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Visa-free travel from Palestine to St Kitts and Nevis now – eTurboNews | Trends | Travel News

Posted By on October 18, 2021

The Premier ofNevisand the Minister of Foreign Affairs ofSt Kitts and Nevis, Hon.Mark Brantleyhas been actively building international relations over the last month.

During the commemoration of the60thanniversary of the Non-Aligned Movementin Serbia this week, Minister Brantley signed a visa-free waiver agreement with Palestine.

Palestine is the fourth nation to formalize diplomatic relations withSt Kitts and NevisafterBurkina Faso,Gabon, andEgyptin the last four weeks.

A historic day forSt Kitts and Nevisas we sign [a] reciprocal visa waiver agreement with HE Riad Maliki Foreign Minister [of] the State ofPalestineallowing visa-free travel between our two peoples.St Kitts and Neviscontinues to expand its diplomatic footprint globally, wrote Minister Brantley onInstagram.

Visa-free waivers allow restriction-free travel to citizens of the nations that sign the agreement. This means that an entry visa is not needed for nationals of either country before entering the country the deal is signed.This privilege also extends to individuals who have received citizenship through economic means, likeSt Kitts and NevisCitizenship by Investment (CBI) Program.

The State of Palestine, the newest addition toSt Kitts and Nevisgrowing list of visa-free travel offerings, allows its citizens to enter close to 35 destinations. However, with millions of Palestinians living aboard due to political instability, many face difficulty travelling internationally or even back to their homeland.

Through this historic agreement, Palestinian diaspora and entrepreneurs who chose to partake inSt Kitts and NevisCBI Program can generally travel visa-free not only to Palestine but to nearly 160 countries and territories, including central education and business hubs.

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Visa-free travel from Palestine to St Kitts and Nevis now - eTurboNews | Trends | Travel News

Palestine celebrates 175 years this weekend | Community | palestineherald.com – Palestine Herald Press

Posted By on October 18, 2021

This weekend, Palestine is celebrating its 175th anniversary with a Heritage Festival.

The heritage celebration is important because we all need a reminder every now and then where our roots are, and no matter where you were born, if you are planted in Palestine today, there is so much to be proud of, said Mary Raum, tourism marketing manager for Palestine. This event will showcase some of our historic sites with free tours, including behind the scenes of the Anderson County Courthouse and Masonic Lodge, just to name a couple. One of my favorite phrases is Do it for the locals, and this celebration is just that. A celebration of the history and heritage of the residents of the city of Palestine.

One hundred and seventy-five years ago, the newly formed Anderson County was in need of a county seat. With no established community fulfilling the requirement of being within one mile of the geographic center, Palestine was established.

With the arrival of the railroad in 1872, Palestine made a name for itself, competing with Dallas and Galveston for commerce and architectural dominance.

To this day, Palestine remains only second to Galveston in historic landmarks and architecture. It has a rich history worthy of study and celebration.

The grand finale of the weekend is the community picnic on Sunday, Oct. 17.

"No one will want to miss it, Raum said.

Planned weekend activities include:

Behind-the-Scenes Tour of the Anderson County Courthouse

October 15 and October 16 4 p.m. to 8 p.m.

Did you know that there is a bathtub in the courthouse? Or a staircase that skips the first floor?Get a full behind-the-scenes tour of the Anderson County Courthouse that takes you all the way above the stained glass dome. Tours are free and will begin at the West facing entrance of the courthouse each hour on the hour.

Candlelight Tour of Howard House

October 15 and October 16 4 p.m. to 8 p.m.

Walk through one of the oldest homes in Palestine with a spooky twist. Step foot through the squeaky door to be met by a gypsy fortune teller and the halls decked for All Hallows Eve. Get a complimentary ticket from the Palestine Visitor Center starting Monday, Oct. 11.

Opening Ceremonies

October 16 - 10 a.m.

Kicking off a full day of festivities, the opening ceremony at the bandstand in Reagan Park will include a short presentation by Mayor Dana Goolsby, a poetry reading by the literacy competition winner and pledge and prayer blessing the community.

Heritage Village

October 16 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Located on the southeast side of Reagan Park, see living history and lifestyle displays including blacksmithing, spinning, Dutch oven cooking and much more.

Games in the Park

October 16 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Stay and play after the opening ceremonies. The city of Palestine Parks & Recreation Department will host small ninja warrior style obstacle courses in the park and inflatable slides and bounce houses from Milestone Celebrations.

Cultural Dance Demonstrations

October 16 4 p.m. to 7 p.m.

Bring your lawn chair and set up with a front row seat to see cultural and heritage dances including Hispanic, square dancing and more.

Community Dance

October 16 7 p.m.

Grab your boots and head over to Reagan Park for an old fashioned dance under the stars and vintage string lights. Live performance by local band Midnight Highway.

Historic Masonic Lodge Tours Palestine Masonic Lodge #31

October 16 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Learn the history of Palestine Lodge No.31, Ancient Free and Accepted Masons which was chartered on May 1, 1848 by the Grand Lodge of Texas. Since that time it has met continuously in Palestine, Texas. Local resident and mason Charles Steen will conduct the tours every half hour.

Texas MG Register Car Show

October 16 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

A unique opportunity to see over 60 British MG cars all in one place. In the heart of Davey Dogwood Park, visit with the owners of these vintage vehicles. This event is free and open to the public to attend. Registration to participate in the show is closed.

Farmers Market

October 16 - 8 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.

You never know what goodies you will find! The Palestine Farmers Market brings the community together while showcasing local unique, crafting and gardening talent. 813 W. Spring Street.

Railroad Heritage Center

October 16 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.

Relish the romance of the rails as depicted by the 37 x17 Domis HO scale model railroad and enjoy the various exhibits that illustrate many facets of railroading.

Historic Church Tour

October 16 - 10 a.m. to 12 p.m.

Stunning stained glass, incredible detailing, beautiful architecture and displays of church history and heritage will be showcased featuring old family bibles open to the birth record pages.

