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Rabbi Arthur Segal’s love of people, humanity, and Judaism has him sharing with others “The Wisdom of the Ages” that has been passed on to him. His writings for modern Jews offer Spiritual, Ethical, and eco-Judaic lessons in plain English and with relevance to contemporary lifestyles. He is the author of countless articles, editorials, letters, and blog posts, and he has recently published two books:

The Handbook to Jewish Spiritual Renewal: A Path of Transformation for the Modern Jew

and

A Spiritual and Ethical Compendium to the Torah and Talmud

You can learn more about these books at:

www.JewishSpiritualRenewal.org
ALL ENTRIES ARE (C) AND PUBLISHED BY RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL JEWISH SPIRITUAL RENEWAL, INC, AND NOT BY ANY INDIVIDUAL EMPLOYEE OF SAID CORPORATION. THIS APPLIES TO 3 OTHER BLOGS (CHUMASH, ECO, SPIRITUALITY) AND WEB SITES PUBLISHED BY SAID CORPORATION.
Religion Blogs - Blog Rankings

Monday, January 12, 2009

RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL:JEWISH RENEWAL:JEWISH SPIRITUAL RENEWAL:P'NAI OR:MISSILE TOV

  RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL:JEWISH RENEWAL:JEWISH SPIRITUAL RENEWAL:P'NAI OR:MISSILE TOV
 
Shalom aleichem Chaverim v' Chaverot:
 
As long as we believe in a living G!D Who breaths His Ruach into us without end, we need never give up ha Tikvah of our Prophets' visions and our Sages' teachings of a just world, of shlema, of shalom, of integration, and true serenity for us individually and for the globe.
 
Many blessings,
Rabbi Arthur Segal
JEWISH RENEWAL
JEWISH SPIRITUAL RENEWAL
HILTON HEAD ISLAND, SC
BLUFFTON,SC
SAVANNAH,GA
__
 
Published on Sunday, January 11, 2009 by The San Francisco Chronicle
In US, War of Words Over Gaza
by Carla Marinucci

As war rages between Israel and Hamas in Gaza, and President-elect Barack
Obama counts down the days until he has to deal directly with the conflict
as the leader of the free world, a war to control the message is raging at
home. And it's unusually fierce.


A woman prays for the Palestinian people at a gathering in San Francisco's
Civic Center on Friday. (Mark Costantini / The Chronicle)This week, some
jarring events made headlines and illustrated the nature of that war:

-- Hugely popular comedian Jon Stewart, who is Jewish - birth name, Jonathan
Stuart Leibowitz - was lauded by the Muslim Public Affairs Council this week
for a scathing "Daily Show" segment entitled, "Israel Invades Gaza ...
Missile Tov!"

The Comedy Central host, noting that rockets lobbed from Hamas into Israel
are not new, posed the question, "Why does Israel feel that they have to
react so strongly right now?"

Answer: the Obama inauguration. "I get it. ... Israel gets their bombing in
before the Jan. 20 'hope and change' deadline ... it's like a civilian
carnage Toyota-thon!" he said to roars of approval from his audience.

-- In San Francisco, Jewish protesters joined pro-Palestinian forces this
week as hundreds gathered outside the Israeli consulate to make their voices
heard, some carrying signs saying "Gaza = Warsaw Ghetto." Among them was
Jack Fertig - known to many in town as performance artist Sister Boom Boom -
who said, "I'm descended from Holocaust victims, and we need to identify
with the oppressed, not imitate the oppressors."

-- Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa came under attack for pro-Israel
statements he made to the Jewish Federation of Greater Los Angeles this
week. Villaraigosa had said that "any nation would take action to protect
its citizens ... and no country would sit silently while innocent families
are threatened and civilian lives are at risk."

That prompted Salam Al-Marayati, executive director of the Muslim Public
Affairs Council Israel, to ask publicly: "Why is the mayor of Los Angeles
dragging himself and his constituents into international conflicts in the
Middle East?"



