Schon mal ein Blick auf nächste Woche…

Trotz aller Nachrichten, trotz allem, in zehn Tagen ist Christtag… blicken wir nach Bethlehem

Und schon ein Grußwort der guten Wünsche, nicht von den geistlichen Hierarchen, kommt auch noch, sondern vom Bürgermeister von Bethlehem, der dazu auffordert zu kommen … und andere mitzubringen…

Brief Hanna Hanania, Bürgermeister von Bethlehem

10. Dezember – Tag der Menschenrechte

Gedenktag zur Allgemeinen Erklärung der Menschenrechte aus dem Jahr 1948

Hier ein Auschnitt aus der Reflektion von Rabbiner Arik Ascherman zum heutigen Tag:

„Israel that has always been plagued by human rights violations, but we can only be embarrassed and horrified that we have now openly and knowingly voted for extremist advocates of massive human rights violations towards non-Jews, the LGBTQ community, non-Orthodox religious Jews and women, and whose first Finance Minister will be an open advocate of neo-liberal policies violating the human rights of Israeli Jews living in poverty. Israel is drifting farther and farther from the principles of international law we celebrate on December 10th. We are slapping in the face the many Jews whose Jewish values and consciousness of Jewish history drove them to be primary authors of these principles representing the highest aspirations of humanity.

Now the question is will be prove ourselves to be worthy descendants of Jacob? Will we succeed in wrestling with our demons and prevail? This is our moment of truth. We are being tested. We are at a moment when each of us is called to say “Hineni – I am here. Count me in to be a part of the struggle for our Jewish values, human rights and decency. Our side is being dragged across the line in a very serious game of tug of war. Will we collapse, or find the inner resources to dig in and pull back?“

Der ganze Text findet sich hier.

Eine andere Sicht der Dinge

Israels neue Regierung wird revolutionär sein

Israel Nachrichten – eine Kommentierung von Ariel Kahana:

„Israels außer Kontrolle geratenes Justizsystem wird endlich einer angemessenen Überwachung unterliegen, und die notwendigen Reformen werden das Leben in Judäa und Samaria verbessern.“

Was bleibt da zu sagen? Eine Herausforderung zu begreifen, daß hier über das gleiche Land gesprochen wird, es liest sich eher wie die Nachricht von einem anderen Planeten…

Weltkirchenratsdelegation in Israel und Palästina

Zwischen den Fronten und an der Seite – um des Friedens willen …

Neben einer Begegnung mit dem Griech.-orth. Patriarchen Theoplilos III. traf die Deleggation unter Leitung des amtierenden Generalsekretärs des World Council of Churches (WCC), Rev. Prof. Dr Ioan Sauca, unter anderem mit dem israelischen Staatspräsidenten Herzog und dem palästinsensischen Präsidenten Abbas zusammen

Hier eine Bilderdokumentation und weitere Nachrichten (WCC-Verbindungsbüro / Herzog / Abbas)

22 November 2022, Jerusalem, Palestine: World Council of Churches acting general secretary Rev. Prof. Dr Ioan Sauca (right) congratulates Patriarch Theophilos III of Jerusalem (Greek Orthodox Church of Jerusalem) during a celebration of the 17th anniversary of the patriarch’s enthronement. Photo: Albin Hillert/WCC (c)

Im Nachgang zu Karlsruhe (ÖRK/WCC)

Auf der 11. Vollversammlung des Weltkircherates in Karlsruhe im September 2022 waren auch die Fragen von Israel & Palästina und die Position zur Verwendung der Begrifflichkeit „Apartheid“ auf der Tagesordnung.

Hier das Heft 2/2002 des PRO ÖKUMENE-Informationsdienstes, das einen Rückblick auf die Tagung und die unterschiedlichen Debatten wirft, auch zu zahlreichen anderen Fragen natürlich.

