Philip's posts with tag: ant-jews
Olmert Declares War On Israel [01.13.2008] Desperate politicians often take outlandish actions in attempts to save their political skins. Today, Israel's Prime Minister used the weekly cabinet meeting to call Israel's actions a "disgrace." As far we can tell Olmert did not condemn Abbas for failing to end Palestinian terrorist attacks against Israel (a rockets continue to fall on Israel.) No, Olmert limited his criticism to his government for not ejecting Jews from their homes. Using the terminology of Israel's enemies Olmert declared war on hundreds of thousands of Israelis including 180,000 Jews who live in Jerusalem. This is another move by Olmert to try and deflect attention away from his personal legal problems and the fallout from the release of a report (from the Winograd Commission)on his government's failings during the mismanaged military engagements in Lebanon. Everyone expects Olmert to come in for severe criticism when the report is issued -- in the very near future. Tell Olmert to stop jeopardizing Israel's security by supporting the Bush-Rice ill-conceived peace initiative. Israel needs a government that stands up for Israel. Zionsake Comment posted at OneJerusalem PM Olmert is a complete hipocrite. According to a report in Frontpage News, he is the one who is delaying the evacuation: Defense officials: Olmert is delaying outpost plan ‘We’ve presented plan to dismantle illegal West Bank outposts 3 times’ http://www.pressdisplay.com/pressdisplay/viewer.aspx Why? Is it because he wants to wage a civil war on Jews Amona style. And then he calls it a disgrace that the outposts are still there!!
| | | David Wilder August 03, 2007
A few days ago I toured with an American family from California. When we arrived at the Shalhevet neighborhood, the 'shuk,' and I related to them the events leading up to next week's planned expulsion of two families from that site, their son piped in, "Arabs are going to throw you out?" And of course I responded, 'no, Jews are going to expel us.' He looked at me with astonishment, his eyes wide, filled with question marks. "I don't understand. What does the Israeli government care about two families in the Shalhevet neighborhood in Hebron? Why are they going to forcibly expel families? How can they do that?!" Very good questions, coming from a young man, first time in Hebron. I have trouble giving him a good answer. Not that I don't know the answer. The question is, how to express it, so that it will be comprehensible. Yesterday Hebron marked the 78th anniversary of the 1929 riots and massacre during which 67 Jews were slaughtered and over 70 injured. The Washington Post article, which I responded to last week, stated that the survivors 'fled.' This is, of course, a lie. The survivors were expelled. They weren't expelled once. They were expelled twice. First in August, 1929 following the riots, and then again, in the spring of 1936. A large group of families desired to return to Hebron, but were prevented from doing so due to 'political considerations' determined by the Jewish leadership at the time. However a group of some 30 families did move back to Hebron in 1931, and lived in the city until a few days after Passover in 1936. At that time the British again expelled them, saying that the Mufti was inciting, there was going to be trouble, and that the British police wouldn't be able to protect them. They threw them out with the clothes they were wearing, but nothing else. That was the end of a Hebron Jewish community until our return in 1967. It was, for all intensive purposes, the first time in almost a thousand years that Hebron had no Jewish population. In the 1920s and the 1930s there was no Jewish state, no Jewish army, no Jewish ability to truly defend themselves. Today, 78 years later, we have Jewish police, Jewish military, a Jewish government, a Jewish state. It seems that they prefer not to follow in the footsteps of the first Jew, Abraham, who, being commanded by G-d to "Lech Lecha" to "Go" to walk the land, the length and width of Eretz Yisrael, did just that, stopping only in Hebron, making this city his home, the first Jewish city in the Land of Israel. Rather, the Israeli state, using all of the resources available to such a sovereign body, prefers to follow in the footsteps of the Mufti and the British. Ah, you ask, the Mufti? The Mufti slaughtered people. How can you compare the Israeli government to Haj Amin el Husseini, a Jew-hater whose incitement led to the 1929 riots? Very clearly, Amin el Husseini's goal was the expulsion of Jews, starting with Hebron, and reaching Jerusalem, and other cities in Israel. He wanted Jews out, and cared not how it happened. He had plans to annihilate all the Jews living in Eretz Yisrael following Rommel's expected invasion of Israel during World War Two. He met with Hitler in Berlin in the 