Category: News

Select a news topic from the list below, then select a news article to read.

  • Community objections to PSU President Wim Wiewel’s statement on the ASA boycott of Israeli institutions

    Community objections to PSU President Wim Wiewel’s statement on the ASA boycott of Israeli institutions

    February 3, 2014

    President Wim Wiewel

    RE:  Objections to your statement on the ASA boycott of Israeli institutions

    Dear President Wiewel,

    As members of Portland State University’s Oregon community we are deeply disturbed by your recent statement on January 14th against the American Studies Association’s boycott of Israeli academic institutions.   We oppose a number of declarations made in your statement.

    First, the ASA resolution does nothing to curb academic freedom or the free exchange of ideas because it is not directed at individual Israeli academics but at institutions complicit in Israel’s denial of fundamental human rights to Palestinians living in Israel, under occupation in the West Bank, Gaza, and East Jerusalem, and in the diaspora. Israeli academics are free to attend ASA-sponsored conferences as long as they are not being paid to attend by Israeli institutions. Your letter misrepresents the ASA’s position and willfully ignores Israel’s ongoing denial of academic freedom to Palestinians.

    (more…)

  • Article on PSU President’s Wim Wiewel’s trip to Israel in July 2013

    Article on PSU President’s Wim Wiewel’s trip to Israel in July 2013

    President’s Israel Trip to Spur New Programs for Kennesaw

    Whose land is it? “As I always said when I was teaching a class, it
    depends on when you want to start and it depends on when you want to
    stop,” he said.

    Trevor Williams
    08.08.13

    Is it more productive to meet a prime minister or a pollster?

    For understanding a conflict, surprisingly, the latter might have been the better choice, Kennesaw State University President Daniel Papp said about a chance meeting on his “eye-opening” trip to Israel in July.

    Of course, he may never know. Dr. Papp and seven of his peers were slated to meet with the presidents of Israel and the Palestinian Authority on July 3.

    Egypt’s military picked that same day to stage a coup, putting the always-tense region on even higher alert. The elected officials suddenly “had better things to do” than meet with leaders of American institutions, Dr. Papp told a small group of KSU backers at a breakfast briefing Aug. 7.

    But the presidents’ stand-in had a unique perspective.

    Khalil Shikaki, a top Palestinian pollster, told the group his research shows that most people on both sides of the territorial conflict want to forget about it and move on; it\’s extremists making up 15-25 percent of each population who continue fueling the fire.

    That was interesting on many levels to Dr. Papp, an expert in Russian foreign and defense policy heading up a university with one of the few doctoral programs in international conflict management.

    In fact, discussions on geopolitics permeated the Project Interchange seminar, an annual program organized by the American Jewish Committee to help American university presidents understand Israel and the region better.

    Dr. Papp put on his professor’s cap during the briefing at the Georgian Club.

    With a presentation mixing maps, charts and statistics with tourist photos, he showed that although Israel was around in biblical times, the modern state emerged 64 years ago (as of Aug. 7) as former British colonies were partitioned after the two world wars in the 20th century.

    Whose land is it? “As I always said when I was teaching a class, it depends on when you want to start and it depends on when you want to stop,” he said.

    One thing that can’t he argued: Israel is a melting pot of cultures. In addition to the various strands of Jews and Arabs, about one of eight Israelis hails from the former Soviet Union. The holy sites on the temple mount in Jerusalem illustrate the diversity of faiths rooted in the Abrahamic tradition.

    “These are right on top of each other,” he said of the western wall of Judaism’s holy temple, the Church of the Holy Sepulchre and the Dome of the Rock mosque. “You can say that and say that and say that, but until you actually see it, you cannot – or at least I could not – fully appreciate it.”

    In the progressive coastal city of Tel Aviv, however, the group saw more sun worshippers than scholars of the Torah.

    They also traveled to Haifa to visit the Technion, which Dr. Papp called the “Georgia Tech of Israel.”

    He conceded that the Technion wasn’t the best partner for Kennesaw but was hopeful that meetings at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and Tel Aviv University would pave the way for formalized student and faculty exchanges. Although he didn’t visit, he also cited Bar-Ilan University as a potential partner.

    The trip also produced bonds among the American universities. After striking up a friendship with Portland State University President Wim Wiewel, Dr. Papp said a Kennesaw group would head to Oregon to study its community engagement strategies.

