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Synagogue’s tradition keeps firefighters well fed on Thanksgiving Day – WGAL Susquehanna Valley Pa.

Posted By on November 28, 2020

Harrisburg synagogue's tradition keeps firefighters well fed on Thanksgiving Day

Updated: 8:08 AM EST Nov 27, 2020

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TO HARRISBURG WHERE A SYNAGOGUE MADE SURE THE CITYS FIREFIGHTERS WERE ABLE TO ENJOY A THANKSGIVING MEAL. WGAL NEWS 8S AMBER GERARD W THERE. >> MEMBERS A CASHER ISRAEL CONTINUED ITS MISSION TO MAKE DINNER FOR THE FIREFIGHTERS ON 16TH STREET. >> WE SHOULD THANK THEM EVERY DAY, BUT AT LEAST THANKSGIVING, WE COULD THANK THEM. >> THE TRADITION BEGAN AFTER 9/11. >> OUR RABBI AND ONE OF OUR FORMER MEMBERS SAID THESE ARE PEOPLE WHO ALWAYS RUN IN WHEN WE ARE RUNNING OUT. >> THE MEAL, PREPARED ENTIRELY BY VOLUNTEERS, INCLUDED ALL OF THE THANKSGIVING FAVORITES, SWEET POTATOES, AND OF COURSE, TURKEY. >> THEY ARE NOT GETTING A HOT MEAL WHEN THEY SHOW UP, BUT IT IS A CARDBOARD BOX THATS MICROWAVABLE. >> AND AS THEY HAVE DONE FOR THE PAST 19 YEARS, THEY WILL HEAD INSIDE WITH ENOUGH FOOD TO SERVE 60. >> THIS IS JUSTIN BARNE FIRST AT THE STATION. BEING AT THE STATION ISNT THAT BAD, HE SAYS. >> WHEN YOU ENJOY YOU

Harrisburg synagogue's tradition keeps firefighters well fed on Thanksgiving Day

Updated: 8:08 AM EST Nov 27, 2020

For the past 19 years, members of Harrisburg synagogue Kesher Israel have been feeding the firefighters at Station 2 on 16th Street.This year, Amber Gerard paid a visit to talk to the volunteers and firefighters. Her story is in the video player above.

For the past 19 years, members of Harrisburg synagogue Kesher Israel have been feeding the firefighters at Station 2 on 16th Street.

This year, Amber Gerard paid a visit to talk to the volunteers and firefighters. Her story is in the video player above.

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Synagogue's tradition keeps firefighters well fed on Thanksgiving Day - WGAL Susquehanna Valley Pa.

Temple Emanu-El Presents ‘The History and Ideas of Zionism’ Over Two Sessions – WHAV News

Posted By on November 28, 2020

As a public service, 97.9 WHAV presents Community Spotlight at no charge for the benefit of Greater Haverhill nonprofit organizations. To submit news of events, fundraising appeals and other community calendar announcements, Click image.

Haverhills Temple Emanu-El Adult Education Committee is presenting Dr. David Starr and his virtual two-session course on The History and Ideas of Zionism.

The first session, The Birth of Zionism: Nineteenth-Century Ideas and Approaches, takes place Tuesday, Dec. 1, at 7 p.m. The second class, Transforming Zionism: Changing Ideas and Realities in the Face of Geopolitical Events of the 1930s, takes place Tuesday, Dec. 8, at 7 p.m.

Starr holds a doctorate from Columbia University and also rabbinic ordination from JTS. An eminent teacher of Jewish history, he is on the faculty of Hebrew College and was the founding director of Meah. He has taught at both Brandeis University and the Wexner Heritage Program.

Registration is required. There is more information at templeemanu-el.org or register here.

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Temple Emanu-El Presents 'The History and Ideas of Zionism' Over Two Sessions - WHAV News

Pentecostal Zionists and their support for the illegal Israeli occupation – Middle East Monitor

Posted By on November 28, 2020

The US elections are often discussed in terms of the victory or defeat of some electoral colleges, based on the so-called "Bible belt". Almost always moral preaching, the same that aligns votes to the right of the political system, points to the so-called "Christian right". As a trained political scientist, I consider it more accurate to call it the "Pentecostal right".

It is not appropriate to directly associate a religious type belief system with a particular political position. This would be something close to apostasy and as this is a crime, I fight this kind of statement vehemently. Nor is it right to relate all Protestant preaching in the United States to more reactionary positions. During the years of great industrialisation, from the beginning of massive unionism in the 1880s until the consolidation of the New Deal in the second half of the 1930s, there were many pastors and ministers who aligned themselves with the working class and fought shoulder to shoulder for better living conditions and rights.

This takes on epic contours with the Congregation of Southern Baptist Churches and the prominent role of African-American religious leaders, starting with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr himself, ahead of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC). Together with Malcolm X, they are the greatest references of African-American intellectuals and preachers in the United States in the 20th century. Unfortunately, white supremacists use "Christian" symbolism to preach just the opposite of what was accomplished by Prophet Issa (Jesus) when he faced the imperialism of his time.

