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Updated 02/09/12 @ 05:54PM EST
- A poll showed that nearly half of likely voters believed the United States should use military force to prevent Iran from developing a nuclear weapon.
- Rabbi Gunther Plaut, a major figure in Reform Judaism, died in Toronto.
- The application for a proposed Hebrew-language charter school was accepted by the District of Columbia Public Charter School board.
- A truck driving calves from Eilat to the Golan Heights was hijacked into the West Bank.
- U.S. Rep. Howard Berman introduced legislation that would allow eligible Israeli nationals to receive non-immigrant investor visas in the United States.
- Poll: Half of U.S. voters back strike on nuclear Iran
- Reform leader Rabbi Gunther Plaut dies
- D.C. Hebrew-language charter school accepted for review
- Op-Ed: Kick the reaction addiction on campus
- Berman moves to grant investor visas to Israelis
- Holy cow! Calves hijacked into Palestinian territory
- Report: Israeli journalist also works for prime minister
- Larry Greenfield tapped to lead JINSA




Posted in: Naive on Iran
02/23/09 10:40 PM
It's remarkable that a New York Times columnist, whether a regular or a guest columnist, would remark on an issue as important as Iranian Jewry with no more knowledge than the good feeling he got during a visit. The Jewish community in Iran once stood at about 100,000 and has dropped to between 10,000 and 25,000 (depending on estimates) since the fall of the Shah. No small part of the emigration has been caused by world-conspiratorial anti-Semitic remarks by Ayatollah Khomeini--the present regime is simply more repetitive in its anti-Semitism than Khomeini was. The Jews who remain (I know well through many acquaintances) tend to be the ones who are least knowledgeable about foreign languages, least educated, least attached to Israel, least likely to have relatives abroad, and most connected to property or business that is not easily gotten rid off. They stay despite precariousness of daily existence, in which they can be (and some have been) arrested and imprisoned on accusations of treason and with no due process. In many public settings, Jewish womenfeel compelled to wear the chador, the Iranian version of the burka. Generally protected by Islamic law as long as they accept their dhimmi status, Iran's remaining Jews have, in effect, acquiesced to second-class status. Iranian culture requires courtesy to guests, even to guests perceived as enemies. Of course, the courtesy can be genuine, but its outward signs should not be confused with genuine friendship, something that needs years to develop. That a Times writer would be so ignorant of history and so naive about cultures is just astounding. It's such self-deluding ignorance that has made Jews susceptible to anti-semites' bloodshed. G-d help us if these are the such commentators actually influence Jews' beliefs..