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Israel Commemorates the Assassination of Rabin with Another Massacre in Gaza – Mintpress News

Posted By on November 26, 2019

Jerusalem, Palestine My short visit to Palestine in early November began around the time of the commemoration of Yitzhak Rabins assassination, went through the assassination by Israel of Islamic Jihad leader, Bahaa Abu Al-Atta and his wife in Gaza, and ended as Prime Minister Netanyahu, who should be indicted for his countless crimes against the Palestinian people, was indicted for low grade corruption (valued at about $200,000), pulling strings and lying. And as always, Palestinians continue to bury their dead as Israelis bury their heads in the sand.

In a tweet following the assassination of Al-Atta, Dr. Basem Naim, Head of Council on International Relations, correctly wrote that the Israeli leadership is pushing the area into war to escape its internal failures. Not long after that Israel bombed both Gaza and Syria.

While it is wrong to speak ill of the dead, when the deceased is a man who represented an entire nation for over half a century, it would also be wrong to allow lies about the deceased to stand uncorrected. Contrary to common belief, Rabin did not die for peace. He spent his entire life destroying Palestine and making the lives of Palestinians unliveable.

Rabin agreed to go along with the Oslo Peace Plan only because it all but ensured that Palestinians would never be able to establish a state of their own. The Oslo Accords secured Israeli control over the entire length and breadth of Palestine. Peace, so it was assumed, would be a by-product of this agreement.

Rabin was the iconic Israeli and he represented Israels privileged elite: he was Ashkenazi, he fought in 1948, became a general, lead the IDF, he was Minister of Defense and Prime Minister. Being an iconic Israeli, Rabin was despised and envied by everything that his assassin represented: Yigal Amir was not-Ashkenazi but rather an Arab Jew, non-privileged, he was part of the national-religious movement which makes up the West Bank settler community. It is a community that did not have any part in the myth of the creation, the legacy of 1948 and the founding of the state and the military but pushed forward the settlement project in the West Bank.

No two groups could be more different and despise each other more than these two.

Israelis like to believe that Rabins assassination was caused by his handshake with Yasser Arafat. That the signing of the Oslo Accords, which allowed Palestinians to govern themselves, albeit to a very limited degree, is why he was killed. That his death represents the sacrifice all Israelis were willing to make for peace. However, in reality, his assassination was not about that at all. It was a climactic point in the tension between the two groups represented by the assassin and his victim.

At the public ceremony commemorating the assassination, the only major figure who spoke was also a retired general, former IDF Chief, head of the Blue and White Party, Benny Gantz. He is the heir apparent to the Rabin legacy of liberal Zionism which promises to continue killing Palestinians while claiming to want peace.

What can be said about Gaza that hasnt already been said? Well, all one has to do is to listen to the commentary on Israeli television news shows to find out. Set up like CNN, a panel of mostly men, naturally all Jewish Israeli, discuss the relations between Hamas and Islamic Jihad. One expert explained how Hamas was pleased that Israel took out Islamic Jihad leader Bahaa Abu al-Atta in Gaza as this helped Hamas in the competition between the two.

Comments that were tweeted by Dr. Basem Naim, former minister of health and the Head of Council on International Relations, showed a different story. The assumptions made by Israeli commentators suggesting that Palestinians would see an Israeli assassination of a Palestinian fighter as a cause for relief is indicative of the ignorance and arrogance of the Israeli media.

Abu-Atta was murdered in his bed, his wife was murdered alongside him and their children were seriously injured. There is no inquiry into the legality of the assassination, the murder of Abu-Attas wife, or the injuries to his children. In fact, a piece in Haaretz, a Liberal Zionist mouthpiece, by Amos Harel stated that Israel had a good week, as a result of the assassination and the massacre that followed.

The assassination was followed by a brutal attack on Gaza in which a total of 34 people were killed, including eight children. Over one hundred people were injured, among them fifty-one children. Indeed a successful week for Israel.

In order to get an understanding of the situation in Palestine, one must visit all of Palestine. In the South, Naqab Palestinian Bedouin activists are struggling under daily repression, dispossession, and arrests of activists. In a recent visit to what used to be the village of Al-Araqib, I saw Sheikh Sayagh A-Turi again for the first time since he was released from prison. With each visit, there is less and less of a village. Last time I was there at the end of 2018 there were still a few tents there. This time we sat on a blanket on the ground, under a tree.

The Israeli police have a special terrorist squad called the Yoav Brigade. It is a specially trained storm trooper brigade that deals with the unarmed, poor Beduin community. They come every day and they destroy everything in sight. I was told by village activists. If they see a blanket they take it throwing everything on the ground, tea, coffee, water, anything they find. The Sheikh is not permitted to be there, in his village on his land, at all.

Sheikh Rad Salah, from the 1948 Palestinian town of Umm El-Fahm is known as the leader of the currently outlawed Northern Branch of the Islamic movement. Israel outlawed the organization, known as The Northern Branch, in 2015. A piece by Lawrence Rubin in the Brookings Press claims, the decision to outlaw the Northern Branch seems to have been based on political calculations, not necessarily security interests. Middle East Monitor reports that an Israeli court convicted Sheikh Salah for incitement to commit terrorism. Magistrates also convicted Salah of illegal incorporation, citing his role as the leader of the Islamic Movement, which Israel outlawed for allegedly engaging in anti-Israel activities.

From the Naqab in the South to El-Jaleel in the north, from the Jordan Valley in the East to Yafa in the West, Palestine is occupied and Palestinians are subjected to inhumane treatment by the apartheid regime known as Israel. There was never a more important time to demand that Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) be enacted against Israel, and without delay.

Feature photo | Palestinians mourn over the bodies of Rasmi Abu Malhous and seven of his family members who were killed in overnight Israeli missile strikes on their family home in Deir al-Balah, Gaza, Nov. 14, 2019. Khalil Hamra | AP

Miko Peled is an author and human rights activist born in Jerusalem. He is the author of The Generals Son. Journey of an Israeli in Palestine, and Injustice, the Story of the Holy Land Foundation Five.

The views expressed in this article are the authors own and do not necessarily reflect MintPress News editorial policy.

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Israel Commemorates the Assassination of Rabin with Another Massacre in Gaza - Mintpress News

This Holiday Season, Give Your Loved One the Gift of Life – Miami’s Community Newspapers

Posted By on November 26, 2019

Dana Marin.

I am a 38-year-old wife, a mom of two young kids and a lawyer. I am also a Previvor meaning I took steps to stop my cancer before it could start. In July 2018, I purchased a 23andme at-home DNA test because I thought it could be a good opportunity to connect with distant relatives. But on September 13, 2018, I received my results and learned I carried the BRCA 1 gene mutation. I was in shock. I didnt have a family history of breast or ovarian cancer, so how was I at an increased risk of developing breast and ovarian cancer? Up until this point, my only knowledge and reference to BRCA was Angelina Jolie, as I never thought BRCA would be an issue for me. I had no idea that 1 in 40 Ashkenazi Jews carried the BRCA gene mutation, and of those that 87 percent were likely to develop breast cancer, or that 54 percent would develop ovarian cancer. Given those startling statistics, I knew I needed to do something.