Founded in 2015, the "Zionist Christians" museum Friends of Zion was the result of an alliance between Republican Mike David Evans and the ruling elite of the state of Israel, including Menahem Begin, the Irgun terrorist who became prime minister of the colonial state. Evans was one of the prominent "Pentecostal advisers" to the defeated Donald Trump. But it does not stop there.

READ: The PA has turned its back on the people of Palestine

The powerful International Fellowship of Christians and Jews network sends a considerable amount of resources to Israel, as well as promoting the immigration of Jewish families. The portal includes nothing of the humanist tradition of the Jewish left, nor does it address the problem of the extreme right that always flirts with Nazi-fascism. Another "coincidence".

According to the Vice channel, the alignment of the so-called "biblical belt" congregations with Israel is of absolute hegemony, which includes an important volume of resources destined to settlements in the West Bank. In other words, in the name of some kind of fundamentalist reading of the Old Testament, companies whose business is to raise funds in kind from people in need, allocate part of this amount to buildings that are illegal under international law, and go against several resolutions of the UN, starting with Resolution 242 which, in "theory", would compel Tel Aviv to return the territories occupied during the Naksa in 1967.

John Hagee is a pastor who coordinates tours to Israel and supports illegal settlements in the West Bank. He is also the leader of the Protestant congregation of television evangelists and winner of a medal from the "Friends of Zion" he even affirms, in the "belief system" section, a commitment to Israel. The alleged reason is millenarian, as stated below through extensive research.

New buildings in the Israeli settlement of Efrat south of the city of Bethlehem in the occupied West Bank on 14 October 2020 [HAZEM BADER/AFP via Getty Images]

Hagee affirms: "We believe in the promise of Genesis 12:3 regarding the Jewish people and the nation of Israel. We believe Christians should bless and comfort Israel and the Jewish people. Believers have a Bible mandate to combat anti-Semitism and to speak out in defense of Israel and the chosen."

READ: The alliance between Israel and far-right anti-Semites runs deep

I suppose that for such American citizens, this interpretation of the Old Testament has more "validity" than the 850,000 people who were expelled from their lands, as well as the approximately 13 per cent of Palestinian Arabs of Christian faith who have simply become "irrelevant".

Curious that a little further down the same text, it is stated in Genesis 12:6: "And Abram passed through that land to the place of Shechem, to the oak of Mor; and then the Canaanites were in the land." Consider the historical phenomenon; the Palestinian people have always been there and fought the same imperialism. Nothing justifies their expulsion unless millennial propaganda goes beyond international law.

It is important to note this interpretation by historian Walker Robins: "Southern Baptists broadly viewed Palestine through orientalist eyes, associating the Zionist movement with Western civilization, modernity, and progress over and against Palestine's Arabs, whom they viewed as uncivilized, premodern, and backward. This view was shared by Baptist travelers, by missionaries, by premillennialists and by their opponents."

READ: Zionism threatens all Arab states, and normalisation is part of the plot

Unfortunately, none of this is "new" and is evidenced in the quasi-state relationship of public diplomacy, which establishes a direct alliance through links between the Ministry of Strategic Affairs of Israel and the largest congregations of the biblical belt. Israeli newspaper Haaretz and Al Jazeera completed investigations into this and correctly state: "As a result of such beliefs, Christian Zionists support Israel's illegal settlement enterprise in the West Bank and, indeed, any other policy Israeli, US, or otherwise that secures Israeli Jewish sovereignty over the land from the Mediterranean Sea to the Jordan River and even beyond, into Jordan's East Bank."

"Christian Zionists generally ignore Israel's violations of Palestinian rights, even of Christian Palestinians, or see them as a necessary means to an end."

However, defeating imperialism in all its forms is a requirement of mankind, as is respect for international law and the inalienable rights of the original peoples to their ancestral territory.

The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Monitor.

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Pentecostal Zionists and their support for the illegal Israeli occupation - Middle East Monitor

Czechia and Israel: Together in the past and future – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on November 28, 2020

