Thursday, December 15, 2016

  • Thursday, December 15, 2016
  • Elder of Ziyon
On December 4, I reported about a New York Daily News story that said:
Straphangers stood by and watched as three drunk white men repeatedly screamed “Donald Trump!” and hurled anti-Islam slurs Thursday at a Muslim Baruch College student before trying to rip her hijab off of her head on an East Side subway, the woman told the Daily News.
The point of my post is that after 20 paragraphs of describing how she was supposedly assaulted - which she reported to the police - the story mentioned in the last paragraph that there were far more antisemitic attacks since Trump's election than anti-Muslim attacks - in fact, more antisemitic attacks than all other bias attacks combined. I questioned why the anti-Muslim stories were getting so much more media attention.

It turns out that the Muslim woman who made these accusations has been arrested for making the entire story up:

Yasmin Seweid, 18, was charged with filing a false report after she told authorities three men called her a terrorist and chanted "Donald Trump" at her aboard the 23rd Street 4/5/6 subway station on Dec. 1.

Now police sources have told NBC 4 New York that Seweid allegedly admitted to them she had been out drinking with friends, and made up the attack to distract her angry father.
Seweid posted to Facebook about the attack on Dec. 2, saying that "it breaks my heart that so many individuals chose to be bystanders while watching me get harassed verbally and physically by these disgusting pigs."

She called the incident "traumatizing" and spoke with multiple news organizations about it.
This doesn't mean that every anti-Muslim attack is false, of course. But it does show that the media needs to be a little more skeptical about its reporting - and in this case the story was reported worldwide, where people will never see the update.

But there is more, that is far more newsworthy, if true:
Her strict, Muslim parents allegedly forced Seweid to shave her head over the incident and were upset that she was dating a Christian, sources said.

The bareheaded Baruch College student, not wearing her hijab, was charged with filing a false report and released after her arraignment early Thursday in Manhattan Criminal Court. A relative covered Seweid’s face with a black down jacket as she was escorted into a waiting SUV following her brief court appearance.

She faces up to a year in jail for each charge.
Yasmin is on the right

I assume that the punishment of shaving her head was so that her family wouldn't suffer the humiliation of her showing her hair.

Humiliating their daughter in the name of "honor" shows that honor is precisely not what this is about.





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Wednesday, December 14, 2016

  • Wednesday, December 14, 2016
  • Elder of Ziyon
Most Christmas music drives me crazy.

But some Christmas songs I look forward to hearing every year. For the most part, they are cynical Christmas songs, but still....


#5. Greg Lake : I Believe in Father Christmas (the album version from Emerson Lake and Palmer)

Lake just passed away, but the song is described as "a picture-postcard Christmas, with morbid edges" by lyricist Peter Sinfield. It includes a section from Prokofiev, whom we just discussed on the blog, and part of the video was made in the Qumran Caves where the Dead Sea Scrolls were discovered.

This is the single version.



#4. The Who: Christmas

Part of the Tommy rock opera, it includes a subversive dig at Christianity, asking how someone who cannot see or hear can be saved.





#3. The Waitresses, Christmas Rapping

OK, this is far more traditional. The plot is corny, but, damn, I love both the lyrics and the tune. My guilty Christmas pleasure. (Along with the original Miracle on 34th Street.)



#2. Bob Rivers, I Am Santa Claus

This Black Sabbath spoof is great, with very funny lyrics.



#1 The Kinks: Father Christmas

Another subversive song, with poor kids mugging Santa Claus because they need money, not silly toys. And it really rocks.







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From Ian:

The United Church of Christ: Knowingly Silent on Terrorism
The United Church of Christ (UCC) published a guide to Israel-Palestine affairs in August and again in September 2016. Entitled, "Promoting a Just Peace in Palestine-Israel", this toxic document is a desperately one-sided, inaccurate, and counter-factual exercise in futile politics. It most certainly does not favour justice or peace in the Holy Land, as its contents show on every page.
The naïvety of the UCC is particularly striking in its choice to take at face value the Palestinian statement that if Israel ended its occupation peace would follow as day follows night. When, after 1949, Gaza was occupied by Egypt and the West Bank by Jordan, no one protested, no one attacked Egyptians or Jordanians. In other words, Israel occupied only itself. But Palestinian terrorism against Israelis continued up to 1967, right through the period of Israeli non-occupation. There were no "settlements" then. Rather, the Palestinians have always regarded all of Israel as one big "settlement." Just look at any Palestinian maps; they cover both the entirety of Israel and the Palestinian territories.
Unfortunately, the Palestinians have a history of regarding every retreat by Israel as a triumph of aggression over diplomacy, as if to say: We shoot at Israelis and they leave; so let's keep doing it.
In its introduction, the UCC, knowing full well that Israel has not occupied Gaza since 2005, still speaks of "the Israeli military occupation of the Occupied Palestinian Territories: the West Bank, East Jerusalem and Gaza."
The UCC Guide states flatly that "Israeli settlements in the West Bank are identified as illegal by the international community" -- even though international law says exactly the opposite. The West Bank and Gaza were both occupied as a result of a defensive war against Egypt and Jordan in 1967, in which the Israelis were victorious. It is never illegal to occupy territory obtained in defensive military action.
Ohio State Terror, The Media, and Israel


