cancel their meeting, the San Francisco Jewish Federation will be grudgingly voting on a resolution that would prohibit it from sponsoring events that denigrate or demonize Israel or supporting organizations that partner with organizations that call for divestment, sanctions or boycotts against Israel.

The resolution follows the Jewish Federation of San Francisco's decision to co-sponsor the San Francisco Jewish Film Festival last summer. That festival featured Shamir's Defamation, and the egregiously anti-Israel film Rachel, about the late pro-terror activist Rachel Corrie. The film festival was also sponsored by the anti-Zionist Jewish Voices for Peace group, the American Friends Service Committee, which hosted a dinner for Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in New York last year, the Rachel Corrie Foundation and other radical anti-Israel groups.

If the vote takes place, it will be a great victory for a small group of local Jewish activists. These individual Jews have banded together because they are deeply disturbed by the federation's willingness to use community funds to advance events whose basic message is that Israel should be destroyed.

KADIMA'S INTERESTS as a political party place it at loggerheads with the government on almost every issue. But its leaders this week were rational enough to recognize that they must support Israel's sovereign rights in Jerusalem despite the fact that doing so placed it on the government's side. Their display of sanity is a clear indication that Israeli society today is healthy and capable of meeting the challenges it faces.

It is clear that most American Jews believe that it is in their interests to support the Democratic Party and the Left. But like the anti-establishment Jewish activists in San Francisco, American Jews ought to realize that on issues like Israel's survival and their own survival as Jews they ought to stand by their interests even when they seem to clash with their leftist and Democratic loyalties. And they ought to stand by their friends on these issues, even when their friends are conservative Republicans.

It can only be hoped that the San Francisco pro-Israel upstarts' campaign against the federation was successful yesterday. Then, too, if the American Jewish community is to long survive, these San Francisco Jewish activists' demand that their community support Israel's right to exist must be joined by their fellow American Jews throughout the country.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Israel; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: adl; berkley; carolineglick; hillel; israel; jews; leftism; zionism
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All too many of my fellow Jews, even purportedly religious ones, are leftists by faith. They claim to be Zionists, but do nothing as Israel is sold out. They claim to respect tolerance, but hate those on the right who most like Israel and are in agreement with traditional Jewish beliefs on family and society. They claim have faith, but transmit none to their children. And they claim to care about demographic decline even as they subsidize the recruitment of thier few children to foreign faiths. Grievance Politics rots the mind.
1 posted on 11/21/2009 4:01:46 PM PST by rmlew
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To: SJackson; dennisw; Alouette

ping


2 posted on 11/21/2009 4:03:02 PM PST by rmlew (Democracy tends to ignore..., threats to its existence because it loathes doing what is needed)
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To: rmlew

When 79% of American Jews vote for 0bama, what do you expect?


3 posted on 11/21/2009 4:11:38 PM PST by ConservativeMind (Hypocrisy: "Animal rightists" who eat meat & pen up their pets while accusing farmers of cruelty.)
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To: rmlew

I don’t remember you being very friendly toward Jews, but as another poster/replier said, so many of our tribe voted for “the Messiah.” How could they not know what kind of person he is?


4 posted on 11/21/2009 4:13:15 PM PST by Stepan12 (Palin & Bolton in 2012)
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To: rmlew

I’m sick of these JINO self hating Marxist vermin running these idiotic jewish organizations. Its time we get together and counter these @#$$%%^. We should start a Jewish chapter for freepers and counter these bums with press releases every time they open their filthy mouths criticizing conservatives (who support Israel) and side with liberals like Osama who bans Jews from living in Israel.


5 posted on 11/21/2009 4:13:17 PM PST by red meat conservative
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To: rmlew
I know more pro-Israel American Christians, than American Jews.

My co-religionists in Manhattan are simply cringe-inducing.

6 posted on 11/21/2009 4:14:49 PM PST by NativeNewYorker (Freepin' Jew Boy)
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To: red meat conservative
Jewish chapter for freepers

Where do I sign up?

7 posted on 11/21/2009 4:16:15 PM PST by NativeNewYorker (Freepin' Jew Boy)
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To: NativeNewYorker

Sad. Even sadder when Abe Foxman of the ADL attacks Geert Wilders of Holland. Geert has great backers like Savage, Pam Yellen at Atlas and Joyce Kaufman.


8 posted on 11/21/2009 4:17:58 PM PST by Frantzie (Judge David Carter - democrat & dishonorable Marine like John Murtha.)
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To: Frantzie

Great “supporters” instead of “backers.”


9 posted on 11/21/2009 4:18:53 PM PST by Frantzie (Judge David Carter - democrat & dishonorable Marine like John Murtha.)
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To: Stepan12
I don’t remember you being very friendly toward Jews, but as another poster/replier said, so many of our tribe voted for “the Messiah.” How could they not know what kind of person he is?

I'm not friendly to Jews? I posted this after coming home from services. I am a Jew by any and all definitions. As for my posts, search my history.
10 posted on 11/21/2009 4:29:24 PM PST by rmlew (Democracy tends to ignore..., threats to its existence because it loathes doing what is needed)
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To: rmlew

I’m completely befuddled by the Jewish religion.

Jews in America vote overwhelmingly for socialists, communists and fascists.

And that’s after Moses took them out for a hike for 40 years to clear their heads.

If Moses can’t get their heads straight, what can we do?

Just asking...


