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Name: Moshe Phillips
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ISLAMOFASCISTS, FASHIONISTAS AND EUROTRASH

 
My new opinion column "ISLAMOFASCISTS, FASHIONISTAS AND EUROTRASH" has been published on Israel Net Daily. Please check it out:
 
http://www.israelnetdaily.com/index.php?menu_option=editorials&editorial_id=79
 
 
Tags: Media bias  
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AFSI's Outpost Newsletter


Outpost is AFSI's national newsletter and the April issue is now online. Visit:
 
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Rabbi David Bar-Hayim

Tamar Yonah of israelnationalnews.com has posted a fascinating and thought provking essay on her website by Rabbi David Bar-Hayim.

Rabbi Bar-Hayim's essay is titled "Clueless Leaders".
 
Here is the link:                              http://www.israelnationalnews.com/Blogs/Blog.aspx/3
 
Rabbi Bar-Hayim's webiste is at:   http://machonshilo.org/
 
Happy Passover!
Tags: Israel  
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ISRAEL'S WILLIAM F. BUCKLEY

ISRAEL'S WILLIAM F. BUCKLEY

By Moshe Phillips

 

            The recent passing of William F. Buckley, Jr., America's most influential right-wing public intellectual, brings to mind the Jewish State's public intellectual, Dr. Israel Eldad. Eldad, like Buckley, was a newspaper columnist, author and magazine publisher known for his sharp wit, brilliant command of language and unwavering dedication to right-wing ideals. Eldad died in 1996 and will perhaps be recalled by most Israeli historians as one of the three commanders of the underground organization known as the LEHI (the Fighters for the Freedom of Israel) and shared the leadership of the LEHI after the assassination of Avraham "Yair" Stern by the British army, but he was much more.

Born Israel Scheib in Poland in 1910, Dr. Eldad was a graduate of the Vienna Rabbinical Seminary and received his Ph.D. in Philosophy from the University of Vienna. While a student he joined Menachem Begin as part of the leadership of the Betar movement. In 1938 he met Avraham Stern through Betar.

After leaving Warsaw, during the Nazi invasion, Dr. Eldad and his wife shared an apartment with Menachem Begin and his wife in Vilna. Dr. Eldad arrived in the British Palestinian Mandate in 1941 and promptly joined the LEHI soon becoming a member of the LEHI high command. Another member of the three man high command was Yitzhak Shamir. In 1944, while attempting to escape arrest by the British Army, Eldad was badly injured and was captured.

After two years of British imprisonment he escaped and resumed his activities in the underground. Throughout the LEHI's revolt against the British, Dr. Eldad crafted the ideology of the LEHI, edited its underground newspapers and acted as its chief propagandist.

After the emergence of the State of Israel, Dr. Eldad concentrated on ideological activities. He began publication of the ideological magazine Sullam which provided a unique perspective on the cultural and social problems of the new Jewish State and was known for its sharp criticism of the Israeli government. As Buckley did with the National Review, Eldad provided right-wingers with a distinctive publication to nurture their writing talents and share ideas.

On orders from David Ben-Gurion, acting in his role as Minister of Defense, Eldad was banned from teaching in government schools. Even after having won a Supreme Court case he could not find a teaching position. He found work as an editor for the publishing arm of Mossad HaRav Kook in Jerusalem. Eventually Dr. Eldad held positions on the faculties of the Technion in Haifa and Beersheba University.

He published a volume of memoirs about his experiences in the underground entitled Maaser Rishon (First Tithe), as well as a series of historical and philosophical studies on the Bible. He also produced the (Jerusalem) Chronicles: News of the Past, a fascinating and highly innovative history of Israel and the Jews using a daily newspaper format. Eldad translated much of Nietzsche's writings into Hebrew. His best known book published in English is The Jewish Revolution: Jewish Statehood (1971, re-issued by Gefen in 2007). Eldad became a frequent columnist for the daily newspapers Haaretz and Yediot Aharonot in the aftermath of the Six Day War.

Buckley was a central figure in the formation of Young Americans for Freedom and Eldad too saw the vital importance of working with young people and was the driving force behind an Israeli student group called the National Cells.

There is little doubt that Bill Buckley would not have become a household name if not for his position as host of the PBS television program Firing Line for 33 years. Broadcast television networks in Israel were owned and tightly controlled by Israel's Labor Party led government for nearly thirty years and Eldad was never given the electronic mass media platform that Buckley was.

