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International News Title: Falling Far From The Family Tree Kfar Tapuach, West Bank If only Marxist revolutionary Leon Trotsky could see what has become of his great-grandson, David Axelrod. The 49-year-old Russian émigré to Israel has adorned his modest living room with a singular-framed photograph: a birds-eye view of Jerusalem with the Dome of the Rock Islams third-holiest shrine digitally replaced with an image of an imagined Third Jewish Temple. He named his 10-year-old son, Baruch Meir, after two of Israels most notorious Jewish figures: Baruch Goldstein, who gunned down 29 Muslims at prayers in Hebron in 1994, and Rabbi Meir Kahane, whose ultra-nationalist political party was outlawed by Israel some years prior. And he has served three terms in jail, he said, on counts of attacking Arabs and setting fire to a mosque, charges that he denies. Lets put it this way: Every time I was arrested, I didnt do it. Whenever I violated a law, nothing happened and nobody arrested me. I did things, but they never got close to me, Axelrod said with a grin, sitting on the porch swing outside his house in this small hilltop settlement of about 150 families, adjusting his large skullcap and chewing on the ends of his beard. In a case of mistaken identity 20 years ago, Israeli police mistook Axelrod for yet another David Axelrod, from the same settlement, who was a suspect in the killing of two Palestinians the morning after Kahane was assassinated in Manhattan. But it would be hard to confuse the Moscow-born Axelrod with his great-grandfather Leon Trotsky, the bespectacled, frazzle-haired intellectual and a leader of the Russian Revolution, who rejected nationalism and renounced his Jewish identity. Zionism is incapable of resolving the Jewish question, Trotsky told Jewish reporters when he arrived in Mexico, where he fled the Soviet state but was later axed to death by order of his arch-nemesis, Stalin. Sometimes in history ideologues beget ideologues, and sometimes history takes an ironic twist. Trotsky is just one of a number of political activists in the early 20th century who led bold movements to create new societies, but whose descendants today advocate ideologies that would make their predecessors turn over in their graves. The latest scion to rock the boat is 36-year-old Avinadav Begin, the grandson of Menachem Begin, who was born in the Russian Empire, a younger contemporary of Trotsky, but led an entirely different movement. He is also the son of Likud Knesset member Benny Begin, a faithful devotee of Menachems dream of a Greater Israel that would include the West Bank. Menachem Begin headed the militant Irgun faction in the run-up to Israels War of Independence, and served as Israels sixth prime minister. Judaism is violence, Zionism is violence
. A flag is violence, an anthem is violence, Avinadav Begin writes in his first book, The End of Conflict, a meditation-cum-treatise in Hebrew and Arabic which argues that clinging to nationalistic identity is at the root of worldwide violence. Israel is used to family rebels. While American politicians progeny often stay out of the limelight, their Israeli equivalents tend to be more vocal and ideologically rebellious. Former right-of-center prime minister Ehud Olmerts daughter, Dana, has participated in demonstrations for Palestinian and gay and lesbian rights. Avraham Burg, son of Yosef Burg, longtime government minister from a hawkish religious party, made waves with his 2008 book, The Holocaust Is Over, in which argued that Israeli society has become violent and isolationist. One-time Irgun fighter and former defense minister Moshe Arens has a son who is a professor at the University of Southern California, Yigal Arens, an outspoken critic of Zionism and Israeli policies toward Palestinians. I dont think anyone compares me to my father or grandfather, Begin said with a laugh, in a telephone interview from his home near Bet Shemesh. My father and [late] grandfather have a strong belief about their identity. I dont think there is such a thing as Israelis, Palestinians, Muslims. I dont think there is such a thing. Only in the mind of people. Its not reality. Benny Begin declined to comment on his sons book. Avinadav Begin grew up in Jerusalem on the same street as his grandfather, Menachem, and walked to his house for Friday night meals. He served in the army and studied fine arts at the prestigious Bezalel Academy. I was a typical Israeli from the center of the political spectrum, Begin said. But then a few months spent working as a dog walker in New York gave him some distance from Israel, and he began to re-examine his beliefs. In the past four-and-a-half years, hes frequently attended demonstrations against the separation barrier, near the Palestinian village of Bilin. His essays about visits to Bilin and meditations on power and violence form the basis of his book. Everyone knows Menachem Begin made an agreement with Egypt, his grandson said. I am talking about the word peace. The essence of the word peace. Peace done between governments is something temporary. Begin says he