by Amanda Borschel-Dan
A month into the tour, the goal — to have these Jewish veterans voice their controversial opinions on Israel at Hillel-sponsored programs — is achieving mixed results.
The first black American  president marched across the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Alabama, on  Sunday, 50 years after “Bloody Sunday,” one of the darkest periods of  wanton police violence and widespread denial of basic rights for blacks  in America’s Deep South. And this weekend, as well as at the march five  decades ago, there were a significant number of Jews in the ranks as  well. 
During  the height of the South’s civil rights struggle, Jews were some 50  percent of solidarity volunteers from the North. In June 1964  during the “Freedom Summer” campaign to register black voters, many put  their lives on hold and traveled en masse to Mississippi and  Alabama. They came to show unity with the black community, and faced  a clash of cultures that saw two young New York Jews, Andrew Goodman and  Michael Schwerner, slaughtered alongside black activist James Chaney by  the KKK. 
“As much as any single factor, it was the  nationwide attention given the discovery of their corpses that  accelerated passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965,” according to one scholar.
While countless Jewish lawyers worked  feverishly around the clock, other Jewish Northerners, including Dorothy  Zellner and Larry Rubin, volunteered with grassroots organizations such  as the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC).
Zellner began her civil rights activism in  1960 and served in a variety of capacities with SNCC: fundraising,  screening Freedom Summer volunteers, and drafting the organization’s  public message as co-editor of The Student Voice. Rubin was a field  secretary for SNCC from 1961 to 1965, and went on to work as an activist  in labor issues.
President  Barack Obama, fourth from left, walks holding hands with Amelia Boynton  Robinson, who was beaten during ‘Bloody Sunday,’ as they and the first  family and others including Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga, left of Obama, walk  across the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Ala,. for the 50th anniversary  of the landmark event of the civil rights movement, Saturday, March 7,  2015. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)
Today, in a Jewish community in which civil  rights is still a central Jewish value, one would expect Zellner and  Rubin to be counted among the Freedom Summer “heroes.” And in many  circles they are.
However, because of their stances on the  Israeli-Palestinian conflict — including openly supporting the Boycott,  Divest and Sanctions (BDS) movement — they are ostracized, banned  from speaking at some Jewish institutions and synagogues as well as most  Hillel houses on campuses through the international organization’s  2010 standards for partnership guidelines.
So, in the spirit of civil disobedience and  freedom of speech, Zellner, Rubin and other former comrades at arms are  currently on a national speaking tour called “From Mississippi to  Jerusalem: In Conversation with Jewish Civil Rights Veterans,” organized  by a counter-Hillel movement called “Open Hillel.”
A month into the tour, the goal — to  have these Jewish veterans voice their controversial opinions on  Israel at Hillel-sponsored programs — is achieving mixed results.
Hillel International chief administrative  officer David Eden is of the opinion that the use of the veterans’ civil  rights work to promote a BDS platform “drives a wedge within the Jewish  community.”
“This highly cynical and deceptive program is  meant to co-opt an historic American civil rights achievement in order  to create a series of propaganda events that attack Israel and promote  BDS. Therefore, this tour dishonors that historic American achievement,”  Eden told The Times of Israel.
He’s not alone in his condemnation.
Reform Judaism was on the forefront of the  civil rights movement in the 1960s. The head of the movement, Rabbi Rick  Jacobs, told The Times of Israel this week, “Comparing the fight for  civil rights in America to the struggle between Israel and the  Palestinians simply doesn’t work.
“The Israeli-Palestinian issue is a  complicated geopolitical maze that has many components to it; it needs  its own template and can’t be reduced to a simple matter of right and  wrong, as the struggle for civil rights in the US so clearly was,” said  Jacobs.
A participant at this weekend’s Bloody Sunday  march re-enactment, Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism head Rabbi  Jonah Pesner, said that as in the past, his delegation this week showed  solidarity with the black community as Jews. They marched with black  congregations, many of which are pro-Israel, said Pesner, to “reaffirm  the civil rights movement of the past and keep the struggle moving  forward.”
To make an equivalency between the civil  rights struggle in the Deep South and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict  is, he said, a “misunderstanding of history.”
“I think it’s really clear that the State of  Israel, considering the neighborhood it’s in, it’s a real ironic misuse  or misunderstanding of history to associate the violation of civil  rights with the State of Israel,” Pesner told The Times of Israel.
