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SF: Local AJCommittee - 60 years of getting things done quietly

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  • SF: Local AJCommittee - 60 years of getting things done quietly

    Jewish News weekly of Northern California, CA
    Sept 9 2005


    Local AJCommittee - 60 years of getting things done quietly

    by joe eskenazi
    staff writer

    Think of them as the Navy Seals in wingtips.

    For 60 years, the San Francisco Bay Area chapter of the American
    Jewish Committee has been in, out and done with a situation before
    anyone was the wiser. Operating largely under the media and
    community's radar, AJCommittee members rarely read about their
    exploits in the next day's papers - but, then again, that was never
    the goal.

    `We don't make a fuss about things in the newspapers. It works better
    this way. You don't want to embarrass people unless they need to be
    embarrassed,' said Joe Durra, a local board president in the
    mid-1980s.

    `We put a lot of pressure on companies. If you're like Bechtel and
    Chevron and doing work in Saudi Arabia where no Jews are admitted at
    all, [we] had to pretty much stay under the radar, right?'

    Added Richard Johns, the AJCommittee's immediate past president,
    `Sometimes people don't pay attention to us. They don't pay attention
    to us the first 30 or 40 times. We don't yell or scream or
    pontificate. We just try to be quiet and influential.'

    Like most people, Johns can't give a particularly succinct answer
    when asked what, exactly, the AJCommittee does. It was founded 99
    years ago in response to Russian pogroms, and, in short, has worked
    to end discrimination against Jews and minorities in the United
    States and around the world since - in its own way.

    Rather than lead a demonstration in front of the Saudi consulate, for
    example, the AJCommittee smuggled anti-Semitic, jihadist textbooks
    out of the Wahabi nation, translated them and presented the tangible
    evidence to the Saudi ambassador.

    It was behind-the-scenes work at major international corporations
    that helped to break the Arab boycott of Israel and the glass ceiling
    for Jewish executives. Behind-the-scenes work got rabbis into
    Catholic schools to explain Judaism to the students.

    `More often than not, we've found that working with some degree of
    discretion has been infinitely more productive than going in for the
    immediate hit and the banner headline,' said Ernest Weiner, the
    AJCommittee's regional director since 1972.

    `Many people here treat diplomats almost as decorations. We don't,'
    he explained.

    This way, the committe has cultivated a worldwide network of friends
    and contacts. It's only a matter of a few phone calls to set up
    meetings with officials from China to Qatar. A network such as this
    is a big help when you're, say, hoping to do something about the
    International Red Cross' ongoing brushoff of Israel's Magen David
    Adom - as the local AJCommittee does..

    But the issues confronting the committee often aren't global at all.
    One of Johns' pet projects was dealing with anger that the
    100-foot-tall cross atop San Francisco's Mt. Davidson was on public
    land.

    While some groups advocated tearing down the metal cross, Johns and
    the AJCommittee quietly organized an auction - `where anyone could
    buy this baby' - in which the land atop the hill was purchased by an
    Armenian group for $20,000.

    The Armenians made the cross into a memorial for the Armenian
    genocide and also, at the AJCommittee's behest, set up some displays
    about the separation of church and state.

    `So, church and state are separate up there,' said Johns.

    http://www.jewishsf.com/content/2-0-/module/displaystory/story_id/26932/format/html/displaystory.html
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