This year marks the 30th anniversary of the renewal of diplomatic relations between the Czech Republic and the State of Israel. Shortly after the fall of the Berlin Wall in November 1989, Communist rule in Czechoslovakia ended. The nonviolent transition of power from the Communist regime to a democratic government was known as the Velvet Revolution. In December 1989, former dissident Vclav Havel was elected president of Czechoslovakia. Then-deputy prime minister Shimon Peres and then-foreign affairs minister Moshe Arens visited Prague in February 1990, and diplomatic relations between the two countries were re-established in that same month. In April 1990, Havel became the first leader from former Communist Eastern Europe to visit Israel. Czechoslovak Jews, who for decades had not been allowed to visit friends and family in Israel, considered Havels visit to Israel miraculous. Holocaust survivors living in Czechoslovakia accompanied their new president on his visit, as the trip coincided with the opening of Where Cultures Meet, a major exhibit about the Jews of Czechoslovakia presented in Tel Aviv at Beth Hatefutsot, the Museum of the Jewish Diaspora.The reconnection with Israel stimulated Jewish life in Czechoslovakia, and Czech-Israeli cooperation began to increase. The Czech-Israeli Mutual Chamber of Commerce was founded in February 1996. In 1993, Czechoslovakia divided into the independent countries of the Czech Republic and Slovakia, and Havel continued as president of the Czech Republic. His initial visit in 1990 illustrated the importance and the depth of good relations between Czechs and Israelis. An essential part of this equation was the Czech/Czechoslovak Jewish community. Jews had been integrated into Czech society since the 19th century, and they played an important role in introducing the Zionist movement to the Czech public. They also represented an important part of society, which contributed to Czechoslovakias development as a free and democratic state. Jewish soldiers were also an important part of Czechoslovak resistance in World War II.HAVEL, WHO died in 2011, and current President Milo Zeman, who has continuously supported Israel in the international arena, are part of a remarkable tradition of Czech-Jewish friendship first epitomized by Tom Masaryk, the well-known Czech politician, statesman, sociologist and philosopher, founder, and first president of the Czechoslovak Republic of 1918. Masaryk was appalled by the Hilsner Affair, a series of antisemitic trials in 1899 and 1900 following an accusation of blood libel against Leopold Hilsner, a Jewish inhabitant of Poln, a small town in Bohemia, part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. He spoke out vigorously against antisemitism in the Czech lands. Later, as the Czechoslovak president, Masaryk became the first head of a modern state to visit Palestine. He was interested in Zionism and Zionists were interested in Czechoslovakia, which represented a modern multinational state where Jews could declare their Jewish nationality.As regards Zionism, I can only express my sympathy with it and with the national movement of the Jewish people in general, since it is of great moral significance. I have observed the Zionist and national movement of the Jews in Europe and in our own country, and have come to understand that it is not a movement of political chauvinism, but one striving for the rebirth of its people, said Masaryk in 1918. The Munich Agreement in 1938, in which Hitler, with the consent of France, Great Britain, and Italy, swallowed up much of Czechoslovakia, was a difficult lesson for the Yishuv (Jewish community in pre-state Israel), and it is remembered in Israeli political discourse to this day. Exhibition in Trebic honoring a Czech rescuer of Jewish children (CULTURAL CENTER OF TREBIC)

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Czechia and Israel: Together in the past and future - The Jerusalem Post

The Dark Shadows of Shared Exceptionalism Between the US and Israel – The Citizen

Posted By on November 28, 2020

In December 2016, white nationalist Richard Spencer left the rabbi of Texas A&Ms Hillel slack-jawed and flabbergasted by drawing a parallel between his movement and Zionism.

The rabbi invited Spencer to study the Torahs message of radical inclusion and love with him, presumably as an antidote to Spencers hate-filled views.

Do you really want radical inclusion into the State of Israel? Spencer retorted. And by that I mean radical inclusion. Maybe all of the Middle East could go move into Tel Aviv or Jerusalem. Would you really want that?

Im not answering, the rabbi finally stammered after an awkward silence.

Spencers admiration for Zionism exemplifies what Amy Kaplan, in her seminal book Our American Israel: The Story of an Entangled Alliance, refers to as the darker shadows of shared exceptionalism between the US and Israel.

Kaplan recognizes that Americans do share with Israel a foundational narrative, in which national liberation from colonial rules rests on the history of colonial conquest, and stories of exodus from tyranny rely on the dispossession of indigenous people. Through this acknowledgment, Kaplan inverts the platitudes of politicians who parrot the unshakeable, unbreakable alliance between the countries.

Kaplan, a professor of English at the University of Pennsylvania who worked in the field of American studies, died in July. Her friend and colleague Judith Frank paid tribute to her as an extraordinary thinker and writer whose work on the culture of US imperialism transformed the field and will resonate for generations of scholars to come.

Her final book was her first devoted to Israel, or, more accurately, to the cultural underpinnings of US support for Israel. It is a masterpiece that will undoubtedly augment Franks assessment of her scholarly contributions.

Like a cultural archaeologist sifting through the topsoil of quotidian and vacuous political talking points, Kaplan digs deep to uncover the bedrock cultural valences which provide such a solid base of US support for Israel.

For anyone looking for an explanation for this political phenomenon that goes beyond diplomatic histories, studies of domestic interest groups and US imperial strategy, this book is a must-read.

Kaplan expertly weaves together a compelling argument for the religious, historical and cultural factors that make up the tapestry of US support for Israel by examining fiction and nonfiction books, movies, television shows, songs and sermons.

