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question everything Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Aug-09-06 03:30 PM
Original message
What are Jews to do, now?
(I don't like the heading that the WSJ gave, but otherwise, right on the money, I would say)

The Wall Street Journal


Red State Jews

By THANE ROSENBAUM
August 9, 2006; Page A10

This is a soul-searching moment for the Jewish left. Actually, for many Jewish liberals, navigating the gloomy politics of the Middle East is like walking with two left feet. I would know. For six years I was the literary editor of Tikkun magazine, a leading voice for progressive Jewish politics that never avoided subjecting Israel to moral scrutiny. I also teach human rights at a Jesuit university, imparting the lessons of reciprocal grievances and the moral necessity to regard all people with dignity and mutual respect. And I am deeply sensitive to Palestinian pain, and mortified when innocent civilians are used as human shields and then cynically martyred as casualties of war.

Yet, since 9/11 and the second intifada, where suicide bombings and beheadings have become the calling cards of Arab diplomacy, and with Hamas and Hezbollah emerging as elected entities that, paradoxically, reject the first principles of liberal democracy, I feel a great deal of moral anguish. Perhaps I have been naïve all along. And I am not alone. Many Jews are in my position -- the children and grandchildren of labor leaders, socialists, pacifists, humanitarians, antiwar protestors -- instinctively leaning left, rejecting war, unwilling to demonize, and insisting that violence only breeds more violence. Most of all we share the profound belief that killing, humiliation and the infliction of unnecessary pain are not Jewish attributes.

(snip)

If the Palestinians didn't want that for themselves, if building a nation was not their priority, then peace in exchange for territories was nothing but a pipe dream. It was all wish-fulfillment, morally and practically necessary, yet ultimately motivated by a weary Israeli society -- the harsh reality of Arab animus, the spiritual toll that the occupation had taken on a Jewish state battered by negative world opinion. Despite the deep cynicism, however, Israel knew that it must try. It would have to set aside nearly 60 years of hard-won experience, starting from the very first days of its independence, and believe that the Arab world had softened, would become more welcoming neighbors, and would stop chanting: "Not in our backyard -- the Middle East is for Arabs only."

It is true that Israel has entered into peace agreements with Egypt and Jordan that have brought some measure of historic stability to the region. But with Israel having withdrawn from Lebanon and Gaza, and with Israeli public opinion virtually united in favor of near-total withdrawal from the West Bank, why are rockets being launched at Israel now, why are their soldiers being kidnapped if the aspirations of the Palestinian people, and the intentions of Hamas and Hezbollah, stand for something other than the total destruction of Israel? And if Palestinians and the Lebanese are electing terrorists and giving them the portfolio of statesmen, then what message is being sent to moderate voices, what incentives are there to negotiate, and how can any of this sobering news be recast in a more favorable light?

The Jewish left is now in shambles. Peace Now advocates have lost their momentum, and, in some sense, their moral clarity. Opinion polls in Israel are showing near unanimous support for stronger incursions into Lebanon. And until kidnapped soldiers are returned and acts of terror curtailed, any further conversations about the future of the West Bank have been set aside.

(snip)

Mr. Rosenbaum, a novelist and professor at Fordham Law School, is author, most recently, of "The Myth of Moral Justice" (HarperCollins, 2004).

URL for this article:
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB115508199528130506.html (subscription)


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Misskittycat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Aug-09-06 07:08 PM
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1. Interesting. Wish I could read the entire article. n/t
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question everything Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Aug-09-06 07:23 PM
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2. Just PMed you (nt)
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Betsy Ross Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Aug-10-06 04:55 PM
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3. Please help me understand
Again, not having access to the full article I am having some trouble getting Rosenbaum's point. Is he leaning toward approval of Israel's actions, a position which would seem at odds with that normally taken by Tikkun staff? Is he bemoaning the loss of momentum by Peace Now or is he questioning the validity of their position?
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question everything Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Aug-13-06 09:27 PM
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5. Yes, he does
Like many Jews, he realized that supporting the Palestinians dreams, that criticizing Israeli actions has been used by many groups to attack Israel.

Even on these pages, there are many who claim that Israel was behind 9/11. I had a debate with a newbie a few days ago who claimed that Israel was behind the murder of Lebanon's Rafiq Hariri.

Many even blame Israel for the invasion of Iraq even though Uri Avneri, the most leftist peace activist of Israel who, by the way, is criticizing the current war, wrote that in this case it was the oil interests of Bush and Cheney.

And, yes, he says that Peace Now is not relevant much now in Israel. Yes, even with all the recent death, the majority of the Israelis are behind the war, especially after realizing the amount of arms and missiles that Hezbollah gathered. Even if it wants its prisoners back, and a recent story talked about three, even if it wants a few acres of a disputed farm - all that cache of missiles really is an over kill for the supposed goals.

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furman Donating Member (363 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Aug-11-06 10:39 AM
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4. link to the full article here
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