A letter from American rabbis to President Biden.
Dear President Biden,
As American rabbis, we write to you with deep sorrow and fury.
Tomorrow is the UN – designated International Holocaust Remembrance Day:
a time to honor the memory of the millions of people murdered through the
genocide committed by the Nazi regime, including six million of our Jewish
ancestors. On this day, we honor the enormity of our losses, the impact of
dehumanization and attempted annihilation on those who survived, and the
still-reverberating trauma that has shaped so many of our families and
communities.
With sorrow, we will also remember this as the time in which Israel was
committing a genocide, aided and abetted by the United States.
We are compelled to speak with moral clarity about what is happening to
Palestinians at this very moment. We do so not in spite of our histories, but
because of them. We know in our bones what it means to hear Israeli officials
dehumanize an entire people, to witness the Israeli military mass murder tens
of thousands of Palestinians, to watch Israel systematically destroy civilian
infrastructure, cultural institutions, universities, and hospitals. To see
Israel purposefully deny food, medicine, and shelter to refugees.
We hold the traumatic history of our people with care and sensitivity —
and know how painful it is for Jews to grasp that a Jewish state could
possibly commit a genocide. Nevertheless, we must agree with increasing numbers
of scholars and
international rights experts who have determined that Israel’s actions in Gaza
constitute, in the words of Prof. Raz Segal, “a textbook
case of genocide.”
We support and uplift South Africa’s recent application to the
International Court of Justice claiming Israel is in breach of the 1948
Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide. And now,
Palestinian human rights organizations, together with Palestinians in the US
and Gaza, are bringing a case against your administration for failure to
prevent, and complicity in, the Israeli government’s unfolding genocide against
them, their families, and the 2.2 million Palestinians in Gaza. We stand in
support of their action as well.
According to a core teaching of Jewish spiritual tradition, humanity was
created in the image of God. That means that each and every human being is of
infinite value. The UN 1948 Convention on Genocide was created to uphold this
very idea. The Torah also teaches that there will always be moments when we
must make a critical moral choice. As Deuteronomy 30:19 says, “I have put
before you life and death, blessing and curse. Choose life.” President Biden,
you have chosen death. Instead of using your considerable power to prevent or
end this genocide, you have directly abetted it with weapons, funds and
diplomatic cover.
On this day of remembrance in 2021, you noted that, “The
Holocaust was no accident of history.” As you stated, “It occurred because too
many governments cold-bloodedly adopted and implemented hate-fueled laws, policies,
and practices to vilify and dehumanize entire groups of people, and too many
individuals stood by silently. Silence is complicity.”
President Biden, what is happening right now in Gaza is no accident of
history — and your complicity has been anything but silent. We call upon you to
be true to your word and end U.S. complicity in Israel’s genocide against the
Palestinian people.
If the words “Never Again” have any meaning at all, they must mean
“Never Again for Anyone.” We fervently ask of you: please honor the word and
spirit of the International Holocaust Remembrance Day by using your office to
bring a ceasefire to this tragic violence — and to stop blocking efforts toward
building a truly just peace for all who live between the river and the sea.
With urgency,
Jewish Voice for Peace Rabbinical Council
Sorrow and fury: a letter from American rabbis to President Biden.
Dear President Biden,
As American rabbis, we write to you with deep sorrow and fury.
Tomorrow is the UN – designated International Holocaust Remembrance Day:
a time to honor the memory of the millions of people murdered through the
genocide committed by the Nazi regime, including six million of our Jewish
ancestors. On this day, we honor the enormity of our losses, the impact of
dehumanization and attempted annihilation on those who survived, and the
still-reverberating trauma that has shaped so many of our families and
communities.
With sorrow, we will also remember this as the time in which Israel was
committing a genocide, aided and abetted by the United States.
We are compelled to speak with moral clarity about what is happening to
Palestinians at this very moment. We do so not in spite of our histories, but
because of them. We know in our bones what it means to hear Israeli officials
dehumanize an entire people, to witness the Israeli military mass murder tens
of thousands of Palestinians, to watch Israel systematically destroy civilian
infrastructure, cultural institutions, universities, and hospitals. To see
Israel purposefully deny food, medicine, and shelter to refugees.
We hold the traumatic history of our people with care and sensitivity —
and know how painful it is for Jews to grasp that a Jewish state could
possibly commit a genocide. Nevertheless, we must agree with increasing numbers
of scholars and
international rights experts who have determined that Israel’s actions in Gaza
constitute, in the words of Prof. Raz Segal, “a textbook
case of genocide.”
We support and uplift South Africa’s recent application to the
International Court of Justice claiming Israel is in breach of the 1948
Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide. And now,
Palestinian human rights organizations, together with Palestinians in the US
and Gaza, are bringing a case against your administration for failure to
prevent, and complicity in, the Israeli government’s unfolding genocide against
them, their families, and the 2.2 million Palestinians in Gaza. We stand in
support of their action as well.
