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  • admin 8:04 pm on June 1, 2011 Permalink
    Tags: , , , Jerusalem Diaries   

    Celebrating Jerusalem Day 2011 

    © Judy Lash Balint

    The amplified wail of the muezzin from the Al Aksa mosque on the Temple Mount couldn’t drown out the celebrations ringing out over Jerusalem tonight.

    From every corner of the Old City, youthful voices join in singing all the classic Six-Day War songs as the city celebrates the 44th anniversary of reunification.

    The sounds of prayer and thanksgiving at the Kotel rise up above the ancient walls–no longer the ‘wailing wall’ of years past when others ruled Jerusalem. Hundreds of groups of energetic teenagers clad in blue and white dance in front of the Kotel and clog the approaches to the Old City.

    They’ve come to the capital, along with thousands of others, to join with various army bands, street performers and musicians who all wind their way through the center of
    the city and then disperse amongst the myriad of events marking the opening of Jerusalem Day.

    The main challenge of the day is getting anywhere. With roads closed throughout the city center, driving is out of the question. Many bus routes suspend operations for a couple of hours during the parade, and getting close to the Old City is virtually impossible except on foot, so the masses take to the streets in a jovial mass of Jerusalem humanity.

    Beit Orot, the hesder Yeshiva on the Mount of Olives celebrates Yom Yerushalayim in their usual festive manner, with an all-night event. Traditionally known as THE happening Jerusalem Day party place for the national religious yeshiva crowd, this year’s festivities uphold its reputation. The bands stop playing around 4:30 a.m. when the young crowd picks up their flags to retrace the footsteps of the paratroopers of 1967. They walk down the same road from the Mt of Olives, turning left at the Kidron Valley and following the Jericho Road as far as Lion’s Gate where they climb the hill to enter the Old City, just like the paratroopers did 44 years ago. The students generally make it to the Kotel in time for the Vatikin early morning prayers. Forty-four years ago, it was midday as the IDF soldiers made their way down from their conquest of the Temple Mount to become the first Jews in 19 years to gain access to the Kotel.

    © Judy Lash Balint

    For the Ethiopian community, Jerusalem Day has evolved into a memorial day. Thousands of Ethiopian Jews who trekked through Sudan and the Ethiopian countryside to take part in Operations Solomon (1991) and Moses (1984) died before they saw Jerusalem. Their relatives mark the day with prayer and ceremonies in the Holy City.

    The festivities and commemorations continue all day with the flag parade culminating in a swirl of dancing and celebrating at the Kotel; the official memorial ceremony at Ammunition Hill for the fallen soldiers who helped liberate Jerusalem; the Mayor’s annual open house reception at the Tower of David and the awarding of the prestigious Yakiray Yerushalayim prizes to Jerusalemites who have made a special contribution to the city.

    For one day, at least, we ignore the security concerns and political realities (even though it’s hard to swallow the fact that not a single country in the world maintains an embassy in Israel’s capital and that EU and US officials never attend Jerusalem Day observances) and we focus on the miracle that restored the Jewish people to the city that King David declared as his capital so many thousands of years ago.Site Feed

     
  • admin 6:41 am on May 22, 2011 Permalink
    Tags: Actthis, , Jerusalem Diaries,   

    Arab terror: Your tax dollars at work? 

    Arnold and Frimet Roth, parents of Malki, 15, murdered by Arab terrorists in the Sbarro restuarant bomb attack in Jerusalem in 2001 are trying to raise a voice of conscience against European and US tax dollars being used to fund these same terrorists: Read and act:

    This Ongoing War: A Blog: 20-May-11: Rewarding the Palestinian Arab terrorists: is this being done in your name?Site Feed

     
  • admin 7:36 pm on May 19, 2011 Permalink
    Tags: , , Jerusalem Diaries,   

    Whats that? Catch the shifts in Obamas Mid-East Speech 

    Elder of Ziyon provides an astute analysis of the nuances of Obama’s Middle East speech. Wonder if Bibi will invite BO over here for a look-see so he’ll have a clue what a return to the 1967 borders really means.

    This will give you an idea…Site Feed

     
  • admin 5:28 am on May 10, 2011 Permalink
    Tags: Atzmaut, Chag, Jerusalem Diaries, Tefila   

    Yom Haatzmaut 2011 Hits the Road 

    Click on the title link above for a few minutes of inspiring Yom Ha’atzmaut tefila
    ———————————————

    Chag Atzmaut sameach!

    Site Feed

     
  • admin 8:39 am on May 8, 2011 Permalink
    Tags: , Jerusalem Diaries, ,   

    Yom Hazikaron: Israel Remembers 

    The Netanyahu family visiting the grave of Lt Col. Yoni Netanyahu, brother of the prime minister, who fell in 1976.

    In a country of 7 million people, there’s barely anyone not touched in some direct way by one of Israel’s wars or the terror attacks that have plagued Israeli citizens since before the founding of the State.
    This year’s statistics indicate that 22,867 men and women have been killed defending the land since 1860, the year the first Jewish settlers left the secure walls of Jerusalem to build new Jewish neighborhoods.

