| 3Cs Meeting with Rabbi Jeremy Milgrom |
| Monday, 12 March 2007 15:24 | |||
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3Cs met with Rabbi Jeremy Milgrom on Wednesday, March 7 to discuss his work on mapping Bedouin populations in the West Bank. Conversation centered around questions of the power & danger of mapping as well, more specifically, the political-usefulness of maps for refugees and displaced peoples.
Short Biography of Rabbi Jeremy Milgrom
Jeremy Milgrom
is an American-born rabbi who has lived in Israel since 1968. Ordained
at the Jewish Theological Seminary of America in New York, he has
served congregations, was a Fellow at the Shalom Hartman Institute and
taught Jewish Studies at the Hebrew University and Achva Teachers'
College, but has mostly pursued a just peace in the Middle East
throughout his career.
Rabbi Milgrom
has had leadership roles in emerging Israeli peace groups during the
last three decades: he was the first to bring Peace Now's message to
American Jewish community in 1978, established the pattern for lecture
and fundraising tours on behalf of Yesh Gvul (in support of Israeli
soldiers who refused to serve in Lebanon) in 1983, and was a founding
member of Rabbis for Human Rights in 1988 and its co-director from
1995-1998.
A
pioneer in interfaith partnerships with Christian and Moslem
Palestinians, he founded and directed Clergy for Peace with Rev.
Shehadeh Shehadeh and since 1998 has brought hundreds of volunteers to
tutor Bedouin children of the Jahalin tribe who have been forcibly
moved from the Negev to the West Bank.
An veteran of the Israeli army, Milgrom
became a pacifist after the birth of his first child and was finally
released from reserve military service ("Miluim") after an eight year
struggle. Like many Israeli activists, his primary measure for the
integrity and viability of his peace efforts is in the upbringing of
his three children, who have been junior participants in Jewish/Arab
dialogue Sabbaths, at joint volunteer work camps and at countless
protest rallies. While he is relieved that his younger two children who
are currently in uniform chose non-combatant service in the Israeli
Army, one of his more rewarding moments came when his oldest daughter
fought for and received a deferment for conscience and spent two years
serving society as a community organizer.
He
is a frequent lecturer in Israel and abroad on Resolving the Middle
East Conflict, the Religious roots of Non-violence and related
subjects. Recently, he wrote Let your love for Me vanquish your hatred
for him: Modern Judaism and Non-violence and delived a series of
lectures for the World Council of Churches' program for Ecumenical
Accompaniment for Peace in Palestine and Israel devoted to helping
participants refute the notion that anti-Zionism is necessarily
anti-Semitic.
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