A great mystery has become a reality in our own days, as God’s response to a people’s prayer. After nearly two thousand years the city of David, the city of Jerusalem, is now restored to the people of Israel. This marvellous event proclaims a call for the renewal of worship, for the revival of prayer. We did not enter the city of Jerusalem on our own in 1967. Streams of endless craving, endless praying, clinging, dreaming, day and night, midnights, years, decades, centuries, millenia, streams of tears, pledging, waiting—from all over the world, from all comers of the earth, carried us of this generation to the Wall, to the city of Jerusalem.
Monday, October 21, 2024
- Monday, October 21, 2024
- Elder of Ziyon
- Monday, October 21, 2024
- Elder of Ziyon
And of course Palestinians have shown great love for Yahya Sinwar. Last December, Sinwar had an approval rating of 69%, it only went down to 65% in June.
Sunday, October 20, 2024
Supporting Palestinians Has Turned into Normalizing Terrorism
The West opposes violence to achieve political aims. The international community always drew a clear line between advocating for a Palestinian state and supporting Palestinian terrorism.Bassam Tawil: The Biden-Harris Administration Owes Israel's Netanyahu An Apology
But Palestinians never rejected terrorism, and therefore, they never achieved a state.
The Palestinian Authority, a governing body created with world support when it pledged to oppose and actively stop terrorism from its people, has instead actively supported and incentivized Palestinian terrorism with its "pay to slay" program of stipends for Palestinian terrorists.
It has yet to condemn the Oct. 7 terror attacks, and many of its leading officials publicly praised them.
While most Palestinian supporters in the West won't directly say they support Palestinian terrorism, they use words that effectively mean the same thing to Palestinian ears.
In demonstrations around the world, Hizbullah and Hamas flags are proudly raised, and chants for the death of Jews and supporting resistance by any means are regularly heard on the streets of Western cities.
"Again and again we see that Israel absolutely made the right call in not heeding the Biden administration and the rest of the world's insistence that the IDF not invade Rafah." — Lahav Harkov, Israeli journalist, X, October 17, 2024.Israel Fights Alone, Carrying by Itself a Catatonically Suicidal West
"Pretty rich after a year of undermining Netanyahu, saying he MUST go to a ceasefire, MUST deescalate, trying to stop Israel from going into Rafah WHERE SINWAR WAS KILLED, and Kamala boycotting his joint address to Congress - now Biden & Harris have the nerve to congratulate him for setting the path to peace. I'm sure the phone call sounds something like 'You were right Bibi [Netanyahu], we apologize,'" — US Rep. Mike Waltz, X, October 18, 2024
Israel's killing Sinwar and destroying Hamas's military infrastructure in Rafah sadly show how steadfastly the Biden-Harris administration was trying to prevent Israel from achieving victory over the Iran-backed Islamist murderers and rapists responsible for the deadliest attack against Jews since the Holocaust.
Netanyahu deserves credit for ignoring the warnings and threats by Biden and his senior officials. Thanks to Netanyahu, Hamas has been significantly debilitated and Sinwar has been eliminated, making the Middle East a safer place. It now remains to be seen whether the Biden-Harris administration will reconsider its failed foreign policies and apologize to the Israeli prime minister for attempting to undermine his efforts to combat terrorism and bring more security and stability not only to Israel, but the entire Middle East as well.
Little Israel is showing the world how to win again – and saving civilization and a free way of life into the bargain .... let Israel keep winning!
The problem with the JCPOA was, of course, its "sunset clauses." They assured Iran that it could legitimately have as many nuclear weapons as it can produce in just a few short years.
The West has left Israel to fight a war that should never have been Israel's alone. The Western nations, through diplomatic miscalculations, the need for votes, cowardice and a fear of conflict, have essentially outsourced their responsibilities for maintaining global peace to Israel, watching from the sidelines as the conflict ramps up.
If the West is too fearful or reluctant to engage directly in the fight against injustice, terror, and tyranny, the very least it can do is stand with Israel and stop trying to sabotage it at every turn. Support should not be limited to words but include political, diplomatic and military backing. By failing to support Israel fully, the West is empowering exactly those countries working to revise the world order -- from one of freedom to one of tyranny -- by displacing the West.
It is a grotesque reflection on the international community, particularly the Biden-Harris administration and the European Union, not to be offering unequivocal support. Israel's struggle is not just for its own survival but for the security and peace of the Free World. The West, through its passivity, is failing not only Israel, it is hollowing out its own survival.
