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Op Ed: In Defense Of The So-Called “Settlements”

by WrathofG-d ( 13 Comments › )
Filed under Barack Obama, Democratic Party, Israel, Judaism, Leftist-Islamic Alliance, Middle East, Palestinians, Politics, Religion, World at July 20th, 2009 - 5:11 pm

The best weapon against the propaganda, and half-truths we are bombarded with everyday by the MSM, and the professional Arab/Islamist taqiyah organizations is education.  It is in this vein that I present to you the following op-ed.

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In Defense of The (So-Called) “Settlements”

by Israel Medad

No one, including a president of the United States of America, can presume to tell me, a Jew, that I cannot live in the area of my national homeland. That’s one of the main reasons my wife and I chose in 1981 to move to Shiloh, a so-called settlement less than 30 miles north of Jerusalem.

After Shiloh was founded in 1978, then-President Carter demanded of Prime Minister Menachem Begin that the village of eight families be removed. Carter, from his first meeting with Begin, pressed him to “freeze” the activity of Jews rebuilding a presence in their historic home. As his former information aide, Shmuel Katz, related, Begin said: “You, Mr. President, have in the United States a number of places with names like Bethlehem, Shiloh and Hebron, and you haven’t the right to tell prospective residents in those places that they are forbidden to live there. Just like you, I have no such right in my country. Every Jew is entitled to reside wherever he pleases.”

We now fast-forward to President Obama, who declared on June 15 in remarks at a news conference with Italy’s prime minister, Silvio Berlusconi, that Jewish communities beyond the Green Line “in past agreements have been categorized as illegal.”

I believe the president has been misled. There can be nothing illegal about a Jew living where Judaism was born. To suggest that residency be permitted or prohibited based on race, religion or ethnic background is dangerously close to employing racist terminology.

Suppose someone suggested that Palestinian villages and towns in pre-1967 Israel were to be called “settlements” and that, to achieve a true peace, Arabs should be removed from their homes. Of course, separation or transfer of Arabs is intolerable, but why is it quite acceptable to demand that Jews be ethnically cleansed from the area? Do not Jews belong in Judea and Samaria as much as Palestinians who stayed in the state of Israel?

Some have questioned why Jews should be allowed to resettle areas in which they didn’t live in the years preceding the 1967 war, areas that were almost empty of Jews before 1948 as well. But why didn’t Jews live in the area at that time? Quite simple: They had been the victims of a three-decades-long ethnic cleansing project that started in 1920, when an Arab attack wiped out a small Jewish farm at Tel Hai in Upper Galilee and was followed by attacks in Jerusalem and, in 1921, in Jaffa and Jerusalem.

In 1929, Hebron’s centuries-old Jewish population was expelled as a result of an Arab pogrom that killed almost 70 Jews. Jews that year removed themselves from Gaza, Nablus and Jenin. The return of my family to Shiloh — and of other Jews to more than 150 other communities over the Green Line since 1967 — is not solely a throwback to claimed biblical rights. Nor is it solely to assert our right to return to areas that were Jewish-populated in the 20th century until Arab violence drove them away. We have returned under a clear fulfillment of international law. There can be no doubt as to the legality of the act of my residency in Shiloh.

I am a revenant — one who has returned after a long absence to ancestral lands. The Supreme Council of the League of Nations adopted principles following the 1920 San Remo Conference aimed at bringing about the “reconstitution” of a Jewish National Home. Article 6 of those principles reads: “The administration of Palestine … shall encourage … close settlement by Jews on the land, including state lands and waste lands.” That “land” was originally delineated to include all of what is today Jordan as well as all the territory west of the Jordan River.

In 1923, Britain created a new political entity, Transjordan, and suspended the right of Jews to live east of the Jordan River. But the region in which I now live was intended to be part of the Jewish National Home. Then, in a historical irony, a Saudi Arabian refugee, Abdallah, fleeing the Wahabis, was afforded the opportunity to establish an Arab kingdom where none had existed previously — only Jews. As a result, in an area where prophets and priests fashioned the most humanist and moral religion and culture on Earth, Jews are now termed “illegals.”

Many people insist that settlements are illegal under the Fourth Geneva Convention. But that convention does not apply to Israel’s presence in Judea and Samaria and the Gaza district.  Its second clause makes it clear that it deals with the occupation of “the territory of a high contracting party.” Judea and Samaria and Gaza, which Israel gained control of in 1967, were not territories of a “high contracting party.” Jewish historical rights that the mandate had recognized were not canceled, and no new sovereign ever took over in Judea and Samaria or in Gaza.

