"Resolved by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United
States of America in Congress assembled, that the United States of
America favors the establishment in Palestine of a national home for the
Jewish people, it being clearly understood that nothing shall be done
which may prejudice the civil and religious rights of Christian and all
other non-Jewish communities in Palestine, and that the Holy places and
religious buildings and sites in Palestine shall be adequately
protected."14


Read this and wonder why Timothy McVeigh quoted Justice Brandeis uon
being found guilty.

See Israel today what Zion Butchers have made it - land of pornograhy
and prostitution and white slavery, Jewish Mafia and Russian Mafia
controlled by Zionists.......see work of Larry Flynt in evidence and
Irving Moskowitz who used their dirty money to spiritually sodomize the
public and steal Arab land.

See the vision of the United States and Brandeis dream as written above
being corrupted - even the Israeli young men today are beginning to see
what evil is being done in the name of Zionism....

Saba

Middle East History: It Happened In August
Justice Brandeis Was the Savior of Zionism in America
By Donald Neff
August/September 1996, Page 38
It was 84 years ago, on Aug. 13, 1912, that Louis Dembitz Brandeis, a
future justice of the U.S. Supreme Court, made a personal decision that
would have a profound effect in establishing Zionism in the United
States and thereby securing America's eventual support for the Jewish
state of Israel. Zionism had been founded 15 years earlier in Europe,
but it had failed to gain much support among Jewish Americans. It had
probably fewer than 20,000 followers from within the 2.5 million-member
American Jewish community before World War I. In the words of a
pro-Zionist writer, American Zionism then was "a small and feeble
enterprise."1 A historian of the movement described Zionism at the time
as still "small and weak, in great financial distress, and low in
morale."2
This began to change after an August 1912 meeting Brandeis had with
Jacob de Haas, editor of the Boston Jewish Advocateand an early Zionist.
A decade earlier, de Haas had been an aide to Zionism's founder,
Theodore Herzl. Intrigued by de Haas' tales of Herzl and the beginnings
of Zionism, Brandeis hired de Haas to instruct him in Zionism over the
winter of 1912-13. At the end of that time Brandeis was a convert to
Zionism.3 Within two years, on Aug. 30, 1914, Brandeis became head of
the Provisional Executive for General Zionist Affairs, making him the
leader of the Zionist Central Office, which had been removed from Berlin
to neutral America just before the outbreak of World War I.
Brandeis, the son of middle-class immigrants from Prague, was a
brilliant attorney who had graduated at the top of his law class at
Harvard. In 1912 he was 56 years of age, a wealthy Bostonian, a
political progressive, a tireless reformer and one of the most famous
attorneys in the country, known as the People's Attorney because of his
successful litigation against big business on behalf of labor. His
courtroom victories brought him riches as well as the enmity of the
business establishment, including the wealthy Jewish communities of New
York and Boston.4
What made Brandeis' conversion so surprising was that he was a
non-observant Jew who believed firmly in America's melting pot and had
grown up "free from Jewish contacts or traditions," as he put it.5 It
was not until he was in his 50s that Brandeis began paying attention to
the Jewish experience. His sense of ethnic kinship had been sharpened by
the turn-of-the-century wave of new Jewish immigrants that had led to
rising anti-Semitism in America and at the same time had exposed
Brandeis to Zionists. These influences came while his popular causes had
estranged him from the Brahmin society of Boston and the New York
business community, leaving him isolated from the mainline Jewish
community.
New York's and Boston's prosperous upper-class Jews rejected Zionism's
pessimistic tenet that anti-Semitism was inevitable. Instead, they
believed in keeping an ethnic low profile and seeking social
assimilation with other Americans. The elite position and wealth enjoyed
by upper-class American Jews proved to them that the American melting
pot worked. The last thing they wanted was an ideology that advocated
establishment of a foreign country specifically for Jews. They feared
this would not only bring into question their place in the melting pot,
but also their loyalty to the land that had brought them a comfortable
and secure life. Implicit in Zionism was the sensitive issue of dual
loyalty toward a Jewish state and toward the nations in which its
supporters actually were living.
Opponents of Zionism in America included Jewish socialists and workers,
who disdained it as a form of bourgeois nationalism. Ultraorthodox
Jewish religious groups went even further, describing Zionism as "the
most formidable enemy that has ever arisen among the Jewish people"
because it sought to do God's work through politics.6 Not even the new
immigrants streaming out of Eastern Europe were attracted to Zionism, as
was obvious from the fact that most of them had chosen to bypass
Palestine and go instead to the United States and other Western
countries.
Unlike Jews who embraced the melting pot, Zionists openly rejected
assimilation. Alienation lay at the heart of Zionism, as explained by
Theodore Herzl when he first formulated its purpose and aims in early
