Monday 3 April 2017

Israeli Knessett Members Reportedly ‘Reach Out’ to US Jews Over Anti-Semitism

Posted on March 31, 2017
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Israeli lawmakers Mark Levy, Rachel Azaria, Tali Ploshkov share a few good laughs together after attending the AIPAC conference in Washington
Let’s have a high-level conference on rising anti-Semitism in America. Oh wait–it was an Israeli Jew who called in the bomb threats! Whoops! Too late to cancel the conference!
Israeli Lawmakers Reach Out to US Jews on Anti-Semitism
By Bob Salsberg
BOSTON (AP) — A group of lawmakers representing a cross-section of Israel’s political spectrum is reaching out to American Jews at a time when anxiety over anti-Semitic activity is running high in both countries, and amid uncertainty over the direction of US policy toward the Jewish state under President Donald Trump.
The five members of the Knesset arrived in Boston on Tuesday after attending the annual American Israel Public Affairs Committee conference in Washington, where US officials including Vice President Mike Pence and senior members of Congress pledged continued support for Israel. On Wednesday, the group met privately with Republican Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker before concluding the visit with a discussion of anti-Semitism at a town hall-style meeting with members of the Boston-area Jewish community.
The meeting was planned during a wave of bomb threats against Jewish schools and other institutions, but prior to the arrest last week of a 19-year-old American-Israeli in connection with many of the threats. The man was said by his lawyer to suffer from a “very serious medical condition.” The lawmakers agreed that the arrest should not detract from the struggle to contain anti-Semitism in the US or elsewhere.
“It is unfortunate,” said MK Ayelet Nahmias-Verbin, from the Zionist Union party which sits in the opposition. “I find it concerning, part of the worldwide battle against cyber, but I don’t think that is the issue.”
Jay Ruderman, president of the Ruderman Family Foundation, said an uptick in anti-Semitism in the US began well before the recent bomb hoaxes, and that he sensed a climate of increased hostility not only toward Jews, but Muslims and other groups as well. The nonprofit foundation, with offices in the US and Israel, sponsored the current visit and those by other Israeli politicians to learn about the American Jewish community.
Verbin said she believed the response from the Trump White House to acts of hate has not been sufficient to date, but not all of her colleagues fully agreed.
“I do believe you have an administration at this time just as, if not more devoted to fighting anti-Semitism, to fighting the bashing of Israel, both in the UN and other places, said Amir Ohana, a member of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s Likud Party. “So I am very optimistic.”
Ohana, the first openly-gay member of Likud, praised Trump’s tolerance, calling him “the most pro-LGBT” candidate ever nominated by the US Republican Party.
Netanyahu, whose relationship with former President Barack Obama often was strained, has called the US-Israeli relationship stronger than ever under Trump, although the new administration has yet to take specific steps to break from previous American policy.
Rachel Azaria, whose Kulanu party is right of center and aligned with Likud, said the arrest of the Israeli teen brought a realization that some of the panic associated with the wave of threats might have been misplaced.
“But you can’t ignore that there are more anti-Semitic incidents,” said Azaria, an Orthodox Jew who also describes herself as a feminist. “I think everyone is kind of wondering, is the sky blue again, or is it still cloudy?”

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