I immediately called my doctor, Liz Etkin-Kramer, who suggested a medical-grade genetic test to confirm the mutation. Speaking with Dr. Etkin-Kramer was the best decision, because she was able to discuss my results, my options for treatment and most importantly, assured me that everything was going to be okay.

On November 12, 2018, just shy of two months from receiving my test results, I underwent a prophylactic risk-reducing total hysterectomy with salpingo-oophorectomy to remove my ovaries, fallopian tubes, uterus and cervix. Less than 3 months later, I had a prophylactic bilateral mastectomy with immediate reconstruction. By undergoing these procedures, I reduced my risk of breast and ovarian cancer to about 6 percent and 2 percent, respectively.

Through my personal journey and learning of my genetic history, I have become an advocate for raising awareness surrounding the BRCA mutation and encouraging not only those with a family history of cancer, but all Ashkenazi Jews to get screened.

This holiday season, I encourage you to give those you love the gift of knowledge and the gift of life by providing them with this inexpensive, simple, medical-grade saliva genetic test. I am forever grateful that I had the knowledge and power to take control of my health, that I will be able to be watch my children grow up, and that I have greatly reduced the chances of a cancer diagnosis.

To learn more about BRCA mutations and their impact on the Ashkenazi community, visit yodeah.org, a nonprofit organization whos mission is to educate and facilitate cost-effective testing for hereditary cancer genetic mutations in the Jewish community. Yodeahs goal is to save lives. Knowledge is power. Knowledge saves lives.

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What You Need to Know Before You Buy an At-Home Genetic Test – Newswise

Posted By on November 26, 2019

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MEDICINE

Newswise By Dani Kupperman, Genetic Counselor at Danbury Hospital, Jessica Lipschutz, Genetic Counselor at Norwalk Hospital, and Susan Ingram, Genetic Counselor at Norwalk Hospital

Summary:

At-home genetic testing kits, also known as direct-to-consumer or lab-to-consumer DNA tests, are growing in popularity especially as holiday gifts.

Most people are aware that at-home genetic testing kits can be used to provide information about their ancestry and family history. Due to advances in genetic testing technology and the availability of lower-cost genetic tests, some at-home genetic testing companies are now also offering health-related genetic testing services. These services can provide information about gene mutations that may put you or a family member at a higher risk of developing an inherited condition such as cancer.

Although these at-home genetic tests may provide information about your health and family history, as well as a dose of highly personalized holiday fun, there are a few things that you should know before you purchase a kit as a gift or send in your own DNA sample.

What are at-home genetic tests and how do they work?

At-home genetic tests are kits that use a sample of your cells to look for changes in your DNA called gene mutations, as well as information on ancestry or paternity. The kit provides tools and instructions for collecting a sample of your saliva, blood, or cells, usually from a swab of the inside of your cheek. You then send your sample to a laboratory (lab) for testing.

Are at-home genetic test results complete?

Although at-home genetic test results are usually accurate, they will likely be incomplete. Thats because at-home genetic tests only test for a few specific gene mutations. The limited scope of at-home genetic tests means that the results may not provide a complete picture of your risk for developing certain medical conditions.

For example, at-home genetic testing providers typically only test for three BRCA gene mutations that are linked to an increased risk of breast cancer, as well as other cancers. These three gene mutations are most common in people of Ashkenazi Jewish descent. For people in the general population who are not of Ashkenazi Jewish descent, the test may not capture other specific BRCA gene mutations that are linked to breast cancer risk. That means that it is possible for someone who receives a BRCA-negative result from an at-home genetic test to still be at an increased risk of developing breast cancer and possibly other cancers.

Are at-home genetic test results easy to understand?

The terminology used in at-home genetic test results can sometimes be confusing for consumers. For example, if the test results show a variant or clinically significant mutation, a consumer might not realize that they could be at increased risk of developing an inherited health condition.

What is the difference between at-home genetic test results and genetic test results provided by a certified genetic counselor?

Most people arent aware that at-home genetic tests do not provide a comprehensive genetic analysis. In contrast, genetic counselors carefully review your family history and coordinate whole gene sequencing, which looks for any mutation that may be associated with an increased risk of certain inherited diseases.

It may help to think of genetic testing like a book at-home DNA tests look at one word on one page, while professional genetic counselors read the entire book. Dani Kupperman, Genetic Counselor, Danbury Hospital

Further, genetic counselors can now perform genetic tests on a large number of genes on a single panel, resulting in more efficient, comprehensive genetic testing when compared to the less-extensive tests that were available years ago.

Related article: This Thanksgiving, Talk Turkey About Family Health History

Do at-home genetic test results need to be validated?

Due to the limitations of the tests and the terminology used in the results, the National Society of Genetic Counselors and the at-home genetic testing manufacturers themselves recommend that all at-home genetic test results be reviewed in a clinical setting by a certified genetic counselor or physician and confirmed by another CLIA-certified genetic laboratory (lab) before being used for healthcare decision-making.

Plus, although at-home DNA test companies have CLIA-certified genetic labs, these labs do not specialize in cancer genetic testing. This is another reason why consumers should validate their at-home DNA test results with a certified genetic counselor.

At Nuvance Health, our genetic counselors often see patients who have done at-home genetic tests and want to verify their positive or negative results for BRCA and other gene mutations. Our genetic counselors can assess the at-home genetic test results, perform additional testing for verification, and work with each patient and his or her physician to develop a proactive health management plan based on the most accurate and complete information.

Are at-home genetic test results private?

At-home genetic testing services usually allow consumers to choose how much information to share and who they would like to share it with. However, at-home genetic testing providers may not be held to the same privacy standards as healthcare providers.

At Nuvance Health, we have policies and processes in place to protect your privacy, including what information is revealed from your genetic testing results and who has access to your information.

What should I consider before doing an at-home genetic test or giving one as a gift?

Although at-home genetic tests might seem like a fun idea for yourself, a friend, or a family member who might not otherwise seek genetic counseling, it is important to consider the risks, limitations, and psychological implications of DNA testing before you make a gift purchase or submit your DNA sample.

For example, it is possible for a genetic test to reveal unexpected information such as that your parents are not your biological parents or that you are at risk for a serious disease. Such unexpected news can understandably cause stress and anxiety, especially if it is not the right time in your life for you to learn these new facts.

Consumers who use at-home DNA tests may not fully understand or be prepared for the implications their results may have. At Nuvance Health, our genetic counselors work with patients before beginning the genetic testing process to help them weigh the pros and cons of genetic testing. We make sure our patients are emotionally and mentally prepared for the possible results, which can sometimes be upsetting and may lead to difficult decisions or conversations with loved ones.

Key takeaways about at-home genetic tests

At-home genetic tests can be fun and interesting, as well as provide people with the tools and empowerment they need to be proactive about their health. Before taking an at-home genetic test, it is essential to understand what you are getting into and make sure you really want to know the results. It is also critical that you make a plan to verify the results with trained professionals.

