Simone Zimmerman
Simone Zimmerman is a Jewish American activist and a Co-Founder of IfNotNow Movement. She is featured in the anti-Israel film: "Israelism".
Israelism
From the World Beyond War website announcing the "Women & War: World BEYOND War’s 2024 Virtual Film Festival":[1]
Day 1: Discussion of "Israelism" on Saturday, March 9 at 3:00pm-4:00pm Eastern Standard Time (GMT-5)
Panelists:
- Simone Zimmerman, Co-Founder of IfNotNow Movement: Simone Zimmerman is featured in Israelism. She is a Jewish American activist and a Co-Founder of IfNotNow Movement.
- Rachel Small (moderator), Canada Organizer, World BEYOND War: Rachel Small is the Canada Organizer for World BEYOND War. Based in Toronto, Canada, on Dish with One Spoon and Treaty 13 Indigenous territory, Rachel is a community organizer who has organized within local and international social/environmental justice movements for over a decade. She is a founding member of the Jews Say No to Genocide Coalition, which has mobilized thousands of Jews to take action against Israeli state violence and Canadian complicity in it since October 2023.
B’tselem
The Israeli human rights organization B’tselem said in March 2019 that former Bernie Sanders adviser and long-time anti-occupation activist Simone Zimmerman has been appointed the new director of its American operations.
Zimmerman is an “American Jewish anti-occupation activist” who will “work to amplify B’Tselem’s voice among US policy makers and the broader public,” the rights group said in an official statement.
Sanders suspension controversy
“As somebody who is 100-percent pro-Israel ... in the long run, if we are ever going to bring peace to that region, which has seen so much hatred, and so much war, we are going to have to treat the Palestinian people with respect and dignity,” Sanders explained. “I believe the United States and the rest of the world have got to work together to help the Palestinian people. That does not make me anti-Israel. That paves the way, I think, to an approach that works in the Middle East.”
This is what Simone Zimmerman, Sanders’ now-suspended Jewish outreach director, said she believes. And it’s a good distillation of what JStreet, the progressive advocacy group fighting for a two-state solution and against inertia in the American Jewish community, believes. (Zimmerman was president of JStreet’s campus arm, JStreet U, while in college.)
As The New York Times reported Thursday evening, Sanders’ campaign suspended Zimmerman just two days after it hired her, after the conservative Washington Free Beacon published a past Facebook post of hers in which she wrote, “F—- you Bibi,” using Netanyahu’s nickname, and described the Israeli leader as “arrogant, deceptive, cynical” and “manipulative.” She criticized Netanyahu for trying to “derail” the Iranian nuclear negotiations and for leading the charge into Gaza, where roughly 1,500 Palestinian civilians were killed during the 2014 invasion.
Zimmerman’s suspension suggests a couple of things, including that Sanders’ campaign does not vet staff members and that it feared alienating New York’s Jewish voters if it didn’t respond to the calls for her firing.
“The smear campaign being waged against Simone Zimmerman is a reflection of how out-of-touch the American Jewish establishment is with the Jewish community,” said Yonah Lieberman, who co-founded IfNotNow with Zimmerman and others. The group is dedicated to ending the American Jewish community’s support for the occupation of the Palestinian territories.
“This is not the first sign of this disconnect — it just the most blatant example of the American Jewish establishment trying to intimidate and silence young people acting on the very Jewish values we were taught by our community,” Lieberman continued. “The Jewish establishment won’t stand for anyone criticizing Israel — no matter the truth or reason. When young Jews call for freedom and dignity for the Palestinians, the establishment can only respond with intimidation and fear.”
Max Berger, another IfNotNow co-founder, started an #IStandWithSimone hashtag campaign on Twitter, which picked up more tweets as Sanders spoke during the debate.[2]