Michel Warschawski
{{Short description|Israeli journalist and anti-Zionist activist}}
File:Michel Warschawski par Claude Truong-Ngoc juillet 2014.jpg
Michel Warschawski (Mikado) ({{langx|he|מיכאל ורשבסקי (מיקאדו)}}; born 25 July 1949) is an Israeli anti-Zionist activist. He led the Marxist Revolutionary Communist League (previously Matzpen-Jerusalem) until its demise in the 1990s, and founded the Alternative Information Center, a joint Palestinian-Israeli non-governmental organization, in 1984.
Biography
Michel Warschawski was born 1949 in Strasbourg, France, where his father was the Rabbi. At the age of 16 Warschawski moved to Jerusalem, in order to study the Talmud. He is a graduate of Mercaz HaRav. He later studied philosophy at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Despite having long since stopped being religious, fellow activists on occasion turned to him to elucidate subtle points of Judaism.{{citation needed|date=March 2009}}
In 1982, Warschawski was one of the co-founders of Yesh Gvul, a term that plays on three meanings: (1) "there is a border": "there is a limit": and "enough's enough".Daphne Golan, "Between Universalism and Particularism: the 'Border' in Israeli Discourse", in V. Y. Mudimbe (ed.), Nations, Identities, Cultures, Duke University Press, 1997 (pp. 75–94), p. 87. In 1984, Warschawski established the Alternative Information Center (AIC), an organization uniting Israeli and Palestinian anti-Zionist activists.
In 1987, Warschawski was arrested for "providing services for illegal (Palestinian) organizations" and sentenced in 1989 to twenty months in prison, with a 10-month suspended sentence, for typesetting a booklet that the judges ruled had come from members of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, which described torture and interrogation techniques allegedly employed by Israel's security apparatus, with advice on how to withstand them. The court determined that Warschawski was unaware of the booklet's origins, but guilty of closing his eyes to the evidence.Daphne Golan, 1997, p. 89.
Warschawski is a writer and journalist, whose articles appear regularly in International Viewpoint, Le Monde diplomatique, ZNet, Monthly Review, Siné Hebdo and other publications. He has also been interviewed for the Real News Network. In the 2006 elections to the Knesset, he was a candidate on the list of an Arab Israeli party ballot (the National Democratic Assembly). He was a candidate for the Joint List in the 2015 election.
Warschawski is married to human rights attorney Lea Tsemel, and is the father of two sons and a daughter.[http://www.lalsace.fr/actualite/2011/04/25/nous-avions-de-bonnes-raisons-de-revoir-michel-warschawski-en-janvier-dernier-a-paris "Michel Warschawski, un pacifiste venu d’Alsace en Terre Sainte", L'Alsace, 25 April 2011] {{in lang|fr}}, [https://www.haaretz.com/.premium-looking-back-on-50-years-of-anti-zionist-activity-1.5348866 “From French Yeshivas to Israeli Prison: Michel Warschawski Recalls 50 Years of Peace Activism”, Haaretz 11 October 2013]. His 1987 trial for supporting a terrorist organization is included in the documentary film Advocate (2019), about the legal career of his wife, Lea.{{Cite web|url=https://www.slugmag.com/film-reviews/sundance-advocate/|title=Sundance Film Review: Advocate|last=Zhou|first=Kathy Rong|date=2019-01-28|website=SLUG Magazine|language=en-US|access-date=2019-09-25}}
External links
- [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I_rBW9HPMac 1995 Michel Warschawski interview on YouTube]
References
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Bibliography
- Toward an Open Tomb: The Crisis of Israeli Society (New York, 2004) {{ISBN|978-1-58367-109-2}}
- On the Border (London, 2005) {{ISBN|978-0-7453-2325-1}}
- The 33 Day War: Israel's War on Hezbollah in Lebanon and Its Consequences (with Gilbert Achcar) (London, 2007) {{ISBN|978-0-86356-646-2}}
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Category:Jewish Israeli anti-Zionists
Category:Jewish Israeli activists for Palestinian solidarity
Category:Israeli activists for Palestinian solidarity
Category:French emigrants to Israel
Category:20th-century French Jews
Category:Israeli non-fiction writers
Category:Writers from Strasbourg