We are told that there is a difference between extremist Islam and peaceloving normal Islam.
Judging by their behavior, Muslims are anti-West, anti-Democracy, anti-Christian, anti-Jewish, anti-Buddhist, and anti-Hindu. Muslims are involved in 25 of some 30 conflicts going on in the world: in Afghanistan, Algeria, Bangladesh, Bosnia, Congo, Cote d'Ivoire, Cyprus, East Timor, India, Indonesia (2 provinces), Kashmir, Kazakastan, Kosovo, Kurdistan, Macedonia, the Middle East, Nigeria, Pakistan, Philippines, Sudan, Russia-Chechnya, Tajikistan, Thailand, Uganda and Uzbekistan.
Doesn't this mean that extremist Islam is the norm and normal Islam is extremely rare?
"The Palestinian people does not exist. The creation of a Palestinian state is only a means for continuing our struggle against the state of Israel for our Arab unity. In reality today there is no difference between Jordanians, Palestinians, Syrians and Lebanese. Only for political and tactical reasons do we speak today about the existence of a Palestinian people, since Arab national interests demand that we posit the existence of a distinct 'Palestinian people' to oppose Zionism.
"For tactical reasons, Jordan, which is a sovereign state with defined borders, cannot raise claims to Haifa and Jaffa. While as a Palestinian, I can undoubtedly demand Haifa, Jaffa, Beer-Sheva and Jerusalem. However, the moment we reclaim our right to all of Palestine, we will not wait even a minute to unite Palestine and Jordan." (PLO executive committee member Zahir Muhsein, March 31, 1977, interview with the Dutch newspaper Trouw.)
It should be remembered that in 1918, with the fall of the Ottoman Empire, Britain and France were handed 5,000,000 square miles to divvy up and 99% was given to the Arabs to create countries that did not exist previously. 1% was given as a Mandate for the re-establishment of a state for the Jews on both banks of the Jordan River. In 1921, to once again appease the Arabs, another three quarters of that 1% was given to a fictitious state called Trans-Jordan. (Jack Berger, May 31, 2004.)
The total for all the 22 Arab League countries is 6,145,389 square miles. By comparison, all 50 states of the United States have a total of 3,787,318 square miles. Israel has 8,463 square miles, about one-sixth of that of the State of Michigan. Iran, Turkey, Pakistan and Afghanistan are Muslim but not Arab and are not included. (See http://www.masada2000.org/geography.html for a graphic presentation of the land area of Israel relative to the size of the Arab countries.)
World Arab population: 300 million; World Jewish population: 13.6 million; Israel's Jewish population: 5.4 million. (reference: Dr. Wilbert Simkovitz,
http://dehai.org/archives/dehai_news_archive/apr04/0223.htmldehai.org/ archives/dehai_news_archive/apr04/0223.html)
"... if Moslems are a minority they are the cause of violent conflicts; if they are a majority, they bring violence to other Moslems - in Pakistan, Sudan, Iraq and elsewhere. Even in the U.S. where newcomers tend to adopt our values, the moderate Moslem majority of new Americans is faced with the control of mosques, schools and community organizations by violent radical minorities." (Sy Frumkin, Graffiti for Intellectuals newsletter, Oct. 25, 2004)
The Palestinian Authority is not the solution; it is the problem. Legitimizing top leaders of the PA, such as Abu Mazen, Abu Ala', Dahlan and Rajoub - in defiance of their horrific track records - constitutes a victory of wishful thinking over moral clarity. (Yoram Ettinger, "A New Palestinian Regime?" November 2004 Blog-Ed.)
"... Mr. Bush is counting on the appearance of elections, with the only candidates being Islamists bent upon genocide and the stealing of rightful Jewish land, to suddenly make these fiends turn into sweet, loving, civilized creatures." (Beth Goodtree, "Bush's Oxymoronic Policy: Fascist-Imposed Democracy," December 2004 Blog-Ed)
"To pretend that Islam has nothing to do with Sept. 11 is to willfully ignore the obvious and to forever misinterpret events." (Bruce Tefft, "Islamic Terror Based On Qu'ran: Ex-Cia Official," December 2004 Blog-Ed)
"The goal of the disengagement plan is to bring about a new reality, a permanent arrangement in which there will not be Jewish settlement in these areas [Judea and Samaria]." (Itamar Yaar, a senior figure on Israel's National Security Council, December 2004 Blog-Ed)
"The last Jews to be forcibly evicted from their homes only because they were Jewish also wore stars. Rather than 'damaging the memory of the Shoah,' it reinforces it." - ("Orange Stars in Gaza," Ari Sacher from Moreshet, Israel. Jerusalem Post Letter To Editor, December 23, 2004.)
