News Nosh 02.24.16

APN's daily news review from Israel
Friday February 24, 2016
 
Quote of the day:
“Why? Because the parliament could. It was a ‘military government’ of the left-wing parties.”
--Expressing reservations about the 'Suspension Bill,' which would allow suspending MKs on ideological grounds, MK Benny Begin tells how his father was suspended in the Fifties.**

You Must Be Kidding: 
A gay Iranian poet who fled his homeland after harassment and arrest has requested asylum in Israel.*
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As many question not only the viability but also the desirability of a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, one of the world’s leading experts on the conflict and on efforts to resolve it discussed the state of the two-state solution.

Dan Kurtzer, is the former U.S. ambassador to Israel and Egypt and currently the S. Daniel Abraham Professor of Middle East policy studies at Princeton University's Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs.

We suggest reading Ambassador Kurtzer’s recent Brookings essay on the two-state solution.

Listen here.

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News Nosh 02.23.16

APN's daily news review from Israel
Tuesday February 23, 2016
 
Quote of the day:
"I don’t feel I need to deny my ancestry and my roots for me to declare and prove loyalty to Israel. My recognition of, and pride in my roots does not pose a threat to Israel’s security, nor should it be considered an ‘attack’ on it - it’s just a fact."
--Rita Khoury, a Palestinian citizen of Israel (commonly known as an Arab-Israeli), is a graduate of the Technion and an information systems engineer.

You Must Be Kidding: 
The prosecution for Israel’s military court refused to allow the family of imprisoned Palestinian journalist Muhammad al-Qiq to visit him at an Israeli hospital as al-Qiq’s hunger strike reached 90 days because it said they were “dangerous to Israeli security." Yet, it reportedly allowed two Hamas prisoners to visit him, ostensibly to convince him to stop his hunger strike. Al-Qiq is protesting being held without charges.
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Settlements ≠ Peace

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Settlements are antithetical to peace…Settlements are, at every level, a liability for Israel. It is because of settlements that the route of Israel's "separation barrier" has been distorted, lengthening and contorting Israel's lines of defense. It is because of settlements that Israeli soldiers are forced to act as police within the West Bank, rather than focusing on their real mission - defending Israel. Settlements are also a huge drain on Israel's economy, with the government continuing to fund construction and to provide settlers a wide range of financial benefits.

It is because of settlements that Israel is forced to rule over a huge - and growing - non-Jewish, disenfranchised population, contrary to basic democratic values. Settlement policies and the actions of settlers erode Israel's image in the world as a democratic state that respects the civil rights of all people under its rule. If allowed to block a two-state solution, settlements will ultimately leave Israeli decision-makers with an impossible choice: be a democracy and give full rights to the Palestinians, at the cost of Israel's Jewish character, or deny rights to the majority of the people under Israeli rule - which the Palestinians will soon be - validating accusations that Israel is increasingly an Apartheid-like state. 

-- From APN's They Say, We Say

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Learn more about settlements – the more you know, the more you can do

  • The debate about settlements has been going on for nearly 50 years. In our seminal publication, “They Say, We Say,” APN takes on the most common pro-settlement canards, one by one, offering factual, substantive responses, updated to include new pro-settlement arguments and narratives put forth by settler advocates in both the U.S. and Israel.
  • The Israeli Peace Now movement & Americans for Peace Now are the leading forces tracking settlement-related developments and exposing them to the public, inside and outside Israel. Click here for APN and Peace Now reports, analyses, and commentary.
  • Supporting Israel is synonymous with opposing settlements and the occupation. This is why APN calls for people who care about Israel to support Israel by boycotting settlements and the occupation. Click here to learn more about our policy and our call to action.
  • APN and its Israeli sister organization, Peace Now, maintain a comprehensive database of settlement-related information. We have put much of that data into an interactive map – Facts on the Ground – that you can use online or download and use via APN’s Map App. Click here for Facts on the Ground/APN’s Map App.
  • “Price Tag” actions – violence and vandalism against Palestinians in the West Bank, East Jerusalem, and increasingly inside Israel – have for years been a tactic of some extremist nationalist Israeli settlement supporters. To learn more, see APN’s Introduction to Price Tag and APN’s Price Tag Timeline.

The Iran Nuclear Deal

February 22, 2016 - Olmert, Eizenkot

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Yossi Alpher is an independent security analyst. He is the former director of the Jaffee Center for Strategic Studies at Tel Aviv University, a former senior official with the Mossad, and a former IDF intelligence officer. Views and positions expressed here are those of the writer, and do not necessarily represent APN's views and policy positions.

This week, Alpher discusses former prime minister Ehud Olmert’s tenure as head of government; the ramifications of IDF Chief of the General Staff Gadi Eisenkot speaking out against excessive use of force by soldiers and police in dealing with knife attacks by Palestinian youth; and two key issues of domestic and international sensitivity that his comments point to.

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News Nosh 02.22.16

APN's daily news review from Israel
Monday February 22, 2016
 
Quote of the day:
"Israel's Ministry of Education is in danger of becoming the Ministry of the Permitted and the Forbidden - or the Ministry of What Is Not Education."
--Sociology Professor Samuel Heilman of the City University of New York warns that the changes instituted by Education Minister Naftali Bennett over who decides what cultural works are appropriate for Israeli pupils, is leading Israel away from being a democratic society.*

You Must Be Kidding: 
Education Minister Naftali Bennett told Sunday’s cabinet meeting that Palestinian parents are not preventing their children from committing stabbing attacks so that they can get money from the Palestinian Authority. One source at the meeting told Haaretz: "Several of those present squirmed uncomfortably in their seats."**
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News Nosh 02.21.16

APN's daily news review from Israel
Sunday February 21, 2016
 

You Must Be Kidding: 
Only some 10% of Jews said they have a good knowledge of Arabic. Some 49% of Ashkenazim want Hebrew to be the only official language in Israel and almost 60% of Jews whose background is in Arab countries want the same, and oppose the status of Arabic as an official language.
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Quote of the day:
"This figure is especially troubling because it signals a desire to erase the existence of the Palestinians in Israel, in the past and present, and points out how effectively the notion of an Arab-Jewish culture has been erased from Israeli consciousness."
--Yuval Evri gives the statistics and the historical and sociological reasons why Jewish Israelis don't want Arabic, the language that was shared by both Jews and Arabs here before the creation of the state.
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For many of my American friends and former colleagues in the media, I am the Israeli they know and therefore a go-to person on Israeli affairs. They contact me with questions on Israeli politics, Jerusalem restaurants, Hebrew slang and Israeli popular culture.

Recently, their curiosity is turning into bewilderment and astonishment. Their lovingly inquisitive approach toward Israel is turning into exasperation. Their focus now is on trying to decipher Israel’s shifting character, on its changing face, on the fading vision of the Israel they grew up loving and hoped to see thriving — a state that embodies progressive, democratic, pluralistic, tolerant values.
“What the hell is going on there,” I’m often asked, “have they totally lost it?”

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