First Christian Church: 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., 113 E Crawford, Guided Tour

Sacred Heart Church: 10:30 a.m. to 12:00 p.m., 503 N Queen St., Guided Tour

Mt Vernon A.M.E. Church: 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., 913 Calhoun St., Viewing Room

First Presbyterian Church: 10:30 a.m. to 2 p.m., 410 Avenue A, Guided Tour

Pilgrim Church: 10:30 a.m. to 2 p.m., 1559 FM 861 Elkhart, Self guided

Maps for scenic driving trails including Davey Dogwood Park, Historic Home Driving Tour, North Loop Driving Trail and South Loop Driving Trail can be found at https://www.visitpalestine.com/heritagecelebration.

Community Picnic

October 17, 2021

The community, including local churches, families and organizations are invited to join together for a community picnic in Regan Park beginning at 12:30 p.m. Food trucks will be available onsite for lunch or bring your own picnic.

Pot luck by church/group.

The pavilion at Reagan Park will not be available to rent or reserve that day.

No solicitation no music permitted.

Can bring tables/chairs but blanket picnics are preferred.

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Palestine celebrates 175 years this weekend | Community | palestineherald.com - Palestine Herald Press

You’re expected to just go on about your day: Palestinian students at U of T react to conflict in Gaza – Varsity

Posted By on October 18, 2021

Content warning: This article discusses graphic accounts of the violence in Palestine.

In the wake of an 11-day conflict between Israel and Palestine in May, The Varsity interviewed four students with families in the Gaza region on their experiences viewing the conflict from abroad. Students reported a sense of anxiety and despair for their families, as well as a feeling that it is difficult to talk freely about Palestine and Palestinian issues at U of T.

Generational trauma

This past May, the long-standing Israeli-Palestinian conflict escalated intensely. 256 Palestinians and 13 Israelis were killed in the fighting.

UTM student Sarah Hashish recalled anxiously watching the news at around 4:00 in the morning as reports of hostilities in Gaza continued. Hashish tried to understand what was happening, shivering in anxiety for the people near her home village in Palestine.

Hashish, whose aunts and uncles live in the West Bank, told The Varsity that after two 15-year-olds were shot near her home village, she was terrified. You never know the extent of force that military occupation forces will use against these people, she explained.

Hashish added that one of her cousins was arrested three years ago because he was in possession of fireworks he purchased to celebrate his sisters graduation. That is the scariest part for me: not being able to really feel like there is a line where my family will be safe if they dont cross it, said Hashish.

Though the students The Varsity spoke to did not experience the war firsthand, many of them talked about experiences of trauma within their family, both past and present.

Amina*, who asked to remain anonymous to avoid harassment, is a Jordanian citizen whose grandmother is Palestinian. She told The Varsity that her grandmother experienced the Nakba the Arabic word for catastrophe. Nakba is the term used to refer to the destruction of Palestinian society and homeland in 1948 when most Palestinians were displaced as a result of the 19481949 Palestine War. Aminas grandmother was separated from the rest of her family during the Nakba, and her sisters were dispersed into different countries, including Egypt, the United States, and Kuwait.

Given that her grandmother was forcibly evicted from her home at the age of 13, Amina said that seeing [the forced evictions] happen now in real time feels surreal It just makes you think: how did my family survive all this trauma? In the past, forced evictions of Palestinians in Jerusalem have led to widespread protest.

Nahil Al-Zuhaika, the president of UTM APS, has family in Gaza and the West Bank. She also had a personal connection to the mass arrests reported in Palestinian territories under Israels law and order campaign in May. Around 2,000 of the 3,100 arrests were made in the internationally recognized Green Line demarcation boundary, which Palestinians recognize as their territory.

Al-Zuhaika told The Varsity that the husband of her fathers cousin was arbitrarily arrested by military police, who suspected that a worker in his store was affiliated with Hamas. He was not personally involved, according to Al-Zuhaika.

When something happened to someone close to me, someone in my family, thats when I kind of [felt] like the reality set in, said Al-Zuhaika.

Youre expected to just go on about your day, do your courses, study, work and pretend everythings fine and live your life normally, Al-Zuhaika added. Ill be sitting at my desk And in my head, [Ill think], right now their lives are in danger, right now theyre being bombed. And I dont know if theyre alive? [Its] exactly that feeling of helplessness.

Culture of silence

In an interview, Lina Lashin, the co-founder of The Palestine Forum, a U of T group working on research and discourse related to Palestine, noted that there is ongoing ignorance around Palestine at U of T.

Theres all this silence from our administration, Lashin explained. It hurts Palestinians at U of T, Lashin added, to see the institution they are a part of to remain silent on their cause when it has both the capacity and expertise to support justice in the region.

Admins and faculty and a lot of the professors that were silent on this are people that [we] as students learn from and see as role models, Lashin said And when a very, very big and significant event takes place in their area of expertise, and theyre silent about it, you start to think and understand, in many ways, that its probably because its Palestine.

Lashin also brought up the fact that U of T has received scrutiny for allegedly halting the hiring process of Dr. Valentina Azarova for the position of director of the International Human Rights Program (IHRP) in the Faculty of Law after a donor expressed concerns about her work on Israels occupation of Palestine. U of T has since re-offered the position to Azarova, and she has declined it.

Hashish, who studies political science, claimed professors avoid talking about Palestine in the classroom because they are worried about external pressure. There [are] big lobby groups that will suppress, boycott and blacklist these professors, said Hashish, Even saying that Palestinians deserve human rights is suddenly a political issue.

The Scarborough Campus Students Union referred a motion to condemn the Canary Mission to its Executive Committee during its June board of directors meeting. The Canary Mission is a group which identifies and doxxes those whom it labels as antisemitic at colleges and universities across the continent, usually due to involvment with the Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions movement against Israel.

Amina said that, as a student with Palestinian heritage, it frustrates her to realize that she feels fearful about discussing Palestine because of the culture at U of T.

Palestinian children deserve dignity, and Palestinian advocates deserve the same academic freedom and unrestricted scope of principles that apply to all the other academics, added Lashin.

*Name changed due to fear of harassment and retribution

With files from Tahmeed Shafiq

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You're expected to just go on about your day: Palestinian students at U of T react to conflict in Gaza - Varsity

Palestine welcomes efforts of preventing admission of Israel as AU observer member – China.org.cn

Posted By on October 18, 2021

RAMALLAH, Oct. 17 (Xinhua) -- Palestine on Saturday welcomed the efforts to prevent the immediate accession of Israel as an observer state in the African Union (AU).

