Debra DeLee, president and CEO of Americans for Peace Now,
published a statement in response to Wiesel saying, "Your ad in the
Washington Post and the Wall Street Journal brought tears to my eyes,
for more than one reason."
(JTA: "Wiesel: Pressure won't produce Jerusalem solution" follows the current article)
Holocaust survivor and Nobel laureate publishes ad in US papers explaining importance of Jerusalem to Jewish people. 'It is mentioned 600 times in Scripture, not once in Quran. It's presence in Jewish history is overwhelming'
By Yitzhak Benhorin
WASHINGTON - Appealing to Obama's heart: Amid tensions between the US administration and the Netanyahu government over construction in Jerusalem, Holocaust survivor and Nobel laureate Elie Wiesel on Friday published a full page ad in the Washington Post and the Wall Street Journal titled: "For Jerusalem".
In the ad, Wiesel said that Jerusalem must remain the spiritual capital of the world's Jews, and should serve as a symbol of faith and hope - not as a symbol of sorrow and bitterness. He wrote: "Jerusalem is the heart of our heart and the soul of our soul
Following the American demand to halt construction in Jerusalem, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu contacted Elie Wiesel, one of the most respected authors in the United States, to help him appeal to US President Barack Obama.
Wiesel was summoned for a meeting at the White House, but despite the high esteem President Obama holds for the Holocaust survivor, who he invited to join him on a tour of the Buchenwald death camp last June, it is unlikely Wiesel will be able to persuade Obama to change his policies.
In Friday's ad the author said, "For me, the Jew that I am, Jerusalem is above politics," Wiesel wrote. "It is mentioned more than 600 times in Scripture - and not a single time in the Quran... Its presence in Jewish history is overwhelming."
Wiesel added that the old city of Jerusalem would still be Arab if Jordan had not joined Egypt and Syria in the 1967 Six-Day War. He noted that while Jews would be willing to die for Jerusalem, they would not kill for it.
He said, "Today, for the first time in history, Jews, Christians and Muslims may all worship at their shrines...And contrary to certain media reports, Jews, Christians and Muslims are allowed to build their homes anywhere in the city."
He stressed that there must be a solution, but that it would not be brought about by pressure. He wondered, "Why tackle the most complex and sensitive problem prematurely? Why not first take steps which will allow the Israeli and Palestinian communities to find ways to live together in an atmosphere of security. Why not leave the most difficult, the most sensitive issue, for such a time?"
Peace Now: Prescription for perpetual strife
Debra DeLee, president and CEO of Americans for Peace Now, published a statement in response to Wiesel saying, "Your ad in the Washington Post and the Wall Street Journal brought tears to my eyes, for more than one reason."
She said one cannot be unmoved by his style, but that that the ad also saddened her, "Because to follow your advice - to indefinitely postpone Israeli-Palestinian negotiations over Jerusalem - amounts to a future of blood and tears for Israelis and Palestinians alike. It is not a prescription for trust and hope, but for perpetual strife."
DeLee, who served in the past as chairwoman of the US democratic party, added, "Mr. Wiesel, I am attaching to this letter a map of east Jerusalem and of the West Bank, produced by our Israeli sister organization, Peace Now. Please look at it. Come to terms with the reality that to continue this status quo means death and destruction. I know that is not what you want."
In conclusion, she wrote: "Next time you visit Jerusalem, Mr. Wiesel, I invite you to tour East Jerusalem with one of Peace Now's experts. I guarantee that it would give you a new perspective on Jerusalem."
JTA: "Wiesel: Pressure won't produce Jerusalem solution"
April 18, 2010
NEW YORK (JTA) -- Elie Wiesel said Jerusalem should not be negotiated "prematurely."
Wiesel, the internationally known Holocaust survivor and Nobel Prize-winning author, said In a full-page advertisement published last Friday in the Washington Post that political pressure would not produce a solution for the contested city.
"For me, the Jew that I am, Jerusalem is above politics," the ad said. "It is mentioned more than six hundred times in Scripture -- and not a single time in the Koran."
Wiesel's ad, which was titled "For Jerusalem," came a day after World Jewish Congress President Ronald Lauder published his own ad in the Washington Post and The Wall Street Journal calling on the Obama administration to reverse the "dramatic deterioration" in relations with Israel. The normally close relationship between Israel and the United States has been on the rocks since Israel approved a construction permit for Jewish homes in eastern Jerusalem during a visit to the region by Vice President Joe Biden in March.
"The anguish over Jerusalem is not about real estate, but about memory," the Wiesel ad said.
In response, Americans for Peace Now President Debra DeLee wrote to Wiesel urging him to tour eastern Jerusalem with a guide from Peace Now for a fuller perspective on the city and calling his advice to postpone negotiations "a prescription ... for perpetual strife."
"Without negotiations over Jerusalem between Israel and the Palestinians, a two-state solution would be impossible," DeLee wrote. "And if the two-state solution is impossible, the only possibility is a bi-national state between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean, which would be neither Jewish nor democratic, a chaotic entity that would perpetuate the conflict between Jews and Arabs."
http://www.jta.org/news/article/2010/04/18/1011623/weisel-pressure-will-not-produce-solution-for-jerusalem
Holocaust survivor and Nobel laureate publishes ad in US papers explaining importance of Jerusalem to Jewish people. 'It is mentioned 600 times in Scripture, not once in Quran. It's presence in Jewish history is overwhelming'
By Yitzhak Benhorin
WASHINGTON - Appealing to Obama's heart: Amid tensions between the US administration and the Netanyahu government over construction in Jerusalem, Holocaust survivor and Nobel laureate Elie Wiesel on Friday published a full page ad in the Washington Post and the Wall Street Journal titled: "For Jerusalem".
