Letters to the Editor: A Debate on Settlements; Toronto for Jews
A Question of Morals
Jay Michaelson’s
“Commentary: Gedaliah in the Eye of the Beholder” (August/September
issue) starts with a glaring historical error and goes on to more
serious errors of misjudgment.
The
Babylonian exile was in the 6th century B.C.E., not C.E. Michaelson
goes on to explain that Gedaliah’s message to the future is “a
methodology of introspection,” which “takes a clear stand for
moderation.”
Is there to be no distinction
between right and wrong at all? Engagement with evil is not always
effective, or the only moral choice. Standing in outrage against the
daily terror attacks on Sderot requires knowing right from wrong,
something Michaelson does not prize as highly as rising “above our
basest natures.”
Roger E. Harris
Raleigh, NC
Unsettling Business
Gershom Gorenberg, in “Letter From Jerusalem: Putting Settlements on
the Map” (August/September issue), excoriates successive Israeli
governments for not stopping settlement construction. Yet, such a
roadmap-required freeze has always been contingent on significant prior
Palestinian performance in stopping terrorism and incitement. That,
manifestly, has not happened. Nor, moreover, is Elliot Abrams alone in
claiming a 2004 U.S.-Israel agreement accepting “natural growth.” Even
contemporaneous media reports attested to it. Given the Obama
administration’s retroactive renunciation, even denial of [the
agreement], can Israel, when contemplating taking existential risks in
the future, now depend on any U.S. assurances?
Richard D. Wilkins
Syracuse, NY
Hadassah’s
continuing inclusion of Gershom Gorenberg’s articles on settlements
without any contradicting articles that support either current Israeli
opinion or government policy is becoming increasingly disturbing to
many readers.
A poll reported on August 27th
in The Jerusalem Post indicated that the number of Israelis who view
President Obama’s policies as pro-Israel has fallen to an all-time low
of 4 percent. When asked whether they would support the freezing of
settlement construction for a year as part of an American-brokered
deal, 50 percent said no, 41
percent said yes. These findings are significantly different than the
impression which one would gain from reading Gorenberg’s article.
Jerome Gumenick
Lake Worth, FL
Calling All Snowbirds
For almost 75 years I have been fortunate to live in Toronto.
As
I read “The Jewish Traveler: Toronto” (August/September issue), I felt
every Hadassah member would be fleeing to our great city, until I came
to the last paragraph that stated that Toronto spends most of the year
under snow. All the Hadassah members were diverted from Toronto to
Florida.
What a disappointment. We are not
like Buffalo, New York, which is still removing snow from three years
ago, but a city that probably has less snow than New York City.
Sid Laufer
Toronto, Canada
I
am curious to know why, among the various Toronto Jewish personalities
described, there was no mention of perhaps Toronto’s most famous
personage: Mayor Nathan Phillips (1892-1976).
Phillips
was elected as Toronto’s first Jewish mayor in 1955, serving in that
position until 1962. He was the first non-Protestant mayor of Toronto.
Recognized as the man who was singularly responsible for transforming
Toronto from a Protestant, sectarian, staunchly British and
conservative city to a modern multicultural metropolis.
Neil J. Abelson
Belle Terre, NY
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