The AU Executive Council, which concluded its 39th ordinary session held in Addis Ababa for two days, decided on Friday to postpone taking a final position regarding granting Israel observer status in the union until the AU summit scheduled for February 2022.

In a press statement, the Palestinian Ministry of Foreign Affairs said the move "would allow for developing an integrated plan of action starting from this moment until the convening of the summit to prevent Israel's accession a success."

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas will participate in the summit and will make an extra effort with the leaders of those countries to prevent Israel from being accepted as an observer member in the union, it added.

"More than 24 member states were able to announce officially and in writing their opposition to the decision to accept Israel's accession, including Algeria, South Africa, Nigeria, Namibia, Gambia, and many other countries," the statement said.

"These countries, which back the Palestinian position and support the Palestinian rights, insist on preventing Israel's accession," it added.

Israel announced on July 22 that it had joined the AU as an observer state after being kept out for two decades, according to Israeli media.

Israel previously held observer status at the predecessor Organization of African Unity until 2002, when the organization was dissolved and became the AU. Enditem

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There is no right or left in Israel, just Zionism and non-Zionism – Haaretz

Posted By on October 18, 2021

Last week, Angela Merkel expressed her admiration for the sustainability of Israels new coalition. Haaretz columnist Carolina Landsmann wonders, on this site, whether we have a duplicitous government or one which has uncovered the greatest deception of all times. Journalist Ron Cahlili avers that the ideological right and Zionist left are one and the same. All of them touched upon the big story, the one of the cat thats come out of the bag: There is no left or right in Israel. The only ideological division is between Zionists, including nearly everyone, and non-Zionists, numbering much fewer.

The chancellor can therefore put her mind at rest. No miracle occurred when the current government was formed and Germany has nothing to learn from it. There was no political accident here, as coined by the prime minister. Its easy to sustain the present coalition since its a coalition of consensus, without great gaps among its components. Likud (minus Netanyahu) and the ultra-Orthodox could join a wall-to-wall coalition, representing a wall-to-wall society.

Saudi Sportswashing and an Israeli Reporters Qatari Dilemma

This government will be remembered as one that exposed the great deception, even if inadvertently. It arose on the waves of the hatred felt towards Netanyahu, and it exists (and will continue to do so) on the basis of the underlying unity of its partners. If Merav Michaeli replaced Naftali Bennett tomorrow morning, no earthquake would occur. Other than a few changes in style, Israel would remain as it was.

The supposedly momentous tenure of the first national-religious prime minister is no harbinger of change. Not because Bennett has betrayed his ideology but because this situation concords amazingly well with the positions of the left-wing components of this government.

Its not that the Zionist left is right-wing, or that the ideological right wing has leftist tendencies. And not all of them are opportunists, signifying the death of ideology. On the contrary, Israel has an ideology, and how! It is stronger than and overshadows all else. Its called Zionism and its the reigning religion that unifies the nation. (Almost) everyone is a Zionist and everyone believes in Jewish supremacy in this country, including the territories it occupies.

Left and right are equal in their worship of the Israel Defense Forces and Shin Bet, whose role is the maintenance of the regime of Jewish supremacy by suppressing any opposition to it. When the incoming new chief of the Shin Bet, Ronen Bar, said that the security service is the bastion of democracy, he was right. Just like the Stasi, Bars role is to uphold the regime which, in the language of the Shin Bet and the people, is called a democracy, rather than a Jewish tyranny.

There is not one member of this coalition who is thinking of ending the occupation, who thinks differently about Iran even the siege on Gaza is consensual. This applies to the IDF and the ongoing settlement enterprise as well. Therefore, there is nothing surprising about the silence of the lambs: in their inner hearts, everyone wants the occupation.

The differences are in the wrapping. The left wants to look better, which is why its representatives occasionally visit the Muqata Palestinian headquarters in Ramallah, possibly also raising a proposal in the Knesset regarding the pogroms in the West Bank. Not much more than that.

The present government ruffled the political map. From here on, we must state the truth: there are no real gaps among Zionists. The non-Zionists are few, almost all of them non-Jewish, all of them having no legitimacy. There are differences between Haredi and secular Jews, and gaps between Ashkenazi and Mizrahi Jews, but the clichs about a polarization in this nation are hollow and meaningless. The only abyss lies between proponents of Jewish supremacy and their opponents. That is why most of the countrys Arab citizens are not part of this game. That is why Israel is nearing its moment of truth. It relates to its basis as a Jewish state in a land with two peoples, exposing its true image in all its nakedness.

Who would have believed that a patently non-ideological government that is trying to flee from such news as from a fire would be the first government to expose the truth? And the truth is that there are not many countries in which ideology is still so critical; there are no democracies with a single tyrannical, dominant ideology. Israel is a Zionist state just as the Soviet Union was a Communist state. There too, there was no difficulty in cobbling together a government of moderate and extremist communists.

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There is no right or left in Israel, just Zionism and non-Zionism - Haaretz

Letters to the editor October 18, 2021: Can Israel learn from New York? – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on October 18, 2021

Can Israel learn from New York?Regarding Needed: A civility spiral to propel Israeli-Arabs forward (October 13): I disagree with Prof. Gil Troys suggestion that Israel can learn from New York how to tackle the Israeli-Arab crime problem because it has over the years lowered its crime rate. No, anyone who reads the citys tabloids will be shocked at how violent the city still is. More to the point is that the United States and Israel have monumental problems which have no commonality. The former must confront gun violence and the racial crisis; the latter, how to integrate the recalcitrant haredi and Israeli-Arab minorities.

Even the US with all its brainpower, as reflected in the staggering number of Nobel Prizes it has won, cannot solve these problems. Much of this brilliance is associated with top universities in California, where seven of the ten Nobel laureates this year in medicine, physics, chemistry and economics were educated, affiliated with, or are now professors. Yet one is astounded by the magnitude of the homeless problem in Los Angeles where thousands of them live in plastic tents lining the sidewalks. California also has the perennial problem of huge forest fires. There is a myth that critical social and natural issues are solvable without sweat in advanced democracies.

