Another attack on Academic Freedom, Activists' Complicity and Fundamentalists for Sharon
November 5, 2004
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Today's Contents:
Joseph Massad responds to the intimidation of Columbia University (Electronic Intifada) Another academic attacked for failing to tow the party line
I, a Collaborator (Direct e-mail) How peace activists reinforce the structure of occupation
Born-agains for Sharon (Salon.com) The
increasingly open alliance between fundamentalist Christians and Israel
[JPN Commentary: Joseph Massad is professor of Modern Arab Politics and
Intellectual History at Columbia University. He is also on the editorial board
of The Journal of Palestine Studies. A campaign aimed at silencing him, as well
as other academics who are vocal in their opposition to Israeli policies, has
been going on for some years.
Recently, he has been the target of a film "Columbia Unbecoming", which
charges that in addition to being an Anti-Semite he has been engaging in
intimidating students who disagree with his politics.
Joseph Massad is a staunch anti-Zionist. While I don't claim to have
read everything he has written, all of the articles I have read were nothing
short of excellent, and - unless one equates anti-Zionism with anti-Semitism - I
never detected a hint of anti-Semitic attitudes in any of them. Regarding the
charge of intimidating students: In an article which was published in the
Jewish weekly "The Forward", a number of his students who were interviewed
testified that they were able to voice "pro Israeli" views in his classes
without any censorship or retaliation on his part. --
RG]
Joseph Massad responds to the intimidation of Columbia
University
By Joseph Massad
http://electronicintifada.net/v2/article3282.shtml
The Electronic Intifada
3 November 2004
The recent controversy
elicited by the propaganda film "Columbia Unbecoming," a film funded and
produced by a Boston-based pro-Israel organization, is the latest salvo in a
campaign of intimidation of Jewish and non-Jewish professors who criticize
Israel. This witch-hunt aims to stifle pluralism, academic freedom, and the
freedom of expression on university campuses in order to ensure that only one
opinion is permitted, that of uncritical support for the State of Israel.
Columbia University, the Department of Middle East and Asian Languages and
Cultures, and I personally, have been the target of this intensified campaign
for over three years. Pro-Israel groups are pressuring the university to abandon
proper academic procedure in evaluating scholarship, and want to force the
university to silence all critical opinions. Such silencing, the university has
refused to do so far, despite mounting intimidation tactics by these
anti-democratic and anti-academic forces.
The major strategy that these
pro-Israel groups use is one that equates criticism of Israel with
anti-Semitism. But the claim that criticism of Israel is an expression of
anti-Semitism presupposes that Israeli actions are "Jewish" actions and that all
Jews, whether Israelis or non-Israelis (and the majority of world Jews are not
Israelis), are responsible for all Israeli actions and that they all have the
same opinion of Israel. But this is utter anti-Semitic nonsense. Jews, whether
in America, Europe, Israel, Russia, or Argentina, are, like all other groups,
not uniform in their political or social opinions. There are many Israeli Jews
who are critical of Israel just as there are American Jews who criticize Israeli
policy. I have always made a distinction between Jews, Israelis, and Zionists in
my writings and my lectures. It is those who want to claim that Jews, Israelis,
and Zionists are one group (and that they think exactly alike) who are the
anti-Semites. Israel in fact has no legal, moral, or political basis to
represent world Jews (ten million strong) who never elected it to that position
and who refuse to move to that country. Unlike the pro-Israel groups, I do not
think that Israeli actions are "Jewish" actions or that they reflect the will of
the Jewish people worldwide! All those pro-Israeli propagandists who want to
reduce the Jewish people to the State of Israel are the anti-Semites who want to
eliminate the existing pluralism among Jews. The majority of Israel's supporters
in the United States are, in fact, not Jews but Christian fundamentalist
anti-Semites who seek to convert Jews. They constitute a quarter of the American
electorate and are the most powerful anti-Semitic group worldwide. The reason
why the pro-Israel groups do not fight them is because these anti-Semites are
pro-Israel. Therefore, it is not anti-Semitism that offends pro-Israel groups;
what offends them is anti-Israel criticism. In fact, Israel and the US groups
supporting it have long received financial and political support from numerous
anti-Semites.
This is not to say that some anti-Zionists may not also be
anti-Semitic. Some are, and I have denounced them in my writings and lectures.
But the test of their anti-Semitism is not whether they like or hate Israel. The
test of anti-Semitism is anti-Jewish hatred, not anti-Israel criticism. In my
forthcoming book, The Persistence of the Palestinian Question, I link the Jewish
Question to the Palestinian Question and conclude that both questions persist
because anti-Semitism persists. To resolve the Palestinian and the Jewish
Questions, our task is to fight anti-Semitism in any guise, whether in its
pro-Israel or anti-Israel guise, and not to defend the reprehensible policies of
the racist Israeli government.
