The internationally respected South African jurist who wrote a UN report on Israel-Palestinian clashes won’t be attending an important Jewish rite of passage for his grandson, but did not confirm reports he was put off by possible protests by Jews angered by conclusions he drew about Israel.
All Richard Goldstone would say on Saturday was that after discussions with a South African Jewish group that has sharply criticized his findings that Israel committed war crimes in Gaza last year, he decided not to attend the bar mitzvah.
“In the interests of my grandson, I will not be attending the bar mitzvah ceremony,” the retired member of South Africa’s highest court said in an e-mail on Saturday. “At this time, I am not prepared to say more than that after consultation with the rabbi and leaders of the congregation at the Sandton Synagogue, to which the South African Zionist Federation was a party.”
The Zionist Federation has called Goldstone’s UN report “flawed and biased.” The group’s chairman, Avrom Krengel, said he could not comment on the bar mitzvah until after the affair under an agreement with the Goldstone family. Neither he nor Goldstone would say when the bar mitzvah, a milestone heavy with religious, cultural and family meaning at which 13-year-olds traditionally come of age, was scheduled.
“It is a day of celebration and we don’t want to detract from it,” Krengel said.
Harelle Isaacs, office manager at the synagogue, said: “As far as we’re concerned, Judge Goldstone is welcome on our premises. No one has asked him not to come. We actually don’t know where that’s coming from.”
Talk of protests has roiled on blogs.
In a statement on Friday, South Africa’s Jewish Board of Deputies said it was concerned the bar mitzvah “would turn into a divisive issue within the Jewish community.”
In what could be taken as a veiled rebuke at any planned protest, the board called for tolerance, and said the exercise of the right to free speech must take “into account, with due sensitivity and understanding, the feelings of others.”
Goldstone is a respected figure in South Africa. In addition to serving on the country’s Constitutional Court, Goldstone once chaired a South African commission of inquiry into apartheid-era political violence, and was a prosecutor for the UN War Crimes Tribunal for Yugoslavia and Rwanda. He currently holds a visiting post at Georgetown University in Washington.
He has faced heavy criticism at home and abroad, however, for his Gaza report. Some of the criticism from fellow Jews has been especially pointed, but other Jews have supported him.
The US said the report did not fully deal with the role of the Palestinian militant group Hamas in the conflict. It also objected to a recommendation that Israeli actions be referred to the International Criminal Court, saying such moves could damage efforts to restart peace talks.
Goldstone has expressed disappointment at the criticism and rejected any suggestion politics played a role in the findings in his 575-page report.
“We believe deeply in the rule of law, humanitarian law, human rights and the principle that in armed conflict civilians should to the greatest extent possible be protected from harm,” Goldstone told the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva last year.
The council commissioned the report.
BLOODSHED: North Koreans take extreme measures to avoid being taken prisoner and sometimes execute their own forces, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy on Saturday said that Russian and North Korean forces sustained heavy losses in fighting in Russia’s southern Kursk region. Ukrainian and Western assessments say that about 11,000 North Korean troops are deployed in the Kursk region, where Ukrainian forces occupy swathes of territory after staging a mass cross-border incursion in August last year. In his nightly video address, Zelenskiy quoted a report from Ukrainian Commander-in-Chief Oleksandr Syrskyi as saying that the battles had taken place near the village of Makhnovka, not far from the Ukrainian border. “In battles yesterday and today near just one village, Makhnovka,
US Secretary of the Treasury Janet Yellen on Monday met virtually with Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng (何立峰) and raised concerns about “malicious cyber activity” carried out by Chinese state-sponsored actors, the US Department of the Treasury said in a statement. The department last month reported that an unspecified number of its computers had been compromised by Chinese hackers in what it called a “major incident” following a breach at contractor BeyondTrust, which provides cybersecurity services. US Congressional aides said no date had been set yet for a requested briefing on the breach, the latest in a serious of cyberattacks
In the East Room of the White House on a particularly frigid Saturday afternoon, US President Joe Biden bestowed the Presidential Medal of Freedom to 19 of the most famous names in politics, sports, entertainment, civil rights, LGBTQ+ advocacy and science. Former US secretary of state Hillary Rodham Clinton aroused a standing ovation from the crowd as she received her medal. Clinton was accompanied to the event by her husband, former US president Bill Clinton, daughter, Chelsea Clinton, and grandchildren. Democratic philanthropist George Soros and actor-director Denzel Washington were also awarded the nation’s highest civilian honor in a White House
Some things might go without saying, but just in case... Belgium’s food agency issued a public health warning as the festive season wrapped up on Tuesday: Do not eat your Christmas tree. The unusual message came after the city of Ghent, an environmentalist stronghold in the country’s East Flanders region, raised eyebrows by posting tips for recycling the conifers on the dinner table. Pointing with enthusiasm to examples from Scandinavia, the town Web site suggested needles could be stripped, blanched and dried — for use in making flavored butter, for instance. Asked what they thought of the idea, the reply