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Netanyahu Pledges Jewish Dialogue after Reform Remarks

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Sunday sought to calm angry U.S. Jews after his religious affairs minister questioned the Jewishness of the Reform movement, to which many of them belong.

"Israel is a home for all Jews," he said at the start of the weekly cabinet meeting.

"The government of Israel serves all Israeli citizens -– secular and religious –- regardless of which stream they come from," he said, pledging to convene roundtable discussions between the different streams of Judaism and Israeli officials.

There were public statements of outrage from rabbis and Jewish community leader in the United States after minister David Azoulay, of the ultra-Orthodox Shas party, said in a radio interview on Tuesday that he "couldn't say" Reform Jews were Jews.

"These are Jews that have lost their way," he added.

The head of the Union for Reform Judaism in the U.S., Rabbi Rick Jacobs, slammed his "ignorant and myopic views." 

Abraham Foxman, national director of major U.S. Jewish rights group the Anti-Defamation League, said Azoulay's comments which come at a time of "growing tensions with the non-Orthodox Jewish diaspora... contribute to an atmosphere of exclusion and growing mistrust.”

The Reform movement is the largest Jewish denomination in the U.S., with a Pew Research Center survey from 2013 showing that 35 percent of U.S. Jews identify with the movement while only 10 percent declare themselves to be Orthodox.

In Israel, less than four percent of the respondents to a poll conducted the same year by the Israel Democracy Institute identified as Reform.

Netanyahu's bid to calm the row was seen as also key to improving ties with U.S. Jewry, crucial in maintaining the support which the Jewish state needs from its American ally.

"There is currently a serious crisis between U.S. Jewry and Israel," said Etan Gilboa, an expert on Israel-U.S. relations at Bar Ilan university, near Tel Aviv.

"Israel is going with the Republicans, while most (U.S.) Jews still identify with the Democrats," he told AFP.

"What (Netanyahu) is trying to do is reduce the flames, but it will take much more serious work, we're losing U.S. Jewry," he warned.

"And without U.S. Jewry there is no pro-Israel lobby and no pro-Israel policy."

Gilboa said the rift with U.S. Jewry could also affect U.S. public opinion and Congress on the impending nuclear deal between Iran and world powers.

Israel fears the deal, yet to be finalized, would not prevent the Islamic republic from manufacturing nuclear arms, and Netanyahu has been vigorously lobbying U.S. public opinion against it.

Source: Agence France Presse


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