The time has arrived for liberal American Jews who support Israel to ask themselves whether there should be some limitations or red lines for organizations seeking to be part of what they describe as the “Jewish tent.” Until now, many seem to be convinced that it is in the Jewish interest for all organizations to be brought into the Jewish fold irrespective of how much they malign the Jewish state.
The most prominent example is J Street, which is publicly committed to lobbying the US government to force Israel to take actions contrary to the will not only of the democratically elected government, but the vast majority of the people.
Many consider that tolerating such a group within the Jewish mainstream
transforms the concept of a Jewish tent into a farce.
Emboldened by the reluctance and in some cases cowardice of
establishment Jewish leaders to confront it, J Street has now advanced
beyond this.
Deliberately designed to coincide with the date of President Barack
Obama’s meeting with Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, The New York
Times published a full-page article challenging US charitable
contributions which directly or indirectly assist enterprises in Jewish
settlements.
The article selectively focused on fringe extremist elements and
implicitly linked them with the broader settlement movement, questioning
the validity of tax deductible status for donations which may benefit
such areas. Not surprisingly, as Gerald Steinberg pointed out in a
recent Jerusalem Post article, the Times skimmed over the many radical
left organizations soliciting tax exempt funds to undermine and demonize
the Israeli government.
J Street capitalized on this article and bombarded its members and
supporters with an e-mail titled “Investigate the Settlement Charities:
Take Action Now,” which was followed by utterly misleading themes
including: “Disgraced Political Fund-raiser Jack Abramoff; Settlements
in the West Bank; US-designated Jewish Terrorist Groups.”
J Street has thus exploited an unbalanced and biased article and further
distorted it by focusing out of context on the reference by The New
York Times to the extremist Kahane Hai fringe group and bracketing it
with the settler movement. Although Kahane Hai does not even exist today
and at its peak never comprised of more than a handful of followers, to
package its message J Street emphasizes that Kahane Hai “was designated
a terrorist organization by the United States in 1994,” to convey the
false message that charitable contributions to any activity or welfare
over the Green Line is akin to supporting terrorism.
To further delegitimize the settler movement, the J Street e-mail
disingenuously highlighted the fact that disgraced fund-raiser Jack
Abramoff had supported a charity over the Green Line.
However, J STREET truly crossed the red line by calling on its
supporters to launch a concerted campaign to bombard the US Treasury,
which it describes as “the federal agency responsible for enforcing the
law when it comes to terrorist financing and tax evasion,” with e-mails
demanding an investigation to determine whether charitable organizations
which provided funding to activities beyond the Green Line “have broken
the law.”
It is outrageous for J Street to imply that donations, including those
intended to assist educational institutes, kindergartens, medical
facilities or welfare, represent “terrorist financing” or “tax evasion”
because some of the funds raised may also benefit residents of Jewish
settlements. And in today’s toxic environment, it is reprehensible for a
Jewish organization – claiming to be mainstream – to be effectively
calling for criminal sanctions against organizations which support
causes in Israel which are contrary to its political worldview.
While criminal sanctions are unlikely to result, J Street is shamelessly
lobbying the government to rule that all philanthropic donations to
charitable organizations funding projects beyond the Green Line not only
be denied tax deductibility, but be deemed to contravene US law. In the
unlikely event that such action succeeded, it would economically
devastate countless vital projects and institutions beyond the 1949
armistice lines.
Surely self-respecting mainstream Jewish organizations appreciate the
potentially disastrous consequences should J Street succeed in its
latest campaign.
This organization is no longer limiting its activities to undermining
the Israeli government. Its activities now extend to seeking to deny
vital assistance to needy Israelis and legitimate apolitical social
welfare projects that happen to be located over the Green Line, the bulk
of which would impact on Jerusalem and the uncontested major settlement
blocs.
Will American Jewish organizational leaders continue to remain silent in
the face of such outrageous actions, not merely directed against the
Jewish state and its citizens, but also toward USbased charitable
organizations contributing to the legitimate needs of Israelis? Perhaps
if Israeli government and opposition leaders, both of whom who are
unquestionably opposed to such harmful activity, were to raise their
voices in a bipartisan manner and condemn such actions which could
inflict enormous damage to the Jewish state, it would encourage American
Jewish leaders to endeavor to marginalize such groups from the Jewish
mainstream.
ileibler@netvision.net.il