I am now being targeted because of my
public writings and statements through the charge that I am allegedly intolerant
in the classroom, a charge based on statements made by people who were never my
students, except in one case, which I will address momentarily. Let me first
state that I have intimidated no one. In fact, Tomy Schoenfeld, the Israeli
soldier who appears in the film and is cited by the New York Sun, has never been
my student and has never taken a class with me, as he himself informed The
Jewish Week. I have never met him. As for Noah Liben, who appears in the film
according to newspaper accounts (I have not seen the film), he was indeed a
student in my Palestinian and Israeli Politics and Societies course in the
spring of 2001. Noah seems to have forgotten the incident he cites. During a
lecture about Israeli state racism against Asian and African Jews, Noah defended
these practices on the basis that Asian and African Jews were underdeveloped and
lacked Jewish culture, which the Ashkenazi State operatives were teaching them.
When I explained to him that, as the assigned readings clarified, these were
racist policies, he insisted that these Jews needed to be modernized and the
Ashkenazim were helping them by civilizing them. Many students gasped. He asked
me if I understood his point. I informed him that I did not. Noah seems not to
have done his reading during the week on gender and Zionism. One of the assigned
readings by Israeli scholar and feminist Simona Sharoni spoke of how in Hebrew
the word "zayin" means both penis and weapon in a discussion of Israeli
militarized masculinity. Noah, seemingly not having read the assigned material,
mistook the pronunciation of "zayin" as "Zion," pronounced in Hebrew "tziyon."
As for his spurious claim that I said that "Jews in Nazi Germany were not
physically abused or harassed until Kristallnacht in November 1938," Noah must
not have been listening carefully. During the discussion of Nazi Germany, we
addressed the racist ideology of Nazism, the Nuremberg Laws enacted in 1934, and
the institutionalized racism and violence against all facets of Jewish life, all
of which preceded the extermination of European Jews. This information was also
available to Noah in his readings, had he chosen to consult them. Moreover, the
lie that the film propagates claiming that I would equate Israel with Nazi
Germany is abhorrent. I have never made such a reprehensible equation.
I
remember having a friendly rapport with Noah (as I do with all my students). He
would drop off newspaper articles in my mailbox, come to my office hours, and
greet me on the street often. He never informed me or acted in a way that showed
intimidation. Indeed, he would write me E-mails, even after he stopped being my
student, to argue with me about Israel. I have kept our correspondence. On March
10, 2002, a year after he took a class with me, Noah wrote me an E-mail
chastising me for having invited an Israeli speaker to class the year before
when he was in attendance. It turned out that Noah's memory failed him again, as
he mistook the speaker I had invited for another Israeli scholar. After a long
diatribe, Noah excoriated me: "How can you bring such a phony to speak to your
class??" I am not sure if his misplaced reproach was indicative of an
intimidated student or one who felt comfortable enough to rebuke his
professor!
I am dedicated to all my students, many of whom are Jewish.
Neither Columbia University nor I have ever received a complaint from any
student claiming intimidation or any such nonsense. Students at Columbia have
many venues of lodging complaints, whether with the student deans and assistant
deans, school deans and assistant deans, department chairmen, departmental
directors of undergraduate studies, the ombudsman's office, the provost, the
president, and the professors themselves. No such complaint was ever filed. Many
of my Jewish and non-Jewish students (including my Arab students) differ with me
in all sorts of ways, whether on politics or on philosophy or theory. This is
exactly what teaching and learning are about, how to articulate differences and
understand other perspectives while acquiring knowledge, how to analyze one's
own perspective and those of others, how to interrogate the basis of an
opinion.
Columbia University is home to the most prestigious Center for
Israel and Jewish Studies in the country. Columbia has six endowed chairs in
Jewish Studies (ranging from religion to Yiddish to Hebrew literature, among
others). In addition, a seventh chair in Israel Studies is now being established
after pro-Israel groups launched a vicious campaign against the only chair in
modern Arab Studies that Columbia established two years ago, demanding
"balance"! Columbia does not have a Center for Arab Studies, let alone a Center
for Palestine studies. The Department of Middle East and Asian Languages and
Cultures encompasses the study of over one billion South Asians, over 300
million Arabs, tens of millions of Turks, of Iranians, of Kurds, of Armenians,
and of six million Israelis, five million of whom are Jewish. To study these
varied populations and cultures, MEALAC has three full time professors who cover
Israel and Hebrew, four full time professors to cover the Arab World, and two
full-time professors who cover South Asia. One need not do complicated
mathematics to see who is overrepresented and who is not, if the question is
indeed a demographic one.
Moreover, the class that this propaganda
machine is targeting, my Palestinian and Israeli Politics and Societies course,
is one of a number of courses offered at Columbia that cover the
Palestinian/Israeli conflict. All the others have an Israel-friendly
perspective, including Naomi Weinberger's "Conflict Resolution in the Middle
East," Michael Stanislawski's "History of the State of Israel, 1948-Present" and
a course offered in my own department by my colleague Dan Miron, "Zionism: A
Cultural Perspective." My course, which is critical of Zionism and Palestinian
nationalism, is in fact an elective course which no student is forced to
take.
