Monday, February 3, 2014

February 3, 2014: Harper visit to Israel a time of pride for Jewish community

By Michael Regenstreif

Much of our attention during the production period for this issue of the Ottawa Jewish Bulletin was focused on Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s first-ever visit to the State of Israel and the first official visit to Israel by a Canadian prime minister since Jean Chrétien’s trip 14 years ago.

Our My Israel columnist Barbara Crook was part of the 200-plus-person Canadian delegation that accompanied Harper on his tour of Israel, and her reports from Israel for us, some JTA coverage, several official photos from the PMO and from other Ottawa members of the delegation, were posted quickly on the new Bulletin website. It was our first opportunity to use the site to report on a major breaking story as it unfolded and with more content than we could possibly use in the print edition. It was an exciting few days as we took advantage of this new tool to deliver news quickly to the community in a way we’ve not been able to before.

From all accounts, Harper was a huge hit in Israel, earning acclaim from Israeli politicians from across the political spectrum (there were two Arab members of the Knesset who heckled Harper during his speech and then walked out), from much of the Israeli press, and from everyday Israelis.

All the while, we were also monitoring the mainstream and social media coverage of the Harper trip – particularly the commentaries. Some pundits applauded Harper. Others were highly critical and some, including several commentators generally seen as pro-Israel, felt the trip was too plainly partisan and missed opportunities for Canada to use its friendship to push Israel in areas of disagreement.

Some implied Harper’s support for Israel was simply electioneering in search of the Jewish vote in the next election.

To be sure, Harper and the Conservatives have courted the Jewish vote, just as they’ve courted the vote in other ethnic and religious communities – and just as the other parties have also done so.

Those accusations that Harper’s – and the Conservative Party’s – support of Israel are motivated by a search for the Jewish vote have been circulating for years. I’ve listened to Harper and such ministers as John Baird and Jason Kenney speak about Israel over the years and I’ve no doubt they are absolutely sincere in their support for Israel.

And the Jewish vote is only concentrated enough in a couple of Toronto-area ridings and one in Montreal that it matters. The Muslim community in Canada, the vast majority of which is naturally much more sympathetic to the Palestinians than to Israel, is about three times the size of the Jewish community and growing. So, if it was about electioneering rather than principle, Harper’s tilt would be elsewhere.

To be sure, there is also tremendous support for Israel on the Liberal – and even the NDP – bench. For example, I don’t think there’s a parliamentarian anywhere in the world whose record on Israel approaches that of Liberal MP Irwin Cotler.

In his speech to the Knesset, Harper clearly said, “Criticism of Israeli government policy is not in and of itself necessarily antisemitic,” before going on to discuss some of the efforts to delegitimize Israel that do cross that line.

And, while Harper would not criticize Israel publicly (just as he did not criticize the Palestinian Authority publicly), he did allude in his joint press conference with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu – which Netanyahu confirmed – that policy differences with the Israeli government on such issues as settlements and occupation were discussed.

Indeed, Harper pointed out that a reiteration of Canadian policy on key issues in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict was publicly posted just before the trip. These are long-standing Canadian policies dating back to long before Harper was in power.

Harper’s visit to Israel and its implications for Canada-Israel relations in the years to come was a time of pride for the Canadian Jewish community. And, despite an ill-conceived comment at the Western Wall by one Conservative MP, it really wasn’t about the 2015 election.

Monday, January 20, 2014

January 20, 2014: Sometimes conventional wisdom gets it wrong

By Michael Regenstreif

When the current round of peace negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians was announced, conventional wisdom suggested these talks, brokered by U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, were doomed to failure – just like so many previous efforts to settle the dispute and put a two-state solution in place have failed over the past two decades.

If I were a gambler, I’d probably follow the conventional wisdom and put my money on these talks ending the same way the others have – despite my belief that successfully reaching the two-state solution is in the very best interests of both Israel and the Palestinians.

Sometimes, though, the conventional wisdom gets it wrong, and I started thinking a couple of months ago that this might be one of those times.

The talks have been shrouded in secrecy and, despite conflicting third-hand reports that they’re making progress and that they’re not going well, it seems to me the success of maintaining the news blackout is an indication that some sort of progress is being made.

That feeling was reinforced when I met with Ambassador Rafael Barak last month for the article on pages 1 and 2. As a veteran Israeli peace negotiator, and having just served as director general of the ministry of Foreign Affairs, Israel’s new ambassador to Canada is someone I’d pay attention to on this issue. Both sides, he told me, are serious and engaged in these talks.

But, to me, the surest sign the talks might – and that’s still a very big “might” – be approaching success are the latest signals from Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Liberman, a man with a reputation for being among the hardest of Israeli hardliners.

I met Liberman when he was in Ottawa in September 2011 and I attended a briefing he gave to a small invited group of Jewish community leaders from Ottawa and Montreal.

At that briefing, Liberman dismissed the peace process and a proposed Palestinian state despite the fact that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was calling for a renewal of talks with no preconditions. There was no hope for peace with the Palestinians, he said then.

In recent days, though (I’m writing on January 10 just before this issue goes to press), Liberman has been singing a surprisingly different tune, saying how important talking to the Palestinians is, praising Kerry’s efforts, and saying these discussions are the basis for the best possible deal.

Avigdor Liberman was one of the last Israeli politicians I’d expect to take this position. So, maybe, just maybe, these talks will be successful.

Monday, December 9, 2013

December 9, 2013: A rabbinic career that has become truly legendary

By Michael Regenstreif

A few days after our November 25 issue went to press on November 15, I received word that Rabbi Reuven P. Bulka was announcing his plan to step down as spiritual leader of Congregation Machzikei Hadas to become rabbi emeritus by Rosh Hashanah in 2015.

Despite the fact that his picture was on that November 25 front page illustrating an article about the current state of Ottawa’s synagogues, I knew this breaking news meant Rabbi Bulka would be back on the front page again this issue. Such is the stature Rabbi Bulka has earned in a career that has become truly legendary.

Before I moved to Ottawa to work at the Ottawa Jewish Bulletin, I worked extensively with the Canadian Jewish News and became well aware of Rabbi Bulka and the impact he has had on the national stage as a Jewish community leader – and as one of the best known and most respected rabbis in the country. His long tenure with Machzikei Hadas is unprecedented in Ottawa and has very few precedents anywhere.

And I soon found out that Rabbi Bulka’s stature extends far beyond the Jewish community. His dedication to so many worthy causes, his radio show and newspaper columns, his idea to establish Kindness Week, and so much more, have made him one of the best known and most respected figures in Ottawa – and far beyond.

In 2007, I was talking with Terry Eagan, a non-Jewish friend of mine who lives in the Boston area. When I told Terry I was about to move to Ottawa to work at the Bulletin, he surprised me by saying, “You’ll get to meet my friend Rabbi Bulka.”

How would Terry even know a rabbi in a city hundreds of miles and an international border away?

Terry is a cancer survivor and lost his wife, Mary, to leukemia in 1992. Since then, he has been dedicated to raising the necessary funds and then building healing gardens for patients at cancer centres in the United States and Canada.

And Rabbi Bulka has dedicated so much time and energy to many health-related efforts, including chairing the Ottawa Regional Cancer Foundation’s Courage Campaign. I now know I shouldn’t have been surprised that Terry would have known the rabbi and had so much fond affection for him. (By the way, there is now a Mary Eagan Healing Garden on the grounds of the Richard and Annette Bloch Cancer Survivors Park in Ottawa.)