Interfaith group mulls question of Mideast peace

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Larry Snider, president of the Interfaith Community for Middle East Peace, addresses the group gathered to discuss the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, Sept. 9, at Yardley United Methodist Church. 

	Photo by Dari Kotzker+ enlarge image

Larry Snider, president of the Interfaith Community for Middle East Peace, addresses the group gathered to discuss the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, Sept. 9, at Yardley United Methodist Church. 

Photo by Dari Kotzker

+ more images

Members of the Interfaith Community for Middle East Peace examine a map of Israel and the region. Members of different faith communities talk about peace prospects in the Middle East.

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When the Interfaith Community for Middle East Peace for the first time tackled the issue of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, its president, Larry Snider of Morrisville, Pa., launched the discussion by asking, “What comes to mind first when you think of Israel or Palestine?” Some of the answers: “particularism,” “conflict,” and “sadness.”

More than 30 ICMEP members gathered at the Yardley United Methodist Church on Sept. 9 for the Interfaith Conversation on Israel, Palestine & Peace.

The Sept. 9 event was the eighth in its continuing series of interfaith conversations. The series “gives people an understanding of different faiths, of different positions, of different people of a broader community….,” said Snider. Through the programs, he said, “we can find ways to work together to promote Middle East peace.”

Followers of Judaism, Catholicism, Christianity, Islam, as well as members of the local Religious Society of Friends (Quakers) as well as non-believers have participated in ICMEP events, voicing their thoughts on the often controversial subject matter, said Snider, but in a positive, open, and candid way.

In March 2008, Snider, a member of Kehilat HaNahar-The Little Shul by the River in New Hope, Pa., organized a delegation of area Christian, Muslim, and Jewish clergy and lay leaders to make a pilgrimage to the Holy Land.

The goal was to meet and converse with politicians, peacemakers, religious leaders, and Israelis and Palestinians affected by the Middle East conflict. According to Snider, “Many members of the group who took the trip together in 2008 decided to create an interfaith organization that continued our journey of understanding.”

ICMEP was established to continue that journey by establishing a venue for the group members to share their experiences and impressions from the trip with others in the Delaware Valley. Since that time, the organization has grown and, according to its mission statement, has brought people together, providing forums for peace, to explore different faiths and traditions, to educate people about the Middle East, and to offer programs with Israeli and Palestinian peace organizations.

Rather than offer an individual speaker or panel presentation, the Sept. 9 program had attendees gather in smaller roundtable groups, each with a moderator. The questions focused on initial thoughts on Israel and Palestine, how faith influences understanding of the conflict, how faith promotes understanding between the different faith communities and peace in the Middle East, and how to help ICMEP promote dialogue, understanding, and coexistence.

The goal was “to build trust so we could have conversations on the issues that really tend to be more divisive,” Bob Coombe, pastor at Yardley Methodist and ICMEP secretary, told NJJN. The programs offer “an opportunity to bring that listening capacity instead of arguing.”

In one group, a participant showed maps of Israel and surrounding countries, and group members examined them together.

At a nearby table, participants discussed their religious backgrounds and what their faiths have taught them about the Middle East conflict.

Other conversations included personal experiences in Israel and the Palestinian territories, participants’ views on God’s role in the conflict, the influence of American politics on the situation, and possible media bias in reporting events in the Middle East.

“As we all started to talk about it, there was a lot of relevance in what each person had to say,” said Marion Snipes, a member of the Fallsington Friends Meeting and a first-time attendee at an ICMEP event. “Some people had gone to Israel and the Middle East and they had conversations with people, and that was so meaningful to hear about that, especially compared to what I read about in the newspaper.”

A common theme at each roundtable was the importance of communicating with and educating the younger generation, both in America and the Middle East, and the confidence that young people could provide the solution for this crisis. “Spreading the word of compassion and peace and justice among all the religions — it helps understanding for all of us,” said Virginia Lavanish, a congregant at Yardley United Methodist.

At the end of the hour, everyone regrouped and reported on what they had discussed at their respective tables. The final word came from ICMEP member Na-eem Sultan, who gave a “homework assignment” to all the attendees: to go back to their religious institutions and talk to the young people about the Middle East crisis and try to get them involved by coming to the next ICMEP meeting to share their viewpoints.

