On October 13 2015, Jerusalem expert Daniel Seidemann analyzed the Jerusalem-specific causes for the current
intensification of violence. Seidemann is a leading expert on Arab-Jewish relations in Jerusalem. He is the founder
and director of Terrestrial Jerusalem.
For this High Holiday season, Americans for Peace Now is partnering with
Israeli superstar David Broza, a peace activist and longtime supporter of Israel’s Peace Now movement.
Donate to APN and we will send you an exclusive set of David’s East
Jerusalem West Jerusalem CD and a DVD with a fascinating film documenting the making of this album.
With your donation of $72 or more, we will send you an exclusive set
of David’s East Jerusalem West Jerusalem peace CD/DVD set. Please note in the comment section on the donate
page that you want us to send it to you.*
David is known for his song Yihiye Tov (It Will Be Okay), which became an anthem of Israel’s Peace
Movement. Watch this video for David’s Rosh Hashanah greeting and join him in the hope that “Yihiye
Tov.”
This is another in a series of reviews of new books on Middle Eastern affairs. We asked Dr. Gail Weigl, an APN
volunteer and a professor of art history, to review Abbie Rosner’s new book about the Arab cuisine of Israel’s
Galilee, and about the power of food as a bridge between people.
APN's Ori Nir interviews Abbie Rosner.
Abbie Rosner, Breaking Bread in Galilee: A Culinary Journey into the Promised Land (Hilayon Press, 2012). 238
pages. $15.00
Although the average reader probably would not choose to emulate the laborious food gathering and preparation
described in Abbie Rosner’s appealing book, the author herself emerges as a woman it would be delightful to know.
From her passion for learning about the traditional food ways of her Bedouin and fellaheen (subsistence
farmers) neighbors, to her deep and informed appreciation for the agricultural and culinary practices they
preserve, Ms. Rosner’s respect for and tireless curiosity about the customs preserved in Israel’s Upper Galilee is
both astounding and inspiring.
Hagit discussed the latest developments in regard to Israeli settler extremists, settlements in the West Bank and
Israeli government settlement construction policy, as well as Peace Now’s recent rally against Jewish terrorism and
incitement, other recent successful Peace Now activities.
Interview with Iran expert Meir Javedanfar. An Iranian-born Israeli who co-authored a book on Iran's leadership and
teaches courses on contemporary Iranian politics at the Interdisciplinary Center in Herzliya, Javedanfar is
well-positioned to analyze attitudes toward the agreement both in Israel and in Iran. The interview is about 10
minutes long.
Interview with Barbara Slavin, Senior Fellow at the Atlantic Council, an Iran policy expert, on the impact of the
new agreement on Iran and on prospects that the new agreement may serve to stimulate reform in Iran, going beyond
Iran's nuclear ambitions. The interview is about 8 minutes long.
Interview with Joe Cirincione, the President of the Ploughshares Fund and one of Washington's leading experts on
the diplomatic efforts to block Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon. The interview is about 5 minutes long. It was
conducted right after the Iran deal was announced.
Interview with Kelsey Davenport, Director for Nonproliferation Policy at the Arms Control Association, upon her
return from Vienna, shortly after a deal has been reached with Iran to block it from acquiring nuclear weapons. The
interview is about ten minutes long.
This is another in a series of reviews of new books on Middle Eastern affairs. We asked Dr. Gail
Weigl, an APN volunteer and a professor of art history, to review Sandy Tolan's new book about young
Palestinian using the power of music to transform their lives under occupation.
APN's Ori Nir interviews Sandy Tolan.
Sandy Tolan, Children of the Stone: The Power of Music in a Hard Land (New York, 2015). 438 pages.
$28.00.
Sandy Tolan’s Children of the Stone: The Power of Music in a Hard Land reads like fiction, but is
a meticulously documented work of non-fiction, as the author makes clear in his introduction to the extensive
source notes. While the book remains focused throughout on the main protagonist, Ramzi Aburedwan, his musical
training and successful effort to bring the healing power of music to the Palestinian communities of the Israeli
Occupied Territories, equal – if not more attention – is devoted to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, from the
founding of Israel to the present. The stage for Ramzi’s story is never-ending physical and emotional
violence perpetrated against the Palestinian people by the Israeli government and IDF. That history is
interconnected with the more or less extensive stories of many Palestinians, Europeans and Americans devoted to
music as the means to assuage Palestinian suffering and restore Palestinian honor and identity.