Let us briefly review these claims of intimidation. Not only have
the students (all but Noah have not even taken my courses) not used a single
university venue to articulate their alleged grievances, they are now sponsored
by a private political organization with huge funds that produced and funded a
film about them, screened it to the major US media and to the top brass of the
Columbia administration. Last Wednesday, the film was screened in Israel to a
government minister and to participants at a conference on anti-Semitism. The
film has still not been released to the public here and is used as a sort of
secret evidence in a military trial. The film has also been used to trump up a
national campaign with the aid of a New York Congressman to get me fired. All
this power of intimidation is being exercised not by a professor against
students, but by political organizations who use students against a junior
non-tenured faculty member. A senior departmental colleague of mine, Dan Miron,
who votes on my promotion and tenure, has recently expressed open support for
this campaign of intimidation based on hearsay. Indeed with this campaign
against me going into its fourth year, I chose under the duress of coercion and
intimidation not to teach my course this year. It is my academic freedom that
has been circumscribed. But not only mine. The Columbia courses that remain are
all taught from an Israel-friendly angle.
The aim of the David Project
propaganda film is to undermine our academic freedom, our freedom of speech, and
Columbia's tradition of openness and pluralism. It is in reaction to this
witch-hunt that 718 international scholars and students signed a letter
defending me against intimidation and sent it to President Bollinger, with
hundreds more sending separate letters, while over 1400 people from all walks of
life are signing an online petition supporting me and academic freedom.
Academics and students from around the world recognize that the message of this
propaganda film is to suppress pluralism at Columbia and at all American
universities so that one and only one opinion be allowed on campuses, the
opinion of defending Israel uncritically. I need not remind anyone that this is
a slippery slope, for the same pressures could be applied to faculty who have
been critical of U.S. foreign policy, in Iraq for example, on the grounds that
such critiques are unpatriotic. Surely we all agree that while the University
can hardly defend any one political position on any current question, it must
defend the need for debate and critical consideration of all such questions,
whether in public fora or in the classroom. Anything less would be the beginning
of the death of academic freedom.
[JPN Commentary: In addition to activism in the New
Profile movement focused on achieving change within Jewish Israeli society,
Dorothy Naor dedicates huge amounts of time to a variety of protest and
humanitarian actions in the West Bank -- from the camp at Masha in protest of
the separation wall through olive harvesting through securing permits
for Palestinians in need of medical treatment in Israel, whom she then drives to
the hospital herself or provides with carpools. Dorothy, a retired teacher with
a PhD in English Literature, is in her seventies, a grandmother of eight. As
part of her work with New Profile she acts as the main contributor to an
alternative information service, an email list forwarding or
providing information from a variety of alternative as well as mainstream
sources on events in the Occupied Territories, anti-militarist analyses and
anti-occupation activities.
Dorothy's essay below reflects on the paradoxical double bind often
encountered in anti-occupation activism. While attempting to resist and
alleviate oppression, activists are forced to negotiate the very rules and
authorities that implement this oppression. The very act of resisting the system
is co-opted, in effect extending its reach. For many activists this is a very
real, very painful issue, further compounding the constantly lurking sense of
being trapped, powerless. About a decade ago, doing human rights work in Gaza, I
wrote: "we are Jewish Israelis, answerable only to the laws that hold only for
the rulers here. These we don't break. We stretch them a little when we try to
offer a couple of their protective measures to people for whom they were never
meant, and probably won't serve. But the freedom we feel ourselves exercising in
fact consists of deciding to obey and apply these laws and rules. ... my liberty
or strength come of crossing. Back and forth. As if I were subject to neither
community while I am actually subject to both."
This recognition of our own complicity as activists is both depressing
and enraging. However, an awareness that each of us, personally, is a player
within the power structure is, in my view, vital to effective resistance. Human
rights and anti-oppression activism can provide activists with a seductive sense
of heroism and generate patronizing attitudes. An awareness of the complex
positioning of such activism can temper these tendencies and nurture more
careful, context-sensitive and egalitarian practices. Therefore, as sad as they
may be, Dorothy Naor's insights make a crucial contribution to continued
resistance. RM]
I, a Collaborator
By Dorothy Naor
The realization has recently begun to weigh heavily on me that in almost all
my acts regarding the occupation of the Palestinian Territories I collaborate
with the powers to be. Of course my collaboration is wholly involuntary. But it
nonetheless is. Almost all of our humanitarian and political intentions and acts
depend on abiding by the rules, which is another way to say that we kow-tow to
the IOF. This applies alike to situations that are planned in advance (e.g., the
intention to help with the olive harvest in the OPTs) and to emergency
situations (e.g., as when Palestinians stuck at a check point request help to
get them through).
We have no option but to request help from the IOF, and by requesting we
unwillingly cooperate with its and the government's rules of the game. We
thereby involuntarily assist the government and the military to perform the
occupation and to perpetuate it, and in this sense I very much realize
that--like it or not--I collaborate.
It's a catch 22 situation. If we don't play by IOF rules we are prevented by
the IOF from helping the Palestinians and of expressing solidarity with them. Of
course there are also means of civil disobedience, and the possibilities of
appealing to the high court. These acts are not collaboration. But the ways in
which we activists daily involuntarily collaborate are many, too many.
