Posted on 12/15/2002 9:52:42 AM PST by SJackson
Synagogue attack puts Israel and Arabs on trial in the Bronx. Jonathan Mark Associate Editor The intifada is on trial this week in Bronx County Court House. Its a case, defense attorney Stanley Cohen tells the jury in his summation, that began more than 50 years ago with the creation of the State of Israel, ...
The intifada is on trial this week in Bronx County Court House. Its a case, defense attorney Stanley Cohen tells the jury in his summation, that began more than 50 years ago with the creation of the State of Israel, when Palestinians were thrown out of their homes producing a Palestinian diaspora that produced this young man, Mazen Assi, born in America, raised here and in Jordan, who was so fixated by the televised war in Israel that two years ago, just days after the war began, on the eve of Yom Kippur, he threw Molotov cocktails that shattered a synagogues glass in Riverdale.
The Bronx shul didnt burn, but not for lack of trying.
The defense wants to put Israel on trial. The State of New York has another trial in mind, charging Assi, 23, and Mohammed Alfaqih, 21, with attempted arson and criminal mischief. They are charged with hate crimes under a law that went into effect just hours before Alfaqih allegedly drove Assi to the Conservative Synagogue of Riverdale with vodka bottles filled with fuel and a wick.
In his confession to police, Assi told the police all about the the f-ing rich Jews in Riverdale, a neighborhood not that far from the Arab-owned Madaba deli in South Yonkers.
What this trial testifies to is that the war against the Jews didnt move beyond Israels borders only with the recent bombing of the Israeli-owned hotel in Kenya. It has been a violent war without borders for some time now, fought on French boulevards and in Berlin alleys and in the most rustic corner of the Bronx. The Anti-Defamation League has files on at least a dozen other crimes in 2002 in which Arabs attacked or intimidated Jews, not in West Bank settlements but in the City of New York
Everyone says Assi and Alfaqih acted alone. In America, we prefer that our madmen act alone, like El Sayid Nosair, the assassin of Rabbi Meir Kahane, back in 1990. When Kahane was killed, who among us didnt say it was the chickens coming home to roost, before the chicken turned out to be us and the assassin, Nosair, turned out to have roosted with Sheik Omar Abdel Rahman, an open confederate of Osama bin Laden.
Rahman, the blind leader of one of Egypts largest terrorist organizations, was sentenced to life imprisonment in 1996 for plotting, in his Jersey City mosque, to blow up bridges and landmarks in New York.
And whos that at the defense table for the Riverdale case? Lynne Stewart, who joined the Rahman defense team after Rahmans other attorney, Ramsey Clark, told her that if she refused, the Arab world would feel betrayed by their friends on the American left. That was enough to convince Stewart.
There she is, a heavy-set 62-year-old woman with short gray hair, walking in a slight waddle to the bench to ask for an explanation of the judges use of hate crime and how that applies to this Riverdale case.
Does anyone on this Bronx jury know that Stewart was handcuffed by the FBI back in April and is herself awaiting trial on two counts of assisting terrorists, including helping Rahman smuggle terrorist directives beyond his prison cell? Maybe these Arabs from Yonkers acted alone but through the notorious Stewart, whom the Justice Department believes is a terrorist consigliore, these Riverdale bombers are just one degree of separation from Rahman and two degrees from Osama.
Assis other lawyer, Cohen, has wild salt-and-pepper hair that piles high on his head not unlike Cosmo Kramer of Seinfeld fame before it cascades down into a long ponytail like a Davy Crockett coonskin cap. In two-tone shoes, he walks across the courthouse floor and reminds the jury that Assi was never far from Palestine, never far from his tradition. He socializes in the Palestinian Muslim community. Oh, he threw the dud Molotov cocktails, all right, says Cohen, and that was wrong, but he was fixated for days by the death of Muhammad Dura, the 12-year-old Palestinian boy famously shot in his fathers arms in September 2000. The photo and video whipped up a frenzy around the world.
Who wasnt fixated, asks Cohen? He says even one of the New York City cops on this case thought the Dura killing horrific.
In case the jury didnt remember and Judge Stephen Barrett refused to let the jury see footage of the shooting Cohen told the jury that Duras father screamed in anguish, trying to shield his sons limp body against the weapons of the Israeli Defense Forces.
Now, never mind that even the Jordan Times just last week ran a story that said young Dura was shot in a crossfire between Palestinians and Israelis, meaning the fatal bullet was of indeterminate origin. What matters is that Assi blames Israel.
It wasnt Jews who killed that young boy, said Cohen. It wasnt Jews practicing their religion that killed that young boy, so Assis revenge cant be a hate crime against Jews. It was the Israeli army that killed that young boy. An Israeli soldier who killed that young boy. The world was fixated on it, not just Assi.