The title of her book is borrowed from a Thanksgiving sermon preached by Massachusetts minister Abiel Abbot in 1799. The people of the United States come nearer to a parallel with Ancient Israel, than any other nation upon the globe, Abbot said. Hence, our American Israel, is a term frequently used and apt, according to Abbot.

Kaplan notes that this parallel with biblical Israel conferred an exceptional identity on the United States right from the start. This exceptionalism grounded the unstable identity of the new American nation-state in the known typology of the biblical Israel.

This identity was construed in an exclusivist fashion and effaced the memory of the Native communities that had been exterminated by warfare, disease, commerce and agriculture to make way for the divinely chosen nation.

Although Kaplan begins the book at the dawn of the 19th century, her narrative focuses on the manifold ways in which US cultural production since the end of World War II has served to buttress US support for Zionism. She examines how Israel is often viewed as a proxy for the deeply-rooted fears, prejudices and aspirations of primarily but not exclusively white, male, Christian US society.

Kaplan wades through the schlock of low-brow, mainstream US culture to prove her point. From the Orientalist blockbuster book and movie Exodus, to the mawkish millenarianism of the Christian Zionist Left Behind book series, Kaplan superbly demonstrates how Israel is often used as a stand-in for what the US should aspire to be and as a reminder of what the US has supposedly lost in the minds of these cultural producers.

(She also takes up the laugh-out-loud improbable plotline of the naval intelligence procedural TV series NCISinvolving a character named Ari Ashrawi (yes, you read that right), whose father is the head of Mossad and whose mother is a Palestinian doctor.)

Unsurprisingly, for the Christian and Jewish men who produce this culture, the manly, muscular, virile Israeli is often counterpoised to a supposedly effete, flaccid, decadent American in hyper-gendered and sexualized terms.

Thus, Leon Uris Exodus protagonist Ari Ben Canaan is presented as the remedy to the domesticated, suburbanized Wally Cleaver of the Leave It to Beaver Eisenhower era. The Left Behind series is a warning for a morally bankrupt US which has eschewed military muscularity and patriarchal family values in the post-Vietnam War era in favor of dtente, nuclear disarmament and womens reproductive rights.

And in a post-9/11 world, NCIS instructs its viewers to drop its namby-pamby insistence on civil rights to adopt an Israeli-style panopticon approach to security.

Kaplan also expertly demonstrates how nonfiction books have helped shape the discourse for a policy of US support for Israel.

Joan Peters shabby and fraudulent From Time Immemorial which skews Ottoman Empire demographic data to posit that Arabs in Palestine were newcomers who immigrated to benefit from Zionist economic development receives the scorn it so richly deserves.

Kaplan also resurrects long-forgotten tracts and puts a new spin on more recent, well-known ones.

An example of the former is Bartley Crums Behind the Silken Curtain: A Personal Account of Anglo-American Diplomacy in Palestine and the Middle East. Crum was a progressive, Catholic civil rights lawyer who was active in the anti-lynching movement in the US and the anti-fascist effort in Spain.

Crum was appointed as a US delegate to the Anglo-American Committee of Inquiry, which in 1946 recommended the admittance into Palestine of 100,000 Jewish displaced persons who survived the Holocaust. The committee, however, did not endorse the Zionist political goal of Jewish sovereignty in Palestine.

Crum was so far to the left on the political spectrum, Kaplan notes, that the State Department tried to block the appointment of Comrade Crum.

Although Crum acknowledged the justice of Palestinian claims, as he recalls in his writings, he was ultimately won over to Zionism through the contrast he witnessed between the gut-wrenching scenes in displaced persons camps in Europe and the thriving Zionist community in Palestine.

In Palestine, many of the Jewish children I saw were blond and blue-eyed, a mass mutation that, I was told, is yet to be adequately explained, Crum wrote. Kaplan astutely notes how Crums racialized views disposed him to view the Zionist project as an extension of the American frontier.

By returning to the ancient homeland, the stooped ghetto Jews, bowed by exile, were restored to their roots as brawny and muscular workers of the land. At the same time, they came to look more like white Americans, she writes.

Crums book and subsequent advocacy played a large role in seeding the ground for US support for the partition of Palestine in 1947. His story is one example among many in Kaplans book which shows that Zionism was very much a liberal, and even progressive, cause during that critical period.

Kaplan also demonstrates how more recent nonfiction books have played a key role in shaping US discourse on Israel and the Palestinian people. In the aftermath of Israels horrific invasion of Lebanon in 1982 and its brutal suppression of the intifada beginning in 1987, sympathy for the Palestinian cause began to build appreciably in the US.

To head off criticism of Israel, a liberal consensus emerged in the 1980s around a narrative of two peoples fighting over one land, and a belief that only mutual recognition could resolve the conflict between them, Kaplan writes.

This distorted consensus posited a symmetry between Israel and the Palestinian people, rather than locating the relationship in its actual position of colonizer versus colonized. This both sides rhetoric formed the basis of the peace process which predominates to this day.

