• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • Home
  • TP について/About
  • Topics/トピクス
    • Gender/ジェンダー
    • Globalisation/グローバリゼーション
    • Japan and Asia/日本とアジア
    • Japanese/日本語
    • Media/メディア
    • News/ニュース
    • Social Justice/社会正義
    • War and Empire/戦争&支配権力
    • Environment/環境
    • Other Stories/他の記事
  • Links/リンク
  • Contact

TokyoProgressive

Linking Progressives East and West Since 1997

東西のプログレッシブをつなぐ − 1997年設立  |  Linking Progressives East and West Since 1997

-FEDERMAN ARREST REVEALS DIVIDED JEWISH COMMUNITY

May 1, 2003 by tokyoprogressive Leave a Comment

Please forward to interested people or appropriate lists, with entire
message and contact details.

———————————————–
DENNIS FOX WRITES
http://www.dennisfox.net
Subscribe: df@dennisfox.net
———————————————–

May 1, 2003

GADFLYING Column [Brookline TAB] http://www.dennisfox.net/tab/2003/0501federman.html

This version may differ from the published version at http://www.townonline.com/brookline/news/opinion/bt_edibrfoxrun04302003.htm

FEDERMAN ARREST REVEALS DIVIDED JEWISH COMMUNITY

Dennis Fox

On April 13th, Framingham police arrested Marty Federman after a peaceful protest against Temple Beth Sholom’s guest speaker — evangelist Pat Robertson, founder of the Christian Coalition and host of the 700 Club. As far as I can tell from conflicting reports, the Brookline resident’s arrest is unlikely to stand up in court, though predicting becomes difficult as authorities across the country crack down on dissent.

Federman serves on the steering committee of the Brookline-based Jewish group Visions of Peace and Justice in Israel/Palestine, which I belong to (http://vopj.org/). The 55 year-old activist has also worked as Northeastern University’s Hillel director, director of education at Somerville’s Congregation B’nai Brith, and executive director of Temple Beth Shalom in Cambridge.

Last year I watched Federman, a familiar presence at meetings and rallies, stand his ground against right-wing Zionists hurling invective rather than rational argument. That his position stems from deep knowledge and appreciation of Jewish culture and tradition seems irrelevant to those who target him for abuse.

Most recently, Federman’s been speaking about his six-week visit to Israel and the occupied territories. Throughout his visit he emailed detailed, thoughtful, often pained observations unfiltered by media gatekeepers. He next speaks at a Visions meeting designed in part to recruit new members (May 11th, 7 pm at Workmen’s Circle Building, 1762 Beacon Street, Brookline).

I missed the Framingham protest because I went instead to hear Noam Chomsky. Many politically conservative Jews can’t stand the influential MIT professor even if they have little accurate knowledge of his views. I wanted to see what he’d say to an audience at the other end of the spectrum, assembled by the New England Committee to Defend Palestine (http://www.onepalestine.org/). NECDP’s goal is one state from the Mediterranean to the Jordan River.

As it turned out, Chomsky stuck to his position that prospects for bi-national existence disappeared long ago. Decades of hostility among Israelis and Palestinians, he argued, mean the only feasible outcome is two separate states. Moreover, since this represents the international consensus and the position of two-thirds of Americans, Chomsky says it’s achievable despite opposition from both sides.

According to polls, most American Jews also support a two-state solution. That can only help, though, if negotiators resolve, rather than sidestep, complex issues. Both states must be equally viable, which means, at a minimum, that Palestine can’t consist simply of the tiny, separate, dependent cantons envisioned in past proposals.

Even that truncated version, though, is rejected by Jews who either don’t trust Palestinian intentions or won’t relinquish fantasies of recreating Biblical Israel. These are the Jews who embrace Pat Robertson.

Although Robertson’s Framingham topic was “The Importance of American Support for Israel,” the dozen protestors outside criticized his views more broadly. Federman and others with tickets listened peacefully to Robertson’s blather about how “evangelical Christians have a visceral, heartfelt love of Israel as God’s fulfillment of His plan for mankind and for the Jewish people” and how Israel is a “western outpost in the midst of a medieval form of tyranny.”

Afterwards, they distributed leaflets outside asking people to “read what Pat Robertson has to say (but what you won’t hear tonight).”