"According to a public survey, 94% of the Arabs living in Israel do not recognize the institutes of the State. Also more than 80% to not trust the Knesset or the Hebrew media." (Guysen.Israel.News, December 29, 2004)
"... calling settlers 'hard-liners,' plays politics by using pejorative terms for one's opponents. The Associated Press does that often. Is it hard-line to want to keep one's home in the cradle of one's civilization in an area set aside for Jewish settlement by the Mandate, rather than turn strategic territory, secure borders, and needed water, over to terrorists?" (Richard Shulman, December 29, 2004 Blog-Ed)
"The laws and mandates of a government or a king in Israel that go against the laws of the Torah, the laws of God, must be disobeyed. It is not an issue of an Israel defying the government and violating the law, but rather an Israel that asks to obey the law that tries to prevent Jews from living in accordance with the law. Not only is it forbidden to accept and obey a mandate or a governmental law that contradicts the Torah, it is, a fortiori, forbidden to assist the transgressors in its actualization." (Rabbi Meir Kahane)
Hasidic Gentile just posted this incredibly heartwarming story.
While I recommend reading the whole story, I'd like to discuss it briefly. It's about an non-Jewish Irish/American policeman whose wife miraculously becomes pregnant and gives birth to a baby boy after receiving a blessing and prayers from a Rabbi. As a result, the father decides to name the boy "Mendel", after the Rabbi. The last bit of the story really touched me:
"But when our parents heard the name they really objected. They said, 'With a name like that, all the kids will think he's a Jew or something and they will call him names and be cruel to him. Why make the kid suffer for no reason?' 'That's just what I want,' I said to them. 'When he comes home and says that the other kids called him names and beat him up because he has a Jewish name, I'll tell him that I want him to learn from those other kids how not to behave. They hate the Jews for no reason, but you should love the Jews, you should help the Jews. You just tell them that without that Jewish Rabbi called Mendel you wouldn't be here at all, and then maybe they'll start thinking differently too!'
Despite this, many news agencies were quick to promote the Palestinian version of events, backed by the UN:
Agence France-Presse, under the headline 'Palestinian schoolgirl shot dead by Israeli troops in Gaza,' prominently quoted the PA prime minister condemning it as 'a crime.' The Israeli denial of responsibility was buried at the very end of the AFP report.
The Independent based its story on a UN official who directly accused the IDF of firing on Deab, then passed off IDF spokespersons who denied culpability as 'plainly embarrassed.'
Knight Ridder-Tribune quoted both Ahmed Qurei decrying the shooting as an IDF 'war crime,' and a UN official condemning 'the Israeli military's indiscriminate firing into civilian areas.'
This lopsided version of events appears all the more ludicrous given the Jerusalem Post's report that PA police have now arrested a Palestinian man for the shooting.
Step two of this dishonest reporting is to ascribe a 'revenge motive' to subsequent Palestinian terror.
Nearly all articles included a statement similar to this from Knight Ridder: 'the militant group Hamas responded [to Deab's death] with a mortar attack on an Israeli settlement.' (Hamas issued a press announcement to that effect.) The IDF was thereby blamed for disturbing the 'calm' that had previously held.
Yet Hamas mortar shells and rockets had never stopped raining on Israeli civilians in Gaza or Sderot \ see reports from Jan. 24, 26, and 29. This episode, therefore, was clearly used by Hamas as a mere excuse for their ongoing terror.
As we've seen repeatedly in this conflict, the terrorists use minor grievances \ oftentimes fabricated \ as pretexts to rationalize their murderous acts against civilians. When media outlets report these statements from Hamas, et al., without directly questioning their merit, the media become a tool exploited by terrorists to promote their anti-Israel campaign.
Since Denmark has only a tiny Jewish community, Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen can't be accused of pandering to the Jewish vote when he launched a spirited defense of Israel on the campaign stump earlier this week.
During an appearance at the University of Aarhus, Rasmussen was challenged over his support for the US and asked why Iraq was attacked for violating UN Security Council resolutions while Israel was able to do so with impunity.
Rasmussen, whose country began a two-year rotating stint on the Security Council on January 1, said that whereas Israel was not completely implementing all the Security Council resolutions, "it is not run by a dictator without a conscience, and that is an essential difference."
"Moreover," he said, "Israel is surrounded by enemies that want to throw it into the sea, and we should recognize that it has a special history. Israel must use somewhat tough measures to defend itself."
Rasmussen's comments were applauded in Jerusalem.
This may be one of several reasons why the not inconsiderable Muslim community in Denmark is mobilizing to unseat him.
On Friday the AFP news agency reported that Rasmussen urged Muslim clerics to "stay out of politics" as a group of imams prepared to ask followers to vote for the opposition.