Kaplan highlights the formative contributions that two New York Times correspondents David Shipler and Thomas Friedman made to build this consensus.

In Arab and Jew: Wounded Spirits in a Promised Land, Shipler portrays a psychological equivalency between traumatized Jewish and Palestinian collectives. In From Beirut to Jerusalem, Friedman sketches a political equivalency between Israel and the Palestinians.

Through these and many more excavations and reinterpretations, written so fluidly, gracefully and analytically, Kaplan has left us with a resonant book that provides so much clarity and depth of understanding to the question of why US support for Israel is so tenacious and enduring.

Our American Israel: The Story of an Entangled Alliance by Amy Kaplan, Harvard University Press (2018)

Josh Ruebner is Adjunct Professor in the Justice and Peace Studies Department at Georgetown University.

Electronic Intifada

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The Dark Shadows of Shared Exceptionalism Between the US and Israel - The Citizen

JUF News | University of Illinois commits to address antisemitism – Jewish United Fund

Posted By on November 28, 2020

The University of Illinois, in coordination with the Jewish community, has announced commitments to address the alarming increase in antisemitic and anti-Zionist harassment and discrimination on its campus.

On Nov. 16, the university issued a joint statement, together with Jewish United Fund, Illini Hillel, Hillel International, Illini Chabad, Arnold & Porter, and the Louis D. Brandeis Center for Human Rights Under Law, recognizing years of antisemitic harassment of Jewish students at UIUC as "unacceptable" and conceding that "the university must do more."

A federal civil rights complaint filed in March asked the U.S. Department of Education to investigate "an unrelenting campaign of intimidation and harassment" of Jewish and pro-Israel students at UIUC. The complaint was prepared by Arnold & Porter Kaye Scholer LLP, together with the Brandeis Center, in consultation with the Jewish United Fund and Hillel International.

The Jewish community thanked UIUC Chancellor Robert Jones for this important first step.

"The Chancellor's validation of these students' painful experiences is significant," said JUF President Lonnie Nasatir. "We particularly appreciate the Chancellor's acknowledgement that for many Jewish students, Zionism is an integral part of their identity and their ethnic and ancestral heritage - and that these students have the right to openly express identification with Israel."

The university has pledged to safeguard the abilities of these students, as well as all students, to participate in university-sponsored activities free from discrimination and harassment.

"All Jewish students, including those who identify with Israel or Jewish campus organizations, should be able to participate in campus activities aimed at fighting racism and achieving social justice," said Emily Briskman, JUF Associate Vice President of Campus Affairs and Executive Director of the Hillels of Illinois.

Jewish students who support Israel have faced discrimination and been "branded as 'racists' regardless of their attitude toward the policies of the current governmentof Israel," said Alyza Lewin, President of the Brandeis Center.

Over the last five years, incidents have ranged from swastikas scrawled on campus dorms and a university-sponsored training with antisemitic content to repeated BDS campaigns and concomitant harassment of Jewish students on campus and in social media.

"We deplore anti-Semitic incidents on campus, including those that demonize or delegitimize Jewish and pro-Israel students or compare them to Nazis," the chancellor's statement said. "This subjects them to double standards that are not applied to others."

This experience has taken a heavy toll on many Jewish students.

"I don't want any other students to go through what my friends and I have gone through," said UIUC junior Ian Katsnelson.

The Nov. 16 statement pledged that "[t]he university is committed to complying with applicable federal, state, and local antidiscrimination as a state and federally funded institution."

"This statement and the commitment it demonstrates is important; however, it is only a first step," said John Lowenstein, JUF Vice President of Campus Affairs. "The next steps will involve real work, including focused and regularly recurring educational programming regarding antisemitism, review and revision of practices and procedures, and the creation of an Advisory Council on Jewish and Campus Life that will consist of stakeholders who are 'committed to the principles set forth in [the] statement.'

"As noted in our joint statement, 'our collective and collaborative efforts will not end with these actions,'" Lowenstein said. "We look forward to ongoing collaborative work with the Chancellor and his team to convert the objectives outlined into action that achieves our shared, common values, including the freedom and security of all University of Illinois students."

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JUF News | University of Illinois commits to address antisemitism - Jewish United Fund

Pakistan will never establish relations with Zionist state, says Imran – Pakistan Today

Posted By on November 28, 2020

Prime Minister Imran Khan has said that Pakistan will not establish relations with the Zionist state until there is a viable, independent and contiguous state acceptable to the Palestinians.

In a statement, the premier said that there was no pressure from any side to recognise Israel, quoting that Quaid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah had said in 1948 that no headway could be made in this regard unless Palestinians were given their due rights.

This statement came weeks after speculation that PM Imran was being asked to recognise the state, as well as baseless media reports and commentary which conjectured that Pakistan might change its stance on the nation.

Similarly, on Tuesday, a statement by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MoFA) had said that rumours of Pakistan recognising Israel as a state are false, and reiterated its stance on the matter.

