Israel's U.S. envoy: We face monumental challenges this Passover
By
Natasha Mozgovaya, Haaretz Correspondent, and Haaretz Service
Israel's Ambassador to the United States, Michael Oren, on Friday issued a Passover message to the American Jewish community urging it to overcome differences and "unite as a people" at a time when Israel faces monumental challenges.
"Passover 5770 finds Israel and the Jewish people facing some of the most monumental challenges in recent memory," said Oren in the message sent to rabbis and other Jewish community leaders. "While Iran strives, unimpeded, to acquire nuclear military capability, and its leaders swear almost daily to wipe Israel off the map, efforts to deny Israel the right to defend itself - or even exist - proliferate."
Oren went on to say that Israel also faces the challenges of achieving peace with its neighbors. He said that Israel has made "unprecedented and far-reaching gestures to facilitate the resumption of peace talks with the Palestinians" that have been met with little goodwill from the Palestinians.
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"Unfortunately, the Palestinians have refused to negotiate or even to prepare their people for peace," Oren said. "The Palestinian leadership persists in sponsoring the deeply slanted Goldstone report, which accuses of Israel of war crimes, in promoting violent demonstrations, and in glorifying terrorists."
However, he said, Israel remains committed to renewing the peace talks and "moving swiftly to a resolution of all the core issues, including Jerusalem, and achieving an historic peace."
The Israeli envoy also addressed the controversial subject of Jerusalem in his holiday greeting, reiterating what Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and others have been saying this week, that Israel's policy in Jerusalem has remained unchanged for 42 years.
"On the Jerusalem question, Israel's policy is that all residents, Arabs and Jews alike, have the right to build legally anywhere in the city, without prejudice," said Oren. "This is not the position of the Netanyahu government, but of every Israeli government going back to 1967. It was the policy of Golda Meir, Menachem Begin and Yitzhak Rabin. With that, Israel understands that the Palestinians also have a position on Jerusalem and is fully willing to discuss it at the negotiating table."
Oren also discussed challenges Israel faces in its relations with Diaspora Jewry, particularly in the United States, including egalitarian prayer at the Western Wall and changes in Israeli conversion law, saying that Israel is committed to "listening to all parties and finding equitable solutions."
The ambassador said that Passover recalls the challenges that confronted the Jewish people over centuries, but recalled that the holiday "also celebrates the precious achievement of liberty."
"As we gather with our families around our seder tables this year, let us be vigilant of the challenges and dangers we face but also thankful for the extraordinary blessings we have gleaned," he said.
Israel's U.S. envoy: We face monumental challenges this Passover - Haaretz - Israel News