The Crowd -- B.W. Cook
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Ehud Barak, prime minister of Israel from 1999 to 2001, came to
Newport Beach this week at the invitation of Rabbi Mark Miller of Temple
Bat Yahm. Barak accepted the invitation to address the Newport-Mesa
community as part of the Norman Schiff Scholar Series sponsored by
Miller’s congregation in Newport Beach.
The 10th prime minister of Israel entered the Bat Yahm sanctuary as
the full house quieted. Secret Service agents in business suits,
earpieces visible, took strategic positions on the pulpit. Security
agents searched the purses of patrons, electronic wands scanned the
torsos of all who entered.
These are the times in which we live. The politics and the players in
the arena of Middle Eastern affairs are nothing less than the center of
the global vortex. As Americans, our destiny is inextricably tied, like
it or not, to the events that have shaped the life of Ehud Barak. He came
to share his story.
Standing 6’5” tall, and sporting a long gray beard resembling the
traditions of Jewish men of centuries past, the erudite Miller introduced
Barak. Miller, dressed in a dark charcoal-colored, three button designer
suit that firmly placed the host in the 21st Century, made remarks
pointed, with both humor and honor, at the privilege of welcoming a world
leader to his sanctuary and the community.
The soldier-statesman Barak, born February 12, 1942 on a kibbutz
founded by his immigrant parents near the Lebanese-Israeli border,
enlisted in the Israeli Army at age 17. By 1972, Barak was a member of an
elite commando unit and led the successful storming of a Belgian airliner
hijacked by Palestinian guerrillas at Tel Aviv airport. Then in 1973,
disguised as a woman carrying a purse loaded with explosives, Barak
retaliated against a Palestinian force responsible for murdering Israeli
athletes at the Munich Olympic games.
“If someone had told me as a young man that the world would still be
facing terror 37 years later, I would not have believed it,” said Barak,
whose Hebrew name is translated as “lightning.”
Israel’s most decorated soldier, with a master’s degree from Stanford
University, retired as army chief of staff in 1995 and joined the Labor
Party under then Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin. The assassination of Rabin
in 1995 put Barak on the path of national leadership. At the apex of his
career, Barak joined former Pres. Bill Clinton at Camp David in an
attempt to reach a peaceful negotiation of differences with the
Palestinians led by Yassir Arafat. The failure of the negotiation
contributed to the violence that has escalated at an alarming rate over
the past 18 months.
Barak addressed the events of Sept. 11 in America, and their relation
to the continuing violence in his nation.
“The world has been changed forever,” he told his silent audience. “It
is reality. We must face it. Everything we hold dear; freedom, liberty,
the sanctity of human life, has been violated.”
Barak continued with alarming words, “The terrorists will use stolen
nuclear or biological arms if they can. After 9-11, nothing will be
regarded as not possible.”
The soldier-statesman shared his joy over becoming a first-time
grandfather of a male child born to one of his two grown daughters.
Stating his love for America, and fond memories of his youth spent in
Palo Alto as a young married student with infant children in tow, Barak
stated, “America is not hated because of her support for Israel, and
likewise, Israel is not hated for her relationship with America. Israel
is hated because she is an outpost of democracy surrounded by a backwater
of civilization that is predominately poor, uneducated, and unwilling to
come into life in the 21st Century.”
Praising President George W. Bush, Vice President Dick Cheney and the
cabinet, Barak drew applause from the assemblage.
“I’ve known Cheney and Rice for 10 years, Powell for 20 years, and I’m
here to tell you that America and the freedom-loving world are in the
best possible hands.”
Barak added that among other important military consequences, a
tighter control of international money must be put in place to stop the
money laundering that supports terror.
“Freedom-loving people must act not by the book, but out of the box.
To win the war on terror, our eyes must be open, our mind must be free
from dogma and conventional wisdom in order to put an end to terror,” he
said.
Barak’s nearly two-hour address followed a private dinner reception
hosted by community patrons supporting his appearances in Newport Beach.
The 59-year-old leader discussed the political ramifications of
involvement by Syria, Iraq, Iran, the Philippines and other nations with
ties to terror. In very pragmatic terms, Barak told the crowd that,
“There can be no stability in the world until terror is eliminated.”
His view concerning the future of Israel and Palestine was equally
pragmatic.
“There must be two states for two nations. Israel must have a secure
and protected border, and Israelis must free ourselves of the burden of
ruling the Palestinians. Jerusalem will not be sacrificed in the
process,” he stated unequivocally.
Following the address, Rabbi Miller questioned Barak on the
intransigence of Arab hatred for Israel.
“When Muslim children are taught to hate Israel, how will the cycle of
violence ever end?” asked Miller.
Barak waxed philosophical in response.
“There is much change that needs to occur. We are a patient people,”
Barak said. “We have waited thousands of years for peace.”
Guests and patrons of the event joined the former prime minister and
Rabbi Miller and wife Wendy, as hosts Jacob and Gina Rabinovich opened
their Italian villa on the Newport Coast for an after-event reception and
dessert. Some 100 Newport-Mesa activists, including honorary chairman of
the event Arthur Yelsey and his wife Karen, William and Michele Klein,
Ygal and Sheila Sonenshine, William and Carolyn Klein, Jim and Ellyne
Warsaw, Jeffrey and Debbie Margolis, Joel Rubenstein, Steve and Jill
Edwards, Edward and Leslea Miller, Jonathan and Sharyn Grant, Winnie Voss
and Elliot Mercer, shared comments and coffee over dessert catered and
underwritten by the Turnip Rose.
Impressive, powerful and poignant was Barak’s address to Newport
Beach. Yet in this columnist’s opinion, two elements were missing. First,
there were no discussions of possible solutions to Israel’s ongoing
struggle with the Palestinian people beyond the need for two nations and
secure borders. Second, there were only a handful of non-Jews in the
audience.
Peace in the Middle East and the end to world terror will never be
lasting without a resolution to Palestinian anger that has grown over
more than three generations resulting from the 1948 creation of Israel.
While strong borders and military might are essential, at least for
now, true and lasting peace only exists in a world of shared opportunity,
cultural exchange, economic and civic validity.
Lastly, here in America, in Newport Beach, in free and prosperous and
enlightened territory, what does it say about a community that does not
turn out in mass to witness an address by a world leader whose role can
and will effect all of our lives?
The failure of a free society of divergent views, backgrounds and
loyalties to come together in peaceful surrounding is an indication of
why mankind cannot or will not seek peace in the Middle East, the Far
East or East L.A.
* THE CROWD appears Thursdays and Saturdays.
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