Pro-Israel demonstration
Pro-Israel groups, citing the need to counter "local newspapers, television
news reports and city streets ... filled with anti-Israel demonstrations,"
have planned a demonstration to support Israel at 11 a.m. today at the San
Francisco Civic Center.

"You may have noticed the lack of strong and united voice for Israel and her
people," said organizers, who include San Francisco Voice for Israel. "Now
is the time to show our solidarity."

The protest is further evidence of a tug-of-war for the hearts and minds of
progressive voters in the Bay Area, especially Jews.

Journalist Ron Kampeas, bureau chief of the Jewish Telegraphic Agency in
Washington, D.C., who covers the conflict, said the increasingly vocal
concerns of Jewish Americans such as Stewart, who have come forward to
express themselves, reflect changing culture and mores. But it doesn't mean
they are anti-Israel, he said.

"This is a culmination of something that has been going on for a while," he
said. "What used to happen is that when Israel did something controversial,"
many Jews thought it "wasn't kosher" to publicly question because it might
fuel perception that "Israel is losing Jewish support."

But increasingly, growing progressive Jewish political action groups like
Americans for Peace Now and the J-Street Project - with energetic
fundraising and activism - have begun to serve as an alternative voice to
the group that has long held center stage as the powerful pro-Israel lobby,
the American Israel Public Affairs Committee.

"They're saying we can be pro-Israel, and we can criticize Israel. It's not
cut and dried," Kampeas said of groups like J Street, which appeal to an
increasing number of American Jews who have been concerned about the
wide-ranging impact of the Gaza escalation.

Surprising shifts of opinion
But some are still wary of speaking out, like one Oakland Jewish
professional who spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of alienating her
business clients. She said this week she's seen some surprising shifts in
opinion - even among Jewish friends in her own synagogue - that have
convinced her that "Israel is losing the public relations war" in the
conflict.

She said it really came home at a recent Torah study, when a fellow student
took her aside and said, "What is Israel doing? How can these bombs go on?"

Some on the far left in the Bay Area - like Berkeley attorney Steve Pearcy,
who has been a headline-making activist in anti-war and pro-Palestinian
efforts - complains the news media have long underplayed support and
protests on behalf of Palestinian causes. He said the current harsher
criticism of Israel, even from prominent Jews like Stewart, could represent
a changing political landscape.

"I believe a significant number of people throughout the world regard Israel
as the terrorist state in all this, and a lot of people in the U.S. feel
this way," he said. "But we don't hear any Democratic representatives
speaking out against Israel in a harsh tone, and we hear it tailored with a
lot of criticism against Palestinians and Hamas."

Pearcy's characterization of Israel as a "terrorist state" might outrage
many liberals, but GOP political consultant Patrick Dorinson says it
underscores a challenge from the left for the incoming Obama administration.

"I am very troubled by the form these protests are taking," he said. "It's
very dangerous, we're on a slippery slope. Israel can try to win the PR war,
but the farther away we get from World War II and the Holocaust, at some
point that generation will be gone," he said. "So the left had better start
looking at itself - and the Democrats should be looking at who's on their
side."

Polarizing images
Jessica Rosenblum, vice president of Rabinowitz/Dorf Communications - a
leading Washington, D.C., public affairs firm that represents a wide range
of progressive foreign policy and Jewish organizations, agrees that the
complex conflict, with its heartrending images, has presented a challenge
for pro-Israeli interests.

"What really strikes me about this invasion is how raw and polarizing the
images are on both sides," she said. "You see bombed-out houses and
ambulance drivers being killed," images that move millions of people.

But "what I think is the primary challenge the media faces ... and the
missed story, is about the moderate majorities on both sides, both the
Israelis and the Palestinians," she said.

The real message, she said, is that "the majority of Israelis and
Palestinians want exactly the same thing - to live in peace and security."


In Gaza: Israel and Hamas continue to battle despite U.N.'s cease-fire
resolution.
© 2009 The San Francisco Chronicle

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