Enough’s enough – it’s time for Labour Jews to call it quits
Week after week, we read of insidious outbursts emanating from individuals within the Labour Party, from all levels. The statements are often dressed up as anti-Zionist. However, some are so extreme and outrageous that they can only be construed as blatantly anti-Semitic.
Anti-Semitism within the Labour Party is not new, but it was latent and unexpressed.
The cause of its eruption so severely during 2016 can be summed up in two words: Jeremy Corbyn.
Corbyn is the first leader of any major British political party to hold views which, if not directly anti-Semitic, are considered hostile by the overwhelming majority of Jews in this country. His antipathy towards Israel, his embracement of the Palestinian viewpoint and his friendship with Arab terrorist groups has characterised his Parliamentary career for decades – long before the nightmare of his leadership of the Labour Party was remotely contemplated.
Labour ’s report into anti-Semitism, led by Baroness Chakrabarti, was a farce. In the words of the Home Affairs Select Committee commenting on the report, it “was clearly lacking in many areas”, the party having become “a safe place for those with the most vile of opinions”.

  • Wednesday, December 14, 2016
  • Elder of Ziyon
  • ,


When one sees the byline of William Booth and Ruth Eglash on a Washington Post article, what follows, one knows, is going to be a very ugly piece about Israel. There will be the pretense of balance, but the slant will always be there and the direction of that slant will never favor Israel. You read their stuff and you have to wonder what's wrong with them, the authors.  Their regular and willful distortion of the facts must, by design, be born of deep-seated hatred for the Jewish State.
Now if the articles were balanced and at least factually true, we might have given Booth and Eglash a pass. We might have said they are writing what they write for the sake of truth. We could have called them truth seekers. We could have ascribed a certain logic to reporting true but ugly news about Israel, and called the authors "truth seekers."  (Even though nitpicking on Israel is kind of a strange thing to do, considering the slaughter going on next door in, for instance, Syria.)

With Booth and Eglash, however, what you've got is something far from the truth, something  at a distant remove from decency and basic journalistic standards. What you've got instead is two authors pushing a single agenda and passing off selected half-truths as cover for their naked hate of Israel.
It's pathological.

The latest Booth and Eglash screed against Israel is a piece about the mosque loudspeakers, Israel wants mosques to turn the volume way down. The piece is framed as though the proposed legislation to ban loudspeakers is a freedom of religion issue, which it most assuredly is not. The caption under the video clip at the top of the piece includes the phrase: "The Muslims say their sacred tradition can't be compared to a rowdy party to be shut down by police."

Right here is where the distortion begins that is carried throughout the article and here is why it is a distortion: the most important thing to know about the loudspeaker bill is that it does not muzzle the muezzin and his call to prayer.

No one asks this. No one wants this. No one is pushing such a thing.

Jews don't do that. Everyone in Israel is free to pray or not pray to whatever deity he or she so chooses. We believe in free will, free choice. We brought the concept to the world, for crying out loud.

What we don't like is having prayers of any sort blasted in our ears at 4:30 in the morning. That's not nice. It disturbs our sleep. It's noise pollution.

And it's deeply unnecessary.

The blasting of prayers at full volume over a loudspeaker is neither sacred nor a tradition. Islam thrived just fine between the 7th century, when Islam was founded, and 1876, when Alexander Graham Bell invented the loudspeaker. The muezzin managed his duties a-okay without a loudspeaker. And if any Muslim is afraid he will sleep so deeply that he will not hear the call to prayer, he can darned well set an alarm clock and call that a "sacred tradition," too.

But let's get to the meat of the article. Booth and Eglash tell us that when Muslims hear the call to prayer, they hear something beautiful, but when Jews hear it, they hear noise. This too, is a distortion. It makes it sound like the Jews are deriding Muslim prayer, calling it "noise."

