Cactus48


True Torah
Jews Against Zionism
Link added August 26, 2007

Senator Joe, do you read Haaretz??
A note to Senator Joe Lieberman from
a former constituent
link added October 14, 2007

 

True Education
Here, in a nutshell, is the problem,
and also the solution, for the mess in the Middle East......simple truth from the heart of a mother.

True Education

 

 

Scroll down to
Israel Doesn't Want Peace
by Gideon Levy
April, 2007


 

I and the public know
What all schoolchildren learn,
Those to whom evil is done
Do Evil in return.

W.H. AUDEN, "September 1, 1939"

Read entire poem at bottom of page

 



If you care about truth, and not just what you've been told all your life, then you may come to believe, as we have, that one of the greatest injustices the world has ever known has been done to the Palestinian people.

Objections to Israel's policies do not reflect anti-Jewish beliefs. Palestine is simply a matter of freedom lost and justice denied. We are American Christians who grew up believing that all Americans care about such things.

The objectives of our web site are to share information, lead you to organizations you can join or support, and give you opportunities to get acquainted with ordinary Palestinian people.

Opinions expressed herein, if not specifically attributed to others, are entirely ours, based on our personal experiences, observations and research. Funding for our website is entirely personal. We have no connection to any organizations.

We hope and pray that leaders of both sides will be determined to forge an agreement that all people in the area can live peaceably with, and that they will be able to persuade their citizens to accept and abide by the agreement.

We also believe that a real key to a just solution of the problem is the increasing involvement by Jewish people in America and Israel. Links to some of their organizations are found at our web site page.

If nothing else while you are here, please take the time to read the complete text of the 3rd Edition of "The Origin of the Palestine-Israel Conflict," a book published by Jews for Justice in the Middle East. We are proud to be able to support their courageous commitment to truth.

Bob and Willie Cork

 

 

 Why we call
our site
Cactus48

Complete Text

PDF Files Available Now
3rd Edition
Including Intifada 2000

 Felloula's Page
"Make Sure I am Remembered"

Come Laughing
by Bob Cork

Zionist Quotes

 Truth against Truth
reconciliating opposite views on the
history of the conflict in 101 steps

Produced by Gush Shalom

 Americas for the
Children of Palestine

 God, America, Israel
Was Peter
Marshall Wrong?
By Bob Cork

 Why seeking justice
for the Palestinians
is
the Jewish Cause


by Shifra Stern

 Roadmap
to Nowhere

Charley Reese
June 20, 2003


Deir Yassin
It just won't go away

Page added April 10, 2006

 A Costly Friendship
America and Israel
by Patrick Seale
The Nation (Magazine)
July 21, 2003


Passion for Palestine
Poems and Essays

It's Not Just The Oil
By Stanley Heller

A Jewish Voice For Peace

Cork Palestine
Solidarity Campaign

(Cork, Ireland this time)

Dr. Alfred M Lilienthal
Middle East Perspective

The Plea of
a Child of Iraq

By Lorraine Charlesworth

 Sami Al-Arian
and the Dungeon:

A Fable for Our Time?

by Sarah Shields -
Common Dreams
Nov 16, 2003

 Rachel Corrie
March 16, 2003

 Local Man Opened Gaza
to Foreign Journalists
The Charlotte Sun
July 14, 2003

"Beyond Intifada: Narratives
of Freedom Fighters
in the Gaza Strip"
ISBN 0-275-97129-5

Iternational
Solidarity Movement

Palestine Report
Telling the story of one nation's
search for independence and justice.


 Our Trip to Palestine


Sambar
buy pins and flags

We Hold These Truths
A Christian website opposing
Evangelical Chistian Zionism

Websites
you'll want to visit

Books
and articles
you'll want to read


Important New Film

SUSTAIN
Stop US Tax-Funded
Aid to Israel NOW!


Palestinians and
Native Americans:

The Inherent Struggle
for Freedom and Justice

By Ramzy Baroud
Jan 14, 2003

Jenin Jenin

Another New Film to
show your neighbors

Jenin...the Book
"Searching Jenin,
Eyewitness Accounts of
the Israeli Invasion, 2002"

Israel doesn't want peace

By Gideon Levy
April, 2007

http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/846420.html

 

The moment of truth has arrived, and it has to be said: Israel does not want peace. The arsenal of excuses has run out, and the chorus of Israeli rejection already rings hollow. Until recently, it was still possible to accept the Israeli refrain that "there is no partner" for peace and that "the time isn't right" to deal with our enemies. Today, the new reality before our eyes leaves no room for doubt and the tired refrain that "Israel supports peace" has been left shattered.