Obama has made his objections to Israeli settlements known. But other U.S. presidents have disagreed. President Reagan’s administration issued a declaration that Israeli settlements were not illegal. Support for that position came from Judge Stephen M. Schwebel, former president of the International Court of Justice, who determined that Israel’s presence in Judea and Samaria did not constitute “occupation.” It also came from a leading member of Reagan’s administration, the former dean of the Yale Law School and former undersecretary of State, Eugene Rostow, who asserted that “Israel has a stronger claim to the West Bank than any other nation or would-be nation [and] the same legal right to settle the West Bank, the Gaza Strip and East Jerusalem as it has to settle Haifa or West Jerusalem.”

Any suggestions, then, of “freezing” and halting “natural growth” are themselves not only illegal but quite immoral.

(The Original Article!)

~Open Thread: Friday G-d Edition~

by WrathofG-d ( 25 Comments › )
Filed under Judaism, Open thread, Religion at June 5th, 2009 - 5:00 pm

Daily we are met with distracting images, busy work schedules, cultural/peer pressure and other opportunities to sin.  It can be from a alcohol advertisement, an invite to a party on Shabbat (or Sunday morning), encouragement to slander or hate someone, the desire to close a business deal, a gossip magazine, or even the constant public mocking of one simply for holding religious beliefs.  As a result, although it might be physically easier today than in the past to try to be Holy (with close churches, websites, Kosher restaurants, bible study groups etc.) it is undoubtedly spiritually more difficult to commit to a life of Holiness, and protecting our spiritual well-being.

In this week’s Torah portion, Jews learn about a person who takes a vow, committing to abstain from wine. In taking such a vow, the Torah says that not only may he not drink wine, but he also may not eat grapes, raisins and even grape seeds and skins!  The Torah is creating a fence to protect the individual from falling foul of his own vow.  If one is forbidden even to eat grape skins, he will never even come close to drinking wine.

We learn from this the importance of making fences to protect our spiritual well-being.  When it comes to the material world, this concept comes naturally.  To protect our money, we put it in a bank.  We mark bottles of poison and/or give them difficult-to-open caps.  We even place barriers around our homes and cars.

When it comes to our spiritual possessions however we we are unfortunately not always as careful.  We often find ourselves rushing toward situations that can only lead to being spiritually cut-off.  What married man hasn’t looked at a sexy woman who was not his wife, gone to strip clubs, refused to pick up the phone when his wife was calling, refrained from telling his wife that he loved her, or forgotten to spend enough time with their family? Similarly, what woman hasn’t criticized her husband in public, wore revealing clothing, read gossip or fashion magazines, or forgotten to spend enough time with their family?  All of these seemingly innocuous acts are the “eating grape seeds and skins” in our present lives.

Are our spiritual possessions not as important as our material ones?  We protect that which we consider important.  Thus we should take the time to accept fences upon our daily lives to help us live on the moral level that we would like to.  We should make fences to ensure not only that we are not slipping spiritually, but that we are actually growing

We all have tremendous spiritual wealth that can slowly slip away if not fenced in.  There are also many spiritual poisons.  If we don’t lock them away in well-marked bottles, we may inadvertently partake of them.  Making a fence is the best way to protect what we have.  If we refrain from making them, it is at our peril.

[The Source Article]

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For those Jews who celebrate it, have a meaningful Shabbat.  To everyone else, have a great weekend!

Jerusalem Day: Celebrating Jerusalem’s Liberation!

by WrathofG-d ( 68 Comments › )
Filed under IDF, Israel, Judaism, Middle East, Religion at May 22nd, 2009 - 1:45 pm

The Temple Mount is in our hands! I repeat, the Temple Mount is in our hands!

-General Uzi Narkiss announcing the liberation of Jerusalem, June 7, 1967


http://www.ynetnews.com/PicServer2/20122005/843918/D327-043_wa.jpg

Today marks the 42nd anniversary of one of the most amazing miracles of our lifetime.  After approximately 2,000 years of exile, the Jewish holy city of Jerusalem has once again been united, liberated, and placed back into the hands of the G-d’s chosen people.  The significance of this momentous event to the history, identity, and religious prophecy of the Jewish people cannot be overstated. It is a blessing of biblical proportions!

If G-d was still writing the Torah, Jerusalem’s liberation in 1967 would have gone into it. 