No. We really aren't. We have no problem with Muslim prayer and don't think of it as noise. UNLESS YOU BLAST IT INTO OUR EARS OVER A LOUDSPEAKER AT 4 FRIGGING THIRTY IN THE MORNING. Like when we're sleeping.

Sing it out in your villages and towns and neighborhoods. But not with a loudspeaker. Not at full volume. Not in the middle of the night when we're sleeping.

And just by the way, it's not a benign sacred Muslim tradition, as Booth and Eglash would have you believe. It's Muslims asserting their belief in their religious superiority. It's a thumb in the eye to Judaism. That is the only reason for the loudspeaker, to make sure EVERYONE hears. Especially the Jews.

And the truth is no one cares about that either. Because we are Jews in our own land and let the Arabs think whatever the heck they want to think. We're secure in our own beliefs.

We DO, on the other hand, want to sleep undisturbed. That's the bottom line. Sleep. Ya know?

But Booth and Eglash, they don't get it. Or they do but pretend they don't. They write, "During periods of heightened violence, when the Jews who live near Palestinians hear the Arabs proclaim that 'God is great!' in a broadcast that travels far from the mosque’s loudspeakers, they say they do not think of God.

"They hear a threat."

What utter malarkey. We don't think of anything much at all. We grumble and pull our pillows over our heads and try to get back to sleep. Except for the babies. They cry. It sounds scary to them. And of course, if they cry and they're scared we can't go back to sleep, because we have to go take care of them, comfort them, try to rock them back to sleep.

Booth and Eglash write: "One might think that after centuries of Jews and Muslims living side by side, in war and peace, these issues would be settled — but that would be naive."

In what century did Jews and Muslims live side by side in peace??? Have they even read a history book? Have they never read about the Muslim Conquest? The Arab riots of the 1920's? The Farhud?
Booth and Eglash write:

“'This call doesn’t hurt anybody,' said Kamal Abdul Khader, a former boxer who works as a bus dispatcher in Shuafat."

It does hurt us. Yes it does. It causes sleep deprivation.

“'You know what the call is? The call is to come and pray to God,' he said. 'The Jews don’t want to hear this? Tell me why.'"

Because it's a call to pray according to Islamic tradition. And we're JEWS. We have our own way of praying. And because it WAKES US UP and WE don't have to pray or get up for at least another couple of hours. It's not fair. It's not nice.

"Told it wakes people up, Khader laughed and pointed at the chaotic street scene with its cacophony of honking horns, cellphone rings and pop music blasting from shops.

"'Listen, this is Jerusalem. We Muslims don’t complain when the Christians ring their church bells. We don’t complain about the Jews with their ram horns. This is religion,' he said. 'No one should interfere.'"

Christians don't ring their church bells at 4:30 in the morning. Jews don't blast their ram horns at 4:30 AM and even if they did, they don't do it into loudspeakers so as to force the Muslims on the other side of town to listen to them. We blow them in shul for the (Jewish) congregants gathered therein.

"Men attending Shuafat’s main mosque agreed. One recalled that he had heard the muezzin bill was changed to protect Jewish customs. In the deeply Orthodox communities of Israel, sirens often wail on Friday afternoons to mark the beginning of the Sabbath. Sometimes a trumpet or ram’s horn is sounded."

The main word here to note is AFTERNOON. We don't play the sirens at 4:30 in the morning. I've never heard of someone blowing a trumpet for this purpose, but even if they did, it isn't at 4:30 in the morning. It really is THAT simple. Don't blast your prayers at full volume over a loudspeaker at 4:30 in the morning.

"There are some who ask why such a divisive topic needs the blunt force of legislation and a ban."

Here is why: we keep asking them to turn down the volume. They crank it down for a bit and then slowly, they inch it back up. They simply don't respect our wishes. They don't respect our freedom of religion, which is to sleep through the night and pray with a minyan instead of on a prayer rug with our backsides facing the Temple Mount. They are inconsiderate and don't care that we want and need to sleep. They don't care that they are scaring our babies and waking them up.

And since they are rude and inconsiderate and don't care about our rights, we have to legislate our rights, enshrining them in law.

But Booth and Eglash make it sound like all Israel wants to do is suppress something of tremendous beauty.

"At the mosque in Shuafat, the muezzin, who asked to be referred to as Abu Mohammad, said he has sung the call to prayer for 35 years. He was sorry to hear about all the complaints. He said he thought there was nothing more moving than hearing the call in the quiet of the dawn as it echoes across the desert where the prophets walked.

