NEW
JERSEY JEWISH NEWS
Mr. Assaf’s opus
Main Editorial
Andrew Silow-Carroll
Editor–in-ChiefApril 21, 2004
This week a reader called and asked the editors of this newspaper why last
week’s issue including letter to the editor written by Aref Assaf, president of
the New Jersey chapter of the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee. The
reader asked how printing a letter from an “Arab anti-Israel propagandist” is
consistent with our “Publisher’s Statement,” which appears on this page.
The answer is that NJ Jewish News feels readers need information from all sides
of the
debate if they are to make sense of, and be prepared to engage in, the arguments
surrounding the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. To print Mr. Assaf’s comments is
not to endorse them, only to let our readers and leaders know the rhetorical
strategy of a prominent and frequent commentator on Mideast issues from the
Palestinian perspective.
We need to pay attention to Assaf in this regard specifically because he for the
most part avoids the rhetorical excess that characterizes many pro-Palestinian
activists. For example, in his letter he raises a number of ideas that are being
discussed within the mainstream in Israel. More than one Jewish Israeli
commentator — including critics within the settler movement — has asked if the
timing of the prime minister’s announcement of a withdrawal of Jewish
settlements from Gaza had anything to do with his legal troubles. Assaf also
raises the question of what Israel intends to do with the settlements’
infrastructure should the withdrawal be carried out. If Sharon’s legal battles
and the fate of the infrastructure are going to become new rhetorical gambits
among pro-Palestinian activists, it’s important that they be aired here.
Printing Assaf’s letter also reflects well on the Jewish community. We often
complain that there is no one to dialogue with in the Palestinian community.
Letting a Palestinian air his or her views in our publications is a challenge to
the other side that our commentators be allowed to respond in kind. That the
Palestinian side often fails to meet this challenge only strengthens our
position.
Airing a wide range of voices works to the benefit of individuals across the
ideological spectrum. As the Publisher’s Statement puts it, NJJN serves as “a
forum for the exchange of ideas and opinions in the Jewish community.” Some of
those ideas and opinions may make us uncomfortable but nevertheless strengthen
our ability to defend our interests.
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