JACOB MENDLOVICJerusalem

YIGAL HOROWITZBeersheba

My frequent flier card continues to gather dust!

SALLY SHAWKfar Saba

SARAH (ELBAUM) GOLDENBERGHaifa

Katz had already acknowledged that Jerusalem is unequivocally the Jewish capital and will remain so. Why, then, should our government have to concede something in order to protect what is rightfully ours? Most especially something that is not in our interest, as would be the case in meeting with the terror-supporting Abbas.

Consider the very different approach of law professor Eugene Kontorovich. There was an indication, he said, that the Americans were thinking of opening the consulate without the required Israeli consent, assuming Israel would just go along. Kontorovich advised:

Israel needs to spell out now that it will not accept a fait accompli. A diplomatic mission needs many things from the host government, from diplomatic visas and license plates to security coordination. If Bennett and Lapid want to deter the United States from attempting hardball tactics, they should declare now that the government will in no way recognize a new diplomatic mission opened without its consent.

How different from the left-wing perspective is this advice that Israel strand strong for her rights.

ARLENE KUSHNERJerusalem

Certain proof that even a broken clock is right twice a day: note Yaakov Katzs editorial. Yes, a US Consulate for Palestinians in Jerusalem would be a terrible political loss for Israel.

Since I have zero confidence that our over-eager-to-compromise government will handle this Biden effort to weaken us appropriately, the drama remains interesting. Perhaps it can adopt Katzs error, buried at the end of the editorial, and offer up Abu Dis proving, I guess, that Katzs broken clock is right only once a day.

CHAIM A. ABRAMOWITZJerusalem

Stantons one-sided conversation with a dead man proved to be a well-received expression of gratitude to the French people for Frances past diplomatic and military assistance to the United States.

The top-down percolation of antisemitism in Ireland from high political levels to the Irish populace at large goes beyond antithesis to Pershings graveside tribute to the deceased Lafayette. Irelands transition from a dominion of the British Empire to an independent republic was facilitated in no small part by Eamon de Valeras close personal and intellectual relationship with Yitzhak HaLevi Herzog when Herzog was chief rabbi of Ireland. Rabbi Herzog, of course, continued his service as a noted rabbi after he made aliyah to the Mandate. Rabbi Herzogs son would later serve as president of Israel, a position now occupied by Rabbi Herzogs grandson following a notable career in Israeli politics.

Yes, Ireland does have a problem a problem rooted in unbounded dissolute ingratitude!

KALMAN H. RYESKYPetah Tikva

In an ironic twist, the article clearly demonstrates the bitter-hate-filled world of Douglas Bloomfield and his twisted view of Zionism, Jewish identity and anything to do with Trump. Hold my tongue from speaking evil has not registered with Douglas Bloomfield. The article has no place in a newspaper with the reputation of The Jerusalem Post.

NEVILLE BERMANRaanana

LAWRENCE SHAPIROCalgary

Gershon Baskin treats the Palestinian Authority and Hamas as though they were The Brady Bunch. He also plays fast-and-loose with history.

He suggests the Holocaust led to the birth of Israel. It did not. It was the San Remo Accords, 1920, that created mandates for areas of the Ottoman Empire that Turkey lost in World War I. The Mandate for Palestine was held as the reconstituted homeland of the Jews. When the Mandate ended in 1948, Israel was declared.

The Nakba was not the result of Israels birth. The Nakba had been ongoing for years, propelled by Nazi war criminal, Haj Amin al-Husseini, the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem.

The muftis first Nakba was the slaughter of the Jews of Hebron in 1929. Another was the Yemenite village of Shiloah, founded in 1882. Arab rioters decimated Jewish life, until in August of 1938, the British evicted the survivors. Illegal Arab settlers moved in and renamed it, Silwan. In June, 1941, the mufti instigated the Farhud, murdering hundreds of Iraqi Jews in Baghdad.

All these Nakbas left the Mufti unscathed. Only when he planned to extend the Holocaust into the Middle East, in 1948, did he fail.

What Palestine would Baskin like Germany to recognize: the 1920 one that included Jordan, the UNs 1947 suggestion, the PAs demands, the American Peace to Prosperity plan, or Hamass goal of killing every Jew?

I suggest the Palestinians (created in 1964 by the KGB) should listen very carefully to the words of the Abraham Accord members.

As for occupation and settlements being in violation of international law, thats a fiction. Article 80 of the UN Charter states that nothing can negate what was promised the Jews in 1920 and ratified by the League of Nations in 1922, meaning Israel includes Judea, Samaria and Gaza, until such time as Israel decides otherwise.

LEN BENNETTOttawa

IDFs top West Bank court calls for imposing high punitive damages in Palestinian terror murder cases (October 14) explains how fruitless it is to have the Israeli court grant punitive damages when they are not paid.

There seems to be no recourse. Jewish people were murdered in Judea or Samaria and nothing can be collected. Excuses are absurd. Our government should correct this legislatively.

In the meantime I would like to suggest a turn-about-fair-play solution: The Palestinian Authority will pay (through deductions from VAT Israel passed back to them) for slaying Israeli citizens.

MARSHA ROTHJerusalem

Guess what - it is not news to anyone that a professor or almost anyone else can make more money in the US than in Israel. Too bad that Angrist wasted those precious years in Israel when he could have been given the bad news before his aliyah. But, in case he did not know this, money is not the reason we move here. You would think that by the time he reached the level of a Ph.D, he would have learned that. The challenge of living in and developing our Jewish country is a greater draw to some of us than making more money elsewhere.

By the way, if I had to be isolated on a desert island with one other person (other than my wife), I would choose the professor of literature over the professor of economics every time.

Id like to make a bet with Angrist as to which of us will have Jewish great-grandchildren. But as an attorney, Id have to advise him not to take such a bet.

BARRY D. ERNSTOFFJerusalem

Once again Herb hits the nail on the head.

After having made aliyah 11 years ago from Los Angeles as a 55-year-old then, I believed then and still believe that living here in Israel is a zchut that not everyone merits. Sure, one can make more money and afford to buy more stuff in America as I did, but you are lacking the experience of living in your own land, among your own people, only here in Israel.