- Sunday, October 20, 2024
- Elder of Ziyon
Since October 7, 2023, there have been 2,932 qualitative resistance operations in the West Bank that killed 50 "Israelis" and injured 377 others.1797 Shooting operations856 Explosive devices23 car ramming operations40 stabbing operations
Buy the EoZ book, PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism today at Amazon! Or order from your favorite bookseller, using ISBN 9798985708424. Read all about it here! |
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- Sunday, October 20, 2024
- Elder of Ziyon
- Sunday, October 20, 2024
- Elder of Ziyon
The Executive Committee of the Palestine Liberation Organization mourns to the sons of our Palestinian people and all national action factions the martyrdom of the great national leader Yahya Sinwar, head of the political bureau of Hamas .The Executive Committee extends its deepest condolences to the brothers in the Hamas leadership and cadres and to the family of the martyr Yahya Sinwar, calling for moving forward to strengthen our national unity within the framework of our sole legitimate representative, the Palestine Liberation Organization, so that we may be one front to thwart the Israeli plan aimed at displacing our people from their homeland, whether in the Gaza Strip or the West Bank...
With great sadness and pain, the Arab Liberation Front mourns the great national martyr Yahya Sinwar, head of the Political Bureau of the Islamic Resistance Movement Hamas, who ascended to glory as a martyr following an armed clash with the Zionist occupation soldiers in the Tel al-Sultan neighborhood in the city of Rafah on the afternoon of Thursday, October 17, 2024. The Front, led by its Secretary-General Rakad Salem Abu Mahmoud, offered its condolences and sympathy to the brothers in the Political Bureau of the Islamic Resistance Movement Hamas, to the family of the martyr, and to all the sons of our steadfast people.The Arab Liberation Front confirmed that the martyrdom of the leader Yahya Sinwar and before him the martyr leaders Yasser Arafat, Abu Ali Mustafa, Ahmed Yassin, Khalil Al-Wazir and other martyred leaders of the revolution will only increase the strength and steadfastness of our people in confronting this arrogant Zionist enemy.
Saturday, October 19, 2024
Brendan O'Neill: Death of a fascist
This is a man who deserved to die. His crimes against the Jews were legion. He took the postwar cry of ‘Never Again’ and stomped it into the dirt. ‘Again, again’ was his preferred slogan. His violent disregard for Jewish life was a function of his deep-seated anti-Semitism – you don’t get to be leader of a terror group whose founding covenant committed it to an apocalyptic war on the Jews without being a Jew-hater yourself. Yet he was horrendously cavalier about Palestinian life, too. He let Hamas’s war with Israel drag on because he believed the ‘spiralling civilian death toll in Gaza’ would drum up global hate for Israel and global pity for Hamas. He sacrificed Jews to his racist ideology, and Palestinians to his grotesque vanity.JPost Editorial: With Sinwar gone, Israel's next move must be decisive
So Gazans also benefit from the demise of this monster. They are a step closer to liberation from the tyrannical rule of the death-mongers of Hamas. Humankind benefits, too. For Israel’s righteous slaying of Yahya Sinwar is more than justice for 7 October. It is more than a brilliant and targeted strike in a now year-long war on terrorism. It is also a message to the world. It says this: you cannot kill Jews with impunity anymore. It reminds us that those days are gone. It reminds us it isn’t the Middle Ages anymore, when the Church would reward your Jew-hunting, or the 20th century, when pogroms had the blessing of governments. No, there are consequences now to singling out Jews for special opprobrium and wicked violence. Do that today and you might very well die. Do that now and you might get your head caved in, as Sinwar did.
And here’s the chilling thing, the thing that should truly unsettle those of us who live in the West: we needed this message. Our nations needed this reminder. Our young in particular needed to be told that fascist violence is intolerable and killing Jews will be rightfully avenged. For across America and Europe in the aftermath of 7 October, unreason reigned. On our campuses, our streets, in our art world and media world, the sympathies of the privileged went not to the victims of Hamas’s pogrom, but to Hamas. Israel was offered not support but condemnation – and the most shrill, hypocritical and borderline bigoted condemnation you could imagine. ‘You had it coming’ was the subtext of the Israelophobic insanity that swept our cities after the pogrom.
We found ourselves in the horrific situation where many of our fellow citizens were seemingly content to see Jews once again loaded into trucks, burnt to a cinder and killed on account of their ethnicity. This spoke to more than a failure of sense and solidarity. It spoke to how determinedly our societies had turned their backs on the values of the Enlightenment and the virtues of civilisation, and could thus find greater common cause with the anti-Jewish, anti-modernity hysterics of Hamas than with the democratic state of Israel.