    For more on the trip, click here. http://web.kennesaw.edu/news/stories/top-us-university-presidents-explore-innovation-and-bilateral-academic-opportunities-israel

  • Video: “Checkpoint” by Jasiri X

    Video: “Checkpoint” by Jasiri X

    This fabulous music video is a must see~

    “Checkpoint” is based on the oppression and discrimination Jasiri X witnessed firsthand during his recent trip to Palestine and Israel “Checkpoint” is produced by Agent of Change, and directed by Haute Muslim. Download “Checkpoint” at https://jasirix.bandcamp.com/track/checkpoint

  • Boycott goes prime-time in Israel

    Boycott goes prime-time in Israel

     
    The following article by Larry Derfner was published by +972 Magazine on 19 January 2014.
    “Boycott goes prime-time in Israel”

    On Saturday night the boycott of Israel gained an impressive new level of mainstream recognition in this country. Channel 2 News, easily the most watched, most influential news show here, ran a heavily-promoted, 16-minute piece on the boycott in its 8 p.m. prime-time program. The piece was remarkable not only for its length and prominence, but even more so because it did not demonize the boycott movement, it didn’t blame the boycott on anti-Semitism or Israel-bashing. Instead, top-drawer reporter Dana Weiss treated the boycott as an established, rapidly growing presence that sprang up because of Israel’s settlement policy and whose only remedy is that policy’s reversal.

    In her narration, Weiss ridicules the settlers and the government’s head-in-the-sand reaction to the rising tide. The segment from the West Bank’s Barkan Industrial Park opens against a background of twangy guitar music like from a Western. “To the world it’s a black mark, a symbol of the occupation,” she reads. “But here they insist it’s actually a point of light in the area, an island of coexistence that continues to flourish despite efforts to erase it from the map.” A factory owner who moved his business to Barkan from the other side of the Green Line makes a fool of himself by saying, “If the state would only assist us by boycotting the Europeans and other countries causing us trouble …” The Barkan segment ends with the manager of Shamir Salads saying that between the European and Palestinian boycott, he’s losing about $115,000 to $143,000 a month in sales. “In my view,” he says, “it will spread from [the West Bank] to other places in Israel that have no connection to the territories.”

    Weiss likewise ridicules Deputy Foreign Minister Ze’ev Elkin, who runs the government’s “hasbara war,” as he puts it. Weiss: “Yes, in the Foreign Ministry they are for the time being sticking to the old conception: it’s all a question of hasbara. This week the campaign’s new weapon, developed with the contributions of world Jewry: (Pause) Another hasbara agency, this time with the original name ‘Face To Israel.’” She quotes the co-owner of Psagot Winery saying the boycott is “nothing to get excited about,” that people have been boycotting Jews for 2,000 years, and concluding, “If you ask me, in the last 2,000 years, our situation today is the best it’s ever been.” That final phrase, along with what Weiss describes as Elkin’s “conceptzia,” are the same infamous words that Israelis associate with the fatal complacency that preceded the surprise Yom Kippur War.

    The Channel 2 piece features abortive telephone calls with boycott “victims” who didn’t want to be interviewed for fear of bad publicity. The most dramatic testimony comes from Daniel Reisner, an attorney with the blue-chip law firm Herzog Fox Neeman who advises such clients. He explains:

        Most of the companies victimized by the boycott behave like rape victims. They don’t want to tell anybody. It’s as if they’ve contracted some sort of disease and they don’t want anyone to know.

        More and more companies are coming to us for advice – quietly, in the evening, where no one can hear them – and they say: ‘I’ve gotten into this or that situation; is there something you can do to help?’”

    Without giving the names of his clients or the extent of their losses, Reisner says the boycott is causing Israeli businesses to lose foreign contracts and investors. “My fear is of a snowball effect,” he says. Prof. Shai Arkin, vice president for R&D at Hebrew University, says there are many cases of Israeli candidates for research fellowships at foreign universities being turned down because their resumes include service in the Israeli army.

    Advice from a friend abroad comes from Matthew Gould, the British ambassador to Israel: “I love Israel. And I’m worried that in another five years Israel will wake up and find that it doesn’t have enough friends.”

    Weiss asks the EU ambassador here, Lars Faaborg-Andersen: “If Israel would change its policy, all this would go away?” The ambassador replies: “Yes. It is about Israeli policies. If the settlement business continue[s] to expand, Israel will be facing increasing isolation.”

    The piece presents Tzipi Livni as the country’s would-be savior. She says the current negotiations with the Palestinians (in which she represents Israel, along with Netanyahu confidant Isaac Molho) are holding back the boycott’s expansion, but that “if there is a crisis [in the talks], everything will break loose.” She says she is “shouting at people to wake up.”

        Weiss: “What does this all mean? What is it going to be like here? South Africa?”

        Livni: “Yes. I spoke with some of the Jews who are living n South Africa now. They say, ‘We thought we had time. We thought we could deal with this. We thought we didn’t need the world so much for everything. And it happens all at once.’”