Responding to media queries, the spokesperson categorically rejected baseless speculation regarding the possibility of recognition of the State of Israel by Pakistan. He added that PM Imran has given clear and unequivocal stance on the matter.

The prime minister has made it clear that unless a just settlement of the Palestine issue, satisfactory to the Palestinian people, is found, Pakistan cannot recognise Israel, the statement had added.

For just and lasting peace, it is imperative to have a two-state solution in accordance with the relevant United Nations and OIC resolutions, with the pre-1967 borders, and Al-Quds Al-Sharif as the capital of a viable, independent and contiguous Palestinian State, said the MoFA.

Earlier this month, PM Imran appeared to confirm there was pressure on Pakistan to also sign such an agreement.

Several things we cannot say because we have good relations with [countries] and we do not wish to upset them, he said in an interview with local media, responding to a question on whether Pakistan was facing such pressure. God willing, let our country stand on its own two feet and then you can ask me such questions.

These rumours escalated after a purported meeting between Netanyahu and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman a few days ago was shared by Israeli media, but the reports of this meeting were declared false by Saudi Arabias government, which said that the prince had met US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and that no Israeli official had attended the meeting.

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Pakistan will never establish relations with Zionist state, says Imran - Pakistan Today

Not just about Crown Heights: A Zionist, an educator and an activist pay tribute to David Dinkins – Forward

Posted By on November 28, 2020

David Dinkins, New York Citys 106th mayor but its first Black one, died at the age of 93 on Monday.

A lifelong Harlem Democrat who spent his career in government and politics, Dinkins became mayor in 1989, defeating three-term incumbent Ed Koch.

To many, his name is associated with the 1991 Crown Heights riots, in which the Lubavitcher Rebbes motorcade resulted in the death of a Black child. Riots, injuries, property damage and the murder of an Australian-Jewish student, Yankl Rosenbaum, followed. Dinkins had run on a platform of racial healing. The riots stained his tenure. Before, during and after his mayoralty, however, Dinkins forged diverse and deep relationships with various Jewish communities in the city.

I believe there are more important issues in this election than race and religion. Lets face it. There is no Black way to fight crime, and there is no Jewish way. I offer a New York way, he used to often say in speeches at both synagogues and churches.

Below, find three testimonials from Jewish leaders whose lives he touched.

A deep relationship: Herbert Block, executive director of the American Zionist Movement

A lot will be written about Crown Heights, but its much deeper than that. In 1975, two weeks after the Zionism is racism resolution was passed at the United Nations, David Dinkins signed a statement from a group called BASIC Black-Americans In Support of Israel Committee.

Mayor Dinkins was attacked by Louis Farrakhan because he publicly spoke out against Farrakhans antisemitism. He was involved in the Soviet Jewry movement for many years. During the Scud missile crisis, when the missiles were falling on Israel, he said Lets go to Israel and show solidarity. We pulled together a 24-hour trip to Israel which was like a whirlwind. Nobody was going to Israel then. It was a huge deal.

Even until recent years, he would go to events at the Jewish community anything hed been invited to. The Israeli Consulate. The JCRC. Israel bonds. He would be there. He was at my wedding, my two sons brises, their bar mitzvahs. He was at my daughters bat mitzvah. He was like a second father. That was the kind of guy he was.

A leader who thanked others: Ruth Messinger, American Jewish World Service Global Ambassador, former City Council member, former Manhattan Borough President

David never failed to recognize officials with whom he worked, staff who did the work behind the scenes and citizen activists who so often go unnoticed.Every speech he ever gave included a litany of these individuals which often drove listeners crazy, but was a deep indication of his respect for others and his determination that they be acknowledged.Ihad the pleasure of working together with David when he ran for Mayor, and I ran to succeed him as Borough President.I had the honor of joining a trip to Israel which he led with a wonderfully diverse group of citizen activists and faith leaders.And I was able to work with him on issues critical to the future of Manhattan when I became Borough President.

In one instance, a new biotech science building was being built in Northern Manhattan with some public financial support.It was being built on the site of the Audubon Ballroom which had been the location for much of Malcolm Xs speech-making and the site of his assassination.I wanted to preserve the faade of the building with an appropriate historical markera position opposed by the planners, the local officials and preservationists.David supported me, and the faade and marker exist as a result.In another instance we worked together to invest significant dollars in protecting and expanding the boroughs museums and public libraries in the face of serious cuts.

Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers

Former New York City Mayor David Dinkins was a compassionate leader who fought for justice for all New Yorkers, our nation, and indeed people everywhere. While Dinkins faced huge challenges, he did much to make the city fairer and left a formidable social justice legacy for all of us.

Mayor Dinkins was a gentleman politician, wedged between two mayors with outsized personalities. As the citys first Black mayor, he was acutely aware of what was riding on his leadership. And he was a kind soul, a good man rarely found in politics.