11 posted on 11/21/2009 4:50:48 PM PST by sergeantdave (obuma is the anti-Lincoln, trying to re-establish slavery)
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To: rmlew
Well said, rmlew. I share your pain as a Jew and a Conservative.

Thanks for a good post. Glick is great at all times, and this article is no exception.

12 posted on 11/21/2009 4:51:27 PM PST by TopQuark
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To: rmlew

It’s a religious thing. Secular leftist Jews were disproportionately represented within the Bolsheviks and carried a hostility towards traditional Jewish culture that they acted on once in power.


13 posted on 11/21/2009 5:09:06 PM PST by fso301
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To: sergeantdave
"If Moses can’t get their heads straight,"

You have assumed, incorrectly, that Jews have not changed sine the time G-d took them out of Egypt. You look at them now and assume they've always been like that. It's like me looking at you as you are getting out of bed on a dark wintry morning and deciding that you are always sleepy.

In the last two millennia, Jews of Europe were far from "progressive:" they belonged, in fact, to the conservative element of society. Religion and traditions is what kept them alive.

Significant changes came about in and after the Enlightenment. As many other Europeans --- Catholics and Protestants of various denominations --- Jews started to drift away from religion. Discrimination did not help, naturally; a cornered person becomes desperate. Having arrived in France before the Franks, Jews lacked citisenship there until 1781. Germany granted citizenship to them in 1869, i.e., very recently. It was actually the Left that advocated equal rights for the Jews. As a consequence, many Jews identified them as friends and viewed the Church with distrust. The promise of equal rights enthused many Russian Jews to embrace the communist revolution.

While none of this was happening here, Jews immigrating en masse at the turn of XX century brought with them ages-old apprehensions and continued to identify with liberal causes. That's what we see today.

The point is, the left leanings of the Jews are quite recent. They undergo the same vicissitudes as all other religions. What Leftist cause has Anglican Church failed to support recently, for example?

14 posted on 11/21/2009 5:09:41 PM PST by TopQuark
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To: TopQuark

Thanks for your explanation. I just figured that with a big and influential guy like Moses leading you out of the wilderness, you’d come out of the desert with some semblance of common sense.

Then again, you hit the bullseye. Roman Catholics voted in the majority for king obuma. Explain that, sergeantdave!!!

Good grief!!

Anyway, that’s why I asked. I don’t understand liberal jews. Nor do I understand liberal Catholics.

Touche.

Maybe if we run both Jews and Catholics through Marine boot camp we might get different voting patterns, yes?

We can wish...


15 posted on 11/21/2009 5:53:25 PM PST by sergeantdave (obuma is the anti-Lincoln, trying to re-establish slavery)
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To: TopQuark
I share your pain as a Jew and a Conservative

I am shocked and heartbroken to learn what has taken place at UC Berkeley's Hillel Center. When I was a student there in the sixties, the Hillel Center was my refuge and I participated in many acivities there. We always had a community Seder there. Rabbi Balanoff was our leader and he was a great Rabbi who built the Hillel Center to be a thriving institution. Now from this article by Caroline Glick, I learn for the first time, how it has changed and it comes as a shock. I had over the years thought that if I were ever able to visit the campus again the first place I would want to go would be the Hillel House. Now I would not want to visit. How could this generation of Jews turn out to be such fools?

16 posted on 11/21/2009 5:56:53 PM PST by tommix2
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To: rmlew

American Jews on the whole are simply interested in furthering the interest of the democrat party. They don’t give two s***s about Israel.


17 posted on 11/21/2009 6:04:09 PM PST by ScottinVA (The arrogance of this Congress is staggering. November 2010 can't get here quickly enough.)
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To: rmlew

Oh sh.. (read without the ellipses)! I got you confused with someone else. I am very very sorry :(


18 posted on 11/21/2009 6:17:22 PM PST by Stepan12 (Palin & Bolton in 2012)
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To: sergeantdave
"Maybe if we run both Jews and Catholics through Marine boot camp we might get different voting patterns,"

I am 100% convinced that you are correct here.

19 posted on 11/21/2009 6:39:32 PM PST by TopQuark
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To: tommix2
I am sorry Glick's info disappointed you a great deal. I too know what it is to have a special place in your heart for a particular part of campus and a particular professor or mentor.

I am sorry to add to Glick's article that, although Berkeley tends to be to the left at any given time, there is nothing unusual about that Hillel. In fact, since earlier years of this decade, whenever I visit a university, I always ask friends about their Hillel. It seems to be the same story: the liberal bend accelerated in mid-1990s (just as the in the rest of the academia), and since about 2004-2005 included active abandonment of Israel. A friend who teaches at Dartmouth tried to counter it there for a while but, I think, not much came out of that. It's a really sad situation.

"How could this generation of Jews turn out to be such fools?"

Well, whene disappointed with a kid, look at the parents, It is the parents of the present-day students that continue to send their alumni contributions although they know full well by now that universities teach PC rather than age-old wisdom and instill obedience rather than develop ability to think. They look the other way. It is not the kids but your friends and mine that make this possible. Do you really think that those that hold the purse strings could not change the situation in a heartbeat? And what about Jewish professors? They are older, they have weight on campus, they could do a thing or two. But most of them have not much connection with Jewishness (aside from the love of lox) and a great deal of connection with leftist ideology. With a few exceptions (such as my friend I mentioned earlier), they actually push Hillels toward all things PC.

So, my friend, it is not "this generation" of kids --- it is your generation and mine. We've met the enemy... and it is us.

20 posted on 11/21/2009 7:00:36 PM PST by TopQuark
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