-----------------------------------
How do I collaborate?
Let me count the ways.
I. The Olive harvest
When I harvest olives for a family that has received insufficient permits to
allow them to harvest their trees by themselves, I, by making up for those who
were not given permits, collaborate with the military and perpetuate Israel's
occupation of the Palestinian Territories.
When I agree to to harvesting olives in certain areas only, because of
military restrictions on where the Palestinians may harvest, I collaborate with
the military and help perpetuate the occupation.
When I agree to harvest olives on the days that the military has designated
for a given village, I collaborate with the military and perpetuate the
occupation.
II. SOS calls
When I phone the so-called Civil Administration to request help to release
someone being held hours at a checkpoint, or when I phone them to request
finding and releasing a 12 year-old Palestinian boy whom soldiers have detained,
or when I phone to request letting an ambulance through post haste, I
collaborate with the military and perpetuate the occupation.
When I request the Civil Administration to issue a permit for a desperately
ill person to go to an Israeli hospital for care that she/he cannot receive in
the OPTs, I collaborate with the military and perpetuate the occupation.
When I request a permit to a hospital in east Jerusalem for a father whose 2
year-old daughter is to undergo kidney surgery, and am denied because the
Central Security Service has declared the father "barred," and then, even after
various attempts to get the permit, nevertheless fail to produce it, I
collaborate with the military and perpetuate the occupation by letting it keep
him from his child's hospital bed.
When I phone the Civil Administration at 1:00 AM to report that the army has
entered a village, ordered all the inhabitants (old, young, ill, well) out of
their homes in pouring rain, and is throwing their belongings outside into the
rain, and after reporting this am told by the woman's voice at the other end of
the phone, "What do you want? This is normal" and I quietly declare rather than
yell at her, that it's not in the least normal, I collaborate with the military
and perpetuate the occupation.
When, after an hour of arguing with soldiers barring my way into a
Palestinian village, I give up trying to get to my destination, and return home
instead, I collaborate with the army and perpetuate the occupation.
III. Road blocks and check points
When I accept the reality of road blocks and check points, I collaborate with
the army and perpetuate the occupation.
IV. The Apartheid Wall
When I go to a Palestinian village to protest the theft of land, the
uprooting of dunams of trees, the destruction of land for the sake of building a
wall that will not only rob the villagers of their trees and land but will also
enclose them in a ghetto, and then run from the bulldozers and soldiers when
they begin shooting tear gas at us, and at the end of the day go home, I
collaborate with the military and perpetuate the occupation, because
construction of the wall goes on.
Dorothy
[JPN Commentary: There is an enormous social base in
the US, well beyond any elements of the Jewish community, supporting the Israeli
right. Evangelical Christians number well over one-quarter of the US
population. Their anti-Semitic theology is consistent with the most extreme
positions of the messianic settlers. Evangelicals have been strong supporters
of Ariel Sharon (and other right winger Israeli leaders going back to Menachem
Begin). They have developed great political clout in the Bush administration,
but will remain a potent force, no matter who wins the presidency. --
JB]
Born-agains
for Sharon
Savvy salesman Rabbi Eckstein has convinced
evangelicals to support Israel -- and he's hobnobbing with the likes of Pat
Robertson and Ralph Reed. But what will he do if Kerry wins?
By Max
Blumenthal
http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2004/11/01/christian_zionism/index_np.html
Oct.
30, 2004 | For some 7 million evangelicals at 25,000 churches worldwide, Oct.
17 was the third Annual Day of Prayer and Solidarity with Israel. For President
Bush's Southeastern regional campaign coordinator, Ralph Reed, and Israeli Prime
Minister Ariel Sharon's liaison to the U.S. evangelical community, Rabbi Yechiel
Eckstein, the event was their latest attempt to rally Bush's base to the side of
Sharon. To help make their point, Eckstein and Reed summoned 21 of Israel's
diplomatic representatives in the U.S. to the pulpits of some of America's
leading conservative churches.
In Atlanta, at the Mount Paran Baptist
Church, to which Reed belongs, Israel's consul general to the Southeast, Shmuel
Ben-Shmuel, shared the stage with Pastor David Cooper, author of the bestseller
"Apocalypse." Meanwhile, Israel's ambassador to the United States, Danny Ayalon,
traveled to Colorado Springs, Colo., to pay a visit to New Life Church and its
senior pastor, Ted Haggard, president of the National Association of
Evangelicals and a star in the glowing documentary about Bush, "Faith in the
White House."
Eckstein was confident the Annual Day of Prayer event
would keep pro-Israel pressure on Bush. "Over 30 percent of the evangelical
respondents to an online survey we conducted last week said support for Israel
was their number one factor in electing a president, and another 61 percent
identified Israel as an important factor in their choice," he stated in a press
release six days prior to the event. "This confirms what our experience tells us
-- evangelical support for Israel hasn't diminished one bit. If anything, it's
stronger than ever." Though evangelicals undoubtedly will vote overwhelmingly
for Bush, the irony is that Jews in America, who support Israel for a different
set of reasons than the evangelicals targeted by Eckstein do, are expected to
vote overwhelmingly for John Kerry.
