I grew up in a small town in Massachusetts where my parents headed our local synagogue, Hadassah and the United Jewish Appeal. My first trip abroad after university, in 1962, included a week-long visit to Israel, where I was awed by its accomplishments, as well as by its vulnerability. After the Six-Day War in 1967, I basked in the courage and military prowess of my fellow Jews. The eloquence of foreign minister Abba Eban, defending his beleaguered country at the United Nations, still fills me with pride. In the years since, I’ve been a contributor and fundraiser for the UJA-Federation of New York, a governor of the American Jewish Committee, which is dedicated to fighting anti-Semitism, and a founding director of the Museum of Jewish Heritage-A Living Memorial to the Holocaust. I’ve made five additional visits to Israel since 1962, the last this summer as part of a humanitarian aid trip to East Jerusalem and the West Bank. As a Jew who has been an ardent supporter of Israel since its independence, it pains me to record what I saw there. But it is my love for Israel and for the Jewish people that drives me to speak out at […]
Tuesday, August 16th, 2011
Apartheid on Steroids
Stephan: This is more polemic than my usual choices for SR, but the immediacy of Stephen Robert's imagery and the clarity of his reasoning trumps that consideration. This is one of the best pieces I have read on the reality of the Israeli-Palestinian situation.
To what Robert says I would add this: The Jews, a people much of whose history has taken place in the ghettoes in which they were forced to live, have done to the Palestinians exactly what was done to them.