    Since the end of the 1948 War of Independence, 2,443 people have been killed in Israel in terror attacks – 13 in the past year.

    Also in the past year, 183 members of the security forces – police, IDF, Border Police, Security Agency and other organizations – have been killed in service of the state.

    Among the bereaved families is PM Bibi Netanyahu, whose brother Yoni was a commander in the successful Entebbe campaign of 1976.

    Last night, the Netanyahu family paid a visit to Yoni’s grave at Mt Herzl to pay their respects in advance of Memorial Day (to avoid huge security problems on the day itself).

    The official ceremonies marking the opening of Memorial Day take place at 8 p.m tonight at the Western Wall.

    To witness the abrupt change in mood between Memorial Day and Yom Ha’atzmaut, Israel Independence Day, tune in to the live feed of Tuesday morning’s ceremony at the President’s Residence that includes music, presentation of awards to outstanding soldiers and the official Air Force fly-by. Tuesday, 10 May 2011 at 09:30-11:00 Israel Time (+3 GMT).

    Site Feed

     
  • admin 9:56 am on April 26, 2011 Permalink
    Tags: , , Jerusalem Diaries,   

    Goldstone, International Law, and the Coming Crisis in September 

    Anyone in the Los Angeles area? Here’s an event not to be missed: Three outstanding legal minds will discuss the ramifications of the Goldstone Report and what’s in store in September at the UN…
    Goldstone, International Law, and the Coming Crisis in September

    Goldstone, International Law, and the Coming Crisis in September

    A presentation by three distinguished lawyers, historians, and scholars

    Avi Bell
    J.J. Surbeck
    Rick Richman

    Thursday, April 28 – 7 p.m.

    Luxe Hotel Sunset
    11461 Sunset Blvd.
    Los Angeles, CA 90049

    Avi Bell participated in a debate on the Goldstone Report at Stanford Law School on March 28 with Justice Richard Goldstone and others, three days before Justice Goldstone published his now-famous recantation in the Washington Post. The Goldstone Recantation demonstrates that the truth about international law and the Arab-Israeli conflict, although slow to get its boots on, can be used as an effective defense by those who are knowledgeable in it.

    International law is usually considered only when it can be played against Israel and is generally ignored when it is in fact in Israel’

     
  • admin 12:18 pm on April 22, 2011 Permalink
    Tags: , Jerusalem Diaries, ,   

    The “Merchants of Peace” Racket

    I’m on the same mailing list of this “peace activist” that Khaled Abu Toameh writes about–it is quite mind-boggling to read of the almost weekly excursions abroad this guy brags about as he travels the world to conferences and meetings on making peace in the Middle East. And then US lefty groups pay him an honorarium when he comes to visit to raise more money so he can gad about to even more “peace-making” meetings.

    In a recent pitch for perpetuating his travel bug, the activist wrote to his list: “* Speaking engagements should be booked directly with G. Speaking arrangements include a minimum speaker’

     
  • admin 9:50 am on April 18, 2011 Permalink
    Tags: , Jerusalem Diaries, , Sic   

    Palestine-Lovers Martyr Syndrome Strikes Again 

    After the brutal strangling by Arab terrorists of Italian International Solidarity Movement member Vitorio Arrigoni in Gaza, his Palestine-loving fellow travelers held a gathering in Ramallah. One of the signs held by a young woman is captured by an AP photographer and published in the New York Times. It says it all: “I Love Palstine (sic) Kill Mee (sic) Too.”

    Ah yes–another potential martyr for the cause: Rachel Corrie, Tom Hurndall, Vitoria Arrigoni…”please, let me be the next martyr.”

    Evidently the posters plastered everywhere in Bethlehem, Nablus, Ramallah and Jenin lauding Arab terrorists as “shahid” and the squares named after Arabs who murdered Jews seem to have done their job. Now we have westerner sympathizers begging to join the ranks of the martyrs too…

    No doubt the next signs we’ll see from these humanitarians will carry slogans like: “We are all Awarta,” in solidarity with the village that harbored the two teenage murderers of the Fogel family.Site Feed

     
  • admin 10:47 am on April 17, 2011 Permalink
    Tags: , Jerusalem Diaries, ,   

    Two 18 year old Arab Relatives Murdered Fogel Kids 

    The IDF Spokesperson announced the arrest of two 18 year olds in the brutal slaying of the Fogel family from Itamar a month ago:

    JoeSettler over at the Muqata blog has it right:
    Conclusions? It appears that plenty of people in this town knew who did it. Relatives who helped. Those who helped try to sell the weapons. Others who hid weapons.