Evangelical support for Israel has
increased dramatically in the past four years even as the country's
international reputation has suffered as a result of Sharon's repressive,
unilateral policies. To most evangelicals, Israel is "covenant land," a place
granted to the Jews in God's covenant with Abraham; to many, Israel also
represents the eventual landing pad for the Second Coming of the Messiah. While
this scenario is not exactly friendly to Jews -- according to premillennial
theology, once biblical Israel is fully resettled and Christ returns, Jews must
accept him or perish -- evangelicals' theological interest in Israel renders
them fervently opposed to any territorial concessions to the Palestinians and,
thus, the natural allies of Sharon and his rightist Likud Party.
Rabbi
Eckstein seems to have reached the apex of his lonely, 25-year-long quest to
cultivate America's evangelical community as Israel's financial lifeline and
most ardent lobbying bloc. Once a pariah among his peers, he has gained
influence through savvy salesmanship, building his International Fellowship for
Christians and Jews into a philanthropic powerhouse that donates tens of
millions of dollars to Israel annually. In the process, he has forged close
relationships with popular right-wing evangelical leaders such as Pat Robertson
and Gary Bauer, as well as White House neoconservatives like Elliott Abrams, who
is in charge of Middle East policy on the National Security Council. Together,
Eckstein and his allies have played an instrumental role in pressuring the Bush
administration to abandon the so-called road map to peace and defend Sharon's
ham-handed handling of the occupation unconditionally.
I met with
Eckstein in August at the IFCJ offices, which occupy an entire floor of a
building in Chicago's Loop. Inside his office, Eckstein reclined behind a desk,
looking out over the city's breathtaking skyline. Husky and youthful at 53, he
looked more like a pro athlete than an Orthodox rabbi. (Think legendary Buffalo
Bills quarterback Jim Kelly with a yarmulke.) He lives in Israel, where he
serves as an informal advisor to Sharon, and was in Chicago to attend to
business and visit his family.
During our meeting and an hourlong phone
conversation the month before, Eckstein spoke glowingly about the
Christian-Zionist alliance he has brokered. "With evangelicals, I haven't had to
change opinions like I do with the [liberal] National Council of Churches. All I
have to do is tap into their abiding love for Israel," he told me. "Since 9/11
and since the intifada, the Jewish community has become much more pragmatic;
they feel Israel's survival is at stake, and they've recognized the one group
that stands with us boldly and proudly is this evangelical group."
Eckstein found his calling in 1977 when he was director of
inter-religious affairs for the Anti-Defamation League. When some neo-Nazis
planned a provocative march in Skokie, Ill., a heavily Jewish community with
numerous Holocaust survivors, the ADL sent him to Chicago to marshal Christian
opposition to the march. Eckstein soon found himself in Wheaton, Ill., the
epicenter of the mounting evangelical movement. It was during a meeting with the
director of Wheaton College's Bible study program and the dean of Trinity
Evangelical Divinity School that Eckstein had his epiphany about the role of
evangelicals.
"The Jewish community was very frightened by this
phenomenon of the rising Christian right, but I came to know that evangelicals
are not bogeymen; they are simply a group of serious people who felt the
pendulum had swung too far to the left and that what was needed was to return to
the Judeo-Christian roots."
By 1983, Eckstein had formed the IFCJ and
become a fixture at National Religious Broadcasters conferences, where he
promoted tourism to the Holy Land and solicited donations for his organization.
"When I started out 25 years ago, there was nobody in the field. I went to my
first NRB convention and I was the only Jew there, and I went for 15 years
straight," Eckstein recalled. "What I participated in spawning has kind of
caught on ... Now there are 10 to 15 booths at NRB conferences selling Israeli
or Jewish stuff and lots of Jews in yarmulkes walking around."
Five
years later, Eckstein was in New York helping maverick Republican presidential
primary candidate Pat Robertson "mitigate Jewish opposition" to his campaign --
and cultivating him and his legion of followers as supporters of Israel. In
1986, Robertson had compared non-Christians to termites deserving of "godly
fumigation"; he later asserted, in the book "The New World Order," that
communism was "the brainchild of German-Jewish intellectuals." But while
Robertson may not be particularly fond of secular Jewish liberals, he has always
been an ardent Christian Zionist who, in his preaching and pulp-prophecy books,
refers to the Jewish presence in Jerusalem and Israel's victory in the 1967 war
as miracles presaging the Second Coming.
In 1994, when the ADL issued a
scathing report blasting fundamentalist evangelicals, and Robertson's Christian
Coalition in particular, as a grave threat to Jewish life, Eckstein leaped to
defend his allies. He convened a meeting in Washington between evangelical and
Jewish leaders, and convinced the ADL's director, Abe Foxman, to invite
Robertson's master tactician, Reed, to issue a call for reconciliation at ADL's
annual conference. And in a 1995 address broadcast nationally by C-Span, Reed
reassured the ADL of the Christian Coalition's commitment to a pluralistic
society, recounted a moving visit to the Yad Vashem Holocaust museum in
Jerusalem and issued a call for Jews and evangelicals to "move from
confrontation to cooperation." According to Eckstein, "Reed made a wonderful
impression."
