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Friday, August 29, 2008


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  • About the Blogger:
    JTA publishes a variety of opinion pieces from across the spectrum of Jewish thought.

    Previous Postings:
    Op-Ed: Be ready for Jerusalem deal
    posted 12/16/2007 @ 05:26PM
    NEW YORK (JTA) -- My first visit to Israel was in 1969, only two years after the Six-Day War, and soon after my arrival I was walking through narrow Jerusalem streets on my way to the Western Wall.

    This was without question an emotional and spiritual en [4.80 kbytes more ]

    Op-Ed: No, Ehud, Jerusalem is ours
    posted 12/16/2007 @ 05:07PM
    NEW YORK (JTA) -- The justification for the modern State of Israel is Jewish history both glorious and grim, and there has long been a compact between the Jews in Israel and the Diaspora.

    Israeli Jews were on the front lines and Diaspora Jewry was a vit [4.77 kbytes more ]

    Op-Ed: Religion on stump troubling
    posted 12/16/2007 @ 04:47PM
    NEW YORK (JTA) -- Republican candidate Mitt Romney’s speech to the American people about his Mormonism and faith in America was an important contribution to our ongoing national dialogue regarding the appropriate role of religion in politics.

    We agree t [4.37 kbytes more ]

    Op-Ed: Why a women's Torah commentary
    posted 12/16/2007 @ 04:42PM
    NEW YORK (JTA) -- This week marks the debut of "The Torah: A Women’s Commentary," which brings together the scholarship and insights of women from all segments of the Jewish community and from around the world.

    For the past two years, in advance of the [5.96 kbytes more ]

    Op-Ed: U.S. must work to restore image
    posted 12/16/2007 @ 04:36PM
    WASHINGTON (JTA) -- During a recent visit to a hospital in Michigan, I stopped and asked a veteran who was laying on his bed, “What can we do to help you?”

    “Win back the respect of the people around the world for America,” he answered.

    Terrorism is th [3.56 kbytes more ]

    Op-Ed: Diagnose, then attack
    posted 12/02/2007 @ 05:23PM
    EAST SUSSEX, England (JTA) -- French President Nicolas Sarkozy, during his recent visit to Washington, stated in widely reported remarks that the resurgence of anti-Semitic propaganda and associated violence around the world should not be minimized or exp [4.65 kbytes more ]
    Op-Ed: Go green at Chanukah
    posted 12/02/2007 @ 05:17PM
    PHILADELPHIA (JTA) -- There are three levels of wisdom through which Chanukah invites us to address the planetary dangers of the global climate crisis -- what some of us call "global scorching" because "warming" seems so pleasant, so comforting.

    We can [4.12 kbytes more ]

    Op-Ed: Time for an Israeli constitution
    posted 11/18/2007 @ 05:03PM
    JERUSALEM (JTA) -- In his speech opening the Knesset’s winter session, Prime Minister Ehud Olmert spoke of the haphazard, “patch by patch” development of Israel’s governing principles. While the quilt that this country’s leadership has stitched together o [5.12 kbytes more ]
    Op-Ed: Annapolis has little chance of success
    posted 11/18/2007 @ 04:57PM
    NEW YORK (JTA) -- Before year’s end, a U.S.-sponsored conference involving Israel and the Palestinian Authority will convene in Annapolis, Md., to frame yet another plan to end the Arab-Israeli war and create a Palestinian state. Sadly, this conference ha [4.48 kbytes more ]
    Op-Ed: Where is Jewish support for Annapolis?
    posted 11/18/2007 @ 04:51PM
    WASHINGTON (JTA) -- The call for American Jewish organizations to support the current peace efforts came from an unexpected direction: Israel’s Chief Rabbi Yonah Metzger. For years closely associated with the right-wing National Religious Party, Metzger r [3.85 kbytes more ]
    Op-Ed: Override SCHIP veto
    posted 10/14/2007 @ 04:54PM
    WASHINGTON (JTA) -- After months of debate, negotiation and compromise, Democrats and Republicans in the U.S. Congress sent to President Bush a bipartisan bill that would reauthorize the State Children’s Health Insurance Program. That SCHIP measure would [3.04 kbytes more ]
    Op-Ed: UJC backs birthright, more
    posted 10/14/2007 @ 03:11PM
    NEW YORK (JTA) -- Every day, United Jewish Communities, the Jewish federations of North America and our partner organizations work hard to fund, organize and run an extraordinary network of essential programs that make Jewish life in North America, Israel [6.47 kbytes more ]
    Op-Ed: Birthright needs communal cash
    posted 10/14/2007 @ 03:07PM
    NEW YORK (JTA) -- Although the High Holidays have always been a period of introspection, the Jewish community -- at least those in it who care deeply about its future -- could stand to do some especially vigorous soul searching this year.

