Over the years, many Jewish leaders, Rabbi’s and Progressive Jews in L.A. have sided with the BLM, Antifa, Planned Parenthood, LGBQT+, socialists and haters of America. Now that Israel has been attacked—and Jews is Los Angeles threatened in the community on at USC and UCLA, the Jewish community has finally found out the truth.
They have been used. For years radicals and haters used the Jewish community for donations and support for crazy ideas—even supporting riots when the BLM created them.
Now, in its time of need, the ONLY friends the Jewish community has are Republicans and Christians! What happened to those “interfaith councils”?
“Brous still feels this way. But she also feels abandoned by non-Jewish progressives, who she says have been less vocal and supportive about the loss of Israeli lives. Brous made this analogy:
“To imagine if there, God forbid, had been a massacre like this on American soil under the Trump administration,” she said. “And then, if the world responded to that massive loss of life by saying, ‘Well, but they lived under this government, so it’s really their fault.’”
It’s a frustration that’s been shared by other Jewish progressives, among them Rabbi Joel Simonds with the Wilshire Boulevard Temple.
“I’ve never felt more connected to my Jewish community, and I’ve never felt so alone in the larger world,” said Simonds, who directs the Jewish Center for Justice, which works with other progressive groups on issues like voting rights, environmental justice, LGBTQ rights and other causes.
Get real. As expected, the Jewish community has been abandoned by their “friends”. They were used. Hope they got the message.
Grief and mixed feelings as war rages
By Leslie Berestein Rojas, LA1st, 10/26/23 https://laist.com/brief/news/las-jewish-progressives-grapple-with-opposing-views-on-israel-and-the-war-in-gaza,
LA’s Jewish Progressives Grapple With Opposing Views On War In Gaza
In the days following the Oct. 7 Hamas attack on Israel, as people mourned and Israel’s retaliatory airstrikes in Gaza intensified, a group led by young Jewish progressives began holding vigils around Los Angeles.
They would recite the Mourner’s Kaddish, a prayer in honor of the dead — for both Israelis who died in the attack and Palestinians killed in the airstrikes.
Asher Kaplan was at one of these vigils in Sherman Oaks when some cars pulled up alongside them, “blasting music, yelling at us, telling us that we were Nazis, you know, all this stuff,” he said.
Kaplan said those critics — like him and many in the crowd — were also members of the local Jewish community.
Since the attacks took place, American Jews have drawn together in their grief. At the same time, longstanding divisions within the Jewish community over Israel have been deepening.
It’s felt here in L.A., where the Jewish community leans liberal and criticism of the hardline Israeli government, at least pre-war, was not uncommon.
WHAT WE KNOW SO FAR
- Death toll and casualties
- Israeli officials report an attack by Hamas militants on Oct. 7 killed more than 1,400 people. In addition, they say more than 220 people were taken hostage, with more wounded.
- Since then, Ministry of Health in Gaza has reported more than 7,700 Palestinians have been killed in Israeli airstrikes and more than 14,000 injured.
- The United Nations estimates more than 1.4 million people — more than half of the territory’s population — are displaced from their homes.
- Israeli military has expanded its ground operations as conditions deteriorate in Gaza.
— NPR (Oct. 28)
But even among Jewish progressives, feelings about Israel’s response are complex. Some are calling for a ceasefire. Others are grappling with mixed feelings, trying to reconcile their progressive values with outrage, grief, and a sense of feeling abandoned by the larger left.
“They’re on the one hand trying to balance their commitment to the rights of Palestinians with their commitment to Israel’s rights,” said Dov Waxman, a political scientist with UCLA’s Y&S Nazarian Center for Israel Studies, “and the rights of Jews to live in the land, in Israel, in peace.”
‘A diversity of opinions’
Kaplan volunteers for IfNotNow, a national Jewish progressive group founded in 2014 that opposes Israeli occupation in Gaza and the West Bank. Last week the group protested in front of Vice President Kamala Harris’ house in Brentwood, calling for an end to the airstrikes.
“I’m connected through friends and family to people that have been impacted by this, that have lost their lives and been taken hostage,” Kaplan told LAist. “I don’t think that dropping 6,000 bombs on Gaza in the span of a week is an effective strategy for returning the hostages safely.”