“Israel in many ways treats the Arab and  Palestinian populations with more decency and more civil rights than the  vast major of the neighborhood. To do some kind of blanket condemnation  is un-nuanced and misunderstands history,” he said.
But despite their condemnations, perhaps the  fact that Rabbis Jacobs and Pesner are talking about Open Hillel and the  veterans’ BDS stances at all is, in a way, a victory for the Open  Hillel movement.
What is Open Hillel?
Open Hillel began in November 2012 when a group of Ivy League students decided to push back against the Hillel partnership guidelines and  began “working to promote inclusion and open discourse on  Israel-Palestine within campus Jewish communities.” Rejecting the  standards, the students launched a campaign to raise awareness of the  need for a plurality of opinions, including petitions, a website, and  increasingly savvy press releases.
By December 2013, the Swarthmore Hillel declared itself an “Open Hillel”; the Vassar Jewish Union followed suit in February 2014, and in April 2014, the Wesleyan Jewish Community.  The movement had a national convention in October at Harvard where  Zellner and other civil rights veterans spoke at an event that became  the impetus of the current multi-campus tour.
Caroline Morganti, a junior at MIT who serves as the Open Hillel Communications Coordinator, in Haifa, Israel. (courtesy)
One of the tour organizers, Caroline Morganti, is a junior at MIT who serves as the Open Hillel communications coordinator.
“I think that we Jews have this nostalgia of looking to Jewish involvement in the civil rights movement as proof that we must stand for equality and social justice, when in reality, I think today there is a serious lack of civil rights among the Palestinian population in the West Bank,” Morganti told The Times of Israel.
‘I think that we Jews have this nostalgia of looking to Jewish involvement the civil rights movement as proof that we must stand for equality and social justice’
“I think it’s important that we remember what  our values are and constantly examine whether our values match our  actions, and I wanted this event to be an opportunity to do that,  regardless of the conclusions people came to,” said Morganti.
Zellner, who at 77 is the oldest of the tour’s  speakers, said she followed the development of Open Hillel and  applauded the students’ grassroots initiative.
“The Open Hillels came as a stunning event in  the Jewish community. I’m far far far from being a student; I just don’t  like this policy of being told who you can have come speak and not,”  she said.
“The issue is whether if you are in the United  States and a Jewish student and belong to Hillel, the social heart of  Jewish student life, whether you can hear speakers that represent these  points of view,” she told The Times of Israel. “Everybody talks about  freedom of speech all the time, yet a venerable institution won’t allow  that.”
Reform head Jacobs agreed that there is room for differing opinions.
“I understand the difficult dilemma faced by  Hillel International and yes, we have to have guidelines but we also  need to find ways for our college students to engage in serious  discussions with those who hold different political views than Hillel’s  official positions,” Jacobs said.
Zellner became active in the  Israeli-Palestinian conflict in 2002 after hearing a talk by Israeli  peacenik Uri Avnery. Since then she’s traveled to Israel and the  Palestinian Authority a dozen times and volunteered there at  organizations such as Physicians for Human Rights.
‘There are a lot of echoes of what I went through in the South’
“To me there are a lot of echoes of what I  went through in the South,” said Zellner. “A lot of the [Israeli] Jews  are living in a bubble; they don’t care, don’t want to know.”
Fellow Freedom Summer veteran Larry Rubin was  recently in Israel. He told The Times of Israel that while there are  many differences, and the Israeli-Palestinian situation is complex,  “seeing streets in Israel-controlled territory where certain people are  not allowed to walk and places barred to certain people certainly  brought back experiences that I had in Mississippi fighting segregation  in the early 1960s.
“I have seen firsthand that Israeli leaders  often attempt to dehumanize a portion of the Israeli population and  people living in areas A, B, and C,” said Rubin.
Rubin and Zellner’s impressions of Israel are  hardly universal, even among civil rights activists. Democratic whip in  the Pennsylvania state Senate Anthony Hardy Williams, whose father Hardy  Williams worked with Martin Luther King Jr. to break the color barrier  at Penn State, saw a different side of Israel on a recent visit.
Israel is ‘the only nation in history to bring tens of thousands of Africans (Ethiopian Jews) out of Africa to be citizens, not slaves’
“We who have visited Israel know the truth  firsthand. The country isn’t perfect (whose is?), but it strives for  peaceful coexistence with its neighbors. Israel is the Middle East’s  lone functioning democracy and by leaps and bounds the region’s leader  in respecting human and civil rights,” he wrote in the New York Post.
