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Jewish activists opposing the Israeli government's policies face
intimidation and harassment via email and on the internet.
Deborah Fink is a singer and music teacher living in London. She is also
Jewish. Last month, out of the blue, she received a deluge of hateful
emails - more than 150 in the space of a week.
One
came from a rabbi in New York, informing her: "Your soul, my dear, is
petrified and lost." Another said, menacingly: "Hitler killed the wrong
Jews."
Yet
another - ostensibly from a Jewish doctor of medicine in the US -
elaborated on the Holocaust theme. "Too bad Hitler didn't get your
family," it said. "With six million Jews dieing [sic] 60 year [sic] ago
it's a shame scum like you somehow managed to survive."
What,
exactly, had Ms Fink done to deserve this vitriol? The short answer is
that she had been planning to sing.
Ms
Fink is a member of Just Peace UK, a mainly, but not exclusively, Jewish
group opposing the Israeli occupation and seeking "a viable and
sovereign Palestinian state alongside a safe and secure Israel, with
Jerusalem as the shared capital of both states".
Just
before Christmas, she helped to organise an alternative carol concert in
Trafalgar Square, at which traditional Christmas songs were sung with
new words. One of them went like this:
Oh
little town of Bethlehem, How still we see thee lie. A wall is laid
where tourists stayed, And tanks go rolling by ...
To
publicise the event, organisers sent out several hundred emails. One of
them fell into the hands of a man named Tom Gross, who strongly
disapproved.
The
furious Mr Gross passed the email to his friend, Naomi Ragen, together
with a note saying that the carol singers would be handing out
songsheets "filled with hatred for Israel and digusting calumnies" to
passers-by.
On
receiving his message, Ms Ragen circulated an email of her own, which
began: "I suppose it's fitting that self-hating Jews will be singing
anti-Israel Christmas songs to curry favour with oh-so-genteel British
anti-Semites."
Her
message concluded: "I hope this will give British Jews a chance to
organise a counter-campaign. If, after reading what the hate-mongers are
going to be saying, you'd like to contact them, here are some
addresses."
Email
addresses for four of the "hate-mongering" carol singers followed,
including that of Ms Fink.
For
good measure, Ms Ragen sent her own personal note to Ms Fink, saying: "I
hope you and your children suffer what we in Israel have suffered. And
then perhaps I will sing carols praising those who blow you and yours
up. Happy Holiday."
Ms
Ragen is a US-born novelist and dramatist who now lives in Jerusalem,
where she also writes freelance columns for the Jerusalem Post.
Among
those who received her complaint about the carol singers was an
organisation called Isralert. Its exact purpose is unclear, although it
describes itself as a "Jewish advocacy network".
It
also operates a private, and rather secretive, emailing list. The only
way to join is by invitation from an existing member - and even then,
its organiser, Harv Weiner, "may refuse a subscription to anyone for any
reason".
This
was not the first time that a message from Ms Ragen had appeared on
Isralert. Last May, she attacked businessman-philanthropist Edgar
Bronfman and 13 other prominent US Jews for breaking with the "Jewish
leadership".
Their
"offence" had been to write a letter to Congress, supporting the road
map for peace in the Middle East. The peace plan is backed by the US,
Europe, Russia and the UN.
"I'd
like to say this to dear Mr Bronfman," Ms Ragen wrote. "Take your money
... and shove it. You are betraying us in Israel. Your recent statement
makes me sick, and can in no way be viewed as a friendly or helpful
gesture to Israel or Israelis. However, I'm sure Mr Arafat will send you
a thankyou note."
The
day before the Trafalgar Square carol concert, Isralert posted Ms
Ragen's email about the carol singers - together with their email
addresses - on think-israel.org, a website based in Bethesda, Maryland.
Among
other things, think-israel.org claims that the Palestinians "have no
historical, national or cultural identity distinct from other Arabs of
the region", and that the whole of the West Bank belongs to Israel.
Ms
Ragen's message, along with the note from Mr Gross, also surfaced as a
special "action alert" on a website called ourenemies.org - undoubtedly
one of the nastiest non-pornographic sites on the internet.
The
site is registered in Bogota, Colombia, where its owner is identified
only by a Hotmail address. It is hosted by a company in Florida called
Aleph-Net.
Besides making crude attempts at satire ("Arafat is gay! Former
paedophile outed"), ourenemies.org targets what it calls "self-hating
Jews" in a vicious and highly personalised way.
Among
those featured is a Jewish lawyer who defended terrorism suspects in
court, and "the Jew who broke bread with Arafat on Passover ...
currently married to a bug-eyed Michigan-born ARAB who calls herself a
'Palestinian'. Was it a match made in Hell? Or simply a Jew made in
Hell! You be the Judge!"
An
Israeli teenager who refused to do military service is pilloried as a
supporter of "Arab terrorism", with the suggestion that he should be
shot for high treason.
There
is also a rabbi "who supports the murders of Jewish children, and
condemns Israeli action to protect its citizens", and a list of "Other
(Self-Hating) Jewish Freaks of Nature" - mainly Israeli peace
organisations.
The
name of one of the site's victims is shown in large brown type with a
note below saying: "Does the color of the above text remind you of
anything?"
The
site gives personal details of the people targeted, including their
email addresses, phone numbers and home addresses, together with street
maps in some cases ("so you won't get lost").
In
the case of organisations, details of their internet servers are given -
presumably to facilitate hacking. This is followed by a disclaimer
urging people not to harass or threaten the targets, hack their
computers, send them viruses, and so on.
Ourenemies.org says it is affiliated to another website,
California-based Masada2000, which publishes a "SHIT List" of more than
6,000 "Self-Hating, Israel-Threatening" Jews.
Interestingly, most of the nastiness generated in the name of defending
Israel seems to come from the US rather than from Israel itself.
It
may be the work of a lunatic fringe but, according to Ms Fink, even
Jewish activists in Britain who reject the Israeli government's line can
face various kinds of harassment. Earlier, Ms Fink had come under fire
from the Union of Jewish Students when she tried to set up a student
branch of "Jews for Justice for Palestinians".
Last
November, a Jewish protest in Golders Green - the heart of the London
Jewish community - against the construction of Israel's West Bank wall
was greeted by threatening phone calls, a counter-demonstration and
cries of "traitors".
It
ended with one of the peace activists - a former Israeli soldier - being
punched and knocked to the ground