Kaplan, who grew up in Pico-Robertson’s Jewish enclave and is the grandson of a Holocaust survivor, has found himself defending this stance with bystanders, friends, and relatives lately. Conversations sometimes turn angry.
“There have always been a diversity of opinions within the Jewish community about the state of Israel,” he said, “and criticism of the way that the country conducts itself is not criticism of Jewish people or Judaism.”
But emotions over the conflict are extremely raw, informed by the ever-present trauma of the Holocaust, and ongoing concerns about antisemitism.
As many Americans on the left have taken to the streets in support of Palestine, some of L.A.’s most progressive Jewish leaders say they feel isolated from other Americans who otherwise share their views.
‘I’ve never felt so alone’
In her sermon on Yom Kippur, less than two weeks before the Hamas attack, Rabbi Sharon Brous made clear her feelings about Israel’s conservative government.
“The fact is there can be no democracy with occupation,” she stated, speaking to her progressive IKAR congregation in Pico-Robertson.
Brous still feels this way. But she also feels abandoned by non-Jewish progressives, who she says have been less vocal and supportive about the loss of Israeli lives. Brous made this analogy:
“To imagine if there, God forbid, had been a massacre like this on American soil under the Trump administration,” she said. “And then, if the world responded to that massive loss of life by saying, ‘Well, but they lived under this government, so it’s really their fault.’”
It’s a frustration that’s been shared by other Jewish progressives, among them Rabbi Joel Simonds with the Wilshire Boulevard Temple.
“I’ve never felt more connected to my Jewish community, and I’ve never felt so alone in the larger world,” said Simonds, who directs the Jewish Center for Justice, which works with other progressive groups on issues like voting rights, environmental justice, LGBTQ rights and other causes.
Simonds said that while he’ll remain dedicated to his work with progressive coalitions, “Will I sit at the table with coalition partners that I sat at the table with a month ago? Maybe not, because I feel a sense of hurt.”
He said he can’t speak for all Jewish progressives, but Simonds knows where he stands on the conflict.
“I like to consider myself a progressive and a liberal,” he said. “I’m not going to abandon those terms just because I have been frustrated with individuals who claim to be progressive. All that being said, I’m not a pacifist. I do believe in just war.”
Multiple truths
As the war escalates, it’s become clear that there’s no lockstep, just as there are no easy answers. UCLA’s Waxman said that right now, it’s difficult for people to accept and speak to multiple truths.
“It’s important that we can do both of these things, that we can denounce Hamas unequivocally for its terrorist attack, and also criticize the conduct and the way in which Israel is conducting its war against Hamas,” Waxman said. “But in this moment where passions are running so high on all sides and tempers are so inflamed, it seems, it is difficult for people to do that.”
As Rabbi Brous observes, the struggle for Jewish progressives is to reconcile the gray areas.
“The challenge of our time,” Brous said, “is to hold more than one truth at once, and to continue to hold above all else our humanity and one another’s.
No one occupies Gaza except unfortunate “Palestinians” and Hamas which rules them. No Jew, no Israeli.
I don’t know the definition of a Jewish progressive, but if it is the same as our many other former-liberal progressives, I can imagine they just may feel isolated as backlash from more conventional US citizens grows. These folks question, why should I accept the rule of a tiny minority whose ideas border on insanity?
Issues like voting rights, environmental justice, and LGBTQ rights are made-up controversies favored by made-up victims.
None of us think victimhood of Jews is made-up. And no one I know thinks the evils of Oct 7 are anything but barbaric. Deluded college students and folks fearing the cancel culture may get out into the streets in protest of Israeli military response, but the mob mind is not noted for its intelligence. Ever.
Thanks for speaking out against the mob. Made up “rights” are about power, not freedom or democracy
I can only think that there are two people that could explain the Jewish Progressive, Unfortunately, both are deceased. One is Moses, the other a little more contemporary is Henny Youngman.
Moses would offer the 11th Commandment, Thou shall not be a Liberal. Henny would offer a Jewish joke that is wryly delivered and the punchline hurts. I would like to have been there if he did. The Jews have been sold out by the Left fand their predecessors for centuries. We now have instant news that allows one to draw a picture of victimhood and it’s yourself; inflicted devotion to the wrong guys.