Roundup Palestinian Flag In D.C. WASHINGTON (JTA) -- The Obama adminis- Palestinian flag tration will allow the PLO office in Washington to fly the Palestinian flag and assume the title of "delegation." The change in status comes with no enhancement in diplomatic status, U.S. officials said. The new privileges for the Palestine Liberation Organization office do not mean the representation has "any dip- lomatic privileges or immunities:' State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley said last Friday. "At the request of the PLO representa- tive, which we have granted given the improvement in the relations between the United States and Palestinians, they have requested permission to fly the Palestinian flag:' he said. "And they have requested permission to call themselves the General Delegation of the PLO, which is a name that conforms to how they describe their missions in Europe, Canada and several Latin American countries." Crowley said the steps have sym- bolic value and reflect improved rela- tions between the United States and Palestinians, but they have no mean- ing under the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations. A White House spokesman sug- gested the changes would help spur the Palestinians toward direct peace talks with Israel, a key demand of the Israeli and U.S. governments. "This decision reflects our confidence that through direct negotiations, we can help achieve a two-state solution with an independent and viable Palestine living side by side with Israel:' Tommy Vietor said. "We should begin preparing for that outcome now, as we continue to work with the Palestinian people on behalf of a bet- ter future PLO representation in Washington was made illegal under a number of laws in the mid-1980s, when the group was widely regarded as terrorist. Since 1993, at the launch of the Oslo peace process, U.S. presidents have exer- cised their prerogative to waive the ban every six months. Obama and his prede- cessor, George W. Bush, have cultivated the PLO and its leadership of the Palestinian Authority as a means of stemming the influence of Hamas, a radical Islamist ter- rorist group. A number of lawmakers have sought to reinstate the ban, saying the Palestinian Authority has not moderated enough, cit- ing among other factors the Palestinian refusal to enter direct negotiations. Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, R-Fla., the ranking member on the U.S. House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee, tied her efforts to eject the PLO from Washington to congressional efforts to move the U.S. embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, another law that presidents have routinely waived since its passage in 1995. "Instead of giving more undeserved gifts to the PLO, it's time for us to kick the PLO out of the U.S. once and for all and move our embassy in Israel to Jerusalem, where it belongs:' she said in a statement. Chelsea Under A Chuppah NEW YORK (JTA) -- Chelsea Clinton was married under a chuppah in a ceremony co-officiated by a rabbi. Rabbi James Ponet, head of the Joseph Slifka Center for Jewish Life at Yale, was joined by Rev. William Shillady, a Methodist minister. Clinton and the groom, Marc Mezvinslcy, reportedly were married under a chuppah, in a ceremony that featured friends and family recit- ing the seven traditional blessings and a ketubah, the traditional Jewish wedding contract. The event took place Saturday night before the end of the Jewish sabbath. Mezvinsky, who is Jewish, wore a yarmulke and prayer shawl. Ponet, a Reform rabbi, has been the Jewish chaplain at Yale since 1981. He cur- rently teaches a college seminar with Dr. Ruth Westheimer on "The Family in the Jewish Tradition:' according to the bio on the Slifka Center website. He and his wife, Elana, also "lead a weekly discussion in Slifka Dining Room on the value of peace in Jewish life and thought?' A New Name? NEW YORK (JTA) -- The leader of Conservative Judaism's flagship institution said the movement is debat- ing a name change. Arnold Eisen, chan- Arnold Eisen cellor of the Jewish Theological Seminary, made the comment in a July 22 meet- ing with reporters and editors at the Forward, the newspaper reported. "I'm open to it. I'm open to it," Eisen reportedly said when asked about the possibility of a name change. The newspaper quoted Eisen as say- ing that the "leading candidate right now" is the name Masorti, the Hebrew word for "traditional;' which is the name Conservative Judaism goes by in Israel and other countries outside of North America. Orthodox Rabbis Support Gays NEW YORK (JTA) -- Dozens of Orthodox rabbis have signed a statement of prin- ciples calling for