Jewish groups quarrel over memorial service at pro-BDS group’s conference
Published March 21, 2017
Jewish Voice for Peace, which is organizing the confab, said however that it had already planned its own general memorial event.
The Israel advocacy group StandWithUs had asked to hold a multi-faith memorial service for the victims of a 1969 deadly bombing in Jerusalem during JVP’s upcoming biannual conference. The gathering, which will take place March 30-April 2 in Chicago will feature among its speakers Rasmeah Odeh, a Palestinian woman convicted by Israel of involvement in the 1969 terror attack that killed two.
JVP — which supports the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement against Israel — confirmed to JTA that the event venue, the Hyatt McCormick Chicago hotel, had passed along the request but said that it decided not to allow the service to be held, noting that it was holding its own memorial event.
The quarrel comes amid criticism from some in the Jewish world about the anti-Israel views of Odeh and Linda Sarsour, two pro-Palestinian activists who have recently taken public role in various feminist events and who are speaking together at a plenary at the JVP meeting.
Rabbi Alissa Wise, JVP’s deputy director, said that her group had the right to decide the schedule at its gathering.
“This is the Jewish Voice for Peace national member meeting. StandWithUs are not members of Jewish Voice for Peace, and this is our gathering, and we have designed the memorial circle and the program that fits our needs,” Wise told JTA on Tuesday. “It’s fine for them to ask, and it’s fine for us to set our own boundaries.”
The JVP-organized multi-faith “memorial circle” will not focus on any particular event, Wise said.
“It’s really a space that we hold with music and poetry for people to pause in time and connect to their feelings and their grief and their mourning for the loss of life that has taken place in recent days, and past decades in the long history for organizing for justice in the region,” Wise said.
StandWithUs said it was “apprehensive” about the JVP memorial event.
On Monday, Shapiro called JVP’s decision “disgraceful,” and slammed the group for hosting Odeh.
“Not only is JVP honoring a convicted terrorist at their conference, they have denied a request to hold a memorial service for her victims — Edward Joffe and Leon Kanner. These two young Jews no longer have voices because they died in an attack perpetrated by Rasmea Odeh, and it seems JVP is committed to silencing them even further by refusing to allow us to hold this service in their memory,” Shapiro said in a statement. “There is nothing Jewish or peaceful about this disgraceful decision.”
Odeh confessed to planting the bomb in the 1969 attack that killed Joffe and Kanner and injured nine others, though in recent years has claimed the confession was given under torture, which is disputed by Israeli officials.
She was convicted and sentenced by an Israeli military court in 1970 to life in prison for two bombing attacks on behalf of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine. She spent 10 years in an Israeli prison before being released in a prisoner exchange with the PFLP in 1980.
Jewish Voice for Peace said earlier this month that it was “proud” to host Odeh, questioning the validity of her Israeli conviction.
“The accusations against Odeh stem from a context of long-standing anti-Palestinian and anti-Muslim persecution by both the Israeli state and the United States, policies which are escalating under the Trump administration,” JVP said in a March 7 statement.
Odeh was one of the leaders of the grassroots feminist International Women’s Strike. Sarsour, who organized January’s Women’s March on Washington and also helped plan the Women’s Strike, recently said there is no space in the feminist movement for those who do not criticize Israel.