    If ever there was a town that deserved to be laid waste – this would be it.Site Feed

     
  • admin 7:41 am on April 13, 2011 Permalink
    Tags: , Jerusalem Diaries, ,   

    18 Ways To Know Passover is Coming in Israel 

    Citizens of southern Israel face the prospect of yet another Passover under fire. The barrage of missiles and rockets on our southern cities and surrounding western Negev kibbutzim is almost taken for granted by the international community as they prefer to focus on whether a few hundred more apartments are being planned in a Jerusalem neighborhood.

    As if that weren’t bad enough, hundreds of former Gush Katif residents are still in temporary housing almost six years since their eviction. Many who moved into the vast and dismal caravilla camp of Nitzan near Ashkelon are still unemployed and dealing with the emotional and psychological effects of displacement.

    On the religious front, Haaretz revealed in a poll that 68 percent of the population answers ‘no’ when asked if they are planning on eating chametz during Pesach and 75 percent of Israelis will take part in a seder.

    Meantime, on Pesach the extent of the dire poverty of hundreds of thousands of Israelis is exposed. Latest figures indicate that roughly 20.5% of Israeli families live below the poverty line. Moreover, 24.7% of Israel’s residents and 35.9% of its children live in impoverished families.

    Families and the elderly form almost endless lines in every city around the food banks and soup kitchens that do their best to provide the basics necessary to celebrate the holiday.

    In every ultra-orthodox neighborhood during the week before Pesach, men and boys block the narrow streets with hand trucks piled high with sacks of carrots, potatoes, oranges and cartons of eggs–all courtesy of the Kimcha D’Pischa funds that funnel donations from abroad to the Haredi communities, specifically for Pesach food.

    Tourists, largely oblivious to our problems, have begun to descend on us. Most visible are the busloads of Christian pilgrims from eastern Europe, Nigeria and an assortment of Asian countries looking to celebrate Easter–the Jews arrive in much smaller family groups, excited to be in Israel for one of the three pilgrimage festivals.

    Meanwhile, for those who have read this far, here are 18 Ways You Know Pesach is Coming To Israel:

    1. The Israeli Army presses into service some 200 IDF chaplains including reservists, to commence the massive task of kashering the hundreds of kitchens, mess halls and eating corners used by soldiers all over the country.

    2. Street scenes in Israel change every day before Passover according to what’s halachically necessary: In the days before the holiday, yeshiva students wielding blow torches preside over huge vats of boiling water stationed every few blocks on the street and in the courtyard of every mikveh. The lines to dunk cutlery, kiddush cups and the like start to grow every day, and, at the last minute, blow torches are at the ready to cleanse every last gram of chametz from oven racks and stove tops lugged through the streets.

    Kashering cutlery for Pesach on a Jerusalem street
    Kashering cutlery on a Jerusalem street

    3. No alarm clock needed here–the clanging garbage trucks do the trick as they roll through the neighborhood every morning during the two weeks before Pesach to accommodate all the refuse from the furious cleaning going on in every household. Two days before the Seder there’s the annual pick-up of oversized items and appliances. Dozens of antiquated computer monitors and old toaster ovens stand forlornly next to the garbage bins on their way to the dump.

    4. The day before Passover, families replace the yeshiva students on the street, using empty lots to burn the remainder of their chametz gleaned from the previous night’s meticulous search. In vain, the Jerusalem municipality sets up official chametz burning locations and issues strict orders banning burning in any other areas. Yeah, right!

    5. Most flower shops stay open all night for the two days before Pesach, working feverishly to complete the orders that will grace the nation’s Seder tables.

    6. Meah Shearim and Geula merchants generally run out of heavy plastic early in the week before Pesach. In a panic, I make an early morning run to the Machane Yehuda market to successfully snap up a few meters of the handy counter-covering material.

    7. Observant Jews mark the seven weeks between Passover and Shavuot by carrying out some of the laws of mourning–one of these is the prohibition against cutting hair.

    Good luck if you haven’t scheduled an appointment for a pre-Pesach/Omer haircut. You can’t get in the door at most barber and beauty shops.

    8. Mailboxes are full of Pesach appeals from the myriad of organizations helping the poor celebrate Pesach. Newspapers are replete with articles about selfless Israelis who volunteer by the hundreds in the weeks before the holiday to collect, package and distribute Pesach supplies to the needy.

    9. The biggest food challenge to those of us ashkenazic, non-kitniyot (legume) eaters is finding cookies, margarine etc. made without kitniyot, but an increasing number of ashkenazic rabbis are coming out with lenient rulings regarding legumes.

    10. Since most of the country is on vacation for the entire week of Pesach, all kinds of entertainment and trips are on offer. Ads appear for everything from the annual Boombamela beach festival, kid’s activities at the Bloomfield Science Museum, concerts in Hebron, explorations at the City of David, solidarity excursions to Sderot and music festivals at the Dead Sea.

    12. Pesach with its theme of freedom and exodus always evokes news stories about recent olim. This year, general immigration numbers are significantly down, but American aliya has enjoyed a mini-boom. For a couple of thousand new Israeli-Americans, it’ll be their first Seder at home in Israel. Israel Radio announces that 700 prisoners will get a furlough to spend the holiday with family.

