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Jewish pilgrimage in Tunisia grows despite debate

Posted By on May 18, 2014

Jewish pilgrims light candles in the Ghriba synagogue, the oldest Jewish monument built in Africa more than 2,500 years ago, as they attend the annual Jewish pilgrimage in the resort of Djerba, Tunisia, Friday April 26, 2013. Jews coming from Tunisia, Europe or Israel make their annual pilgrimage to El Ghriba synagogue, commemorating the death of Shimon Bar Yohai, a second-century kabbalistic rabbi who authored a famous religious text known as The Zohar. (AP Photo/Aimen Zine)

DJERBA, Tunisia (AP) Despite years of security concerns and a harsh debate over Israeli passports, officials said Sunday the number of Jewish pilgrims taking part in an annual rite in Tunisia is up dramatically for the first time in years.

Rene Trabelsi, who helps organize the trek to the Ghriba synagogue, Africa's oldest, said 2,000 people, including 1,000 from abroad, took part in the three-day pilgrimage ending Sunday.

"The pilgrimage of 2014 has definitely been a success. It is a great day," he said, thanking security forces for protecting the event.

The pilgrimage to the island of Djerba, site of the synagogue, was canceled in 2011 after the revolution and in subsequent years there were only hundreds attending, down from a peak of 7,000 in 2000.

In 2002, al-Qaida militants set off a truck bomb near the synagogue, killing 21 people, mostly German tourists and badly jolting the now-tiny Jewish community

This year was the first time that Israeli pilgrims have been allowed to use their passports rather than a special document issued by the Tunisian government, prompting an outcry among some lawmakers. Tunisia has no diplomatic relations with Israel.

Iris Cohen, who runs an Israel-based travel agency, said it was the first time she had done the pilgrimage since the revolution.

"I thank the tourism minister who made it easier for Israeli pilgrims to come," she said.

Jews have been living in Djerba since 500 B.C. The Jewish population has shrunk to 1,500, down from 100,000 in the 1960s. Most left following the 1967 war between Israel and Arab countries, and the economic policies adopted by the government in the late 1960s also drove away many Jewish business owners.

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Jewish pilgrimage in Tunisia grows despite debate

In Tunisia an ancient Jewish pilgrimage, controversy and hope

Posted By on May 18, 2014

Every year hundreds if not thousands of Jewish pilgrims travel to Djerba island in Tunisia, where an ancient Synagogue is believed to contain a stone from the destroyed First Temple in Jerusalem. This year, controversy has come with them.

Pilgrims were crowding into the sanctuary, votive candles were glowing under the arches, and a singer from Jerusalem named Moshe Giat was atop a low bench, leading the men in an old and rousing song in Hebrew that ended, Hear, O Israel!

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Jerusalem? No. This scene took place in Tunisia, where about a thousand Jews are gathered this weekend for an annual Jewish pilgrimage and festival on the island of Djerba. The presence of Israeli visitors like Mr. Giat has become the focus of a sharp controversy among Tunisias political leaders.

On May 9, legislators at a raucous parliamentary hearing cited support for the Palestinian cause, opposition to Israel, and Israeli attacks on PLO figures in Tunisia in the 1980s as grounds for removing two government ministers and reversing a recent decision to formalize procedures for Israelis visiting Tunisia, which does not have diplomatic relations with Israel. The government says the move will boost Tunisias struggling tourism industry by projecting a message of openness.

The polemic is quintessentially Tunisian, combining fears for an economy battered by the countrys 2011 revolution, evocations of the Arab worlds most enduring cause clbre, and the tumultuous politics of an emerging democracy. For Tunisians, its also an occasion to weigh their countrys priorities.

According to tradition, Jews fled from ancient Israel to Djerba bearing a stone from the temple following its destruction in 586 B.C. by the Babylonian king Nebuchadnezzar. Today the stone rests in the foundation of the La Ghriba synagogue.

Tunisias Jewish community has dwindled to about 1,000 since the mid-20th century as regional tensions over Israel and the prospect of jobs abroad led many to emigrate. But the La Ghriba pilgrimage for the Jewish festival of Lag Baomer has remained a big draw for Jews of diverse origins.

One is Mr. Giat, who is attending for the sixth time since 1992. After singing, he is seated at a courtyard table in a building beside the synagogue where food is being served and a band is in full swing, eating almonds with fellow Israeli Alan Debasc.

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In Tunisia an ancient Jewish pilgrimage, controversy and hope

Outrage as Kiryas Joel orders map of Hasidic landowners

Posted By on May 18, 2014

What are they, meshuggeneh?

