by Becca Wertman
The intensity of the attacks against this proven program suggests that these groups actually lack a market for their politically charged campaign or support for their own trips.
The war on Birthright continues. IfNotNow  protested outside of Birthright’s New York City headquarters on April  5, demanding that Birthright make institutional changes to  its programming.
These events follow weeks of threats from IfNotNow, which is bankrolled by the Rockefeller Brothers Fund and  dozens of news articles from activists and activist-journalists over  the past few months detailing IfNotNow participants who were removed  from their Birthright trips for “coordinated plans to ruin the experience for others in order to promote a specific agenda.”  All of these actions come after a series of well-publicized stunts (or  “walk-offs”) attacking Birthright and claiming that the organization had  failed to focus on the Palestinian narrative of the occupation.
For the uninitiated, Birthright Israel  offers free 10-day trips to the Jewish state for young Jewish adults,  dedicated to enabling them to explore their Jewish identity and build a  connection to Israel.
Why are these groups going after Birthright? What’s wrong with educating young Jews about their heritage and homeland?
Birthright Israel is a remarkable program;  as a participant and staff member of four trips, I should know. The  program has managed to engage a wide spectrum of Jewish youth –  attracting everyone from the secular and unaffiliated to religious, from  straight to LGBTQ, from elite athletes to those with physical  handicaps. Birthright has engaged more than 650,000 young Jewish adults  from 67 countries, including places like Poland and Uganda.
Yet some groups are threatened by its  success – and not because they run competing programs. Rather, a  positive connection to Judaism and the Jewish state imperils their  narrow-minded politics. They therefore seek to hijack Birthright in  order to advance their own agendas – namely, to exploit Diaspora Jewry  to fight Israeli policy in the West Bank.
There are various other groups behind the current “anti-Birthright” campaign, including the Israeli group Breaking the Silence, which enjoys the largesse of a variety of European governments; and the New Israel Fund, which both supports organizations involved in the campaign and whose official published an opinion piece targeting Birthright.
And while anti-Birthright activists might  claim to be part of a grassroots effort, the hundreds of thousands of  taxpayer funds say otherwise. For instance, late last year, the  Jerusalem-based research institute NGO Monitor (of  which I am the managing editor) revealed that in 2018, the Dutch  government provided $218,000 to Breaking the Silence, including for  its efforts “to encourage diaspora Jewish communities to voice their  opposition to the occupation.” During the grant period, the group was a  key partner in the war on Birthright – taking those participants who had  “walked off” on politically one-sided tours of the West Bank.
It is deeply problematic that  groups like Breaking the Silence and IfNotNow are trying to make  Birthright about politics, something it is not. Even though the  Israeli-Palestinian conflict is by definition not the focus of the trip,  it not only undoubtedly comes up in a busload of 40 Americans (or  Canadians, Europeans, etc.) combined with eight Israeli soldiers. It is  also part of the educational curriculum – something that critics simply decide to leave out of their anti-Israel rhetoric.
But that is apparently not enough for those  who are against the positivity that permeates the trip. Participants  are encouraged to learn about the issues firsthand for themselves;  Birthright emphasizes that the conflict is complex; and at the end of  the day, the trip merely serves as a basic introduction to inspire a  deeper experience of Judaism and Israel.
Anti-Birthright activists are interested in  trashing the program’s content. They fundamentally want to alter the  core of Birthright as an apolitical program, bringing it into the realm  of the conflict and making sure it echoes their preferred political  positions.
In the meantime, Birthright should not bow  down to the pressure. It is Birthright’s prerogative to determine its  own educational curriculum – one that has a proven history of success.  The fact that a handful of participants are walking off or disrupting  trips – with the help of funds from RBF, NIF and European governments –  is miniscule in comparison.
IfNotNow and the others might not like  Birthright’s agenda, so a logical solution would be for activists to put  their money where their mouths are and develop their own alternative  trips to Israel. However, the intensity of the attacks against  Birthright suggests that these groups actually lack a market for  their politically charged campaign. Without the ability to generate  grassroots support of their own, they appear to be threatened  by Birthright’s progress and seek to destroy it.
For those considering going on a Birthright  Israel trip, the challenge at hand is to go with the understanding of  what it is and what it is not – a free 10-day trip funded by generous  philanthropists, the Israeli government and the Jewish Agency.
No one is trying to hide anything except  those deceiving you with well-funded divisive political campaigns  cloaked in “progressive” language.
Becca Wertman
Source: https://www.israelhayom.com/opinions/the-well-financed-war-on-birthright-israel/
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