According to a core teaching of Jewish spiritual tradition, humanity was
created in the image of God. That means that each and every human being is of
infinite value. The UN 1948 Convention on Genocide was created to uphold this
very idea. The Torah also teaches that there will always be moments when we
must make a critical moral choice. As Deuteronomy 30:19 says, “I have put
before you life and death, blessing and curse. Choose life.” President Biden,
you have chosen death. Instead of using your considerable power to prevent or
end this genocide, you have directly abetted it with weapons, funds and
diplomatic cover.
On this day of remembrance in 2021, you noted that, “The
Holocaust was no accident of history.” As you stated, “It occurred because too
many governments cold-bloodedly adopted and implemented hate-fueled laws, policies,
and practices to vilify and dehumanize entire groups of people, and too many
individuals stood by silently. Silence is complicity.”
President Biden, what is happening right now in Gaza is no accident of
history — and your complicity has been anything but silent. We call upon you to
be true to your word and end U.S. complicity in Israel’s genocide against the
Palestinian people.
If the words “Never Again” have any meaning at all, they must mean
“Never Again for Anyone.” We fervently ask of you: please honor the word and
spirit of the International Holocaust Remembrance Day by using your office to
bring a ceasefire to this tragic violence — and to stop blocking efforts toward
building a truly just peace for all who live between the river and the sea.
With urgency,
Jewish Voice for Peace Rabbinical Council
Sorrow and fury: a letter from American rabbis to President Biden.
Dear President Biden,
As American rabbis, we write to you with deep sorrow and fury.
Tomorrow is the UN – designated International Holocaust Remembrance Day:
a time to honor the memory of the millions of people murdered through the
genocide committed by the Nazi regime, including six million of our Jewish
ancestors. On this day, we honor the enormity of our losses, the impact of
dehumanization and attempted annihilation on those who survived, and the
still-reverberating trauma that has shaped so many of our families and
communities.
With sorrow, we will also remember this as the time in which Israel was
committing a genocide, aided and abetted by the United States.
We are compelled to speak with moral clarity about what is happening to
Palestinians at this very moment. We do so not in spite of our histories, but
because of them. We know in our bones what it means to hear Israeli officials
dehumanize an entire people, to witness the Israeli military mass murder tens
of thousands of Palestinians, to watch Israel systematically destroy civilian
infrastructure, cultural institutions, universities, and hospitals. To see
Israel purposefully deny food, medicine, and shelter to refugees.
We hold the traumatic history of our people with care and sensitivity —
and know how painful it is for Jews to grasp that a Jewish state could
possibly commit a genocide. Nevertheless, we must agree with increasing numbers
of scholars and
international rights experts who have determined that Israel’s actions in Gaza
constitute, in the words of Prof. Raz Segal, “a textbook
case of genocide.”
We support and uplift South Africa’s recent application to the
International Court of Justice claiming Israel is in breach of the 1948
Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide. And now,
Palestinian human rights organizations, together with Palestinians in the US
and Gaza, are bringing a case against your administration for failure to
prevent, and complicity in, the Israeli government’s unfolding genocide against
them, their families, and the 2.2 million Palestinians in Gaza. We stand in
support of their action as well.
According to a core teaching of Jewish spiritual tradition, humanity was
created in the image of God. That means that each and every human being is of
infinite value. The UN 1948 Convention on Genocide was created to uphold this
very idea. The Torah also teaches that there will always be moments when we
must make a critical moral choice. As Deuteronomy 30:19 says, “I have put
before you life and death, blessing and curse. Choose life.” President Biden,
you have chosen death. Instead of using your considerable power to prevent or
end this genocide, you have directly abetted it with weapons, funds and
diplomatic cover.
On this day of remembrance in 2021, you noted that, “The
Holocaust was no accident of history.” As you stated, “It occurred because too
many governments cold-bloodedly adopted and implemented hate-fueled laws, policies,
and practices to vilify and dehumanize entire groups of people, and too many
individuals stood by silently. Silence is complicity.”
President Biden, what is happening right now in Gaza is no accident of
history — and your complicity has been anything but silent. We call upon you to
be true to your word and end U.S. complicity in Israel’s genocide against the
Palestinian people.
If the words “Never Again” have any meaning at all, they must mean
“Never Again for Anyone.” We fervently ask of you: please honor the word and
spirit of the International Holocaust Remembrance Day by using your office to
bring a ceasefire to this tragic violence — and to stop blocking efforts toward
building a truly just peace for all who live between the river and the sea.
With urgency,
Jewish Voice for Peace Rabbinical Council
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