1930s and clearly discussed more than formation of the Muslim Brigades, which fought against the allied forces in Europe. And our government, where are they? Are they defending their people? Where are they today, as Kasam rockets continue to fall on Sderot? Where were they last year when rockets fired from Lebanon blasted northern Israel? How are they, at present, preserving not only the physical entity of the State of Israel, but also its heritage, its history, its essence? Yesterday, the new-old Defense Minister, Ehud Barak, effectively declared war on Hebron's Jewish residents, and seemingly on all Jews living in Judea and Samaria. Barak received first-hand information from high-ranking legal advisors within the administration that the families do not have to be expelled from their homes, that there is no court ruling compelling forced eviction of the families, and that there are legally viable alternatives to the expulsion which could be acceptable to both sides. (One of Hebron's ranking legal advisors, former Justice Minister Ya'akov Neeman offered such a compromise, labeled the "Neeman plan" months ago, on behalf of the community, but the compromise was rejected for reasons not specified.) Despite this information, despite the chance to avoid what could turn into an ugly clash, Barak prefers to flex his muscles and show the country what he's made of: Black uniforms, hard-rubber batons, tear gas, and lots of force. Blood, sweat and tears. ('Settler blood and tears, or course!) (The last time such a decision was taken, the result was Amona). A year and a half ago, nine Hebron families and a Torah study hall voluntarily left these homes in order to prevent what could have been an extremely violent situation. The community was given a firm promise, in the form of an agreement with the commander of forces in Judea and Samaria, General Yair Golan, that following our voluntary exit from the homes, families would soon be allowed to 'legally' return. That was a year and a half ago. The agreement was voided by Attorney General Menachem Mazuz, using the excuse that Golan was not authorized to make the agreement. This, despite the fact that the General was on and off the phone with his bosses in the Defense Ministry during the meeting with Hebron representatives in order to receive their OK to the compromise. Again we've been told that 'we can talk about the shuk after the families leave.' We've been through that once, once too many times. Not again. The property is Jewish property. A military appeals court recommended that the buildings be leased to the Hebron Jewish community. This too was rejected. What more do they want? The answer to that seems very clear: they are looking for blood. Jewish blood. Shades of the Mufti – shades of the British; blood and expulsion. Not by Arabs and British, rather by Jews. Astounding. And very sad. One of this morning's headlines in the ynetnews internet news site proclaims: 63 MKs demand that Israel not expel refugees from Sudan. [ynetnews.com] So now I have a new idea. Let's bring those refugees to Hebron and let them live in shuk. That way nobody will dare touch them. Unless, of course, they convert. Once they're Jewish, watch out. Then, for sure, they'll face expulsion: not from Israel, but from the Shalhevet neighborhood in Hebron. | |
| The army says it prevented the planned ascent to the ruins of the Jewish community of Homesh in Samaria, 18 miles east of Netanya, but hundreds of pioneers made their way up at night. They built a water tower and the beginnings of a makeshift synagogue. The security forces are planning ways to remove the hundreds, and destroy the makeshift structures. "The event has been successful, and continues." | | | So states a recorded announcement from the headquarters of Homesh First, the grassroots organization dedicated to rebuilding the destroyed town of Homesh. Homesh was one of four Jewish communities in Northern Samaria razed by Ariel Sharon's Disengagement plan two years ago, but its residents have never given up the idea of rebuilding it. An estimated 2,000 to 3,000 people have tried to make their way by foot to Homesh since Sunday morning. Many of them were stopped at several blockades set up by the army along the way, and many others were forcibly removed after reaching the ruins. The pioneers reported that one person was knocked unconscious during the eviction, and five others were injured by security forces in violence reminiscent of Amona. Nearly a year and a half ago, hundreds of youths required hospital treatment after police used excessive violence to remove them from a hilltop in Amona in order to enable the razing of nine Jewish houses. Limor Sohn Har-Melekh, from the Homesh First task force, announced Sunday night, "Army and police spokespersons say they have defeated us, but the fact is that more people are marching towards Homesh right now