    13. This just in: According to Israel’s Brandman Research Institute study, 43 million people hours will be spent nationwide in Israel’s cleaning preparations for Passover this year. How does that break down? Of those cleaning hours, 29 million are done by women and 11 million by men. Persons paid to clean do the remaining 3 million hours at a cost of NIS 64 million ($15.6 million).

    14. Israel’s chief rabbis sell the nation’s chametz to one Hussein Jabar, a Moslem Arab resident of Abu Ghosh. Estimated worth: $150 billion secured by a down payment of NIS 20,000. Jabar took over the task some 14 years ago, after the previous buyer, also from Abu Ghosh, was fired when it was discovered his maternal grandmother was Jewish.

    This year, volunteers from the My Israel movement will be collecting unwanted chametz at Israeli supermarkets and shipping it via the Foreign Ministry to needy victims of the Japanese earthquakes and tsunami.

    15. Sign of the times? A few years ago, former Sephardi Chief Rabbi Mordechai Eliyahu issued a ruling that Viagra may be taken on Pesach provided the pill is encased in a special empty capsule so that the drug itself is not in direct contact with the body.

    16. At the Kotel last week, I watched as workers performed the twice-yearly ritual (pre-Pesach and pre-Rosh hashanah) of removing thousands of personal notes from the crevices of the Kotel to bury them on the Mt of Olives.

    17. Guess Who’s Buying Matza? According to Iyad Sharbaji, the manager of Gadaban Supermarket at the entrance to the the Galilee Arab town of Umm al Fahm, his Matza is consumed entirely by local Arabs. Sharbaji told Haaretz that he generally stocks up on Matza for Passover and has to replenish stock before the end of the holiday, due to keen demand by locals.

    It turns out the avid consumption of matza is not a new trend in Arab towns and villages, whose inhabitants view the traditional Jewish food as nothing more or less than a welcome and refreshing change in the menu. “It’s not a religious issue, and certainly not a political one,” Sharbaji explains.

    18. A sign of our economic times–supermarkets entice shoppers with a promise to allow us to settle up the bill in six equal monthly payments on the credit card. Yes, many of us will still be paying for the Seder come Rosh Hashana!Site Feed

     
  • admin 7:41 am on April 13, 2011 Permalink
    Tags: , Jerusalem Diaries, ,   

    17 Ways To Know Passover is Coming in Israel 

    Citizens of southern Israel face the prospect of yet another Passover under fire. The barrage of missiles and rockets on our southern cities and surrounding western Negev kibbutzim is almost taken for granted by the international community as they prefer to focus on whether a few hundred more apartments are being planned in a Jerusalem neighborhood.

    As if that weren’t bad enough, hundreds of former Gush Katif residents are still in temporary housing almost six years since their eviction. Many who moved into the vast and dismal caravilla camp of Nitzan near Ashkelon are still unemployed and dealing with the emotional and psychological effects of displacement.

    On the religious front, Haaretz revealed in a poll that 68 percent of the population answers ‘no’ when asked if they are planning on eating chametz during Pesach and 75 percent of Israelis will take part in a seder.

    Meantime, on Pesach the extent of the dire poverty of hundreds of thousands of Israelis is exposed. Latest figures indicate that roughly 20.5% of Israeli families live below the poverty line. Moreover, 24.7% of Israel’s residents and 35.9% of its children live in impoverished families.

    Families and the elderly form almost endless lines in every city around the food banks and soup kitchens that do their best to provide the basics necessary to celebrate the holiday.

    In every ultra-orthodox neighborhood during the week before Pesach, men and boys block the narrow streets with hand trucks piled high with sacks of carrots, potatoes, oranges and cartons of eggs–all courtesy of the Kimcha D’Pischa funds that funnel donations from abroad to the Haredi communities, specifically for Pesach food.

    Tourists, largely oblivious to our problems, have begun to descend on us. Most visible are the busloads of Christian pilgrims from eastern Europe, Nigeria and an assortment of Asian countries looking to celebrate Easter–the Jews arrive in much smaller family groups, excited to be in Israel for one of the three pilgrimage festivals.

    Meanwhile, for those who have read this far, here are 17 Ways You Know Pesach is Coming To Israel:

    1. The Israeli Army presses into service some 200 IDF chaplains including reservists, to commence the massive task of kashering the hundreds of kitchens, mess halls and eating corners used by soldiers all over the country.

    2. Street scenes in Israel change every day before Passover according to what’s halachically necessary: In the days before the holiday, yeshiva students wielding blow torches preside over huge vats of boiling water stationed every few blocks on the street and in the courtyard of every mikveh. The lines to dunk cutlery, kiddush cups and the like start to grow every day, and, at the last minute, blow torches are at the ready to cleanse every last gram of chametz from oven racks and stove tops lugged through the streets.