It's hard to determine when the breaking point occurred. Was it the absolute dismissal of the Saudi initiative? The refusal to acknowledge the Syrian initiative? Prime Minister Ehud Olmert's annual Passover interviews? The revulsion at the statements made by Nancy Pelosi, the speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives, in Damascus, alleging that Israel was ready to renew peace talks with Syria?

Who would have believed it? A high-ranking U.S. official says Israel wants peace talks to resume and instantly her president "severely" denies the veracity of her words. Is Israel even hearing these voices? Are we digesting the significance of these voices for peace? Seven million apathetic Israeli citizens prove that we are not.

Entire generations grew up here weaned on self-deception and doubt about the likelihood of achieving peace with our neighbors. In our younger days, David Ben-Gurion told us that if he were only able to meet with Arab leaders, he would have brought us peace in his time. Israel has demanded direct negotiations as a matter of principle and Israelis have derived great pride from the fact that their daily focus on "peace" has concealed their state's lofty ambitions. We were told that there was no partner for peace and that the ultimate ambition of the Arabs is to bring about our destruction. We burned the portraits of "the Egyptian tyrant" at our bonfires on Lag Ba'omer, and were convinced that all blame for the lack of peace lied with our enemies.

After that came the occupation, followed by terror, Yassir Arafat, the failed second Camp David Summit and the rise of Hamas to power, and we were sure, always sure, that it was all their fault. In our wildest dreams, we wouldn't have believed that the day would come when the entire Arab world would extend its hand in peace and Israel would brush away the gesture. It would have been even crazier to imagine that this Israeli refusal would have been blamed on not wanting to enrage domestic public opinion.

The world has been turned upside down and it is Israel that stands at the forefront of refusal. The policy of refusal of a select few, a vanguard of the extreme, has now become the official policy of Jerusalem. In his Passover interviews, Olmert will tell us that, "The Palestinians stand at the crossroads of a historic decision," but people stopped taking him seriously a long time ago. The historic decision is ours, and we are fleeing from this crossroads and from these initiatives as if from death itself.

Terror, used as the ultimate excuse for Israeli refusal, only helps Olmert keep reciting, ad nauseum, "If they [the Palestinians] don't change, don't fight terror and don't adhere to any of their obligations, then they will never extract themselves from their unending chaos." As though the Palestinians haven't taken measures against terrorism, as though Israel is the one to determine what their obligations are, as though Israel isn't to blame for the unending chaos Palestinians suffer under the occupation.

Israel makes a point of setting prerequisites and believes it has an exclusive right to do so. But, time and time again, Israel avoids the most basic prerequisite for any just peace - an end to the occupation. Of all the questions asked during his Passover interviews, no one bothered to ask Olmert why he didn't react with excitement to the recent Arab initiatives, without preconditions? The answer: real estate. The real estate of the settlements.

It's not only Olmert who is dragging his feet. A leading figure in the Labor party said last week that "it will take five to 10 years to recover from the trauma." Peace is now no more than a threatening wound, with no one still talking about the massive social benefits it would bring in development, security, freedom of movement in the region and by establishing a more just society.

Like a little Switzerland, we are focusing more these days on the dollar exchange rate and on the allegations of embezzlement leveled against the Finance Ministry than on the fateful opportunities fading away before our very eyes.

Not every day and not even in every generation do we encounter an opportunity like this. Although it's not for sure if the initiatives are completely solid and believable, or if they are based on trickery, no one has stepped up to challenge or acknowledge them. When Olmert is an elderly grandfather, what will he tell his grandchildren? That he turned over every stone in the name of peace? That there was no other choice? What will his grandchildren say?

 

US Must Reevaluate
Its Relationship With Israel

by Scott Ritter


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Comments on
"the soul of American Jewry"

An excerpt from an op-ed article by
Georgetown Law Professor Norman Birnbaum
published in the Los Angeles Times...1999


"We claim full rights in this country by virtue of universal criteria of citizenship. For most American Jews, life here is marvelous, free of the savage persecutions of the European past and of the subtler but still painful discrimination earlier generations encountered in America. Our Israel, in other words, is here.

