Two Apologies from Rabbi Lerner

Two apologies from Rabbi Lerner  a minor one and a major one

1) The minor apology is that the mailing of the Summer issue of Tikkun was delayed by something going wrong at the printers. That issue should have been mailed in mid-July and instead is coming sometime in mid-August.

Firebombing of Palestinian Homes & Murder of Palestinian Child, plus Murder at Gay Pride Demo

Editor’s Note:

Faced with the horrendous crimes of an ultra-orthodox Jew stabbing participants in a gay pride demonstration in Israel, and the firebombing of Palestinian homes and resulting burning to death of an 18 month old Palestinian baby while others in the family are in critical condition and may not survive, many Israelis and American Jews denounced these horrendous acts. Netanyahu and his government ordered a few Israeli settlers arrested in “administrative detention,” the polite word to describe the practice which till now has been used against thousands of Palestinian civilians–arrest without formal charges, often held in detention for months or more without trial, and in the case of Palestinians often tortured. The Israeli settlers arrested did not face what most Palestinians “suspected” of terrorist acts usually suffer: the homes of the family of the suspect are immediately blown up by the occupying Israeli Army in the West Bank. That no such punishment was immediately meted out to the Israeli settler suspects was not surprising, but just another manifestation of the racist treatment Palestinians in the Occupied territory face (though of course we don’t support this tactic against settlers or Palestinians). As many Israeli human rights and peace advocates point out, the firebombing of Palestinian homes is just one of many variants of violence visited upon Palestinians in the Occupied West Bank, the goal being to make life so difficult that Palestinians will eventually be “ethnically cleansed” and Israel can make the West Bank a fully Jewish-majority part of Israel.

Israel’s “Divide and Conquer” Strategy for Palestine–by Uri Avnery

Uri Avnery

August 8, 2015

 

                                                Divide et Impera

 

BINYAMIN NETANYAHU is not known as a classical scholar, but even so he has adopted the Roman maxim Divide et Impera, divide and rule.  

The main (and perhaps only) goal of his policy is to extend the rule of Israel, as the “Nation-State of the Jewish People”, over all of Eretz Israel, the historical land of Palestine. This means ruling all of the West Bank and covering it with Jewish settlements, while denying any civil rights to its 2.5 million plus Arab inhabitants.  

East Jerusalem, with its 300,000 Arab inhabitants, has already been formally annexed to Israel, without granting them Israeli citizenship or the right to take part in Knesset elections.  

That leaves the Gaza Strip, a tiny enclave with 1.8 million plus Arab inhabitants, most of them descendents of refugees from Israel.

Readers Respond to Our Conference Call with Obama

On July 30th, the Tikkun and Network of Spiritual Progressives (NSP) community, along with a variety of other groups, was invited to a conference call with President Obama. During the call he spoke about the nuclear agreement reached with Iran and urged us to become active in supporting that deal in light of the ferocious opposition of the Republicans, Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu, and many national American Jewish organizations. President Obama referenced the failure of peace-oriented people to stop the disastrous war in Iraq and urged us to become visibly engaged in supporting this agreement, which he said would prevent the only other possible alternative for those who want a denuclearized Iran, namely a war with Iran. Of course, I had hoped that there would be a chance to engage directly with Obama, but he simply continued to do what he has done ever since we helped to elect him, namely talk to us but not with us. Still, many members of our Tikkun and NSP community tuned in for the talk and then sent their responses to me.

The Pope’s Anti-Capitalist Message

Will Pope Francis’ strong message meet resistance in US? Michael Sean Winters  |  Jul. 31, 2015

Francis in the United States

Print  email  ANALYSIS   WASHINGTON

Those looking for clues of what to expect from Pope Francis when he visits Cuba and the United States at the end of September should study his trip to Latin America. Francis’ eight-day trip to Ecuador, Bolivia and Paraguay July 5-12 accentuated almost every theme of this pontificate. At a large prison in Bolivia, he told the prisoners, “I could not leave Bolivia without seeing you.”

Death by Debt: Germany’s Treatment of Greece

 

Death by Debt – My Response to The German Finance Ministry

Guest contribution by Jeffrey Sachs

Dr. Ludger Schuknecht, senior economist at the Germany Finance Ministry, explains his ministry’s viewpoint regarding Greece. This viewpoint essentially holds that Eurozone countries should live within their means; adjust to their debt burdens; and take their reform medicine as needed. If they do so, they will be successful, as illustrated by Ireland, Spain, and Portugal. Greece has only itself to blame, and indeed was on track to recover as of late 2014 if it had not deviated from its course. I have enormous respect for Dr. Schuknecht as an able and thoughtful economist.

