The following article refers to the attempts by J Street to distort the realities of life in Israel
A host of progressive organizations use their Jewishness
as cover or sanction for their campaigns against Israel. J Street, which calls
itself “pro-Israel” and “pro-peace,” is perhaps the best known among them.
There’s no better example of how this works than J Street’s recent launch of a
program to compete with Birthright Israel, the 20-year-old organization that’s
provided free trips to Israel for more than 600,000 young Jews around the
world.
According to J Street, “the omission and
erasure of Palestinian perspectives and narratives on these [Birthright] trips
creates a political environment that allows home demolitions, settlement
expansion, and other destructive policies of occupation to continue
unchallenged.” Instead, the group says, “organized educational trips for young
American Jews must present a robust, nuanced and honest view of the current
realities on the ground in Israel and the Palestinian Territory.”
The first such J Street trip, labeled the “Let
Our People Know” tour, just concluded. Here, according to a miserable piece by the New York Times’s David Halbfinger, is the “nuanced” and
“honest” take that was offered to the 28 American college students involved:
In Har Gilo, they received a harsh history
lesson from a veteran opponent of the occupation. Then they toured an
impoverished, water-starved Palestinian village that Israeli settlers want to
demolish, and visited the city of Hebron, where repeated outbreaks of violence
have turned an entire Palestinian business district into a ghost town.
Not a word, either from the “opponent of
occupation” or from Halbfinger on the murderous Palestinian anti-Semitic
violence that necessitates Israel’s policing of such places in to begin with.
Similarly, no mention of the kleptocratic Palestinian leadership that’s
consigned generations of Palestinians to certain ruin. Finally, no mention of
the fact that the Palestinians have, again and again—and again—refused to make
peace with Israel when it was offered.
Here’s some more nuance, J Street style:
The ride to Har Gilo, just south of Jerusalem,
took the bus through an Israeli checkpoint. Hagit Ofran, a leader of Peace Now,
addressed the group over a microphone and described how soldiers decided which
motorists to stop: “To look suspicious,” she said, “you need to look Arab.”
You know what might go a long way toward
curbing suspicions? Putting an end to attacks on Jews, like the one that happened last November—in Har Gilo—when a terrorist stabbed Aharon Heller in his
body and face. Again, no mention by Halbfinger of that or similar attacks.
Finally, Halbfinger relays how students on the
trip were turned off by Israel and Zionism: “By dinnertime, two participants
said they were reconsidering their belief in a Jewish state.” He quotes
one: “I came in here a very ardent Zionist . . . You never know when a
Holocaust might happen again. Yet, coming here, I’m starting to doubt whether a
two-state solution is possible—and whether Zionism is even worth pursuing
anymore.”
This is, of course, the goal of the entire
undertaking. It’s not about painting a nuanced picture of the conflict or
moving toward peace. It’s about Jews showing other Jews what a terrible and
misguided place Israel has become. Increasingly, that’s J Street’s mission.
Despite its denials, the group has supported the boycotting of Israel on college
campuses and targeted pro-Israel activists. Now, it’s packaging the supposed
evils of the Jewish state for students to see up close.
The good news is that J Street has taken only
28 kids on a single trip. Put that against Birthright’s estimated 650,000. It
will take a lot of David Halbfingers to make up the difference.
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