The Jerusalem Post

Under cloud of Iran talk, AIPAC quietly courts progressiv­es

- • By SARAH WILDMAN

WASHINGTON ( JTA) – At the AIPAC conference last week, a sea of 16,000 Israel supporters spent their time talking Iran policy amid the swirling controvers­y over Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s speech to Congress. To the sidelines fell discussion of the Israeli election, the peace process and Israeli innovation – as well as another, quieter aim of the three-day forum: courting progressiv­es. Sprinkled through the dense program were several well-attended sessions devoted to presenting Israel’s deep connection to progressiv­e values. In plenary sessions and breakout panels, speaker after speaker described the American Israel Public Affairs Committee’s mission as being in alignment with the history of civil rights and social justice. “Friendship. Courage. Commitment. These are the characteri­stics that I was taught to value,” AIPAC National Council member Rashida Winfrey, a Selma, Alabama, native with deep roots in the civil rights movement, said from the main stage following a clip of marchers crossing the Edmund Pettus Bridge in 1965. “Today I stand with those who support Israel as I know they stood with me.” AIPAC, long accused of leaning to the Right and concerned about stagnant support for Israel on the Left, has quietly upped its outreach to liberals in recent years. Marilyn Rosenthal, a former deputy political director with the lobby, was named national director for progressiv­e engagement in 2014. And yet, much of that effort was invisible to the media covering the AIPAC policy conference. A number of sessions that celebrated progressiv­e values were open to the press, such as the struggles against sexism and for gay rights. At one panel, titled “Proud and Pro-Israel,” longtime gay rights activist Winnie Stachelber­g of the Center for American Progress highlighte­d the history of Jewish support for marriage equality and employment nondiscrim­ination. But at several points, AIPAC shut the door to reporters. One session, titled “The Progressiv­e Case for Israel,” ran three times at the conference and was closed to the media. Also off the record was a panel – “Israel and the Progressiv­e Mind” – featuring Haaretz writer Ari Shavit, whose book, “My Promised Land,” re-examines several of Israel’s founding myths and whose presence conference-goers pointed to as evidence of a new openness. At one closed panel, Barney Frank, the longtime former congressma­n from Massachuse­tts, questioned settlement policy and Netanyahu’s decision to address Congress without first checking with the White House or congressio­nal Democrats. “It was one of the first times I heard any substantiv­e debates,” said Rabbi David Paskin of Palm Beach Gardens, Florida, who attended the Frank session and describes himself as a “progay rights, pro-women’s rights, pro-immigratio­n reform” progressiv­e. “Congressma­n Frank said something quite powerful: If Israel’s greatest supporters can’t criticize her, then we lose credibilit­y to others.” AIPAC declined to respond to repeated requests for comment on its progressiv­e outreach effort and why these panels were closed to the media. But interviews with attendees revealed that talk about the Palestinia­ns exposed a rift between those who believe it is time for AIPAC to address questions of Palestinia­n rights and those who feel such issues are outside the lobby’s purview. Rabbi Gil Steinlauf of Washington’s Adas Israel confessed to some ambivalenc­e about attending the conference. One speaker, he recalled, said that we are “called by God [to] do what is right for Israel.” “When I think about doing right for Israel, I also think of justice for Palestinia­ns and a real accountabi­lity for all kinds of policies and actions on the part of the current Israeli government that are hurting chances for peace profoundly,” Steinlauf said. Rabbi Daniel Cohen of South Orange, New Jersey, who participat­ed in a recent AIPAC trip to Israel for progressiv­e rabbis and serves as a volunteer AIPAC ambassador, called the notion that it’s contradict­ory to be both a progressiv­e and an AIPAC activist a “false narrative.” But Cohen, who pointed to his own long commitment to gay rights, poverty relief and the environmen­t, said AIPAC’s mission is solely to strengthen the US-Israel alliance. The future of the West Bank and Israel’s relationsh­ip with the Palestinia­ns fall outside the organizati­on’s mandate. “Organizati­ons have the right to define their mission and purpose in the way that they choose to define it,” Cohen said. “It is the democratic nation of Israel that has to determine what to do there” – in the West Bank and Gaza – “hopefully with a Palestinia­n Authority that really wants peace. But it is undemocrat­ic for someone living here to dictate policy there.” Without mentioning J Street, the self-described “pro-Israel, pro-peace” lobby seen as an alternativ­e to AIPAC, Cohen acknowledg­ed that other Israel policy groups disagree with AIPAC’s policy of avoiding such issues. “You can say that approach is wrong,” Cohen said. “Then this is not the pro-Israel lobby for you.” Joel Braunold, the US director of the Alliance for Middle East Peace, an umbrella group for organizati­ons working on Israeli-Palestinia­n reconcilia­tion, participat­ed in two open panels addressing coexistenc­e projects. Braunold said he did not moderate his message for AIPAC. His audience, he added, was mostly receptive to warnings by his fellow panelists about Jewish extremism. Matt Duss, the president of the Foundation for Middle East Peace and a writer for a number of progressiv­e publicatio­ns, said it was good that AIPAC recognized that it had a problem with progressiv­es. “But they need to understand it’s not a perception problem but a reality problem,” Duss said. “It is great to talk about LGBT rights, social welfare and other progressiv­e issues. Israel is a great society in many respects. But you cannot use those things to paper over the fact that Israel continues the occupation, continues to expand settlement­s and continues to control the lives of millions of Palestinia­ns to whom it owes no accountabi­lity. “The question is whether AIPAC is really willing to grapple with these issues. And I see no evidence of that yet,” he said.

 ?? (Jonathan Ernst/Reuters) ?? WORKERS PREPARE the stage at the AIPAC conference in Washington last week.
(Jonathan Ernst/Reuters) WORKERS PREPARE the stage at the AIPAC conference in Washington last week.

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