    The results of [6.63 kbytes more ]

    Op-Ed: Use traditional text
    posted 10/14/2007 @ 02:31PM
    NEW YORK (JTA) -- The forthcoming publication of Mishkan T'filah, the first new Reform prayer book in 30 years, reminded me of these words by Abraham Joshua Heschel in "Man's Quest for God":

    "The crisis of prayer is not a problem of the text. It is a pr [7.19 kbytes more ]

    Op-Ed: Reform liturgy must ring true
    posted 10/14/2007 @ 02:22PM
    FRANKLIN LAKES, N.J. (JTA) -- The siddur is not a study text for rabbis and cantors; it is a love letter between Jews and our God. The experience of worship is not intellectual.

    God calls to the heart -- and one doesn’t fall in love without compatibilit [4.50 kbytes more ]

    Op-Ed: Mainstream birthright alumni
    posted 10/14/2007 @ 02:17PM
    ST. LOUIS (JTA) -- Our engagement with the 100,000 American Taglit-birthright israel trip alumni will determine the shape of the Jewish community for years. While a growing body of research indicates that the trips provide a foundational Jewish experience [5.53 kbytes more ]
    Op-Ed: Don't back 'Armenian genocide' resolution
    posted 10/14/2007 @ 02:14PM
    WASHINGTON (JTA) -- In a battle recently described as “pitting principle against pragmatism,” some in the American Jewish community have chosen a third way to handle the longstanding and bitter dispute between Turks and Armenians -- “the path of least res [6.73 kbytes more ]
    Op-Ed: Reject gamesmanship on SCHIP
    posted 10/14/2007 @ 02:10PM
    WASHINGTON (JTA) -- Now that the battle between President Bush and Democrat leaders in Congress over a federal children’s health program has heated up, it is important that Jewish leaders – even those who affiliate with a different political party than th [3.37 kbytes more ]
    Op-Ed: Let's create 'Big Tent Judaism'
    posted 10/14/2007 @ 01:53PM
    WASHINGTON (JTA) -- Imagine you are trekking through town on a scorching summer day when you pass a man sitting at the entrance to his home , which happens to have all its doors open. The man and his wife, whom you have never met, invite you into their ho [6.51 kbytes more ]
    Op-Ed: Israeli Arabs reject Jewish state
    posted 08/07/2007 @ 04:25PM
    JERUSALEM (JTA) -- Like the rest of my circle of Israelis who have seen war as kids and soldiers, and then as undergraduates attended peace rallies before establishing families and joining the middle class, I also assumed that Israel's Arabs were part of [5.66 kbytes more ]
    Op-Ed: JNF's land should be leased to Jews
    posted 08/07/2007 @ 04:18PM
    PHILADELPHIA (JTA) -- Israel's democratically elected Knesset is right to be pushing forward with a bill reaffirming that all lands belonging to the Jewish National Fund should continue to be leased to Jews in accordance with terms of the organization's c [5.43 kbytes more ]
    Op-Ed: Israeli Arabs must be treated fairly
    posted 08/07/2007 @ 04:13PM
    WASHINGTON (JTA) -- It is a common belief among those who care about the future of Israel that the Jewish state is in danger.

    From the security perspective, the dangers seem obvious. Hamas' supremacy in the Gaza Strip, Hezbollah's dominance in Lebanon a [5.29 kbytes more ]

    Op-Ed: Saving the JNF from itself
    posted 08/07/2007 @ 04:05PM
    NEW YORK (JTA) -- Imagine the following scenario: Italy’s Parliament passes a law that restricts the sale of public lands to Christians. Government officials rush to justify the measure, citing historic ties between Italy and the Roman Catholic Church.

    [4.69 kbytes more ]

    Op-Ed: Parents must communicate
    posted 08/06/2007 @ 04:10PM
    NEW YORK (JTA) -- Thousands of Orthodox students will soon head off for their post-high school year of study at a yeshiva in Israel. For most of these adolescents, it will be their first year away from home and a time to begin their ascent to independence [4.03 kbytes more ]
    Op-Ed: Jews must save environment
    posted 08/06/2007 @ 04:05PM
    WASHINGTON (JTA) -- As the energy crisis and the ominous reality of global warming loom larger in the public's mind, there is little doubt the United States must immediately engage this issue head on. Fortunately the solution to both concerns require the [4.25 kbytes more ]
    Op-Ed: Modern Orthodoxy under attack
    posted 07/30/2007 @ 08:19AM
    NEW YORK (JTA) -- However tempting, it would be a mistake to dismiss Harvard Law professor Noah Feldman’s personal and pointed critique of Modern Orthodoxy in The New York Times Magazine of July 22 as merely The Big Kvetch.

