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Thursday, December 30, 2004
Israeli Aid - Unreported
And this is acceptable? It must be, because I am certain that it would not take long to find at least a thousand similar examples. For it is a fact that Israel has frequently and repeatedly helped nations that would not only never help Israel, but wish to see Israel destroyed, and the Jewish people with it.
What does the fact that the world condones it actually tell us?

All major media outlets ignore Israel's massive humanitarian aid to South Asia - an indication of a national ethos of caring.

When disaster strikes anywhere in the world, Israelis can be counted on to help. So it's no surprise that within hours of the devastating tsunami in the Indian Ocean, the following humanitarian missions all departed from the tiny Jewish state:


IDF rescue team on its way to Sri Lanka

œ  The Israeli organization Latet ('To Give') filled a jumbo jet with 18 tons of supplies.

œ  A medical team headed by four doctors from Jerusalem's Hadassah Hospital arrived in Sri Lanka on Monday night (Dec. 27), carrying medicine and baby food. The doctors specialize in rescue operations, trauma and pediatrics.

œ  An IDF rescue team is now on its way to Sri Lanka with 80 tons of aid material, including 10,000 blankets, tents, nylon sheeting and water containers, all contributed by the IDF.

œ  A ZAKA rescue-and-recovery team arrived in the disaster areas Monday night, armed with its specialized equipment for identifying bodies.

œ  A Health Ministry contingent left for Thailand on Monday night to aid in rescue efforts. The group includes doctors, nurses and four members of the IDF.

œ  Israel has also offered its assistance to India \ a search-and-rescue team from the Home Front Command, as well as consignments of food and medicine.

Yet, with the exception of UPI (as of this writing - Tues. 4pm EST), none of the major news outlets have dedicated an article to this remarkable Israeli humanitarian effort. This, despite the fact that the IDF sent all Israel-based journalists a press release Monday evening (Dec. 27), inviting them to the airport to cover the departure of one IDF group.

This is all the more surprising given the fact that the major news agencies have entire teams of reporters in Israel, who submit at least one 'Israel-article' each day.

So what did the Associated Press send out today to its 15,000 subscribing news agencies? A dreary story about the construction of a new IDF base near Jenin. AP sarcastically remarked in this 'news' story that the base's 'elaborate color scheme and landscaping shows that the army is not planning to pull its forces out of the area anytime soon.'

The lack of media interest in this Israeli humanitarian effort means that Israeli benevolence toward other peoples is not fairly conveyed to the western world. Perhaps if it were conveyed, observers would come to understand something else \ that Israel's response to Palestinian violence is also motivated by the highest ethical concern for all human life, and is not (as the media so often portray it) driven by an oppressive, mean-spirited national ethos.


Posted at 03:19 pm by Maria

Hatshepsut
December 31, 2004   07:39 PM PST
 
Hey thanks a lot! Yeah amazon is contantly "recommending" some of those books to me, especially "a right to exist". It's a pity I don't have time for all of them, but oh well..
selfindulgence
December 31, 2004   06:55 PM PST
 
Ahem...I meant "chief negotiator." Not "chef."

Sheesh....
selfindulgence
December 31, 2004   06:50 PM PST
 
1) The Missing Peace by Dennis Ross-

***This one, by Bill Clinton's chef negotiator in 2000, clearly debunks the Arafat apologists inane cartoons/bantusans declarations and illustrates that Arafat never intended to find peace. It's particularly good because Ross was actually at Camp David.

2) Defending Israel by Martin van Creveld

***You'd like this one, Hat, it's by another Scandinavian friend of Israel. It's almost strictly military in tone, (he's a famed military strategist) and goes into intense detail delineating how Israel can best defend itself militarily. Although, it does go on to illustrate how silly the "Jewish lobby" claims of anti-Zionists actually are.

3) Right to Exist by Yaacov Lozowick

***Just a very good, solid book.

4) The Case for Democracy by Natan Sharansky

5) Jerusalem Besieged by Eric Cline

***Casts major doubt on some Palestinian apologist claims.

6) The Birth of the Palestinian Refugee Problem by Benny Morris

***Morris is frequently misrepresented by Palestinian apologists because he proves that yes, some Palestinians were forced off their land by Israel in '48. But he goes on to confirm that this was a very small minority, not part of IDF SOP and that most Palestinians never saw an Israeli soldier. He firmly believes that Israel was in the right back in '48. It's also worth mentioning that he had free reign over Israeli archives while he couldn't go anywhere near Palestinian ones. No one ever has, as far as I know.
Hatshepsut
December 30, 2004   06:35 PM PST
 
Yes. Like during the earthquakes in Iran the Irani government said they were desperate for help, and that they'd accept help from any country other than Israel.
yiddishe-kop
December 30, 2004   05:04 PM PST
 
yeah, it's definitely sad that the int'l community refuses to recognize what israel does for the world, but what's even worse is the way some countries have responded to israel's offers to help (like sri lanka, where the government refused israeli aid if it came by way of the idf). i don't get it- i'd expect these countries to jump at the chance for assistance of any kind no matter where it came from.
 

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