
Jewish Americans call for cease-fire
By Susan Webb, People's Weekly World August 10, 2006
Carolyn Eisenberg, a history professor in Brooklyn, N.Y., grew up in
what she describes as a Zionist family, with “a great deal of affection
for Israel.” Last week, as co-chair of Brooklyn Parents for Peace, she
was organizing an Aug. 9 “Brooklyn Walk for Peace,” calling for an
immediate cease-fire by all sides in the Israel-Lebanon-Gaza crisis. An
alert issued by the organization said, “Enough! War is not the answer!”
She is one of a growing number of Jewish Americans appealing for a
cease-fire since Israel launched a massive military attack on Lebanon
July 14.
On July 31, the progressive Jewish group Tikkun published a
full-page ad in The New York Times, headlined, “Stop the slaughter in
Lebanon, Israel and the Occupied Territories.” It also ran in the Los
Angeles Times Aug. 6. The ad, posted on the Tikkun web site with an
appeal for additional signers, initially had 1,500 names. The number
has since risen to 3,500.
Rabbi Michael Lerner, editor of Tikkun magazine, said responses he
has received following the ad’s publication have ranged “from people
who say if they could find me they’d kill me” to “people saying ‘I was
about to leave my Judaism until I read your ad’” to “Muslims who said
all their life they had never heard Jews speak with compassion” until
this ad.
Lerner, interviewed by phone, cited articles in the San Francisco
Chronicle and elsewhere reporting that “there is no dissent” on this
issue in the U.S. Jewish community and labeling those who do dissent as
“marginal.”
“The pressure is so intense,” Lerner said. “The line that’s put
forward” is that “you’ve got to kowtow or you’ll be attacked as a
‘self-hating Jew.’” As a result, he said, very few Jews are willing to
take the risk, to say “Wait a minute, is this really helping Israel?”
The corporate media have “simply blacked out the voices of those of
us who are challenging this war, calling for an immediate cease-fire,”
Lerner said. “It is making people feel like they are the only ones.”
The ad’s 3,500 signers “are an indication that there are a lot of
people out there who feel this way,” he said. A needed step, he said,
is to become a political force that can be an alternative to AIPAC —
the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, the powerful right-wing
Jewish lobbying group.
Nichola Torbett, Tikkun national organizer, told the World, “I
think congressmembers are afraid. I think they really need to hear from
their constituents, especially Jewish constituents, who don’t share the
views of AIPAC. They need to know that there is a Jewish voice for
peace.”
Debra Hirschberg, a co-coordinator of the Cleveland Tikkun
Community, said her organization is supporting the resolution
introduced by Ohio Congressman Dennis Kucinich, H. Con. Res. 450, which
calls for an immediate cease-fire. The group, with a mailing list of
some 150, has joined in two rallies by a coalition of peace and justice
organizations in Cleveland in the last few weeks. “We’re into ending
the violence and disempowering the terrorists,” she said.
Other Jewish groups working for a cease-fire and peaceful solutions
include Jewish Voice for Peace and Brit Tzedek v’Shalom, the Jewish
Alliance for Justice and Peace, both with chapters around the country.
In Brooklyn, Eisenberg said she feels an obligation to speak out.
“For me it is especially tragic to see people who have been victimized
throughout history victimize others,” she said in a telephone
interview, referring to Israeli bombings of civilian homes and
infrastructure. “As a Jew, I do feel implicated in this.”
Speaking of Jewish concerns for Israel’s right to defend itself,
she said, “I feel enormous sorrow that this very legitimate human
concern has been transformed into a very ugly position.”
“I would emphasize it is horrible for Israel, it is horrible for
America,” Eisenberg said. “You could not draw up a more
self-destructive behavior.”
“Israel would be a lot more secure in defending itself if it would
live harmoniously with its neighbors,” she added. “Through diplomacy,
Israel can be better protected, Lebanon can be better protected,
ultimately the Palestinians can be better protected.”
As of Aug. 8, according to the UK Independent, 932 Lebanese people
had been killed in the Israeli military assault, with dozens missing
and 3,293 wounded. Forty-five percent of the casualties have been
children. The paper said 913,000 Lebanese have been displaced,
including 300,000 children. News reports say 103 Israelis have been
killed in the crisis, both Jews and Arabs, with close to 2,000 wounded
and thousands evacuated.
Israel has flown 8,700 bombing raids over Lebanon, destroying 146
bridges and 72 roads, the Independent reported. Damage caused to
Lebanon’s infrastructure is estimated at $2 billion. Up to 30,000 tons
of oil have spilled into the Mediterranean since an Israeli air strike
on a power station. Hospitals face shutdowns as fuel supplies dwindle.
According to the Independent, Hezbollah has fired 3,000 rockets at
Israel, with the daily numbers increasing. The rockets, filled with
anti-personnel ball bearings according to news reports, have hit
Israeli villages, its third-largest city, Haifa, as well as some West
Bank areas.
Some 10,000 Israeli soldiers are currently in southern Lebanon.
The Associated Press reported Aug. 9 that Israel’s Security Cabinet had authorized a wider ground assault.
Brooklyn Parents for Peaces notes that “weapons for this carnage
are being supplied by the U.S. government, with a green-light by the
Bush administration to use them.”
The group has a network of some 1,000 people across the borough.
Many are Jewish, and support Israel’s right to exist, Eisenberg said.
“What we’re united in is that violence and destroying a country is not
a solution.”
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