David was part of a group of a barrier-breaking charismatic leaders who came of political age together in Harlem leaders like former New York State Secretary of State and union negotiator extraordinaire Basil Patterson, Cong. Charlie Rangel, and Manhattan Borough President Percy Sutton. They helped build back Harlem and NYC from the ravages of the 1970s fiscal crisis, and demonstrated it could be done through the lens of justice and equity.The strength of the Harlem leadership was that it understood power is based on promoting social justice and building coalitions. The civil rights movement was their beacon, but political leadership was an integral part of creating change.

Mayor Dinkins inherited a city in turmoil, with financial and racial divisions that he hoped to ameliorate. Instead of simply succumbing to budget cuts, he successfully kept the library system open, a lifeline to young people throughout New Yorks neighborhoods. He cleaned up Times Square, and rebuilt public housing. And he made the US Open shine.

Fairness for everyone was so deeply ingrained in David Dinkins that he made certain to use his mayoral perch to promote equality. As a tweet on Tuesday from the Irish Consulate in New York reminds us: 30 yrs ago Mayor David Dinkins marched in the face of opposition with an Irish LGBT Organization, ILGO, in NYCs St Patricks Day Parade. His leadership and solidarity helped build progress towards a more inclusive sense of Irishness and towards Irish participation in NYCPride.

He also started to reinvest in public schools and brought many new faces and activists into the ranks of city government. Mayor Dinkins hired more police and promoted community policing. Crime went down, but intra-community tensions were not resolved.

A staunch believer in coalition politics, especially the coalition between Jews and Blacks, this tension became the deepest problem of his administration, caused by a tragic and unfortunate incident. In 1991, a young black child, Gavin Cato, was accidentally killed by a car carrying Hasidic Rebbe Menachem Schneerson. The car ran a red light at a Crown Heights intersection. The neighborhood erupted in response and tragically, an innocent yeshiva student, Yankel Rosenbaum, was murdered in retaliation.

While Mayor Dinkins immediately rushed to the scene to comfort both families and try to assuage both the Black and Hasidic communities, the effects cast a long shadow on the city, on the rest of the mayoralty and on Mayor Dinkins legacy. I remember I taught in Crown Heights at the time at Clara Barton High School.

To those young people who marched together for Black lives and who seek out a multi-racial coalition for social justice, to those of us who, as Jews, fight for the strangers among us, to those of us who have dedicated our lives or will do so to social change, Mayor Dinkins vision of our city as a gorgeous mosaic is one we must take and pass on.

In his concession speech, David Dinkins was eloquent as always, saying to his disappointed supporters, Never forget that this city is about decency, about dignity, about working people struggling to make a life for their children. My friends, the gorgeous mosaic is alive.

Now it is up to all of us to make his dream a reality.

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Not just about Crown Heights: A Zionist, an educator and an activist pay tribute to David Dinkins - Forward

Antisemitism is alive and well at Sydney Uni – Australian Jewish News

Posted By on November 28, 2020

ALL Jews must die.

These words were yelled by Robert Bowers as he shot up Pittsburghs Tree of Life synagogue on October 27, 2018, killing 11.

Such manifest antisemitism is common amongst Islamic extremists and neo-Nazis. Jew-hatred within certain circles on the left, however, disguises itself, often avoiding such open displays of bigotry.

So on November 10, when the University of Sydney Students Representative Council (SRC) passed a motion condemning the UK Labour Partys suspension of Jeremy Corbyn, such blatant antisemitism was absent. But dont be fooled. The SRCs support for Corbyn and gaslighting of world Jewry must be recognised for the antisemitic filth that it is.

The Australasian Union of Jewish Students has accused the University of Sydney Students Representative Council of

Posted by The Australian Jewish News onWednesday, November 18, 2020

In October, UK human rights watchdog The Equality and Human Rights Commission held the Labour Party responsible for unlawful acts of harassment and discrimination, citing a culture within the party which, at best, did not do enough to prevent antisemitism and, at worst, could be seen to accept it.

Corbyn Labours leader from 2015 to 2020 dismissed the report as dramatically overstated for political reasons. After refusing to retract his statement, Labour suspended him.

But whats all the fuss about? Why, under Corbyns leadership, did the Labour Party experience such a whirlwind of allegations of antisemitism? Lets take a brief look at Corbyns history.

Prior to leading Labour, Corbyn described genocidal, antisemitic and state-designated terrorist groups as his friends. He defended a vicar of the Church of England who claimed Israel was responsible for the 9/11 attacks, arguing he had been victimised for speaking out against Zionism. He suggested English Zionists (which surveys show are the overwhelming majority of English Jews) dont understand English irony despite living in England for a very long time, probably all their lives. He attended ceremonies honouring terrorists, events hosted by Holocaust deniers, and defended an antisemitic mural depicting hook-nosed Jewish bankers running the world.