Related article: Genetic Testing Results Help Mom Be Proactive About Her Health

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What You Need to Know Before You Buy an At-Home Genetic Test - Newswise

Antisemitism on the college campus – Grand Valley Lanthorn

Posted By on November 26, 2019

Currently and historically, antisemitism has been a threat to American community and diversity. The term, now referring to hostility or prejudice against the Jewish people, was initially coined by a German named Wilhelm Marr in the late 19th century. Marr inaccurately used the linguistic term semitic to define what he saw as a dangerous and alien race in his pamphlet The Victory of Judaism Over Germandom. His arguments, later used by the Nazi party, have also been seen in our own country from 20th century anti-immigration laws preventing Jewish migration into the United States to Unite the Right protestors in Charlottesville, Virginia chanting Jews will not replace us in 2017.

To combat antisemitism and strengthen campus education on the subject, Grand Valley State University student Bella Rosenberg hosted the event Campus Inclusion: Antisemitism on Tuesday, November 19. Her presentation, which included discussion of personal experiences with antisemitism from her fellow students Ethan Shimones, Ben Friedman and Bella Lieberman, addressed the history of antisemitism and how communities can fight proactively against it.

The word Jew is a borderline slur the reason its borderline is because it depends on who youre talking to, but it tends to have negative connotations, said Rosenberg. Like from the 1936 attack on a French Jewish political named Leon Blum, where he was dragged from his car while people yelled death to the Jew. Or if youve ever heard things like dirty Jew, stuff like that. So its best, at least for non-Jewish people, to say Jewish people as opposed to Jews.

Many American stereotypes and popular conceptions of Jewish people are based on the Ashkenazi, a Jewish diaspora population from Eastern Europe. There are many Jewish diasporas, populations identified by their involuntary mass dispersion from their indigenous homeland and split into different minority ethnic groups, such as the Mizrahi from the Middle East and Central Asia, or the Sephardi who fled Spain and Portugal during the Spanish Inquisition.

Between 1881 to 1920, about three million Ashkenazi Jews immigrated to the United States, said Rosenberg. They were treated similarly to the other immigrants in terms of discrimination when it came to employment, education, and social advancement. The Populist Party perpetuated the idea that D.C. and Wall Street were in the hands of international Jewish banking houses, and that the Jews were the center of an international conspiracy to fix the currency/economy to a single gold standard.

This stereotype of Jewish people as greedy bankers a characterization dating as far back as the 9th century, when medieval Christians restricted their Jewish subjects to unappealing careers like money lending and tax collecting is often accompanied by appearance-based tropes, such as droopy, beady eyes and big noses. Rosenberg shared a piece of Nazi propaganda aimed at children saying the Jewish nose is crooked at its tip it looks like the number six. Though its been almost a century since the popularization of Der ewige Jude style Nazi propaganda outright depicting Jewish people as subhuman monsters, these stereotypes can still be seen in popular culture. One particularly unsubtle example cited by Rosenberg during her presentation was the Gringotts goblins from Harry Potter greedy, secretive bankers with beady eyes and crooked noses who never forget a debt.

Most Jewish characters in media tend to be a stereotyped exaggeration, or theyre totally chill with being in an entirely Christian culture, said Rosenberg. On one hand youve got your Howard Wolowitz from the Big Bang Theory, whos characterization is based like exclusively off of stereotypes, especially his relationship with his mother.

The event also covered challenges faced by Jewish members of the Grand Valley community, such as attendance conflicts with important Jewish holidays.

What Ive struggled with in terms of taking off the Jewish holidays is that I have to play catch up with my assignments, said Roseberg. Like, were almost at Thanksgiving and Im still trying to catch up in some of my classes! But the holidays fell late this year, they fell in October as opposed when they typically occur in September. The ever changing Gregorian dates of the Jewish holidays isnt something I can help, its just something I follow.

Rosenberg notes that though she has been fortunate with professors understanding why she has to miss class on religious holidays, the larger problem could be solved through changes to school policy.

Personally, I think that every non-religious-affiliated academic and professional institution should have some sort of interfaith training where everyone can be educated on important holidays and days that students/employees/what-have-you of different religions should be able to take off said Rosenberg. It goes beyond being Jewish kids in a Christian area, because there are more religions here Grand Valley as a whole should be more educated on how to accommodate non-Christian students. Having to constantly explain to my friends, professors, classmates, etc. that Im not going to be in class on the day an assignment is due because Im going to be in synagogue praying all day is kind of annoying.

Rosenberg staged the presentation on behalf of her role as the Campus Inclusion Intern for Hillel, Grand Valleys chapter of the international foundation for jewish campus life.

The Campus Inclusion Internship is relatively new, said Rosenberg. It was established to forge relationships between Hillel and other minority groups on campus, as well as to educate Grand Valleys students, faculty and staff on antisemitism what it is, whats the history, what it looks like on college campuses, and how to be a good ally. Within Hillel, Im the person students report antisemitic incidents to. So if someones professor wasnt letting them miss class because of a Jewish holiday and counted them as absent, which is religious discrimination, they would come to me.

Rosenbergs research covered so much history that she was unable to fit everything into her presentation, shortening it into a more manageable account of antisemitism that was still too comprehensive for this article to cover in its entirety. But the most important lesson to be learned is not just that antisemitic persecution has occurred throughout history, but that the stereotypes and generational trauma it created still exists in our society today. Fighting against continued antisemitism, such as that exhibited by the Charlottesville protestors or the violent hatred of the 2018 Pittsburgh synagogue shooting, is something that requires the pro-active cooperation of the campus community.

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Antisemitism on the college campus - Grand Valley Lanthorn

U.S. and Israel seek assurances on Iran from each other, but for very different reasons – Haaretz

Posted By on November 26, 2019

Israel has hosted a series of senior defense officials in recent weeks, climaxing in Sundays visit by the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Mark Milley, who was hosted by Israel Defense Forces Chief of Staff Aviv Kochavi.

Both countries took care to stress that ties between their respective defense establishments are particularly close. But two other considerations that arent talked about publicly are also apparently motivating this aerial convoy of senior American officials. Both have to do with calming fears Israels fear of American abandonment and Americas fear of unilateral Israeli action.

Haaretz Weekly Ep. 50Haaretz

>>'It's time to teach them a lesson': How Iran plotted to strike Saudi Arabia

The Israeli fear stems from the Trump administrations recent moves: It has refrained from responding to Iranian attacks in the Gulf, including one that did serious damage to Saudi oil facilities, another that downed an expensive American drone, and has withdrawn American soldiers from the Kurdish regions of northeast Syria, opening the way for a Turkish ground invasion. Israel is scared by Americas apparent desire to quit the region, which leaves Iran with more room to maneuver.

The Americans, in contrast, are apparently worried about decisions Israel might make in the future. Senior Israeli officials speak ceaselessly about the dangers posed by Irans efforts to entrench itself militarily in southern Syria, smuggle advanced weaponry to Hezbollah and bolster its presence in Iraq and Yemen. Increased military friction between Israel and Iran plus its satellites could drag the Americans into a regional war, which, judging by his public statements, U.S. President Donald Trump doesnt want.

This is somewhat reminiscent of the series of senior Pentagon officials who visited Israel in the summer of 2011 and again the following summer. At both junctures, as we later discovered, Israel was considering attacking Irans nuclear facilities on its own. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and then-Defense Minister Ehud Barak favored such an attack; the American generals were sent to take the pulse of their Israeli counterparts who opposed it.

As far as we know, no such attack is currently on the agenda, since Iran is still committed in principle to its nuclear deal with five major powers (the sixth, America, quit the deal in May 2018), and its recent violations of the deal havent yet crossed the line that Israel deems intolerable.

