see also:

http://snipurl.com/9lgq

The Bush Administration urged the members of the International Atomic
Energy Agency (IAEA) to approve an October 31 deadline on Iran for
compliance or face sanctions at the UN Security Council. Bush lost that
vote. Had the motion passed, that would have started the countdown to an
Israel-Iran war just days before the November 2nd elections.  Restrained
by western nations on the IAEA, neoconservatives in Washington and their
allies in Ariel Sharon's Likud government have had to forego the "October
surprise", an attack on Iranian nuclear installations on the eve of the
U.S. presidential election. Nevertheless, events already in motion
indicate that a pause before World War IV could last only weeks, if George
W. Bush gains a second term...

-----------

Date: Wed, 29 Sep 2004 22:24:14 -0400 (EDT)
From: Rabbi Michael Lerner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Violence/Non-Violence Debate in Palestine

Violence or Non-Violence Debate in Israel/Palestine
September 4, 2004

Greetings!

The recent formation of a non-violence campaign in Palestine, spurred by
the visit of the grandson of Mahatma Gandhi, has generated a fervent
debate in both the Israeli and Palestinian peace movement about the
relative efficacy of non-violence. While we at Tikkun come down firmly on
the side of non- violence, and cheer on the work of this latest Gandhi and
some of the Palesitnian leaders who are now seeking to follow that path,
like Sami Awad, in this communication we are first going to present an
article by Uri Avneri that shows some of the complications of the debate
going on today in Palestine. After Avneri's article, we will present some
criticisms of Avneri from our own position of principled non-violence. And
after that we present some troubling news that happened today, just before
the Jewish holiday of Sukkot, when members of the non-violent Christian
Peace Makers Team were allegedly attacked and beaten by Israeli settlers.
This comes immediately after the terrible reality of Yom Kippur on which
many Palestinians found themselves prevented from leaving their homes and
many more from leaving their villages which were surrounded by the Israeli
army during this offical "closure" as a "preventive measure against
terror." What a shandah--that our holidays should be observed at the
expense of this repression. And how terrible for Israelis also to be
living at a such a level of fear that otherwise decent people would
consider that kind of an outrageous measure necessary for self-defense.
Please read the rest of this email to get a sense of the debate and our
response to it.


Uri Avnery 4.9.04 How Are You, Non-Violence?

At the mass meeting with Arun Gandhi, the grandson of the Mahatma, in
Abu-Dis, I observed the faces of the participants. While Gandhi was
preaching non-violence, I imagined a debate between two young Palestinians
in the audience.

Yussuf: "He is right. The armed intifada has failed."

Hassan: "On the contrary. Without the actions of the martyrs, the world
would have forgotten us long ago."

Yussuf: "For half a year there were no suicide attacks in Israel, and look
what we have achieved!"

Hassan: "We have achieved nothing. On the contrary, the Israeli generals
boast that they have defeated us with their targeted assassinations,
incursions into our territories and all the other acts of oppression. And
all this time they have been enlarging the settlements, putting up new
'outposts' and continuing to build the racist wall."

Yussuf: "You forget that the International Court has declared the wall
illegal and the UN General Assembly has confirmed this with a huge
majority. All of Europe voted in our favor. We are winning in the arena of
world public opinion."

Hassan: "What is that worth, if in the meantime Sharon does what he wants,
goes on keeping Arafat in a cage and spits in the face of Abu-Ala, while
Abu-Ala is advocating non- violence?"

Yussuf: "Even the senior jurists in Israel itself warn Sharon that if he
goes on like this, the United Nations will end up imposing sanctions on
Israel."

Hassan: "But in the meantime, the opposite is happening. Because of the
lull in suicide attacks, the Israeli economy is reviving. Tourism to
Israel, that had stopped altogether because of our actions, is starting up
again. If the Israelis feel comfortable and are no longer afraid of
suicide bombers, why should they talk with us? Why should they give back
any territories? Why should they stop enlarging the settlements? They
don't give a damn."

Yussuf: "We have to win international public opinion. We can do this only
by non-violence. I admire the martyrs who are ready to die for our people.
I am proud that we have such heroes. But they don't get us anywhere. They
only provide Sharon with pretexts to oppress us even more."