doesnt remember the reactions of his family members when they began discussing his newly formed opinions after his return from New York. But he says that family get-togethers are lively, with many different political views expressed. Even among his four sisters, there are a few different opinions, though none of them think like I think, he said. (Begins brother, an F-16 pilot, was killed in training in 2000.) Avinadav Begin takes pains to distance himself from his famous father and grandfather; his author biography includes no mention of them. But, like a deft politician, he is careful to smooth over their ideological differences. Part of the book we agree upon, and part of it we dont agree upon, Begin said diplomatically about his fathers opinions of his book. On the other side of the political spectrum and the Green Line Axelrod makes no effort to pay tribute to his great-grandfather. Trotsky he wasnt really smart, Axelrod said with a shrug. He called his relation to Trotsky a gimmick and said that Trotsky cared only about his career and didnt really practice what he preached. For Axelrod, who has dedicated his life to the settlement enterprise, living what you believe matters. Axelrod was born in Moscow in 1961 to Yulia Akselrod, a mother whose family paid a heavy price for Trotskys revolutionary activities. Stalin not only had Trotsky assassinated in 1940; he methodically sought out Trotskys children and pursued his other first-degree relatives, fearful that anyone left alive might potentially challenge his rule. Yulias father, Sergei Lvovich Sedov Trotskys second son was killed, and her mother served a 10-year term in a labor camp in Kolyma, east of Siberia, followed by 10 years of forced exile. Her maternal grandparents in exile in Siberia raised Yuli Growing up, Yulia hid the Trotsky connection from her son until shortly before they immigrated to New York, in 1979. He found out he was Jewish only when boys at school found out and beat him up because of it. En route to the United States, Axelrod participated in a youth trip to Israel and came back enamored. When the family arrived in the Crown Heights section of Brooklyn, Axelrod began to hang out with Chabad Lubavitch Jews, and two years later he found himself in the ultra-nationalist town Kiryat Arba near Hebron, working alongside his role model, Russian émigré and settlement movement activist Ben Zion Tavger. After a stint in an Israeli settlement in Sinai, he eventually moved to Kfar Tapuach, where he resides today with his wife and their six children. Me and my son live in completely different worlds. I try not to think about how he lives, Yulia Akselrod said from her small apartment in downtown Jerusalem, which is filled with cat figurines and dusty-framed portraits of Trotsky, Martin Luther King, Jr. and Eleanor Roosevelt. A self-described explosive personality, she left the United States for Israel after 25 years to live near her only son, but refused the official citizenship granted to Jews because she rejects a religious affiliation. Trotsky didnt want to be a Jew. He has his right not to be a Jew. I have the right to do what I want. My son, he has the right to do what he does. Whether it is wise or not, it is a different matter, but there is nothing I can do about it, Akselrod said. Though David Axelrod dissociates himself from his great-grandfather, he is proud to come from a long line of imprisoned relatives. My children were in jail already, he boasted; two of his sons were arrested for protesting the dismantling of Jewish settlements in Gaza in 2005. He sets examples for his children in other ways, too: when his son thought he wasnt capable of university studies, the older Axelrod began studying engineering at the nearby Ariel University Center of Samaria in addition to his day job as a welder. His mother admires her sons devotion to his children, a trait she is told Trotsky lacked. And though David Axelrod denies it, he and his great-grandfather share other similarities. Like Trotksy, he is a nonconformist who rejects the ruling authorityhe hasnt voted for the Knesset since Kahane died and broods about what would make a perfect society. Democracy is screwed up, Axelrod concluded after participating in a discursive discussion on the topic. Torah is the king. Axelrods thoughts, like Trotskys, are directed toward economic wrongs, and he has distributed his writings in pamphlets and on the Internet. His mini-manifesto Wars of the Torah rails against rabbis who make a financial profit from teaching Torah. Similarly, Avinadav Begin, despite his efforts at isolating his book from his familial ties, has been praised for his similarity to his grandfather and father. Military general Moshe Dayans widow, Ruth, herself politically opposite from her hawkish late husband, told the Israeli daily Haaretz earlier this year that she is entranced by Avinadav Begins book. He is very Begin-y, exactly like his father and grandfather. He believes in something, Dayan said. 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#1. To: whyofcourse (#0)
What's left to be said? Deport the traitors...after they serve life in max security.