We too, like Pope Francis, must be zealous guardians of the Common Home

Pope Francis: zealous guardian of the Common Home
Leonardo Boff
      Theologian-Philosopher
      Earthcharter Commission

 

Given the patron saint who inspired his name –Saint Francis of Assisi–, Pope Francis has everything in his favor to become the great promoter of a world ecological project.  It has to be him, because, as we face the threats affecting the common destiny of the Earth and the human family, sadly, we lack leaders with the authority and convincing words and deeds to awaken humanity, especially the governing elites,  and the sense of collective and individual responsibility to safeguard it for all. This wish was fully realized with the publication of the encyclical, «Laudato si’: to care for the Common Home». Pope Francis offers us a wide-ranging text of rare intellectual and spiritual beauty – of holistic ecology, uniting that which was so valuable to Saint Francis of Assisi, and is to Francis of Rome: an attitude of caring for sister and Mother Earth and a preferential love for the condemned of the Earth. This connection runs through the entire text like a conducting cable. There is no true ecology, of any kind, be it environmental, social, mental or holistic, if it does not rescue the humiliated of humanity, the impoverished millions of our times, for whom the Earth Mother is most gravely attacked and degraded.

The New Brutalism & America’s Racist Killing Fields by Henry Giroux

The New Brutalism and the Racist Killing Fields in America:
The Death of Sandra Bland
 
by      Henry A. Giroux
 

On July 9, soon after Sandra Bland, a 28-year-old African-American woman, moved to Texas from Naperville, Illinois to take a new job as a college outreach officer at her alma mater, Prairie View A&M, she was pulled over by the police for failing to signal while making a lane change. What followed has become all too common and illustrates the ever increasing rise in domestic terrorism in the United States.  She was pulled out of the car by a police officer for allegedly becoming combative and pinned to the ground by two officers. A video obtained by ABC 7 of Bland’s arrest “doesn’t appear to show Bland being combative with officers but does show two officers on top of Bland.”[i]

In a second video released by the Texas Department of Public Safety, Texas state trooper Brian Encinia becomes increasingly hostile toward Bland and very shortly the interaction escalates into a shouting match and becomes confrontational.[ii]  During the interaction, Bland is asked by the officer to put out her cigarette she refuses stating “I am in my car, why do I have to put out my cigarette?” Encinia then opens the driver’s door, and quickly attempts to physically remove her. He then states “I’m going to drag you out of here.”  Bland says “don’t touch me, I’m not under arrest.”   Encinia then pulls out his Taser, points it at Bland, and says “I will light you up.”  Spokespersons for the State troopers later admitted that “Encinia did not follow proper procedure; ….

Uri Avnery (and below that Jeffrey Sachs) on the Iranian Nuclear Deal

Editor’s note:

Avnery is sage in his analysis, but too much into big-power-politics thinking for comfort. As a result he underplays the role of ideology, and understates the evil deeds of the Iranian mullahs against their own people. Some people respond to the balance of power argument, then, by saying that Iran is more serious about ideology and hence might be willing to do a first strike on Israel even if that did lead to their own destruction. But here we agree more with Avnery–it is precisely because of their ideology that makes them want to remain the society that brings Islam to the world. To be the advocate for a growing Islam, rather than its grave-digger, a Muslim Iran has to avoid being wiped out by a second retaliatory strike by Israel should the Iranians use the nuclear weapons they will likely eventually acquire in ten or twenty years.

God’s Prayer: a Review of an amazing book by Michael Kagan

Hearing God’s Prayer—Inside and Outside of Religion
a review of God’s Prayer by Michael Kagan, by Ya’qub ibn Yusuf
 

God’s Prayer is a collection of messages which the author, Michael Kagan, experienced receiving from God. We might call it a book of contemporary prophecy. It begins with a call to all human beings to stop abusing one another as well as the planet which supports us. It proceeds with particular messages for the Jewish, Christian and Islamic communities: each one is seen as having a mission to fulfill which requires our going beyond our current pre-occupation with ourselves. The book goes on to address the significance of Jerusalem and the times in which we live, and the deeper implications of healing ourselves and the earth.

Confronting Religious Hatred in the Holy Land–by Alon Goshen-Gottstein

Alon Goshen-Gottstein

Founder and Director of the Elijah Interfaith Institute. Acknowledged as one of the world’s leading figures in interreligious dialogue. Over the past 4 years, 42 Churches, mosques and monasteries were vandalized, attacked or torched in the Holy Land. A very narrow section of the Orthodox Zionist world has engaged in what is in fact religious terrorism. Initially a form of political protest, that channeled hatred of the religious other as part of its political message, it has taken an ugly turn and become an outright attack on other religions.

Who is hoping to lead us into war with Iran?