So yes, we needed to hear it. We needed to hear that the murder of Jews will be met with the severest of consequences in the 21st century. The killing of Sinwar puts flesh on the bones of the cry of ‘Never Again’ that had come to be so weakened and withered in recent years. Jew-killers everywhere will tremble now, making this not a day of death, but a day of hope.
Hamas and Hezbollah have both suffered heavy losses over the last year, but Israel did what many thought was impossible and took down those responsible for October 7. At long last, all the ringleaders are down and out – for good.Abe Greenwald: Sinwar Is Gone, Hamas Isn’t Far Behind
Decisions will need to be made about what to do next, and this war is still not over. Hezbollah remains a well-armed threat against Israel and continues to regularly fire rockets, drones, and missiles into the Jewish state. Hamas still has men under arms and rockets at their disposal, and 101 hostages still remain in their possession. The Houthis in Yemen are still a threat that could strike at any moment, boasting an arsenal of ballistic missiles and drones, and their leadership remains intact. And then there is the ever-looming threat of Iran, a well-equipped nation who backs all the aforementioned actors and hosts a formidably large army of its own.
What's next?
So what comes next? Will Israel be able to start returning evacuees to their homes? Will they press for another hostage deal on favorable terms? Will the IDF turn its focus to Iran or the Houthis?
Those questions will need to be answered very soon, and it remains to be seen how Israel’s allies such as the US will want the Jewish state to proceed. But for now, we can take solace in the fact that at the very least, Israel’s archenemy over the past year is dead, and that some measure of justice has been achieved for all the people who have lost and suffered since October 7. Zman simchateinu indeed.
All of this also means that Hamas’s remnants might find themselves without the Iranian funds they’d have used to try to reconstitute the organization in the future. The regime in Iran has spent billions of dollars on its terrorist proxies. This was a good investment for decades, enabling Tehran to project power abroad and attack Israel without Iran sticking its neck out. But the mullahs can’t be happy looking at the present state of Hamas (and increasingly of Hezbollah). Iran’s return on its investment in proxy armies is vanishing fast. And with Israel about to take the fight straight to the regime, Iran needs to reallocate its resources.
So who wants to fill Sinwar’s shoes now? Israel took out Hamas leader Ismael Haniyeh in July. The crown then fell to Sinwar, and now he’s dead. The list of senior Hamas members killed by Israel is long and growing longer by the day. The same, rather suddenly, applies to the senior ranks of Hezbollah. There aren’t many takers for the job of next mole to be whacked. Especially if it means getting whacked for a crumbling cause with a spare and ruined fighting force. It’s not going to be easy recruiting new members to what’s left of Hamas.
But what about Hamas’s supporters over here in the U.S.? Are they still “exhilarated” by the October 7 attack? Do they still think that it was a “gift to Allah from the world”? That “Palestine has never been as within reach”? Are they satisfied with what Hamas has wrought for the people of Gaza? And do they still think they’re on the winning side against Israel? Even if they now recognize Hamas’s strategic failure, they undoubtedly still support its aims. And they’re the kind of enemy that’s truly hard to defeat because you can’t destroy moral imbecility. On October 7, 2023, Sinwar ensured his own demise and that of his monstrous organization. But the woke jihadists of the West will live to tweet another day.
And here’s a thought for the Biden administration. The U.S. has recently threatened to withhold arms shipments to Israel over concerns about humanitarian aid getting into Gaza. The greatest gift of humanitarian aid ever received by the people of Gaza was Israel’s killing of Yahya Sinwar. His death, and the destruction of Hamas, don’t by any means guarantee that the Palestinians will one day be able to thrive in freedom. But so long as he was in charge, that would have remained a certain impossibility. And if Israel had heeded the Biden administration’s calls for a ceasefire, this massive aid package would never have been delivered. Take the win, Mr. President.
Wednesday, October 16, 2024
Andrew Roberts: Churchill would have stood behind Israel. We must too
Although the USSR and USA were not fighting the Second World War beside Britain in 1940, and only came into the war as a result of Hitler’s decisions rather than their own in 1941, the British were supported stalwartly by Canada, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, India and other possessions and dependencies around the globe.Hamasticide: Apocalyptic barbarians at the gates of Israel
By total contrast, much of the world has shunned Israel as she fights its battles against Islamist tyranny and terrorism, ultimately for them as well as for herself.