Nevertheless, Israeli officials recent statements about Iran have been unusually aggressive.

On Sunday, Netanyahu and Defense Minister Naftali Bennett toured the Syrian and Lebanese borders. Netanyahu announced that Israel would work to thwart arms smuggling from Iran to Syria and block its efforts to turn Iraq and Yemen into bases for launching missiles. Bennett added that Iranian forces in Syria have nothing to look for here.

Monday, at the official memorial ceremony for soldiers who died in the 1956 Sinai war, Bennett said, its clear to our enemies that well respond to any attempt to prevent us from living. Our response will be very precise and very painful. Im aiming these remarks not only at those who threaten our lives on the southern front, but also at those in the north.

Senior Israeli officials have also referred to the domestic woes the Iranian regime is facing a massive wave of protests in Iraq and Lebanon that has taken on an anti-Iranian flavor, and last weeks violent protests in Iran in response to a hike in gas prices. The warnings about possible Iranian moves against Israel arent a false alarm. But its impossible to completely separate Israeli officials considerations from the domestic situation, primarily the decision to indict Netanyahu and the impasse in efforts to form a government

For years, Netanyahu was justly praised for showing responsibility and restraint in employing military force, especially his stubborn refusal to bow to populist pressure for another pointless war in the Gaza Strip. On the northern front, too, he generally acted with finesse which prevented a full-scale clash with Iran.

But he has had one documented slip: A week before Septembers election, Attorney General Avichai Mendelblit had to intervene (with the armys encouragement) to stop him from an operation in Gaza that could have forced a postponement of the election, and which he planned to launch without vetting it with the security cabinet.

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A person who in recent years was in the know about the campaign between the wars, the IDFs operations beyond Israels borders, was asked last week about how much the continued conflict between Iran and Israel depended on actions taken by the latter. The answer was: 20 to 80, in other words Israel is the one who will dictate to a great extent how things develop. This situation will require all the oversight bodies the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee, attorney general, the media to be on heightened alert. And mostly, it places particular responsibility on Kochavi, who testified after the recent targeted killing in Gaza that all the decisions were made in a business-like manner and were not influenced by political considerations.

Given the circumstances in which Netanyahu is preoccupied with his own personal fate and the new defense minister needs to take advantage of the relatively short time he has at his disposal to make himself stand out politically, all eyes are on Kochavi. He pushed to take an aggressive line in the recent operations in Gaza and Syria, and he is now the responsible adult. In addition, a number of other senior defense officials are identified more with Netanyahu than Kochavi is, or are examining the events mostly from the tactical viewpoint, which emphasizes the need for continuing with counter-operations. The previous IDF chief of staff, Gadi Eisenkot, demonstrated an especially strong backbone sometimes it seemed as If he was almost roaring for battle with the politicians. Now Kochavi is facing, against his will, a similar test.

The military cannot be completely protected against the political considerations that preoccupy the establishment. The General Staff is not a monastery and its generals are well aware of what is going on in the country. But the commanders of the division that Bennett and Netanyahu visited on Sunday, and the pilots who undertake their night-time missions, must be certain that the security decisions about life or death matters are made for the right reasons. Given Netanyahus apocalyptic mood, reflected in the last few days in the vicious attacks against prosecutors and the police, the doubts about his decision-making have been growing.

At the beginning of the decade, the defense establishment was rocked by the Harpaz affair, which was mainly an unrestrained conflict between then chief of staff, Gabi Ashkenazi, and Barak. Netanyahu, as prime minister, showed zero interest in the affair. He suddenly remembered it only in the course of the last year when Ashkenazi entered political life and Mendelblit who as Military Advocate General was almost court martialed for criminally delaying the handling of a forged document began to be perceived, as far as Netanyahu was concerned, as a real threat. During this period, the question came up of how the military could preserve its moral and professional compass, while the defense leadership wallowed in mudslinging. This question is now even more resounding when the prime minister is in trouble and the security crisis can ruin all the politicians plans.

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U.S. and Israel seek assurances on Iran from each other, but for very different reasons - Haaretz

More than 1000 women take part in 2019 MTL Challah Bake – The Suburban Newspaper

Posted By on November 26, 2019

More than 1,000 women took part in the 2019 edition of the MTL Challah Bake,hosted by Federation CJAs Womens Philanthropy, at the Crowne Plaza in St. Laurent last week.

The event is part of the worldwide grassroots movement The Shabbat Project, which "aims to unite the Jewish community from across the political, ideological, and national spectrum by experiencing one complete Shabbat together," a Federation CJA statement explains. The Shabbat Project was started by South Africas Chief Rabbi, Dr. Warren Goldstein. More than "a million Jews in 101 countries and 1,511 cities are expected to take part" in the project this year.

This year's MTL Challah Bake included a special performance by the Shira Choir, "an inclusive group of singers with developmental disabilities dedicated to celebrating the power of music."

The Montreal event was co-chaired by Ella Barr, Cindi Becker, Sandra Eskenazi and Lynn Etinson.

"Proceeds support Federation CJAs annual campaign, which helps secure a strong, vibrant and safe future for the community in Montreal and around the world," says the Federation CJA statement.

There are so many different ways to live Jewishly today, and making challah is an important part of how I celebrate Shabbat with my family each week, stated Ruth Bensimon Choueke, Chair of Federation CJAs 2019 Womens Philanthropy Campaign. Whether youre Sephardic or Ashkenazi, young or old, religious or secular, a recent immigrant or a fourth-generation Montrealer, the Challah Bake is a beautiful opportunity to strengthen our sense of community, connecting with each other and our shared traditions.

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More than 1000 women take part in 2019 MTL Challah Bake - The Suburban Newspaper

How shakshuka and other Middle Eastern dishes turned into iconic ‘Jewish food’ – Haaretz

Posted By on November 26, 2019

A certain childhood memory remains vivid for Nof Atamna-Ismaeel. I went with my parents to visit a friend of my fathers from work. A Jewish family. His mother made stuffed grape leaves. I was sure they were Arab just because of the grape leaves, said Dr. Atamna-Ismaeel, a microbiologist and past winner of the Israeli reality TV show MasterChef, in a recent interview with the Israel Hayom daily.

As a young girl, Atamna-Ismaeel associated stuffed grape leaves with the Arab cuisine she knew from the central Israeli town of Baka al-Garbiyeh, where she grew up. The action of rolling the leaves gave the dish its name: Jews from the Balkans called it sarmale or sarmalute, in Romanian; Jews from the rest of the Ottoman Empire called the dish dolma or dolmas (in Turkish) and dawali (in Arabic). As with many of the dishes Jews and Arabs from the region inherited from earlier generations, stuffed grape leaves are a living repository of stories, languages, geographies and origin awareness piled one atop the other.

Food its manner of preparation and consumption, and its place in a culture and language has become the most significant, albeit the most overlooked point of encounter between Jewish Arab culture and Palestinian Arab culture. In addition to the cuisines of the Jews of Morocco, Tunisia, Libya, Egypt, Yemen, Iran and Iraq, Mizrahi food in Israel also contains references to elements of Palestinian, Ottoman and Arab culinary cultures.

