American Jewish Committee (AJC) Executive Director David Harris assesses challenges to Jewish security worldwide.
The following is adapted from my remarks to a meeting of the Senate Democratic Steering and Outreach Committee, attended by about 20 Democratic Senators, on Capitol Hill on July 22.
Thank you for the privilege of speaking once again before this distinguished group.
I represent AJC - the American Jewish Committee. We have been active for decades in supporting Israel and advancing peace. I would describe our outlook in the words of President John F. Kennedy, who said,"I'm an idealist without illusions."
We welcome President Obama's groundbreaking speech in Cairo on June 4th.
We applaud his statement that the bonds between America and Israel are "unbreakable."
We praise his principled condemnation of the Holocaust denial that is all too common in Arab and Muslim societies.
We fully embrace his commitment to peace - peace among Israel, its Palestinian neighbors, and the larger Arab world.
And we share his vision of a region where "children grow up without fear."
At the same time, I wouldn't be honest if I didn't tell this audience that we have some specific areas of concern. This is a caring critique from a friend, and we hope that these issues can quickly be put behind us.
Let me cite three.
First, in his Cairo speech, the President implied that the Holocaust was the primary reason for Israel's creation. That is unfortunate - and factually incorrect.
Israel was born out of an ancient vision unique in the annals of history. In the words of its Declaration of Independence, Israel "was the birthplace of the Jewish people. Here their spiritual, religious and political identity was shaped. Here they first attained statehood, created cultural values of national and universal significance and gave to the world the eternal Book of Books."
This was understood by President Harry Truman, who defied the advice of his State Department to recognize the re-establishment of Israel in 1948.
His favorite Psalm, according to presidential historian Michael Beschloss, was Number 137: "By the rivers of Babylon, there we sat down, yea, we wept, when we remembered Zion."
Why is this important now? Because the Arab world has long challenged Israel's legitimacy by arguing that it is a Western implant in the Middle East, created to appease the conscience of a Europe with Jewish blood on its hands.
President Clinton encountered this view when his valiant efforts to make peace were rebuffed, as Yasser Arafat outrageously denied the historical Jewish connection to Jerusalem.
Indeed, more than any other issue, this gets to the root of the conflict. The United States must take every opportunity to reinforce Israel's rightful place in the region.
Second, the President juxtaposed the Palestinian condition with that of black Americans and other suffering people "from South Africa to South Asia; from Eastern Europe to Indonesia."
Whatever its intent, this seemed to create a regrettable equivalence.
I would not for a minute deny that Palestinians have suffered. I have visited the West Bank and Gaza and know that the lives of many Palestinians have not been easy.
Yet I also know that the Palestinian condition is, above all, self-inflicted. That is to say that the Palestinian people have been ill-served by their own leaders.
Where are the Martin Luther King and John Lewis, the Vaclav Havel and Lech Walesa, and the Mahatma Gandhi of the Palestinian people - individuals of visionary greatness and deep commitment to non-violence?
According to a senior British official, Palestinians are the world's largest per capita recipients of foreign aid. Yet corruption and mismanagement have siphoned off too much from the intended recipients.
To suggest that Palestinians are the modern-day version of those who endured inescapable oppression is to give them, and especially their leaders, a free pass. Those leaders should be held accountable for failing to move Palestinian society from victimization to responsibility.
On this front, there are glimmers of hope today in the West Bank, but there remains a long road yet to be traveled. Meanwhile, of course, Gaza is in the iron grip of Hamas, which continues its implacable hostility toward Israel, and, indeed, toward the Palestinian Authority.
And third, the President, in his speech in Cairo, made a specific demand for action by only one country. He said, "It is time for these settlements to stop." Like the Secretary of State, the President made clear that he was referring to all settlements, everywhere.
The President has said that friendship entails honesty, and that he is being honest with a friend.
Yes, but among all the countries of the region, it was unusual to see our President single out only Israel - our "stalwart democratic ally," in the words of Senator Menendez - with such sharp focus.
To be sure, the settlements are an issue. We at AJC have said so more than once.
But they are not the underlying cause of the Israeli-Palestinian dispute. They should be addressed in the context of negotiations, not treated as a sine qua non for talks, as Palestinian leaders are doing now.
In fact, Palestinians seem to have interpreted - or misinterpreted - President Obama's stance as a license to sit back while Israel is forced into concessions. As President Abbas said in a revealing interview, "I will wait for Israel to freeze settlements. ... Until then, in the West Bank we have a good reality. ... The people are living a normal life."
In the end, Israel cannot and will not return to the fragile armistice lines of 1967. This was acknowledged by Presidents Clinton and Bush, and we hope that it will be reaffirmed.
As the late Abba Eban, an Israeli diplomat and peacemaker par excellence, said, "We have openly said that the map will never again be the same as on June 4, 1967. ... The June map is for us equivalent to insecurity and danger."
Distinguished Senators, no nation other than Israel has experienced the daily trauma of more than six decades without peace. Today, Iran, Hamas and Hizbullah openly call for its destruction.
No other nation in the Middle East has been a more steadfast friend and democratic partner of the United States.
No other nation, victorious in wars thrust upon it, has demonstrated more willingness to make painful concessions to advance peace.
The UN embraced the idea of two states - one Arab, the other Jewish - as early as 1947. Prime Minister Netanyahu's call for recognition of Israel as a Jewish state is not new. It was embraced by a majority of UN member states six decades ago.
