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flamingdem Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-03-10 01:40 PM
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Cuba Jewish groups deny work with jailed American
Cuba Jewish groups deny work with jailed American
By PETER ORSI

Wednesday, December 1, 2010
HAVANA -- The leaders of Cuba's two main Jewish groups both denied having worked with a jailed American contractor whose family says he was on the island to hand out communication equipment to Jewish organizations.

Cuban authorities have accused Alan Gross of espionage, though they have not pressed charges despite keeping him in custody since he was detained last Dec. 3.

Adela Dworin, president of Havana's Temple Beth Shalom and Cuba's largest Jewish organization, the Jewish Community House, told The Associated Press on Wednesday it's possible Gross came to the center as one of "hundreds" of foreign visitors it receives each year. But she said she doesn't remember meeting him and he certainly was not doing any work with her group.

Dr. Mayra Levy, president of the Hebrew Sephardic Center of Cuba, said the same thing: "I never saw him. He never came here."

Cuba's tightly knit Jewish community is believed to number about 1,500 people, most of whom live in Havana and belong to one of those two groups. While it is possible Gross was working with one of the other Jewish groups scattered across the island, the other organizations represent very small numbers of people.

"As far as I know, none of the three synagogues (in Havana) authorized any such activity," Dworin said.

Gross' wife, Judy, has denied that her husband was a spy and says he is a veteran development worker who was helping members of Cuba's Jewish community use the Internet to stay in contact with each other and with similar groups abroad. Communications equipment he brought with him was intended for humanitarian purposes, not for use by the dissident community, she said.

Dworin said many visitors bring donations - medicine for a community pharmacy, books, DVDs, computer games, food for religious festivals - but she stressed that the group would not accept any contraband equipment, or even have need for it.

"We have all the necessary media to communicate with the entire Jewish world," Dworin said. "We are able to communicate freely."

"We respect the laws of the country where we were born," she added.

The detained man, a native of Potomac, Maryland, was working for a firm contracted by USAID when he was arrested. Senior Cuban leaders including President Raul Castro have accused Gross of spying.
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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-03-10 04:47 PM
Response to Original message
1. Glad they've made this public statement. Very cool. So low of him to try to hide behind them.
The Jewish community in Cuba's very old. They've been there for ages.

People from the States visit Cuba frequently to be with their loved ones. Many of them have posted their comments and their photos on the internetS.



Comunidad Hebrea Hatikva, Santiago de Cuba



Centro Hebreo Sepharadi



Synagogue el Patronato, La Habana

ETC.

Hope Cuba will "pants" this scumball from USAID.
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Peace Patriot Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Dec-04-10 04:09 AM
Response to Reply #1
2. Hear! Hear! Alan Gross ought to be ashamed of himself!
I find it especially offensive when rightwingers and fascists try to use Jewish groups in this way, to slander or sabotage leftist governments, and to try to stir up the lowest of human behaviors: religious or racial bigotry. We saw a similar thing in Venezuela, when the Simon Wiesenthal Center alleged that Hugo Chavez had made some anti-semitic remark, and the Jewish groups in Venezuela sent them a stinging letter, telling them to knock it off, it was untrue and slanderous. I don't know who's running the SW Center, but somebody with an anti-Chavez agenda got to them, or was working from within, to give the corpo-fascist press one more of a thousand anti-Chavez headlines, and probably to set the progressive Jewish community in the U.S. against leftist democracy in Latin America, and the Chavez government in particular.

I find this just despicable! I don't know for sure why it nettles me so much, in a world of injuries and horrors. But I got the same feeling back when Daddy Bush let his campaign utilize overt racism against Dukakis with the Willy Horton ads. There is something so low-minded, and so destructive, about particular uses of race or religion with long histories of unconscionable, brutal suppression, that makes using those sufferings for crass political purposes especially horrible and utterly irresponsible, in my book. Sociopathic, is the word I'm looking for. Complete obliviousness to the health of a society and welfare of others.

This is worse than shitty behavior--Gross lying about working with Jewish groups, or Bush I stirring up racist hatred in a country stained with black slavery. It is cynical in the extreme and it is dangerous. You are tearing at the very fabric of society--on race relations here, in the one case, and at the peaceful accommodation between Jewish groups and the Cuban revolution, in the other. It appalls me that anyone in our government would do this, even though I know that they have done far worse.

I think also that I am very, very proud of our country, as the most interesting and successful "melting pot" in the world, and in history--at least as to what we, as a people, aspire to. The civil rights movement formed my psyche as a young person. I even traveled to Georgia and Alabama to be part of Martin Luther King's movement, with nothing in my background that explains, or could have predicted, such a journey. It MOVED me, to think that I belonged to a country where ancient wrongs could be righted, and where people of vastly different backgrounds could love and appreciate each other, and be equals. That is so precious to me. It may be my highest value. To have someone stomp on that value, for bad, cynical purposes, ignites my most passionate animosity.

The civil rights movement in the South was also the place where I first got to know progressive Jews on intimate terms. It impressed me so much that they were fighting side by side with another, very different oppressed group, in common cause. Their magnanimous outlook inspired me; opened a whole new world to me. So it especially disturbs me when Jews, or Israel, are used to front an anti-progressive cause--as with the "Neo-cons" and the Iraq War or oppression of the Palestinians, or in these two nasty cases, in Venezuela and Cuba. It seems so wrong to me--a violation of something sacred. We need to hold on to those sacred and inspiring things, our youthful ideals, even as we learn awful truths about our government. They are our bulwark for helping to create a better world. They keep us on the right path even when we fail and see failure all around us.
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Billy Burnett Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Dec-04-10 10:38 AM
Response to Reply #2
3. Good post, BUT, I have to disagree w/you on one niggling point.
Edited on Sat Dec-04-10 10:40 AM by Billy Burnett
When it comes to "melting pot" nations of N. America, Canada is clearly the leader. In immigrant percentages, total population, ability for upward economic mobility, etc., Canada outranks the US. Plus, considering the establishment of significant socialist programs in Canada, I would say that Canada is not only the greatest melting pot, but a civilized one at that.
;) (Had to get that little "dig" in, for laughs. I too love the promise of America and the American people.)


You might like to peruse this site (Canada has it's share of draconian history also),

CANADA'S RIGHTS MOVEMENT: A HISTORY
http://www.historyofrights.com/




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ChangoLoa Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Dec-04-10 10:57 AM
Response to Reply #3
4. Good observation
Edited on Sat Dec-04-10 11:03 AM by ChangoLoa
Especially because you reduce the "world" framework to "N. America". I couldn't agree more. I see the USian "melting pot" as anything but a fusion. Its components stayed separated and even segregated up to the late 20th century. USA was also one of the last countries in the world to abolish slavery.

All in all, I think the term "salad" fits a lot better since its components mixture is still very limited. For real fusions and melting pots, I believe we should see Latin American societies* as the most evident examples in the world. "Melting pots" are necessarily brown and I think around 90% of the brown population in the US is... Latino. Isn't it?


* Even the worst example, Bolivia, has a % of mixed population that doubles the US %.

On edit: This argument excludes social segregation, of course. In that field, L.A. goes from top to bottom.
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ChangoLoa Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Dec-04-10 11:00 AM
Response to Reply #2
5. "the most interesting and successful "melting pot" in the world"...
along with Australia and South Africa.
:sarcasm:

When did the last American segregative laws disappear?
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