Difference between revisions of "Irving I. Moskowitz"

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==Funding Illegal Settlements==
 
==Funding Illegal Settlements==
 
Moskowitz has used his Irving I. Moskowitz Foundation to funnel money to right-wing Jewish settlers to colonize the occupied West Bank. In 1996, he had funded the digging of a new exit to an archaeological tunnel in East Jerusalem that sparked a three-day gun battle between Israeli and Palestinian security forces resulting in 76 deaths. Since the mid-1980s he also funded the rightwing Jewish settlers colonizing Arab neighborhoods in occupied East Jerusalem. He personally nailed mezuzahs to the doors of the new Jewish homes. By 1997, he had spent $20 million on the enterprise. Janet Aviad of the Israeli group Peace Now called Moskowitz 'the biggest backer of Jews moving into East Jerusalem.' So provocative were Moskowitz's actions that they were resented even by Netanyahu.  
 
Moskowitz has used his Irving I. Moskowitz Foundation to funnel money to right-wing Jewish settlers to colonize the occupied West Bank. In 1996, he had funded the digging of a new exit to an archaeological tunnel in East Jerusalem that sparked a three-day gun battle between Israeli and Palestinian security forces resulting in 76 deaths. Since the mid-1980s he also funded the rightwing Jewish settlers colonizing Arab neighborhoods in occupied East Jerusalem. He personally nailed mezuzahs to the doors of the new Jewish homes. By 1997, he had spent $20 million on the enterprise. Janet Aviad of the Israeli group Peace Now called Moskowitz 'the biggest backer of Jews moving into East Jerusalem.' So provocative were Moskowitz's actions that they were resented even by Netanyahu.  
 
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==Fighting the Oslo accords==
 
Moskowitz called the Oslo peace accords part of a 'slide toward concessions, surrender and Israeli suicide' which he said he was determined to stop. Palestinian Minister for Higher Education Hanan Ashrawi considered it 'unconscionable that one individual can singlehandedly hijack the peace process.' But Moskowitz defended his original plan for a settlement on Ras al-Amud arguing: 'If the peace process is incapable of digesting the presence of 50 Jewish families 860 yards from the Western Wall and barely a mile from the King David Hotel, then its fragility is indeed beyond repair.' <ref name="im"/>
 
Moskowitz called the Oslo peace accords part of a 'slide toward concessions, surrender and Israeli suicide' which he said he was determined to stop. Palestinian Minister for Higher Education Hanan Ashrawi considered it 'unconscionable that one individual can singlehandedly hijack the peace process.' But Moskowitz defended his original plan for a settlement on Ras al-Amud arguing: 'If the peace process is incapable of digesting the presence of 50 Jewish families 860 yards from the Western Wall and barely a mile from the King David Hotel, then its fragility is indeed beyond repair.' <ref name="im"/>
  

Revision as of 22:21, 29 September 2010

Irving I. Moskowitz (born 1928, New York) is a casino magnate and a right-wing Zionist funder of neoconservative institutions and illegal Jewish settlements in the Occupied Palestinian Territories. In 1997, Time magazine described him as 'arguably the most pivotal player in the Middle East at the moment.' Moskowitz claims his intense Zionism is born of loss, having lost 120 relatives in the Nazi Holocaust.[1]

Funding Illegal Settlements

Moskowitz has used his Irving I. Moskowitz Foundation to funnel money to right-wing Jewish settlers to colonize the occupied West Bank. In 1996, he had funded the digging of a new exit to an archaeological tunnel in East Jerusalem that sparked a three-day gun battle between Israeli and Palestinian security forces resulting in 76 deaths. Since the mid-1980s he also funded the rightwing Jewish settlers colonizing Arab neighborhoods in occupied East Jerusalem. He personally nailed mezuzahs to the doors of the new Jewish homes. By 1997, he had spent $20 million on the enterprise. Janet Aviad of the Israeli group Peace Now called Moskowitz 'the biggest backer of Jews moving into East Jerusalem.' So provocative were Moskowitz's actions that they were resented even by Netanyahu.

Fighting the Oslo accords

Moskowitz called the Oslo peace accords part of a 'slide toward concessions, surrender and Israeli suicide' which he said he was determined to stop. Palestinian Minister for Higher Education Hanan Ashrawi considered it 'unconscionable that one individual can singlehandedly hijack the peace process.' But Moskowitz defended his original plan for a settlement on Ras al-Amud arguing: 'If the peace process is incapable of digesting the presence of 50 Jewish families 860 yards from the Western Wall and barely a mile from the King David Hotel, then its fragility is indeed beyond repair.' [1]

Funding Righwing Politicians

Moskowitz has reportedly funded both Benjamin Netanyahu and his predecessor Ehud Olmert (though Olmert denied this). He was a key contributor to the Third Way which became part of Netanyahu's first ruling coalition. Moskowitz maintains links with its leader Avigdor Kahalani.[1]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Michael S. Serrill, Lisa Beyer, Jamil Hamad, Eric Silver, and Elaine Lafferty, Israel: The Power of Money, Time, 29 September 1997