My Meeting with Young Progressive Jews – Aish

We have failed to properly educate the next generation about Jewish history, Jewish values, and the Jewish connection to the Land of Israel.

[NZFOI: Thought-provoking. The same could be said by most of us in the Western world! We haven’t taught the next generation about our history, values and what made the freedoms we cherish today, possible.
Where did we get the idea that all people are equal? We didn’t get it from the Greeks or Romans! Where did we get the idea that there should be a rest day in every seven? Where did we get the idea of freedom of speech? Where did we get the idea that slavery was wrong?]

I recently spent an evening conversing with a group of left-wing progressive Jews in Brooklyn who are deeply bothered by what is happening in Gaza. They blame the conflict squarely on Israel and its treatment of the Palestinians. They were open to meeting a rabbi and having a heated exchange of ideas.

They all identify as politically progressive, and as one person told me, “Everyone I know is anti-Zionist.” I gained a number of valuable insights from our encounter which I am still mulling over. Here are a few of the key takeaways.

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Being Jewish in New Zealand and the concerning rise of antisemitism | North & South

Juliet Moses

Growing up in Auckland, I knew I was a bit different.

Christmas wasn’t a big deal for me. My family didn’t have a Christmas tree and a wreath on our door, and 25 December was the most boring day of the year. Often, we would travel to a holiday destination on that day. Once, we excitedly discovered the movies were on, and had pretty much the entire theatre to ourselves.

Around Easter, my customary school lunchbox sandwiches got replaced with thin, dry tasteless crackers that my friends would ask to try, but only once.

On Sunday mornings, I begrudgingly went to a special school – listening to Bad Jelly the Witch on the radio as we carpooled there – where I learned a script we read from right to left. Sometimes I would use words I thought were part of every family’s lexicon, but when I was greeted with blank stares I realised they were Yiddish. When the subject of World War II came up, or what was happening in the world, I often sensed a raw and bitter pain in my grandmother.

Yes, I knew I was a bit different, but I was proud to be Jewish. My family, although not religious, was observant. I had a bat mitzvah (a coming-of-age ceremony) when I turned 13. Some of the highlights of the year for me were the Jewish festivals, when we took a day off school to attend synagogue and gather together with close family friends for a ceremonial dinner that included much rowdiness and hilarity.

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We are anti-Zionist Jews, we are not anti-Semitic | NZ Herald

This is controversial, what are your thoughts on it?

When Defence Minister Ron Mark met Israel’s Prime Minister on January 27, Benjamin Netanyahu was quoted as asking New Zealand to change its definition of anti-semitism so that it includes political opposition to Zionism.

Netanyahu’s office website reports that he told Mark, “The main attack against the Jewish people today is the attacks against the Jewish state and the attempt to delegitimise the very right of the Jewish people for a state of their own. This is called anti-Zionism, and we ask not only all our friends, but all decent countries everywhere to include [in] the definition of anti semitism, anti-Zionism as well. And so I’ve just made that request from you as well.”

We write as two committed Jews, members of a synagogue, engaging in regular prayer and daily study. We believe in the enduring, prophetic school of Jewish thought. As per our understanding of our religion, law and justice, we are not Zionists.

For that, Netanyahu would like you to call us anti-semites – pathological Jew-haters. He would deny us the right to challenge Israel’s actions, as we challenge the actions of any state (including our own). If New Zealand forecloses on political debate in this way, it will forfeit its potential role in seeking justice for Israel-Palestine.

Rob Berg: It is anti-semitic to oppose Israel’s right to exist | NZ Herald

Rob Berg, President of the Zionist Federation of New Zealand

Criticism of Israeli Government policy and actions is not only legitimate but is a vital and important aspect of any democracy. Israel should be challenged and scrutinised in the same way as any other country, yet too often this is not the case. Other countries, no matter how they came into being or how they behave, do not have their legitimacy or right to exist questioned or their outright destruction called for.

Anti-Zionism should not be conflated with mere criticism of Israeli policy. Anti-Zionism rejects the very idea of a Jewish state.

Zionism is the belief in the right to self-determination of the Jewish people (a right guaranteed to them by international law) in their historical and spiritual homeland, Israel.

It acknowledges the Jewish people as indigenous to the land and Israel as the nation state of the Jewish people, although all citizens, including Israel’s 20 per cent Arab population, have equal civil rights. There are some people who identify as Jews who are anti-Zionist, but they are a tiny fringe. For most Jews, Zionism is core to their identity.

Zionism is often deliberately and falsely labelled by its opponents as a colonialist, racist ideology. Had a Jewish homeland been set up anywhere else, for example in Uganda which was “offered” to the Jewish people, then the accusation of colonialism would have legitimacy. But in the land of Israel, where Jewish people are the Tangata Whenua, accusations of colonialism are made to delegitimise the Jewish presence in their ancestral homeland.

Anti-Zionism has become the new form of antisemitism. The state of the Jews has become the Jew of the states. The same canards and conspiracy theories are applied to the Jewish state and Zionists, as have been applied to Jews for millennia.

Accusations are plenty, such as controlling governments, global banks and media, harvesting organs for sale on the black market – the equivalent of a modern day blood libel – creating world wars and controlling Isis. The Jewish State (instead of the Jewish people) is blamed for all the world’s ills and must be eliminated for the good of humanity.

Yet Zionism is not just an idea but a reality whose elimination would mean 6.5 million Jews facing the prospect of ethnic cleansing and a return to homelessness unless the Palestinian leadership and other Arab states suddenly decide to embrace the legitimacy of a Jewish presence in their midst and democratic ideals.

Antisemitism under cover of anti-Zionism can be illustrated by responses to two New Zealand politicians’ interaction with the Jewish Community.