Foreshadowing a recent comment by Rod Paige, President Bush’s Education Secretary, one Robertson quote should interest local public-school supporters: “We can change education in America if you put Christian principles in and Christian pedagogy in. In three years, you would totally revolutionize education in America.” Similar gems clarify the reverend’s opposition to feminism, homosexuality, separation of church and state, and more.

He’s entitled to his opinions. Still, as the leaflet concluded, “Being in bed with Pat Robertson can never be good for the Jews!”

Federman says a police officer demanded protestors stop leafleting “because I told you so.” They reluctantly complied, but when Federman wanted to go back to meet his friends, the officer said “That’s it. You’re under arrest.” Released on bond, Federman went to an emergency room to treat a neurological condition exacerbated by rough handcuffing. Charged with trespassing and disorderly conduct, his pretrial hearing is May 19th.

Regardless of the outcome, the arrest won’t diminish Federman’s work against intolerance and injustice. It remains to be seen, though, if it intimidates others who hold the important middle ground.

———————————————–
Subscribers to this list receive:

* biweekly columns applying broader themes to local issues in
Brookline, Massachusetts
* a monthly political column for BeyondMainstream.com and other
commentaries as written
* academic papers at the intersection of critical psychology,
law/justice, and radical politics (occasional)
* personal/political essays (rare)

Most papers are posted at http://www.dennisfox.net

May 1, 2003

GADFLYING Column [Brookline TAB] http://www.dennisfox.net/tab/2003/0501federman.html

This version may differ from the published version at http://www.townonline.com/brookline/news/opinion/bt_edibrfoxrun04302003.htm

FEDERMAN ARREST REVEALS DIVIDED JEWISH COMMUNITY

Dennis Fox

On April 13th, Framingham police arrested Marty Federman after a peaceful protest against Temple Beth Sholom’s guest speaker — evangelist Pat Robertson, founder of the Christian Coalition and host of the 700 Club. As far as I can tell from conflicting reports, the Brookline resident’s arrest is unlikely to stand up in court, though predicting becomes difficult as authorities across the country crack down on dissent.

Federman serves on the steering committee of the Brookline-based Jewish group Visions of Peace and Justice in Israel/Palestine, which I belong to (http://vopj.org/). The 55 year-old activist has also worked as Northeastern University’s Hillel director, director of education at Somerville’s Congregation B’nai Brith, and executive director of Temple Beth Shalom in Cambridge.

Last year I watched Federman, a familiar presence at meetings and rallies, stand his ground against right-wing Zionists hurling invective rather than rational argument. That his position stems from deep knowledge and appreciation of Jewish culture and tradition seems irrelevant to those who target him for abuse.

Most recently, Federman’s been speaking about his six-week visit to Israel and the occupied territories. Throughout his visit he emailed detailed, thoughtful, often pained observations unfiltered by media gatekeepers. He next speaks at a Visions meeting designed in part to recruit new members (May 11th, 7 pm at Workmen’s Circle Building, 1762 Beacon Street, Brookline).

I missed the Framingham protest because I went instead to hear Noam Chomsky. Many politically conservative Jews can’t stand the influential MIT professor even if they have little accurate knowledge of his views. I wanted to see what he’d say to an audience at the other end of the spectrum, assembled by the New England Committee to Defend Palestine (http://www.onepalestine.org/). NECDP’s goal is one state from the Mediterranean to the Jordan River.

As it turned out, Chomsky stuck to his position that prospects for bi-national existence disappeared long ago. Decades of hostility among Israelis and Palestinians, he argued, mean the only feasible outcome is two separate states. Moreover, since this represents the international consensus and the position of two-thirds of Americans, Chomsky says it’s achievable despite opposition from both sides.

According to polls, most American Jews also support a two-state solution. That can only help, though, if negotiators resolve, rather than sidestep, complex issues. Both states must be equally viable, which means, at a minimum, that Palestine can’t consist simply of the tiny, separate, dependent cantons envisioned in past proposals.

Even that truncated version, though, is rejected by Jews who either don’t trust Palestinian intentions or won’t relinquish fantasies of recreating Biblical Israel. These are the Jews who embrace Pat Robertson.

Although Robertson’s Framingham topic was “The Importance of American Support for Israel,” the dozen protestors outside criticized his views more broadly. Federman and others with tickets listened peacefully to Robertson’s blather about how “evangelical Christians have a visceral, heartfelt love of Israel as God’s fulfillment of His plan for mankind and for the Jewish people” and how Israel is a “western outpost in the midst of a medieval form of tyranny.”