In the ad, Wiesel said that Jerusalem must remain the spiritual capital of the world's Jews, and should serve as a symbol of faith and hope - not as a symbol of sorrow and bitterness. He wrote: "Jerusalem is the heart of our heart and the soul of our soul
Following the American demand to halt construction in Jerusalem, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu contacted Elie Wiesel, one of the most respected authors in the United States, to help him appeal to US President Barack Obama.
Wiesel was summoned for a meeting at the White House, but despite the high esteem President Obama holds for the Holocaust survivor, who he invited to join him on a tour of the Buchenwald death camp last June, it is unlikely Wiesel will be able to persuade Obama to change his policies.
In Friday's ad the author said, "For me, the Jew that I am, Jerusalem is above politics," Wiesel wrote. "It is mentioned more than 600 times in Scripture - and not a single time in the Quran... Its presence in Jewish history is overwhelming."
Wiesel added that the old city of Jerusalem would still be Arab if Jordan had not joined Egypt and Syria in the 1967 Six-Day War. He noted that while Jews would be willing to die for Jerusalem, they would not kill for it.
He said, "Today, for the first time in history, Jews, Christians and Muslims may all worship at their shrines...And contrary to certain media reports, Jews, Christians and Muslims are allowed to build their homes anywhere in the city."
He stressed that there must be a solution, but that it would not be brought about by pressure. He wondered, "Why tackle the most complex and sensitive problem prematurely? Why not first take steps which will allow the Israeli and Palestinian communities to find ways to live together in an atmosphere of security. Why not leave the most difficult, the most sensitive issue, for such a time?"
Peace Now: Prescription for perpetual strife
Debra DeLee, president and CEO of Americans for Peace Now, published a statement in response to Wiesel saying, "Your ad in the Washington Post and the Wall Street Journal brought tears to my eyes, for more than one reason."
She said one cannot be unmoved by his style, but that that the ad also saddened her, "Because to follow your advice - to indefinitely postpone Israeli-Palestinian negotiations over Jerusalem - amounts to a future of blood and tears for Israelis and Palestinians alike. It is not a prescription for trust and hope, but for perpetual strife."
DeLee, who served in the past as chairwoman of the US democratic party, added, "Mr. Wiesel, I am attaching to this letter a map of east Jerusalem and of the West Bank, produced by our Israeli sister organization, Peace Now. Please look at it. Come to terms with the reality that to continue this status quo means death and destruction. I know that is not what you want."
In conclusion, she wrote: "Next time you visit Jerusalem, Mr. Wiesel, I invite you to tour East Jerusalem with one of Peace Now's experts. I guarantee that it would give you a new perspective on Jerusalem."
JTA: "Wiesel: Pressure won't produce Jerusalem solution"
April 18, 2010
NEW YORK (JTA) -- Elie Wiesel said Jerusalem should not be negotiated "prematurely."
Wiesel, the internationally known Holocaust survivor and Nobel Prize-winning author, said In a full-page advertisement published last Friday in the Washington Post that political pressure would not produce a solution for the contested city.
"For me, the Jew that I am, Jerusalem is above politics," the ad said. "It is mentioned more than six hundred times in Scripture -- and not a single time in the Koran."
Wiesel's ad, which was titled "For Jerusalem," came a day after World Jewish Congress President Ronald Lauder published his own ad in the Washington Post and The Wall Street Journal calling on the Obama administration to reverse the "dramatic deterioration" in relations with Israel. The normally close relationship between Israel and the United States has been on the rocks since Israel approved a construction permit for Jewish homes in eastern Jerusalem during a visit to the region by Vice President Joe Biden in March.
"The anguish over Jerusalem is not about real estate, but about memory," the Wiesel ad said.
In response, Americans for Peace Now President Debra DeLee wrote to Wiesel urging him to tour eastern Jerusalem with a guide from Peace Now for a fuller perspective on the city and calling his advice to postpone negotiations "a prescription ... for perpetual strife."
"Without negotiations over Jerusalem between Israel and the Palestinians, a two-state solution would be impossible," DeLee wrote. "And if the two-state solution is impossible, the only possibility is a bi-national state between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean, which would be neither Jewish nor democratic, a chaotic entity that would perpetuate the conflict between Jews and Arabs."
http://www.jta.org/news/article/2010/04/18/1011623/weisel-pressure-will-not-produce-solution-for-jerusalem




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Thank you for your work Ms. Debra Delee. May God reward you.
I was saddened to see a man of such renowned stature as Mr. Wiesel write that Jerusalem is not mentioned once in the Quran so as to say that Muslims have then less of a spiritual connection with the Holy City than the Jewish people, "whose scriptures mention it 600 times".
As a Muslim, Jerusalem carries significant preponderance in my religion as well as to the Palestinians residing there. The 'Dome of the Rock' mosque is one of our holiest sites and in the direction towards which the first, earliest Muslims had once prayed before the Islamic establishment of the Kabaah in Makkah.
I along with the many Muslims around the world pray that we can find a solution to the havoc that is perpetuating such a site, which is revered not only by our faith but also the Jewish and Christian as well.
Building settlements into East Jerusalem is not the way to go especially when not only does it go against the sanctity of such sacred Land but also against the needs & autonomy of the Palestinian people. Letting this issue stand unresolved by leaving it alone will only dampen this predicament and exasperate the plight of the masses in Palestine.