There is no ‘halachic state’ in Jewish law

Eine interessante und jetzt mit Blick auf die Entwicklungen in Israel und im rechten/religiösen Lager spannende Debatte, zu der hier Rabbiner Naftalie Rothenberg auf dem Blog der Times of Israel seine Position darlegt;

Theocracy is simply not a Jewish legal concept – the halachic legal system applies its authority only to those who accept it

Beschluß des Haushaltsausschusses

Deutsch-Israelisch-Palästinensisches Promotionskolleg in Flensburg wird gefördert

Wissenschaftler*innen präsentieren Arbeit zu internationaler Verständigung im Deutschen Bundestag

Mit insgesamt 2,1 Millionen Euro fördert der Bund die European Wasatia Graduate School for Peace and Conflict Resolution an der Europa-Universität Flensburg. Das hat der Haushaltsausschuß des Bundestages entschieden. Damit ist die Graduiertenschule, in der Promovierende aus Israel, Palästina und Deutschland gemeinsam religionsübergreifend und interdisziplinär zu Lösungen des Konflikts im Nahen Osten forschen, bis zum Jahr 2029 gesichert. Zudem kann mit dem Geld ein Programm für Gastwissenschaftler*innen (scholar-in-residence) aufgelegt und eigene Stipendien vergeben werden.

„Ich freue mich sehr darüber, daß es gelungen ist, dieses in Deutschland bisher einmalige Programm für Promovierende aus Israel, Palästina und Deutschland weiter zu fördern. Die European Wasatia Graduate School for Peace & Conflict Resolution wird zukünftig bis zu 359.000 € jährlich im Rahmen ihrer Arbeit für Frieden, Verständigung und Versöhnung vom Bund erhalten“, so Dr. Wiebke Esdar, zuständige Haushaltspolitikerin der SPD-Bundestagsfraktion für den Etat des Bundesministeriums für Bildung und Forschung.

Prof. Dr. Ralf Wüstenberg, Professor für evangelische Theologie und Direktor des Graduiertenkollegs bewertet diese Anschlußfinanzierung als wichtiges friedensethisches Signal. „Dieses Zeichen strahlt über den Nahost-Konflikt hinaus und berührt wesentlich auch europäische Fragen. Es ist nun sichergestellt, daß über die gegenwärtig eingeschriebenen Promovierenden zwei weitere Kohorten in 2023 und in 2026 aufgenommen werden können. Neben Israelis, Palästinensern und Deutschen sollen Stipendien auch an junge Promovierende aus andere Transformationsgesellschaften gehen, wie u.a. Südafrika, Irland, Albanien. Gemeinsames Lernen, eigenständiges Forschen und das wechselseitige Entdecken von Konfliktlösungsstrategien im Horizont von Wasatia und Versöhnung sind die Eckpfeiler des Programms.“

Auch Prof. Dr. Udo Steinbach, Leiter des MENA Study Centre der Maecenata Stiftung, das eng mit der Wasatia Graduate School zusammenarbeitet, schätzt die Entscheidung des Deutschen Bundestags als nachhaltigen Beitrag Deutschlands für die Lösung des palästinensisch-israelischen Konflikts ein.

Projektkoordinatorin Dr. Zeina Barakat freut sich über das breite Interesse an der European Wasatia Graduate School for Peace and Conflict Resolution unter den Parlamentariern des Deutschen Bundestages und erklärte: „Als in Jerusalem geborene Palästinenserin, die sich über ein Jahrzehnt auch wissenschaftlich mit Friedensethik befaßt, sind die Ziele der Graduiertenschule auch eine Herzenzangelegenheit.“

Die „European Wasatia Graduate School for Peace and Conflict Resolution“

Das interdisziplinäre, transnationale und multireligiöse Promotionskolleg wurde im November 2021 gegründet. Derzeit sind zwölf Doktorand*innen Teil der „European Wasatia Graduate School for Peace and Conflict Resolution“.

