New York – Prominent Jewish Philanthropist Questioned By Israeli Airport Security After Visiting Palestinian Areas

    17

    Meyer Koplow, left, accepting an award from American Friends of The Hebrew University in 2016New York – A prominent Jewish philanthropist says he was aggressively questioned by Israeli airport security after going on a Jewish tour of Palestinian areas of the West Bank.

    Join our WhatsApp group

    Subscribe to our Daily Roundup Email


    Meyer Koplow, chair of Brandeis University’s board of trustees and a longtime donor to pro-Israel causes, was delayed for 30 minutes by a security agent at Ben Gurion International Airport Sunday before being allowed to board his flight. Koplow’s visit to Israel included a trip to the West Bank with Encounter Programs, a nonpartisan organization that brings Jews to Palestinian areas to meet Palestinians and see their society firsthand.

    He believes he was called for questioning after security personnel found a brochure in his luggage titled “This Week in Palestine,” which he had picked up in a Bethlehem hotel lobby. Agents had placed a note in the same pocket of his luggage informing him that the bag “was opened for the purpose of carrying out a security check.”

    Koplow was questioned by a security agent for 10 minutes in the departure hall, after which he was told to wait and eventually allowed to board his flight.

    “The best way I can describe it is a badgering form of questioning where before you finish giving one answer, you’re being asked the same question again as if what you said is not credible,” Koplow told JTA. “She asked what purpose could possibly be served by people visiting the territories. She asked that several times.”

    (Full disclosure: This reporter was a participant on the same Encounter tour that Koplow attended last week. Participants left Israel separately, and this reporter was not at the airport while Koplow was questioned.)

    Koplow said he appreciates Israeli personnel checking luggage for the purposes of security, but he feels that the questioning he experienced “goes a level beyond that.”

    “I applaud the careful security, including examining people’s luggage,” he told JTA. “But not for materials that they’re taking with them out of the country that aren’t in the nature of what you would call classified materials. Why would you do that other than to send a message that the government doesn’t welcome your engaging in any kind of inquiry.”

    Koplow was disturbed as well by “the manner of the continued implication that I wasn’t telling the truth or all of the truth,” he said. He added that describing his past involvement with Jewish and Israeli causes did not change the tenor of the interrogation, which was conducted in public view.

    In addition to his position at Brandeis, Koplow is a board member of the UJA-Federation in New York and has served as the president of his synagogue, Young Israel of New Rochelle. He told JTA that he has given millions of dollars to Israeli causes.

    “The most disturbing question she asked me, and she asked me more than once, was what was I going to do with the information I learned in the territories,” Koplow said. “What business is it of security at departure as to what I’m thinking or what I might say?”

    Koplow subsequently spoke with Dani Dayan, Israel’s consul general in New York, who apologized for the incident while justifying the questioning on security grounds.

    “We intend to continue with a clean sheet even if it means paying a price on other fronts,” Dayan wrote in an email to Koplow on Tuesday. “That price includes sometimes our image being damaged. The total and complete security of our aviation and its passengers is and will continue to be our first priority. All other considerations are subordinated to that.”

    But Dayan wrote he regretted how Koplow was treated.

    “I wish to express once more my sorrow for the inconvenience and embarrassment caused to you,” he wrote. “I hope your next departure from Ben Gurion Airport will be more pleasant.”

    Koplow told JTA that the incident will not deter him from visiting or engaging with Israel in the future.

    His story first appeared in a Twitter thread about the incident written by his son, Michael Koplow, policy director at the Israel Policy Forum, a group that advocates for a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. The younger Koplow wrote that his father’s story “is a perfectly sad microcosm of everything wrong with the way Israel treats information as a threat and American Jews as objects of suspicion.”

    “We have moved from Israel being worried about tangible security threats, to treating BDS advocates and protestors as if they are security threats, to treating any evidence of basic engagement with Palestinians as security threats,” Michael Koplow wrote, using an acronym denoting the movement to boycott, divest from and sanction Israel. “Simple information is treated as dangerous.”


    Listen to the VINnews podcast on:

    iTunes | Spotify | Google Podcasts | Stitcher | Podbean | Amazon

    Follow VINnews for Breaking News Updates


    Connect with VINnews

    Join our WhatsApp group


    17 Comments
    Most Voted
    Newest Oldest
    Inline Feedbacks
    View all comments
    5 years ago

    Imagine how the average Yid would have been treated had he or she complained. And little or no chance to complain to the general counsel!

    5 years ago

    If you are a mega rich donor you can at least get an apology afterwards for being harassed by the thought crime police. The rest of us would not be so lucky.

    triumphinwhitehouse
    triumphinwhitehouse
    5 years ago

    liberal Jew, with too much money AND time.

    5 years ago

    Those DIBS don’t know the first thing about courtesy or manners. If they can treat this big macher with plenty of gelt in that manner, think of how they would treat the average person.

    AlbertEinstein
    AlbertEinstein
    5 years ago

    Good job by Israeli airport security. It’s called behavioral profiling (not racial profiling). Mr. Koplow obviously had suspicion indicators, and the interview resolved them to be harmless.

    5 years ago

    Communist Israel!

    hashomer
    hashomer
    5 years ago

    Which two states was sonny boy Michael referring to? Hamas Gaza and West Bank PLO? Some solution. Some sonny boy. FEH.

    yosher
    yosher
    5 years ago

    Rudeness and unprofessional behavior by Israeli security and police are typical. They beat on the frum and the anti frum, they abuse leftists and rightists, Israelis are doing maximum damage to themselves as fewer and fewer people can stomach them.”You don’t have to be nice to the people you meet on your way up, as long as you”re certain you won’t be meeting them on your way down! This interrogation could have been handled professionally and politely, but not by Israelis.

    CountryYossi
    CountryYossi
    5 years ago

    i see nothing wrong interrogating someone who visits enemy territory.
    if this was in USA and you come back from North Korea or Cuba believe me they would question you for a few days.

    Liepa
    Liepa
    5 years ago

    Israel security is one of the best and tightest across the globe, this Yokel and his son’s, kissing up to the palies, not withstanding !!!

    lazy-boy
    Active Member
    lazy-boy
    5 years ago

    good for the security staff for ignoring his “prominent Jewish philanthropist” status and making certain that he was not a security risk!

    LiberalismIsADisease
    LiberalismIsADisease
    5 years ago

    He didn’t like the method of questioning? TOO FREAKING BAD!! NEXT TIME STAY HOME!

    5 years ago

    We should retaliate and employ the same tactics to Israeli visitors leaving the USA by plane; you mess with our citizens, and we’ll mess with yours.