Hassan: "As if Sharon needs pretexts! He wants to break us, and world
public opinion will not lift a finger for us. The treacherous Arab leaders
will not do anything for us, either. Only our heroes will save us."

Yussuf: "But Gandhi argues that non-violent methods will be more
successful. His grandfather proved this in India."

Hassan: "He doesn't know the Israelis. The Israeli army will open fire on
any non-violent Palestinian demonstration that reaches serious
proportions."

Yussuf: "Look at the brothers who scaled the wall. That is an example of
successful non-violent action, breaking the law of the occupier openly and
without fear!"

Hassan: Don't kid yourself. If Arun Gandhi and the Israelis hadn't been
there, the soldiers would have shot and killed them. Later they would have
announced that they were wanted terrorists. You remember the beginning of
the al-Aksa intifada, when there were unarmed mass demonstrations? The
Israeli army brought in snipers and killed the leaders. Please, this is
not India, and the Israelis are not Englishmen. They understand only the
language of force."

Yussuf: "But that is exactly what they say about us!"

This kind of debate is now going on everywhere in Palestinian society,
perhaps in every Palestinian family. The Yussufs have no success in
convincing the Hassans, and I am afraid that Gandhi will not succeed
either, because they lack the decisive argument. Abu-Mazen, who advocates
non- violence, got nothing from Sharon. Half a year without suicide
attacks inside Israel have not brought the Palestinians any achievements
on the ground. Therefore, the suicide attack in Beer Sheva, just a week
after the Gandhi rally, was to be expected.

As long as the Sharon government, with the active encouragement of
President Bush, goes on enlarging the settlements, building the Wall and
all the other actions of annexation, there is no way to convince
Palestinian public opinion to turn its back on violence. And only a
decisive change in Palestinian public opinion can put an end to suicide
attacks. No wall will stop people who are ready to die in order to carry
out attacks, and the Palestinians have already proved that they have any
number of such people.

Ehud Barak, a very violent person, once said that if he had been a young
Palestinian, he would have joined a terrorist organization. Obviously, he
doesn't believe that non-violence will succeed against the Israeli army.
And he should know. I was impressed by the teachings of Mahatma Gandhi. He
was the greatest liberator of the 20th century, achieving freedom for the
whole Indian subcontinent, including present- day Pakistan and Bangladesh.
(But Gandhi also said that Hitler should be opposed only by non-violent
means, and even his most ardent admirers found it hard to accept that.)

[Avneri concludes:] In my youth I joined two very violent organizations
(the Irgun and the Israeli army), but after I was wounded near the end of
the 1948 war there were several months when the very thought of combat
caused me physical nausea. I detest violence in all its forms, but how can
it be stopped? There are people amongst us who are ready for a compromise
peace but have been led to believe that "there is no one we can talk
with", because "they" don't want peace but seek to annihilate us. But we
must understand that Palestinian violence, which causes so much bloodshed,
is the predictable result of our cutting off every other road in front of
them. I am convinced that it is possible to put an end to violence in our
country - if we offer the Palestinian people an alternative, non-violent
way of achieving freedom and justice. Anyone who believes that a wall will
succeed in stopping suicide attacks might as well rely on the amulets of
Kabbalist rabbis.

------------

A Tikkun Response to the Violence/NonViolence Debate We have the greatest
respect for Uri Avneri, but we have no sympathy with the side of the
argument presented in favor of violent struggle against Israeli civilians.

The pragmatic argument that is made, "We've tried non- violence and it has
failed," is completely false. It's not true that a demonstration is
non-violent when its participants don't use guns but "only" throw rocks at
the IDF. It's not non-violent when you do your best to land rocks on the
heads of your opponent. It may be "less violent" but it's not non-violent.
That Palestinians make this argument is a reflection of their failure to
even understand what a non-violent movement would look like.

The strategic argument for non-violence goes like this: Every oppressor
gets locked into their position as oppressor in part out of fear that
should they remove their boot from the neck of the oppressed, the
oppressed will jump up and do to the oppressor the same horrific things
that they oppressor has done to the oppressed. If you want to get the
oppressor to lift the boot, you must convince the oppressor that
he/it/they will NOT face this reversal in which the oppressor becomes the
oppressed. And that is no easy sales job, because understandably the
oppressed have lots of anger, and that anger is felt by the oppressor who
feels the need to strengthen their hold on the neck of the oppressed--for
self-protection.