At the time of his death the Likud party issued an official statement calling Eldad the "spiritual father of the Hebrew Revolution, who groomed generations of fighters toward the realization of and dedication to the love of the people and the land."

Likud, however, had long since abandoned the ideas of Dr. Eldad. Eldad stated at the 1938 Betar international convention in Warsaw that "...only a Don Quixote believes there is any morality in politics." So Eldad never entered big party politics, even as his friends and colleagues Begin and Shamir went on to each become prime minister. Eldad never accepted a position in the Israeli government. He remained loyal to the ideas of Stern and the LEHI. Israel Eldad never stopped advocating that the entire Jewish People must return to the Jewish State. A Jewish State that encompasses all of Greater Israel with its capital in a fully rebuilt Jerusalem. A Jerusalem that has the rebuilt Holy Temple at its center.

Eldad was barely over five feet tall, bespectacled, and had a receding hairline even in his early thirties. He had the gentle appearance of a stooped shouldered scholar more comfortable in a library than in a prison. Yet when he had no choice he willingly became an underground leader dedicated to liberating the Jewish Homeland. Eldad's son is Member of Knesset Arieh Eldad of the National Union / National Religious Party and he has recently joined in starting the new Hatikva Party.

Dr. Israel Eldad has left an indelible imprint on the Jewish People. Our own and future generations were immeasurably enriched by his long and fruitful career. We should pray that his example and teachings endure, enlighten and inspire for generations to come. One can only imagine the impact Eldad would have had if the Israeli government elites had not censored and banned him. Given the opportunity to work free of government interference, as Bill Buckley was in the United States, Eldad's impact could have changed history to the extent that Buckley's did. Tragically, Israel's censoring and banning of the right goes on.

 

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Moshe Phillips is a member of the executive committee of the Philadelphia Chapter of Americans for a Safe Israel / AFSI. The chapter's new website is at: www.phillyafsi.com

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RADICAL CLERGY AND THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY

RADICAL CLERGY AND THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY

By Moshe Phillips

 

Have you heard about the Democratic presidential candidate that has links to a radical clergyman?

Did you know that the clergyman had been arrested for conspiracy and criminal political violence in the early 1970s? Some of the things the clergyman wrote around that time were: 

-- "The Jewish community is racist, internally corrupt…" 

-- "The synagogue as currently established will have to be smashed."  

-- "Black anti-Semitism…is not an anti-Semitism rooted in …hatred of the Christ-killers but rather one rooted in the concrete fact of oppression by Jews of blacks…" 

What's that you say? You had not heard that Barack Obama's pastor, the Reverend Jeremiah Wright, had been arrested for violent acts? You did not know he said these things?

Wright was not the clergyman responsible the above quotes and he was not arrested for conspiracy in the 1970s. And the candidate is not Obama. This article is about Hillary Clinton and her friendship with her "Politics of Meaning" guru Rabbi Michael Lerner and he wrote those things in a 1969 article in Judaism magazine.

A 1993 Time Magazine article by Priscilla Painton titled "The Politics of What?" relates Lerner's influence on Clinton's thinking then. When Hillary Clinton was the First Lady perhaps other than the Monica Lewinsky scandal, national healthcare, and her It takes a Village book she is recalled for the introduction of the idea of "Politics of Meaning" to the nation's marketplace of ideas. 

What is not known is what impact the "Politics of Meaning" and the creator of this idea, Michael Lerner, will have on Middle East policy and specifically Israel policy in a future Clinton Administration.

Lerner is best known as the publisher of the leftist political journal Tikkun since its founding in 1986. The Clintons read the magazine and according to many press reports the ideas in the extremist magazine had a powerful effect on them. Hillary Clinton called for "a new politics of meaning" in her major April 6, 1993 speech on health care at the University of Texas at Austin. At the time, Lerner was labeled "the guru of the White House" by the press.

Now, of course, Michael Lerner is a sham rabbi, even if he was the Clintons' guru. He never completed education at a rabbinical college or yeshiva and his 1995 rabbinical ordination was led by the radical Rabbi Zalman Schachter-Shalomi of the far out Jewish Renewal group. But, Michael Lerner had a profound effect on Hillary Clinton in the 1990s.

