NOVANEWS
Posted By: Sammi Ibrahem
Chair of West Midland PSC
Dear Friends,
Just 4 items this evening. Item 4 is very long, but is an important document. Joseph Masad not only states his own convictions but also contributes valuable information in setting right the issue of ‘Israel’s right to exist.’ Am in a rush this evening, so haven’t time to comment more, but the other 3 items are self-explanatory.
All the best,
Dorothy
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1. More on the case of Tony Kushner
From: “Ed Kent”
Sent: Friday, May 06, 2011 5:58 PM
Subject: A University Trustee Expands on His View of What Is Offensive
[There are two views of those of us who support the existence of Israel:
1. It can do no wrong.
2. It must be criticized for its abuse of the Palestinians which is
little more than the Holocaust in slow motion. Ed Kent]
About New York
A University Trustee Expands on His View of What Is Offensive
By JIM DWYER
Published: May 5, 2011
“I want to say something,” Jeffrey S. Wiesenfeld said. “The question is
offensive. Before you even finish.”
Michael Appleton for The New York Times
Jeffrey S. Wiesenfeld, a trustee of the City University of New York.
Mr. Wiesenfeld is the City University of New York trustee who rose this
week at a board meeting to block an honorary degree to the playwright
Tony Kushner, declaring him an “extremist” opponent and critic of Israel.
It was a startling development for a board that appeared to be on the
verge of rubber-stamping a bundle of honorary degrees proposed by the
colleges within the university, including one for Mr. Kushner from the
John Jay College of Criminal Justice.
Mr. Kushner was not present, and fragments of his views — which are
complicated, passionate, critical — were balled up into a few pellets by
Mr. Wiesenfeld, who gave a 900-word speech that was mostly devoted to
other figures who he felt were radically hostile to Israel. He quoted
about 75 words that he said showed that Mr. Kushner’s thinking was
beyond the pale.
The trustees pulled the playwright’s name from the motion and moved on
to wholesale rubber-stamping of the remaining honorary degrees.
Was this any way for one of the great public universities of the world
to discuss the views of one of the leading dramatists of modern times,
author of the epic “Angels in America”?
“I have no idea who Mr. Kushner is; I don’t know his issues,” said
Valerie Lancaster Beal, a trustee who said she felt the board should not
have singled him out. “To me, it should have been all or none.”
On Thursday afternoon, Mr. Wiesenfeld took a phone call about the events
at the board meeting, and said he was surprised to get enough support
from other trustees to block the Kushner degree. He had thought, he
said, that he was going to register his dissent for the record and move on.
I tried to ask a question about the damage done by a short, one-sided
discussion of vigorously debated aspects of Middle East politics, like
the survival of Israel and the rights of the Palestinians, and which
side was more callous toward human life, and who was most protective of it.
But Mr. Wiesenfeld interrupted and said the question was offensive
because “the comparison sets up a moral equivalence.”
Equivalence between what and what? “Between the Palestinians and
Israelis,” he said. “People who worship death for their children are not
human.”
Did he mean the Palestinians were not human? “They have developed a
culture which is unprecedented in human history,” he said.
But is there no reason to hear from Tony Kushner, or have a more
thorough airing of his views? “Tell you what,” Mr. Wiesenfeld said.
“Your question tells me — and I am saying this not to insult you — tells
me that you don’t know” what you are talking about.
Two years ago, John Jay gave a medal to Mary Robinson, the former
president of Ireland and human rights commissioner with the United
Nations. Many who see the world as Mr. Wiesenfeld does also revile Ms.
Robinson for having presided over a conference on racism in Durban,
South Africa, at which a number of delegates were unabashedly
anti-Semitic and anti-Israel.
Mr. Wiesenfeld said he had confronted Jeremy Travis, the president of
John Jay. “I said, ‘Jeremy, this is crazy. Mary Robinson? The woman who
oversaw this disgrace that the United States pulled out of. You can’t
have a tin ear.’ He said, ‘Well, many people see it differently,’ ” Mr.
Wiesenfeld said. Mr. Travis could not be reached on Thursday, his office
said.
(During the Durban conference, The Jerusalem Post reported that Ms.
Robinson had spoken out at a major dinner when she was presented with a
book of anti-Semitic cartoons. “When I see the racism in this cartoon
booklet, of the Arab Lawyers’ Union, I must say that I am a Jew — for
those victims are hurting,” Ms. Robinson was quoted as saying. “I know
that you people will not understand easily, but you are my friends, so I
tell you that I am a Jew, and I will not accept this fractiousness to
torpedo the conference.”)