The dreams, prayers, yearnings, and greatest unimaginable hope of countless Jews throughout history had finally been answered.  G-d’s promise had been witnessed and fulfilled!  The Temple Mount is in our hands…the Temple Mount is in our hands:  Jerusalem -Judaism’s holiest city, our greatest joy -has been liberated!

The Six Day War was a watershed moment in Jewish history.  Only days before the great victory, Israelis were facing a national calamity, an existential threat, as five Arab armies were amassing to snuff out the 19-year-old state.  Plans were drawn to convert parks to cemeteries – so palpable was the threat.  Before the war, Israel’s farmers in the Kinneret communities were being fired upon regularly from the Syrian-controlled Golan Heights, fresh water supplies were under constant threat of enemy diversion, and of course the holy places were inaccessible: the Western Wall and Temple Mount, Joseph’s tomb, Hebron and more were all under Arab control.

In the wake of the war, however, Israel had swelled to thrice its size.  From the majestic Hermon to the blue beaches of Gaza, from Kfar Etzion to Kfar Darom, from Mount Sinai to the Temple Mount, Israel expanded west, east, north and south just as the Biblical prophecy foretold.   In the same Biblical vein, the Arab armies not only lost, they seemed to flee in seven directions. The desert was strewn with boots which Egyptian troops took off to hasten their retreat.

The Six Day War saw Israel’s security established, as the buffer between Israel and her enemies grow significantly. No less important was the euphoria generated by the miraculous victory – now Israel saw itself as more than surviving, it was thriving! Worldwide Jewry received a boost of national pride. This pride brought about an unprecedented wave of North American Aliyah and eventually brought about Soviet Jewish aspirations to break out of the iron wall. The war also awakened a will to settle those lands liberated – to live in and around Hebron and Shechem, to climb the heights of the Golan, to farm the desolate sands of Gaza.

The Six Day War also awakened a longing for a rebuilt and united Jerusalem. The Western Wall plaza was created, the Jewish Quarter was brought back to life, and the gleam of the Temple flickered in the eyes of the saints.

The Six Day War is at once a modern victory fought with planes and artillery, and at the same time a triumphant return by an ancient people to their ancient homeland. It is a testament to the grit and valor of Israeli society and the Israeli soldier, yet it is also the revelation of G-d’s Mighty Hand to save His nation which had been strewn amongst the nations for two thousand years.

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Related Links:  Chronology of Six Day War, Audio of IDF entering and liberating Jerusalem (with English translation),  Jewish Growth In Liberated Lands, Articles Regarding Jerusalem’s Holiness To Jews, Eyewitness To Miracles (soldiers stories), The Battle of Ammunition Hill, Western Wall Cam (see HaKotel live)

Recommended Reading:  “Six Days of War” by Michael Oren, The Fight for Jerusalem: Radical Islam, the West, and the Future of the Holy City by Dore Gold,

Before Islam, Medina Was Originally A Jewish City

by WrathofG-d ( 29 Comments › )
Filed under Anti-semitism, Islamic hypocrisy, Islamic Invasion, Islamic Supremacism, Islamists, Jihad, Judaism, Religion, Sharia (Islamic Law), Terrorism at May 13th, 2009 - 2:23 pm

http://www.deenislam.co.uk/gallery/artefacts/medina.JPG

Today, we hear a lot of talk about how Jerusalem should be split, – one half surrendered to Muslims, while the other half remains a mixed Muslim/Jewish city in Israel.  If this is the appropriate diplomatic way of turning back the clock, and ensuring peace between Muslims and Jews, then why not try out this solution with Medina first–a city that was originally Jewish?

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Although the fact is little publicized, the Arab world’s second holiest city, Medina, was one of the allegedly “purely Arab” cities that actually was first settled by Jewish tribes. 1 History shows that Judaism was already well established in Medina two centuries before Muhammad’s birth.

On page 40, of his book “Arabs In History”, Bernard Lewis writes:

The city of Medina, some 280 miles north of Mecca, had originally been settled by Jewish tribes from the north, … The comparative richness of the town attracted an infiltration of pagan Arabs who came at first as clients of the Jews and ultimately succeeded in dominating them. Medina, or, as it was known before Islam, Yathrib, had no form of stable government at all. The town was tom by the feuds of the rival Arab tribes of Aus and Khazraj, with the Jews maintaining an uneasy balance of power. The latter, engaged mainly in agriculture and handicrafts, were economically and culturally superior to the Arabs, and were consequently disliked…. as soon as the Arabs had attained unity through the agency of Muhammad they attacked and ultimately eliminated the Jews.”

