Singles Connection


Singles Connection
STORIES IN THIS ISSUE
FEATURES
     Aging gracefully
     Daniel Pearl's articles
     Community concern leads osteopath to politics
COMMUNITY
     Teens drawn to Israel
     Or Adam moves in
NATION
     Americans die, but D.C. is on vacation
     Poll
WORLD
     School shocked by alumnus' act
ISRAEL
     'No other place I would rather be'
     Sharon faces pressure
OPINION
     Editorial - Wage war, plan for peace
     In the Mail - Letters to the Editor
     Commentary - You can take it with you
     Voices - Partners in democracy
ARTS
     'The Wiz'
     Israel Philharmonic
BUSINESS
     Borrowing from your 401(k)
     Mind Your Own Business - Business Calendar
     People on the move
COMING UP
     This Week
MILESTONES
     Births
     B'nai Mitzvah
     Obituaries
SENIORS
     Events
SINGLES
     Datebook
EDUCATION
     Pardes teacher recognized
TORAH STUDY
     The boundary of compassion in war

Singles Connection
Logo

August 9, 2002/Elul 1 5762, Vol. 54, No. 47

Poll: U.S. Jews still favor Palestinian state

JOE BERKOFSKY
Jewish Telegraphic Agency
NEW YORK - Two years into the intifada, most American Jews still support the creation of a Palestinian state, but feel closer to Israel than ever, according to a new poll.

Israeli Jews, on the other hand, increasingly are turning away from the idea of a Palestinian state, hardening their attitudes toward the Palestinians and worrying about their own safety, according to a new Israeli study by the Jaffee Center for Strategic Studies at Tel Aviv University.

The U.S. survey, conducted by pollster Stanley Greenberg for the American Jewish Committee, also shows that an overwhelming majority of American Jews feel that peace talks can't resume until the Palestinians end terrorism and the Palestinian Authority institutes real reforms.

The poll of 392 Jews across the denominational spectrum was taken July 11-21. It is part of a major public opinion research project the AJCommittee is undertaking to gauge and build Amer- ican support for Israel, AJCommittee spokesman Kenneth Bandler said.

According to the survey, 86 percent of American Jews expressed strong ties to Israel, with 48 percent feeling "very close" and 38 percent "fairly close."

In annual public opinion polls that the committee conducts separately, American Jews have not voiced as strong a kinship to the Jewish state.

For example, the AJCom-mittee's 2001 Survey of American Jewish Opinion, which questioned 1,000 American Jews, found that 29 percent of American Jews felt "very close" to Israel and 43 percent "fairly close."

A similar survey in 2000 showed that 28 percent of American Jews felt "very close" to Israel, while 46 percent felt "fairly close."

The new poll also found that a huge majority of American Jews - 85 percent - support Israel in its conflict with the Palestinians. Of those, 64 percent strongly back Israel.

"Jewish support for Israel is rock-solid," Greenberg said of the latest survey. "This is a unified community, and the seriousness of the current conflict has only intensified their commitment."

Jennifer Laszlo Mizrahi, who is managing the AJCommittee polling project, called it noteworthy that so many U.S. Jews back Israel.

Typically, "you put two Jews in a room, you get three opinions," she said. "That kind of support of Israel is extremely significant."

While U.S. Jews feel closer than ever to Israel, their support for the eventual creation of a Palestinian state has not waned, despite two years of violence that have killed more than 600 Israelis.

Some 63 percent of U.S. Jews said they favor the establishment of a Palestinian state; 38 percent of them said they "somewhat favor" a Palestinian state while 25 percent "strongly favor" one.

Meanwhile, 33 percent of U.S. Jews oppose a Palestinian state, with 25 percent of them strongly opposed.

The AJCommittee's Bandler said the two positions - feeling closer to Israel, while supporting a Palestinian state - are hardly at odds.

"One of the few people in the world who doesn't realize that the end game is a two-state solution is" Palestinian Authority President Yasser Arafat, Bandler said. "The majority of American Jews recognize it, and even (Israeli Prime Minister) Ariel Sharon has mentioned it."

Most American Jews echo President Bush's stance on Mideast peace, Bandler said. This latest survey took place in the weeks after Bush's June 24 Mideast speech, in which he called both for Arafat's ouster and a two-state solution.

Previous surveys taken before the intifada have shown that many American Jews, if not a majority, feel Israel and the Palestinians should live side-by-side.

An AJCommittee survey from May 1999 showed 42 percent of American Jews supporting Palestinian statehood.

American Jewish attitudes toward Israel and the Palestinians stem partly from Jewish communal solidarity, but also must be seen in the context of the Sept. 11 terror attacks, said Gary Tobin, president of the San Francisco-based Institute for Jewish and Community Research.

Since Sept. 11, the White House has helped steer public opinion by taking a tough stance against terrorism, remaining loyal to Israel and emphasizing that the two nations are fighting the same war on terror, Tobin said.

When the survey asked Jews their feelings about various public figures, 51 percent said they felt "warm" toward Bush and only 34 percent were "cool" about him.

This poll shows that American Jews "are rallying as Jews," Tobin said, "but they're also rallying just as much as Americans."


Home