The major strategic goal of the oppressed, in this case, must be to
convince the oppressor that the oppressed have been able to retain a sense
of the humanity of the oppressor, and have decided not to return
"eye-for-eye" vengeance should they be in a position to do so. The
commitment to non-violence is one of the most powerful ways to convey that
message.

But if conveying that message is the goal of the non-violence, then the
non-violence must be total and must be held in ways that become credible
to the oppressor. It can't be that 95% of your actions are non-violent,
and only 5% violent, because those 5% who are violent may be the very ones
who will use their violence to dominate the oppressed once they have been
liberated, and to use the position of power that they achieve through
violence to inflict terrible violence on the current oppressor. So, if you
want to convince the oppressor that you see their humanity and do not
intend to do back to them the horrible crimes they did to you, you cannot
be partially non- violent or tactically non-violent. The non-violence has
to be persistent, determined, and principled.

That is the kind of non-violence employed by Martin Luther king that
thawed through the consciousness of racists in the South and the kind of
non-violence used by Nelson Mandela in South Africa.

In his new book The Geneva Accord and Other Strategies for Middle East
Peace (North Atlantic Books, 2004) Rabbi Michael Lerner argues that there
is an important distinction the progressives, peace movement and social
justice movement must learn: the difference between what is right and
fair, on the one side, and what is smart on the other. Lerner argues that
it is NOT fair to ask an oppressed group to take on the burden of
convincing the oppressor that the oppressed continue to see the oppressors
as human beings deserving of respect and deserving to not be subjected to
the same indignities that they have visited on the oppressed. NOT FAIR.
But, IT IS SMART. And it is one of the few ways that one can imagine from
the vantage point of US and global politics in 2004 how the Palestinian
people are ever going to get out from under the boot of Israeli Occupation
with its attendant forms of oppression. The problem is, argues Lerner,
that many people on the Left, and many Palestinians, would rather be right
than be smart. But from the standpoint of The Tikkun Community, whose goal
is to end the Occupation, strategies to end oppression of those who are
really in deep pain and suffering should be chose on the basis of what is
most effective, not solely on the basis of what is most fair.

Of course, we have yet another reason to go this direction: we fully
believe in non-violence in principle. We've seen too much killing being
done in the name of some "reasonable" argument by zealots on every side of
too many issues. It's time to stop the murders on all sides. And let it
begin with us.

Please circulate this discussion far and wide. We think it helps clarify
some of the important issues facing Palestinian activists and gets us
inside their frame of argument. So help your friends understand it.

While you are at it, please join The Tikkun Community, our interfaith
organization seeking peace and justice for all peoples in the Middle East.
A voice of reason, a voice calling for recognition of the legitimate needs
of the Palestinian people,but a voice that rejects violence (on all
sides)--that is the voice that is so badly needed in American politics.
The Tikkun Community is the progressive pro-Israel and pro-Palestine
alternative to AIPAC--but it can only be that if you join and help us
financially. That is just the reality: the number of people who belong,
and the amount of money it can mobilize, will be the decisive factor in
determining whether a progressive Middle Path that is both pro-Israel and
pro-Palestine can get any traction in American politics discourse. And
that depends entirely on whether you will join and get your friends and
acquaintances to do same.

People can join The Tikkun Community at http://www.Tikkun.org or by
calling Stephanie or Liz at 510 644 1200 during working hours 9-6 Pacific
Standard Time (we are in Berkeley, Ca.). If you joined in a past year,
please renew (we may not have made it clear that this is an annual
membership organization, and we can only survive if you renew your
membership each year).