The recent scene in the United Nations where delegates filed out of the General Assembly room rather than even listen to Bibi Netanyahu sums up the situation.
Meanwhile, South Africa has tried to divert attention from the corruption of its own government by making unfounded charges against Israel at the International Criminal Court.
At least the neutral nations in 1940-41 were privately hoping that civilisation would destroy barbarism: today they cannot even be counted on to do that.
What Churchill said about Britain’s ability “to ride out the storm of war” has powerful echoes in modern-day Israel.
The performance of the IDF was woeful on October 7 itself but since then it has fought with superb professionalism in destroying and degrading Hamas in Gaza, although of course we still eagerly await the moment when Yahya Sinwar meets the same fate as the Führer in the Reich Chancellery on April 30, 1945. Similarly, the failures of the hitherto-much-vaunted Israeli intelligence were apparent for all to see on October 7, yet since then it has carried out the flawless supply-chain “grim beeper” attacks that have done so much to cripple Hezbollah. Churchill would recognise the phenomenon of these early humiliations – with hardly a significant victory from 1939 to El Alamein in 1942, except for the Battle of Britain – turning into later triumphs. The IDF’s steep but highly successful learning curve in Gaza and now southern Lebanon has been impressive, just as it was for the Allied armies in the Second World War.
To paraphrase Churchill in his and his country’s finest hour, Israel is proving herself yet again able to defend her home, to ride out the storm of war, and to outlive the menace of tyranny, if necessary for years, if necessary alone. At any rate, that is what she is going to try to do. It is the solemn duty of everyone who cares about the defeat of barbarism to stand beside her.
Hamas senior leader Yahya Sinwar used his imagination well, ordering the tearing of children from their mothers’ arms and the killing of mothers in front of their children, inventing every possible way to make the terror more horrendous than that of ISIS, to exterminate in the cruelest manner possible. Sinwar commanded his men to kill babies; to brutally rape women of any age, whether alive or dead; to castrate men and boys; to decapitate; to burn entire families alive along with the symbols of their lives. Thus, he forever epitomized the savagery of his movement, making him the absolute leader of contemporary hatred.Jonathan Tobin: Jewish anti-Zionists can’t be part of our ‘big tent’ community
Sinwar placed Hamas at the head of a worldwide movement for the deconstruction of history that legitimizes rage as the emblem of life. That believes that it must take this action against all of civilization. This movement has decided that the contemporary outcome of history and religion, including the Jewish-Christian civilization and the human rights culture, is advantageous only for those who created [it], and so it is a tool of oppression to be ripped to pieces. The diabolical choice to tear down this civilization permits any means to destroy the “colonialists,” the “imperialists,” the “racists,” the rich, the white men, and above all, of course, the Jews. This concept finds consensus far from Gaza, first in the Muslim world, which places the “Islamophobes” among the oppressors, and along with the students, the LGTBQ movements, the ecological movements that think the Earth will be destroyed by capitalist interests and the Jews.
The United Nations, the Palestinian Authority, and even the Ivy League universities have still not condemned Sinwar’s atrocities. It is a crime whose “context” is what counts, and nobody expected that after a massacre like Oct. 7, the destruction of contemporary civilization would piggyback on an antisemitic atrocity. The plan, unlike that of the Nazis in their time, was to destroy the Jews by publicizing as widely as possible the resolve to make them suffer one by one. Hamas leaders repeated the promise: “We did it, and we will do it again and again and again.”
Once the barbarians entered Israel, they roared down the roads by the hundreds in white pickup trucks and on motorbikes, shooting everyone they encountered, pedestrians and drivers, in the head and chasing those who tried to escape. They were divided into units, some assigned to close public roads, while others headed for the countryside and the kibbutzim. They were systematic, coming back to seize anyone who might have escaped them. They opened the doors of the cars abandoned at the sides of the roads to make sure everyone was dead and finish off the wounded. Then they came together to shout for joy over the bodies of the dead: Itbah el Yehud! Allah hu Akbar! They all shouted with the index finger raised, indicating their blasphemous oneness of God, the primal call of jihadism: “Allah is great.” By cutting off the head of a baby, the murderer was fulfilling the mission of reconquering the land occupied by the Jews, purifying it of the Western and democratic culture.