Afterwards, they distributed leaflets outside asking people to “read what Pat Robertson has to say (but what you won’t hear tonight).”

Foreshadowing a recent comment by Rod Paige, President Bush’s Education Secretary, one Robertson quote should interest local public-school supporters: “We can change education in America if you put Christian principles in and Christian pedagogy in. In three years, you would totally revolutionize education in America.” Similar gems clarify the reverend’s opposition to feminism, homosexuality, separation of church and state, and more.

He’s entitled to his opinions. Still, as the leaflet concluded, “Being in bed with Pat Robertson can never be good for the Jews!”

Federman says a police officer demanded protestors stop leafleting “because I told you so.” They reluctantly complied, but when Federman wanted to go back to meet his friends, the officer said “That’s it. You’re under arrest.” Released on bond, Federman went to an emergency room to treat a neurological condition exacerbated by rough handcuffing. Charged with trespassing and disorderly conduct, his pretrial hearing is May 19th.

Regardless of the outcome, the arrest won’t diminish Federman’s work against intolerance and injustice. It remains to be seen, though, if it intimidates others who hold the important middle ground.

———————————————–
Subscribers to this list receive:

* biweekly columns applying broader themes to local issues in
Brookline, Massachusetts
* a monthly political column for BeyondMainstream.com and other
commentaries as written
* academic papers at the intersection of critical psychology,
law/justice, and radical politics (occasional)
* personal/political essays (rare)

Most papers are posted at http://www.dennisfox.net

Filed Under: World News

Join the Discussion

Comment on this article or respond to others' comments.

You can post below or send to the mailing list at discuss@list.tokyoprogressive.org.

a) Please sign you name at the bottom of your comment, so that we know who wrote it.

b) To prevent spam, comments need to be manually approved.

c) Comments which are insulting, racist, homophobic or submitted in bad faith will not be published.

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Primary Sidebar

Search the site

Archives

Main Categories (old and most recent)

Alternative News Contributors/投稿者 creative Democracy Now Environment/環境 Featured Gender/ジェンダー Globalisation/グローバリゼーション Jacobin Japan/日本 Japan and Asia/日本とアジア Japanese/日本語 Japan Focus Japan News Korea/韓国 latest latest-j links Media/メディア Mp3 National Security Archive neoliberalism new News/ニュース Other Stories/他の記事 Social Justice/社会正義 Topics Uncategorized Video War and Empire/戦争&支配権力

Search deeper

Abe activities, protests, films, events Afghanistan alternative news Bush class issues and homelessness Environmental research fukushima gaza health care Henoko human rights Iraq Iraq, Afganistan and the War on Terror Iraq and Afghanistan, opposing the wars Israel Japan Korea labor issues Latin America Middle East military North Korea nuclear nuclear waste Obama Okinawa Okinawa Palestine peace protest protest and resistance racism/human rights radiation state crimes Syria Takae Tepco Trump U.S. War world news English ニュース/社会問題 人権 平和、憲法9条

Design and Hosting for Progressives

Donate/寄付

Please support our work. This includes costs involved in producing this news site as well as our free hosting service for activists, teachers and students. Donations/寄付 can be sent to us via PayPal or Donately. You can also click on the buttons below to make a one-time donation.




Work with us

TokyoProgressive
supports and participates in projects of like-minded people and groups directly (technical, editing, design) and not-so directly (financial or moral support). Likewise, we also welcome contributions by readers that are consistent with promoting social justice. If you have a project you would like help with, or if you would like to submit an article, link, or report on a protest activity, please contact us here.

Footer

All opinions are those of the original authors and may not reflect the views of TokyoProgressive. This site contains copyrighted material the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. We are making such material available in our efforts to advance understanding of environmental, political, human rights, economic, democracy, scientific, and social justice issues, etc. We believe this constitutes a ‘fair use’ of any such copyrighted material as provided for by copyright law in several countries. The material on this site is distributed without profit.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Copyleft 1997-present: tokyoprogressive dot org

TokyoProgressive supports and participates in projects of like-minded people and groups directly (technical, editing, design) and not-so directly (financial or moral support). Likewise, we also welcome contributions by readers that are consistent with promoting social justice. If you have a project you would like help with, or if you would like to submit an article, link, or report on a protest activity, please contact us here.

Copyright © 2025 · Magazine Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in