“Israel welcomes Arabs as citizens  contributing to its democracy and legislative process, its military  institutions,and universities, sitting in its parliament and in high  judicial posts. It’s also the only nation in history to bring tens of  thousands of Africans (Ethiopian Jews) out of Africa to be citizens, not  slaves,” wrote Williams.
BDS as a continuation of nonviolent civil rights activism
When asked what he thought was the legacy of  the civil rights activists, the Reform movement’s Jacobs said, “The  Jewish civil rights activists demonstrated yet again that our Jewish  tradition is serious when it comes to matters of justice. Before the  Jewish civil rights movement, Jews were involved in fighting for social  justice and have not stopped since.”
Zellner agreed and said at a recent Harvard interfaith panel co-hosted  by the campus Hillel (more on that later), “As a Jew, I feel a Jewish  obligation to stand up for the oppressed. I view Palestinians as being  the oppressed.”
| A Palestinian activist places a sign to boycott Israeli products at a supermarket in Bethlehem, West Bank, February 11, 2015 (photo credit: AP/Mahmoud Illean) | 
Zellner supports the BDS movement, which  while labeled by mainstream Judaism as a way to delegitimize the State  of Israel, is for her a continuation of nonviolent civil rights  activism, harking back to the picket lines and store boycotts that aided  in the fight in the Deep South.
“We’re asking the world to make it  uncomfortable for business to go on as usual… In the civil rights  movement, we used boycotts all the time. If nobody bought at your store,  you ended up leaving,” she said.
The BDS movement “has been reduced by the  right-wing into, ‘Oh, you are calling for Israel’s destruction.’ Then I  have to defend myself. ‘No I don’t want the destruction of Israel, I’m  talking about Israel’s policy.’ BDS is a grassroots movement that is  catching on around the world to change Israel’s policy,” said Zellner.
‘If you take seriously your Jewish heritage you do have to say something — you shall not stand idly by! What we see is wrong, so we’re going to stand up and speak until we’re hoarse’
“If you take seriously your Jewish heritage  you do have to say something — you shall not stand idly by! What we see  is wrong, so we’re going to stand up and speak until we’re hoarse,” said  Zellner.
The Open Hillel tour, she emphasized, is not  the movement’s declaration that it supports BDS; rather, it’s a way to  bring a variety of opinion to campus.
But just whose opinion, even in the issue of BDS, may be the question.
According to a recent Forbes oped, “The BDS  movement inflames rather than enlightens global dialogue around the  peace process. Israel invests heavily in Palestine; the rest of the  world doesn’t bother.”
And even other Jewish supporters of BDS have  alluded to the straw man in the room — the future of  Israel. Controversial author Norman Finkelstein discussed in a 2012  interview what he called “the cult” of BDS.
“We have to be honest, and I loathe the  disingenuousness: They don’t want Israel… You know and I know what’s the  result [of the success of BDS]: There’s no Israel,” said Finkelstein.
A BDS supporter on a Harvard Hillel panel
Confusingly, Zellner did join a February 25  interfaith panel that was co-sponsored by Hillel at Harvard. The event,  called “Selma to Ferguson: Religious Tradition as Solidarity,” was  outside of the Open Hillel Freedom Summer speaking tour.
Rabbi Jonah Steinberg, executive director at  the Harvard Hillel, told The Times of Israel that although he had  initially not wanted to participate in the panel, he decided to co-host  the event to ensure it included a place for a pro-Israel Jewish speaker.  So in addition to Zellner’s pro-BDS stance, the 50 students who  attended also heard from Yavilah McCoy, an African-American Orthodox  Jewish teacher and advocate for Jews of Color in the United States.
Rabbi  Abraham Joshua Heschel (second from right), marches at Selma with Rev.  Martin Luther King, Jr., Ralph Bunche, 
Rep. John Lewis, Rev. Fred Shuttlesworth and Rev. C.T. Vivian. (Courtesy of Susannah Heschel)
Rep. John Lewis, Rev. Fred Shuttlesworth and Rev. C.T. Vivian. (Courtesy of Susannah Heschel)
“Harvard Hillel is committed to constructive  engagement with Israel. BDS urges disconnection and alienation where  Israel is concerned… The tactics of BDS undermine Israelis seeking  solutions and increase fearfulness and reactivity in Israel; BDS tactics  do not lead to cooperation and hope,” Steinberg told The Times of  Israel.
