APN and Shalom Achshav on the issues |
APN Resources |
Recommended Reading |
Hagit Ofran and Lara Friedman in Haaretz: Don’t Be Fooled by Netanyahu’s Sleight of Hand on Settlements (Nov 2, 2015) A Message from APN CEO and President Debra DeLee: Terrorism is the Symptom (October 14, 2015) Press Release - APN to Kerry: Take Concrete Steps to Calm Israeli-Palestinian Situation (October 14, 2015) Press Release: APN Alarmed at Spiraling Israeli-Palestinian Violence; Urges Leaders to Act (October 4, 2015) |
Podcasts/Interviews/Briefing calls The Jerusalem chapter from APN’s publication, “They Say, We Say” |
Amos Harel in Haaretz: Paris Attacks Give Netanyahu Cover for Islamic Movement Bans (Nov 18, 2015) Raphael Ahren in The Times of Israel: Netanyahu hints at possible annexations in West Bank (Nov 18, 2015)
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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.
--Uri Savir, an Israel diplomat and former politician, in today’s Maariv.
You Must Be Kidding:
“I think we cannot be indifferent and do nothing regarding the issue that we have an Arab living in the building. I invite you all to come for a meeting to discuss this issue and see what can be done. I’m not rejecting him personally, but I think it’s very important that we know him and check him out.”
--From a flyer posted in a residential building. The surprised young Arab-Israeli resident from Tel Aviv posted the flyer on Facebook and decided to use humor in his post: “Ya, I’m coming with mulukhiyeh (Palestinian national dish) muffins.” Within a short time, the post went viral. (Maariv)
This week, Alpher discusses the arguments that the Temple Mount and the al-Aqsa Mosque are at the heart of the current wave of terror that began in Jerusalem and explains what happened; PM Netanyahu's banning both Jewish and Arab members of Knesset from visiting the Mount and, earlier, banning two of the extremist Israeli Islamist movements; why shouldn’t Jews who wish to do so be allowed to pray on the Mount; what Netanyahu’s options are; and sums up the characteristics of the violence now that we are two weeks into this wave and there is no sign of it letting up
--Policeman Moshe Chen, who prevented the shooting of a Palestinian attacker who injured him.
You are probably following with horror the news from Israel and the West Bank. It’s easy to despair in the face of all the misery. Israelis and Palestinians have been deadlocked in this violent embrace, unable to find a way to separate into two states living side by side in peace and security.
In such times, when there is no political horizon to give us hope, we can find solace in the work of individuals, people on both sides – yes, on both sides – who despite the trouble around them choose to reach out and build bridges.
One such hero is my friend David Broza, the famous Israeli singer-songwriter, who is a committed peace activist and a longtime friend of Israel’s Peace Now movement.
David recently made an album, produced by Steve Earle, devoted to peace, collaborating with Palestinian musicians to build musical bridges to Palestinians in East Jerusalem. His album, and a documentary that tells the story of the making of this album, are now available as a set, exclusively to APN donors like you.
Please read David’s letter below. It will give you hope, and – hopefully – inspiration.
--Right-wing religious Jewish man, Maimoun Himi, who saved the life of a young Israeli-Arab man, Abed Jamily, who was being lynched by a mob in Netanya.
--Zionist Camp MK Tzipi Livni slams calls by Jerusalem Mayor Nir Barkat and some in the police for civilians to carry arms.
In recent weeks, an upsurge in violence in Jerusalem has brought the embattled city back into the headlines. According to Danny Seidemann, founder of Terrestrial Jerusalem and one of the leading experts on the city, this violence, boiling at a level unseen in Jerusalem since 1967, actually began over a year ago, and it is not just another spoke in the “cycle of violence.”
“Usually there’s a tendency to overstate the instability of Jerusalem,” Seidemann said at a meeting of journalists and analysts in Washington this week. “But Jerusalem is normally a far more stable city than its reputation. What we are seeing now are significant developments that go well beyond tomorrow’s headlines.”
Seidemann described a dangerous confluence of factors, with the political stalemate creating an atmosphere of despair in which the conflict, which has always been political, will finally become the religious conflict that many have believed, until now incorrectly, that it is. The current conflict centered on the Temple Mount is only the tip of the iceberg. According to Seidemann, “The entire fabric of this conflict has changed.”
“The fighting over the Temple Mount indicates the establishment of a biblical narrative which is already fanning the flames of a religious conflict,” Seidemann said. “It is planting the seeds of the transformation of a political conflict, which can be solved, into a religious conflict which cannot be solved. We are seeing the ascendancy of those faith communities that weaponize faith. We are seeing the marginalization of traditional religious bodies who understand that Jerusalem is best served by the faiths working together.