Jewish and Persian Connections Mission

In response to statements emanating from the Middle East regarding nuclear threat to both the Jewish and Persian peoples, we seek to project an alternative voice on Jewish- Persian relations that disseminates knowledge about the historical and cultural ties between these two peoples, fosters friendship and openings for creative exchange, and contributes to the identity of adults and children of mixed Jewish and Persian ancestry.

Seeking Your Personal Stories and Intellectual Contributions!

Please submit your personal writings on the following topics:
a) Relationships between Persians and Jews
b) Raising a Persian Jewish child
C) Historical and/or current affairs between Persians and Jews/ Iran and Israel
D) Current Debate: Is the current conflict between Iran and Israel inherently tied into the Israeli- Palestinian conflict?

All submissions welcome including poetry, links and other recommendations. Please email any submissions to tiffanyssf@aol.com. Authors are responsible for providing respectful, factually accurate, and fully citated submissions as a pre-requisite for inclusion. Articles should be a minimum of 2 paragraphs in length up to a maximum of 10 pages. Please use proper citation when referencing another writer or speaker. Assume no specific religious knowledge and explain all references to any religions. Translate all non-English words used, including Farsi, Hebrew, Arabic, Ladino or Yiddish. Writers wishing to anonymously post may use their first name only. Please send all submissions to tiffanyssf@aol.com. All information outside of your submission will remain strictly confidential including your email and contact information. Thank you for your contributions!

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

Jewish rabbi leads historic for peace delegation to Iran

U.S. Civilian Diplomacy Delegation Departs for Iran; Woman Rabbi Makes Historic Visit for Peace. Ethan Vesely-Flad, Fellowship of Reconciliation (FOR). 04/30/08
(http://www.payvand.com/news/08/apr/1309.html)




In the wake of comments on April 21st by U.S. presidential candidate Sen. Hillary Clinton, who responded to a question of a theoretical future attack by Iran on Israel by saying, "I want the Iranians to know that if I'm the president, we will attack Iran," a 21-person interfaith peace delegation to Iran will depart New York on Tuesday, April 29, 2008. The two-week delegation is organized by the Fellowship of Reconciliation (FOR), the oldest and largest interfaith peace organization in the United States, and is FOR's seventh fact-finding and friendship delegation to Iran.


Rabbi Lynn Gottlieb

Rabbi Lynn Gottlieb, one of the first ten women rabbis in the history of Judaism, will co-lead the delegation, becoming the first woman rabbi to visit Iran and the first U.S. rabbi known to travel there in a formal peacemaking capacity since the 1979 revolution. "I am deeply concerned that Senator Clinton, a national political figure, discussed the prospect of military action against Iran and even stated, 'we would be able to totally obliterate them'," said Rabbi Gottlieb. "This is a time for finding common ground between our two nations, not threats. When our elected leaders choose belligerent rhetoric over dialogue, it is up to us as everyday Americans to serve as civilian diplomats."

The group will be hosted by Iran's Center for Interfaith Dialogue, an official entity committed to supporting interaction between different religious communities. The interfaith delegation includes people of Jewish, Muslim, Buddhist, Christian, and Indigenous spiritual commitments. The delegates hail from 11 different U.S. states and include best-selling author Sam Keen, author of Faces of the Enemy (also an award-winning public television series), and a diverse group of six young adults who are of Afro-Brazilian, Indigenous (Navajo), Jewish American, Iranian, European, and Korean American heritage.

"More than half of Iran's population is under the age of 30, so I am especially excited to meet with young Iranian artists and educators to discuss our passions and concerns for the world," said Shauen Pearce, an artist and co-director of FOR's Youth & Militarism program. "I think that through such people-to-people relationships we will lay a foundation for resolving the tension between our governments and stand in community with one another."

The delegation will travel to Tehran, Shiraz, Isfahan, Hamadan, and Qom, and meetings are scheduled with educators and students, politicians, artists, and religious leaders from the Muslim as well as minority Christian, Jewish, and Zoroastrian communities. The delegation's reports will be published on FOR's blog, and background information about the Iran program can be found online on FOR's web site.


Members of FOR's April 29 - May 13, 2008 Iran delegation:

Rev. John Backe, Denver, Colorado
Hank Brusselback, Dixon, New Mexico
Alicia Cattoni, Ventura, California
Michelle Cook, Tucson, Arizona
Rev. Patricia de Jong, Berkeley, California
Lily Tinker Fortel, Columbia, Missouri
Rabbi Lynn Gottlieb, Berkeley, California
Suad Jafarzadeh, Germantown, Maryland
Sam Keen, Sonoma, California
Katharine Kunst, Berkeley, California
Susan Mark Landis, Orville, Ohio
Charles London, Brooklyn, New York
Sean McConnell, Richmond, California
Mark McHugh, Minneapolis, Minnesota
Gaia Mika, Dixon, New Mexico
Patty Nuelsen, New Haven Connecticut
Shauen Pearce, St. Paul, Minnesota
Rudy Perkins, Athol Massachusetts
Rev. Allie Perry, New Haven, Connecticut
Ethan Vesely-Flad, New York, NY
Carol Watson, Los Angeles, California
About FOR:
Vision: We envision a world of justice, peace, and freedom. It is a revolutionary vision of a beloved community where differences are respected, conflicts are addressed nonviolently, oppressive structures are dismantled, and where people live in harmony with the earth, nurtured by diverse spiritual traditions that foster compassion, solidarity, and reconciliation.
Mission: FOR seeks to replace violence, war, racism, and economic injustice with nonviolence, peace, and justice. We are an interfaith organization committed to active nonviolence as a transforming way of life and as a means of radical change. We educate, train, build coalitions, and engage in nonviolent and compassionate actions locally, nationally, and globally.