“'If there is a more beautiful voice than mine?' he said. 'They can do the call.'”

Yeah. Because it's all about your voice. Right. Us Jews just don't get the poetry, the lilting harmonies, the LOUDSPEAKER BLASTING ARABIC IN OUR EARS AT 4:30 IN THE MORNING.
Sheesh.

Now it's clear that Booth and Eglash see Islam and the Arabs in this pink, soft, romantic light. Conversely, they want to see Jews and Israelis as culturally bankrupt morons. And actually, that would be just fine if they were writing fiction, or even opinion. But it's not fine that a newspaper like the Washington Post would carry a piece like this even once, let alone on an ongoing basis, as it has done.

In so doing, the Washington Post, rather than disseminating information, is fostering hate. Readers trust Wapo to tell them the truth. It's a sad thing indeed that Booth and Eglash are allowed to use the pages of the Washington Post to spread lies, misinformation, and their pathological hatred of Jews and Israel.

Sad and tragic.

The only thing to do is keep calling them on it. Every single time they do it. And to recap in logical terms, the truth of the matter.

It was only ever about sleep, Habibi. No matter what Eglash and Booth try to tell you. And no matter where they tell it.


(h/t Alexi)



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leoJoe, the guys are not pleased with your delusions of grandeur, and I can't say I disagree. Aside from the fact that it's just dangerously destabilizing to go boasting about visions of your own superiority over us, it's not right to go describing all the "stars" you saw using that word. For the sake of accuracy, you have to refer to one of them as a planet.

We've all seen the night sky, and we know the brightest small objects up there aren't just thermonuclear gas-and-plasma spheroids. Some of them are just chunks of rock or blobs of gas that reflect sunlight. Aside from the disturbing implications of your dreams for the unity and harmony of this family, if you're going to command any respect whatsoever among us you had best start using the correct terminology. Otherwise anyone serious will know you're not serious.

Let's leave aside the troubled history of this family: our grandfather Isaac's troubled relationship with his half-brother Ishmael, born of the tension between Great-Grandmother Sarah and her handmaiden Hagar; Grandpa Laban's manipulative treatment of his sister, Grandma Rebecca; and the fraught dynamic between our father and Uncle Esau. It's almost a given that at this point, one of us is going to be rejected as the principal heir because he's unworthy. Your antics make you a prime candidate, and your imprecision with astronomical nomenclature certainly is no help. A planet is a planet. A star is a star.

You're already seventeen years old. You've learned enough at our father's knee to know the difference between an object that produces light and an object that merely reflects light. It's not a difficult concept. Your insistence on calling anything up there that isn't the sun or the moon "stars" is almost as annoying as your astounding presumption that telling all of us, in excited tones, about how you're going to lord it over us because you foresaw it in a dream about stars wouldn't turn every last one of us against you.

Get your act together, Joseph. Just because you're the eldest son of Dad's favorite wife doesn't mean you've automatically secured a place of pride in this family. Look at what happened to Esau. Gone to Seir despite his lifelong efforts to kiss up to Grandpa. So stop it with your stupid dream tales. And start using proper terminology when you talk of these things. Don't be such a philistine.




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From Ian:

