Time to move U.S. embassy to Jerusalem | Wisconsin Jewish Chronicle

Time to move U.S. embassy to Jerusalem

I recently participated in a moving experience — a rally held on the site of the proposed United States Embassy in the Talpiot section in the southern part of Jerusalem.

The rally was held in conjunction with the Orthodox Union’s Biennial National Convention. It had two objectives:

• To call for the U.S. government at long last to move its embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, in compliance with the expressed will of Congress.

• To affirm that Jerusalem is the eternal, undivided capital of Israel and must never be divided in any peace negotiations.

The two messages go hand-in-hand in determining the future of Jerusalem and are key elements in the O.U.’s policy regarding Israel.

After holding our 2004 and 2006 biennial conventions in Jerusalem, we believed that as a North American-based organization, this was the year to return to having our gathering in the United States.

However, it became apparent several months ago that Jerusalem’s undivided status was at risk in Israel’s negotiations with the Palestinians. We decided we must act with determination to make our positions known.

We changed plans and geared for a combination convention/mission to Jerusalem. Our message was clear: Jerusalem must remain the undivided, eternal capital of the Jewish people forever, with the U.S. embassy located there, where it belongs. The theme of the convention was “Jerusalem: Keep it One, Keep it Ours.”

 
Bar mitzvah gift

It has been 13 years since passage — by overwhelming majorities in both houses of Congress — of the Jerusalem Embassy Act stating that “Jerusalem should be recognized as the capital of the State of Israel and the United States Embassy in Israel should be established in Jerusalem no later than May 31, 1999.”

What a wonderful bar mitzvah present it would be for Jews worldwide if the White House finally honors the will of Congress.

At this crucial time for Jews throughout the world, the Orthodox Union proclaims that Jerusalem must be off the table. Any peace negotiations must be predicated upon the fact that Jerusalem will remain Israel’s undivided capital. We pray for it, yearn for it, fast because of its destruction, and remember it at our most joyous times.

The next few months, with a new president of the United States and elections in Israel, inevitably will produce changes in the quest for peace. President-elect Barack Obama will make his own policy, and no one knows just yet how it will differ from President George W. Bush’s approach.

No one wants peace more than Israel. But peace cannot be based on dividing what is most precious to us — Jerusalem.

And peace cannot be based on the untenable proposition that diplomatic activity with Israel should be conducted in a place other than its capital.

As Jews, we should never be hesitant to proclaim to the world that Israel has the right as a sovereign nation to select its own capital, as every other country does.

The actions of the United States will be critical. The recognition of Israel’s independence in 1948 by President Truman led to recognition by other countries around the world.

If the United States government honors the will of the American people as demonstrated by Congress, that act also would set the example for other nations to follow.

Obama soared to election in great part because of the theme of change. So we respectfully suggest that he implement change in the Middle East by moving the embassy.

On April 1, 2009, he has a decision to make: Whether to continue the suspension of the Jerusalem Embassy Act or whether to implement it.

With Israel surrounded by terrorists to the north and in Gaza; with Iran getting closer to developing nuclear weapons every day; with acts of terror horrifying the world as evidenced by the carnage in Mumbai, we encourage Obama to do what’s right and give Israel the vote of confidence it needs in this critical period of its existence.

Then Israel will face future negotiations fortified by the affirmation of the United States that Jerusalem is Israel’s capital not only in its own mind, but in the mind of the world’s greatest power as well.

As convention participants rode their buses to the rally site, they took a zig-zag route along the “seam” of what a divided Jerusalem would look like.

If neighborhoods that are now safely in Israel’s hands would be turned over to the Palestinians, the heart of the country would be turned into the target of Hamas rockets, just as Sderot and Ashkelon are now.

It was deeply unsettling to stand on the heights of some of these neighborhoods, to look down on the city below, and to realize what carnage would be inflicted on Israel if these areas were ceded to the Palestinians.

We of the Orthodox Union were more convinced than ever that we must lead the Jewish community in convincing our new president that an undivided Jerusalem, with the U.S. Embassy standing in the city, is not only a gift to Israel — it is vital for Israel’s security. Equally important, it is Israel’s sovereign right.

Stephen J. Savitsky is president of the Orthodox Union.