
 
 
Both Jews and  Muslims celebrated holidays in September 2009. However, the United States  Consulate in Jerusalem – America's representative in Israel's capital – chose to  focus entirely on Islam this year, while ignoring the Jewish holidays of Rosh  HaShana and Yom Kippur completely.
The Consulate's website features Eid  il-Fitr greetings from U.S. President Barack Obama, Secretary of State Hillary  Clinton, and Consul General Daniel Rubinstein. Its staff was involved in Ramadan  celebrations in Jenin and Shechem, and hosted a meal in Jericho for the Muslim  holiday of Iftar.
Clinton's greeting was published on September 19 – the  first day of Rosh HaShana. However, no mention was made of the Jewish  holiday.
All three holiday wishes from American leaders to Muslims were  apolitical, and focused on messages such as “personal reflection” and “charity.”  In contrast, President Obama's Rosh HaShana greeting, which is not on the site, included a  brief promotion of his Israel-Palestinian Authority peace plan.
Snub Follows Admission that Consulate Caters to  PA
The High Holidays snub follows an admission in August that the  U.S. Consulate in Jerusalem views itself as America's representative to the PA, while the embassy in Tel  Aviv is seen as the representative to Israel. Consulate staff explained that  they are “the principal representation to the Palestinian Authority” in an email  to a Jewish American concerned by the lack of balance in consulate  events.
The admission angered many American citizens in Israel. America's  apparent recognition of the PA's claim to rights in Jerusalem was seen as a slap  in the face, particularly because America takes care not to recognize Israeli  rights in the capital city despite more than 40 years of Israeli sovereignty in  the greater Jerusalem area.
The U.S. has repeatedly declined to move its  embassy to Jerusalem, the seat of Israel's government, and American citizens  born in Jerusalem are not registered as having been born in Israel. 
Embassy Ignores Judaism as Well
While  admitting that U.S. representatives in Jerusalem cater to the PA, consulate  staff defended that decision by pointing to the Tel Aviv embassy as the existing  representative to Israel. However, the Tel Aviv embassy website provides no  mention of the major Jewish holidays in September and October.
The only  mention of any autumn holidays, Jewish or Muslim, appears in the form of a  video from a dinner hosted at the Ambassador's residence in celebration of  Iftar.