The first example was when Andrew Little, then leader of the Opposition, visited the Auckland Hebrew Congregation. When Mr Little posted about it on his Facebook page, the level of antisemitism was so intense his office had to delete many comments, including accusations that Israel was responsible for 9-11, and a call for the death of all Jews, due to “the way they [are] treating Palestinians”.

The second example was in January this year, when an MP, Alfred Ngaro, changed his Facebook profile photo to show him standing near the Menorah (candelabra used during the Jewish Festival of Hanukkah) at a public event to celebrate the festival. The negative comments came flooding in quickly, accusing Israel of genocide, ethnic cleansing, apartheid, and paying off New Zealand politicians, as well as praising Hamas.

So how is it possible to distinguish legitimate criticism of Israel from antisemitism? One simple way is “Sharanski’s 3D Test”. If Israel is delegitimised, demonised or double standards applied to it, then antisemitism is at play.

When Jewish peoplehood and their historic connection to Israel is erased, that’s delegitimisation. When the patently absurd accusation that Israelis are the new Nazis is made, that’s demonisation.

And when the UN General Assembly passes 21 resolutions condemning Israel, and six against the entire rest of the world, and none against China (which occupies Tibet and has imprisoned 1 million Uyghurs in concentration camps) or Turkey (which occupies Northern Cyprus and persecutes Kurds), as it did in 2018, that’s double standards.

All these three elements are present in the boycott divestment and sanction campaign (BDS) against Israel, which, if it achieves its three stated goals, will see the replacement of the world’s one Jewish state with another Muslim state.

Understanding the difference between antisemitism disguised as anti-Zionism as opposed to legitimate criticism of Israel, and not giving the former legitimacy, is key to finding a peaceful resolution to the current situation, and in doing so improving the futures for both Israelis and Palestinians.

Rob Berg is president of the Zionist Federation of New Zealand and president of the Jewish National Fund NZ.

Source: NZ Herald

Corbyn’s comments most offensive since Enoch Powell, says ex-chief rabbi | The Guardian

R Jonathan Sacks

The former chief rabbi Jonathan Sacks has called Jeremy Corbyn an antisemite, saying the Labour leader’s comment about Zionists at a 2013 conference was the most offensive statement by a senior UK politician since Enoch Powell’s “rivers of blood” speech.

Labour dismissed the comparison with Powell as “absurd and offensive”.

In an interview with the New Statesman, Sacks, who was the UK’s chief rabbi from 1991 to 2013, said Corbyn had “given support to racists, terrorists and dealers of hate who want to kill Jews and remove Israel from the map”.

The rise of British anti-Semitism | Otago Daily Times

UK Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn

British Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn is embroiled in a conflict which threatens to not only see him challenged for his position, but also split the party when it should be riding high in the polls.

On Saturday, Mr Corbyn apologised for the hurt inflicted on Jewish people by the Labour anti-Semitism row as he vowed to speed up scores of disciplinary cases.

In a video message released on social media, he said working with the Jewish population to rebuild trust was a ”vital priority”. Labour has been slow in processing disciplinary cases of, mostly online anti-Semitic abuse by party members. The party wants to accelerate this process – Labour must never be the home for such people.

His public statement on the divisive issue came after weeks of difficult headlines and virtual silence from Labour’s front bench. Labour MP for Barking Margaret Hodge confronted Mr Corbyn in Parliament and told him to his face what she and many others are feeling.

Under his leadership, the Labour Party is perceived by most Jews, thousands of party members and millions of members of the public, as anti-Semitic and racist.

Ms Hodge, who describes herself as a secular, immigrant Jew, said anti-Semitism appeared to have become the legitimate price the leadership was willing to pay for pursuing the longstanding cause of Palestinians in the Middle East.

Complaints to the Labour Party about anti-Semitism from party members have been dealt with in a desultory manner. In the middle of last month, Labour’s national executive committee agreed its own definition of anti-Semitism. Instead of adopting the international definition agreed in 2016 in the wake of the rise of anti-Semitism across Europe, the party chose to omit key examples used in that definition.

The British Labour Party is not alone in battling anti-Semitism. The childhood home of the late Elie Wiesel, the Holocaust survivor, renowned author and winner of the Nobel Prize for Peace, was vandalised with anti-Semitic graffiti. The house in the Romanian town of Sighetu Marmatiei serves as a museum. Anonymous vandals scrawled on the house the words: ”Pedophile. Jewish Nazi who is in hell with Hitler”.

In New Zealand, Unite Union official Mike Treen was detained in Israel after he took part in an aid convoy to Gaza. Mr Treen was allegedly attacked, alongside other international campaigners, on the ship Al Awda. Green MP Marama Davidson also suffered the same treatment on an earlier trip.

There is a rise in anti-Israel sentiment globally, fuelled in part by hard left-wing activists who are taking the side of Palestine. Israel says it is defending its borders, surrounded as it is by Arab nations.

Gruesome images of children being hit by Israeli rockets can be found easily in mainstream media reports, often without the balance of why Israel decided to launch the attack. Israel’s voice needs to be heard.

The scrape Mr Corbyn now finds himself in will not go away easily as Jewish groups accuse him of lecturing them on the issue and being ideologically hostile to the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance’s definition of anti-Semitism.

It remains unclear whether the Labour leader is ready to adopt the code. The Jewish community has repeatedly said the party must act, rather than just talk, about the problem.

In an article for The Guardian published on Saturday, Mr Corbyn said he felt confident outstanding issues over the definition of anti-Semitism could be resolved.

The British Labour Party is an example to politicians around the world of the dangers of ignoring the growing global problem of anti-Semitism affecting both the political left and right.

With the Holocaust remaining in living memory, world leaders must show more empathy to the horrors the Jewish people have faced and continue to face.

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