Twenty-five imams living in Denmark are expected to meet Wednesday to develop a strategy to help promote the opposing parties.
There are an estimated 170,000 Muslims in Denmark out of a population of 5.4 million, making Islam the country's second largest religion. There are an estimated 6,500 Jews in Denmark.
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Some of you may have noticed that I always get quite excited to see a fellow Scandinavian defend Israel. This is mostly, however, caused by the fact that it is such a rare occurence for me, and what I experience is normally the exact opposite. For instance. I just came back from school (university). There a friend told me about how a group of people had spent a substantial amount of time discussing how completely and utterly they dislike me (he used stronger words than this, but I think I should clean up the language) for my opinions where Israel is concerned, and discussed how much they "hated" my article on Arafat. I found the latter quite interesting in the sense that even Abu Mazen wouldn't deny the accusasations of my article. They are facts known by everybody. Well, except for people like my fellow students who have formed their opinions based on ignorance.
Well ain't this swell! This immediately made me think of Adam, who had already told me about 3 times to read this book "The Case For Democracy" by Nathan Sharansky.. It seems that President George Bush (I love that guy!) has beat me to it.
The story has been told over and over in the last two months: Natan Sharansky wrote a book about democracy in the world; President Bush read it and became an enthusiastic fan. The modest author was invited to meet Condoleezza Rice and the Supreme Reader in person, Bush, joined the cause of spreading praise about the book.
A reader meets the author - rare but natural. Sharansky, known in the West for some 30 years, a minister in the Israeli government, is far from being Cinderella, and it is still the stuff of fairy tales: Bush, busy dealing with the world's affairs, takes time to leaf through Sharansky's writings.
"In recent years, however, unemployment in Israel has hit record levels, the army has become more selective in its inductions due to a surfeit of recruits, and the treasury has argued that the age of the welfare state and reliable stipends for the disadvantaged has come to an end."
I realise that as far as practical issues, such as employmency, is concerned, Israeal doesn't "need" Jews. But that isn't the main issue. Instead of declaring my own opinions, I've decided to post some of the comments of the readers.
1. Yes and Yes. Israel and aliyah go together like peanut butter and jelly. They are a part of each other. The more people, the stronger the country. Look at all that Israel has accomplished with one of the smallest populations in the world. One can only imagine what lofty goals Israel could achieve with double the Jewish population it has now. For me, the word 'SuperPower' immediately comes to mind. Aliyah Forever!
Seth Cohen, Miami, United States of America
2. With fire-bombings of synagogues, kosher slaughtering made illegal, emergence of 'far-right' political parties and 75% of CNN's voters saying the Holocaust can happen again - especially with the millions of growing muslims in Europe - it does not seem unreasonable to assume that one day Jews across Europe will again feel threatened. France is just the beginning.
3. Israel has and always will be our home. It was a desert when we weren't there and now we've returned it's an oasis. Israel needs aliyah as much as Jews need Israel.
4. I've just gradauted and I'm going as soon as I get enough experience to benefit Israel's prosperity...I can't wait!
Daniel Cohen, London, United Kingdom
5. Israel, a country indoctrinated with racism and militarism, should strive to make peace and reconciliation with the Palestinians (the victims of the victims) instead of continuing with these evil designs to uproot them and replace them with "Jews" from around the world, most of whom have no connection to Israel and his children.
Khalid Suleiman, Jerusalem, Israel
Sorry I just couldn't resist that guy
6. True, Israel may not need olim, but can Diaspora Jewry really survive without the prospect of aliyah? I am not so sure. We never know what horror lurks around the corner. Have we not learned that by now?
Yehuda Goldstein, Boston, United States of America
7. The question is phrased as though Jewish communities in the diaspora were no longer in 'mortal peril'. This was believed to be the case in the middle of the 19th century too, and we know what happened shortly after. Jew-hatred is still highly abundant in all parts of Europe, especially so in eastern Europe. Even more disturbing is that the hatred is constantly increasing. A more relevant question than whether aliyah is necessary for Israel, is whether aliyah is necessary for e.g. Russian Jewry. I believe the answer is 'yes', and that those who choose to stay in Russia will pay dearly for their blind optimism.
Torbjurn Karfunkel, Gothenburg, Sweden
Yay! I'm not the only thinking Scandinavian! Oh I think he's Jewish, though. I googled him. He's an active supporter of Israel and zionism so he's a much hated man, and he comes from Gteborg, where I was born. Cool!
Yesterday I received a very sweet mail from a fellow "Webshots" user. Webshots is the online photo gallery I use to post photos I take with my digital camera. The mail was from an Israeli PhD student from Haifa. I was extremely impressed with the photos she had uploaded to her own website, since they are a vivid & creative mixture of "life in Israel" photos. I strongly believe (especially after my last visit) that representation like this is exactly what Israel needs: Daily life in Israel - Orly's Gallery I also recommend the links she has to other people. Some of the photos are breathtaking.
