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IRAQ,
NO. ISRAEL, YES.
Some Jews join anti-war protests,
but worry about radical bedfellows
By Ron Kampeas (JTA)
WASHINGTON, Sept. 27 (JTA) -- Hours before a demonstration against the
Iraq war swelled to tens of thousands of people, a few dozen protesters
packed a stately synagogue in downtown Washington. They were, in the words
of Rabbi Arthur Waskow, “caught between a rock and a hard place.”
The rock the Jewish protesters faced was their impassioned opposition
to the Iraq war, while the hard place was the vituperative anti-Israeli
sentiment among some of their anti-war allies. Between sermons, worshippers
discussed which events to attend that weekend and which to avoid because
of the likely presence of virulent anti-Zionism.
The service, a joyful melding of psalms and protest songs, offered Jewish
protesters a way through, Waskow said afterward. “We figured out
a way to honor Shabbat and to celebrate the Jewish values of Israel and
the Jewish values of ‘seek peace and pursue it,’” said
Waskow, who heads Philadelphia's Shalom Center.
It's a dilemma that the national Jewish leadership may soon face as support
for the war falls. In surveys last year, U.S. Jews opposed the war in
even greater numbers than non-Jews, while recent surveys show that a majority
of Americans oppose how the Bush administration is handling the situation.
Jewish officials say privately that they're seeking an outlet for burgeoning
anti-war sentiment at the grassroots level, but the problem is that some
of the war's leading opponents -- such as Cindy Sheehan, a mother whose
son died in the war -- equate the U.S.-led occupation of Iraq with Israel's
occupation of the West Bank.
Some of the best-organized groups -- and those likeliest to attend anti-war
protests -- do not stop at criticizing Israeli policy but reject Israel's
very existence.
International A.N.S.W.E.R., a cosponsor of several of the weekend events,
speaks of Israel as “within the borders of historic Palestine."
Jewish protesters spoke of their discomfiture at sharing space with placards
accusing Israel of being the dog that wags the American tail. Waskow avoided
events associated with A.N.S.W.E.R. Rabbi Michael Lerner, of the San Francisco-based
Tikkun community, joined those events, but told followers that he wished
organizers had heeded his calls to distance the rally from A.N.S.W.E.R.
That company has kept many of the top Jewish groups silent since the war
began in March 2003.
Prior to the war, the Reform, Conservative and Orthodox streams each issued
statements supporting its objectives – the removal of Saddam Hussein
and weapons of mass destruction – but stopping short of endorsing
the war outright. More than two years later that equivocation continues.
Spokesmen for the Reform and Orthodox movements did not return calls in
time for this story, but a Conservative movement official said there was
little demand at the grassroots for an organizational position. “We
haven't had any discussions recently as an organization,” said Mark
Waldman, director of public policy for United Synagogue.
Jewish defense organizations and pro-Israel groups by and large also expressed
support for Bush administration objectives at the war's outset, but stopped
short of explicitly endorsing the war. Recently there have been signs
of a shift toward criticism.
The Reform movement and the Anti-Defamation League noted with alarm revelations
last year that captives in U.S. custody had been tortured. Those images
prompted Rabbis for Human Rights-North America to launch a rabbinic letter
in January, citing Jewish teachings, to call on President Bush and Congress
to end torture, inhumane treatment and degradation of captives. Administration
officials say some of the conventions against torture do not apply to
captives suspected of terrorism because they are not traditional soldiers
in uniform.
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“We understand that the most fundamental ethical principle, which
results from our belief in God as Creator of the world and Parent of all
humanity, is that every human being is seen as reflecting the Image of
God,” says the letter, which so far has accrued 600 signatories
from all Jewish streams. “Torture shatters and defiles God's image.”
The group is not contemplating a broader encomium against the war in Iraq,
said its executive director, Rabbi Brian Walt, because its mandate is
strictly human rights and not broader political issues. But the groundswell
of support for the petition suggests a desire for a more substantive statement
from the Jewish community, he said. “Torture is such a challenging
topic, no one wants to think about it,” Walt said.
“Most Americans do not believe Americans would do such a thing,
but the reality is that we are.”
The group was counseling rabbis to address the topic in High Holiday sermons.
Whether a major group moves beyond the specific issue of torture to a
broader indictment of the war remains an open question. United for Peace
and Justice, the umbrella body that organized this weekend's events, hopes
to nudge the anti-war movement to a middle ground that would make mainstream
Jewish groups and others more comfortable with its message, spokesman
Bill Dobbs said.
“We planned three days of events: a rally, a march, a concert with
speakers, a peace and justice festival, an interfaith service, civil disobedience,
a large lobbying effort," he told JTA. “Of all of those events,
two of them" – the march and the concert – “were
cosponsored by A.N.S.W.E.R.”
Dobbs suggested the movement could move further toward accommodating those
uncomfortable with the radicals' message.
One problem, he said, is reconciling groups like his that advocate an
immediate withdrawal from Iraq with those who advocate a managed exit
strategy.
Waskow, who was arrested in front of the White House with another 270
protesters, said that the weekend's events were successful overall and
offered an outlet for young Jews who oppose the war but hear little about
it from their community's leaders. “We were able to bring a positive
Jewish message and to be able to affirm clearly that our Jewish values
include an affirmation of the State of Israel,” he said.
“I'm deeply disappointed at the silence of the larger Jewish organizations
about the war. They've wasted a hunk of next generations of Jews, and
wasted a connection with decent parts of the anti-war movement.”
For feedback, contact editor@sdjewishjournal.com.
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