Every year at this season, we send out a letter underlining the connection between the values of the Passover season and the work we do at APN. This year, we're pleased to send you a letter from the noted writer James Carroll. Carroll is a columnist for the Boston Globe and the author of the National Book Award winning An American Requiem; the New York Times bestselling Constantine's Sword; House of War, which won the first PEN-Galbraith Award; Practicing Catholic; as well as his most recent book Jerusalem, Jerusalem: How the Ancient City Ignited Our Modern World, which was named a 2011 Best Book by Publishers Weekly.Blog: March 2012 Archives
Every year at this season, we send out a letter underlining the connection between the values of the Passover season and the work we do at APN. This year, we're pleased to send you a letter from the noted writer James Carroll. Carroll is a columnist for the Boston Globe and the author of the National Book Award winning An American Requiem; the New York Times bestselling Constantine's Sword; House of War, which won the first PEN-Galbraith Award; Practicing Catholic; as well as his most recent book Jerusalem, Jerusalem: How the Ancient City Ignited Our Modern World, which was named a 2011 Best Book by Publishers Weekly.
Jo-Ann Mort Vice Chair; Mark Silverberg Secretary/ Treasurer; New Board Members: Rabbi Andy Bachman and Mik MooreWashington, DC - Americans for Peace Now announced today the election of James B Klutznick of Chicago as the new Chair of its Board of Directors. In addition, APN's Board re-elected Jo-Ann Mort of New York as its Vice Chair, Mark Silverberg of Cleveland as its Secretary/Treasurer, and approved the appointment of two new Board members: Rabbi Andy Bachman of Brooklyn and Mik Moore of New York.
Peter Beinart's recent New York Times article advocating a settlement
boycott has sparked a spectacular public display of Jewish angst.
Apparently for many who view themselves as the judges, advocates and
juries of what is "kosher" progressive Jewish activism, his suggestion
is beyond the pale.They agree that settlements are a problem, even a shonda, but boycott fellow Jews? Heaven forbid. And even if it weren't Jewishly distasteful, it wouldn't work anyway, so don't go there.
Alpher discusses the Israeli high court rejection of the Migron compromise, why Israelis seem oddly relaxed about the dangers of war with Iran, what the murder of Jews in Toulouse by an Islamic extremist tells us about tells us about Islam in Europe that we didn't already know, why the several important dates from this week are indeed so important, and why the Tuareg revolt in Northern Mali may have significance for the Arab revolutions.
There was a lovely surprise at Peace Now's tour of West Bank settlements Friday. Several students from the settlement of Otniel, one of the ideological bastions of the settlement movement, boarded the bus in Jerusalem. Peace Now staffers were concerned that the young settlers and settler-sympathizers were hecklers. "We've had problems in the past with hoodlums who joined our tours only to disrupt," Peace Now's National Activities Coordinator Etai Mizrav told me.
Yusef Munayyer's essay today in Zion Square suggests that it is unhelpful and distracting to debate whether Jewish-Arab relations in the area that is under Israeli rule between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean are Apartheid-like. He goes on to argue that they actually ARE Apartheid. That assertion, somehow, is supposed to be helpful and non-distracting.
That time for that litmus test is now upon us.
Today Peter Beinart, the author of a new and much anticipated book, The Crisis of Zionism, (available on March 27th) published a blockbuster op-ed in the New York Times entitled, "To Save Israel, Boycott the Settlements". We strongly encourage people to read Peter's piece. His suggestion - that people who love Israel and care about Israel as a Jewish state and democracy should boycott settlements - is completely consistent with a call APN made in July 2011. Our call came in the context of the Israeli Knesset passing a disgraceful piece of legislation effectively criminalizing such a boycott - a boycott law that is unlike anything that exists in the U.S. or other progressive, democratic countries.
Alpher discusses escalation between Israel and jihadist groups in the Gaza Strip, assesses the danger that a Muslim Brotherhood-dominated government in Egypt would seek to cancel the peace treaty with Israel, and the trending course of Arab revolutions from Libya and beyond.Threats on Israel's borders
A recent Saturday Night Live episode opened with a sketch that said a
lot about America's views on war with Iran. In the sketch, Andy Samberg,
playing Rick Santorum, tells the audience that the coming presidential
campaign is about two things: "One, making the family once again the
center of our nation's public policy, and two, starting a war with Iran,
as a favor to Israel, whether Israel asks us to or not." Samberg forgot
to add: "and whether or not it's actually good for the U.S., Israel or
the Jews."
Recently, we asked you to contact your members of Congress to tell them that AIPAC and its supporters don't speak for you when they call for ever-more belligerent U.S. policy on Iran.Since we sent you that original action alert, there has been an important development: Rep. Barbara Lee (D-CA) introduced HR 4173, the "Prevent Iran from Acquiring Nuclear Weapons and Stop War through Diplomacy Act." This extremely constructive legislation calls for sustained, robust U.S. diplomatic efforts to resolve the crisis with Iran, including calling for the appointment of a high-level United States representative or special envoy for Iran.