    Kashering cutlery for Pesach on a Jerusalem street
    Kashering cutlery on a Jerusalem street

    3. No alarm clock needed here–the clanging garbage trucks do the trick as they roll through the neighborhood every morning during the two weeks before Pesach to accommodate all the refuse from the furious cleaning going on in every household. Two days before the Seder there’s the annual pick-up of oversized items and appliances. Dozens of antiquated computer monitors and old toaster ovens stand forlornly next to the garbage bins on their way to the dump.

    4. The day before Passover, families replace the yeshiva students on the street, using empty lots to burn the remainder of their chametz gleaned from the previous night’s meticulous search. In vain, the Jerusalem municipality sets up official chametz burning locations and issues strict orders banning burning in any other areas. Yeah, right!

    5. Most flower shops stay open all night for the two days before Pesach, working feverishly to complete the orders that will grace the nation’s Seder tables.

    6. Meah Shearim and Geula merchants generally run out of heavy plastic early in the week before Pesach. In a panic, I make an early morning run to the Machane Yehuda market to successfully snap up a few meters of the handy counter-covering material.

    7. Observant Jews mark the seven weeks between Passover and Shavuot by carrying out some of the laws of mourning–one of these is the prohibition against cutting hair.

    Good luck if you haven’t scheduled an appointment for a pre-Pesach/Omer haircut. You can’t get in the door at most barber and beauty shops.

    8. Mailboxes are full of Pesach appeals from the myriad of organizations helping the poor celebrate Pesach. Newspapers are replete with articles about selfless Israelis who volunteer by the hundreds in the weeks before the holiday to collect, package and distribute Pesach supplies to the needy.

    9. The biggest food challenge to those of us ashkenazic, non-kitniyot (legume) eaters is finding cookies, margarine etc. made without kitniyot, but an increasing number of ashkenazic rabbis are coming out with lenient rulings regarding legumes.

    10. Since most of the country is on vacation for the entire week of Pesach, all kinds of entertainment and trips are on offer. Ads appear for everything from the annual Boombamela beach festival, kid’s activities at the Bloomfield Science Museum, concerts in Hebron, explorations at the City of David, solidarity excursions to Sderot and music festivals at the Dead Sea.

    11. Pesach with its theme of freedom and exodus always evokes news stories about recent olim. This year, general immigration numbers are significantly down, but American aliya has enjoyed a mini-boom. For a couple of thousand new Israeli-Americans, it’ll be their first Seder at home in Israel. Israel Radio announces that 700 prisoners will get a furlough to spend the holiday with family.

    12. This just in: According to Israel’s Brandman Research Institute study, 43 million people hours will be spent nationwide in Israel’s cleaning preparations for Passover this year. How does that break down? Of those cleaning hours, 29 million are done by women and 11 million by men. Persons paid to clean do the remaining 3 million hours at a cost of NIS 64 million ($15.6 million).

    13. Israel’s chief rabbis sell the nation’s chametz to one Hussein Jabar, a Moslem Arab resident of Abu Ghosh. Estimated worth: $150 billion secured by a down payment of NIS 20,000. Jabar took over the task some 14 years ago, after the previous buyer, also from Abu Ghosh, was fired when it was discovered his maternal grandmother was Jewish.

    This year, volunteers from the My Israel movement will be collecting unwanted chametz at Israeli supermarkets and shipping it via the Foreign Ministry to needy victims of the Japanese earthquakes and tsunami.

    14. Sign of the times? A few years ago, former Sephardi Chief Rabbi Mordechai Eliyahu issued a ruling that Viagra may be taken on Pesach provided the pill is encased in a special empty capsule so that the drug itself is not in direct contact with the body.

    15. At the Kotel last week, I watched as workers performed the twice-yearly ritual (pre-Pesach and pre-Rosh hashanah) of removing thousands of personal notes from the crevices of the Kotel to bury them on the Mt of Olives.

    16. Guess Who’s Buying Matza? According to Iyad Sharbaji, the manager of Gadaban Supermarket at the entrance to the the Galilee Arab town of Umm al Fahm, his Matza is consumed entirely by local Arabs. Sharbaji told Haaretz that he generally stocks up on Matza for Passover and has to replenish stock before the end of the holiday, due to keen demand by locals.

    It turns out the avid consumption of matza is not a new trend in Arab towns and villages, whose inhabitants view the traditional Jewish food as nothing more or less than a welcome and refreshing change in the menu. “It’s not a religious issue, and certainly not a political one,” Sharbaji explains.

    17. A sign of our economic times–supermarkets entice shoppers with a promise to allow us to settle up the bill in six equal monthly payments on the credit card. Yes, many of us will still be paying for the Seder come Rosh Hashana!Site Feed

     
  • admin 7:54 am on March 21, 2011 Permalink
    Tags: , Jerusalem Diaries, ,   

    Ahmadinejad and Purim Meet Manhattan 

    My colleague and veteran Jewish activist Glenn Richter reports from Purim in New York City yesterday:

    Biblical Persian King Achachverosh was there in regal duds. So was the Green Hornet, Groucho Marx, and others with assorted headgear and masks. And all of them held up paddles and shouted “boo!” numerous times.