Historical memory lies at the heart of most Jewish holiday commemorations. During Sukkot, for example, Jews daily welcome ushpizin—“guests” or ancestors, including the patriarchs of Judaism—into their sukkahs, which themselves are a remembrance of the post-Exodus wanderings of the Jewish people in the desert. It is just one example of how identification with the past is very much part of the present. It also emphasizes the collective fate of a people on their way to their homeland, where shelter would hopefully no longer be a function of impermanent huts open to the stars. On Sukkot, we not only invite guests into our homes; it is a way we connect ourselves with that journey to Israel.
But for a small though noisy minority of contemporary American Jews, the fate of other Jews and Israel is no longer a matter with which they concern themselves. As a consequence, it is now more imperative than ever for Jews to stop pretending that one can join those chanting “from the river to the sea” and “globalize the intifada”—slogans that justify and encourage the genocide of the Jews of Israel—and still be considered part of the Jewish community.
Anti-Zionists may be considered Jewish according to religious law as well as mainstream by The New York Times. But in the post-Oct. 7 world, it should no longer be possible to pretend to speak for Jewish values or tradition, or to be part of the Jewish world, while opposing the right of the one Jewish state on the planet to exist and defend itself. That is true whether those who take that position explicitly—as do Jews who join the pro-Hamas demonstrators in America’s streets and on college campuses—or who merely rationalize their efforts from the sidelines or on the platforms provided to them by the liberal mainstream media.
Negotiating what with whom?
Does Austin not think Israel is trying to do that? What would make it “possible” sooner rather than later? Does he think that talking to Hamas will do it? Just this month, U.S. officials said Hamas senior leader Yahya Sinwar is the primary impediment to a deal. And again, to be fair to Austin, he goes where the president goes, and U.S. President Joe Biden said the country is “doubling down” on negotiations.Biden’s betrayal of Israel is clear weakness masquerading as policy
Instead of doubling down, the administration should try a different path—one with which the secretary of defense should be familiar.
In 1939, following years of belligerence and the Anschluss, Nazi Germany launched World War II with the invasion of Poland. The Blitzkrieg followed in May 1940. Then Dunkirk, the French surrender, the Battle of Britain, Operation Barbarossa and Stalingrad. The Axis surrendered in North Africa in May 1943.
Maybe that was enough. Maybe the Allies should have sued for a negotiated settlement, offering the Germans … what? Autonomy for France and a promise never to take back Alsace? It was, after all, largely German-speaking and not terribly happy with France anyhow.
Then, the siege of Leningrad ended in the east and Italy surrendered in the west; followed by D-Day and the liberation of Paris.
Maybe that was the time to offer the Nazis a deal they could live with; after all, a lot of civilians had already been killed.
While the Soviets moved westward, the Allies moved east. The Germans launched the Battle of the Bulge in December of 1944, intending to split the Allied forces and allow the Germans to encircle the Allied armies and force them to negotiate a peace treaty in Germany’s favor.
Maybe they’d only keep half the concentration camps.
The Allies kept going and on May 7, 1945, Germany surrendered. Unconditionally. VE Day was on May 8.
President Franklin Roosevelt was a very mixed bag for Jews, to put it kindly. But on unconditional surrender, he was right, opposing half-measures for temporary quiet in Europe that might have been mistaken for “peace.”
Back to the present: Negotiations work best when the parties agree on an endgame and discuss, even acrimoniously, how to get there. Israel seeks security for its people; the removal of the military and political power of Hamas and now Hezbollah as well; and the return of the hostages. As long as Iran, Hamas, Hezbollah and friends believe the endgame is the destruction of Israel, their surrender is necessary.
There was nothing then and there is nothing now to negotiate with evil.
A refresher course on how we got here is apparently necessary for a White House that seems to have forgotten.Michael Oren: Israel Pays a Price for Delaying Its Retaliation against Iran
Hamas broke a cease-fire to launch the war with Israel more than a year ago with its barbaric invasion from Gaza.
Hezbollah, in a show of support, began its daily barrage of rockets and drones the very next day, forcing more than 60,000 Israelis to evacuate from their homes along the Lebanon border.
They still can’t go home, and Israel is still taking incoming fire from all sides, with Iran playing the role of puppet master and financier.
The mullahs are also firing on Israel, yet the White House is insisting all Israeli retaliation be modest.
Indeed, Biden reportedly extracted a promise from Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that Israel’s response will not hit Iran’s oil fields or its nuclear facilities.
The argument against striking the oil fields is that taking Iran’s production off the global market would drive up prices everywhere.
The last thing Dems want is a spike in gasoline and heating oil prices as voters make their choice.