As my wife, Wendy, has said many times, When you live in Israel you get a front row seat to history. Not only Jewish history, but world history.

Maybe now that Professor Angrist has won the coveted Nobel Prize and will soon join MIT as a professor there, he will change his last name from Angrist to Happiest.

NORMAN L. DEROVANMaaleh Adumim

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Letters to the editor October 18, 2021: Can Israel learn from New York? - The Jerusalem Post

Lies Are Being Told About Sally Rooney Because She Refuses to Ignore Israeli Apartheid – The Intercept

Posted By on October 18, 2021

Because there is no way to deny that Israel refuses to grant basic civil rights to millions of Palestinians in the territories it has occupied since 1967, the Israeli government and its supporters in the West reflexively smear anyone who refuses to ignore or excuse this injustice using a familiar set of lies.

Thats why the attacks on Sally Rooney this week, for refusing an Israeli publishing firms request to produce a Hebrew translation of her new novel, Beautiful World, Where Are You, to honor the Palestinian-led cultural boycott of Israel, were so predictable.

Rooney explained in a written statement that she was convinced that Israels unequal treatment of the Palestinians in the occupied territories was akin to the former apartheid regime in South Africa, justifying an international campaign of boycott, divestment, and sanctions like the successful one against that state.

Earlier this year, the international campaign group Human Rights Watch published a reportentitled A Threshold Crossed: Israeli Authorities and the Crimes of Apartheid and Persecution. That report, coming on the heels of a similarly damning report by Israels most prominent human rights organization BTselem, confirmed what Palestinian human rights groups have long been saying: Israels system of racial domination and segregation against Palestinians meets the definition of apartheid under international law, Rooney wrote.

Of course, many states other than Israel are guilty of grievous human rights abuses, she continued, preempting one of the most common objections tothe boycott campaign raised by supporters of Israel. This was also true of South Africa during the campaign against apartheid there. In this particular case, I am responding to the call from Palestinian civil society, including all major Palestinian trade unions and writers unions.

But before Rooney released the statement explaining her reasons for joining the boycott, she was accused of being either an antisemite, for singling out the worlds only Jewish state for criticism, or a hypocrite, for not taking similar actions to prevent translation of her work into the languages used in authoritarian nations.

Sally Rooneys novels are available in Chinese and Russian, the literary critic Ruth Franklin tweeted. Doesnt she care about the Uighurs? Or Putin-defying journalists? To judge Israel by a different standard than the rest of the world is antisemitism.

A London correspondent for i24 News, an outlet based in Tel Aviv, Israel, chimed in, asking, Will she refuse Russian, Arabic and Chinese publishers, too?

The next day, an app used by Israels government to coordinate the outrage of its supporters on social networks directed them to like a Facebook comment saying that her decision reflects her antisemitic behaviour!

Ignorance about the Irish was a factor of much of the criticism of Rooneys decision on social networks. The thought that something other than antisemitism like the sympathy of one formerly colonized nation for another might explain widespread Irish support for the Palestinians seemed to be utterly lost on most of those dismissing Rooneys stance.

More knowledge of Irish history might have made Rooneys decision less shocking to her critics. None of them, for instance, seem aware that the battle of an indigenous population to regain control of its land from settlers who seized it as part of a violent process of colonization is far from abstract to the Irish. Just last month, Irelands president, Michael D. Higgins, turned down an invitation to join the British queen at an event to commemorate the creation of Northern Ireland through the partition of Ireland along ethnic lines 100 years ago.

Omar Barghouti, the Palestinian co-founder of the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions, or BDS, movement, observed in an email interview that the first significant instance of cultural boycott against apartheid South Africa was a 1964 declaration signed by twenty-eight Irish playwrights who committed not to permit their work to be performed before segregated audiences in South Africa.

Barghouti also observed that the demand for Rooney to make her work available in Hebrew, or be branded an antisemite, attempts to center the oppressor community and its privileged entitlement to read world literary works in its language intentionally de-center the oppressed, the Indigenous Palestinians, and our fundamental entitlement to freedom, justice and basic human rights. (He might have added that the outrage at Rooneys decision to not license a Hebrew translation is particularly odd given that just 8 percent of Jewish Israelis do not speak English.)

Then theres the fact that Rooney is from Mayo, the Irish county where the term boycott was invented in 1880, during a popular struggle to regain control of the land from the descendants of English settlers.

It is also absurd to claim that Rooney somehow arrived at her decision on a whim. In 2019, she added her name to an open letter deploring a decision by the city of Dortmund to rescind a literature prize from the writer Kamila Shamsie because of her stated commitment to the non-violent Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement for Palestinian rights.

Earlier this year, she signed a Letter Against Apartheidthat called on artists to exercise their agency within their institutions and localities to support the Palestinian struggle for decolonization to the best of their ability. Israeli apartheid is sustained by international complicity, it is our collective responsibility to redress this harm.

As the writer and activist Omar Robert Hamilton observed, Rooney was simply following through on those principles when she announced that she would stop working with the Israeli publishing house Modan, which published Hebrew translations of her two previous novels but also prints books for Israels Ministry of Defense, including an ethics guide for soldiers by the moral philosopher Asa Kasher, who helped craft the Israeli army doctrine that killing civilians in Gaza is acceptable to protect Israeli soldiers.

There was also support for Rooney. The novelist Michael Chabon told The Associated Press that as a proudly Jewish writer who wants Israel to survive and thrive, and (and therefore) supports the Palestinian people in their struggle for equality, justice and human rights, I say yasher koach (Hebrew for Good job or More power to you) to Rooney. Chabon added that he might consider joining the boycott of Israeli publishers in the future.

On Twitter, Chabon responded to a defender of Israel who called Rooneys boycott silly and ineffectiveby writing: I commend her experimental spirit; intractable evils demand no less. Who knows what effect it will or wont have? Not us.

Mohammed El-Kurd, a Palestinian from the East Jerusalem neighborhood of Sheikh Jarrah, mockeda claim from a spokesperson for Israels foreign ministry, who said that Rooneys stance impedes peace, dialogue, or any meaningful change.