Das Kolleg identifiziert Wahrheit wie Recht als Bedingung für Frieden und Konfliktlösung im israelisch-palästinensischen Verhältnis. Vor dem Hintergrund, dass rechtliche, politische und religiöse Dimensionen der Versöhnung ihrerseits mentale Komponenten beinhalten, wie etwa die Anerkennung von Leid, die Befähigung zur inter-religiösen Toleranz und zur Dekonstruktion festgefahrener Narrative, soll die Wasatia Graduate School als ein interdisziplinäres Forum fungieren, das Versöhnung als zentrales Element zur gesellschaftlichen Konfliktlösung herausstellt.

Logo Europa-Universität Flensburg

Analytische Bemerkungen von Rabbiner Arik Asherman

Der Direktor von Torat Tzedek über den Ausgang der Knesset-Wahlen 2022

Eine linke relgiöse Stimme, hier besonders interessant der Punkt 2b

(Link zur Webversion, die auch noch Aktuelles enthält)

***

A FEW QUICK OBSERVATIONS ABOUT THE ELECTIONS

  1. The elections were a choice between bad and worse. We should have no illusions that the outgoing government had a decent human rights record.

a. The failure of Meretz to make it into the next Knesset was not just because of the fact that Labor refused to unite with them or the fact that Yesh Atid siphoned off votes. Many Meretz voters punished the party because they were somewhere between complicit to ineffective regarding serious human rights violations in the Occupied Territories. The violence and the land takeovers didn’t slow down.

b. Since January Torat Tzedek was in contact with a top advisor to Internal Security minister Bar-Lev (Labor). For all their good intentions, they were not able to get the police on the ground to prevent settler flocks from invading and destroying Palestinian fields, groves and vineyards. They were not able to get the police to properly investigate and prosecute even when there was good documentation of violence or invasions.

c. The latest spike in support by Israeli security forces for settler violence more or less coincides with Benny Gantz’s tenure as defense minister both for Netanyahu and in the outgoing government. I don’t know whether that was a matter of policy, or because it was not something Gantz was paying attention to. We had contact with his deputy defense ministers, who had very little real influence.
d. Nevertheless, without intense international pressure that goes beyond words, we are likely to move from bad to worse. We need to wait to see who will receive which ministries, what the coalition agreements look like, etc. However, if already those acting violently against Palestinians and human rights defenders have understood that they will pay no price for acting violently, we could be in a situation in which there will be open season against us and against Palestinians.

e. The Religious Zionism party has made it very clear that further undermining our judicial system is a top priority. They have a great deal of support for this in the Likud and ultra-Orthodox parties. While the courts have not been particularly favorable to human rights or international law, they can be further compromised. Judicial appointments can set the tone for years to come. It is also conceivable that the law will be employed to make it impossible or very difficult for human rights organizations to operate.

f. It may seem surrealistic, but our last best home might be Netanyahu. Before his indictments, he had some red lines regarding the rule of law. He always preferred to be in the political middle of his coalitions, and currently he is the far left of the Likud and of his coalition. The Likud democrats are long gone. Netanyahu may try to balance the radical rights with somebody to his left. Being dependent on Netanyahu’s potential moderating influence is not something to count on or to relish.

g. Arguably the outgoing government has been more neo-liberal and worse on internal Israeli socioeconomic issues than the previous Netanyahu governments. If nothing changes, this coming Tuesday will find many of us barricaded in the home of a single parent mom on the day that she is to be evicted from public housing. It was the current. There will likely be a power struggle in the incoming government between the ultra-Orthodox parties working on behalf of their lower income constituents, and others with clear neo-liberal tendencies. However, the solutions of the ultra-Orthodox parties tend to be band aid solutions that don’t tackle underlying factors keeping people living in poverty.

h. “Meshilut” (governability) is a favorite word of the right wing, and we have heard it a great deal during the campaign and since the elections. It is code for the majority “democratically” imposing laws on non-Jews, particularly Israel’s Negev Bedouin citizens.

