I'm happy to see Hadar Susskind leading Americans for Peace Now not only because of his experience, management, skills and expertise but because he embodies the best of our movement's next generation.
Please read Hadar's letter, which follows. I was so moved by it, I increased my donation over last year's.
As we welcome a New Year and all the change we hope it brings, join me in contributing with your tax-deductible donation today.
Shana Tovah U'metukah,
Letty Cottin Pogrebin
APN Board Member and past Chair of the Board
September 2020
Dear Friend,
Twenty-five years ago this November 4th, thousands of Israelis gathered at a Peace Now rally in what was then known
as Kings of Israel Square. Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, who had the courage to shake his enemy's hand on the White
House lawn just two months earlier, stood in front of the audience of hopeful faces and announced "the path of
peace is preferable to the path of war." Sadly, we all know what happened next. Minutes later, he was gunned down
by a radical national-religious Israeli, assassinated for his willingness to embrace change, to grow beyond a
military commander and become a champion for peace and a better future for Israel and its Palestinian
neighbors.
Perhaps you were there, holding a candle and singing with thousands of Israelis and Aviv Geffen as he
almost predicted the outcome of the evening with his somber lyrics, "to cry for you." Yitzhak Rabin risked and
lost his life for a chance to make peace. He did not succeed. But we shall continue until his dream is
realized. Yitzhak Rabin is my hero. And I hope you will join me this fall as we commemorate his life and his
legacy.
There will be more information coming soon regarding APN's
October 20th celebration of Yitzhak Rabin, which will be hosted by actor, social activist, and APN board
member Mandy Patinkin. But in the meantime, I hope you will consider
making a gift to APN as we
gather for the High Holidays and continue to work towards the peace that Rabin championed, and all of us
believe in so passionately.
Over the last 25 years I learned many things about making change. I
learned that you have to be willing to grow and be flexible and be courageous. You have to be willing to speak out
when others around you believe the opposite. You have to take risks and do uncomfortable things. And I long ago
learned that simply talking about what's needed does not change the world and does not get you to peace. Bold
action, honesty, creativity and a willingness to truly listen to different narratives gets you to peace.
As soon as the news came in that Rabin had been assassinated, I remember thinking that war was now imminent. We
assumed the perpetrator was a Palestinian. But we soon learned that the enemy this time came from within. The
assassin was an Israeli who was so opposed to peace that he took a gun and killed his own prime minister. Instead
of going to war, we bowed our heads in shame.
Instead of starting a war, the assassination paralyzed the peace
process. It shattered the fragile good will and diplomacy that had been building. And it also shattered our
hearts.
Yet here I am, 25 years later, at the helm of
Americans for Peace Now, the oldest organization dedicated to peace between Israel and its Palestinian neighbors.
From the day I made myself that promise to honor Rabin's legacy, to this moment when I am honored to be picking up
the mantle of the struggle for peace, we have seen Israeli and Palestinian leaders come and go. We've seen American
presidents of both parties try and fail to bring peace.
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And yet, a quarter of a century after the shocking and tragic day, there are still
more obstacles. Today we are faced with a new enemy, a challenge to our ability to gather in community, as so many
did that evening in Tel Aviv, as Jews have done for millennia.
The 2020 High Holidays will be an experience unlike any the Jewish community has seen in at least a hundred years.
With a pandemic raging, we will be unable to gather as we usually do-to pray, to mourn, to celebrate, to atone, to
be together as we set out a path for the new year.
While we are accustomed-and even commanded-to pray in community, we will be finding new ways to approach our annual
rituals. For many of us, it will be a strange and isolating experience. We will not be gathering in synagogue to
intone Kol Nidre or hear the shofar, we won't be emptying our pockets of breadcrumbs together at the river for
taschlich, and we won't be inviting our guests to eat in our sukkot to mark the arrival of autumn.
We will be watching our clergy on Zoom, unable to hug each other and absorb the collective energy of repentance and
atonement. We will be eating with small family groups or perhaps even by ourselves. It will be a profound,
unnerving experience, especially when faced with the most somber, existential questions of the season-who will live
and who will die.
But I think we can find the good in this new way of approaching the holidays.
Just as the pandemic has required that we move inside-both literally and figuratively-and turn within
ourselves for meaning, calm, and the strength to keep going, this year's high holidays will be asking the same
of us. And more.
I want to suggest that we also can use this moment of calm and quiet to search for our recommitment to peace.
As a longtime supporter of APN, and as a fellow traveler on the quest for
peace, you have been holding up the beacon of hope for as long as we have been trying to make peace a reality. Like
me, you have believed in the process, held your breath as each step opened the door just enough to engender the
hope that this might be the right time, and exhaled with disappointment and anger when yet another opportunity was
squandered.
You have gone to demonstrations, visited Israel and Palestine, and supported the prospect for peace with your money
and your time. Like me, you mourned when Yitzhak Rabin was murdered on that early November evening. And yet, like
me, you are still here. Yearning, hoping, and working for peace.
Peace may feel farther away than it did in 1995, but today, we have new leaders rising up-in
Jerusalem, in Ramallah, in Washington DC. We are creating new language, new actions, new alliances, and a new
fervor to achieve what Rabin did not. We are building a new peace movement for our times, one that will
include people who care about peace and justice and who are willing to take the risks that we need to get
there. One that will include you and me.
We need you to get there. We need your heart, and your time, and your support. We need you to make a gift this year
to APN that will demonstrate your commitment to the path for peace that Rabin started, and that we are going to
move forward to completion.
We need your support to work on policy that will move peace to
the top of the agenda. We need your support to help create momentum on both sides of the ocean - with APN and
our Israeli partner, Shalom Achshav - so that we can spread our message far and wide and light the beacon of
hope in a new generation of peace activists who have the skills and the strength and the same idealism that
has buoyed APN for 40 years.
We need you to make peace a reality at last.
So as we move inside during this holiday season, I hope you will use the quiet space to recommit yourself to peace
in our lifetime, and make a generous gift to
APN.
I am looking forward to celebrating the life and legacy of Yitzhak Rabin on October 20th with you and Mandy
Patinkin and with our community of friends and supporters from around the world.
In the meantime, thank you for your commitment to APN. Together, we are building a movement. Shana tova, and with
shalom, salaam, and peace,
Hadar Susskind
President and CEO
Americans for Peace Now
PS: Look for your invitation to APN’s Rabin Commemoration in your inbox soon.
PPS: Again, we are so grateful for your strong and generous support of APN, and I hope that when travel is again a
possibility, I will be able to come to your city and thank you in person.