That ties of solidarity and sympathy connect us to the people of Israel is clear. There is, however, a flagrant contradiction between our enjoyment of citizenship in a multi-ethnic, multireligious and multiracial democracy and the notion that solidarity with Israel requires that we accept any policy it might choose to follow toward the Arabs it rules. The matter is made worse when Jews who think differently are branded as self hating,and Gentiles who disagree are told that they are anti Semitic. Fortunately for Israel, its population debates this matter strenuously. The recent election demonstrates that an Israeli majority wishes to make a new beginning in relations with the Arabs.

That has been lost, apparently, upon some of Israel's supporters here. The phrase about Israel living in a "bad neighborhood" speaks volumes. It applies American notions of class and racial conflict to a totally different historical situation, and reveals the ignorance of those who employ it. Egypt and Jordan are not bad neighbors to Israel; they are very good ones.

The phrase is revealing in another way. It bespeaks a view of life as a jungle in which survival demands a tooth for a tooth, an eye for an eye--and the permanent oppression of the Arabs in their own homeland.

A good many Israelis see that if conflict with the Arabs continues, they are in danger of becoming like the Germans from 1933 to 1945--accomplices if not perpetrators of permanent oppression. American Jews can pay tribute to our tradition--and to our own experience of America--by backing them. We should also reach out to fellow Americans who are Arabs and whose rights to full citizenship are as great as ours.

The most profound threat to American Jewry comes from the unreflective belief that humans are subject, in the last analysis, only to the law of the jungle. Nothing, in that case, can protect us--here or anywhere else."

 

.

 

 

 Rare Map of PalestineBefore al-Nakba
It's 4 MB in size. However, it's worth the time to download.
Note that the upper left corner of the map was signed by the Moshe Dayan,
which should silence the skeptics of its authenticity

e-mail to Cactus48

 

September 1, 1939

by W. H. Auden

 

I sit in one of the dives

On Fifty-second Street

Uncertain and afraid

As the clever hopes expire

Of a low dishonest decade:

Waves of anger and fear

Circulate over the bright

And darkened lands of the earth,

Obsessing our private lives;

The unmentionable odour of death

Offends the September night.

 

Accurate scholarship can

Unearth the whole offence

From Luther until now

That has driven a culture mad,

Find what occurred at Linz,

What huge imago made

A psychopathic god:

I and the public know

What all schoolchildren learn,

Those to whom evil is done

Do evil in return.

 

Exiled Thucydides knew

All that a speech can say

About Democracy,

And what dictators do,

The elderly rubbish they talk

To an apathetic grave;

Analysed all in his book,

The enlightenment driven away,

The habit-forming pain,

Mismanagement and grief:

We must suffer them all again.

 

Into this neutral air

Where blind skyscrapers use

Their full height to proclaim

The strength of Collective Man,

Each language pours its vain

Competitive excuse:

But who can live for long

In an euphoric dream;

Out of the mirror they stare,

Imperialism's face

And the international wrong.

 

Faces along the bar

Cling to their average day:

The lights must never go out,

The music must always play,

All the conventions conspire

To make this fort assume

The furniture of home;

Lest we should see where we are,

Lost in a haunted wood,

Children afraid of the night

Who have never been happy or good.

 

The windiest militant trash

Important Persons shout

Is not so crude as our wish:

What mad Nijinsky wrote

About Diaghilev

Is true of the normal heart;

For the error bred in the bone

Of each woman and each man

Craves what it cannot have,

Not universal love

But to be loved alone.

 

From the conservative dark

Into the ethical life

The dense commuters come,

Repeating their morning vow;

"I will be true to the wife,

I'll concentrate more on my work,"

And helpless governors wake

To resume their compulsory game:

Who can release them now,

Who can reach the deaf,

Who can speak for the dumb?

 

All I have is a voice

To undo the folded lie,

The romantic lie in the brain

Of the sensual man-in-the-street

And the lie of Authority

Whose buildings grope the sky:

There is no such thing as the State

And no one exists alone;

Hunger allows no choice

To the citizen or the police;

We must love one another or die.

 

Defenceless under the night

Our world in stupor lies;

Yet, dotted everywhere,

Ironic points of light

Flash out wherever the Just

Exchange their messages:

May I, composed like them

Of Eros and of dust,

Beleaguered by the same

Negation and despair,

Show an affirming flame.

ee