Analysis: Jerusalem likely disappointed by Trump's secretary of state pick
Nobody will admit it, but it is safe to assume Jerusalem was disappointed Tuesday when US President-elect Donald Trump announced the winner of his secretary of state sweepstakes.
It’s not because Jerusalem dislikes or does not trust Trump’s nominee, ExxonMobil CEO Rex Tillerson – policy makers in Israel, like those in most other non-oil producing countries, don’t know that much about him. It’s just that the Netanyahu government really liked some of the other candidates that were bandied about over the last five weeks: Rudy Giuliani, Mitt Romney and John Bolton.
Giuliani, Romney, Bolton – these are men that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has known for years and with whom he shares a similar world view. Tillerson, however, is a largely unknown quantity.
Jerusalem knows that Tillerson is close to Russian President Vladimir Putin, and that he has worked intensively in Arab countries with which ExxonMobil does business. But no one seems to have any idea about where he stands on issues such as the settlements, Jerusalem and the two-state solution.
Some are making assumptions, however, that because he was highly recommended for the position by former secretaries of state James Baker and Condoleezza Rice, and because he is reportedly close to former national security adviser Brent Scowcroft, that he doesn’t have a warm spot in his heart for either the settlement enterprise or Israel. But Tillerson has left no public record of comments on these issues to support that assumption. In short, his positions on the Mideast conflict are, at this point, anyone’s guess.
One thing it is important to keep in mind, said Danny Ayalon, a former Israeli ambassador to the US and deputy foreign minister, is that US secretaries of state “serve at the pleasure of the president, and we know that Trump is closer to Israel on issues like the settlements.”
ICC threat lingers over Settlements Bill among others
Politicians on the Right have been regularly underplaying the threat of the International Criminal Court and slamming Israel’s internal lawyer take-over revolution as well as the Supreme Court for interfering in the Amona debate by telling them what is or is not legal.
Apparently some of this is for show and on Monday at the Knesset’s joint committee closed-to the media meeting on the Settlements Bill, some of the same politicians took the threat far more seriously, which will likely impact their votes.
The question is whether passing the Settlements Bill would change an ICC full criminal war crimes investigation into the settlement enterprise from a neutral or remote possibility to a much higher likelihood.
If the ICC went after the settlement enterprise for war crimes, Israeli defense ministers, housing ministers, local settlement councils and possibly others could be on the hook.
Can Trump Really Move the Embassy?
The assumption of those promoting a two-state solution is that the Arab neighborhoods of Jerusalem would serve as the capital of the Palestinian state that would be created as part of a peace settlement. We don’t know whether the Palestinians will ever take yes for an answer and accept a peace that would recognize the legitimacy of a Jewish state no matter where its borders are drawn. But no reasonable person can dispute that Israel will always keep Western Jerusalem and those Jewish neighborhoods that were built after 1967. The city is the country’s capital, and always will be.
To a Middle East novice like Trump, recognizing this is just common sense. But for the foreign policy establishment, doing so would be a grave mistake. It would prejudge the outcome of peace negotiations, their thinking goes, and would result in violent riots throughout the Arab and Muslim world with unforeseen consequences. Yet Trump, with his outsider’s viewpoint, may get that these dire predictions are self-fulfilling prophecies, and trap the U.S. in a policy that perpetuates the conflict rather than moving towards a solution. If peace is to be achieved, the Palestinians and their supporters must accept that the Jewish presence in Jerusalem will never be reversed or its history erased (as the Palestinians have sought to do in various United Nations resolutions that designate the Temple Mount and the Western Wall as exclusively Muslim shrines).
It would be foolish to pretend that an embassy move would not cause problems or lead to riots ginned up by Islamists who hate the U.S. as much as they do Israel. But the world will not come to an end if the U.S. sends a signal to the world Washington has finally understood that the conventional wisdom about Jerusalem has done more to encourage Palestinian intransigence than it has to promote a solution. The new embassy would also not preclude a two-state solution or make it harder to achieve assuming the Palestinians wanted peace since all it would do is to make it easier for U.S. diplomats to travel between their new offices (at an empty site owned by the U.S. that has been designated for that purpose for decades) and Israeli government institutions they deal with.
On Jerusalem and One China, Trump may not be playing by the existing diplomatic rules. But it’s time for even those who doubted his fitness for the presidency to admit that those rules don’t always make sense and changing them might do more good than harm.

  • Wednesday, December 14, 2016
  • Elder of Ziyon
As far as I can tell, no mainstream media outlets mentioned Prime Minister Netanyahu's visit to Azerbaijan on Tuesday or his visit to Kazakhstan today.

This is probably because the media is invested in the idea of Muslims and Israeli Jews hating each other, with the subtext that Zionist Jewish invaders have taken over historically Muslim lands (and that Jews lived peacefully in Arab lands before Zionism ruined everything.)

And this is a narrative that is not accurate.

As Netanyahu said in his speech with Azerbaijani President Aliyev:

But I think there's something else that’s unique about this relationship: Israel is the Jewish state, it's a Jewish state. Azerbaijan is a Muslim state, predominantly Muslim population. Here you have an example of Muslims and Jews working together to secure a better future for both of us. And it's an example that shines against the background of intolerance and lack of acceptance and mutual respect.

In fact, the mutual respect that you show here, the attitude that you've shown to Jews in Azerbaijan over the years, has fostered this very strong bond of sympathy and admiration for Azerbaijan, first of all with the 70 thousand Jews living in Israel who are from Azerbaijan. It's a human bridge, but also something that we can show the world. You know, the world sees so much intolerance, so much darkness, and here is an example of what relations can be and should be between Muslims and Jews everywhere.