Blog poll results, nationality, and the notion of home
Alrighty then. So I had promised I'd give you the real answer to the question of "my real nationality" after tormenting you a little with a poll. I must say that readers were quite clueless. Here were the results: (This feels like the Eurovision Songcontest).
20% Thought I was Icelandic/Romanian
That's a good guess, since I have family living in Romania
20% Thought I was Icelandic/Israeli I suppose they figured I look exactly like the Icelandic side.
20% Thought I was Icelandic.
Also not a bad guess. I pretty much am, plus I blog about Iceland a lot. 20% Thought I was Icelandic/Norwegian.
Good guess.
10% Thought I was Swedish.
Someone completely clueless, I guess. 10% Thought I was Romanian.
Nobody thought I was Norwegian.
I find that odd. I work in the tourist industry so I'm used to seeing people from all over, and I definitely look Norwegian.
Reality?
A little complex. 20% were correct (but I do know a few of you know me quite well, so your votes don't really count).
I am indeed Icelandic/Norwegian
What has confused some of you is that I was born into a family of world travelers, so my family (an Icelandic mother and a Norwegian father) just happened to be living in Sweden when I was born. In addition to that, my father had lived all over North America, South and Central America, Australia, all over Asia, in various muslim countries, etc etc. My mother on the other hand, who also enjoys the experience of living in different countries, currently resides in Romania.
But to complicate things even more...
In anthropology we study how different cultural worlds, and even different individuals, have a different notion of the word "home". I recall how a professor once asked the class what our idea of "home" was. A girl in class raised her hand and gave an answer that did not seem particularly thought through to me: "roots". If that were the case, I would not really have much of a home. Luckily it is not the case, for "home" is a state of mind, something you feel with your heart, as opposed to an actual, material home.
This is why is may well be that the seemingly simplistic saying of "home is where the heart is", may infact be the most accurate description ever given.
While even the BBC published material in remembrance of the 60th Anniversary of the liberation of the Auschwitz deathcamps, the same cannot be said for everybody. Der Sturmer.. Ooops I mean 'The London Spectator' ran an article by (sigh) Anthony Lippmann.
On the anniversary of the liberation of German death camps, The Spectator suggests an IDF-Nazi comparison.
Elie Wiesel addresses the UN
General Assembly on Monday
On Monday (Jan. 24), the United Nations and European leaders marked the 60th anniversary of the liberation of the Nazi death camps, testifying to that greatest crime in human history the industrial murder of 6 million Jews.
While much of the British media (including BBC) provided helpful educational material on the Holocaust, The (London) Spectator ran an article by Anthony Lipmann, who declared that on this day
I will think not just of the crematoria and the cattle trucks but of Darfur, Rwanda, Zimbabwe, Jenin, Fallujah.
'Jenin'?! Lipmann suggests some comparison between Auschwitz and Jenin where less than sixty Palestinians (the majority armed combatants) were killed in an IDF counter-terrorism raid in 2002. Columnist Mark Steyn was outraged that 'to Lipmann, those 52-56 dead Palestinians weigh in the scales of history as heavy as six million Jews.'
Lipmann, an Anglican whose Jewish mother survived Auschwitz, goes on to make his Nazi-Israel comparison even clearer:
"What would I have done?" I ask myself. "What should I be doing now? What am I doing for those being persecuted today - among them the Palestinians, who are suffering at the hands of Jews? But for a turn of fate, could I have been a Nazi too?... This little band of 600 [Holocaust survivors attending a reception hosted by the Queen] has a terrible responsibility - to live well in the name of those who did not live and to discourage the building of walls and bulldozing of villages.
One would think that the Holocaust anniversary would compel all British media to promote understanding for a secure State of Israel, defending Jews from those who would perpetrate another extermination campaign. Yet The Spectator chose, on this of all dates, to suggest the IDF are modern-day Nazi storm troopers. Says Melanie Phillips:
To imply that the Jews have turned into Nazis in the Middle East does two things. It tells a wicked lie about that tragic impasse, reversing who is victim and who is victimiser. It is the Palestinians who have a programme to eradicate the Jewish state and ethnically cleanse the Jews from the land, as the Arabs have been trying to do for the past 100 years. Israel is merely defending itself...
And of course the second thing Lipmann does through this travesty is to minimise the Holocaust itself and the crimes of the actual Nazis, and thus to betray the memory of those who died.
The Spectator, the oldest continuously published magazine in the English language (since 1828), should have exercised better editorial judgment on this historic occasion.