Good question.
The David Axelrod in the article is not the same one that works for Obama. This is about the Russian emigre to Israel who is named David Axelrod. And in his Israeli settlement of 150, there are two men named David Axelrod. Apparently, it is a fairly popular name among Jews.
COMMUNIST INSIDER CONFESSES: THE COMMUNIST PARTY HAS INFILTRATED THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY!
Some of Lincoln's Marxist Union Army did leave the Red Republican party, and become Democrats.
Obama's watch stopped on 24 May 2008, but he's been too busy smoking crack to notice.
I thought the topic was Trotsky's distant descendants. The David Axelrod in your photo is not the David Axelrod that works for Obama.
Instead of inserting a bogus photo, why didn't you include the proper URL and source publication? The Jewish Daily Forward: Falling Far From The Family Tree
The url is in #2 The Lonely Conservative Observations from a conservative in a blue state. With a little help from my friends! About Contact Todays Headlines Comment Rules Home David Axelrods Communist Past Comes to Light March 4, 2012 By Lonely Conservative 9 comments Stacy McCain has a preview of a Paul Kengor article in this months print edition of the American Spectator documenting the communist ties of President Obamas top political operative, David Axelrod. Two key figures in Axelrods past are known communists David Canter and Don Rose who acted as mentors to Axelrod during the early years of his career. Rose and Canter played a critical role as mentors to young David Alexrod, Kengor explains, citing numerous sources including David Canters son Marc Canter for the fact that it was a letter of recommendation from Don Rose that helped Axelrod land a job as a reporter for the Chicago Tribune. By 1987, all three of these men Don Rose, David Canter and David Axelrod, who had left journalism to become a paid political adviser were part of the campaign to re-elect Harold Washington as Chicagos mayor. Kengors American Spectator article is important because Axelrods background like Obamas associations with such left-wing figures as Frank Marshall Davis and Bill Ayers shows how ideas, policies and rhetoric originating in Marxist-Leninist doctrine and anti-American propaganda have been mainstreamed into Democratic Party politics. Critics of Kengors investigative report will likely raise the charge of McCarthyism, expect5ing us to miss the irony of that accusation because, of course, revelations from the Venona papers and other sources have largely vindicated Sen. Joseph McCarthy: There wereSoviet agents in the U.S. government, and the American Communist Party was at all times an instrument of Soviet subversion. What strikes me, in Kengors extensive account of Axelrods background (the article is more than 5,000 words long), is the remarkable degree to which Americans seem to have lost their horror of Communism in the post-Cold War era. Be sure to read the whole thing. I doubt the perception of communism is going to change as long as the left controls the schools. Not only do they fail to teach the horrific history of communism, Marxisms tenets are routinely finding their way into lesson plans. FULL STORY: lonelyconservative.com/20...nist-past-comes-to-light/
But he is not the David Axelrod who is related to Trotsky. Your article is boob bait. What's new about American communism and their fellow-travellers? The Dems have been fundamentally socialist since the mid-Twenties, the last time they ran a conservative candidate.
This is about the Russian emigre to Israel who is named David Axelrod. Can we send him to prison anyway? ;o)
I think Axelrod is one of the most ruthless, unprincipled and lawless political operatives in American history. But he isn't a great-grandson of Trotsky. Some other guy who lives in an Israeli settlement who is also named David Axelrod actually is Trotsky's great-grandson. Well, I really have beaten this horse long after it was dead, eh?
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