Lerner does have a doctorate in philosophy from University of California at Berkeley. While at Berkley he was a leader in the Free Speech Movement, the SDS and the militant, revolutionary left in the Bay Area. Other products of that time and place are the Weatherman / Weather Underground, the Black Panther Party and the Symbionese Liberation Army.

Lerner left Berkley and took a position as an Assistant Professor of Philosophy at the University of Washington in Seattle. On February 17, 1970 just two days after Lerner organized a campus visit from the "Chicago Seven" leader Jerry Rubin, Lerner founded the Seattle Liberation Front (SLF).

The SLF soon absorbed the veteran SDS activist cadre on campus and began its anti-government, anti-Vietnam war militancy. An early leader of the SLF with Lerner was Susan Stern. Stern was already involved with the Weathermen and later penned a memoir titled With the Weathermen, The Personal Journal of a Revolutionary Woman. She died of a drug overdose in 1976. Among the people Stern wrote about in her book was Cathy Wilkerson whom she met in the Weathermen. Wilkerson's father's Greenwich Village home was the site of the Weathermen March 6, 1970 "Townhouse Explosion". Cathy Wilkerson was there that night and had offered the home to the terrorists. They were building a bomb that was to be used in an attack at Fort Dix in New Jersey that night against U.S. soldiers. Three Weathermen were killed in the explosion and Wilkerson would spend the next 10 years hiding underground. It is not known if Lerner knew Wilkerson then.

Just a month after its founding Lerner's SLF sponsored a protest at Seattle's Federal Courthouse and police were attacked with paint bombs, tear gas and rocks. Twenty people were injured and 76 arrested during the fighting between police and protesters.

Lerner and six others were indicted on conspiracy charges by a federal grand jury. The first trial of the Seattle Seven, as the criminal conspirators were dubbed, was declared a mistrial. All the conspirators except for Lerner served jail terms from contempt charges stemming from their misbehavior at the first trial and there was never a second trial on the original conspiracy charges.

On March 11, 1970 Lerner and his fellow revolutionaries set their sights on the University of Washington. Six buildings were taken over and a strike was declared. Fourteen faculty members and students were beaten by the strikers. Local newspapers at the time showed Lerner with a bullhorn leading the protesters. 

Lerner stated in a 1970 interview with the Seattle Times that "The only place left for those who want social change is to be fighting in the streets."  Twenty some odd years later he was off the streets and was a guest at the White House. The Clintons invited Lerner and Arthur Waskow, a Philadelphia based '60s radical turned Jewish Renewal rabbi, as well as other longtime leftist critics of Israel's policies to witness the September 13, 1993 agreement between Israel's Yitzhak Rabin and the PLO leader, Yasser Arafat. For more information on Lerner's time with the SLF please see the book With Friends Like These: The Jewish Critics of Israel by Edward Alexander (S.P.I Books, 1992). Alexander is a professor emeritus in the Department of English at the University of Washington.

By 2003 Clinton sought to sanitize her history with Lerner and he and his Tikkun magazine are curiously left out of her autobiography, Living History.  It is worth noting that she did spend three pages in the book on her "Politics of Meaning" speech.

Lerner's views on Israel and the Middle East are still exceedingly extreme. The Tikkun website, as of the writing of this column, features a 2008 Tikkun Passover Haggadah supplement that reads in part: "… as we face the 60th anniversary of the birth of the State of Israel on May 8th of this year, and simultaneously remember the tragedy (al Nakba) that the creation of the State (of Israel) turned into for our Palestinian brothers and sisters.."

The same Lerner who blamed Jews for the social ills of America in the 1960s and 1970s consistently seeks to blame the U.S. and Israel, and never any Islamic state, for all of the turmoil in the Middle East

Hillary Clinton may have left Lerner out of her book, but is he out of her life? Does she have a closer relationship with any rabbi, self-styled or not? How does Lerner's outlook still influence her thinking on the Middle East? Does she still read Tikkun? It looks like two different Democratic presidential candidates have had interpersonal relationships with radical clergymen that they need to clarify to voters. Will Hillary Clinton? 

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Moshe Phillips is a member of the executive committee of the Philadelphia Chapter of Americans for a Safe Israel / AFSI. The chapter's new website is at: www.phillyafsi.com.

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