the acceptance of gays in the Orthodox community. The statement, signed by rabbis in the United States and Israel, was released July 29, the same day as a Gay Pride parade in Jerusalem. "All human beings are created in the image of God and deserve to be treated with dignity and respect (kevod haberi- yot)," the statement says. "Every Jew is obligated to fulfill the entire range of mitzvot between person and person in relation to persons who are homosexual or have feelings of same sex attraction. Embarrassing, harassing or demeaning someone with a homosexual orientation or same-sex attraction is a violation of Torah prohibitions that embody the deep- est values of Judaism?' The statement continues: "Halachah [Jewish law] sees heterosexual marriage as the ideal model and sole legitimate outlet for human sexual expression. The sensitiv- ity and understanding we properly express for human beings with other sexual ori- entations does not diminish our commit- ment to that principle?' Signed mostly by Modern Orthodox rabbis, as well as educators and mental health professionals, the statement was drafted following a panel held six months ago in New York that included three gay graduates of Yeshiva University. The school's spiritual supervisor, Rabbi Yosef Blau, hosted the panel. Israel In U.N. Flotilla Probe JERUSALEM (JTA) -- Israel has agreed to participate in a United Nations investiga- tion of the Gaza-bound Turkish flotilla incident. "Israel has nothing to hide Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Monday after informing U.N. Secretary Ban Ki-moon that Israel would participate in the panel that he is establishing. "The opposite is true. It is in the national inter- est of the State of Israel to ensure that the factual truth of the overall flotilla events comes to light throughout the world, and this is exactly the principle that we are advancing?' Netanyahu and his inner Cabinet of seven ministers made the decision to par- ticipate in the international probe. Geoffrey Palmer, the former prime min- ister of New Zealand, and Alvaro Uribe, the outgoing president of Colombia, will serve as chair and vice chair of the panel. Its two additional members will be from Turkey and Israel. It marks the first time that Israel will serve on a U.N. committee that is investi- gating its activities, according to Haaretz. Israel's Navy intercepted the Gaza- bound flotilla, which originated in Turkey, on May 31, when violence on the deck of one of the ships, the Marmara, led to the deaths of nine Turkish nationals, including one dual Turkish-American citizen. An independent Israeli public commis- sion chaired by retired Supreme Court Justice Jacob Turkel also is investigating the incident. Israel Breaks Power Mark JERUSALEM (JTA) -- Electricity use in Israel to combat a heat wave blanketing the country hit an all-time high, according to the government-run electric company. The country broke the mark on Sunday, according to the Israel Electric Corp., when temperatures reached nearly 110 degrees Fahrenheit in some places. Humidity of 70 percent during the day and 90 percent at night is making it feel much worse. Company officials have called on Israelis to reduce use of major appliances during peak hours, between noon and 5 p.m. Electric reserves reportedly are very low. Damages from the death of more than 1 million chickens in the heat wave, which began two months ago, is being estimated at $1.3 million. Expected to continue for several more days, the excessively hot weather is being attributed to extremely hot winds from Saudi Arabia, Iraq and Syria, Haaretz reported. Anti-Semitism 'Troubling' NEW YORK (JTA) -- The number of anti-Semitic incidents in the United States remained at a "sustained and troubling" level, according to the Anti- Defamation League's annual audit. The 2009 audit of anti-Semitic inci- dents, released Tuesday, recorded 1,211 incidents of vandalism, harassment and physical assaults against Jewish individu- als, property and community institutions across the U.S. last year. The number fell from the 1,352 inci- dents reported in 2008, but some of the decline was likely because of revised methodology for reporting and tracking incidents that was unveiled in the '09 audit, the ADL said. In the latest audit, the incidents include 29 physical assaults on Jewish individuals, 760 incidents of anti-Semitic harassment and threats, and 422 cases of anti-Semitic vandalism, according to the report. Some incidents that occurred in 2009 were not tallied under the new method- ology, which takes a more conservative approach to counting certain types of inci- dents, including graffiti and swastikas. Roundup on page 12 10 August 5• 2010