    His essay “Orthodox Paradox,” [9.68 kbytes more ]

    Op-Ed: Censuring intermarrieds painful but necessary
    posted 07/30/2007 @ 08:07AM
    NEW YORK (JTA) -- One can’t help but feel sad for Noah Feldman. In spite of his considerable professional accomplishments -- a law professorship at Harvard, three books, a slew of well-received essays and a fellowship at the Council on Foreign Relations, [5.87 kbytes more ]
    Op-Ed: Leadership battles in life and Torah
    posted 06/12/2007 @ 06:53PM
    In one of those biting and perhaps ironic alignments of Torah and public Jewish life, we read Parashat Korach as three contemporary rebellions came to a climax this week in contested Jewish leadership battles.

    Moshe Katzav, the embattled and discredited [5.57 kbytes more ]

    Op-Ed: Abba Eban was the voice of a nation
    posted 06/11/2007 @ 06:36PM
    As we recall the Six-Day War 40 years ago, the role of Abba Eban -- Israel's foreign minister and eloquent spokesman -- deserves special attention. Eban's unforgettable speech to the United Nations on the second day of the war brilliantly defined the mo [3.18 kbytes more ]
    Traditionalists have nothing to fear from creative ways of young Jews
    posted 05/15/2007 @ 06:33PM
    For many younger American Jews, American Jewry looks like this:

    "Synagogues are for people with children. And they're generally uninspiring."

    "JCCs are for people with children. And they don't have great gyms, either."

    "Federations only want my m [5.37 kbytes more ]

    Iran not just a Jewish problem
    posted 05/08/2007 @ 04:00PM
    Why is the Jewish Council for Public Affairs making a nuclear-armed Iran its principal concern in the year to come?

    Keeping Iran from developing nuclear weapons is a goal that unites people of diverse races, ethnic backgrounds, nationalities and religio [5.07 kbytes more ]

    Two Jewish viewpoints on the abortion debate
    posted 04/22/2007 @ 04:23PM
    Time to fight abortion decision by Phyllis Snyder

    The Supreme Court has made it clear that ideology trumps women's health in the nation's highest court.

    On April 18, the Supreme Court made it clear that respect for legal precedent [8.26 kbytes more ]

    With Arabs' peace initiative, seize this time to negotiate
    posted 04/17/2007 @ 11:32AM
    Opportunity comes infrequently, often disguised, but when it comes, you had better recognize it and do something about it because it may be a long time before it comes again.

    This is a hard lesson I learned from 40 years in the investment business and o [5.87 kbytes more ]

    JTS illustrates a modern approach to halacha with decision on gays
    posted 04/01/2007 @ 06:00PM
    Around the time of my ordination at the Jewish Theological Seminary in 1985, many people skeptical of the ordination of women asked, "What's next? The ordination of gays and lesbians"?

    The question angered me. After all, the issue of embracing the full [4.39 kbytes more ]

    Passover's lessons for U.S. immigration policies
    posted 04/01/2007 @ 05:36PM
    The recent immigration raids in New Bedford, Mass., where nearly 200 children were left stranded when their parents, who otherwise were lawful workers, were arrested and shipped off to detention centers in Texas and other distant states reinforce the esse [6.39 kbytes more ]
    Anti-war Jews must
    be vocal in stating case

    posted 03/07/2007 @ 05:22PM
    PHILADELPHIA (JTA) — What to do about the Iraq war has made for the sharpest and most important disconnect between the political behavior of large Jewish organizations and the opinions of the flesh-and-blood Jews who actually make up the American Jewish c [4.39 kbytes more ]
    Intermarriage isn't a threat


    to Jews; divisiveness is

    posted 03/06/2007 @ 07:13PM
    We’re at it again, defining the lines of who’s in and who’s out as the debate on Jewish continuity in America rages on.

    Steven M. Cohen’s latest sociological study on intermarriage, titled "The Tale of Two Jewries," argues that intermarriage is the sin [4.68 kbytes more ]

    Think big, like Canada
    posted 02/28/2007 @ 07:11PM
    When American Jewish leaders hear I’m consulting in Canada, they often comment that Canadian Jewry is years behind American Jewry.