I have to tell you, Mr. President, I said this privately but I'm telling you that there is a change that we see in many parts of the Muslim world and specifically the Arab world. But I think if they want to see what the future could be, come to Azerbaijan and see the friendship and the partnership between Israel and Azerbaijan. It’s not only good for both our countries and both our peoples; I think it’s good for the region and good for the world. So I want to thank you again for welcoming us in the middle of the day. We come day and night. And you are, of course, invited to come to Israel. I hope to receive you there at the appropriate time, when it's convenient for you. And I want to say again how much we appreciate the friendship and hospitality that you've shown us. Thank you.



Iran is upset because, like the media, it wants opposition to Israel's existence to remain a consensus Muslim position.

An Armenian website, Panorama, reported on Monday that Iran considers Netanyahu’s visit objectionable, with a top Iranian cleric, Sayed Mehdi Ghoreishi, telling reporters, “It is unacceptable when a Muslim country tries to develop ties with a perpetrator. The Azerbaijani authorities must take this into account, as it is unacceptable for the Muslim society.”
The media isn't reflecting today's reality of Jewish Muslim relations.  It is reflecting the desire of the extremists to make it a religious conflict.




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Here is a video showing Arabs learning how to edit Wikipedia entries. (The HP computers are especially interesting.)



The logo behind the operators shows that the office is at the Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights Monitor, an anti-Israel NGO that I believe gets funding from many European nations and other NGOs.


If you look up this program at the Euro-Med Monitor site, you will see that they claim merely that they aim "to improve [Wikipedia] content with information on human rights."

But if you look at how the project is described in Arabic news sites, you find out the truth:

The Euro - Mediterranean office in the Gaza Strip launched in the middle of October a "Wikipedia Palestine" project, in cooperation with the Arab Center for the Development of Social Media, which aims to create a cadre of activists and editors for  the encyclopedia "Wikipedia."
Rawan Abu-Assad, who coordinates social media in the Euro - Mediterranean Observatory, talks about the new project:
What are the goals of "Wikipedia Palestine" project?
"Euro-Mediterranean" is seeking through the project to enrich the content of human rights in the free encyclopedia "Wikipedia", promoting the narrative of victims of Israeli violations in the Palestinian territories to present them before the other party's [Israeli] narrative.
We've seen the work of Euro-Med before, and they are anything but objective, and the only human rights they care about are the ones they can use as weapons against Israel, no matter how absurd the claims.

A couple of years ago there was an uproar when Israelis were teaching activists how to use Wikipedia to help hasbara efforts. You can be sure that there will be no outcry about this, even though the goals are explicitly to bash Israel.

(h/t Ibn Boutros)

UPDATE: An earlier version of this post mixed up the Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights Monitor and the Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights Network, which are two separate NGOs. I am not yet certain where this group gets its funding from.




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  • Wednesday, December 14, 2016
  • Elder of Ziyon
The National Geographic magazine of December 1927 had a very long essay on the Holy Land, with some remarkable color photographs.

Here are the color photos of Jews in Jerusalem from 89 years ago.










Among the black and white photos were these of the Chief Rabbis:



Their photos of Muslims and Christians are no less impressive. 

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Tuesday, December 13, 2016

From Ian:

