Eric
Yoffie's criticism of the Protestant churches' letter to Congress is misplaced:
The price of 'interfaith dialogue' cannot be silenced by Christian leaders on
Israel’s human rights violations, evidence of which I saw firsthand in a recent
visit to the West Bank.
By Rabbi Brian Walt | Oct.31, 2012 | 5:54 PM | 7
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THIS STORY IS BY
Rabbi
Brian Walt
In his recent Haaretz op-ed, “Heading toward an
irreparable rift between U.S. Jews and Protestants,” my colleague, Rabbi
Eric Yoffie, sharply criticized the recent letter to Congress by
leaders of Protestant churchesthat called for U.S. military aid to
Israel to be contingent on Israeli compliance with American law. Nowhere in his
article, however, did Yoffie mention the central concern of the Christian
leaders’ letter: the overwhelming evidence of systematic human rights
violations by the Israeli military against Palestinians.
Over the past two weeks, I had the privilege of leading an interfaith
delegation including several leaders of the civil
rights movement, younger civil and human rights leaders, Christian clergy,
academics, and several Jews, on a two-week trip to the West Bank.
We were all shocked by the widespread human rights violations
that we saw with our own eyes and that we heard about from both Palestinians
and Israelis. Several black members of our group, including those who
participated actively in the civil rights movement, remarked that what they saw
on the West Bank was "frighteningly familiar" to their own
experience, a systemic pattern of discrimination that privileged one group (in
this case, Jews) and denigrated another (Palestinians).
Together we walked down Shuhadah Street in Hebron, a street restricted to Jews and foreigners where Hebron’s Palestinians are mostly not allowed to walk, even those Palestinians who own houses or stores on the street. This street was once the center of a bustling Palestinian city. Now the area is a ghost town with all the Palestinian stores shut down by the Israeli military.
Together we walked down Shuhadah Street in Hebron, a street restricted to Jews and foreigners where Hebron’s Palestinians are mostly not allowed to walk, even those Palestinians who own houses or stores on the street. This street was once the center of a bustling Palestinian city. Now the area is a ghost town with all the Palestinian stores shut down by the Israeli military.
We visited several villages on the West Bank whose land has
been expropriated by the Israeli government and where their nonviolent protests
against this injustice are met with rubber bullets and tear gas (we saw with
our own eyes many empty canisters of tear gas made in the U.S.). We witnessed a
demonstration in Nabi Saleh, watching soldiers in armored cars launch tear gas
and shoot rubber bullets against children who were throwing stones. In this
village, soldiers routinely enter homes in the middle of the night to arrest
children, who are handcuffed and blindfolded, and taken to interrogation
without the right to the presence of a parent or of consultation with a lawyer.
The shocking abuse of children that we heard about from several sources,
including Israeli lawyers, was particularly disturbing.
Our delegation also saw the rubble of Palestinian houses
demolished by the Israeli authorities and waited in long lines at check points
as Jewish motorists were waved through or passed unimpeded through special
settler checkpoints.
We met with a young Palestinian man who played the part of
Martin Luther King Jr. in a play about Dr. King’s life written by one of the
people on our trip. This young man (like over 140,000 other West Bank Palestinians)
has lost his residency rights as he went to Europe to study acting. Despite the
fact that his family has lived in Jerusalem for generations, he is now unable
to live in the city in which he was born. Yet I, or any other Jew, could become
a citizen of Israel overnight and live in Jerusalem while enjoying many
privileges available only to Jews.
Every day we were on the West Bank, we saw this pattern of
discrimination: a systemic privileging of one ethnic group over another. Every
day we heard about egregious human rights violations: Administrative detainees
held in prison for years without any right to due process (a Palestinian due to
talk to our group about prisoners was arrested two days before the presentation
and is still in prison), massive land confiscation, separate roads and grave
restrictions on movement.
As the Christian leaders’ letter indicated, all the violations
we witnessed are made possible by unconditional American aid, in violation of
American law. Rabbi Yoffie predicted that this statement may cause “an
irreparable rift between U.S. Jews and Protestants.” It may be more accurate to
say it may cause a rift between the American Jewish establishment and the
Christian leaders who have until now been cowed with the warning that the price
for “interfaith dialogue” is silence on Israel’s human rights violations.
But after these past several weeks, as I read the courageous
Christian leaders’ letter and stood side-by-side with my interfaith colleagues
on this remarkable delegation, I sense a new form of interfaith cooperation –
one based in our mutual sacred imperative to “seek peace and pursue it.”
Rabbi Brian Walt is the Palestinian/Israeli Nonviolence
Project Fellow of the Dorothy Cotton Institute. He was the executive director
of Rabbis for Human Rights-North America from 2003-2008.