Perilous duel with Iran
The reason for the American ban on striking Iran’s nuclear facilities is less clear, although it surely reflects Biden’s constant fear of escalation.
It’s the same fear that has kept our ally Ukraine in a bloody stalemate with Russia.
Michael Oren, the former Israeli ambassador, likens the tit-for-tat limitation to a boxing strategy known as the “rope-a-dope.”
He cautions that “the knockout punch, the haymaker, is the Iranian nuclear weapon.”
Oren, writing in The Times of Israel, adds: “the only question is whether Israel is prepared to deliver ours first.”
That’s the crunch of the argument that Israel should strike the nuke plants before Iran gets a bomb and the missile to deliver it.
The clock is ticking, with some reports saying the mullahs could reach that point within weeks.
Netanyahu has often said Israel will never allow a nuclear-armed Iran because the mullahs have made it clear that eliminating Israel is their aim.
One former Iranian official even called Israel a “one bomb country,” meaning that’s all Iran would need.
Although Israel is said to be still debating how it will respond to Iran’s latest attack, it has greatly diminished both Hamas and Hezbollah and thus made Iran more vulnerable.
But Oren argues that a stalemate offers insufficient protection because Iran could throw its nuke punch without notice.
“Now is our chance to strike,” he concludes.
“We may not get another.”
In a piece Mosaic published exactly one year ago today, Jonathan Schachter praised American military and rhetorical support for Israel, but also warned of the dangers of a “bear hug,” whereby U.S. aid becomes a tool for preventing the Jewish state from taking necessary actions to defend itself. Michael Oren fears Israel now finds itself in a similar situation in the wake of Iran’s October 1 missile attack, resulting in
a prolonged delay in Israel’s response that threatens our security no less than the missiles themselves. With each passing day of inaction, Israel’s casus belli grows weaker. If and when Israel acts, the world will scarcely remember why.
What, besides avoiding further friction with the White House, does Israel have to gain by waiting? . . . Can we use the American administration’s fear of our response to Iran to secure vital concessions from Washington?
One such concession would be the president’s agreement not to oppose Israel’s implementation of General Giora Eiland’s plan to declare northern Gaza a closed military zone and then trade territory for Hamas’s release of the hostages. Another concession would be a presidential commitment to intervene militarily against Iran’s nuclear plants once they enrich uranium above 60 percent. Yet another concession would be America’s agreement to sell us long-range strategic bombers capable of dropping 15,000 kilogram bunker-buster bombs from a height that Iran’s defenses cannot reach. Such a sale would say to the Iranians “we won’t bomb your facilities this time but we have the means to do so effectively in the future.”
In the past two days, as if to confirm Oren’s suspicions, the U.S. has begun transfer of the THAAD missile-defense system to Israel while reportedly extracting a promise that Israel will not attack Iran’s oil infrastructure or nuclear program. As to what Israel is getting in return, Washington also appears to be pressuring Jerusalem not to go through with the Eiland plan.
- Wednesday, October 16, 2024
- Elder of Ziyon
From Yinon Magal's Twitter account:
— Abu Ali Express English (@AbuAliEnglishB1) October 16, 2024
Battalion 7012 of the Alexandroni Brigade builds sukkah in #Lebanon!
חג שמח 🇮🇱🇮🇱
عيد العرش اليهودي في لبنان pic.twitter.com/rWyXmOdgfW
- Wednesday, October 16, 2024
- Elder of Ziyon
- Forest Rain
By Forest Rain
Stress
poisoning and bombs
On October 13th, I had a very interesting day. Too
interesting. By the end of the day, I felt like I had been steam-rolled and it
took me 24 hours to bring myself back to normal.
Of course, our normal here in Israel, particularly in the
north, isn’t normal at all.
Our day began with a meeting with an important Israeli
official in a Haifa coffee shop. The conversation was interrupted by the sound
of sirens, screaming that we needed to race to the bomb shelter – only there
was no shelter in the coffee shop. What do we do? Everyone got up, leaving
their food and drinks on the table and ran across the street to the shelter in
the nearest building.
Packed in the shelter of an apartment building with people
we don’t know, we had to wait 10 minutes before leaving - because while the
Iron Dome is excellent, no system works 100% of the time and shrapnel from the
missile interceptions can continue to fall from the sky – so we continued our
discussion with explosions overhead and a girl crying in the corner from
stress.
Then we returned to the shop, paid our bill, and continued
our day.
Later in the day, we drove toward the northern border.