As part of its controversial plan to annex 507 acres of land upstate, the ultra-Orthodox village of Kiryas Joel commissioned a map highlighting Hasidic Jewish landowners surrounding the town a move that angry sect members have compared to Hitlers record-keeping.

It reminds all of us of the 1940s, when the Nazis did exactly this an account of every Jew, and their businesses, said one source who grew up in the Orange County village founded in the 1970s by the Satmar Grand Rabbi Joel Teitelbaum.

Why do they need to know whos a Hasidic Jew and whos not? Why does it matter?

The map was posted this month on the Orange County Web site. Residents whose homes fell within areas identified as Hasidic recoiled particularly in light of the villages powder-keg land-grab petition, which came last December when 141 property owners in Kiryas Joel submitted their request to annex land from the surrounding town of Monroe.

The landowners claim the move is needed to accommodate the insular villages exploding population and presumably crafted the map to better understand where the Jewish properties are, so that it should help them decide what to annex, a source said.

Opponents in Monroe argue that a land grab will ruin their quality of life and lower property values.

Most of us bought our homes here because of the rural character, but this would immediately result in high-density development and a tremendous strain on our natural resources, said Emily Convers, chair of the opposition group United Monroe.

Chaim Rolnitzky, a Monroe resident and member of the Satmar sect, blasted the map.

My reaction was disbelief and concern, he recalled.

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Outrage as Kiryas Joel orders map of Hasidic landowners

Congregation B’nai B’rith’s 2013-2014 Year in Review – Video

Posted By on May 18, 2014

Congregation B #39;nai B #39;rith #39;s 2013-2014 Year in Review Turn up the volume and enjoy a brief and exciting look back on the past year at CBB Santa Barbara. Assembled and edited by Cantor Mark Childs. By: Mark Childs

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Congregation B'nai B'rith's 2013-2014 Year in Review - Video

Becky Lee & Gil Ashkenazi Social Dancing @ 4th On2 Salsa Congress 2014 – Video

Posted By on May 18, 2014


Becky Lee Gil Ashkenazi Social Dancing @ 4th On2 Salsa Congress 2014
May 2014.

By: Gil Ashkenazi

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Becky Lee & Gil Ashkenazi Social Dancing @ 4th On2 Salsa Congress 2014 - Video

Ella Jauk & Gil Ashkenazi Social Dancing @ On2 Salsa Congress 2014 – Video

Posted By on May 18, 2014


Ella Jauk Gil Ashkenazi Social Dancing @ On2 Salsa Congress 2014
May 2014.

By: Gil Ashkenazi

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Ella Jauk & Gil Ashkenazi Social Dancing @ On2 Salsa Congress 2014 - Video

Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto in D major, Op. 35; Zukerman, Israel Phil., Mehta – Video

Posted By on May 18, 2014

Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto in D major, Op.

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Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto in D major, Op. 35; Zukerman, Israel Phil., Mehta - Video

Hamas and Fatah reach an agreement on the names of ministers – Video

Posted By on May 18, 2014

Hamas and Fatah reach an agreement on the names of ministers Senior Hamas leader Musa Abu Marzouk says the agreement was reached a few days ago during discussions in the besieged Gaza Strip. Hamas and Fatah officials have already expressed hope that... By: PressTV News Videos

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Hamas and Fatah reach an agreement on the names of ministers - Video

Over the Rainbow (Israel Kamakawiwo’ole Cover) – Regan Trow – Video

Posted By on May 18, 2014

Over the Rainbow (Israel Kamakawiwo #39;ole Cover) - Regan Trow Ukelele cover of Israel Kamakawiwo #39;ole #39;s 1993 cover of the original "Over the Rainbow" performed by Judy Garland in the 1939 movie: The Wizard of Oz. Subscribe to my channel: https://www.youtube.c..

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Over the Rainbow (Israel Kamakawiwo'ole Cover) - Regan Trow - Video

Daf Yomi Talmud Rosh Hashana Jewish New Year page 5 Gemarrah ‘ – Video

Posted By on May 18, 2014


Daf Yomi Talmud Rosh Hashana Jewish New Year page 5 Gemarrah #39;
Talmud daf Yomi class for Rosh Hashana, The Jewish New Year by Rabbi Dr. Moshe P. Weisblum. " ...

By: Moshe Weisblum

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Daf Yomi Talmud Rosh Hashana Jewish New Year page 5 Gemarrah ' - Video


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