THE STRANGE ALLIANCE OF FUNDAMENTALIST JEWS AND CHRISTIANS WHO
ACHE  FOR ARMAGEDDON
      BY
ALLAN C. BROWNFELD
—————————————————————————————————————————–
It has often been said that politics makes for strange bedfellows. This adage is certainly reflected in the unusual alliance  between fundamentalist Jews and Christians, who have joined together to oppose the creation of a Palestinian state and, now, to oppose any nuclear agreement with Iran and to silence campus debate on the Middle East. In June, casino mogul Sheldon Adelson held a meeting in Las Vegas to raise funds and create an organization, Campus Maccabees, to aggressively counter the movement on some college campuses to divest from companies doing business in the occupied territories and to boycott and divest from Israel, the so-called BDS  (Boycott, Sanctions, Divestment) movement.  Adelson calls this movement “anti-Semitic,” although many of its leaders and supporters are Jewish. Open debate is being challenged, somehow, as “hate speech.”

Hllary Clinton’s Troubling Attack on Peace Activists by Prof. Stephen Zunes

Editor’s note: While we at Tikkun have not signed on to the BDS movement in part because of the failure of its most prominent proponents in the U.S., e.g. Jewish Voices for Peace, to unequivocally separate themselves from the parts of that movement that seek the end of the State of Israel, we do support the boycott of goods from West Bank settlements and boycotts of Western firms that have used the West Bank as their base or that aid in the occupation or benefit directly from it. These distinctions are important, because we do not support a full boycott of the State of Israel, but do support (and helped shape) the resolutions passed by the Presbyterians and the United Church of Christ in this regard. If our contributing editor Prof. Stephen Zunes is correct in his interpretation of Hillary Clinton’s letter, then if she becomes the Democratic candidate for President in 2016 many liberals and progressives may find themselves faced with the kind of choice they faced in 1968 in having to choose between supporting a foreign policy hawk as Clinton seems to be wanting to portray herself on Zunes’ interpretation, though also being relatively progressive on some domestic issues, and a true extremist from the Republican Party (in that case in 1968 it was Nixon). As it turned out, Nixon ended up pursuing the same militarism that Humphrey was pledged to continue from his boss LBJ, but actually supported some of the most progressive legislation on environmental issues that Humphrey might have been too timid to support. In our Winter 2016 issue we will deal with the issue of “lesser evil” politics from a variety of perspectives.

How to Make July 3-5 a Celebration of Interdependence

Interdependence Day Celebration  
Transforming July 4th into an event affirming the value of everyone on earth and affirming our interdependence with them and with the earth itself

 

Faced with July 4th celebrations that are focused on militarism, ultra-nationalism, and “bombs bursting in air,” many American families who do not share those values turn July 4th into another summer holiday focused on picnics, sports and fireworks while doing their best to avoid the dominant rhetoric and bombast.  

We in the Network of Spiritual Progressives believe that this is a net loss. There is much worth celebrating in American history that deserves attention on July 4th, though it is rarely the focus of the public events.  

We also acknowledge that in the 21st century there is a pressing need to develop a new kind of consciousness—a recognition of the interdependence of everyone on the planet.  A new (and this time, nonviolent) revolution is necessary—one in which our actions reflect a realization that our well-being depends  on the well-being of everyone else on the planet and of the planet itself.  

We’ve designed the following material as a possible guide for individual families or for public celebrations that share the values we hold.

A very different analysis of the Greek financial crisis

Syriza:  Plunder, Pillage and Prostration
James Petras
Introduction

Greece has been in the headlines of the world’s financial press for the past five months, as a newly elected leftist party, ‘Syriza’, which ostensibly opposes so-called ‘austerity measures’, faces off against the “Troika” (International Monetary Fund, the European Commission and European Central Bank). Early on, the Syriza leadership, headed by Alexis Tsipras, adopted several strategic positions with fatal consequences – in terms of implementing their electoral promises to raise living standards, end vassalage to the ‘Troika’ and pursue an independent foreign policy. I will proceed by outlining the initial systemic failures of Syriza and the subsequent concessions further eroding Greek living standards. Winning Elections and Surrendering Power

The North American and European Left celebrated Syriza’s election victory as a break with neo-liberal austerity programs and the launch of a radical alternative, which would implement popular initiatives for basic social changes, including measures generating employment, restoring pensions, reversing privatizations, reordering government priorities and favoring payments to employees over foreign banks.  The “evidence” for the radical reform agenda was contained in the ‘Thessaloniki Manifesto’ which Syriza promised to be the program guiding their newly elected officials. However, prior to, and immediately after being elected, Syriza leaders adopted three basic decisions precluding any basic changes: Indeed, these decisions set it on a reactionary course.