It’s not safe to travel to places under missile bombardment If
you are in a shelter, that along with the Iron Dome is likely to keep you more
or less safe (and even that is not 100% certain) but traveling between places,
there is no shelter and no assurance that you won’t be hit.
But we wanted to see what was really happening to our
country. Haifa is under bombardment and the communities along the way to the
north have been bombarded even more than Haifa. Traveling that path is a risk
but bombs can find you anywhere and the thought that any terrorist would
succeed in terrorizing me into not going wherever I want in my own country made
me so angry that there was no way I was staying home.
The communities bordering Lebanon have been evacuated for
the last year. When the IDF entered Lebanon with ground forces, the area became
a closed military zone – meaning that only the military or those approved
by the military can travel there.
But from Haifa to Nahariya, life goes on. People live in
their homes, go to work, shop, and send their kids to school (according to the
assessments of the IDF Homefront Command which shuts down the schools when the
bombings are too bad).
We decided to drive on the old road rather than the highway.
The highway is faster but the old road has buildings along the way, making it
possible to find shelter should we get caught outside when the sirens go off.
We popped in to check on our daughter-in-law who was by
herself in their home near Nahariya. Our son, her husband, is enlisted and
someplace in the north. That means worrying about him while being bombed. Fun
stuff. She told us that although where they live there supposedly is 30 seconds
to get to the shelter when the sirens go off, the explosions often come before
the siren.
We had a nice visit and continued further north.
After Nahariya, soldiers stand guard closing the area to
unnecessary travel – for the protection of civilians and to make it easier for
the army to do what they need to do. The soldiers we talked to were pleasant
(as our soldiers usually are) but also anxious (which is not usual at all).
They were concerned about Hezbollah UAVs invading and bombing them. It was later
in the day when we saw just how justified their concern was…
It was getting dark. Definitely, time to go home. That’s
when the sirens went off.
We were on the road, nowhere near any kind of shelter. We
did what other drivers did – stopped the car on the side of the road and ran
down a small incline as far away from the cars as we could get. There was a
ditch that provided some semblance of protection so we laid down and covered
our heads, as the Home Front Command instructs us to do. When missiles hit
shrapnel flies up at an angle so the best bet is to be flat on the ground and
cover your head.
The sound of the siren blaring from the nearest community
and my phone was nerve-wracking enough. Then I saw on the app update that the
sirens were due to an incoming UAV. Then we heard explosions - the IDF trying
to intercept – which is more difficult to do than with missiles that have a
defined trajectory.
So there I was face down in a ditch, in the dark, shaking and cursing my
curiosity. Len covered me with his body. He wanted me to feel safe and calm
down so he made jokes to distract me. I laughed. Then I heard a little girl
wailing in terror. She was further down the road with whoever it was that was
trying to take her home. None of us were hurt but if I was shaking, how would a
small child feel?
How long do you wait before moving when it’s a UAV attack
and not a missile? I could see on my app that alerts were going off further
south so obviously the UAV was moving in that direction, away from us. I
assumed that it would be shot down closer to Haifa.
We got in the car and continued on the way home.
Outside Nahariya, the sirens went off again. This time
missiles. Like all the other drivers on the road, we pulled over and got out to
run to the nearest shelter. There wasn’t anything close and there wasn’t time.
Some people stopped next to a wall that couldn’t really help. We were close to
the mall so we ran in that direction, hoping to find an entrance. A building
outside the mall looked like a bomb shelter but it was closed. It took us a
moment to figure out that it was an electricity generator room for the mall (so
not a place to go inside). So we stood in between the wall of that building and
the wall of the mall, a relatively good place to be. Women from Nahariya were
reluctant to stand where we were because they were wearing flip-flops and there
were thorny bushes under our feet. But what’s a few scrapes in compared with
flying shrapnel? We encouraged them to come in and they waited with us. One had
a 10 or 12 year old daughter. She was silent but had tears in her eyes and her
face was twisted in fear.
I swallowed my own pounding heart to smile and tell her she
was very brave and doing a great job. It is absolutely infuriating to see
children being terrorized – and children should not see grown-ups afraid.
There were no more sirens on the way to Haifa. When we
arrived we thought we’d take some time to sit outside on the beautiful
promenade overlooking the bay, breathe some fresh air, and relax before going
home.
The weather was beautiful and the view stunning, as
always.
And then, from the base at the bottom of the Carmel we heard
their loudspeakers: “Warning! Be prepared for impact! Take shelter!”