Because Rooney achieved fame in her 20s and has been marketed in ways that draw attention to her youth, such as Salinger for the Snapchat generation, supporters of Israel have also attacked her as a self-obsessed millennial, a young woman too naive to understand the conflict.

Jake Wallis Simons, deputy editor of Londons Jewish Chronicle, accused Rooney of making a statement against Jews in an opinion piece for the Daily Telegraph headlinedSally Rooneys Israeli boycott is nothing but a futile millennial gesture. On Twitter, he added: if Sally Rooney really cared about human rights and the values of democracy, free speech, and the rights of women and minorities, she would *support* Israel and prevent her books from being translated into Arabic or Chinese.

But Simons has been making exactly the same argument since at least 2014, when he was celebrated by pro-Israel activists for describing calls to boycott Israel but not China or Saudi Arabia as ridiculously naive and even hypocritical.

Because these same arguments have been made since the BDS movement was created by Palestinian activists in 2005, the late historian Tony Judt had time to debunk them thoroughly before his death. In 2010, Judt told the London Review of Books:

If Zionism is to succeed as a representation of the original ideas of the Zionist founders, Israel has to become a normal state. That was the idea. Israel should not be special because it is Jewish. Jews are to have a state just like everyone else has a state. It should have no more rights than Slovenia and no fewer. Therefore, it also has to behave like a state. It has to declare its frontiers, recognise international law, sign international treaties and agreements. Furthermore, other countries have to behave towards it the way they would towards any other state that broke those laws. Otherwise it is treated as special and Zionism as a project has failed. People will say: Why are we picking on Israel? What about Libya? Yemen? Burma? China? All of which are much worse. Fine. But we are missing two things: first, Israel describes itself as a democracy and so it should be compared with democracies not with dictatorships; second, if Burma came to the EU and said, It would be a huge advantage for us if we could have privileged trading rights with you, Europe would say: First you have to release political prisoners, hold elections, open up your borders. We have to say the same things to Israel. Otherwise we are acknowledging that a Jewish state is an unusual thing a weird, different thing that is not to be treated like every other state.

In the same interview, Judt explained that economic and cultural ties to European nations were very important to Israelis. The joke is that Jews spent a hundred years desperately trying to have a state in the Middle East, Judt said. Now they spend all their time trying to get out of the Middle East. They dont want to be there economically, culturally or politically they dont feel part of it and dont want to be part of it. They want to be part of Europe.

In 2006, Judt, who had been an idealistic supporter of Zionism in his youth, had warned in the pages of Haaretz that decades of occupation and military rule over millions of Palestinians had been a moral and political catastrophe for Israel.

Israels actions in the West Bank and Gaza have magnified and publicized the countrys shortcomings and displayed them to a watching world, Judt wrote. Curfews, checkpoints, bulldozers, public humiliations, home destructions, land seizures, shootings, targeted assassinations, the separation fence: All of these routines of occupation and repression were once familiar only to an informed minority of specialists and activists. Today they can be watched, in real time, by anyone with a computer or a satellite dish which means that Israels behavior is under daily scrutiny by hundreds of millions of people worldwide. The result has been a complete transformation in the international view of Israel.

The habit of tarring any foreign criticism with the brush of anti-Semitism is deeply engrained in Israeli political instincts, Judt added, while warning that such accusations, when made baselessly, would only erode Israels moral credibility.

Judt, who taught at New York University, also sensed that Israels brutal occupation was alienating younger generations. Thanks to the passage of time, most Western European states have now come to terms with their part in the Holocaust, Judt observed. Today, now that the history of World War II is retreating from the public square into the classroom and from the classroom into the history books, a growing majority of voters in Europe and elsewhere (young voters above all) simply cannot understand how the horrors of the last European war can be invoked to license or condone unacceptable behavior in another time and place. In the eyes of a watching world, the fact that the great-grandmother of an Israeli soldier died in Treblinka is no excuse for his own abusive treatment of a Palestinian woman waiting to cross a checkpoint.

Fifteen years later, Rooney, who was born in 1991, argued this week that the most relevant historical frame for understanding the Israeli occupation is apartheid-era South Africa.

Barghouti points out that Jews in Israel and abroad who support the BDS movement play a significant role in exposing Israels regime of oppression and advocating for isolating it.

Younger Jewish activists there and elsewhere are increasingly abandoning Zionism and supporting Palestinian liberation, Barghouti added. They understand that there is nothing Jewish about Israels siege, ethnic cleansing, massacres, land theft and apartheid, and therefore there is nothing anti-Jewish per se in supporting BDS to end these crimes.

One of the most prominent Jewish writers to endorse the BDS movement is Intercept contributor Naomi Klein. Klein explained in 2009 that in order to respect the boycott, her book The Shock Doctrine was published in Hebrew by a now-defunct publisher called Andalus which she found with the help of BDS activists. Andalus, as Klein explained, was an activist press, deeply involved in the anti-occupation movement and the only Israeli publisher devoted exclusively to translating Arabic writing into Hebrew. In that way she was boycotting the Israeli economy but not Israelis.

Barghouti also notes that the boycott of apartheid South Africa was a key reference for Palestinians who first called for cultural boycotts against in 2004. This reference is neither coincidental nor rhetorical, Barghouti says. It stems from the many similarities between the two cases of colonial oppression, and it aims to highlight the effectiveness and moral unassailability of using the boycott in the cultural sphere to resist a persistent oppressive order that enjoys impunity and ample complicity from the powers that be around the world and to increase the isolation of oppressive regimes, like apartheid Israel.

Rooneys use of the word apartheid to describe Israels treatment of the captive Palestinian populations in the West Bank, East Jerusalem, and Gaza, which was repeated on news sites worldwide this week, comes five years after the South African novelist J. M. Coetzee defined that term on the closing night of the 2016 Palestinian Festival of Literature in Ramallah.

Coetzee, who had just completed an intense weeklong fact-finding mission across the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem, began by saying that he had always been reluctant to use the word apartheid to describe what was happening in Palestine. Like using the word genocide to describe what happened in Turkey in the 1920s, using the word apartheid diverts one into an enflamed semantic wrangle which cuts short opportunities of analysis, Coetzee explained.