    Sixteen minutes of prime time on Israel’s all-popular TV news show on Saturday night, the end of the week in this country. Bracing stuff. A wrench thrown into the national denial machine – and by Channel 2. Definitely a sign of progress – and of life. Another reminder of why this country is worth fighting for – which, for many of us Israeli boycott-supporters, if not necessarily most of us, is what the boycott, strange as it may sound, is all about.


  • It is not anti-semitic to side with Palestinians

    It is not anti-semitic to side with Palestinians

    [This op-ed appeared in the Oregonian]

    With Ariel Sharon’s passing, I pause to consider my own journey through the Israel-Palestine conflict. Named after a Holocaust victim, I grew up in a family where commitment to traditional Judaism was only exceeded by our reverence for Zionism, and where Israel was the remarkable manifestation of a 2000-year-old dream come true.  Zionism was in the air, and Israel was a significant part of what it meant to be Jewish, for if the Holocaust broke our hearts, the creation of Israel was our redemption.

    I thought I was being open-minded when I held to the conviction that there were two legitimate claims to the same land, and that was why it was so unsolvable. What was really unsolvable was the battle that raged in my heart. I had become a progressive on every issue, except one. I marched for civil rights, women’s rights, and an end to war.  But when it came to Israel-Palestine, internally I was torn up. Israel had ethnically cleansed the indigenous population, but how could I turn my back on my people after the thousands of years of suffering Jews had endured?

    My dual-narrative world began to unravel when a friend challenged me to see not two conflicting narratives, but one history of what actually happened. His challenge took me on one of the great journeys of my life – the struggle to fundamentally reconcile my politics around Israel-Palestine with my values. I came to understand that my liberation as a Jew is intrinsically bound up with the liberation of Palestinians, and that the Jewish tradition of “justice, justice thou shall pursue” required me to stand with Palestinians in their struggle. In doing so, I was not only not turning my back on my people, I was upholding Judaism’s highest values, and reclaiming them for myself in a deeply meaningful way.

    It is imperative to understand that being critical of Israel is not tantamount to anti-semitism. If people are engaged in this struggle because they dislike Jews, they likely are anti-semites. If, however, they do this work because they believe in justice, that is hardly anti-semitic. It’s called having a conscience. What part of supporting an oppressed people is against Jewish teachings?

    The Palestinian struggle has become a profound moral issue, a successor to the struggle against South African apartheid. For Jews, this issue cuts to our core, for at some point, it will break your heart. The question is will it break our hearts into pieces so wounded that they can’t be put back together, or will it break our hearts open, to be more sensitive to suffering. Perhaps the redeeming part of this whole tragedy is how we reconfigure our lives, politics, and values to stand for justice for Palestinians, and in doing so create new and more deeply meaningful connections to ourselves and our Jewish roots. It’s about untangling Judaism from Zionism to see the immense beauty of the former and the intense contradictions of the latter. It’s about reclaiming the deepest parts of ourselves as the battle around us – and in us – rages.
    Sharon never woke up, but more and more Jews are.


  • In video: Israeli military accompanies settler attack

    In video: Israeli military accompanies settler attack

    pogrom: Mob attack, condoned by authorities, against persons and property of a religious, racial, or national minority. (Merriam Webster Concise Encyclopedia)
     

    [Photo: An image grab showing a settler throwing stones next to an israeli soldier.(B’Tselem)]
     
    BETHLEHEM (Ma’an) — Israeli human rights group B’Tselem on Wednesday released video footage which shows Israeli soldiers standing among settlers while they attack a Palestinian school with stones in the Nablus village of Urif.

    The incident took place on Monday when a group of settlers raided the village and started throwing stones at the Safadi family home, adjacent to the site of a USAID funded water reservoir project.

    The settlers then threw stones at a village school.

    The video footage, which was filmed by local resident Usama Safadi, clearly shows settlers throwing rocks in the presence of Israeli soldiers.

    “The soldiers took no measures to arrest the settlers, to remove them from the area, or at the very least to put an end to the stone-throwing. Several students at the school threw stones back at the settlers and the soldiers fired teargas at the students,” B’Tselem said.

    The settlers appeared to also be accompanied by a security guard from a settlement.
    (more…)

  • Dutch pension fund quits Israeli banks over settlements

    Dutch pension fund quits Israeli banks over settlements

    The Hague (AFP) – Dutch pension asset manager PGGM, one of the largest in the country, said on Wednesday it was divesting from five Israeli banks because they finance Jewish settlements in the occupied Palestinian territories.

