FREE JONATHAN FOR ME
By Yaffa Goldstein
HATZOFEH
(Translated from Hebrew)
Reprinted with permission
Esther Pollard is back with us again.
It seems that Israel’s official recognition of Jonathan as an Israeli agent which
occurred two months ago has not, in the meantime, moved things forward at all.
With the full support of the Rishon
Letzion, Ha Rav Mordecai Eliahu, who has ruled that Jonathan’s case is a mitzvah of
Pidyan Shvuyim, Pollard’s wife has returned to Israel to see to it that his case is
not allowed to sink into oblivion.
Is Pollard’s situation being
influenced by the current state of bilateral relations between the US and Israel, which
are not exactly brilliant at the moment?
Esther Pollard reacts indignantly to
the question.
“It is a complete farce to see
Jonathan’s situation as being dependent on the relations between the two countries.
When the last Government (Labor) was in power and the relationship with Israel was at its
best, did they release Jonathan? Or in any way advance his case? Just the opposite!”
According to his wife, Pollard does not
receive kosher food in the American prison, nor does he receive proper medical treatment,
appropriate to his medical condition.
He lives and works in sealed rooms
where the temperatures are burning hot, and there is neither air conditioning nor
appropriate air circulation. As the only visible, kipa-wearing Jew, his life is in
constant danger in prison, which is a hotbed of anti-Semitism.
“What’s more,” she
fumes, “the fact that Israel publicly announced that Jonathan was an official Israeli
agent signaled to the Americans that Israel was ready to begin intensive negotiations for
his release. Two days later, the Prime Minister arrived in Washington and spoke before
AIPAC’s national convention. He did not even mention Jonathan’s name.”
This she says was extremely damaging to
the American perception of Israel’s serious intent.
While the Prime Minister did say to
Esther in a meeting last week that the current government has done more than any previous
government for Jonathan, Esther responds that making a public declaration and then failing
to follow up with intensive action behind the scenes sent a clear messages to the
Americans that Israel is not seriously committed to securing Pollard’s release.
Esther Pollard will meet with the Prime
Minister again this week.
“We received phone calls from
highly-placed contacts in Washington and on Capital Hill, mostly non-Jews, expressing
their surprise that Israel had not yet contacted them to begin the process of intensive
negotiation in order to free her agent.
When more time passed and Israel still
did nothing, the Americans drew the conclusion that the whole issue of Jonathan’s
change in status was nothing more than a public relations stunt designed for local
consumption.
This gave the green light to the
Washington Post (which is not known for its support of Israel) to publish a devastating
article about Jonathan and Israel.
“Both Jonathan and I were
portrayed as crazy people, and the Israeli Government was portrayed as foolish in an
article which was nothing but lies, lies and more lies.”
Jonathan Pollard is the only person in
the history of the United States to receive a life sentence for spying for an ally.
Recently, Lt. Cmdr. Michael Schwartz, a
non-Jewish American naval officer who spied for Saudi Arabia received not a single day in
jail, for the same indictment as Pollard. His only punishment was dismissal from the Navy
and loss of Navy pension and rank.
Others have gotten relatively short
sentences- some only a few months. In the worst cases 10 years. Another American (Peter
Lee) who recently gave American nuclear munitions information to the Chinese, received a
sentence of only a year in a half-way house.
Other than Pollard, no agent who has
spied for an ally has actually served more than five years in prison. Even though the
maximum sentence for spying for an ally has since been limited to 10 years, the Americans
have made no move to reconsider Pollard’s grossly excessive sentence.
In an article that was published last
week in the Jerusalem Post, the author quotes Angelo Codevilla who was one of the advisors
to the Senate Special Committee which investigated espionage cases in the United States
during the time of Pollard’s arrest and conviction.
Codevilla says that Pollard’s
great sin was that he was ahead of his time regarding America’s disastrous policy of
arming Iraq- at that time no one yet dreamed of the Gulf War.
“Those most strongly opposed to
Pollard’s release are those responsible for arming Iraq- Schultz, Weinberger and
Inman - and for withholding this information from Israel. It is precisely because of the
information that Jonathan gave to Israel that the concept of preparing sealed rooms was
born.”
Esther Pollard adds that US law does
not consider espionage as treason unless one spies for an enemy nation. This means that
the sentence Jonathan received (i.e. one that has only been meted out to those who spied
for enemies of the US) teaches us little about the offense that Jonathan committed, but
teaches us a hard lesson about the way the US relates to Israel.
With her uncompromising approach,
Esther Pollard has made enough enemies. This does not bother her- since her greatest
detractors are the ones most responsible for foot-dragging in advancing Jonathan’s
release. Even when Pollard’s family -who once held the heart of the Israel public -
were active (and were in touch with her then, but have since cut the contact), nothing was
done to secure his release.
Her attractive face becomes distorted
with great anger whenever the name of any group is brought up or some story is mentioned
about how attempts were made to “help “ Pollard. Empty gestures for public
consumption. As far as she is concerned, the litmus test is that he is still in prison.
She is extremely angry and frustrated
with the silence in Israel. She likens Jonathan’s situation to a terrible car
accident. A crowd gathers around the victim who is lying on the ground bleeding heavily.
All the bystanders keep saying that it is such a tragedy but absolutely no one makes a
move to save him!
“They all have their own excuses
for not helping,” she says, “including the spurious excuse that they won’t
help because Esther Pollard is too aggressive.”
About Minister Sharansky who has
recently been in the United States several times and yet still hasn’t found the time
to fulfill his long time promise to visit Jonathan.
She said she recently met him in the
corridor near the Prime Minister’s office. She shook his hand and held it firmly as
she asked him how it was that a man like himself who had been in prison could be so
indifferent to her husband’s suffering, after he sacrificed his life on behalf of
Israel.