Excerpt from:
Lies Are Being Told About Sally Rooney Because She Refuses to Ignore Israeli Apartheid - The Intercept

Israel is approaching the next Nakba – Haaretz

Posted By on October 18, 2021

Youre here by mistake, because [Israels first Prime Minister David] Ben-Gurion didnt finish the job and throw you out in 1948, lawmaker Bezalel Smotrich told Arab Knesset members during a debate on a proposed change to the Basic Law on Immigration, which was sponsored by his Religious Zionism colleague, Simcha Rothman. Thats the truth, thats the truth, Smotrich reiterated.

Its hard to downplay the importance of this statement. This is no longer a war of narratives between the return to Zion and the Jews historical rights and the Nakba, but rather an adoption of the Palestinian narrative. Simultaneously, its also an abandonment of all morality. Without blinking, Smotrich seeks to erase Israel's Palestinian citizens from existence.

LISTEN: The offshore accounts bankrolling Israeli settlements

Nevertheless, we need to ask one simple question: How great is the distance, in both moral and practical terms, between Smotrichs statement and Prime Minister Naftali Bennetts omission from his UN speech of the Palestinian issue, or the nation-state laws disregard of Palestinian history, as if the land had been empty when the Jewish Diaspora arrived here?

Its important to remember between the people who focus solely on the Jewish nation's historical rights and those who claim it was a historic mistake, those families who werent uprooted from their homes are walking down a similarly crooked moral path one that sees human beings solely as representatives of a historical chain of events and not as creatures of flesh and blood, people with souls, people with rights.

Anyone who is fluent in the language of self-justification on the basis of historical claims will end up or else their children will cutting down olive trees at the start of the harvest season and fixating on the inheritance of our forefathers without being capable of seeing the human beings toiling and cultivating the vineyard.

We can't keep sticking our heads in the sand. We have to admit openly that from the standpoint of their ideological guideposts, theres a similarity between Smotrichs statements and the governments policy toward the Palestinians.

Despite the meeting between Meretz party members and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in Ramallah and the photographs that promised a bright future, the governments official talking points remain unchanged. The Palestinian issue wont be on the agenda and Bennett isnt interested in solving the basic moral problem, which is Israels control of millions of men and women through a military occupation.

Smotrich opened a Pandoras box that touches on the heart of the Palestinian issue the Nakba and the right of return. There is a direct connection between the governments actions and the silence around the damage done against the Palestinians on one hand, and Smotrich's statement on the other.

The obvious conclusion is that if Ben-Gurion made a historic mistake, the day will naturally come when it must be corrected. There are no human beings here to respect, only the historical imperative to establish the Jewish state. Therefore, the land must be cleansed of Arabs.

Smotrichs remarks should be read as implying that we need a second Nakba. Maybe not one in the style of 1948, but a more refined, elegant one. Yet that would be no less dangerous.

With the governments protection and in the spirit of the nation-state law, Smotrich and others have the privilege of inciting against human beings and ignoring them. That is how the daily reality in the West Bank pogroms against the Palestinians, the theft of their lands, the damage to their property is quietly accepted in Israel.

The dehumanization of the Palestinians on both sides of the Green Line stems from an overarching view that history is more important than modern-day reality. Whether Israelis are talking about their historical rights or about correcting a historic mistake, they are promoting violations of human rights.

Sheren Falah Saab is a contributor to Haaretz.

Elitzur Bar-Asher Siegal is a professor of linguistics.

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Israel is approaching the next Nakba - Haaretz

Sephardic New Yorkers say Spain is breaking promise of citizenship – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on October 18, 2021

After Spain announced it would offer of citizenship to families of Jews it expelled more than 500 years ago, Mark Tafoya, a personal chef living in New York City, filled out an application.

Originally from Albuquerque, New Mexico, Tafoya calls himself a proud Sephardic Jew rediscovering my roots. So from Inwood, in northern Manhattan, he tracked down all the required documents, created a genealogy chart and hired an attorney. He detailed his familys heritage from their departure to Spain and arrival in New Mexico some 500 years ago. He even bought a small stock in Santander Bank to prove a monetary link what the application requirement defines as a special connection to Spain. The Jewish Federation of New Mexico certified his application.

Tafoya had seemingly done everything right. But for the last 25 months, he has been waiting for an answer from Spain that hasnt come. He hasnt gotten any indication that hell ever get an answer.

The waiting is the hardest part, he said. If I knew I was rejected, I could start the appeals process. Appeals can take four to five months.

Until this year, only one applicant for the Spanish citizenship program had been rejected. But in 2021, over 3,000 applications have already been denied, according to the American Sephardi Federation, and more than 20,000 have found themselves in an extended period of waiting not just for citizenship, but for an explanation of what appear to be endless delays.

Tafoya was one of about 30 people who gathered in front of the Consulate General of Spain in New York on Monday to protest the denials and delays. Calling their protest Yo Soy Parte (I am a part), members of both Latino and Jewish communities to call out what they see as the injustice and hypocrisy of these rejections.

The protest was the result of a collaboration between American Sephardi Federation, a Jewish group, and The Philos Project, a New York-based nonprofit that helps Christian leaders, mostly evangelicals, understand and engage with important Near East issues, according to its website.

The event emerged after Jason Guberman, executive director at the American Sephardi Federation, spoke to Hispanic leaders around New York about the issue at the invitation of Jesse Rojo, the head of Philos Latino who often collaborates with Gubermans group.

Teresa Leger Fernandez, a Democratic congresswoman from New Mexico, flew in for the event and spoke to the crowd in an expression of solidarity.

A congressional letter that she initiated addressed to Spanish President Pedro Snchez Prez-Castejn and would introduce on October 12 was read aloud at the protest.

We urge you to rescind these changes and ensure that every eligible Sephardic Jewish descendant can receive citizenship to their ancestral home under the law as the Cortes Generales intended, said the letter, signed by nine members of Congress, including New York Democrats Alan Lowenthal and Ritchie Torres.

Spains Law of Return passed unanimously in the Cortes Generales, the Spanish legislature, in 2015. It allowed for any descendant of Sephardic heritage to apply for citizenship. Similar versions of the law existed throughout the 20th century, but the 2015 version said applicants need not be practicing Jews, and that they could apply for dual citizenship.

