Submit your comments on this article |
Fifth Column |
Progressive Cincinnati rabbi disinvited from anti-Nazi rally because he supports Israel |
2025-03-09 |
The response to this story from early February. [IsraelTimes] Reform Rabbi Ari Jun, a self-described liberal Zionist, has called for empathy for Palestinians in Gaza; protest organizers say his values don’t align with theirsWhen Rabbi Ari Jun learned that faith leaders were invited to speak at a rally in Cincinnati against neo-Nazi ...adherents of a philosophy that was seen even at the time as pure evil, which makes them either consciously purely evil, or attention-seeking ratbags. Pick one, or both.... s and white supremacy ...the pernicious doctrine that laws were intended to be obeyed, that society works better when people don't pour shreiking from their places of worship every Friday for a weekend of rioting over insults real or imagined; and that cannibalism, beastiality, incest, murder, theft, rape, and similar activities are bad. A Dead White European (which invalidates his opinion) philosopher once opined that societies thrive when a person's word can be relied upon, and that a society which puts individual happinessfirst will invariably fail. Strangely enough, other successful societies, such as China, Japan, Korea, and those kinds of places could also be lumped with white supremacistsocieties, since they push the same values... , he quickly responded that he would be there. As the former director of the local Jewish community relations council who recently took the helm of a progressive Reform synagogue, Jun has experience responding to antisemitism and a passion for social justice. But a week later, he was told he was off the docket. The reason: He is a Zionist. "Some of your values do not truly align with the values this protest is trying to represent," Laini Smith, an organizer of the rally being held Sunday in the city’s Washington Park, told him via text message. Billie Pittman, another organizer with Queen City United, a progressive group, spelling things out even more clearly: "Rabbi Ari Jun is a well-known Zionist, and while this event is intended to oppose Nazis and white supremacy, allowing Zionists to participate undermines the original goal of the demonstration." ”Dear lord, can you imagine?! Letting Jews stand with us against Nazis — we’d get their cooties just from breathing the same air!” Pittman also posted on the event’s Facebook page: "We are in the works of having another speaker from the Jewish community."That’s a misquote. That person meant “Jewish” community. The about-face by Queen City United comes as progressive Jews around the United States and beyond continue to struggle with how they fit into the political communities they called home before the onset of the Israel-Hamas![]() war on October 7, 2023. Only the stupid ones struggle. To the rest of us it is obvious that Jew-hate is fashionable on the American left once again. The war broke out after Hamas-led forces of Evil invaded Israel, killing some 1,200 people and kidnapping 251.Many progressive Jews have reported feeling excluded by litmus tests — often implicit, but sometimes explicit — that require them to denounce Israel’s very existence in order to be welcomed in political spaces. Jun offers a case study in these dynamics. A graduate of the Reform movement’s Hebrew Union College, he said as he assumed the role of senior rabbi at Temple Sholom in January that he was eager to rebuild interfaith relations and continue the synagogue’s longstanding tradition of social justice. Temple Sholom is actually Reconstructionist, the terribly earnest Unitarianism of Judaism with all that entails. He has also been a vocal critic of the Israeli government and its right-wing US supporters, even challenging some centrist orthodoxies in the immediate wake of Hamas’s attack on Israel. "If our empathy extends only to Israelis and Jews ... we play into Hamas’s hands," he wrote on his own blog in November 2023, in advance of the Jewish community rally in Washington DC that drew an estimated 300,000 people. Last month, he wrote in an op-ed in the Cincinnati Enquirer that US President Donald Trump...Perhaps no man has ever had as much fun being president of the US... ’s Gazoo ...Hellhole adjunct to Israel and Egypt's Sinai Peninsula, inhabited by Gazooks. The place was acquired in the wake of the 1967 War and then presented to Paleostinian control in 2006 by Ariel Sharon, who had entered his dotage. It is currently ruled with a rusty iron fist by