  1. It is of course to early to say what the new composition of the Knesset will mean for our political landscape in the future.

a. If Meretz does not survive outside the Knesset, will anything replace it? Will there be a home for the Zionist left? Labor is center left both in terms of the Occupied Territories and socioeconomic justice.

b. It is arguable whether there was ever a political party representing religious Jews who were anti-Occupation. The relatively moderate Orthodox parties in favor of some sort of pluralism and rule of law were always pro-Occupation and had become increasingly neo-liberal. However, all that is left in the Knesset is a religious party supporting the legalization of unauthorized outposts, as well as the expansion of settlements. Their constituents largely support the violent hilltop youth. I know some right wing national religious Orthodox Jews who voted this time for ultra-Orthodox parties because the Religious Zionism/Jewish Power party was too extreme for them. Will this be a trend for the future? Truly progressive Orthodox Jews largely voted for non-Orthodox parties.

  1. The difference in the popular vote between the pro-Netanyahu and anti-Netanyahu coalitions was very small. However, the reason why the outgoing government was no better than the Netanyahu governments regarding Palestinian human rights, and arguably more neo-liberal was because the anti-Netanyahu coalition contained parties that had identical positions on human rights issues to the positions of the parties in Netanyahu’s block, but were anti-Netanyahu. In other words, trying to elect a future government more supportive of human rights is not just a matter of avoiding the strategic mistakes of the anti-Netanyahu coalition or doing better in terms of voter turnout.
  2. We should be careful about not idealizing the past, but there is a change going on in Israel. In the past, uncomfortable truths were swept under the table, but the declared public ethos was one which allowed most Israelis to maintain their self-image of a just people seeking to uphold universal values. Today, there are still many Israeli Jews who want to maintain that self-image. That will now be harder to do because we will now have a government with many members who are completely open about their racist, anti-democratic, and ethnocentric agenda. We may have an opening, if we can capitalize on the cognitive dissonance created when the veneer is stripped away. That will not be simple. I recall hearing from Palestinians that they thought that the election of Ariel Sharon would strip away the veneer.

However, there is also a sizable number of Israelis who knew just what they were voting for when they chose to vote for candidates with the openly racist, anti-democratic and ethnocentric agenda. Given that a large percentage of this population is Orthodox or traditional, can we craft a message of a different Judaism on their terms? I have long commented on how much more those who think differently than we do invest in education. Anonymous educators get to every small community in the country. The Eli settlement created the first pre-army academy dedicated to spreading their world view through a gap year program. They now run programs for post army young adults. There is no quick fix, but can we have “skin in the game?”

  1. These are just some initial thoughts, and I too need to spend a lot more time reflecting on what our strategy must now be, and discussing with others.

a. It is clear to be that we will need to take even further physical risks. Today, the Friday on the eve of Shabbat Lekh Lekha, is the day I was attacked by a knife wielding settler in 2005. The risks may well be becoming even greater, although I hope that I am wrong, and hope that somehow we will find a way of influencing the system to restrain settler violence by creating deterrence. However, that may only happen when the violence gets so bad that it has to be dealt with.

b. We must seek to go on trial, in the best tradition of civil disobedience. As mentioned above, just before the elections I did something I have almost never done. Guy Hirschfeld and I physically blocked the pickup of a violent settler racing into a Palestinian flock. I then grabbed him after he got out of the car and approached the flock on foot with a large rock in his hand, even as he banged my hand with the rock. On social media and in my blog, I begged the police to arrest me. I haven’t been arrested, but if Itamar Ben Gvir becomes Internal Security Minister, I might get my wish.

c. We must have the resources to use every legal strategy remaining to us, even as we keep our fingers on the pulse of the shifting legal sands in order to avoid doing harm. That is why increasing our budget to have a lawyer on staff is such a top priority for us.

d. We must work with our supporters abroad to maximize the impact of the international community.

e. We must find a way to speak to the Orthodox/traditional community in their language and on their terms.