The day before Assi took a ride to the Conservative Synagogue of Riverdale, he and his entire family attended a Palestinian demonstration, spurred by the Dura killing, in Times Square. It wasnt a rally against Jews, said Cohen, it was a demonstration organized by Muslims and Christians and Jews yes, you can bet Jews were there. It was a demonstration, said Cohen, that asked Israel to stop killing children. Stop killing Palestinian children.
And that synagogue in Riverdale, it wasnt a target for Assi because it was a synagogue, said Cohen. The building was not just a house of worship ... its a building where they raise money for Israel. Its a building where pro-Israeli speakers come to speak.
Its also a synagogue less than a mile north along a straightaway from the Hebrew Institute of Riverdale, home of activist Rabbi Avi Weiss, who once demonstrated outside the Jersey City mosque of Sheik Rahman. Maybe Assi couldnt tell one shul from the other, or maybe the more liberal synagogue was good enough, just like the left-wing kibbutz was a good enough target for Palestinians last month.
What, Cohen asked the jury, actually was the crime here? All that happened was a broken window. No one went to the hospital. No one was physically injured. The synagogue wasnt engulfed in flames. But it is a big deal to the system. ... The message from the politicians, the message from the brass, was solve this case. It doesnt mattersolve this case ... bring some people in, and then work backwards and prove the evidence against those you bring in.
Imagine, said Cohen, the police used aerial photography for a broken window. The FBI was called in, maybe the CIA, who knows?
Its not about Jews, its about Israel. The prosecutors keep wanting you to think this had something to do with Jews, Cohen told the jury. How many times did we hear from witnesses, Yom Kippur, Yom Kippur, the High Holidays, the High Holidays ... how many times yahrtzeit ceremonies? How many times, little memorial plaques for the dead? Was it necessary? We know its a synagogue.... plaques for the dead? From 1932? What does that have to do with this case?
Cohens right, the Bronx district attorney wants the jury to think that a bomb thrown at a shul has something to do with Jews. And why do the 1930s keep coming up? Those plaques for the dead keep following us around. n
Jonathan Marks e-mail address is jonathan@jewishweek.org.
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That should read "the most rustic corner of The Bronx."
Folks in Riverdale are so pretentious, that for years, I thought there were TWO Riverdales, one in The Bronx, and another just over the border in Westchester County. That is because I have encountered businesses (a Jewish private school, I believe it was) that claimed the fictional postal address of "Riverdale, N.Y." Their real postal address was "Bronx, N.Y." (The postal address for ANYWHERE in The Bronx is "Bronx, N.Y.") And yet, I'm not sure that the proper response to such pretentiousness is to firebomb folks' synagogues.
They lost before in America, and they'll lose again, this verdict notwithstanding (I have great faith in the jury system, but there are aberrations).
The underlying premise of his defense in both immoral and un-American.
Well, all the prosecution has to do to counter this line of argument is to present the facts. The Arabs in those parts of Palistine that became the infant state of Israel were NOT thrown out of their homes. They either left voluntarily, at the behest of various Arab groups who assured them that they would get not only their own property back, but that of the Jews too, when the Arab Armies threw the Jews into the sea, or they were bought out. Many were of course bought out well before, since Jewish settlement in the area had been ongoing since before 1900, and of course there were some Jews there long before that. Try again Mr. defense attorney.
and go directly to Jail? Riverside is a neighborhood in New York City, is is not? The city fathers, sadly many of them Jews, have declared the Second Amendment and almost identical provision of New York state law (substitutes "cannot" for "shall not") do not apply in New York City. Mere possession of a gun, without registering it, is a crime. The rules and regs for obtaining the necessary licenses are to say the least draconian. See the NRA synopsis for NYC for all the nauseating details. Best to have your barf bang handy before clicking on that link.
I meant Riverdale of course.
JESUS CHRIST!
I'm gonna have a stroke. I HATE this woman...
"First the Saturday people, then the Sunday people."
I'm surprised that the perps didn't hail from my neighborhood, Bay Ridge, aka "Bay Ruit" (at least parts of it). There is a small synagougue here that I heard has hired armed guards in case "the neighbors" get similar ideas as these two idiots.
BTW: Riverdale, like Forest Hills, was a nice area filled with single family homes until some genius developer decided to fill both neighborhoods with some of the ugliest Condo/CoOp developments this side of Tamarac. I agree, Rustow, with the pretentiousness of Riverdale residents, but disagree with many assessments that it is the "nicest" section of the Bronx. That honor goes to City Island and portions of Throgs Neck near the water.
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