Hamas with about the living conditions you'd expect. It periodically attacks the Hated Zionist Entity whenever Iran needs a ruckus created or the hard boyz get bored, getting thumped by the IDF in return. The ruling turbans then wave the bloody shirt and holler loudly about oppressionand disproportionate response... plan is "nothing short of the dictionary definition of ethnic cleansing." Terribly earnest but not necessarily rigorous thinkers, in the sadly typical far left way. He has also drawn scorn from some non-Jewish progressives, for example from the Cincinnati Socialists last year, for his attitudes about Israel and Zionism.Those attitudes put him in the American Jewish mainstream. According to a 2021 Pew Research study, 80 percent of US Jews say caring about Israel is an essential or important part of what being Jewish means to them. Nearly 60% said they personally feel an emotional attachment to Israel. Last year, the American Jewish Committee Survey of American Jewish Opinion found that 85% of US Jews think it is important for the United States to support Israel in the aftermath of October 7. "I would call myself a liberal Zionist," Jun said. "I am attacked by people to the right of me in the Jewish community for being insufficiently allegiant to Israel, and I am attacked by progressives for having any association with Israel. I don’t consider all anti-Zionism to be antisemitism, but I do know there is a dramatic overlap between the two." The rally’s organizers did not publicly announce that they had disinvited Jun. As the news emerged on Thursday, both critics and supporters of his exclusion posted a flood of comments on the event’s Facebook page. "This is a shameful march that’s a complete lie. I am a progressive, but progressives can’t stand for equality when you exclude Jews," wrote Rabbi Sammy Kanter, director of Jewish learning at the local JCC. "Excluding a minority group is not a rally against hate, but rather breeds more!" Mohammad Ahmad, who leads a pro-Paleostinian group in Northern Kentucky, just across the Ohio river from Cincinnati, praised the decision to disinvite Jun. "As a Paleostinian, I want to thank the brave organizers of this event for taking a clear stance against Zionism and all forms of white supremacy in the Tri-State area. Bravo and well done," he wrote. "Zionism is unequivocally racism and Zionism is, without a shadow of doubt, an ultranationalist, fascist ...anybody you disagree with, damn them... , and far-right ethno-supremacist ideology that has inflicted so much harm not just on Paleostinians in Paleostine, but on so many other marginalized groups, including right here in Cincinnati." The organizers, too, weighed in on the Facebook page. Smith wrote they believe that "standing up against white supremacy, neo-Nazism, and other forms of oppression requires us to critically engage with the full scope of ideologies and actions that perpetuate harm," and that they believe hate has no place in Cincinnati. "The decision to not invite Rabbi Jun-Ballaban was not based on his Jewish identity, but rather on a fundamental divergence in values," Smith wrote. "Our event is rooted in a commitment to challenging white supremacy, ethnic cleansing, and the ongoing harm against marginalized communities." Previously, according to private messages between Jun and Smith that Jun shared, his plan was to speak about the threat of white supremacy, which Smith said "would be perfect." Jun had even told his congregants that to "counter Nazism," they would need to show up in spaces where they may feel uncomfortable. Since his dismissal by organizers, he said he feels differently. "It’s one thing to go to a rally expecting different people with disagreeing viewpoints to show up as their full selves, and for that to create discomfort and to live with that discomfort," Jun said. "It’s another thing for us as a Jewish community to be told, ’You cannot show up as your full selves.’" Related: Cincinnati: 2025-02-09 Violent clashes after armed neo-Nazis drape swastika flags from Ohio overpass Cincinnati: 2025-01-24 Woke flash mob ruins University of Washington student's event about DEI and trans sports Cincinnati: 2025-01-22 Four Chilean nationals arrested in connection to Joe Burrow home burglary |
Posted by:trailing wife |
#3 The purist causes are getting muddled. |
Posted by: Skidmark 2025-03-09 10:54 |
#2 Rabbi Jun is a delusional idiot. |
Posted by: EMS Artifact 2025-03-09 10:48 |
#1 They're all Nazis, rabbi. |
Posted by: Grom the Affective 2025-03-09 10:48 |