Until recently, the term Mizrahi food was an Israeli cultural signifier of a kind of food that was popular and inexpensive food that came in large quantities, had no refinement to it, and used a lot of oil and paprika. It was also thought of as the food identified with big family celebrations and so on. But can the term Mizrahi food also lay claim to a culinary sphere that is separate from that which is identified with the cultural spaces in which the Mizrahi communities existed?

Mizrahi food celebrates mixture. Palestinian hummus has collided with Yemenite malawah and Kurdish kubbeh. Moroccan fish is eaten in a Palestinian pita with Shami (Syrian) tahini on the side. Unlike other branches of Mizrahi culture, Mizrahi food underwent a process of acceptance, appropriation and nationalization. In the past, because of its low cost and popular association with home cooking, or as typical street food, Mizrahi food was associated with the weaker segments of Jewish society in Israel, as reflected in cinema and literature. Even today, Mizrahi food is still thought of as home cooking, as food that is functional and satisfying but it is also the food of the non-Mizrahi other, when they celebrate.

The appropriation process occurred in tandem with worldwide changes in the 1980s and connected to the rise of the Mediterranean diet as a lifestyle. The culture of olive oil, fresh tomatoes and garlic was marketed as both tasty and healthful. At the start of this process in Israel, trendsetters, virtually all of whom were Ashkenazim (that is, of European descent), still referred to this as Italian food and local restaurants served pasta and more pasta. In time, the arbiters of taste had to acknowledge that the culinary culture in their immediate surroundings Palestinian Arab food and Mizrahi food was based on the same preferred ingredients. Mizrahi food, which only a few years earlier was still an object of scorn, was already melded with Palestinian cuisine, some elements of which had already been nationalized, and was quickly recruited for purposes of Israeli propaganda. Images of Israeli chumminess were now revised via the ritual of eating Palestinian hummus, and political questions about appropriation and assimilation of Palestinian food began to buzz in the liberal sphere.

At first the talk about Palestinian food became a cultural bon ton in trendy Tel Aviv. Gradually, Mizrahi food began to enjoy a similar reputation. Its easy to miss the idea at the basis of the appropriation criticism by asserting that many Mizrahim not only see themselves as part of Israeli culture, but as among its most prominent creators.

What should one make of the present situation, in which Mizrahi food has gone from being an object of derision to being on the menus of the most fashionable cafes? How did the shakshuka just as spicy and oily as ever go from being a Tunisian Jewish food to a hallowed staple of the Israeli breakfast? How should one respond to the ironic turn in which the dishes of Mizrahi Jews have lately, especially in North America, become almost synonymous with Jewish food?

Entering into a discussion of Mizrahi food by considering the question of the appropriation of Palestinian Arab food also means recognizing the deep historic connections between these cuisines. As with the coexistence that was part of the common musical space shared with the Muslim cultural environment, the food of the Jews of Arab countries was identical to that of their neighbors, and sometimes even more varied. Moreover, the key difference between these cuisines are a result of appropriation: While the cultural identity of the creators of Palestinian Arab food is often denied and obscured by the people serving it, eating it or writing about it, the identification of Mizrahim with the state has never been more pronounced. A Mizrahi catering hall that considers itself Israeli that is, not just Tunisian does not by dint of this identification make the culinary origins of the dishes it serves Israeli, just as a Japanese immigrant in New York who makes sushi in a restaurant does not make sushi American.

To pinpoint all the culinary connections between Mizrahi and Shami-Palestinian food, a more precise terminology is needed than has hitherto been employed. Alinazik, for example, a dish of lamb kebab grilled eggplant and onion over yogurt, with a clarified butter sauce a staple of the cuisines of Gaziantep (Turkey) and Aleppo is also included in Jewish cuisine in a kosher version with a tomato base to replace the yogurt and butter. Similarly, Lebanese Jews, like the Mizrahi family from Sidon, typically made hummus with bulgur. So when they make hummus at the Azura restaurant in Jerusalem, which was founded by Jews with origins in the locales on the borders between Iraq and Iran, and between Syria and Turkey that act also deeply embodies a cultural continuity with cuisines that have many ties to one another, and which existed together in the Ottoman Empire prior to the age of partition in the Middle East.

When Jews from Arab lands arrived in Israel in the 1950s, their culinary culture changed all at once. The ingredients that had been available to them along the rim of the Mediterranean, on the banks of the Tigris or on the Atlantic coast, disappeared and were replaced by mass-produced cooking oil, egg powder and even cubes of frozen fish, if they were lucky. The newcomers subordinated what they had known in their countries of origin to the constraints of the new culture. Palestinian olive oil, for example, was available to a small part of the Jewish public members of the Ashkenazi elite who were close to the military corridors of power.

For Eastern European immigrants in Israel, Palestinian cuisine and Arab Jewish cuisine were equally alien. As noted, the Mizrahi foods, which were so heavily seasoned, contained large amounts of oil and were perceived by those of European background as unhealthy. They even became the subject of jokes. And yet Mizrahi food, or a combination of the two Arab cuisines, Mizrahi and Palestinian, satisfied the European fantasy of briefly traveling far from home, whether to Qalqilyah in the West Bank or to the Hatikva neighborhood in Tel Aviv, and enjoying a dish prepared in some exotic kitchen.

Israel is apparently the only place in the world in which food ingredients have been reduced to their national origin. Think about the culinary culture with its many influences that crystallized over centuries along the Atlantic coast of Morocco: saffron, argan oil, the flesh of goats and fish, tajine stews loaded with seasonal greens on a base of tomatoes reddened in the sun of the Western Mediterranean. Yet, when people talk about Mizrahi food, all this richness has been reduced to Moroccan fish, a marginal dish that is not up to bearing the burden of representing the culture from which it comes. This dish has even been paired with Aleppan food, and made with a sauce of sour cherries with dry mint and tahini; or with khachapuri (a cheese-filled bread from the Black Sea region); or with rice kubbeh from the banks of the Tigris. The distillation of all this culinary richness into Mizrahi food is one of the weak points of Mizrahi culture, which submitted itself to reduction.

This reduction occurred, among other places, in the Mizrahi restaurant, an institution that served an especially eclectic mix of Amazigh couscous from the depths of the Sahara, Iraqi kubbeh, fries with salad, Palestinian hummus and an inferior pareve version of Bavarian crme a dessert of French origin named for the German state of Bavaria, which was Balkanized and made Mizrahi. Spiciness became a key characteristic of Maghrebi food, even though the latter wasnt overly spicy in its original form.

This culinary distortion was immortalized in a satiric scene from Boaz Davidsons 1974 movie Charlie and a Half. The mother of Gila, an Ashkenazi girl, who opposed her daughters marriage to Charlie (played by Yehuda Barkan), nearly dies from ingesting a spicy red mixture; her condition only worsens when she mistakenly tries to wash it down with arak instead of water.

Over the years, Moroccan, Iraqi and Persian restaurants were established in Israel on the basis of the classic Mizrahi restaurants. Olive oil, which had meanwhile become so popular in New York and California, made a return to the Israeli table, even as two things were simultaneously ignored: the fact that the local land is full of olive trees, and the fact that olive oil was consumed by Mizrahim long before they came to Israel. For example, before they immigrated to Israel, the Naaman family, owners of the Mahsanei Hashuk supermarket chain, kept a vast number of olive trees in southern Tunisia one of the worlds leading producers of olive oil.