The following year, Eckstein capitalized on his successes
by forming the Center for Christian and Jewish Values in Washington. Co-chaired
by Orthodox Jewish Sen. Joe Lieberman, D-Conn., and evangelical Sen. Sam
Brownback, R-Kan., the now-defunct center, according to Eckstein, "brought
together disparate groups to find common ground on issues of shared concern."
While Eckstein did bring people of different faiths under one roof, their
ideological leanings were mostly uniform. The center was made up almost entirely
of right-wing evangelicals like then Family Research Council director Bauer,
Southern Baptist Convention executive director Richard Land and the dean of
Robertson's Regent University's school of government, Kay James. (James is now
director of the Office of Personnel Management under Bush.) Also involved were
neoconservatives such as Abrams, William Kristol and William Bennett. The center
was essentially a command post for the culture war.
Despite its pantheon
of influential conservatives, however, the center produced little more than a
flurry of symbolic resolutions calling for religious freedom in the Third World,
more education for what Eckstein termed "non-abortion" and a moment of silence
as an alternative to school prayer. The center also served as the platform for
Lieberman, Bennett and Brownback's censorship crusade, which ultimately amounted
to a few blustery editorials blasting Hollywood's "mental poison" and a failed
bill in 1997 that would have mandated that TV manufacturers install "V-chips"
allowing parents to block offensive programming.
While the center's
culture warriors soldiered on, Eckstein shifted his focus to filling the IFCJ's
coffers. By 1999, he had settled in Israel and was cruising the Holy Land in a
van with his own film crew to produce a line of fundraising videos
custom-tailored to evangelical tastes. In one of the videos, "Guardians of
Israel," Eckstein appears amid scenes of heart-wrenching poverty, staring
directly into the camera like Mister Rogers' long-lost brother, his hand on the
shoulder of one destitute Israeli or another, pleading for Christian money. "If
you don't hear this woman's tears, you're not human," Eckstein says in
"Guardians of Israel," while standing above a sobbing woman in Nazareth. In
another of Ekstein's videos, "On Wings of Eagles," a narrator, soliciting money
for his immigration program for Russian Jews, informs viewers, "Just $350 can
save one Jew."
After viewing one of these videos in 2000, the ADL's
Foxman accused Ekstein of "schnorring from non-Jews to help Jews." However, what
may seem like shameless pandering to Eckstein's critics is, in fact, effective
salesmanship to those familiar with the insular evangelical culture. When
Eckstein looks into the camera with tears welling in his eyes and declares, "I
couldn't face God if I didn't open up to you, Christians" -- a phrase few Jews
could imagine themselves uttering -- he is appealing to the confessional
tradition that stresses God's transformative power. It is the same tradition
that prompts President Bush to say, "There is only one reason I am in the Oval
Office and not in a bar. I found faith."
Eckstein's uncanny ability to
penetrate evangelical culture has fed a perception among his detractors that he
is really a "Jew for Jesus." One of Eckstein's most strident critics, Jerusalem
City Councilor Mina Fenton, has enlisted a group of high-profile rabbis in a
campaign to in effect excommunicate him. Fenton points as proof of Eckstein's
crypto-Christianity to his fictional novel, "The Journey Home," loosely based on
his friendship with evangelical pastor Jamie Buckingham. In the book, Eckstein
writes, "While I still don't believe in Jesus as the Christ as Jamie does, and
view him instead as a Jew who brought salvation to the gentiles, in some
respects, that is exactly what I have become -- a Jew for Jesus."
In an
interview with the Israeli daily Ha'aretz, Fenton accused Eckstein's IFCJ of
trying to "create a situation of dependency [of Israel on evangelical funding],
so that they can control us. They pour money galore into welfare, absorption,
aliyah [Jewish immigration to Israel], and education and find our weak points."
Fenton also believes that by pumping so much evangelical money into Israel,
Eckstein is helping to further evangelicals' apocalyptic "end times" agenda.
That charge has dogged Eckstein throughout his career in spite of his
best efforts to defuse it. In 2003, he commissioned the Tarrance Group to
conduct a poll of evangelicals' attitudes on Israel. While a majority of
respondents cited a literal belief in Genesis 12:3 -- "he who blesses Israel
shall be blessed" -- as their primary reason for supporting Israel, a minority,
albeit a large one at 28 percent, cited "reasons related to the End Times." Even
though the Tarrance Group is run by veteran GOP operative Ed Goeas, who has
collaborated with Reed on numerous campaigns, Eckstein feels vindicated by the
poll.
"The media portrays [evangelicals] as premillennialists who do
this [support Israel] to get all the Jews to Israel, ... [so] those who don't
accept Jesus will be killed. It's just hogwash. If anything, it's about Genesis
12:3," said Eckstein.
