by Shmully Hecht
On Oct 24, I protested a  visit to Yale University by noted journalist, Thomas Friedman. After  his lecture, I stood in the corner of the Whitney Humanities Center and  held a sign that asked the question: "With friends like Chomsky, Soros,  Mearsheimer and Thomas Friedman, does Israel need enemies?"
A  video of the event now has over 12,000 views on YouTube and has been  written about and discussed in newspapers and on television worldwide. I  have received hundreds of emails about my silent action – both  encouraging and disparaging. Many wanted to know why I would include  Friedman, who claims to be a friend of the Jewish State, among others  whose hostility towards Israel is open and unapologetic.
A few  days ago, I ran into a former Yale professor and Harvard graduate who  was about my age during the turbulent 60s and who was particularly  enthusiastic about my latest effort, even calling it "revolutionary."  Aside from taking the remark as a deep compliment, that word also struck  me as one that inspired so-called radicals from that historic time to  action. More recently, Tea Party rallies as well as the Occupy Wall  Street movement have shown a renewed spirit of protest in our country.  But something is missing. I asked my learned friend where organizers and  activists like Mario Savio, Abbie Hoffman and Jerry Rubin are in these  modern movements. These men emerged from their protests as leaders and  cultural heroes, even though they sometimes actively plotted mayhem and  destruction.
“There was a draft,” my friend replied, explaining  the powerful sense of urgency among the nation's young men and women who  felt their lives were inevitably on the line. Young people today seem  more worried about the next iPhone release.
The fact is that what’s happening today is no less urgent, in this country and especially in the Middle East.
Iran  appears to be on the brink of finishing a nuclear bomb which could  leave death tolls on the scale of Auschwitz with the press of a button.  Thousands of rockets fall indiscriminately on Israel, to which any  response by the Israel Defense Forces is condemned globally. Egypt's  former president Hosni Mubarak was last seen publicly in a cage,  ex-Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi is dead and Syria's Government is  executing its own citizens, including woman and children. In Israel,  America's ally swapped a thousand prisoners - hundreds of which are  convicted murderers - for one soldier held in solitary confinement for  five years while having been denied access to visits by the Red Cross.
What  happens across the sea ultimately reaches our shores. Friends call me  from Columbia University, scared to walk out of their dorms as visible  Jews because of a malicious public campaign to equate Israel with the  system of Apartheid.  Students in the University of California system  are trying desperately to fend off a renewed campus anti-Semitism fueled  by Islamic radicals. A Yale Professor proudly took her students to meet  Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who calls for the annihilation  of the Jewish State. Even Occupy protests have been colored with  anti-Semitic statements reminiscent of early 20th century Germany. As I  look to Occupy rallies in major cities across the country, I see some of  our youth,  but I do not see the same intellectual debate that was seen  in college student movements of the past.
Friedman, meanwhile,  routinely lectures on the mythical emergence of true democracy in the  Middle East. He continues to blame Israel for the lack of progress as  defined under the terms of the Oslo accords. He seems to forget that the  unilateral moves of PA President Mahmoud Abbas at the UN effectively  and illegally canceled the agreements. He also seems to forget that  Israel's first obligation is to protect its own citizens. The Chomskys  and Mearsheimers are easier to deal with, because their hostility is  naked. Friedman comes to the table cloaked in the language of  moderation, neutrality and respectability."
Some critics told me that my behavior was inappropriate for a “sophisticated” campus like Yale. I could not disagree more. Friedman's current book is titled "That Used to Be Us: How America Fell Behind In the World It Invented and How We Can Come Back." I have no desire to follow in the more radical actions of Savio, Hoffman or Rubin, but I will always believe that the best way to "come back" to our truest selves, as Americans, is for people of all political views to reclaim the great tradition of protest, a tradition that has been best preserved on campuses such as this one.
Shmully Hecht is a rabbi and the co-founder of Eliezer, the Jewish Society at Yale University.
Source: http://www.jpost.com/Magazine/Opinion/Article.aspx?id=245827&prmusr=oByHA%2bHfQTBSHV2T8h2MFJWlNFennv629gsc0djppiLJgyg0%2bEMfprCZQ%2boocCKh
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1 comment:
This is the first time I've landed on your blog. This piece blew me away. Calm, reasoned thought supporting a strongly held view. No bombast or invectives, just the facts.
Thank you. Please keep it up.
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