The global culinary transformations arrived in Israel in the 1980s, but in the absence of a binding identity for Mizrahi Jews, Mizrahi food was soon adopted as authentic Israeli food. The custody battles over hummus, which has drawn in numerous claimants, were not repeated when it came to any discussion of Mizrahi food. Tunisian shakshuka and Iraqi kubbeh were all quickly dubbed Israeli and, before long, as the cooking shows and food columns gained in popularity, the new Israeli cuisine was established on the ruins of various types of Mizrahi Arab cuisine. Suddenly Persian food, in adapting itself to the Israeli palate, became mild, and even milder. Suddenly falafel was being served with gleaming white gloves, considered clean and healthier, and accompanied by a gluten-free pita and organic hummus. The problematic image that used to be associated with Mizrahi restaurants was quickly forgotten in favor of touting Israeli restaurants that promote new Israeli cuisine, a source of national pride around the world.

Who would have believed that a pan-fried green chili pepper a mandatory item on the Shabbat table of every Mahgrebi Jew, where it appears alongside a fried eggplant and a tomato salad thats called cooked salad, in Maghrebi Arabic would one day star on every plate, alongside delicate dollops of tahini and yogurt, drizzled with local olive oil. The concept of localness has become the main byword of the new Israeli cuisine, with the Carmel Market, in Tel Aviv, and Mahane Yehuda, in Jerusalem, providing the new locality agent a Mizrahi backdrop, with a cookbook about it becoming a best seller in English. But the condescending concept of localness was forged at the expense of entire and distinct food cultures that were ostracized and forgotten: those of our grandmothers.

In the dishes that are preserved and passed down from generation to generation lies the secret of cultural continuity. They are the point of contact between past and present. Dishes are always the part of immigrant cultures which survive the longest, long after clothing, music and language have been abandoned, as British cultural anthropologist and cookbook writer Claudia Roden, daughter of a Syrian Jewish family, has written. In her exemplary books about Middle Eastern and Jewish cuisine, Roden has documented the long history of Mizrahi food.

Nonetheless, Mizrahi Jewish food, which has such an incredible richness, is losing its age-old identity, which comes from many geographical sources. The Turkish brek and the Tunisian brik are, in the minds of both Israelis and American Jews, simply considered Israeli food. Essentially, the identifying labels for food items that come from the culinary sphere of Islam, from places that for the average Israeli do not presently exist, are being changed.

Part of the backdrop to the cultural context in which the appropriation is occurring is the weak image of the country of origin. Fish and chips, a classic Portuguese Jewish dish in origin, will forever be labeled as British; tortellini with pumpkin and Amaretti cookies will, for now at least, remain an Italian Jewish dish from Mantua. But shakshuka, which is consumed daily in Tunisia, is referred to by all as Israeli, while the cultural identity of the Tunisian community in which it was invented is erased. In todays Tunis, the locals fondly remember the Jews and are amazed at how the Amazigh word shakshuka ended up in Israeli cuisine, and then in Jewish cuisine, and not for example in French cuisine, even though that culture swallowed up more Tunisian Jews than did Israel. Ironically, a traditional Tunisian Jewish dish is not considered sufficiently Jewish on its own. In order to obtain the Jewish seal, it first had to be seen as Israeli.

Todays Israel is dismissive of questions of origin, ownership, belonging and history regarding communities that dont serve its official narrative. Israel and the United States, for example, are among the few countries that are not signatories to the International Convention on the Use of Designations of Origin and Names for Cheeses, which safeguards the connection between the nomenclature cheeses and the areas in which they are produced. One of the basic principles of the classification of local food in different areas of the world has to do with the equitable relations between farmers and their land and environment. Its not just about what kind of feed the chickens are given, but there are also ethical, historical and ecological aspects to the issue of land ownership. The unequal power relations between different socioeconomic communities in Israel are also evident in the discussion of Mizrahi food its definition and promotion, the ability to make a living from it, and to speak on its behalf. Will the question of culinary honor also be placed at the heart of the discussion about the emergent cuisine in Israel?

In Tunisia, Morocco, Turkey or even Canada, food is also political, but in other ways. People dont get preoccupied with its national definition; they just prepare it the way they learned to from their family, their neighborhood, the environment they grew up in or lived in. The focus in Israel on the question of the national identity of a dish may well be unique. While America doesnt refer to Creole Cajun cooking or the food brought by Italian immigrants as American food, Israel blithely does that with Mizrahi and Palestinian cuisines. The process is somewhat parallel to the erasure of the languages of the Jews in the 1950s Yiddish, Ladino and Arabic whose literatures were kept out of the canon by the agents of a new language supposedly based on the Bible and not on more recent upstart languages. But while languages from those countries were largely ignored, the food still exists as a kind of powerful memory of the coexistence that once was.

Similarly, olive oil is not culturally admired in Israel because it has been consumed for years by Djerba Jews in Jerusalem, or by a Palestinian family in Ein Karem in Jerusalem, but because it was consumed by the inhabitants of an ancient Oriental land, with a book in one hand and a sword in the other; no different from the olive growers in Israel today who conjure up biblical stories as they press the olives.

As Yahil Zaban, author of the Hebrew-language Eretz Okhelet: Al Hateavon Hayisraeli (English title: A Land of Milk and Hummus: A Study of Israeli Culinary Culture), has written, food is always more than just the sum of its ingredients. It is made of words, imagery and metaphors. Similarly, Ronit Vered was right when she wrote here earlier this month that, Its people who insist [that food] has community, religious or national meaning, but even that changes and is shaped according to historical circumstances.

Thus we seek to place Mizrahi food within a narrative framework that serves political, social and economic interests and also as a historic resource. Those pushing the ever-growing commercial and Israeli-national culinary sphere impose their preferences on us. In such an environment, demands for culinary justice and against the imposition of narrow terminology are sarcastically derided as culinary racial theories. But food, racism, power and justice will always be intertwined, as food historian Michael W. Twitty demonstrated in his acclaimed 2017 book The Cooking Gene:A Journey Through African American Culinary History in the Old South. Twitty also lucidly addressed the issue of cultural appropriation. Is the demand for culinary purity at all reasonable in a world of migrations and exiles and occupations? Must cultures stick exclusively to their own cuisine?

And at the same time, we can ask: Arent chefs of Israeli-Jewish background allowed to make hummus or harissa? Of course they are. But cultural diffusion is not the same as cultural appropriation. Diffusion is a natural process that occurs when people from different cultures live in proximity to one another and cannot help but interact. Cultural appropriation, however, hinges on exploitation, abuse, erasure, scorn and theft. And also on the willful ignoring of all of these things. Which is why chefs of Israeli-Jewish background need to be alert to the ways in which they are talked about or on their behalf. A Lebanese Jewish chef who lives in Israel, for instance, is also making Lebanese food when he makes kibbeh nayyeh. Taking what the Jews have made for generations and attaching the label Israeli to it is another form of culinary injustice, and an erasure and disregarding of the ancient Jewish traditions of that food.