The next ICMEP meeting will take place Sunday, Nov. 11, at 3 p.m. at the Zubaida Foundation, 855 Big Oak Road in Yardley. For more information, contact Larry Snider at ld.snider@yahoo.com.

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One of the biggest obstacles to interfaith Mideast peace, is the attitude of so many American Jews.  As being the biggest supporters of Israel, so many of them will advocate the physical extermination and force removal of the Palestinians.  So many of these people are not affiliated with a synagogue, know nothing about Halachic law, ritual, or history.  So the only way they can identify with being Jewish is to espouse radical right-wing support of Israel.  The goal is to make Jews a part of humanity, and Israel a nation among nations in the world.  To do so, we must treat people as people, and nations as nations.

Mr. Upham, your comment is completely fact-free. I challenge you to cite one mainstream Jewish organization or a single survey that suggests that Jews support the “physical extermination and force [sic] removal of the Palestinians.” A majority of American Jews support a two-state solution—in a recent survey of Florida Jewish voters by the American Jewish Committee, 44% responded that Palestinians are mostly to blame for the failure to achieve an Arab-Israeli peace, while 34%  said THE ISRAELIS AND THE PALESTINIANS ARE EQUALLY TO BLAME—hardly the sentiments of a population that advocates genocide or ethnic cleansing. According to an April 2012 survey by Public Religion Research Institute, a slim majority (53%) of American Jews say that, generally speaking, they would support the establishment of a Palestinian state, while 42% say they would be opposed. Dig deeper, and you find that more Jews would support a two-state solution if they and the Israelis were confident that the Palestinian state would be demilitarized and peaceful in its intentions. Many Jewish liberals will concede that the major Jewish organizations are not doing enough to promote the two-state solution, but to suggest anyone but the fringe elements of Jewish life support genocide or ethnic cleansing is a libel of the worst kind.

 

CAIRO — A fiery tirade against Jews by the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood’s leader highlights one of the foremost diplomatic challenges facing the country’s new Islamist President Mohammed Morsi as he balances popular sentiment with the need for security relations with Israel.

The Brotherhood’s supreme leader, Mohammed Badie, called on Muslims worldwide last week to defend Jerusalem, saying “Zionists only know the way of force.” He said that Jews were spreading “corruption,” had slaughtered Muslims and desecrated holy sites.

Read more: Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood plays to anti-Israel sentiment - The Denver Post http://www.denverpost.com/nationworld/ci_21767927/egypts-muslim-brotherhood-plays-anti-israel-sentiment#ixzz29H4koBAf
Read The Denver Post’s Terms of Use of its content: http://www.denverpost.com/termsofuse


WHEN will we Jews wake up.? This is Adolph HITLER AND THE NAZIS PARTY. Here in America most were silent while six million JEWS DIED. WE WERE SILENT. NEVER AGAIN. Tell your Rabbi and Jewish leaders to speak up. Tell you non-Jewish friends to speak out. Where are the youth, especially our college kids. Where are the protests of the 60’s . Why is Israel not a major issue to MOST Jews in this election. Another Holocaust can and will happen if IRAN AND ITS NEIGHBORS ARE NOT STOPPED. EGYPT IS

 

 

 

 

 

WE MUST FIGHT TO SAVE ISRAEL. ANOTHER HOLOCAUST MAY OCCUR. I FOR ONE , CHILD OF HOLOCAUST SURVIVORS, WHO LOST SIBLINGS, GRANDPARENTS, AUNTS AND UNCLES, and cousins WILL FIGHT WITH ALL MY MIGHT. ELECT ROMNEY . DO YOU TRUST OBAMA? DO YOU WANT YOUR KIDS OR GRANDCHILDREN TO GROW UP LIKE ME WITH THE MEMORIES OF THE HOLCAUST ANDA FAMILY DESTROYED.? The extremist muslims are the new nazis. I HAVE THE GUTS TO SAY THIS BECAUSE IT IS TRUE.

RABBI DR. BERNHARD ROSENBERG   EDISON NJ 08817

A lot of ground has been covered in three count em, only three responses. There are reasons to fear, to be angry, to be frustrated and they are real. Interfaith Conversations will not magically erase the pain or hostility, but it can help us to walk on Rabbi Nachman’s narrow bridge and gain insight and even recognize the humanity in others.

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