“At the same time, we must not play ‘duck and  cover,’ we must have the courage to step up and debate issues and to  make sure our perspectives are widely heard and understood. Like Israel  itself, we must pursue dialogue across serious disagreements,” he said.
Hillel houses have rejected offers of  co-sponsorship or event hosting at campuses where the regular speaking  tour has held or is scheduled to hold events. Other campus Hillel  directors applaud both the Harvard decision and those of other campuses.
‘We must have the courage to step up and debate issues and to make sure our perspectives are widely heard and understood’
So what made the Harvard event different? That  it was not overtly centered on Israel or BDS, said Andy Gitelson,  the executive director of the Oregon Hillel Foundation.
“Our Israel policy does not prohibit someone  from making a statement that supports BDS or criticizes Israel — what it  says is that we will not host an event or group whose sole purpose is  to support BDS or speak out against Israel… The assertion that Hillel is  somehow ‘closed’ because we choose not to provide a pulpit for those  whose sole purpose is to deny Israel’s right to exist or who think  boycotting Israel is the path to a peaceful region is completely false,”  said Gitelson.
But for Hillel high-up Eden, the speaking tour itself is merely a tactic to undermine Hillel’s overarching mission.
“This tour was pre-announced by the so-called  ‘Open Hillel’ activist group to do only one thing: ‘violate’ our  organization’s guidelines. Therefore, the intent was not educational but  purely for political propaganda purposes… It is unfortunate that these  Jewish civil rights veterans, who like thousands of other Jews worked to  achieve racial equality in our country, have agreed to be manipulated  by this small band of student activists. Given its malicious intent to  undermine Hillel’s overarching mission this program is beyond the pale,”  Eden told The Times of Israel.
The Freedom Summer tour comes to the Open Hillels
The mid-Atlantic leg of the speaking tour will commence March 22 and reach the Open Hillel at Swarthmore on March 24.
Swarthmore Jewish students have spent the past  year since famously rejecting Hillel International’s standards of  practice in serious thought about how to approach their “openness.”
Swarthmore Hillel President Sarah  Revesz said, “Being open means creating a space where we can engage with  different viewpoints — a space built on respect and a genuine desire to  learn from others and to learn about ourselves.”
The  board at the Hillel chapter of Swarthmore College in Pennsylvania is  openly rejecting
guidelines on Israel debate adopted by the international umbrella group.
(photo credit: Wikicommons/via JTA)
guidelines on Israel debate adopted by the international umbrella group.
(photo credit: Wikicommons/via JTA)
The social justice series, which includes the  civil rights veterans’ event, is “as much about discussion as  presentation,” said Israel-Palestine programming committee head Joshua  Wolfsun. “We want students to critically engage and think about the  stories and views all of our speakers share. In no way will this event  be dedicated to solely one voice.”
It is the lack of plurality of opinion that  brought activist Zellner to the speaking tour. In her experience, the  conversations in Israel are much more broad than those of the Jews in  the United States.
‘People have become extremely hysterical. I’ve been called a kapo, which gives you an example of some of the level of discourse in this country’
“In the US there are tremendous difficulties  with talking about Israel and it has had a really horrible affect on  Jewish life. People have become extremely hysterical. I’ve been called a  kapo, which gives you an example of some of the level of discourse in  this country,” said Zellner.
Fellow activist Rubin agreed that Israelis are openly self-critical.
“I talked to a lot of Israelis who were not  afraid to say they feel the current government is exacerbating the  problems. In Mississippi in the 1960s white people were afraid to  criticize the segregation policies of the government of their state  because when people did, they would be ostracized,” Rubin said.
But you get the sense in speaking with Zellner  that she expects just a little bit more from American Jews, historic  champions of freedom of speech. “From Hillel’s point of view I wouldn’t  be able to come in and discuss baking cookies,” she said.
“A blind loyalty to Israel is not going to  help Israel. These students are the people who are going to be mapping  the human genome, looking at the stars, Pulitzer prize winners, but  they’re not allowed to hear this?” Zellner said.
Amanda Borschel-Dan is The Times of Israel's Jewish World editor.
Source: http://www.timesofisrael.com/jewish-civil-rights-activists-use-legacy-to-promote-bds/
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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