Lapid: ‘Guardian’ delays Mideast conflict solution
Lapid responded to a question that he regarded as hostile from Antony Loewenstein, a Jerusalem- based freelance reporter who writes for the Guardian and other publications.
“You talked before about the idea that since Oslo, Israel has done little or nothing wrong, but the truth is that 2017 is the 50th anniversary of the occupation.
There are now 600,000- 800,000 settlers, all of whom are regarded by international law as illegal, including your good friends in Amona apparently,” Loewenstein’s question began.
“Is there not a deluded idea here that many Israeli politicians, including yourself, continue to believe that one can talk to the world about democracy, freedom and human rights while denying that to millions of Palestinians, and will there not come a time soon, in a year, five years, 10 years, where you and other politicians will be treated like South African politicians during Apartheid?” he asked.
Lapid responded by saying that the question was full of errors and calling it the perfect example of how this is an era that is “post-truth and postfacts.”
“It’s a declared policy of Israel that we need to go to a two-state solution and the ones who refused it were the Palestinians,” Lapid said. “The ones who call Jews pigs and monkeys in their school books are the Palestinians. The problem is that the Palestinians are encouraged by the Guardian and others saying we don’t need to do anything in order to work for our future because the international community will call Israel an apartheid country.”
Lapid said Israel is not an apartheid country but rather a law-abiding democracy, and that unlike the Palestinian leadership, Israel was making sure the Palestinians’ human rights are protected.
“Why don’t you go to the Palestinian Authority or to Gaza and ask them about women’s rights, gay rights, Christian rights,” Lapid told the reporter.
Identifying the Real Threat to Jews
But the CSS report reminds us how Islamist ideology has also motivated terror attacks that specifically targeted Jews. While much of the reporting on the subject of hate crimes has focused on individuals, the report correctly states that the problem here is rooted in ideology. Just as skinhead and neo-Nazi ideas are behind white supremacist attacks, Islamist anti-Semitism that combines age-old religious-based Jew-hatred with resentment of Israel and fuels the efforts of those who have committed violence.
Some of the conclusions contradict conventional wisdom.
One such conclusion is the “critical role of pre-operational surveillance.” Monitoring hotbeds of hate is key to stopping attacks, but, in the effort to avoid accusations of Islamophobia, efforts by law enforcement to keep tabs on radical mosques and other Islamist centers have been abandoned and wrongly branded as acts of prejudice. Without good intelligence, it’s only a matter of time before another major attack might be successful.
Another key point is that attacks on Jews are often precursors to larger incidents in which secular institutions or sites are targeted. It is also true that “lone wolf attacks”—which is how many Islamist terrorist incidents in this country are characterized—are always “lone.” In each case, the attacker received inspiration if not instruction from radical groups. The notion that these are isolated one-off attacks is a delusion that can only lead to more such terrorists slipping through the fingers of law enforcement.
Finally, complacency is “deadly.” The more the country and the Jewish community ignore the source of inspiration for religious-based hate crimes derived from radical Islam and instead concentrate on largely political disputes with no connection to terrorism, the more likely it is that the killers will evade detection. Moreover, the report also makes clear that Jewish institutions need to devote more resources to security.
The CSS should be commended for compiling this report at a time when so much of the discussion about anti-Semitism is divorced from the facts about terrorism. Let’s hope it gets a wide circulation and is taken to heart even by those who are currently muddying the waters on hate with absurd comparisons to Nazi Germany.
NGO Monitor: Human rights, Palestinian terror and congressional lobbying
These concerns are brought into stark relief by the “No Way to Treat a Child Campaign,” -focusing on Israeli detention practices- coordinated by the organizations Defense for Children International-Palestine (DCI-P) and the American Friends Service Committee (AFSC). Under this framework, these NGOs have held Congressional briefings… Similarly, they encouraged Members of Congress to sign letters critical of Israeli security policy in the West Bank, such as the June 20, 2016 letter accusing Israel of widespread abuse of Palestinian prisoners, initiated by Rep. Betty McCollum (D-Minn.).
Of prime concern are the ties between DCI-P officials and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), designated as a terrorist organization by the US, Canada, EU, and Israel for carrying out suicide bombings, assassinations, airline hijackings and other attacks on Israeli civilians.
These examples demonstrate the cardinal importance of proper vetting when engaging with NGOs claiming to promote human rights agendas. It is not enough to rely on their own portrayal of their activities, nor is it sufficient to review only one sub-section of their stated agenda. Potential partners, employees, and board members must be broadly scrutinized, taking into account the totality of their aims, actions, statements, and affiliations.

  • Tuesday, December 13, 2016
  • Elder of Ziyon
Everyone seems to agree that there cannot be peace without dividing Jerusalem and making it the capital of the Palestinian state.

When did that idea first take hold?

In the original 1964  PLO Charter, Jerusalem is not mentioned once.

In the 1968 PLO Charter, after Fatah dominated the organization, Jerusalem is still not mentioned once. 

In Yasir Arafat's 1974 speech to the UN, he demands a single Arab-dominated state to replace Israel, but he does not say that Jerusalem must be its capital.

The earliest mention of east Jerusalem as the capital of a Palestinian state that I could find in an official Arab document was the 1982 Fez Initiative, an Arab peace plan that was ambiguous enough to make it sound like it might have indirectly recognized Israel.

And the 1988 Palestinian "Declaration of Independence" then went on to declare that Jerusalem was its capital.

If Jerusalem is so key to the establishment of a Palestinian state, why was this not mentioned before the 1980s?





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Whoever would have thought that manger scenes and mall Santas could become a topic of contention in America? That saying “Merry Christmas” is becoming taboo in some circles?

Wow.

I spent the first decade and a half of my life in America. Most of my neighbors were Christian, not Jewish. They put up Christmas lights on their houses and had Christmas trees. Some of them even went to midnight mass on Christmas eve. The stores were full of Christmas music and decorations and so were the streets.

They were pretty.