What the hell?! First of all it was shocking that we could
hear what was happening from so far away. And my reflexive response was, why do
our soldiers have to be prepared for impact?! Hezbollah should be preparing for
impact!!
And then they shot an intercept missile, bright like a
streak of fire into the night sky. The trajectory was so steep, at first it
wasn’t clear what direction it was going in – my body tensed before my mind
understood what it was seeing. It looked like it went to Lebanon. The light
disappeared and then we heard the sound of the explosion rolling back at us
like a wave coming in from the sea.
Looking at my phone to see updates on what happened, I began
seeing the lists of wounded roll in. The UAV that didn’t explode on us flew all
the way to Benyamina and exploded on people there. A lot of people (later we
learned that they were soldiers – 4 were killed, dozens wounded, some
critically).
We went home and began to unwind from the too intense day. I
understood that my body was washed with adrenaline, and I needed to decompress
or suffer from stress poisoning, so I drank a lot of water.
And then the sirens went off.
We raced down the stairs to the shelter and listened to the
huge explosions of the missile interceptions over our house.
It wasn’t easy to relax and go to sleep after all that but
finally we managed – only to be woken up too early in the morning by sirens.
That was just one day when nothing happened to us.
Buy the EoZ book, PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism today at Amazon! Or order from your favorite bookseller, using ISBN 9798985708424. Read all about it here! |
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- Wednesday, October 16, 2024
- Elder of Ziyon
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu should not forget his country was created as a result of a resolution adopted by the United Nations, French President Emmanuel Macron told cabinet on Tuesday, urging Israel to abide by UN decisions.“Mr Netanyahu must not forget that his country was created by a decision of the UN,” Macron told the weekly French cabinet meeting, referring to the resolution adopted in November 1947 by the United Nations General Assembly on the plan to partition Palestine into a Jewish state and an Arab state.“Therefore this is not the time to disregard the decisions of the UN,” he added, as Israel wages a ground offensive against the Iran-backed Shiite militant group Hezbollah in southern Lebanon, where the UN peacekeepers are deployed.
As I hear a world leader reminding Israel that it “was created by a UN decision,” it’s a perfect moment to address why European elites seem particularly vexed by Israel’s independence— and why they expect obedience.For those European elites, the right of self-determination of the French, Palestinians, or Chinese, is framed as a matter of justice: an inherent, unconditional right of a people to their land. But when it comes to the Jews, the narrative shifts. Their right to self-determination is not viewed as intrinsic, but as an act of European compassion—granted out of guilt for the Holocaust. In this view, Israel exists not because of a millennia-old connection to the land, or because of global rejection or because of Zionist activity, but because Europe, burdened by its conscience, graciously allowed the Jews a state through the UN.This paternalist narrative strips Jews of their agency and their deep historical ties to Israel. But much worse, it turns their right to a homeland into something conditional—a “gift” from Europe. And like any gift, it can be revoked if the recipient misbehaves.And this is where the obsession with Israel kicks in. If Europe believes it bestowed Israel’s right to exist, then it assumes the authority to judge Israel’s conduct. The Jews, unlike other nations, are expected to earn their right to sovereignty daily by conforming to the standards set by their “benefactors.” Fail to do so, and the right that was “given” can be questioned—or withdrawn.
Buy the EoZ book, PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism today at Amazon! Or order from your favorite bookseller, using ISBN 9798985708424. Read all about it here! |
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- Wednesday, October 16, 2024
- Elder of Ziyon
[I]n furtherance of supporting section 620I of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 (22 U.S.C. 2378-1) and applicable international law, obtain credible and reliable written assurances from a representative of the recipient country as the Secretary of State deems appropriate that, in any area of armed conflict where the recipient country uses such defense articles, consistent with applicable international law, the recipient country will facilitate and not arbitrarily deny, restrict, or otherwise impede, directly or indirectly, the transport or delivery of United States humanitarian assistance and United States Government-supported international efforts to provide humanitarian assistance.
Hamas has profited by at least a half billion dollars from humanitarian aid entering the Gaza Strip, Channel 12 reported on Tuesday.“It’s actually become the main oxygen pipeline for the terrorist organization,” reported Channel 12‘s Almog Boker.Hamas steals the humanitarian aid and sells it to the population. It then uses the money to finance recruitment, Boker said, noting that 3,000 terrorists have been added to Hamas’s payroll in northern Gaza.
Buy the EoZ book, PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism today at Amazon! Or order from your favorite bookseller, using ISBN 9798985708424. Read all about it here! |
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