Friday, October 29, 2010

American Grassroots Suport for Israel and the Midterms Elections

Israel and the Midterms

By Dovid Efune

While strolling down 5th Avenue on Sunday in New York's Upper East Side I was browsing through the wares of various sidewalk vendors and as I passed the Metropolitan Museum of Art I noticed one that really stood out. It was busier than all the others, surrounded by throngs of passersby.

"What you are doing is disgusting" spat an older woman as she walked on. To which the stocky vendor snapped back "now now, be nice." I then caught sight of what was causing the stir; rows and rows of political buttons, all of which were emblazoned with seriously conservative anti Obama slogans such as  "Could someone please put The Constitution on his teleprompter" and "I'd rather be waterboarding."

I asked the stall owner, who later revealed that he was a very secular Jew of Italian descent, what prompted him to be selling these pins in the Upper East Side of all places. He responded that for him this was just a Sunday hobby that he had started last year, but whilst in 2009 nobody looked at him, now business is brisk, and he has now even launched a website; thepolitickle.com.

As the pins continued to sell like hot cakes I realized that there was no better gauge of overall public sentiment than to observe this scene and was left with no doubt that the pundits are spot on; voters are angry with the current administration.

On November 2nd Americans will be back to the ballot, in what is widely projected to result in a Republican sweep, and whilst there is widespread disappointment on a host of domestic issues, candidates' positions on Israel have taken center stage in a host of electoral races throughout the country.

It first became clear that Israel was going to be a weak spot for the Democrats several months ago, when Congressman Henry Waxman, undoubtedly the senior and most powerful Jewish lawmaker in the House of Representatives, published a piece in the Los Angeles Jewish Journal denying that the president had mistreated the Jewish state.

He was prompted, he said, by the unprecedented number of phone calls and emails from Jewish voters, all expressing concern at President Obama's attitude to Israel.

So, on the subject of Israel and the November 2nd elections, I would like to make two points.

Firstly, for all those observers and commentators who are wondering why the issue of Israel is such a central political topic when American Jews only constitute a fraction of the population, the answer is as follows:

Support for Israel is not exclusively a Jewish cause, it is an American cause.

When detractors speak of the great 'Israel lobby,' they must understand that organizations like AIPAC and Christians United for Israel are grassroots organizations that represent public sentiment. Support for Israel is as American as McDonalds, as it strongly appeals to the collective American sense of justice, morality and reason.

The second point is that in America it is virtually impossible for any would be politician to make it into congress without claiming to be an Israel supporter.  It is for this reason that there are no mainstream politicians in any corner of the political spectrum that will admit to representing an anti-Israel stance. Of course this is completely unique in all electoral matters, as there are politicians that are pro abortion, and anti abortion, pro big government and anti big government, pro medicare and anti medicare, pro the war or anti the war, but all are pro Israel and none anti.

Of course there are a number of politicians that in reality are not friends, but because American support for Israel is so deep, they will never publicly admit it, and as a consequence they have redefined what they consider to be in the best interests of the Jewish State, this enables them to vote for positions that are detrimental to Israeli security and still be able to claim that they are friends. This is precisely the reason d'ĂȘtre of an organization like J-Street, that allows anti Israel policies to pass by redefining what they feel is best for the Jewish State on their own terms.

If Mahmoud Ahmedinejad wanted to run for congress he would claim to be a supporter and then go on to qualify that in his opinion it is in Israel's best interest to self destruct.

Voting pro Israel is less about the claims of politicians and more about our own feelings on what is good for the Holyland. When assessing our local leadership options, and preparing ourselves to vote we should strive to be savvy in assessing the positions of the politicians on the ballot and keep in mind that pro Israel is not something that is just said, it is something that is done.

The Author is the director of the Algemeiner Journal and the GJCF and can be e-mailed at defune@gjcf.com

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

8th Doha Inter-Faith Conference: Rabbi Marc Schneier defends Israel against diatribe by Sheikh Taysir al-Tamimi on Jerusalem

WORLD JEWISH CONGRESS + + + PRESS RELEASE + + + 19 OCTOBER 2010

World Jewish Congress leaders at inter-faith forum in Doha, Qatar / Rabbi
Marc Schneier defends Israel against diatribe by Sheikh Taysir al-Tamimi on
Jerusalem

NEW YORK / DOHA - Representatives of the World Jewish Congress are
participating in the 8th Doha Conference of Inter-Faith Dialogue. WJC
Vice-President Rabbi Marc Schneider, who also heads the US chapter of the
World Jewish Congress and is founding president of the Foundation for Ethnic
Understanding, WJC Deputy Secretary-General Maram Stern, who is in charge of
inter-religious dialogue, and Claudio Epelman, executive director of the
Latin American Jewish Congress, are in the Gulf Emirate of Qatar where the
meeting is being held this week.

At the conference, Schneier defended Israel against a diatribe by Sheikh
Taysir al-Tamimi, the chief Islamic judge of the Palestinian Authority, who
said at the conference that Israel was "illegally occupying" and "Judaizing"
Jerusalem. Rabbi Schneier declared: "Jerusalem represents Jewish hopes and
dreams. For millennia, we have prayed toward Jerusalem. We pray at the
Western Wall, we mourn the destruction of our Temple 2,000 years ago, and we
tell each other 'Next year in Jerusalem'. Jerusalem has always been the
capital of the Jewish state, ancient or modern. It is therefore an insult to
all of us to accuse us of illegally occupying the city."

Schneier added: "At the same time, we respect that Jerusalem is a holy place
for Christians and Muslims as well. We know that the status of Jerusalem is
at the forefront of peace talks, but denying the other side's right to be
there is wrong and counter-productive."

The WJC vice-president praised the organizers of the 8th Doha Conference of
Inter-Faith Dialogue, which was opened on Tuesday by Qatar's Justice
Minister Hassan bin Abdulla Al Ghanim, for focusing on how to raise future
generations in a spirit of respect and understanding for other faiths. "This
is what inter-religious dialogue is all about: winning the future, and not
fighting the battles of the past."

About the World Jewish Congress

The World Jewish Congress is the international organization representing
Jewish communities in 92 countries around the world. The WJC serves as the
diplomatic arm of the Jewish people to governments, parliaments and
international organizations and has been at the forefront of inter-religious
dialogue with other faiths.


Media contact

Michael Thaidigsmann
WJC Brussels Office
Tel: +32 2 552 09 24
Mob: +32 485 86 95 84
Email: press@worldjewishcongress.org

Website: www.worldjewishcongress.org