By Rabbi Joshua Levine Grater from the Pasadena
Jewish Temple and Center in Pasadena, CA. I had the honor of hearing Israeli President and elder statesman Shimon Peres last week in Los Angeles. Coming off a week where the tenor for war against Iran was being ramped by Prime Minister Netanyahu and in the halls of AIPAC, it was refreshing to hear President Peres say that diplomacy is always the preferred option, that Israel is a nation that values and cherishes peace, and that the morals of our people, based on the Torah, call us to a higher purpose in life than political expediency.
Washington, DC - Americans for Peace Now (APN) today called on the Obama Administration to work with Israel, Egypt, and Palestinian leaders to urgently advance diplomatic efforts to reach a ceasefire on the Israel-Gaza border.
It is a now famous story: A young Arab man, fed up with the injustices
of life under a military regime, decides he's had enough. By
demonstrating his readiness to die to protest these injustices, the man
powerfully asserts his own humanity and that of millions of his
compatriots. His dramatic display of self-sacrifice inspires millions
and his name becomes known across the Middle East and beyond.
Alpher discusses last week's AIPAC conference and Obama-Netanyahu meeting and the talk about Israel, the US and Iran and what happens next.
Jerusalem - Last night I watched here a hypnotizing interview with the world's favorite Israeli author, Amos Oz. He mainly spoke about the writing process, about his novels and his childhood and about his friendship with author David Grossman. Oz told Channel Two interviewer Ilana Dayan that after Grossman lost his son, Uri, during the very last hours of Israel's Second Lebanon War in 2006, he drove to Grossman's home at a Jerusalem suburb and begged him not to stop writing. Oz was anxious that losing Uri might paralyze Grossman and silence him as a writer.
Jerusalem - On Purim 2012, Israel does not look like a country on the
verge of war. Certainly not like a country on the brink of a nuclear
holocaust. Tens of thousands were out on Thursday, in perfect weather, to enjoy marches and masquerades, feasts and festivals. At the entrance to the emergency room of Jerusalem's Shaare Tzedek Hospital, a covered lot that is supposed to turn into a mass triage center in case of a non-conventional war, there were groups of children dressed in colorful costumes, preparing to fan out at the large medical center and entertain the patients.
Recently, thousands of activists were on Capitol Hill, brought there by
AIPAC. They told members of Congress and their staff that they speak
for all Americans, and especially American Jews, who care about Israel.
These activists told Congress, in effect, to call for war with Iran.
They also sent a message that achieving Israeli-Palestinian peace
shouldn't be a priority.Contact your own members of Congress today to tell them: AIPAC's activists don't speak for me.
March 7, 2012
Americans for Peace Now, J Street and the New Israel Fund today issued their first-ever joint statement condemning the unseemly attack on President Obama by the Wall Street Journal's Bret Stephens. Stephens focuses on the President's association with our organizations and some of our key supporters. This is simply the latest in a litany of partisan attacks on the President for standing for and with the values that are actually at the very heart of the Jewish community.
With the drumbeat of war against Iran growing louder in Washington, and as thousands of hardline activists prepare to flood Capitol Hill on Tuesday, the voice of the Israeli public on this issue is all but lost. A new poll by Maryland University and the leading Israeli Dahaf polling firm shows that Israelis, realizing the dire consequences of a military strike on Iran, are not as gung-ho as one might expect.
Alpher opines on what the Assad regime prevailing in Syria would mean for the Middle East, what Israel and the American Jewish community can do to influence whether or not the Alawite regime in Syria survives, and how Islamist electoral victories thus far (in Tunisia, Egypt, Morocco and Kuwait) have already affected civil rights and freedoms.
Americans for Peace Now (APN) commends President Obama for an AIPAC speech that was staunchly pro-Israel, unabashedly pro-peace, and responsible yet sober on Iran.
APN President and CEO Debra DeLee said: "The President's speech today, before a crowd of thousands at the annual policy conference of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, was a valuable reminder from the leader of Israel's greatest ally that supporting Israel means supporting peace and sparing no effort to avoid war.
- 5/22 9:19am High Court orders Israeli AG to explain law allowing confiscation of Palestinian land in J'lem (a bit late, no?) http://t.co/yxPxtlvYPh
- 5/22 1:17pm Read Larry Derfner's essay about the very odd Israeli government report on the Muhammad al-Durra affair: http://t.co/Q7b8cswTnZ
- 5/20 12:43pm Lapid interview in NYTimes "Israel should not change its policy on settlmnts..to revive the stalemated peace process" http://t.co/vKq7co4IVK
- 5/23 11:10am Kerry Meets Netanyahu, Abbas to ‘Exhaust Possibilities of Peace’ http://t.co/eBurHoXOe9
- 5/23 12:56pm Amid ongoing effort to renew peace talks, Kerry calls Netanyahu to protest Israeli govt decision to legalize outposts http://t.co/oOPxh7ERTl




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