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Kerry, emerging as the front-runner in the race for the Democratic presidential nomination, appeals to competing constituencies otherwise at odds in the battle for the Democratic soul.
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His Jewish stump speech — delivered with vigor and passion, with barely a pause — cites the Roosevelt administration’s decision to turn away a ship of Jews fleeing Nazi-occupied Europe as a failure of U.S. policy he would never repeat.
He says he stood atop Masada and felt the echoes of Jewish resistance call to him. He shouts, extending each syllable with his broad Brahmin vowels: “Am Yisrael Chai!”
One on one, Kerry, 60, exudes athletic energy, even returning to play ice hockey since his treatment a year ago for prostate cancer. On the campaign trail, he often stoops over his interlocutors to look them straight in the eye. He never raises his voice.
Arab Americans thrill not just at his condemnation of Israel’s security barrier — “We do not need another barrier to peace” — but at how he says he arrived at his conclusion.
Speaking at an Arab American Institute conference in Dearborn, Mich., in October, he described how in the West Bank he witnessed how “Palestinian women, traveling on foot, were forced to stand in long lines at checkpoints with their children tugging at their sleeves and their arms loaded with groceries.”
Newman Abuissa, who organized support for Kerry among American Arabs in Cedar Rapids and who is now a Kerry delegate from Iowa, says, “He dealt with the Arab issue on a personal level; he knows names and events.”
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http://www.jta.org/page_view_story.asp?strwebhead=Kerry+appeals+to+Jews%2C+Arabs&intcategoryid=3Kerry must get in line on Israel. Dean's waffling damaged him. Kerry must be clear in his support of the Jewish state.