It is customary for our people to honor fast days, memorial days and festivals by studying commentaries on their origins, the symbols and rituals of their observance, and the ways in which they connect to our own lives.



Palestinian hunger strikes: the power of peaceful protest

Media Outlet: 
The Christian Science Monitor
Article Type: 
Opinion
Date: 
May 15, 2012

It may not have received much international attention, but Palestinian hunger strikes, which ended on May 14, have the potential to shake the status quo of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

That potential lies in the nonviolent nature of the strikes, which were carried out by Palestinians in Israeli detention, backed by grass-roots organizers, and concluded with Israel [20] agreeing to improve prison conditions.



Annexing Israel

Media Outlet: 
Haaretz
Article Type: 
Opinion
Date: 
May 16, 2012

You could, of course, be horrified at the bill to annex the West Bank settlements to the State of Israel, sponsored by MK Miri Regev (Likud ). But it's not mandatory. You could also welcome the miracle - the finger of God Himself - that caused Justice Minister Yaakov Neeman to come to his senses at the very last moment and oppose it (by abstaining only ), but that too is superfluous. Even the chilling thought of what would have happened had the bill been passed, what kind of world war it would have brought upon Israel, is of no consequence now.



J Street's Ben-Ami: 'U.S. Congressmen live in fear of pro-Israeli intimidation'

Media Outlet: 
Haaretz
Article Type: 
Opinion
Date: 
May 16, 2012

Many American senators and congressmen “keep quiet” and refrain from criticizing Israeli policies because they “live in fear” and are “intimidated” by pro-Israeli groups such as the Emergency Committee for Israel (ECI), according to J Street founder and President Jeremy Ben-Ami.



A tale of two Zionists: Ze'ev Jabotinsky, David Ben Gurion and the dramatic origins of Israel

Media Outlet: 
The Independent
Article Type: 
Opinion
Date: 
May 16, 2012

Two charismatic men born in Eastern Europe meet in 1934, first in a London hotel room and then in a Golders Green flat, to resolve their political differences in the shadow of the rise of Nazism. Within 15 years, one of them, who more than once interrupts the argument by reciting his own Hebrew translation of Edgar Allen Poe's darkly mysterious poem The Raven, will have died in exile.



Arab Spring and the Nakbeh

Media Outlet: 
The Jordan Times
Article Type: 
Opinion
Date: 
May 15, 2012

The Arab Spring has not been good to the Palestinian cause. It has deflected attention from Israel’s nefarious scheme to bypass the two-state solution by enforcing a unilateral settlement on the Palestinians.



The Palestinian struggle persists

Media Outlet: 
The Daily Star
Article Type: 
Opinion
Date: 
May 16, 2012

Yesterday marked the 64th anniversary of the Palestinian Nakba of May 1948, when Israel was established and Palestinians experienced the combination of exile and occupation that still defines them today.



Prisoners of Process

Media Outlet: 
The Daily Beast
Article Type: 
Opinion
Date: 
May 15, 2012

Two days ago the news of an agreement between Israel and the Palestinian prisoners to end the hunger-strike broke. The prisoners, most of whom have been without food for a month, won the right to have Gazan family visit them in prison (such visits have been denied for the past seven years) and the release of roughly 20 prisoners from solitary confinement into the general prison population (one prisoner has been in solitary confinement for almost a decade).



'The Palestinians Can Wait'

Media Outlet: 
Al-Monitor
Article Type: 
Opinion
Date: 
May 7, 2012

The coordinator of government activities in the Palestinian territories, Brigadier-General Eitan Dangot, has asked that the government approve an additional 5,000 permits for Palestinian laborers to enter Israel. That’s good for everyone. Politically, it’s good for Israel. Economically, it’s good for the Palestinian Authority. From a security perspective, it’s not a problem.