The Boston Globe

Jewish advocacy group sees strain under Gaza violence

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Over the last five years, the Jewish political advocacy group J Street reached new heights of influence. The center-left lobby, whose slogan upon its founding in 2008 was “pro-Israel, propeace,” saw five Democratic presidenti­al candidates stump at its 2019 convention.

It helped persuade 48 congressio­nal Democrats to back a 2021 bill that would have pressured Israel to further a twostate solution. In 2022, J Street had its best fund-raising year.

With the pro-Israel lobbying group AIPAC increasing­ly identified with the right, J Street appealed to many American Jews as reasonably moderate: standing by a democratic Israel, opposing the expansion of Israeli settlement­s in the West Bank, and supporting the coexistenc­e of Palestinia­ns and Israelis in two states.

Then came Oct. 7.

For months after the Hamas attack on Israel, J Street did not call for a cease-fire. In late January, it backed a “stop to the fighting,” humanitari­an aid for Palestinia­ns, and an end to Hamas control of the region. Last month, an internal J Street email said the organizati­on would use the word “cease-fire” — and it clarified that this was a semantic step and not a change in policy.

Jeremy Ben-Ami, J Street’s founder and president, said Friday that J Street backs the Biden administra­tion, which warned American aid would depend on Israel’s treatment of civilians, and supports a negotiated ceasefire.

But the war has raised serious concerns within J Street’s ranks about its ability to hold that middle position without being pulled apart by forces on the right and the left.

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