I never imagined it would be necessary to discuss this. It seems so bizarre but as this has become such an issue I, as a Jew, would like to say to Christians everywhere:

For God’s sake, just say: “Merry Christmas.”

Your holiday doesn’t threaten my identity. If this time of the year makes you feel more Christian that’s great. You being more Christian doesn’t make me feel less Jewish.

It would be nice if you could remember that I also have a holiday at this time of year. It’s called Hanukah (and has nothing to do with Jesus). For those that don’t know, one wishes Jews a “Happy Hanukah.”

To Christians who wish me a “Merry Christmas” I always answer: “Thank you. My holiday is called Hanukah but thank you.” The PC police might see wishing someone the wrong holiday wishes as inappropriate, racist and an attempt to subjugate a minority to the majority culture. I see it as a well-intentioned mistake. Really, it’s not a big deal.

If you can’t remember that I have a holiday and that it’s different from yours, you know what? That doesn’t really matter to me. I don’t need your recognition in order to know who I am. It would be nice but it’s not necessary. What you do doesn’t change my identity, my history, my rituals or traditions. I will remain me and you can remain you.

If anything, as a Jewish person, what I’d like to ask of Christians everywhere is to use this time of year to remember the true meaning of Christmas. Do you remember what it is you are supposed to be celebrating? It has nothing to do with presents or lights or food.

Who gets the best stuff has nothing to do with the promise that everyone, no matter what they have done in life, can find redemption. Having enormous family meals often has very little to do with love or gratitude.

As a Jew, I’d like to ask Christians everywhere not to focus on what Jews or Muslims or Sikhs or Buddhists or whoever think of your holiday. Instead focus on what you are doing with your holiday. What are you teaching your children about Christmas?

If you are teaching them to be more Christ-like, that’s the best thing I could ask for. The ideas of hope, loving your fellow man, having compassion for others etc. are eternal. I don’t have to believe in your Savior to recognize that those are good things to teach. I don’t have to be Christian to hope that you will teach your children to be Christ-like or to believe that we’d all be better off if you did so.
I would like to point out that there is a real War on Christmas and it has nothing to do with Starbucks deciding to print “Merry Christmas” or “Happy Holidays” on their cups. Or if the cup is red or green. 
         
The real war on Christmas is happening in the Middle East, in Africa and in China. It is a war on Christians who have pledged to follow in the footsteps of the Nazarene: Jesus of Nazareth (whose Hebrew name was Yehoshua or in English, Joshua). It is a matter of life and death, not a matter of holiday decorations.

Home in Iraq marked with the symbol of the Nazarene
The war is against Christians who are being marked for death because they have refused to submit to the Islamic State. It is people who are beaten up, ostracized, considered “less than,” arrested in the dead of night, blown up in their churches and sometimes even crucified for their faith.

These things are not happening in the Middle Ages, it’s not a thing of the past, they are happening here and now, in a number of places around the world.

But who cares about the Christians of Iraq or Syria or Africa or China when Starbucks makes an issue out of printing the words: “Merry Christmas”?

Maybe you’ve lost your job or are sick. Maybe you think that Trump is scary. Everyone has something that is bothering them in their life. To my Jewish way of thinking it seems that Christmas season should be a time for Christians to look beyond the issues in their own lives.


I would hope that you use this holiday to bring joy to others, to people in your own community less fortunate than you. Buy presents for the kids in the poor family. Invite a lonely veteran to have Christmas dinner with your family. There are countless small ways you can make a big difference… If you do nothing to help others, at least be grateful for what you have. Your “War on Christmas” is ridiculous compared to the real war, the war on Christians. Scary is when your neighbors rise up against you, to kill you. Scary is heads on pikes in the street, executions in the town square. Everything else is child’s play, the complaints of the overly satiated. 

For God’s sake, just say: “Merry Christmas” and be happy that you have the freedom to do so. Anyone who has a problem with your choice of words is free to go curl up in a corner a cry if they like.

I choose to wish my Christian friends a very Merry Christmas!

I’ll be busy here in Israel, reveling in the miracles of Hanukah. As a child, I was taught about Hanukah, “a great miracle happened there.” Now I live in the place where one says: “a great miracle happened here.”  This is MY legacy and that’s what I’m going to focus on.

I certainly won’t be thinking about the people who said “Happy holidays” vs “Happy Hanukah” vs “Merry Christmas.”

That’s the beauty of freedom.

Thank God, we are still free enough to choose what to focus on, to choose our own reactions. There are people elsewhere who don’t have that luxury.





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