1896 in his seminal pamphlet Der Judenstaat: "We have sincerely tried
everywhere to merge with the national communities in which we live,
seeking only to preserve the faith of our fathers," he wrote. "It is not
permitted us."7
At its core, this was the fundamental rationale of Zionism: a profound
despair that anti-Semitism could not be eradicated as long as Jews lived
among gentiles. Out of this dark vision came the belief that the only
hope for the survival of the Jews lay in the founding of their own
state.
With his conversion came changes in Brandeis' embrace of the American
melting pot. He now preached the "salad bowl," a belief in cultural
pluralism in which ethnic groups maintained their unique identity.
Brandeis maintained:
"America…has always declared herself for equality of nationalities as
well as for equality of individuals. America has believed that each race
had something of peculiar value which it can contribute… America has
always believed that in differentiation, not in uniformity, lies the
path of progress."8
As for the unsettling question of dual loyalty, the foremost suspicion
about Zionism among gentiles, Brandeis asserted there was no conflict
between being an American and a Zionist:
"Let no American imagine that Zionism is inconsistent with patriotism.
Multiple loyalties are objectionable only if they are
inconsistent…Every American who aids in advancing the Jewish
settlement in Palestine, though he feels that neither he nor his
descendants will ever live there, will likewise be a better man and a
better American for doing so…There is no inconsistency between loyalty
to America and loyalty to Jewry. The Jewish spirit, the product of our
religion and experiences, is essentially modern and essentially
American."9
Brandeis's Zionism, however, was far from the reality on the ground in
Palestine, where Arabs and Jews viewed each other with mutual
suspicions. He linked Zionists with the early New England Puritans,
declaring that "Zionism is the Pilgrim inspiration and impulse over
again. The descendants of the Pilgrim fathers should not find it hard to
understand and sympathize with it." To Jewish audiences he said: "To be
good Americans, we must be better Jews, and to be better Jews, we must
become Zionists."10
Brandeis' Zionism, obviously, was different from the passionate and
messianic Zionism of Europe, driven as it was by pessimism about the
enduring anti-Semitism of the world against Jews and the need for the
ethnic cleansing of Palestine's Arabs. His was an ethnic philanthropic
vision, a desire to help needy Jews set down a kind of New England town
in the Middle East—but with no intention of going to Palestine to live
among them. This concept of helping with financial support but not
actually moving to Palestine remained central to American Zionists and
helps explain why through the years so few Jewish Americans have
emigrated to Israel.11 To European Zionists, it was a pale and anemic
version of their life's passion, "Zionism without Zion," they
grumbled.12
While Brandeis's vision of Zionism was unrealistically idealistic, he
would achieve what probably no other Zionist could have. He became
instrumental in gaining the support of the United States for a Jewish
state in Palestine. Brandeis accomplished this feat by using his
friendship with President Woodrow Wilson to advocate the Zionist cause,
which he achieved by serving as a conduit between British Zionists and
Wilson.
The president was a ready listener. He was the son of a Presbyterian
minister and a daily reader of the Bible. Although not particularly
interested in the political ramifications of Zionism, he shared the
vague sentiment of a number of Christians at the time that there would
be a certain biblical justice to have the Jews return to Palestine.
Wilson thought so highly of Brandeis that he appointed him to the
Supreme Court on Jan. 28, 1916, thereby enormously increasing Brandeis'
prestige and his influence in the White House. In turn, Brandeis
resigned from all the numerous public and private clubs and
organizations he belonged to, including, ostensibly, his leadership of
American Zionism. His resignation, however, did not mean Brandeis had
deserted Zionism or active involvement in its promotion. Behind the
scenes he continued to play a leadership role. At his Supreme Court
chambers in Washington he received daily reports on Zionist activities
from the New York headquarters and issued orders to his loyal
lieutenants, many of them graduates of Harvard, now heading American
Zionism.13
While on the court, Brandeis was instrumental in 1917 in gaining
Wilson's support for Britain's Balfour Declaration, a seminal document
that thereafter served as Zionism's claim to have a legitimate right to
settle in Palestine (Washington Report, October/November 1995).
The final major diplomatic achievement of Brandeis and American Zionism
in the post-World War I period was the passage by Congress on Sept. 11,
1922, of a joint resolution favoring a Jewish homeland in Palestine. The
words of the resolution practically echoed the Balfour Declaration.
"Resolved by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United
States of America in Congress assembled, that the United States of
America favors the establishment in Palestine of a national home for the
Jewish people, it being clearly understood that nothing shall be done
which may prejudice the civil and religious rights of Christian and all