She is no less astonished at the
behavior of the religious public. She said that not a single one of the top NRP officials
have ever been to visit Pollard, nor have the religious ministers and Knesset members.
While it is true that M.K. Chanan Porat
wrote to him, why she asks haven’t the religious ministers and M.K.’s made
Pollard’s release a national priority, even conditioning their votes on his release.
That would be fuel to fire the Prime Minister’s efforts, she said.
Her well-groomed appearance and the
determination in her eyes is all part of her uncompromising dedication to the fulfillment
of one objective: the release of her husband.
She does not take any time for herself.
She also is not interested in talking about herself. Every minute of her time is taken up
with meetings and conversations about her husband’s case.
When I ask her how long she plans on
staying in Israel she answers me with irritation that that question bothers her more than
any other:
“Jonathan’s life is hanging
in the balance and they keep asking me how long I’m staying- as if I am here on
vacation! Look, every minute that he manages to stay alive in that place is nothing but a
complete miracle!”
When I tell her that Jonathan
doesn’t look bad in the pictures we’ve seen, in spite of the hardships he is
undergoing, Esther answers me saying, “ When I was on a hunger strike two years ago,
I too did not look bad, even though I went some 20 days without food. Ha Rav Eliahu said
that this was a sign of HaShem’s personal supervision over us. It is clearly Divine
Providence which guides us from above, for there is little if any help from below."
And she adds “People don’t
understand that there isn’t any time left for starting groups and forming committees,
holding demonstrations or writing letters. It is too late for those things! M.K. Rechavaam
Ze’evi who is a member of the Knesset lobby for Pollard recently warned the Prime
Minister that unless the government takes immediate intensive action to bring Pollard home
now- just the way they did for the agents in Jordan and in Switzerland- they are liable to
bring Pollard home in a way that will be a tragedy for all the nation.”
Esther Pollard has been with Jonathan
for 8 years, and has been married to him for 5 - yet has never had the privilege of being
alone with him. She started to write to Jonathan when she read a notice in the newspaper
asking people to write to him to give him support and encouragement.
At that time she did not remember that
she had previously met him when the two of them were in Israel on youth group programs. At
the time they shared a common love: love of the land and the people of Israel. When
Jonathan received her letter, he had only 5 stamps and 25 letters to respond to.
He felt an inner compulsion to respond
to Esther’s letter. His first letter , she says softly, touched her very deeply. It
was only later on that the two of them remembered that they had been in Israel together.
Esther Pollard lives in Canada where
she works as a teacher in Special Education, a job that she regards as challenging. All
the rest of her time is devoted to Jonathan, “Without him, I have no life.”
In order to visit her husband she has
to take time off from work, and undertake a long and expensive trip from Toronto to North
Carolina. Losing any part of her salary, which is the sole source of support for herself
and Jonathan is very difficult, as is paying for the trip and all of their expenses.
Nevertheless she manages to visit him at least once a month, and they speak on the phone
every day.
Originally they had to fight for the
right to have her number included on his strictly limited phone list. She also had to
fight for two years for his right to call her at an additional number in Israel. She has
to send him money in advance to pay for the daily phone calls.
Four hundred prisoners share 2
telephones, so Jonathan spends long periods of time waiting in line so that he can call
Esther. They often speak of their faith and trust in Divine Providence, and about their
unending disappointments in man’s efforts.
And sometimes they speak of a time and
a place when things will be better, in Israel, the land of their dreams, which was the
first love they shared in common. Of a time when Jonathan will be free and they will have
children which they so badly want.
Esther says that her only desire is to
be a housewife and mother and to help Jonathan to accomplish the important projects he has
planned.
“He has many projects planned that
will free Israel from her dependence on foreign energy sources, and that will solve her
problems regarding water supply. Jonathan is an amazing man. He is the source of all of my
strength. He keeps me going, even though we are now very weary and can’t go on
fighting alone any more.”
This month Esther has not seen
Jonathan. She doesn’t have the means to pick up and make a quick trip from Israel to
the United States. And she will not allow herself to leave until she has done everything
possible to get the Government of Israel to move decisively. Which is to say until Pollard
is free. Preferably tomorrow.
Some time back Esther rented a room in
Katamon. She was thrown out when the owner became irritated by the media attention
surrounding the case. Friends in Canada called on their connections and found a kind,
pious widow in Jerusalem who offered Esther a room in her home.
This is the place that Esther now calls
“home” in Jerusalem. It was hard at first for Esther to be convinced to accept
this kindness. She does not ask for money or even for encouragement or sympathy. All she
wants, she says, is the “chessed” of the fulfillment of the mitzvah of
“pidyan shvuyim”.
“When I was on a hunger strike
here in Jerusalem 2 years ago and the month of Ellul arrived, HaRav Eliahu blessed me. He
said to me, ‘Until now you were the only shofar blowing to wake up the nation. Now
the month of Ellul has arrived and many shofars will be blowing.’
“Two years have passed. Here I am
back again. Once again I am a shofar trying to wake up as many people as possible. Very
soon it will be Ellul once more.
I am shouting as loud as I can. Trying
to wake people up, before it’s too late...”

ZINC encourages you to contact the
Pollards to give them support and get updates on their situation. You can also write the
Israeli Prime Minister from the link on our homepage.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION:
Justice for Jonathan Pollard
Tel 416-781-3571 Fax 416-781-3166
Email [email protected]
Web Site:: http://www.interlog.com/~abrooke/jp
Esther & Jonathan Pollard
Tel 416-781-3571 Fax 416-781-3166 |