During the Bush Administration years, Chabad of Greenwich,
where I attend Shabbat services, had a speaker from the Israeli Embassy at our
Kiddush lunch. His title was something to the effect of “Outreach to
Evangelicals.”
I listened with attentiveness and interest to his speech
about efforts to garner increase support from Protestant Evangelical
mega-church leaders and their flocks. Afterward I raised my hand and asked the
question that had started to bother me as he spoke: “Why are we allying
ourselves with people who only want there to be an Israel so that the Rapture
can happen, and then if we don’t accept Jesus as our personal Saviour we take
the down escalator to the hot and fiery place?”
He shrugged and responded “We don’t believe the Rapture will
happen and Israel needs support now.”
While I understand Israeli pragmatism, the response bothered
me then, and as I watched the recent GOP debate, I couldn’t help thinking how
this full-throated embrace of right wing evangelicalism has been incredibly
short-sighted on Israel’s part, serving to alienate a wide swathe of American
Jews.
During the debate, several candidates made statements that
were contrary to Jewish law on abortion, in attempts to pander to evangelicals.
Scott Walker said that there should be no exception to save the life of the
mother, claiming it is a “false choice.”
"I believe that that is an unborn child that's in need
of protection out there, and I've said many a time that that unborn child can
be protected, and there are many other alternatives that can also protect the
life of that mother. That's been consistently proven," Walker claimed,
despite the fact that back in 2012, in response to another GOP politician
making such claims, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists
stated: “Despite all of our medical advances, more than 600 women die each year
from pregnancy and childbirth-related reasons right here in the US. In fact,
many more women would die each year if they did not have access to abortion to
protect their health or to save their lives. These inaccurate comments are yet
another reason why (The College) message to politicians is unequivocal: Get out
of our exam rooms.”
Mike Huckabee, Israel’s Evangelical BFF who in July claimed
that by negotiating a nuclear deal with Iran, President Obama would “take the
Israelis and march them to the door of the oven” went even further. “I think
the next president ought to invoke the fifth and 14th amendments to the
Constitution. Now that we clearly know that that baby inside the mother's womb
is a person at the moment of conception."
Interesting, because under Jewish Law, the unborn fetus is not considered a person until it has been born. In fact, until
forty days after conception, the fertilized egg is considered as “as water.”
Yet this man, whom the Israelis court and view as a friend, went so far as to
claim,"It's time that we recognize the Supreme Court is not the Supreme
Being.”
Perhaps Governor Huckabee – and the rest of these pandering
candidates - should read George
Washington’s Letter to the Jews of Newport to remind themselves the precepts of religious freedom upon which our nation was founded.
As if this weren’t enough to turn off a thinking, literate,
American Jew, there was the recent “inspirational Christian romance” from Kate
Breslin, For Such A Time, in which a concentration camp inmate falls in love
with the SS Officer commandant, billed as a retelling of the Story of Esther
with a magic New Testament.
I. Just. Can’t. Even….
My dear mishpoche in Israel, who send emails telling me how I
should vote…(not to mention the disgustingly racist ones that if one substituted "Jew" for "Muslim" read as if Goebbels had written them, which I've learned to delete without
reading) this is why I ignore your advisements.
You’ve chosen to ally yourself with forces in our country that you wouldn’t dream
of electing in your own.
What’s more, we’re then subjected to insulting pieces
calling us “cowards” for supporting Israel without blind obedience, like this recent
one: “Liberal Jews are afraid to oppose the Iran Deal” by Vic Rosenthal posted on the Jewish Press. The Jewish Press was formerly edited by the late Meir Kahane.
While insulting the vast majority of American
Jews, and complaining what a shanda is it that the AIPAC meeting supporting the Iran deal has to be held in an Evangelical church instead of a synagogue, Rosenthal
conveniently neglects to mention the long list of Israeli military and intelligence officers who support the deal.
He isn't the first American Jew to make such insulting and patronizing remarks. Years ago, I spoke to a retired men's club at a local conservative synagogue. I was told, as a member of the press who writes opinion columns, that I should keep any criticisms of Israel "in house."
Apparently being a Jew isn't compatible with my First Amendment rights. Yet these same gentlemen were asking why moderate Muslims weren't speaking out against extremists. Perhaps moderate Muslims were getting the same message I was?
I was also berated loudly by a man at shul during the period of saying kaddish for my father because I said I wasn't going to the Stand with Israel Now rally. I explained that I felt conflicted about the bombing of Gaza, something that caused this man to go red in the face and start shouting at me.Israeli soldiers in the IDF who fought in Protective Edge apparently have the right to feel conflicted and express themselves about it, but I, as an American Jew, do not.
If Israel is losing support amongst American Jews, it is their own government's policies they should blame, not American Jewish cowardice.
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteCould you expand on this and send it to the New Yorker?
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeletehi think you have the right to speak your own mind ,whether I agree with you or not .Personly think that you have the same low level of politicians in the states as we have in Israel Baruch
ReplyDeleteI totally agree that we have the same low level of politicians in the States. Watching the Republican debate would have been comedic if it hadn't actually been our political process for the highest office in the land, which made it deeply, DEEPLY depressing. If this is my Uncle Baruch, then the problem is more Jews in the United States who are trying to stifle free speech. Tami was staying with me when I got an email from ANOTHER JEW calling me anti-Semitic (!!!!) after expressing a measured opinion about Israeli policy in a column, one that she said many Israelis also held. THAT is the problem I'm speaking of here. In Israel, you are allowed to have many opinions. In the Diaspora, we are expected to support everything Israel does, right or wrong, or else we are considered Bad Jews or not Jewish at all, or called "cowards" or "anti-Semitic". And that is just WRONG.
Delete