ed note–a living, breathing, pulsating example as to why this particular group of people have throughout their history been rejected, expelled, and sneezed out of virtually every body politic with which they have ever come into contact.

No matter what, it is never ‘them’, but rather, ‘us’.

Please note a few of the more interesting statements appearing in what is for all intents and purposes a whitewash/misdirect of Jewish narcissistic behavior and the inevitable Gentile backlash that has always attended it.

One of the statements on the part of one Rebbe Graubart who said that if there is to be peace in the world between Jews and non-Jews–in this case, the Palestinians–then they (the Jews) need to be a people ‘who value peace over their historical/religious narrative’ and a people who ‘love peace more than they love the ancient stories of their people.’

Wow, talk about a mouthful of ugly truth there. What the rebbe is saying in effect is that the Jews have gotten themselves into ‘unpeaceful’ circumstances both today and throughout history due to their attachment to the ‘unpeaceful’ actions of ‘unpeaceful’ warlords that appear in the ‘ancient stories of their people’, a few examples of which include names such as Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Moses, Joshua, David, Saul, etc.

We’ve said it before and we’ll say it again–while the rest of the civilized world is living in the 21st century AD the Jews as a group are living in the 21st century BC, and not simply content to ‘live and let live’ instead have adopted the protocol of ‘live and let die’, where the rest of the ‘AD’ world MUST be dragged by the hair kicking and screaming back into the world of ‘BC’, by hook or by crook.

Our unesteemed Hebraic author then goes on to reveal YET AGAIN what is at the crux of all the Jooish suffrink that has taken place throughout history in his assertion that the Jews abandoning their ‘historical/religious narrative’ and the ‘ancient stories of their people’ in return for ‘peace’ is simply not an option.

In other words, when faced with the choice of ‘peace’ with the world VS living in a state of perpetual (and now apocalyptic) war with the world, Jews must–by virtue of being Jews–choose the latter over the former.

And yet, as we are told, over and over and over and over again, it is not ‘they’ who are the problem, but rather ‘us’ who is to blame for ‘anti-Shemitism’.

Micha Danzig for Jewish Journal

The Forward recently ran an open letter by Rabbi Philip Graubart headlined ‘Letters to My Palestinian Neighbor Is Not the Book We Need Right Now.’

Seeing the headline only, I thought, because most Palestinian leaders engage in blatant Holocaust denial, promote anti-Semitic canards such as Jews poison water wells, deny any Jewish connection to the land of Israel, and endorse the murder of Jews, that this open letter would argue Jews need to wait for a Palestinian sea change before Yossi Klein Halevy’s ‘Letters to My Palestinian Neighbor’ could advance peace.

Instead, this open letter accused Halevy of being too stuck in the Jewish ‘narrative.’

Imagining a theoretical ‘Palestinian moderate,’ Graubart posited that after reading Halevy’s book, this moderate might say, ‘Why waste time in dialogue with you? … We already agree on the basics.’

Query: What ‘basics’ does Graubart think Palestinian ‘moderates’ and Halevy agree on? Based on Halevy’s scholarship, he believes Jews have a deep connection to the land of Israel. The ‘moderate’ Palestinian leaders don’t believe Jews are even a people, let alone a people with a 3,300-year-old love affair with the land of Israel.

Graubart asserts his issue with Halevy’s book is that it makes allegations about Halevy’s ‘loving embrace of religious, biblical narrative’ that ‘no Palestinian could accept’ and that the ‘biblical impulse to build settlements in the West Bank [Judea and Samaria] is precisely what’s sabotaged an agreement.’

So, according to Graubart, it isn’t rabid anti-Semitism, rejection of any Jewish connection to Israel or even the rejection of offer after offer to have an independent Arab state in Judea and Samaria and Gaza, which is to blame. It is the Jews’ ‘biblical impulse’ to live in Judea.

There are so many problems with this perspective. The most obvious is that it implies the Palestinians bear no responsibility for their actions.

Graubart’s piece, however, does a great job of capturing the growing divide between many Jews in the U.S. and the overwhelming majority of Jews in Israel.

This divide is represented strikingly in Graubart’s letter, where he writes, ‘if your book taught me anything, it’s that we must begin the admittedly difficult process of privileging basic values over national, religious narratives.’ Graubart adds that for peace, Jews need to be ‘a people who value[d] peace … over historical/religious narrative. … People who loved peace more than they loved the ancient stories of their people.’

Thankfully, our ancestors didn’t think abdicating our faith was the way to go.

Plainly, many American Jews have not internalized the lessons most Jews in Israel have over the past 100 years.

Also, if we just ‘privileged basic values over national, religious narratives,’ then why drain swamps, irrigate deserts, revive Hebrew as our national language, or even fight for our independence against five Arab armies and numerous Arab militias sworn to destroy us?

After all, if we value ‘peace’ above everything else, we could all just give up on our indigenous faith, stop being ‘stiff-necked’ Jews, and convert. Plainly, that would have made the Jew-haters much happier and much more ‘peaceful’ toward us.

Thankfully, our ancestors didn’t think abdicating our faith and our ‘religious longings’ to live in Zion was the way to go.

By Graubart’s definition, the Maccabees would also be disparaged as ‘willing to sabotage future peace negotiations by giving in to religious longings.’ As unwilling to ‘love peace more than they loved the ancient stories of their people.’

Most Palestinians, however, reject that there were ever Maccabees. And this is where Graubart is the most mistaken. Graubart assumes the obstacle to peace is Jewish love of our ‘historical/religious narrative.’ But it is the Arab rejection of Jewish history that is the obstacle to peace.

This is the ultimate message of Halevy’s book. In order for there to be peace, the Palestinians are going to have to meet us halfway and stop asking us to accept that their new Palestinian identity deserves two Arab states — all while they reject history and Jewish sovereignty anywhere in the land of Israel.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Discover more from The Ugly Truth

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading