MISSION
TO ISRAEL
In
These Times of Trouble,
Friends Come on the Double
By
Raphael Rothstein
S
a veteran over the years of hastily organized missions of North American
Jews to Israel in times of trouble, I’ve learned that despite the
brevity of the stay, Israelis genuinely appreciate the affirmation of
connection and expressions of sympathy and concern.
Social
psychologists say that beleaguered people need to know that they are not
alone, that in some fashion, no matter how distantly, others share
knowledge of their plight.
This
consciousness helps them endure.
For
the participants who come for two and a half days it is a question of
being what in Hebrew is called shutaf la’inyan, a partner in the experience.
For
many of the 200 or so
participants on our
Presidents Conference-
JNF-Israel Bonds mission
it was a defining moment,
making vivid and real the
anxiety of vulnerability to
terrorism and bewilderment
over where things are
heading. |
As
fleeting and evanescent the emotions and responses are during the packed
days and many meetings – formal and informal – a shared sense of Ahm
Yisrael emerges.
It’s
always hard to predict what parts of a mission’s itinerary will be the
most affecting, but encounters with young people are invariably moving.
Such
was the case at a JNF forest in Drom Hasharon near the green line, which
was recently torched by arsonists identified as coming from a nearby Arab
village.
A
teen-age girl spoke of the pain of seeing the woodland destroyed. At her
invitation the delegates gingerly walked over the charred acres and placed
small green flags amid the stumps in their determination to replant and
rebuild.
For
many of the 200 or so participants on our Presidents Conference-JNF-Israel
Bonds mission it was a “defining moment,” making vivid and real the
anxiety of vulnerability to terrorism and bewilderment over where things
are heading.
Another
such vignette crystallizing emotion and empathy was meeting with relatives
of the soldiers lynched in Ramallah.
In
a rare spasm of inter-organizational coordination, those responsible
managed to unite the Canadians, Americans and European solidarity missions
and the Jewish Agency Board of Governors at key gatherings with President
Katzav, the Prime Minister and the Mayor of Jerusalem.
A
large audience in the impressive city council chamber heard Mayor Ehud
Olmert declare that the current wave of violence is nothing less than the
battle for Jerusalem.
The
next night, Prime Minister Ehud Barak beamed as he made his entrance to
the Jerusalem Theatre, cheerfully shaking hands and reciting “shalom,
shalom” to the obviously delighted participants.
For
these few days, contentious issues such as Conservative and Reform
enfranchisement were muted and the meetings were decorous.
One
minor exception was a delegate’s irritated retort to U.S. Ambassador
Martin Indyk’s welcome.
“How
is it,” the questioner demanded, “you welcome us when your State
Department tells us to stay away?”
And,
at the President’s residence, the head of the French-Jewish Community
was roundly booed when he mentioned Jacques Chirac’s “efforts for
Mideast peace.”
Reports
of large-scale tourist cancellations and over-all economic dislocation
hardly prepare the visitor for the reality of empty hotels and restaurants
and the generally gloomy atmosphere.
TO
strengthen its mission
of promoting traffic to
Israel, the Ministry of
Tourism has dispatched
Uzi Gafni to New York in
the role of Deputy
Commissioner for Tourism
in North America as well as
consul and director of the
Israel Government Tourist
Office (IGTO) in the
northeastern United States. |
Lunchtime
found us at the Minaret, a popular Jerusalem restaurant featuring tangy
Mideastern salads and skewers of grilled lamb and chicken.
There were barely half a dozen customers in the newly opened,
spacious dining room.
We
schmoozed with one of the owners, the scion of a long-standing
Jerusalem-Arab family.
Lamenting
the current strife, he firmly rejected any notion of future separation,
saying that the Jews and Palestinians were like “two fish in the sea –
remove one and the other dies.” Maybe
something lost in translation, but we got his drift.
Back
at the hotel, more briefings with the serendipitous element of surprise
guests, some of them quite well known, such as former UN Ambassador Dore
Gold and Raanan Gissin, the ubiquitous Israel Army spokesman whose
energetic clarifications are a mainstay of CNN coverage.
The
demands of the volatile situation make it difficult for government
officials and others to adhere to fixed schedules. So there were many
last-minute cancellations.
Malcolm
Hoenlein, executive vice chairman of the Presidents Conference, was on his
cell phone resembling nothing so much as a desperate mountain-resort
impresario whose stellar holiday weekend program is falling apart at each
moment.
That
Malcolm succeeded in finding qualified, expert replacements was a tribute
to his personal connections and the considerable media attention the
mission received soon after arrival.
The
much-maligned Jewish Agency, buffeted in recent years by charges of
redundancy and so-called post-Zionist revisionism, still has the knack of
staging public rallies complete with bands and school children, flags and
signs with such quaint and dated slogans as “Zionism will win!” (as if
it hasn’t).
We
gathered with hundreds of Israelis on Mount Zion for a march to the
Western Wall where once again Mayor Olmert would address us.
While
waiting, an unaccounted for brown paper bag was spotted on the ground and
the security forces in a well-practiced drill cleared the area, probed the
bag and then shot it, presumably to disarm any charge that might be
inside.
The
incident passed without mishap and one wag sighed, “Another lunch bag
bites the dust.”
A
few hours later, the good-natured group again experienced the overall
tension when a visit to Gilo, at the southern end of the city, was
cancelled because of continuing sniper fire from the neighboring village
of Bet Jalla.
Some
speakers wear well. Such was the case with Natan Scharansky who made a
second appearance at our farewell dinner.
Despite his years in politics, the popular Sharansky remains an
original and thoughtful speaker.
He
reiterated the importance of Israel knowing that she is not alone. He
asked us to bring back a message of the nation’s firm resolve.
“Well,”
said one exhausted participant as she looked around the jammed ballroom,
“we can at least thank Arafat for bringing Jews together.”
|