    Photo: Glenn Richter

    The day, of course, was Purim, the Jewish festival celebrating the biblical Queen Esther and her people’s triumph over the king’s evil vizier Haman, who almost succeeded in wiping out the Jews across the vast Persian empire.

    The location was different — outside the Iranian UN Mission in midtown Manhattan, where co-organizer Larry Domnitch read loudly from the Megilah scroll. The 100 participants vigorously shook upheld Purim groggers (noisemakers) constructed of paddles with the face of Haman’s spiritual successor, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad intersected by a red “no go” symbol, each time Haman’s name was read. The paddles were created in an inspirational moment by Elliot Auerbacher of Englewood, NJ. Some held up signs such as “Ahmadinejad: Remember What Happened to Haman!”

    The public Megilah reading was sponsored by Americans for a Safe Israel, Amcha-Coalition for Jewish Concerns, Z STREET, and the Jewish Political Education Foundation.

    Speakers included AFSI director Helen Freedman and Z STREET’s director Lori Lowenthal Marcus. At the conclusion of the feisty megilah reading and singing, Amcha-CJC’s national president Rabbi Avi Weiss stood on a chair above the crowd. He declared:

    “On this Purim, we remember Rabbi Udi, Ruthi, Elad, Yoav and Hadas Fogel. What kind of a savage can go into a bedroom and murder? Slit the throat of a three-month old? Stab a three year-old in the heart? What kind of savage than a proxy of Iran could perpetrate this crime?

    “In every generation there are those who have risen to try to overcome ‘am yisrael’, the people of Israel — but we have prevailed. As we prevailed over Haman, we will prevail over you, Ahmadinejad, and you will go down. ‘Am yisrael chai’ — the people of Israel live!

    “We also have a message to the president of the United States: If you weaken Israel, you weaken America. If you strengthen Israel, you strengthen America. Israel’s war against terror is America’s war against terror. Israel is on the front line against Iran, and her fight is America’s fight.

    “The message of Tamar Fogel, who came into her home, saw this horror, then later declared, ‘I, at 12 years old, will become the mother of my two remaining siblings’, is to open our hearts. The message of Queen Esther, who told Mordechai to gather all the Jews to oppose Haman, is to gather together people of conscience and decency. We stand with Tamar, with Itamar — with are with you!

    “How can we celebrate on Purim with all that happened in Itamar? The people of Israel are involved in a covenant with God. The message of the covenant is that of the Megilah — ‘v’nahafochu’ — no matter where we are in life we have the capacity to turn it around. We have an example in the Israeli supermarket magnate Rami Levi, who promised to bring food to the Fogel family every Sabbath eve until the last surviving child is 18.

    “So this Purim, for all the tears, tears including for those who died in Japan — we are full of grief, full of love, full of ‘v’nahafochu’. Purim teaches never to despair. ‘Am yisrael chai’ — the people of Israel live!Site Feed

     
  • admin 5:53 am on March 13, 2011 Permalink
    Tags: , Jerusalem Diaries, ,   

    What Happened on Shabbat in Itamar 

    Thanks to Ruthie Lieberman who gathered first hand the facts of the unspeakable tragedy that left five members of a young Jewish family in Itamar dead on Shabbat.

    “On Friday night at 10:30 pm the terrorists entered the house through the
    living room picture window, did not notice the 6-year-old boy sleeping on
    the couch and continued on to the bedroom where they slashed the throats of
    the father and newborn baby who were sleeping there.

    The mother came out of the bathroom and was stabbed on its threshold. The evidence shows that she tried to fight the terrorists. They then slashed the throat of the 11-year
    old-son who was reading in bed. They did not notice the 2-year old asleep in
    his bed, but murdered the 3-year old with two stabs to his heart. After
    that, they locked the door, exited through the window and escaped. Exactly
    two hours after the infiltration, there was another warning signal from the
    same spot on the fence, as the terrorists left the way they had come. Once
    again, the patrol did not identify the source of the signal as infiltration.

    The 12-year-old daughter returned home at 00:30 and found the door locked.
    She asked a neighbor, Rabbi Yaakov Cohen, of the Itamar Yeshiva, to help
    her. He brought a weapon with him once he noticed tracks and mud near the
    house. The two woke up the 6-year old sleeping in the living room by calling
    through the window and when he opened the door, the Rabbi returned to his
    home. When she entered the bedrooms, the young daughter saw the horrific
    blood-soaked scene and ran out of the house screaming. The neighbor ran back
    and fired several shots in the air to alert security personnel. Within a
    short time, large police and IDF forces arrived and began intensive searches
    to see if the terrorists were still in the community. At 03:30 a.m.,
    military trackers discovered footprints leading to the Arab village of
    Avrata.”