Some may recall that when I was attacked on the eve of Shabbat Lekh Lekha, I asked to be called to the Torah to say the Mi Sh’Berakh prayer after the aliyah in which Abraham chooses not to employ his seniority and power to impose a solution on Lot when their shepherds begin to fight over grazing lands. He invites Lot to make the choice of who will graze where, because they are family, and family shouldn’t fight. Rashi teaches us that the conflict was also one of values:

7) ויהי ריב AND THERE WAS A QUARREL because Lot’s shepherds were wicked men and grazed their cattle in other people’s fields. Abram’s shepherds rebuked them for this act of robbery, but they replied, „The land has been given to Abram, and since he has no son as heir, Lot will be his heir: consequently this is not robbery“. Scripture, however, states: „The Canaanite and the Perizzite abode then in the land“, so that Abram was not yet entitled to possession (Genesis Rabbah 41:5).

May we all understand that we are one human family, that there are enough resources for all if we share them properly, and that we too must respect what belongs to others.

Shabbat Shalom,

Arik

Rabbi Arik W. Ascherman – Executive Director Torat Tzedek

Reisen – bildet

Im Januar und Februar 2023 auf nach Israel und Palästina

Zwei Angebote, die von diAk-Mitgliedern begleitet/organisiert werden – noch Plätze frei

Einmal (mit eigener Anreise) eine Fahrt zur Gebetswoche für die Einheit der Christenheit – 21.-29. Januar 2023:

Die Vielfalt der Ökumene in Jerusalem entdecken und erleben

und zum anderen eine

Studienfahrt Israel | Palästina. Perspektiven auf den Nahost-Konflikt
(Deutsche Vereinigung für Politische Bildung, Landesverband Rheinland-Pfalz, DVPB) vom 18.-26. Februar 2023

Kontakt auch über agentur@aphorisma.eu | Anmeldung bis 15. November 2022

Islam in Europa. 1000-1250

Ausstellung „Islam in Europa. 1000-1250“ vom 7. September 2022 bis 12. Februar 2023 im Dommuseum Hildeshein.

Mit Begleitprogramm und Katalog

In den Kirchenschätzen Europas und im Hildesheimer Domschatz sind zahlreiche Kunstwerke aus vom Islam geprägten Regionen überliefert. Ausgehend von diesen Objekten werden in der großen Sonderausstellung im Dommuseum Hildesheim die Gemeinsamkeiten und Verflechtungen der Kulturen aufgezeigt. Hochkarätige internationale Leihgaben unter anderen aus Florenz, London, Paris und Wien bieten eine einzigartige Möglichkeit, dieses auch für die Gegenwart relevante Thema zu betrachten.

Córdoba, Palermo, Kairo und Konstantinopel waren glänzende Metropolen mit florierender Wirtschaft, Wissenschaft und Kunst. Kostbare Bergkristallgefäße, Seidenstoffe, Elfenbeinschnitzereien und Übersetzungen von wissenschaftlicher Literatur fanden aus den vom Islam geprägten Regionen einen Weg bis nach Mitteleuropa. Die Migration der Objekte sowie die Vermittlung von Wissen und Technik führten zu einer Verflechtung der Kulturen. Sie verbanden über die Grenzen von Religionen und Sprachen und geographische Entfernungen hinweg die Gebiete des heutigen Irak und Iran über Nordafrika und Spanien bis nach Mitteleuropa. In den Kirchenschätzen erhalten, zeugen diese Objekte von den Gemeinsamkeiten der Kulturen in der Zeit zwischen 1000 und 1250. … (Weiterlesen)

Sog. Keilförmiges Reliquiar mit abbasidischer Schachfigur und arabisch beschriftetem Stein. Dommuseum Hildesheim

Sog. Keilförmiges Reliquiar mit abbasidischer Schachfigur und arabisch beschriftetem Stein. Dommuseum Hildesheim, DS 4. © Dommuseum Hildesheim, Photo: Florian Monheim