--------------

TROUBLING NEWS FROM HEBRON: CHRISTIAN PEACE MAKER TEAM ATTACKED, ALLEGEDLY
BY ISRAELI SETTLERS. HEBRON DISTRICT: CPTers Kim Lamberty and Chris Brown
badly injured by settlers in the south Hebron hills At about 7:15am on the
morning of Wednesday September 29, 2004 settlers attacked Christian
Peacemaker Team members Chris Brown and Kim Lamberty as they accompanied
children to school. The children, from the village of Tuba, have
experienced harassment from settlers in the past as they to school in the
village of al-Tuwani. The five settlers, dressed in black and wearing
masks, came from an outpost of the nearby Ma'on settlement and attacked
Brown and Lamberty with a chain and bat. All of the children escaped
injury by running back to their homes. The settlers pushed Brown to the
ground, whipped him with a chain and kicked him in the chest, which
punctured his lung. They kicked and beat Lamberty's legs. She is not able
to walk because of an injury to her knee and has a broken arm. The
settlers also stole Lamberty's waistpack, which held her passport, money
and cellular phone. Lamberty and Brown were taken by ambulance to Soroka
hospital in Beer Sheva for treatment. Hebron Team Support person, Rich
Meyer, reports that the two CPTers told him they are receiving excellent
care from Israeli doctors. Children from four small Palestinian villages
walk to a central school in the village of al-Tuwani. Because settlers
have harassed the children since school began in September, and the
Israeli police would not intervene to prevent the attacks, the villagers
have sought the protection of international accompaniment. A coalition
comprising Christian Peacemaker Teams, the Israeli group Tayush and
members of Operation Dove, (an Italian Christian organization that
undertakes accompaniment work similar to CPT's work), set up a presence in
the village of al-Tuwani beginning on September 12, 2004. The three groups
initially committed themselves to six weeks of accompaniment after members
of these organizations witnessed settler attacks on children each time
they made exploratory visits to the area. Christian Peacemaker Teams,
Operation Dove and Tayush plan to continue accompanying children to school
in al-Tuwani. Journalists wishing more information may call Hebron Team
Supporter person Rich Meyer at 574-202 3920.

For those of us committed to non-violence, it may be time to start
creating more of these non-violent observer teams. And to get local city
councils to endorse the Tikkun Resolution for Middle East Peace--which
explicitly calls for the U.S. and other nations to create an international
intervention to separate and protect Israelis and Palestinians and protect
each side (we have repeatedly and unequivocally condemned suicide bombers
and other acts of terror against Israelis by Palestinians and have no more
sympathy for them than we have for these disgusting acts of violence
against Palestinians and those who seek to defend them).

What is actually needed is a global U.N. force of millions of volunteers
who are willing to go anywhere in the world where violence is happening
and to be non-violent interveners who report on what is happening, take
non-violent acts to prevent it, etc. Something of this sort is needed
immediately in Israel/Palestine and in Darfur/Sudan. Would that American
media were willing to raise this sort of discussion during the election
campaign and get America focused on how to reduce global violence instead
of on how to insure that America "wins" its violent struggle in Iraq. O
the hypocrisy of those who bemoan violence in one place as they perpetrate
it in another! And that goes for us too--because we have not always been
consistent on this issue in Tikkun, and have to acknowledge that as well!
(We supported a U.S. military intervention in Bosnia and Kosovo to stop
the genocide there, and in retrospect the good that that accomplished may
be outweighed by the bad of legitimating military interventions that could
then have led us to the war in Iraq and to a 21st century in which
countries military responses are becoming more and more "acceptable" to
people who should know how violence begets more violence. But not to be on
too high a horse here, we also have to acknowledge reasonable debates
about this, particularly in relationship to the issue of stopping genocide
and self-defense, and our opennness in Tikkun magazine and in The Tikkun
Community to further explore and debate this issue (particularly the issue
of what is and is not self-defense, since it is on that slippery slope
that the Occupation of the West Bank, construction of the Wall, and, in
the U.S., the Patriot Act and the war in Iraq and the possible forthcoming
war with Iran or North Korea are built). So we apologize if we seemed in
this note to be a bit too huffy or self-righteous about those who do not
share the non-violence position totally, given that we ourselves are
debating it internally and only some of us have fully embraced it, and
that only for a relatively few years. We want a world based on love, but
not one based on guilt, so we apologize for guilt-inducing rhetoric on
this difficult issue.

Blessings for a world committed 100% to non-violence. May it happen
speedily and in our day, bimheyra beyameynu.

Tikkun
http://www.tikkun.org/

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