    The family has released pictures of the carnage of the children. They are far too brutal and distressing to be seen by normal human beings–they should, however, be passed 24 hours a day in front of the eyes of the murderers (who will be found by Israeli security forces) and their religious and political leaders who incited such hatred.Site Feed

     
  • admin 5:31 am on March 13, 2011 Permalink
    Tags: Gina, , Jerusalem Diaries,   

    Libyan Jews seek justice 

    Libyan protesters seek justice ‘

     
  • admin 2:22 pm on March 11, 2011 Permalink
    Tags: , , Jerusalem Diaries,   

    The Muqata: Imagine

    A truly eye-opening prospect laid out by Dore Gold that has the potential to change the face of the Middle East as much as the turmoil currently underway amongst our neighbors.Site Feed

     
  • admin 1:46 pm on February 4, 2011 Permalink
    Tags: , Jerusalem Diaries, ,   

    Jerusalem Misunderstandings.. 

    No–I don’t mean the Netanyahu administration isn’t understanding the situation in Egypt. I mean that most people for whom Jerusalem is important, do not understand the latest developments here, that have been overshadowed this past week by events south of our border.

    Some 13 years ago, I was recruited by a couple of young activists to help out with a group called Yerushalayim Shelanu–Jerusalem is Ours, or Our Jerusalem. We realized that the battle for Jerusalem would only be won if and when Jews understood the challenges facing the capital, and we set about organizing tours of parts of the city rarely visited by Jews to raise awareness of the areas being discussed in the peace talks.

    For several years prior to the Camp David Summit of 2000 when President Bill Clinton, PA Chairman Yasser Arafat and Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak convened to discuss the division of Jerusalem, our little team was busy taking busloads of Israelis and tourists to Yeshivat Beit Orot on the Mt of Olives; the future site of Har Homa; Sur Baher and the neighborhoods of Abu Dis, Ras el Amud and Shimon HaTzaddik.

    At each of these places, we would talk about the history of the area and point to the importance of creating and maintaining a Jewish presence in order to prevent the re-division of Jerusalem and to thwart Arafat’

     
  • admin 4:36 pm on January 20, 2011 Permalink
    Tags: Ella, Jerusalem Diaries, , Sderot   

    A Sderot Yahrzeit–Tu BShvats New Beginnings 

    Kassam missiles and mortar shells continue to fall on southern Israel. Earlier this week, there was a bombardment that caused minimal damage–the week before, three Thai workers were injured.

    Two days ago was the 6th yahrzeit of Ella Abukasis, a 17-year-old killed by a Kassam rocket in Sderot in 2005. In honor of Tu B’Shvat I’m posting a piece I wrote on Ella’s 2nd yahrzeit, a few days before Tu B’Shvat, 2007. Sadly, little has changed…

    Sima Abukasis looked on quietly as Chief Rabbi Yonah Metzger and Knesset members joined dozens of her Sderot neighbors and friends yesterday at a modest commemoration of the second anniversary of the death of her daughter, Ella, 17, who died of wounds suffered from a Kassam rocket attack on Sderot in 2005.

    Sima, a slight woman with olive skin and short auburn hair, managed a wan smile as she greeted her daughter’s friends and family members who came to take part in the ceremony in the center of Sderot. The pain of the loss of her middle child is firmly etched on the face of this bereaved mother. Ella died shielding her younger brother, Tamir, as the siren sounded on a Shabbat afternoon on a cool January afternoon two years ago.

    That day, the Abukasis family was at Ella’s grandmother’s home celebrating the birthday of one of the granddaughters. From there Ella went with her younger brother Tamir to their Bnei Akiva youth movement activity. They were on their way home when the siren sounded, giving them 20 seconds warning of an incoming Kassam rocket. With no time to take cover, Ella lay on top of Tamir, who escaped with relatively minor wounds when the rocket fell and exploded alongside them. Ella was fatally wounded and died a week later without ever regaining consciousness.

    Ella’s older brother, Ran, did most of the organizing of yesterday’s memorial ceremony. Held just a few days before Tu B’Shvat, the memorial was also a dedication of a new Bnei Akiva building named for Ella. Outside the bright new facility that includes several meeting rooms, a kitchen and main hall, six saplings were planted in honor of Tu B’Shvat and to signify new beginnings. The fresh earth was dug by a few of Ella’s male friends who are students at Sderot’s Hesder Yeshiva. The young men, who combine Torah learning with army service, include representatives of every ethnic group in Israeli society–Ethiopians, Russian speakers, Sephardim and Ashkenazim. Their cameraderie and cooperation is evident as they greet each other with warm hugs and slaps on the back before they get down to the digging.

    Many teachers from the the yeshiva and Ella’s AMIT high school show up too, and the respect and warmth they elicit from the students would be the envy of teachers anywhere. Maybe it’s the simple solidarity born from the terrifying experiences they’ve shared over the past six years since Sderot has been under Arab bombardment: several schools in Sderot have taken direct hits from Kassam rockets and now they’re commemorating the death of one of their friends.

