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New Jersey Jewish News
New Jersey Feature Story
Passaic
Democrats dump candidate over terrorism remarks
by
Robert Wiener
and
Elaine Durbach
NJJN Staff Writers
Passaic
County Democrats withdrew their endorsement of a Lebanese-American freeholder
candidate who had been criticized for remarks some critics said conveyed
sympathy with Palestinian suicide bombers.
At a
meeting on Saturday, March 25, just seven days after endorsing Sami Merhi, from
Totowa, as a candidate for freeholder, the Passaic County Democratic screening
committee rescinded that decision. The move, passed by a 20-3 vote, has won
approval from some quarters and outrage from others.
The
decision came following reports that at an April 2002 rally and at a fund-raiser
the same day for Rep. Bill Pascrell (D-Dist. 8), Merhi made comments allegedly
conveying sympathy with Palestinian suicide bombers. According to a report in
The New York Times, he rejected a comparison between such attacks in Israel
and the 9/11 World Trade Center attacks, in which he lost a godson, and he
quoted a would-be bomber captured in Israel in a way that some observers
interpreted as a justification for such attacks.
According
to Julie Roginsky, a spokeswoman for Democratic Party county chair John Currie,
Merhi is to be replaced by Joanne Graviano, a Hawthorne school board member who
is also active with the New Jersey Education Association. Roginsky quoted Currie
as saying Graviano should have had the nomination from the start and that there
was no room for divisiveness in the party.
Following
Saturday’s vote, Merhi told the Associated Press: “I’m in shock, feeling
betrayed. They should be ashamed of themselves.” Merhi, who narrowly lost the
party’s endorsement in 2004 because of the same issue, said he asked the party
leaders on Saturday to support him and accept his explanation that his comments
were misinterpreted. He said he reiterated his opposition to all forms of
terrorism and his belief that killing innocent people is always wrong.
Pascrell,
a personal friend of Merhi’s, sits on the screening committee with 16 municipal
leaders but was absent from the March 25 meeting because of illness. Commenting
on the decision at a town meeting in West Orange Monday night, he said, “There
isn’t an anti-Semitic bone in Sami Merhi’s body. He wouldn’t have a Jewish
Israeli as his business partner if there was. But it’s been four years since
these comments were made, and he needed to clear things up, and he didn’t do it.
This is not just about politics; it’s also social and cultural.”
Asked
whether the pressure to remove Merhi from the slate had come from the Jewish
community, Pascrell replied: “Not from the community as such, but from some
within it.”
And yet it
was fellow Democrats Gov. Jon Corzine and Sen. Robert Menendez who brought the
issue forward last week, earning praise from Jewish leaders when the political
leaders opposed Merhi’s candidacy.
Max
Kleinman, executive vice president of
United Jewish Communities of MetroWest New
Jersey, who last week expressed his agreement with Democrats and
Republicans who opposed Merhi’s candidacy, welcomed the screening committee’s
shift. He stressed that the opposition to Merhi had nothing to do with
ethnicity, but that his remarks made him an undesirable candidate. He pointed
out that in Israel, the late Rabbi Meir Kahane and his Kach party, which
advocated “a racist ideology of forced evictions of Palestinians,” were kicked
out of the Knesset.
Kleinman
added: “Let’s see what future developments unfold. We are always interested in
having dialogue with members of the Arab-American community who seek good
intergroup relations.”
Speaking
with NJJN last week before the meeting, Currie said, “I don’t believe
Sami Merhi is a terrorist. He is a good, hard-working American. He is a
peace-loving man, but he made a mistake, and I have encouraged him for better
than two years to go and fix this — particularly with the Jewish community.”
Currie
said Merhi’s statement may be “fine in life, but in politics it’s a problem. I
expressed to my screening committee that if he was going to be a candidate, this
would be a problem for the Democratic Party. My candidates are not going to be
able to talk about other issues if they have to defend him as a running mate.
The other side is going to use that to their advantage, and it is my job to put
the best possible ticket forward that can win.”
Deputy
Assembly speaker Al Steele (D-Dist. 35) said he thought it right that the
endorsement be withdrawn. “I know Sami, and I’ve met his wife and his family…. I
don’t think he’s a terrorist; I think he made a statement that makes it
unhealthy for him to be considered for political office. Wrong has to be
corrected before restoration takes place.”
Merhi’s
ouster drew furious condemnation from Aref Assaf, president of the Arab American
Forum. In statement written after the move was announced, he blamed Corzine,
Menendez, the party, and “influential Jewish leaders who threatened to withhold
their financial support if the party does not comply.” He said, “Political
lynching of Arab Americans is now an accepted practice. Every Arab American is
now Sami Merhi.”
Assaf said
he hoped the incident would not worsen “the already tense relations between Arab
and Jewish Americans, the majority of whom are proud members of the Democratic
Party. My fear is that if not sufficiently contained, the harm done and the
distrust created as a result will weaken the political chances of the party….
Both groups must find common ground on which to focus their collective energies.
In fact, as persecuted ethnic communities, we have a lot [more] that unites us
than pushes us apart.”
Lori Price
Abrams, director of UJC MetroWest’s Community Relations Committee, stressed that
it was not Merhi’s identity as an Arab American that the Jewish community
reacted to, but the attitude he expressed. “It was untenable to have a person
who sees terrorism against Israelis as more acceptable than terrorism against
other people become electable,” she said. “There’s tacit permission given to
Israel-bashing in justifying the cause of suicide bombing. It’s dangerous to let
that position rest as acceptable, and that’s why we need to be outspoken about
it at this point in time.”
CRC chair
Stephen Flatow said that while Merhi had condemned terrorism, he hadn’t defined
terrorist groups. “That leaves open the question of who is a terrorist. That’s
too wishy-washy.”
As for the
endorsement withdrawal, Flatow said, “It was the right thing to do. It’s kind of
sad that it had to go to the mat like that. The county Democratic Party knew
about his remarks and didn’t see them as disqualifying, but they responded to
the complaints, and now it’s over — at least as far his candidacy goes.”
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