A few weeks ago, chef Nof Atamna-Ismaeel spoke in a way thats seldom heard about the split between Mizrahi and Palestinian food: The separation between the Arab Jews and the Palestinian Arabs is one of the worst things that ever happened here. Everything could have been different if there were cooperation between us. The Mizrahim and we were both scorned by the elite that was dominant here and they too, like us, were forced to hide their culture. Instead of joining hands, we split into separate groups.

The separation Atamna-Ismaeel spoke of, in that interview with the daily Yedioth Ahronoth, along with the general negation of the proximate past, and the denial of the Arab dimensions of the region, are what have enabled the nationalization and conversion of Mizrahi food in Israel (and the West in general). But this food, which Israelis like to say is killer tasty, will remain tasteless as long as the unique combinations that lend it its flavor, identity and history continue to be denied.

Continued here:

How shakshuka and other Middle Eastern dishes turned into iconic 'Jewish food' - Haaretz

Zionism As A Reflection of Jewish History Past and Present – The Jewish Press – JewishPress.com

Posted By on November 26, 2019

Photo Credit: courtesy

An interview with Alex Ryvchin, author of Zionism: The Concise History

Q: What do you see as the purpose of the book and who is it for?

A: The whole concept of Zionism has been politically and strategically trashed by her enemies. The danger is that future generations will only know Zionism as an evil to be fought and the young people, whom we count on as the next advocates to tell the story of Zionism and defend it, today are generally apathetic or ignorant of this story. We hear people saying Zionism has nothing to do with Judaism or being Jewish, but I think Zionism is inextricably linked to Jewish history.

The story of Zionism is the story of the Jewish people. And if Jews dont know that story and dont take part in it, we will see greater rates of intermarriage and loss of identity.

For this reason, Id like to see my book taught in schools and universities.

Q: One of the patterns in Jewish history is making questionable alliances with apparent enemies. You mention Herzl in this regard. Can you give an example, and do you think this is an unavoidable element of Zionism?

Herzl dealt with a lot of ardent antisemites like the Kaiser and the Russian Foreign Minister. He felt a cold synergy between the interests of Zionism and these rabid antisemites. Herzl thought that for the Jews to achieve the return to their ancestral land, these antisemites who are so keen to purge their countries of Jews would be accommodating. And indeed, many of them saw a benefit in a movement that could absorb a large number of Jews.

In any political campaign such as Zionism, there has to be a dose of realpolitikto think not only about the idealism, but also how to practically achieve your goal. That means creating alliances with those you find unsavory. The danger is when you look at an alignment of interests as temporary and mistake that for good faith or long term alliances. To Herzls credit, he quickly realized he was not going to achieve the goals of Zionism through alliances with those who were fundamentally hostile to Jewish rights. That is why he shifted the Zionist movement from the European continent to Great Britain, where he found men who more driven by Christian ideals and a general passion for the idea of the Jews returning to their ancestral land.

Today, Israel has formed alliances with some nations that might really see a short term alignment of interests, but dont harbor any great feeling of warmth towards the Jewish people. That is dangerous, but it is also the world that we live in. And as long as the Netanyahu government and the successive governments go into this with their eyes open, I think it is something that can and needs to be done. But at the same time, I think that Israel should act morally in this regard and call out antisemitism of far-right leaders around the world with whom they may have diplomatic relations. If those relations are genuine, they will withstand those criticisms.

Q: We know the Balfour Declaration favors the establishment of a national home for the Jewish people in Palestine and that nothing shall be done which may prejudice the civil and religious rights of the existing non-Jewish communities in Palestine but it also says nothing should be done to prejudice the rights and political status enjoyed by Jews in any other country. What was that issue?

A: The concern was that Zionism was not the universal position of the Jewish World. There was still discussion in the Jewish World what was best way to alleviate the suffering of the Jews was through assimilation. Not everyone was on the side of Zionism, particularly those who lived in liberal Democratic countries like the UK, Australia and the US. They did not see the need for a national movement to return to Palestine. They favored assimilation.

In order to assuage those concerns, that wording was put in, to say that basically, those Jews who preferred to live outside of the Jewish State would continue to live in the Diaspora with nothing to impede their rights. There was a concern that once the Jewish State was formed, Jews living outside that state would be viewed as alien, foreigners. That language in the Balfour Declaration was to protect them.

I am keen that people should read this book and apply its lessons to contemporary times. I think that is very important.

Bernie Sanders is different from those Jews in the early 20th century who were driven mainly by self-preservation. They were men who, despite being Jewish, soared to the heights of public life in the UK and Australia. They looked at Zionism, dedicated to liberating the Jewish people and alleviating their antisemitism and thought: what do I need this for; it will only have a detrimental effect on my standing!Sanders is not motivated by that sort of calculus. He is an American Jew, deeply committed to perfecting American society, making it as just and equitable as possible the way he sees it. I think he views Zionism as a foreign project and doesnt identify with it. Also, he is associated with the hard left who are rabidly anti-Zionist and has to placate them.

Q: Originally, Arab leaders like Hussein ibn Ali and his son Amir Faisal allied with Chaim Weizmann and favored the re-establishment of a Jewish state. Then along came Mohammed Amin al-Husseini, the Grand Mufti, who incited riots and tried to prevent it. Today, are we seeing a shift back in the other direction?

A: Today the Arab states see the peace treaties between Israel and Egypt and Jordan. They see if you dont threaten Israel, it wont harm you back, will be good friends and share technology. Israel can become a dependable strategic ally in the face of much bigger threats like Iran.

But at the same time, one thing that Zionism teaches us is that alliances come and go, they rise and fall, and cannot really be depended on. They need to be used at that point in time. As long as Israel is economically, militarily, and diplomatically strong, that is the most important thing. Let Israel choose alliances at that point in time, but it cannot depend on anyone.

Q: In the last chapter of your book, you discuss anti-Zionism, which started off as Jewish opposition to Zionism. How is that different from todays anti-Zionism on college campuses and expressed by politicians?

A: Early anti-Zionism is virtually unrecognizable from anti-Zionism today. The anti-Zionist Jews at the time were overwhelming loyal, proud Jews who cared deeply for the future of the Jewish people, but they had a different view on how to solve the problem of antisemitism in the streets. Their solution was the full immersion into the societies in which they lived. It was a legitimate point of view, but ultimately disproven.

The anti-Zionist Jews of today do not care about Jewish rights. Instead, they use their Jewishness to attack their own people. Rather than stand up against their oppressors, they side with them.

But once the state of Israel exists, anti-Zionism becomes not merely a different political position or philosophy, it now becomes the opposition to the existence of the state of Israela state that has now existed for over 70 years. Anti-Zionism is no longer a morally tenable position. That is why you will not find in the ranks of anti-Zionist Jews someone who cares about the future of the Jewish people. Instead, overwhelmingly you find selfish people of low character.

Q: You trace Great Britains change into an enemy of Zionism to its being a declining imperial power, stretched thin and wearied by Palestine. Some might see that as a description of the US. Do you think there is a danger of Zionist history repeating itself here too?

A: I think so. That description of Great Britain in the 1940s could apply to the US today. There is a growing trend, particularly under the current president, of isolationism and rethinking US foreign policy solely in terms of US interests. It is no longer fashionable to think the US should bring the values of democracy to the darkest places in the world and be a force for good.