other non-Jewish communities in Palestine, and that the Holy places and
religious buildings and sites in Palestine shall be adequately
protected."14
Zionists trumpeted the resolution as another Balfour Declaration,
evidence that a Jewish state had official support not only from Britain
but from the United States. After all, it had been sponsored by Senator
Henry Cabot Lodge and Representative Hamilton Fish and signed by
President Warren G. Harding.
However, during the debate leading up to passage of the resolution, a
number of speakers had emphasized that it was merely an expression of
sympathy by the Congress, had no force in law and in no way would
involve the United States in foreign entanglements. This was the
interpretation adopted by the State Department, which had opposed
Zionism since its beginning, considering it a minority group interfering
in foreign affairs.15
Passage of the congressional resolution was the height of Brandeis'
brand of American Zionism, and also the end of its heroic period. Under
Brandeis the Zionist membership had burgeoned tenfold, reaching around
200,000 after the heralded victory of the Balfour Declaration. The
momentum of that historic event carried over into the halls of Congress
and resulted in the joint resolution. But a year before the resolution
became a reality, Brandeis himself had been swept from power in Zionist
councils in a showdown with European Zionists. Brandeis' tepid form of
Zionism was simply too emotionless and sterile for them.16
Nonetheless, his contribution to Zionism had been enormous, not only in
gaining official U.S. support but also in establishing the intellectual
framework for the movement in America. It was from Brandeis' time that
American Zionists began a concerted effort to link American ideals and
interests with a Jewish state and thereby establish a mutual identity.
How successful Brandeis and his successors have been was demonstrated at
the two most recent annual meetings of the American Israel Public
Affairs Committee (AIPAC).
In 1995 President Bill Clinton had become the first sitting president
ever to appear before the lobbying group. On April 28, 1996, appearing
before AIPAC for the second time, he told the applauding audience that
the relationship between America and Israel was "based on shared values
and common strategies."17 Two days later at the White House, Clinton
told visiting Israeli Prime Minister Shimon Peres that America "stands
with Israel through good times and bad because our countries share the
same ideals—freedom, tolerance, democracy."18 However astonishing
Palestinians and foreign observers might find that description of a
country that continues to occupy foreign territories by force and
continuing to deprive their occupants of political and civil rights of
any kind, the fact is that Zionists have been successful in selling in
the United States Brandeis' preposterous claim that the Zionist state
and America are basically the same.
* Available through the AET Book Club
RECOMMENDED READING:
*Ball, George W. and Douglas B. Ball, The Passionate Attachment:
America's Involvement with Israel, 1947 to the Present, New York, W.W.
Norton & Company, 1992.
Beit-Hallahmi, Benjamin, Original Sins: Reflections on the History of
Zionism and Israel, New York, Olive Branch Press, 1993.
Bruce, Allen Murphy, The Brandeis/Frankfurter Connection: The Secret
Political Activities of Two Supreme Court Justices, Garden City, NY,
Anchor Press/Doubleday & Co., 1983.
Grose, Peter,  Israel in the Mind of America, New York, Alfred A. Knopf,
1983.
Howe, Irving, World of Our Fathers, New York, Harcourt Brace Jovanovich,
1976.
Mallison, Thomas and Sally V., The Palestine Problem in International
Law and World Order, London, Longman Group Ltd., 1986.
Manuel, Frank E., The Realities of American-Palestine Relations,
Washington, DC, Public Affairs Press, 1949.
*Neff, Donald, Fallen Pillars: U.S. Policy Towards Palestine and Israel
since 1945, Washington, DC, Institute for Palestiine Studies, 1995.
O'Brien, Lee, American Jewish Organizations & Israel, Washington, DC,
Institute for Palestine Studies, 1986.
Sachar, Howard M., A History of Israel: From the Rise of Zionism to Our
Time, Tel Aviv, Steimatzky's Agency Ltd., 1976.
Tivnan, Edward, The Lobby: Jewish Political Power and American Foreign
Policy , New York, Simon and Schuster, 1987.
FOOTNOTES:
Quoted in Howe, World of Our Fathers, p. 204. Also see Grose, Israel in
the Mind of America, p. 45; Manuel, The Realities of American-Palestine
Relations, p. 112.
Yonathan Shapiro, quoted in O'Brien, American Jewish Organizations and
Israel, p. 38.
Murphy, The Brandeis/Frankfurter Connection, pp. 25-26.
Grose, Israel in the Mind of America, p. 48.
Tivnan, The Lobby, p. 16.
Grose, Israel in the Mind of America, p. 72.
Sachar, A History of Israel, p. 40.
Neff, Fallen Pillars, p. 11.
Tivnan, The Lobby, p. 17.
Neff, Fallen Pillars, p. 11.
In the 28 years between Israel's founding in 1948 and 1976, fewer than
60,000 Jewish Americans migrated to Israel. Of these, 80 percent
returned to the United States, the highest rate of any immigrant group;
see Beit-Hallahmi, Original Sins, p. 197.
Tivnan, The Lobby, p. 19.
Grose, Israel in the Mind of America, p. 57; Murphy, The
Brandeis/Frankfurter Connection, p. 56.
Manuel, The Realities of American-Palestine Relations, p. 282.
Ibid., pp. 281-82.
Neff, Fallen Pillars, p. 17.
C-SPAN2.
Thomas W. Lippman, Washington Post, 4/30/96.
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