Eckstein's close associate Bauer echoed his
opinion. "Among Christians, there's just a fundamental religious idea that the
Jews are God's people and the land of Israel is covenant land that God granted
them. Beyond that, what drives Christian support for Israel is that Christians
tend to see U.S. foreign policy in very moral terms," Bauer told me. "We believe
Israel and the U.S. are facing the same types of totalitarian forces, and we as
two countries that share the same values should stand against that."
Away from the media's critical eye, however, Eckstein has struck an
altogether different tone. In "On Wings of Eagles," as montages of former
Israeli Prime Minister Yitzak Rabin and Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat shaking
hands in Oslo in 1994 and the crumbling Twin Towers flash across the screen to
an ominous soundtrack, a narrator intones, "The mosaic of events we see
happening today is like a gigantic jigsaw puzzle with the pieces beginning to
form the exact picture foretold by the prophets." Next Eckstein appears standing
on a mountaintop somewhere in Israel, and, before launching into a pitch for
donations, says, "You can see the pieces of the puzzle that are coming
together." Is he insinuating that with so many "end times" prophecies in the
headlines, evangelical support for Israel is all the more urgent? It's unclear
what else he could mean.
However controversial Eckstein's fundraising
techniques may be, they are working. His videos enjoy widespread viewership on
Robertson's Christian Broadcasting Network and through paid spots on local
networks across America's heartland. Eckstein has even organized aggressive
fundraising campaigns in countries like Mexico and El Salvador, where nearly
half of the population lives below the poverty line. With nearly 350,000 donors,
the IFCJ was able to dole out a whopping $20 million to 250 social welfare
projects in Israel last year, including an armored, mobile dental clinic that
provides services to Jewish settlers in the occupied territories. Today, the
IFCJ is the second largest nongovernmental donor to Israel, next only to the
quasi-governmental Jewish Agency for Israel.
By building the IFCJ into a
such a powerful philanthropic force, Eckstein has mollified erstwhile critics
like Foxman. "I'm popular now because we give away money and that has helped
leverage this whole issue [evangelical support for Israel] to give it legitimacy
in the Jewish community," Eckstein said proudly. As a testament to Eckstein's
success, in 2002 Foxman took out full-page ads in major U.S. papers, reprinting
a pro-Israel Op-Ed written by Reed, then chairman of the Georgia Republican
Party.
When Sharon and Bush came to power in 2000, they began a cozy
relationship that has become iconic of the evangelical-Likudnik marriage
Eckstein helped broker. With Eckstein as his advisor, Sharon has courted the
support of evangelicals more aggressively than most of his predecessors. In the
fall of 2002, for instance, Sharon told a crowd of 3,000 evangelical tourists in
Jerusalem, "I tell you now, we love you. We love all of you!"
That same
year, he invited Bauer to Jerusalem for a private meeting with his Cabinet. "I
was given a great deal of access and a number of briefings on the various issues
they're facing," Bauer told me. "In my meeting, ... I attempted to explain that
they had a much broader base of support in the U.S. than perhaps they realized
and they should be sensitive to the fact that more Americans than they think
regard Israel as a natural ally." To help make his point, Bauer gave Sharon a
letter of support signed by leading evangelicals like Charles Colson, Jerry
Falwell and Focus on the Family president James Dobson.
As for Bush's
friendly relations with Sharon, Brent Scowcroft, national security advisor for
the first President Bush, told the Financial Times this month, "I think Sharon
just has [Bush] wrapped around his little finger." Yet Bush is complaisant not
only to Sharon but also to his own domestic base. After all, over the past four
years, Eckstein and his evangelical allies have waged a fierce lobbying blitz to
pressure Bush against participating in the Israeli-Palestinian peace process
that every American president since Jimmy Carter has engaged in.
Their
campaign gained momentum at the National Rally in Solidarity with Israel in
April 2002 on Washington's Mall, which was attended by over 100,000. While
popular figures like author Elie Wiesel and former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani
issued fiery denunciations of Palestinian terror, the most boisterous applause
of the day was reserved for evangelical radio host Janet Parshall, who boomed,
"We will never give up the Golan. We will never divide Jerusalem." None of the
rally's Jewish speakers was nearly as strident; in fact, Deputy Secretary of
Defense Paul Wolfowitz, a prominent neoconservative, was booed for referring to
the daily suffering endured by Palestinians under occupation. The rally
coincided with the initiation of Reed and Eckstein's Day of Prayer and
Solidarity with Israel, which mobilized 17,000 evangelical churches to pray for
Israel that October.
With a number of close associates now working in
the White House, Eckstein and company leveraged their grass-roots muscle into
high-level access. In July 2003, Eckstein brought 20 leading fundamentalist
evangelicals to the White House for "a quiet meeting" with National Security
Advisor Condoleezza Rice and Middle East advisor Abrams. There, delegation
members stated their fervent opposition to the Israeli-Palestinian road map
while Rice explained the administration's sympathy for their position. Rice
"talked about her religiousness and how her father was a Baptist minister,"
Eckstein recalled. "And she explained the administration's position: It's Bush's
faith that prompts him to take some of his major positions. I think that's
what's so attractive about Bush to people," Eckstein added. "You can become
relativistic, but what's needed is black and white."