    After several years of intensively working with the Toronto Jewish community, I’m not so sure. In fact, I see them as bein [9.89 kbytes more ]

    U.S. Jews have abandoned Pollard
    20 years after his life sentence

    posted 02/28/2007 @ 03:36PM
    NOTRE DAME, Ind. (JTA) — March 4 marks the 20th anniversary of the unprecedented life sentence meted out to Jonathan Pollard. The date is a most appropriate moment to take stock of the response of the American Jewish community and the government of Israel [6.49 kbytes more ]
    Dialogue events in New York
    show it takes time to build trust

    posted 02/11/2007 @ 04:02PM
    In mid-January, seizing on the spirit of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.'s memory, Imam Omar Abu-Namous of the New York Mosque hosted Rabbi Marc Schneier of the New York Synagogue in a dialogue entitled "Muslims and Jews: A Conversation."

    It was a ret [5.30 kbytes more ]

    JTA Op-Ed
    Flawed U.N. council derails
    Annan's human-rights revolution

    By Harris O. Schoenberg

    On the eve of the United Nations Human Rights Council's latest session, which opened March 12, the United States announced it would not seek election in May for membership in the council.

    This decision was regrettable because it would have been important to demonstrate that Washington has tried to
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    make the council work.

    At the same time, it should be kept in mind that the problem is less the elections than the council's flawed mandate. That mandate was adopted by the U.N. General Assembly in March 2006 with the support of then-Secretary-General Kofi Annan, Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International.

    Annan and these human-rights groups supported the mandate even though the General Assembly had thrown out the safeguards that Annan and some non-governmental organizations had proposed for keeping human-rights violators off the council.

    As a result, 21 of the 47 members elected last May are rated by Freedom House as human-rights violators. Some are rated the worst of the worst.

    The Asian and African regional groups, which hold a majority of seats on the council, are dominated by these violators and their supporters, who make a mockery of the council's mission because they are interested only in condemning Israel.

    They have already done this eight times since the council started work last June, and they are expected to condemn Israel again at this month's session.

    The council has condemned no other state, not even the Sudan for genocide in Darfur, where an estimated 400,000 people have been slaughtered and 2.5 million made homeless.

    A report this week by a high-level mission is likely to be buried. That report declares that the United Nations "has proven inadequate and ineffective" in dealing with the Sudanese government, which "has manifestly failed to protect the population of Darfur from large-scale international crimes and has itself orchestrated and participated in these crimes."

    Governments committing gross violations of human rights routinely send representatives to council sessions to stifle criticism or denounce the actions of states with far better records. For example, Iran sent the man responsible for the torture and murder of Zahra Kazemi, a Canadian-Iranian journalist, to represent it at the council's inaugural session last June, and this week it sent Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki, the person responsible for organizing the December Holocaust-denial conference in Tehran.

    These violators are circulating a proposal to abolish many of the council's special rapporteurs, who produce reports on critical issues such as summary executions and disappearances, as well as the human-rights conditions in several countries where abuses have been reported. The one rapporteur whose mandate would be continued reports on alleged violations by Israel.

    Another council program also is in trouble. This is the Universal Periodic Review of the human-rights records of U.N. member states. Human-rights violators are trying to sabotage the review by making it a peer review or watering down the criteria.

    It was just two years ago, in March 2005, that Annan proposed replacing the discredited Commission on Human Rights with a Human Rights Council. Annan argued that not only had the commission lost credibility because it had been taken over by human-rights violators, but it was also undermining the credibility of the United Nations as a whole.

    Indeed, the chair of the commission had passed over the years from Eleanor Roosevelt to an ambassador from Libya, a state that supported international terrorism and had a fearsome record of human-rights abuses.

    However, when the secretary-general, Amnesty and Human Rights Watch failed to stand up for the safeguards that would have made the council an improvement, only U.S. Ambassador John Bolton had the courage to declare that the proposed mandate was flawed.

    He was supported by the major liberal and conservative newspapers in New York and Washington, which portrayed it as "The Shame of the United Nations" and "a moral disaster waiting to happen." But the United States was joined by only three other countries in voting against the seriously flawed document – Israel, the Marshall Islands and Palau.

    To fix the mandate, certain changes are required. First, the council should be reduced in size to that of the original commission, which had only 18 members.

    Second, council members, while elected by states, should be distinguished human-rights champions, like original commission members Roosevelt, Rene Cassin of France, Charles Malik of Lebanon and Carlos Romulo of the Philippines.

    In proposing the demise of the commission and its replacement by the council, Annan took a revolutionary step. But until the human-rights violators are swept out of the council and replaced by human-rights champions, his human-rights revolution will remain unfinished and the U.N.'s reputation will continue to suffer.

    Harris O. Schoenberg serves as president of U.N. Reform Advocates, honorary chairman of the U.N. NGO Human Rights Committee and adjunct professor of human rights at New York University.

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