    “PGGM recently decided to no longer invest in five Israeli banks,” said the company, which manages about 153 billion euros ($208 bn)in funds.
    The announcement comes a month after a major Dutch water supplier ended a partnership with an Israeli water company which supplies Israeli towns and Jewish settlements in the occupied West Bank.

    “The reason for this was their involvement in financing Israeli settlements in occupied Palestinian territories,” PGGM said in a statement.

    PGGM said there was “a concern, as the settlements in the Palestinian territories are considered illegal under humanitarian law,” and regarded by international observers as an “important obstacle to a peaceful (two-state) solution of the Israel-Palestinian conflict.”

    It said it would no longer do business with the Hapoalim and Leumi banks, the First National Bank of Israel, the Israel Discount Bank and the Mizrahi Tefahot Bank.

    PGGM added it based its decision on a 2004 UN International Court of Justice ruling that the Jewish settlements were in breach of the Geneva Convention relating to occupying powers transferring their own citizens into occupied territories.

    The group said it had been discussing the issue with the Israeli banks “for several years” but that the banks “have limited to no possibilities to end their involvement in the financing of settlements in the occupied Palestinian territories.”

    “Therefore, it was concluded that engagement as a tool to bring about change will not be effective in this case,” PGGM said.

    All investment in the banks ended on January 1 “as concerns remain and changes are not expected in the foreseeable future,” it added.

    PGGM’s investments in Israeli banks amount to a few tens of millions of euros, Israeli newspaper Haaretz reported.

    “But its decision is liable to damage the banks’ image, and could lead other business concerns in Europe to follow suit,” the paper said.

    Last month Dutch water supplier Vitens ended a partnership with Israeli water company Mekorot due to the “political context.”

    The decision came days after a visit to the Mekorot offices in Israel by Dutch trade minister Lilianne Ploumen was abruptly cancelled.

    The visit was part of a larger tour of Israel by Prime Minister Mark Rutte that was marred by a dispute over a Dutch-made security scanner intended to check goods leaving Gaza for the West Bank.

    Rutte was to have inaugurated the scanner on the isolated territory’s border with Israel, but the ceremony was broken off after Israel said it did not want Gazan goods going to the West Bank.

    Israel’s defence ministry wants to isolate the two Palestinian regions, while Dutch officials had hoped the scanner might boost commerce between them.

    Israeli deputy Foreign minister Zeev Elkin last month said he was “blindsided” by Vitens’ pullout “and a few more European companies have made similar decisions in the past months, which have blindsided us exactly in parallel with the peace process.”

    Zeev, speaking to Israeli military radio, said that peace initiatives should mean “that people don’t breathe down our neck”, but “unfortunately this doesn’t work.”


  • Musical instruments of Portland, Oregon Ensemble destroyed by TSA officials

    Musical instruments of Portland, Oregon Ensemble destroyed by TSA officials

    Musical instruments destroyed by TSA officials

    Source: Al Andalus Ensemble
    Dated: Jan. 01, 2014

    Professional musician in tears after losing his lifetime collection of flutes

    PORTLAND, Ore. — Boujemaa Razgui had his ney flutes taken from him by TSA and destroyed by US
    customs officials in New York. Boujemaa Razgui is a virtuoso ney player and longtime
    Al Andalus
    Ensemble
    member. You can hear Boujemaa Razgui’s beautiful ney playing on the Al Andalus Ensemble “
    Illumination” on the track “Nabil.” Boujemaa has performed and recorded with Beyonce, Shakira and the
    Cirque de Soleil and is a regular with the Boston Camarata.

    Boujemaa has made many trips around the world for over three decades with these flutes and never before
    has had a problem. He was traveling back to the US to his home in Boston, Ma from Marrakech, Morocco
    via Madrid, Spain when his instruments were confiscated and destroyed in New York. Boujemaa is a
    Canadian citizen and longtime US permanent resident. His wife and children are US citizens. In addition to
    the loss of his valuable instruments, Boujemaa said he was treated very poorly by US Customs officials
    where he was questioned for hours, photographed and fingerprinted without cause.

    Boujemaa was in tears when he told us about the loss of his neys. He explained:

    “besides representing my livelihood, the neys are like my children. Each one was carefully and lovingly
    crafted. Seasoned and oiled, and regularly played upon. With the years, the sound of the ney just grows
    better and better. I don’t know what I am going to do now…” he mourned.

    (more…)

  • BBC Comedy Sketch The Israeli Embassy’s Extension

    BBC Comedy Sketch The Israeli Embassy’s Extension

    The ever creeping dispossession of Palestinians in the guise of comedy by the BBC Three.

    Watch: 
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=e6KqarWbN7A