--MK Haim Yellin (Yesh Atid), who immigrated from Argentina during that country's "Dirty War" period of state terror, tells Culture Minister Miri Regev after she presented her controversial 'Cultural Loyalty' bill to Knesset.**
The strength of organizations working to end the occupation and their supporters is greater than we think.
One day the occupation will end. It will probably happen in one fell swoop. And when it happens, it will suddenly
emerge that everyone was against it. That the politicians had actually worked to end it, that the journalists
strove indefatigably to expose its injustices, that the cultural institutions condemned it courageously and that
Israeli academia was a center of persistent resistance, from which the struggle drew ideological and moral backing.
In short, everyone was part of the Resistance.
This week, Alpher discusses why he has had so little discussion on issues related directly to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and prospects for new negotiations recently; whether, even if that’s the case regarding the PLO in the West Bank, we can ignore assessments regarding Hamas and Hezbollah activity there, alongside predictions regarding violence emanating from Gaza, extremist inclinations among the Israeli Arab community, and even a high-level forecast of ISIS activity against Israel; the angry Israeli reaction to US Ambassador Dan Shapiro's statement that Israel exercises a legal double standard in its approach to Israeli settlers as opposed to Palestinians in the West Bank; and whether Israeli-Turkish negotiations regarding normalization of bilateral relations hold out any hope for a better situation in Gaza.
I came from a long line of worriers — we’re Jews after all! My parents worried that I’d never make a living as a songwriter and urged me to become a shoe salesman! I didn’t become a shoe salesman but I remain a worrier.
I worry about Israel today, after nearly 50 years as an occupier of another people. The Occupied Territories hardly figure in the public discourse in Israel these days, and yet the occupation won’t go away simply as a result of inattention.
The attitude of right-wing extremist supporters of Israel also worries me greatly. When you tell them that constructing peace is a complex undertaking, that it requires both imagination and pragmatism, they’ll dismiss you by dumbing down the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. They say things like, "The Muslims want to destroy Israel" or "The Arabs refuse to recognize Israel as a Jewish state" or "If the Arabs had accepted Israel in 1948, the Palestinians wouldn’t be where they are today."
They say things like, "Israel has no partner for peace," ignoring the Palestinian government's renouncement of violence against Israel. They even have problems with the Palestinians using a non-violent diplomatic path towards peace by turning to the international community for support of their national aspirations.
Extremists here and in Israel will never find a situation in which Israelis and Palestinians can reach an accord and a Palestinian state can peacefully come into existence.
That’s why I’m so worried — and infuriated.
APN's Lara Friedman takes part in discussion following show on Israel-Palestine in DC (1/19/2016, Foreign Policy in Focus)
Peace Now condemns West Bank land expropriation (1/21/2016, AP/Boston Globe)
Peace Now: Netanyahu government expropriates 370 acres in West Bank (1/20/2016, AP/ABC News)
Peace Now: Netanyahu government returning to land expropriations in the West Bank (1/20/2016, Reuters)
Peace Now report: Right-wing Israeli nonprofits hide their funding sources (1/19/2016, Jewschool blog)