Alhough Eckstein
says his meeting with Rice marked the first time leaders of the Christian right
had met with a high-level White House official on Israel policy, it wasn't the
last. As Rick Perlstein of the Village Voice reported, in March Abrams met with
leaders of a self-identified "theocratical" lobbying group, the Apostolic
Congress, to allay their concerns about Bush's pending endorsement of Sharon's
Gaza pullout plan. And evangelical leaders like late Religious Roundtable
director Ed McAteer have reportedly held numerous off-the-record meetings on
policy toward Israel with White House public liaison Tim Goeglein, who was the
spokesman for Bauer's 2000 presidential campaign.
Curiously, Eckstein
refused to tell me who was among the delegation he brought to the White House,
though he did mention that Bauer was pointedly uninvited as punishment for
running against Bush in the 2000 Republican presidential primaries and attacking
him as insufficiently conservative. Yet lack of direct access hasn't prevented
the wily Bauer from influencing White House policy on Israel. When the Bush
administration criticized Israel's botched assassination of Hamas leader Abdel
Aziz Rantisi in June 2003, Bauer e-mailed an alert to 100,000 followers calling
for pro-Israel pressure on the White House. "We inundated the White House with
e-mails and faxes arguing that Israel had the same right to defend itself as we
did. In very short order, the tone of the White House changed dramatically, and
I believe it was the reaction of Christian conservatives in favor of Israel that
changed the tone," Bauer said. And when Israel did kill Rantisi in April, the
White House issued the
now boilerplate statement of support for Israel's
"right to defend herself."
Bauer's influence earned him the keynote
address at the 2003 annual convention of pro-Israel lobbying powerhouse AIPAC
(American Israel Public Affairs Committee), where he says he was interrupted 12
times by standing ovations. Bauer has also played a leading role in lobbying on
behalf of Israeli settler groups (he refused to say which ones) against both the
road map and Sharon's Gaza pullout plan. "Off and on over the years I have met
with various groups in the West Bank, and they've come to the U.S. I've given
them my best read on what the lay of the land is in Washington and how they
might be more effective in getting their message out here," Bauer said. "I
oppose ethnic cleansing, and the idea that the West Bank or Gaza should be a
Jew-free zone is deeply offensive," he added.
Bauer, unlike Eckstein,
who is beholden to Sharon and his Gaza policy, has little to lose and everything
to gain by working with Israel's most reactionary elements. Through his
political action committee, the Campaign for Working Families, Bauer is
aggressively soliciting donations from conservative Christians for the Bush
campaign while plugging the latest version of the GOP's anti-Kerry "flip-flop"
attack on his group's Web site. Bauer ostensibly hopes that by backing Bush, he
can heal the wounds his 2000 primary run opened and, if Bush wins, earn back his
place at the grown-ups table.
Although Eckstein says he's a registered
Democrat, he has converted to Bush's side and is urging other Jews to join him.
"I personally think the Jewish community and America should vote for Bush
because I think he will be stronger on terrorism. And anything less than a full
confrontation [with terrorists] has the potential, God forbid, to spell the end
of Western civilization as we know it," Eckstein said. "I, like many Jews,
support John Kerry's domestic agenda, and that's why I think many Jews are
struggling with this choice in a big way."
Whether or not Jews have
struggled with their choice, most are supporting Kerry. A nonpartisan poll taken
by the American Jewish Committee in September showed 69 percent of Jews
supporting Kerry, compared with 24 percent for Bush. The poll's other findings
reveal strong Jewish opposition to Bush's policies on social issues, but
overwhelming support for further dismantling of Jewish settlements in the
occupied territories, an issue Kerry has studiously avoided and Bush has refused
to press with Sharon.
Another factor in Jewish support for Kerry is his
unabashedly pro-Israel platform. To reinforce Kerry's message, his campaign in
July released a policy paper, "Strengthening Israel's Security and Bolstering
the US-Israel Special Relationship," stating positions on the Gaza pullout and
Israel's separation wall that are identical to Bush's.
But if Kerry is
elected, members of the Christian-Zionist lobby should not expect any backslaps
from the new president. With Bush back in Crawford, Texas, Eckstein and
company's White House soul mates would have to return to their think-tank
fellowships and academic jobs, severely compromising the influence and access
the lobby has worked for over two decades to attain.
Already, Bauer is
grumbling, "I would be happy if Kerry was overall pro-Israel, but I would have
to caution that before the race got going in earnest, Senator Kerry repeatedly
said where the president failed in not having a balanced approach in the Middle
East. A balanced approach is the last thing I would want."
Max
Blumenthal is a freelance writer based in Los Angeles.
Jewish Peace News Editors: Judith Norman Alistair Welchman Mitchell Plitnick Lincoln Shlensky Ami Kronfeld Rela Mazali Sarah Anne Minkin Joel Beinin Racheli Gai