than this morning... The police were very violent, breaking cameras, using clubs, and pushing people from terraces. But our spirit is so strong that people who are taken down right away try to come back up..." In addition to the many hundreds of youth who participated, several families planning to live in Homesh were removed from the hilltop in the afternoon hours, while others who were on the scenic hilltop ran away. The army bused some of them to Rosh HaAyin and there dropped them off, and took the others to nearby Kedumim. Several dozen youths were attacked by Arabs from a nearby village, and the security forces intervened. MK Aryeh Eldad (National Union), who moved to Homesh three months before its destruction in 2005, also took part in the ascent on Sunday. This, after initially being told that even his Knesset Member privileges would not suffice to allow him passage to the area. "The manhunt that the Border Guard policemen are waging after the youths who have come to rebuild Homesh," he said, "will not break the spirit of those who still believe that the Land of Israel belongs to the Jewish People and not the Arabs." Organizers were very happy at the way the event was developing. "This is a rolling event, not a one-time thing," they said, "and it is not yet over. This is our climactic moment in the struggle for Homesh. It began last week when we pulled a good trick in announcing that Tuesday's planned ascent would not take place - while ever since then, hundreds have made their way up." "The point is to show the Prime Minister that we are not planning to ever give up the plan to return and rebuild Homesh. We have changed the rules of the game, and the government is unable to deal with the great amounts of people that keep coming here." The first ascent to Homesh took place seven months ago, on Chanukah, when 1,000 people evaded army checkpoints and lit holiday candles there. A few months later, shortly before Passover, 3,000 people attempted to settle the site, but were thrown out after three days. A month later, on Independence Day, 20,000 people marched to Homesh, in an event permitted at the last moment by the security forces. On June 12, thousands made their way to Homesh in a government-authorized visit, marking the 40th anniversary of the liberation of the area, and of all of Judea and Samaria. | | Police Beat Homesh Youth, Confiscate Cameras July 23 2007 http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/Flash.aspx/130413 Police have removed their identification tags and are beating Homesh youth and confiscating videos and cameras at this hour. Hundreds of activists reached Homesh overnight and early Monday morning, erected tents and began to build a new synagogue. They also have settled on a neighboring hilltop. (Photo: Police brutality with the Amona eviction - Olmert's showed how to deal with Settlers) | | Israeli media have maintained an almost total blackout on police violence at Homesh. Reports that police are hitting youth and confiscating cameras that document the violence have been relegated to one-line statements on the radio and on web sites. Media were not present at the site. Several hundred people circumvented police Sunday night and Monday morning and reached the site of the demolished Jewish community and a neighboring hilltop. They vastly outnumbered police and began building a synagogue, but police sent reinforcements and are forcibly dragging people on to buses. Homesh supporters at the site reported that police also took bottles of water away from activists. Border Police Brig.-Gen. Gets Note on File July 24, '07 http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/Flash.aspx/130455 (IsraelNN.com) Brigadier-General Shlomi Even-Paz, the head of the border police in Judea and Samaria, received a critical note in his personal file on Monday. According to the note, Even-Paz violated police procedure on Monday when dealing with activists who attempted to rebuild the destroyed Jewish community Homesh in the northern Shomron. Even-Paz ordered his officers to confiscate cameras and memory cards from activists who filmed events in Homesh. Some activists argued that Even-Paz also told officers to “break their arms and legs.” | "The day will come that our grandchildren will play in the streets of Homesh," vowed Moshe Feiglin, leader of the Jewish Leadership faction within the Likud party. "No one will remember the failure of the man who destroyed the community," he added, referring to former Prime Minister Ariel Sharon. Feiglin also denounced the police violence that is taking place at this hour in Homesh as forces beat and drag away hundreds of activists on to buses. "Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, who has failed to strike the enemy, sent security forces to hit Jews returning to Homesh," he stated. | | |
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