Jeremy Corbyn. Photo: Daniel Leal-Olivas/AFP

Under Corbyns leadership, according to the report, Labour politicians compared Israelis to Nazis, suggested that Israel cease to exist, accused Jewish bankers of running the world, and described Jews as a fifth column; just to name a few examples. Jewish MP Luciana Berger who quit the party in 2019 due to antisemitic abuse required police protection at the 2018 Labour Party conference. When complaints were raised regarding antisemitism, Corbyn and his office quashed them unlawfully on multiple occasions.

This is just the tip of the iceberg of Corbyns relationship with antisemitism, yet the SRC somehow conjured up the drivel that there is no evidence that he has ever done or said anything indicating prejudice against Jewish people.

The SRCs defence of Corbyn, and suggestion that Jews reporting antisemitism within the Labour Party are propagating a cynical lie intended to intimidate and silence the left and its criticism of Israel, is antisemitic gaslighting at its worst. 2019 polling of British Jewry revealed 87 per cent view Corbyn as antisemitic, while 47 per cent would seriously consider emigrating had Corbyn won the 2019 election. Yet the council that purportedly represents the students at the University of Sydney including a large Jewish cohort had the gall to accuse Jews of defaming Corbyn for political gain.

One cannot imagine the SRC passing a motion accusing African-Americans of running a political smear campaign against American police. Nor could one fathom a motion stating Indigenous Australians who accuse Pauline Hanson of racism are spreading propaganda for political purposes. These would rightfully be called out as disgraceful displays of bigotry. So why is it acceptable to level such accusations against Jews?

The sentiment behind this motion is nothing new. It rests on the myth believed by many on the left that theyre categorically incapable of being bigoted. The motion reflected this, claiming accusations against Corbyn represent an attack upon the anti-racist and anti-imperialist left.

When accused of antisemitism, as explained by British scholar David Hirsh, left-wing antisemites often charge their accusers with shutting down criticism of Israel as a means of refusing to engage with an accusation of antisemitism; instead it reflects back an indignant counter-accusation, that the accuser is taking part in a conspiracy to silence political speech. He dubbed this tactic the Livingstone Formulation, after ex-London mayor Ken Livingstone, who in 2005 compared a Jewish reporter to a Nazi only after learning he was Jewish. Following widespread outrage, Livingstone insisted that anyone offended by his remarks was simply trying to silence his criticism of Israel.

Labours turmoil under Corbyn had nothing to do with criticising Israel, but it did have everything to do with Corbyns antisemitism. The University of Sydney Students Representative Councils decision to deny that and lay the blame on Jews sends a clear message to all.

Josh Feldman is an active memberof the community involved ininformal education and Israel advocacy.

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Antisemitism is alive and well at Sydney Uni - Australian Jewish News

Dont give Pollard a heros welcome or Trump a heros send-off opinion – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on November 28, 2020

Jonathan Pollard may soon move to Israel. For decades, I endorsed the release of this clearly guilty yet abusively punished spy whose sustained imprisonment I called the worst act of official American antisemitism in our lifetimes.Still, I hope Israelis and the government control themselves. Dont give him a heros welcome. He doesnt deserve it. The American government treated him abominably, but he acted unlawfully. And dont believe he acted only altruistically. That doesnt explain the thousands of dollars he earned, the diamond-and-sapphire ring his Israeli handlers gave him, or his efforts to shop American secrets to South Africa and possibly Pakistan.Im not arguing that a heros welcome will annoy many American Jews which it will. Im not objecting that gushing about an American who spied on America will alienate Joe Biden which it will. I fear for Israels soul. During this brittle moment in Israels political history, and the history of democracy, protecting Israels soul is a pressing national security challenge.In his non-eulogy honoring Theodor Herzl when he died in 1904, Rabbi Abraham Isaac Kook noted that Israel, like all nations, seeks material improvement. But Israels unique mission involves cultivating spirituality too. Kook blessed the Zionist desire to accumulate material powers... coupled with spiritual excellence.From across the religious spectrum, A.D. Gordon toasted the cosmic element of nationality that comes from fusing the peoples spirit with its homeland. In 1961, when The Atlantic monthly celebrated Israels bar mitzvah year, prime minister David Ben-Gurion christened Israel The Kingdom of the Spirit.Obviously, Israel needs spies and soldiers who sometimes act ruthlessly, but you dont roll out the red carpet when they finally get out of jail. Pensions, yes; parades and medals, no.You also dont nominate veterans with a history of threatening Arabs to head Israels Holocaust holy of holies, Yad Vashem, as Zeev Elkin and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu did with Effi Eitam. Leading Yad Vashem isnt just more political pork to distribute. Eitam must be suited to some other plum post, experientially, ideologically, temperamentally and ethically perhaps a new position protecting parents of fallen soldiers who are protesting democratically from Likud thugs.

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Dont give Pollard a heros welcome or Trump a heros send-off opinion - The Jerusalem Post


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