There especially a risk with the progressive Democrats who dont have that instinctive warmth for the state of Israel as establishment Democrats have in the past.

Governments and allies come and go. Israel needs to remain strong and independent to preserve its interests. We have seen this already in the course of its existence.

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Zionism As A Reflection of Jewish History Past and Present - The Jewish Press - JewishPress.com

Theodor Herzl: From vision to reality – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on November 26, 2019

Theodor Herzl is not only the visionary of The Jewish State. For the Jews he is a kind of modern biblical Moses.This being the case, in order for us to better understand who we are today, it is important to continue to research Herzls writings and Zionist theory.The first international conference on Theodor Herzl and Contemporary Zionism From Herzls Vision to the Reality of Zionism in the Twenty-First Century held in October deliberated over the central topics with which Herzl dealt: state, religion, economy, society, science, technology and other issues.It is our intention to continue to spread his legacy in Israel, the Jewish Diaspora and the free world in various ways that are related to the man who said that Zionism is an eternal ideal.I often ask myself, what would Herzls reaction be if he would arrive in Israel today and see what is going on?On the one hand, he would be very happy because he would see a modern state with a lot of construction, with many start-ups and a strong economy. Israel is today very strong in international business markets, with a very strong currency. Relative to the small population in Israel, it is a leader in the world economy and hi-tech. Herzl wanted Israel to be a modern nation with a liberal society.By studying religious texts alone it is not possible to create start-ups. He envisioned a country with total separation of religion and state.On the other hand he would be unhappy with the electoral system where a small minority of ultra-Orthodox Jews control the political system and thereby control the day-to-day life of the country where the majority of people are traditional and secular. No public transportation on Shabbat, few shopping opportunities on Shabbat, and strict laws on kosher certification of food. In my opinion, the issue of kosher certification has nothing to do with religion but is merely a money-making enterprise. For example, the Rabbinical Court in a recent divorce case took away the custody of a mother from her children because she did not keep kosher.Herzl believed in institutions: a strong police force, prosecution and court system. Today these three institutions are under attack for personal reasons, and once these three institutions lose power to government, democracy is threatened.There are about 5,000 soldiers currently serving in the IDF who are not recognized as Jews by the Orthodox Chief Rabbinate. They risk their lives defending the country but, nevertheless, their Jewishness in not recognized by the religious establishment.Herzl felt that Zionism can only survive if there is a strong army. We need such an army because we live in a region faced by existential threats from Syria, Iran, the terror organizations Hamas, Hezbollah and others, and not in a country with neighbors like Italy and Switzerland. Everybody must serve in the army from all sectors of Israeli society. If there should be a war, those studying religious texts will not be able to defend the country, in my opinion. Only a strong, modern, hi-tech army will be able to save Israel from its enemies.Herzl also believed in equality for women, and women were given the right to vote already at the second Zionist Congress of 1898. Therefore, regarding the issue of womens rights at the Western Wall, it is imperative that the plan to expand the egalitarian section must be implemented.Women have the right to pray with their fathers, husbands and sons together at the Kotel. Dr. Nissim Levy is chairman of the Board of Governors of The Herzl Center and Museum on Mount Herzl in Jerusalem. The views expressed here are his own and do not reflect any policies of The Herzl Center and Museum. http://www.herzl.org.il

Original post:
Theodor Herzl: From vision to reality - The Jerusalem Post

Letter to the Editor: Collective statement from ASU activist community: Palestine, Protests and Repression – The State Press

Posted By on November 26, 2019

Nine campus groups joined in a letter to The State Press calling on others to support the BDS movement

"Dear State Press, you've got mail." Illustration published on Friday, March 3, 2017.

Since the publication of an opinion column in support of Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions and Palestinian human rights, and further with protests against U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the Israeli Defense Forces, groups such as Hillel,Chabad and other pro-Israel organizations have come out in unison to decry the pro-Palestinian movement as anti-Semitic, even going so far as to connect the pro-BDS movement and the hanging of anti-Semitic posters on campus together.

The conflation of supporting Palestinian liberation with anti-Semitism is nothing new and has been used since the beginning of Israels occupation of Palestine.

We fully deny and repudiate the claim that we are anti-Semitic opposition to the Israeli occupation of Palestine is not the equivalent to the hatred of the Jewish people.

We, as the activist community, have consistently fought Nazism on campus and all forms of oppression against marginalized people. It is in this spirit that we oppose both ICE and the IDF and mobilize against them under the lawful protection of the constitutions first amendment.

We reject the notion that groups such as Hillel and Chabad speak for the entire Jewish community on campus. The people who signed and released a statement labeling an opinion columnist's support for Palestine as anti-Semitic represent the pro-Israel establishment consensus within certain Jewish community organizations.

As noted in a separate statement released by one of the undersigned organizations, there is a long and rich history of Jewish opposition to Zionism. According to Jewish Voice for Peace, a Jewish pro-Palestinian activist group, Zionism is a settler-colonial movement that denies the right of return to Palestinians and establishes an apartheid state. Zionism cannot be conflated with Judaism or the Jewish people.

The smear that we are anti-Semitic attempts to direct attention away from what we are really fighting for. We support BDS and we disrupted the IDF event because of the injustices and genocide being perpetrated against Palestinians by Israel, which has been happening for more than 50 years. The call to boycott Israel's apartheid was modeled after the successful boycott movement against South Africas apartheid.

We understand that activism can be intimidating, and the attendees of the IDF event indeed felt this way. But it is worth mentioning the fear Palestinian students were struck with when they heard that the very military apparatus that is massacring their people, separating their families and bombing their lands was being hosted and promoted on their campus.

We could not sit by and ignore IDF propaganda events without attempting to inform the public of the egregious human rights violations occurring in Palestine.

In the wake of this protest, the University separately called in each president of the groups involved in the ICE and IDF protests on Nov. 13. We view this as an attempt to pacify and divide our resistance due to an influx of complaints that have come in from the Zionist community against students and community members who support Palestine.

The ASU activist community will stand firmly in supporting BDS and Palestinian liberation. We will not be deterred by false claims that we are anti-Semitic," when we consistently protest all forms of racism and oppression.

We will continue to stand united in defense of our community and in defense of the parts of the ASU community that have stood with us during these protests.

Signed,

Students for Socialism at ASU, No Ms Muertes at ASU, ME[ChA] de ASU, Multicultural Solidarity Coalition at ASU, Black Lives Matter Phoenix Metro, Party for Socialism & Liberation Phoenix, Undocumented Students for Education Equity, Young Democratic Socialists of America at ASU and Students for Justice in Palestine at ASU

Editors note: The opinions presented in this letter to the editor are the authors and do not imply any endorsement from The State Press or its editors. This letter to the editor was submitted by MaryKelly Starrs, president of the No More Deaths at ASU and Asia Brown, chairperson of Me[Cha] de ASU.

Reach the authors at msmccar3@asu.edu and Asia.Brown@asu.edu.

Want to join the conversation? Send an email toopiniondesk.statepress@gmail.com. Keep letters under 500 words and be sure to include your university affiliation. Anonymity will not be granted.

LikeThe State Press on Facebook and follow@statepress on Twitter.

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Letter to the Editor: Collective statement from ASU activist community: Palestine, Protests and Repression - The State Press


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