An agreement, however difficult, remains possible today. Indeed, four consecutive Israeli prime ministers have called for a two-state accord.
Yet their Palestinian counterparts have not reciprocated, even when Prime Minister Olmert made what the Palestinians themselves acknowledged was an unusually far-reaching offer.
As Majority Leader Reid recently said, "I believe negotiations will be successful only with a renewed commitment from the Palestinians to be a true partner in peace."
In that spirit, why has Saeb Erekat, the PA's principal negotiator, refused to negotiate with the current Israeli government, while holding talks with the Iranian foreign minister instead? Shouldn't it be the other way around - spurning the Iranians and meeting the Israelis?
It's no wonder that many Israelis are skeptical about the chances of achieving a solution. They seek reassurance that the United States, their indispensible friend and partner, stands with them in their quest for lasting peace and security.
President Obama has laudably reiterated his deep and abiding friendship for Israel on numerous occasions. Quite frankly, though, the polls show that many Israelis are not convinced.
Perhaps he could soon find an opportunity to pay a visit and speak with Israelis directly. It might do a lot to advance understanding among the Israeli public - and to reaffirm America's belief, expressed by President Truman, that Israel is "not just another sovereign nation, but ... an embodiment of the great ideals of our civilization."
Thank you.
Rena Weis, center, gets ready to say good-bye to her daughter Adina and husband, Mark, as they start their marathon ride to Florida.
July 16, 2009
While bicycling
aficionados focus their attention on the famed Tour de France, a father and daughter team from Hillside are on a personal tour to focus attention on the plight of kidnapped Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit.
Mark Weis and his daughter, Adina, 15, set out from their home in New Jersey on July 2 for what they intend to be a four-week bicycle ride to Florida.
The trip is a father-daughter adventure, a chance for Mark, a vascular technician and volunteer kids’ baseball coach, to lose weight, and an opportunity for Adina, a junior at Bruriah High School for Girls in Elizabeth, to increase her fitness.
But it is above all a way to raise consciousness about Shalit, who was kidnapped three years ago by Hamas. Sporting Israeli flags on their bikes, the Weises plan to talk to people all along the way, educating them about the soldier, and encouraging communication with legislators to further efforts to secure his release.
Mark Weis and his daughter Adina set out from their home in Hillside on a four-week ride to publicize the plight of kidnapped Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit.
Shalit’s captivity is a deeply emotional issue for Mark, and he will speak out about it at every opportunity along the route.
“When I’m in Israel and an Israeli soldier approaches me, I feel quite shaky — almost in tears,” he said last week, speaking by cell phone four days into their bicycle marathon. “Here are these young people who are risking their lives so that we can have an Israel. And then something like this happens.”
Shalit was 19 when the Palestinian militants captured him, the age now of Mark’s oldest son. He and his wife, Rena, have four boys and two girls, including Adina.
“When I think of what he is going through every day, it’s almost too painful to contemplate,” Mark said. Why a country that could rescue a planeload of people from Entebbe, Uganda, can’t rescue this one soldier baffles him, he said.
When Mark spoke with NJJN, he and Adina had stopped along a roadside in Pennsylvania after having cycled a total of about 115 miles in their first few days; they hoped to do another 25 before stopping for the night.
The family belongs to Congregation Adath Israel in Elizabeth. Along the route, they were encountering communities quite unlike the Orthodox community they live in. “We live in such a Jewish area,” he said. “We forget how different it is in other places.”
The first weekend, however, they were in familiar territory. They stopped in Roslyn, Pa., at Mark’s mother’s house. He borrowed her car to drive home and get Rena and their two youngest kids, and brought them back there for a family Shabbat and Fourth of July weekend. On Monday morning, he and Adina hit the road, this time heading out beyond reach of such easy reunions.
If they can get up early enough each day — around 5:30, to make the most of the cool hours — they hope to average 40 miles a day. Adina was finding it hard to get up so early, according to her dad. “The secret is getting to bed early enough,” he said. But the riding was going well so far.
Come last Friday, they planned to stop for Shabbat in Washington and to visit the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. A few weeks later, Mark said, they hope to reach Georgia in time for a family wedding. That is the one fixed date; most of their schedule is flexible.
Mark Weis lays tefillin before heading out on a four-week ride to Florida with his daughter.
Taking off like this, even for such a worthy cause, wasn’t easy. His five other “jealous kids” could not come along for the ride, he said. In fact, it wasn’t possible for any of the other Weis kids to take part; the oldest two — aged 19 and 18 — are working and studying; the youngest three — 10-, five-, and three-year-olds — are attending summer camps.
“Adina is my adventure mate,” their father said. Together in Israel last year, they were the only two members of the family to climb Masada, no big deal for the tall, thin young athlete, who plays basketball and softball, but much more of a struggle for her father.
Like all teens, Adina has her cell phone with her and has done plenty of texting during breaks. She also brought her MP3 player along, but she wasn’t using it much. Her father was pleased by that. Though he works with computers and ultrasound machines, he describes himself as “a little old-fashioned” when it comes to high-tech gadgets.
Meanwhile, back in Hillside, Rena was worrying that Adina might lose too much weight on the ride. “She’s already very slim,” she said. She stressed to her daughter that if the going gets too tough, if for any reason she wants to stop, she must do so. But, she acknowledged, that’s not likely: Adina, she said, “is very stubborn” — a quality that might, in fact, be just what is needed to complete the physical challenge and fulfill the mission to raise awareness of the plight of Gilad Shalit.