-Caveat Lector-

http://www.forward.com/issues/2002/02.10.18/news3.html

OCTOBER 18, 2002
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Christians Hail Rightist's Call To Oust Arabs

FORWARD STAFF

WASHINGTON � Thousands of Evangelical Christians waving Israeli flags cheered last
week as Knesset member Benny Elon called for the "relocation" of Palestinians from the
West Bank into Jordan.

The enthusiastic crowd at the annual convention of the Christian Coalition in 
Washington
also cheered House Majority Whip Tom DeLay, who urged activists to back pro-Israel
candidates who "stand unashamedly for Jesus Christ."

Elon, whose Moledet Party advocates the "transfer" of Palestinians to Arab 
countries,said
that a "resettlement" of the Palestinians is prescribed by the Bible.

None of the other high-profile speakers echoed the call for transfer by Elon, a former
minister of tourism in Prime Minister Sharon's government and head of the Moledet 
Party.
But they joined him in opposing American and Israeli plans for a Palestinian state � a
position well to the right of most American Jews and Jewish organizations on Middle 
East
issues.

The cheers for Elon and DeLay highlight potential pitfalls in the burgeoning political 
alliance
between Jewish pro-Israel activists and evangelicals. While large gaps still divide 
them on
the domestic front, both camps have been working together with increasing comfort on
Israel-related issues.

Still, while American Jewish groups have staked out hawkish views on Israeli security 
issues
since the start of the intifada, most organizations fall far short of endorsing the 
concept of a
mass expulsion of Palestinians. Yet Elon received an enthusiastic response when he 
quoted
from the Bible in an attempt to justify the idea.

"If that's what he said, then it is something that should be unacceptable," said 
Kenneth
Jacobson, associate national director of the Anti-Defamation League. "We have 
criticized
that position before and will continue to do so. That's not what the State of Israel 
is all
about."

Jacobson stressed that ADL welcomed and encouraged the evangelical community's show
of support for Israel. But, he added, "This kind of thing should have been rejected as 
soon
as it was said."

Several prominent figures who spoke at the event, including DeLay, Jerusalem Mayor Ehud
Olmert and Christian Coalition founder Pat Robertson, did so before Elon took his turn 
at the
podium. Since the rally, however, none have criticized Elon's call for transfer.

Olmert has rejected the idea of transfer in the past. But, when contacted this week by 
the
Forward, a spokeswoman for Olmert said the mayor would not be commenting on Elon's
speech. "The mayor participates in numerous events with numerous speakers, and
therefore does not see himself obligated to react to each of their statements," the
spokeswoman said.

The mayor, she said, works diligently and equally for the well-being of Jerusalem's 
Arab
and Jewish populations. Therefore, she added, any question regarding his position on
transfer "is obviously irrelevant."

The Israeli embassy in Washington also declined to react to Elon's comments. But an 
Israeli
official in Washington said that the government does not endorse Elon's positions. 
Also, the
official pointed out, Elon does not represent the government of Israel.

The Texan was slammed by the National Jewish Democratic Council, which warned that
statements like his push for Christian candidates "threaten the atmosphere of religious
freedom that our nation is founded upon."

"There should be no religious litmus test before choosing which lever to pull in the 
voting
booth," said Ira Forman, executive director of the Jewish Democratic group. He added,
"When it comes to the inclusive, heterogeneous nature of American society and the
inherent dangers of religious exclusivism, Tom DeLay still does not get it."

A spokesman in DeLay's office rejected the claim of religious exclusivism, citing many
occasions when the Majority Whip spoke out in favor of religious tolerance. The 
spokesman
declined to comment on Elon's remarks.

During his speech last week, Elon quoted from Chapter 33 of Numbers, in which God tells
Moses that the children of Israel are mean to inherit the land of Canaan. God then 
instructs
the children of Israel: "Ye shall drive out all the inhabitants of the land from 
before you...
But if ye will not drive out the inhabitants of the land from before you, then shall 
those that
ye let remain of them be as pricks in your eyes, and as thorns in your sides, and they 
shall
vex you in the land wherein ye dwell."

Drawing loud cheers from the audience, Elon said, "I know, we always have to be 
politically
correct, but it is very, very complicated to be politically correct when you have to 
correct so
many political mistakes."

To correct such mistakes, said Elon, an Orthodox rabbi, "Let's turn to the Bible, 
which says
very clearly... we have to resettle them, to relocate them, and to have a Jewish state
between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean."

Another Texas Republican, House Majority Leader Dick Armey, made a similar argument in
May, during a television interview with Chris Matthews on CNBC.

Israel's government declined to send an official representative to the rally. Instead, 
it was
decided that Olmert, a senior member of the reigning Likud party but not a member of 
the
cabinet, would represent Israel. Olmert fired up the crowd by saying he had come "from
the city of God, the place which God made the capital of the Jewish people more than 
3,000
years ago," and vowing that the undivided Jerusalem will remain the eternal capital of 
the
Jewish state.

Elon, who was not participating as an official representative of Israel, thanked the 
crowd "in
the name of the people in Israel."

A spokesman for the Christian Coalition, Ross Torossian, said that Elon had been 
invited as
a representative of the Moledet party, "which maintains very close contact with the
coalition." He said that many other Knesset members were invited as well, but declined 
to
participate. Torossian refused to comment on Elon's message of "transfer." He declined 
to
indicate if the coalition endorses it or rejects it.

However, a senior official of the Christian Coalition said that the organization was 
well
aware of Elon's ideology when it sent him an invitation. The invitation, he added, was 
sent
not despite of Elon's ideology, but because of it.

Although the Israeli government did not authorize a senior government official to 
address
the coalition's gathering, the Foreign Ministry, Tourism Ministry and Israeli embassy 
in
Washington all had booths at the convention.

Robertson was the main speaker during the pro-Israel rally, which ended the three-day
annual convention. He lashed out at Yasser Arafat, accusing him of having "killed or
deported the vast percentage of the Christian population in Bethlehem." Robertson said 
that
"the Palestinian Authority, right now, in my opinion, are a group of mafia-like thugs, 
who
have been imported from Tunisia, and really, Palestine has been occupied by Yasser 
Arafat
and his thugs. We cannot turn that nation over to them."

Dismissing the legitimacy of the Palestinians' claim to the land, and particularly to
Jerusalem, Robertson said that "the Palestinians are really Arabs who moved there a few
decades ago. Their claim to that land really does not go back very far such as it is," 
while
the claim of the Jews goes back thousands of years. The Temple Mount, he concluded,
"belongs to Israel, not to the Palestinians."

The most significant characteristic of this year's Christian Coalition convention was 
the
attempt to graft foreign-policy issues onto the organization's traditional domestic
conservative agenda. That fusion of a conservative domestic platform and a hawkish
foreign policy agenda was well expressed in the introductory statement of Roberta 
Combs,
national president of the Christian Coalition.

"Our Road to Victory conference will be the largest pro-family event in America, as
Christians will don armor for the war on terrorism," Combs said. "We will call on 
America
to safeguard our institutions by returning to the true teachings of the Bible. We will 
pray for
reform of our nation's soul by casting aside abortion, pornography, drugs and other
manifestations of moral decline... we set out an agenda to affect social change in 
America,
and want to let the terrorists know that they will not win."

� Ori Nir in Washington, with additional reporting from Ami Eden in New York



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