Mr. Wiesenfeld was appointed a trustee of City University in the late
1990s by Gov. George E. Pataki, for whom he worked in the 1990s as a
political fixer, an essential and often honorable function that can lead
scrupulous people into a blizzard of trouble. In Mr. Wiesenfeld’s case,
his work, and his actions, put him at the center of a scandal over
paroles that had allegedly been sold to campaign contributors. He was
never charged and said he had done nothing wrong. Nevertheless, a
federal prosecutor described a memo Mr. Wiesenfeld had written urging
leniency for a prisoner as “outrageous.”
Did Mr. Wiesenfeld see no comparison between what had happened to him
and his characterizing of Mr. Kushner’s views without giving his target
a chance for rebuttal?
“That’s absurd,” Mr. Wiesenfeld said.
E-mail: dwyer@nytimes.com
Twitter: @jimdwyernyt
A version of this article appeared in print on May 6, 2011, on page A21
of the New York edition with the headline: A University Trustee Expands
on His View of What Is Offensive.
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3. WCC News
media@wcc-coe.org
Contact: +41 79 507 6363
Worldwide action for peace in Palestine and Israel coming up
For immediate release: 02 May 2011
As part of a week-long series of events to promote a just peace in Israel and Palestine, Palestinians and Israelis will be praying for peace in front of several Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank, the separation wall and in houses of worship in Jerusalem and across Palestine.
They will be part of a worldwide effort to affirm the human dignity and rights of all peoples through the World Week for Peace in Palestine Israel, an initiative of the Palestine Israel Ecumenical Forum (PIEF) of the World Council of Churches (WCC), taking place from 29 May to 4 June 2011.
The aim of the week for peace is to encourage concerned communities and individuals to make a common witness by participating in worship, educational events, and acts of advocacy in support of a just peace for Palestinians and Israelis.
“With the Palestinian-Israeli peace process at a standstill, people of faith are increasingly searching for ways to express their support for a just and lasting peace for all in Palestine and Israel,” says the Rev. John Calhoun, the convenor of the World Week for Peace in Palestine Israel. “The WCC has set aside this period of seven days to encourage churches and individuals to worship and pray, to educate and be educated, and to take action in support of a peaceful and just end to the occupation of Palestine, in accordance with United Nations resolutions.”
The common focus of this year’s events is Jerusalem. Policies and actions taken by the Israeli government in occupied East Jerusalem continue to threaten the future of Jerusalem as a viable home for two peoples – Palestinians and Israelis – and three faiths – Judaism, Christianity and Islam.
Furthermore, the restrictions on access by Palestinians to places of worship in Jerusalem, the demolition of Palestinian homes in East Jerusalem in order to expand illegal settlement building, and the denial of Palestinians’ right to family reunification in the city, as well as the withdrawal of the residency permits to many Palestinians, as is the case with Bishop Suheil Dawani of the Anglican Church in Jerusalem, constitute grave violations of basic human rights.
The activities planned for the week demonstrate the initiative’s commitment to peaceful action in support of a resolution to this long running conflict. Local church groups and peace activists will advocate with government officials and community leaders through educational seminars, open forums and public demonstrations focusing on the urgent need to bring to an end the ongoing injustices taking place in the region.
The WCC invites member churches, religious and community organizations, and all people of faith to join with peacemakers in the region and around the world by participating in the events of the week.
For more information on the World Week for Peace in Palestine Israel, and to view a list of events being planned by country, please visit the initiative’s website at www.worldweekforpeace.org, or send an email to the convener, Rev. John Calhoun, at calhoun.wwppi@gmail.com
WCC media contact: Michel Nseir, Michel.Nseir@wcc-coe.org (+41-22-7916052) or Ranjan Solomon, ranjan.solomon@wcc-coe.org,
Website of the Palestine Israel Ecumenical Forum:
The World Council of Churches promotes Christian unity in faith, witness and service for a just and peaceful world. An ecumenical fellowship of churches founded in 1948, today the WCC brings together 349 Protestant, Orthodox, Anglican and other churches representing more than 560 million Christians in over 110 countries, and works cooperatively with the Roman Catholic Church. The WCC general secretary is Rev. Dr Olav Fykse Tveit, from the [Lutheran] Church of Norway. Headquarters: Geneva, Switzerland.
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4.-Al Jazeera Friday, May 06, 2011