That opened the door for over 132,000 people who applied for citizenship under the program, claiming ancestry through family trees that included Sephardic Jews with roots in Spain and non-Jewish descendants of crypto-Jews whose ancestors were expelled or fled Iberia during the Inquisition. More than half of those people began their application in the last month before the October 1, 2019 deadline.

But the 59,000 people who had submitted their materials well before before the October 2019 closing date should have gotten an answer by now. Of them, approximately 34,000 have been granted citizenship, and another 22,000 still await a response.

For the Sephardic descendants, it seemed as though Spain was genuine in its attempts to make reparations. It was an amazing gesture, said Guberman, who has worked with many applicants to get their documents in order.

Which is why it feels like such a betrayal when applications are suddenly and inexplicably rejected, protestors said.

Its an insult on top of an insult, said Tafoya, referring to Spain inviting its Sephardic descendants back in after acknowledging the horrific acts of the Inquisition, only to reject them once again.

The broken promise of the noble gesture of reparation wounds more than if Spain had never made the offer of return in the first place, the congressional letter concludes.

It is unclear why there has been a sudden slew of rejections. The congressional letter cites complaints by applicants who were approved by Spanish judges, only to be rejected by the Ministry of Justice a move that is illegal, according to the New York Times. Many applicants have been asked to provide more in-depth genealogy charts, and some face bureaucrats insistence that the special connection donation to the Spanish economy must have been made before the law was announced in 2015. Others have seen certificates of Sephardic origin from Jewish institutions outside of Spain rejected.

The window to apply closed on October 1, 2019, which makes it even more frustrating that the rules for approval changed after that deadline and applications were already in, a spokesperson from the Jewish Federation of New Mexico told The Jewish Week.

The New Mexico federation, located where a number of people claim Spanish Jewish ancestry, is one of only a few institutions in the United States that grants certificates of Spanish-Jewish origin to non-Jews. Many of those applicants have been denied.

The New Mexico federation helped certify 20,000 people from more than 50 countries across the globe, it said. A majority of the applicants came from Venezuela Colombia, and Mexico.

The wave of rejections is especially heartbreaking for Venezuelans who applied, Tafoya said. The law seemed to offer a safe, legal opportunity for them to leave their beleaguered country and become European Union citizens. Many had emptied their savings to afford the application process, which costs at least $7,000 to complete.

Some of the protestors speculated that the halt in approvals is due to sentiments of antisemitism in the new Spanish government, which is led by a left-wing party that came to power in November 2019. Others wondered if the ruling party, which was not responsible for the Law of Return, is wary of introducing new voters into the country who might support the previous, more conservative party that had accepted them.

The Consulate General of Spain in New York does not provide information on the status of pending applications, it told JTA by email.

I believed the Spanish government when they said that they were sorry for the sins of the past, said Jason Gomez. a third-generation New Yorker who learned about Spains citizenship program while it was under discussion. He subsequently interviewed his older Puerto Rican relatives about the strange customs of his childhood eating only beef, not pork; placing rocks on graves and only marrying into certain families, all reminiscent of Jewish traditions.

Gomez discovered that his family is descended from a community known as Xuetas, Mallorcan Jews who were forcibly converted to Christianity, but continued to practice their faith in secret.

In 2015 the Spanish government said that they recognized the generations of suffering in this terrible history and wanted to make amends, he said in his speech. But only six years later they have turned away from us.

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Sephardic New Yorkers say Spain is breaking promise of citizenship - The Jerusalem Post

Jrgen brings Passover to the Great British Baking Show with charoset-and-matzah-topped pavlova – JTA News – Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Posted By on October 18, 2021

This story contains spoilers about Episode 4 in Season 9 of Netflixs The Great British Baking Show.

(JTA) Jrgen Krauss, the basically a Jewish dad on the latest season of The Great British Baking Show, lived up to his reputation during Desserts Week when he produced a Passover-inspired pavlova complete with a traditional charoset topping.

The dessert also sustains a different tradition: the internationally popular shows habit of not getting Jewish content quite right, when host Noel Fielding badly mispronounces charoset while describing Krauss creation.

Krauss, who is from the Black Forest region of Germany, is married to a British Jew, and their family belongs to a Reform synagogue in Brighton, where the Jewish Chronicle reported he has taught a challah-baking class to children. In the first episode of this season, a Passover Seder plate is visible behind him in a scene introducing viewers to his home and family.

That proved a prescient symbol in this weeks episode, which arrived on Netflix Friday for American viewers. Judges charged the contestants with producing a flavorful pavlova, a delicate dessert made with just whipped egg whites and sugar.

Pavlovas are naturally kosher for Passover because they lack flour, and Krauss leaned into that as he designed an inspired-by-Passover version with a charoset topping and pyramids of chocolate-covered matzah.

Jurgen Krausss Passover Pavlova was warmly received on The Great British Baking Show. (Screenshot)

Krauss makes his charoset in the Sephardic style, using dates, oranges and cardamom while eschewing the apples and nuts that are common in Ashkenazi versions. The Seder plate staple symbolizes the mortar that the Hebrews used as slaves in Egypt.

The fan-favorite series has drawn criticism before for its handling of Jewish foods. In Season Five, the instruction to make a plaited loaf left some viewers wondering if anyone on the show knew about challah. Then last year, rainbow-bagel and babka challenges did not delve into the Jewish significance of the bakes.

This time, the show did spend time there. After judge Prue Leith wonders whether the topping will be too sweet against the pavlova, Krauss explains charosets symbolism.

Its the mortar used by the Jews to stick the pyramids and Pharoahs cities together, he says.

Its carrying a lot, this little pavlova, Leith responds, smiling.

It is, it is, Krauss answers with a laugh.

After Krauss creation earns a favorable review judge Paul Hollywood announces, Jrgens back! host Matt Lucas, who is Jewish, offers one more reaction.

Mazel tov, Lucas tells him before moving on to the next baker one who channeled the colors and flavors of Easter.

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Jrgen brings Passover to the Great British Baking Show with charoset-and-matzah-topped pavlova - JTA News - Jewish Telegraphic Agency


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