It appears that Israel is ramping up its attack on Jewish visitors who don’t follow the party line. In this report about three American Jewish students participating in the free birthright trip, we learn that they are shipped home when they ask questions about the separation wall. While entering Israel in July of 2017, this editor learned about three Jewish activists from the United States that were denied entrance into Israel because they supported Palestinian rights. One of these activists was a rabbi (see: “Interfaith Leaders Denied Entry to Israel for Supporting Palestinian Human Rights“). Does all this mean that if anyone who wants to visit Israel will have to swear an oath of allegiance to Israel and promise not to ask any embarrassing questions or think incorrect thoughts? [Ed.-TEC]
Three young Jews are kicked off ‘Birthright’ trip for asking questions about separation wall in Palestine
Philip Weiss. 12/23/2018, mondoweiss.net
Three young Jews were reportedly kicked off their free trip to Israel sponsored by the pro-Israel Birthright program today because they asked questions about the separation wall Israel has erected on occupied Palestinian territory.
A video of the young people as they leave the trip has been posted by one of them on her Facebook page. Shira Leah reports that she and two others were kicked off Birthright, “because when we drove past the border separation wall between Israel and the West Bank (which our tour guide had ignored all 4 times we drove past it), we tried to ask questions about it and didn’t accept his answer that the entire conflict is caused by crazy violent Palestinians.”
In the accompanying video, young people are heard to discuss signing a waiver to end their trip with a Birthright official in a tense conversation.
That official says to a young man: “I was more than willing to have a conversation with you… Then you came at me with the nineteen-year-old’s feeling this way and that way…. The program is designed and going to stay as is. With you being allowed to ask questions.”
The young man says he only asked two questions and he is being kicked off for who he is.
The only reason i knew we drove past the ‘separation wall’ is because people pointed it out to me on Google maps… I asked two questions and that’s it… [Evidently] my views in my head are incompatible with the trip. Because I am progressive and because I don’t like Netanyahu and Trump and border walls. Because I have those thoughts in my head, I can’t be here?…. What rule did I break?… This has been really stressful and honestly slightly traumatic to be screamed at and kicked off… I asked two questions, and I said I was disappointed in the way–
The official then says: “The reason we can’t have you here is because of the agenda of an outside program that we believe you are affiliated with.”
That’s a reference to the young Jewish group IfNotNow’s efforts to disrupt Birthright trips. At that link, IfNotNow posts the latest Birthright agreement, which limits the free speech of participants.
Shira Leah says on her Facebook page: “I am devastated by Trump’s policies of family separation, detention of children, and building a wall on the U.S.-Mexico border because it goes against all of the values I was taught growing up n my Jewish community, where my mom was the Rabbi. It is unfathomable that I would be asked to stay silent when we see the same thing happening in Israel. Clearly this is a bribe, not a gift. #NoSuchThingAsAFreeTrip #NotJustAFreeTrip”
Birthright has come under great pressure from IfNotNow since last summer when nearly a dozen young Jews walked off Birthright trips, and IfNotNow encouraged more to do so, and the organization, funded by Democrat Haim Saban and Republican Sheldon Adelson among others, pushed back.
Nonetheless, reports are that participation in the free trip for Jews under 26 has fallen off this winter.
Here is Ben Doernberg’s report from Twitter about getting kicked off:
Today has been absolutely surreal. I woke up at 7am on a @birthrightisrael trip… and by 3pm I was standing on a street corner next to the Tel Aviv stock exchange with my luggage, trying to process getting kicked off the trip.
Basically, throughout the entire trip it was pretty standard right-wing propaganda. *Literally* every single time an Arab or Palestinian was mentioned in a story, it was to talk about someone who was a crazy terrorist murderer who likes killing Jews for fun. Every. Single. Time.
Eventually, Emily (who’s an immigration rights organizer) got fed up when they drove us past the separation wall between Israel and the West Bank *for the 4th time* without acknowledging that it existed, and she asked if the wall we were passing was the West Bank separation wall.
He said yes, and launched into a monologue about Palestinian suicide bombers and put 100% of the blame on them. Emily and I asked him about the lack of nuance and whether we’d be getting any perspectives from any Palestinians, or people who advocate for Palestinian rights.
He said “I don’t know of any program or person who could do that”, which is obviously absurd. It was getting very tense, and then he noticed that the conversation was being recorded and he went from 0 to 100, got in her face, and things escalated dramatically.
This is in the context of a trip where people were openly filming all the time, including 15 seconds before this particular conversation started, with no issues at all. Anyway, at that point other people on the bus intervened and calmed things down.
At our next stop a bunch of Birthright trip staff members pulled Emily, Shira and I out of the group and told us that we had to leave the trip immediately, for unspecified reasons.
The woman in charge told us that they had rebooked our flights home for today, and we had 2 choices: either we could get in a car with them and drive straight to the airport to leave the country, or they would cancel our flights home. Either way, we couldn’t stay on the trip.
The wildest part was, they had no explanation for why we were being kicked off. They said we violated the trip rules and regulations, but refused to say which rule or regulation we had violated by asking questions on the bus about things we could see out the window.
What they did say, repeatedly and explicitly, was that our desire to hear multiple viewpoints and perspectives was incompatible with the trip, and as a result we were done with the trip because it wasn’t possible for it “to meet our needs.”
I can’t think of anything less Jewish than to kick someone off for asking questions, for wanting to hear a multiple perspectives, for caring about the freedom of everyone who lives in Israel/Palestine.
Demanding that young Jews keep their values quiet in exchange for plane tickets is not a gift, it’s a bribe. People like Sheldon Adelson, the largest donor to both @birthrightIsrael and Trump, want to buy off our generation with plane tickets. No thanks.
Batya Ungar-Sargon of the Forward writes:
A new clause in the @birthright contract participants sign includes a ban on “any attempt to.. hijack a discussion or create an unwarranted provocation violate Taglit-Birthright’s founding principles.” Who the hell would want to go on such a trip? smdh
Thanks to Scott Roth.