    Chief Rabbi Metzger affixes a large mezuza on the external door of the new building, noting that at the request of the family it’s a mezuza that was blessed by Rabbi Kedourie, the centenarian kabbalist who passed away a few years ago.

    Inside the main hall, a huge banner with a picture of a smiling, relaxed Ella adorns the wall. At the head table, a single memorial candle burns in front of the seated dignitaries. In addition to Rabbi Metzger there’s Rabbi Benny Lau; Knesset members Hanan Porat, Tzvi Hendel, Uri Ariel; former Defense Minister Yitzhak Mordechai–a family friend; the principal of the AMIT High School; Ella’s father, Yonatan and the head of Bnei Akiva for the southern region.

    Each of them speaks lovingly of Ella, her brief life and her heroic death. For a change, it’s a quiet day in Sderot with no Kassam attacks. But for Yonatan and Sima Aubkasis and their remaining children, Ran, Tamir and Keren as well as the families of the other seven Kassam fatalities in Sderot, there’ll never be another quiet day.Site Feed

     
  • admin 9:00 am on January 13, 2011 Permalink
    Tags: Jerusalem Diaries, , ,   

    Obama Quotes Rav Kook in Tucson Speech 


    Well–here’s one for the books–President Barack Obama quotes Rav Avraham Isaac Kook, one of the founders of religious Zionism, in his speech to the nation comforting the survivors and families of victims of the Tucson shooting.
    Obama used Rav Kook’s mantra as the lynchpin of his message about the tragic murder of 9-year old Christina Taylor Green:
    “I believe that for all our imperfections, we are full of decency and goodness, and that the forces that divide us are not as strong as those that unite us,” Obama said.
    Anyone know which one of Obama’s speech writers is a closest religious Zionist–or did someone look for “unity” quotes in an online dictionary of quotations and not notice the source?
    Who’s taking bets that we won’t be hearing any other quotes from Israel’s first Ashkenazi chief rabbi any time soon–unless Mashiach is really imminent and Obama starts spouting off about how the return of Jews to the land of Israel is divinely inspired and Jews have inalienable rights to the land.

    Site Feed

     
  • admin 8:51 pm on December 27, 2010 Permalink
    Tags: , , , Jerusalem Diaries   

    Whats Jerusalems “dirty little secret?” 

    Afternoon services in St James Cathedral in Jerusalem’s Armenian Quarter

    The Atlantic’s Jeffrey Goldberg is visiting Jerusalem over the Christmas holiday with his family–Goldberg penned a little piece for the magazine’s blog about how astonished he was by all the multi-cultural experiences he’s had here over the past few days–things that Jerusalemites take completely for granted.

    Goldberg waxes eloquent about being treated by an Arab doc at the local walk-in clinic and joining dozens of Israelis who attended Christmas eve services at an Old City church. He could have added a myriad of other cultural activities as well as mundane places in the city where Jews of all ethnic origins, Christians of all stripes, Moslems and Mormons interact on a daily basis.

    I spent this afternoon in the Old City visiting the Karaite synagogue and listening to Gregorian chants at the afternoon service at the ancient St James Cathedral in the Armenian Quarter–the biggest group in the church was a busload of retired Israeli schoolteachers from Holon.

    The best line in the Atlantic blog goes to Israel Museum director James Snyder, who whispers to Goldberg that “the dirty little secret of Jerusalem is that it is a fully-functioning intercommunal city.”
    Exactly right–but why is this a message that’s so hard to get out?Site Feed

     
  • admin 4:53 am on December 24, 2010 Permalink
    Tags: , , Jerusalem Diaries,   

    Rejected: Anti-Israel Bus Ads in Seattle 

    SEATTLE ANTI-ISRAEL AD CAMPAIGN REJECTED!

    Activism works…

    After meeting with Seattle pro-Israel activists and consulting with Federal and local officials, King County executive Dow Constantine yesterday rejected the anti-Israel ads scheduled to run on Seattle buses next week–as well as the pro-Israel counter ads offered by David Horowitz’s Freedom Center–in order to stay focused on their mission, which is to provide bus service to King County residents and not get involved with international conflicts.

    Constantine wrote:Dow ConstantineKing County Executive News Release Date: December 23, 2010 Executive Contacts: Frank Abe, 206-263-9609 Christine Lange, 206-263-9752 Metro Transit contact: Linda Thielke, 206-684-1414

    Citing potential for disruption to transit service,

    Executive implements interim Metro policy restricting new non-commercial advertising on buses

    Escalation of global interest in ad critical of Israel raises risk of service disruption; Metro rejects ad and response ads

    Citing the potential for disruption to transit service, King County Executive Dow Constantine today approved an interim policy fromMetro Transit that calls for a halt to the acceptance of any new non-commercial advertising on King County buses. Under provisions of the previous policy, Metro officials today also rejected a proposed ad from the Seattle Mideast Awareness Campaign and the proposed response ads from two other groups. ‘

     
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