The number of Jews in Medina swelled following the Roman invasion of Israel – the subsequent expulsion of its Jewish population, and from Jews fleeing persecution in Persia2.  These refugees were assimilated into the three major Jewish tribes in Medina: the Banu Nadir, the Banu Quynuqua, and the Banu Quraiza.  When these Jews resettled in Medina, they took with them a superior knowledge of agriculture, irrigation, and industry. Homeless Jewish refugees in the course of a few generations became large landowners in the country.  In addition, the refugees who had come from Israel quickly became the controllers of its finance and trade.  This new Jewish prosperity also quickly became a direct challenge to the Arabs of the region, particularly the Quraysh at Mecca (of which Mohammad was a member) and other Arab tribes in Medina.

According to Alfred Guillaume,

At the dawn of Islam the Jews dominated the economic life of the Hijaz [Arabia]. They held all the best land … ; at Medina they must have formed at least half of the population. There was also a Jewish settlement to the north of the Gulf of Aqaba…. What is important is to note that the Jews of the Hijaz made many proselytes [or converts] among the Arab tribesmen.5

To add fuel to this fire, the Jews, strong in their faith in G-d, refused to accept Mohammad’s claims to be the final prophet.  In response, a precedent was established by Muhammad among Arab-Muslims to expropriate that which belonged to the Jews of Medina.

Guillaume continues,

… [Jewish] leaders opposed [Mohammad’s] claim to be an apostle sent by God, and though they doubtless drew some satisfaction from his acceptance of the divine mission of Abraham, Moses, and the prophets, they could hardly be expected to welcome the inclusion of Jesus and Ishmael among his chosen messengers.

... the existence of pockets of disaffected Jews in and around his base was a cause of uneasiness and they had to be eliminated if he [Muhammad] was to wage war without anxiety.

Because the Jews preferred to retain their own beliefs the Jews of Medina fell under suspicion of treachery by Mohammad and were forced to lay down their arms and evacuate their settlements. Valuable land and much booty fell into the hands of the Muslims.12

Jealous, frustrated, and offended by the refusal of the Jews to accept him as a prophet of G-d, at the first feeling of military superiority over the Jews of Medina, Mohammad gave up his attempts to convert the Jews, and decided instead to make war on them proclaiming the following:

“Two religions may not dwell together on the Arabian Peninsula.”13

This edict was carried out by Abu Bakr and Omar 1, the Prophet Muhammad’s successors; the entire community of Jewish settlements throughout northern Arabia was systematically slaughtered.

According to Bernard Lewis,

“the extermination of the Jewish tribe of Quraiza was followed by “an attack on the Jewish oasis of Khaibar.”14

The battle of Khaybar, (the final destruction of the Jews of Medina) is a battle well known by Muslims today.  They often recall it at “anti-Israel” rallies, protests, speeches, and all over youtube, with the chant “Khaybar Khaybar ya Yahud, jaish-Muhammad saya’ud” (Khaybar Khaybar oh Jews, the army of Muhammad will return)15

They recall as their greatest hope, and sincerest joy to repeat the massacre at Khaybar done by their “pefect man” Mohammad.  At Khaybar, after the Jews were forced to flee their homes and villages in Medina, Messengers of Muhammad were sent to the Jews who had escaped to the safety and comfort of Khaibar, “inviting” Usayr, the Jewish “war chief,” to visit Medina for meditations.

Usayr set off with thirty companions and a Muslim escort. Suspecting no foul play, the Jews went unarmed. On the way, the Muslims turned upon the defenseless delegation, killing all but one who managed to escape. “War is deception,” 15 16

The slaughter of Arabian Jews and the expropriation of their property became Allah’s will. This massacre is recalled joyfully in the Koran:

… some you slew and others you took captive. He (Allah] made you masters of their [the Jews’] land, their houses and their goods, and of yet another land [Khaibar] on which you had never set foot before. Truly, Allah has power over all things.18

Guillaume reports that the anti-Jewish attack at Khaibar was fiercely fought off, but “though the inhabitants fought more bravely here than elsewhere, outnumbered and caught off their guard, they were defeated.”19 Those who somehow survived constituted the formula for Islam’s future successes. Some of the Jews, “non-Muslims” or infidels, “retained their land,” at least until Muslims could be recruited in sufficient numbers to replace the Jews. Meanwhile, the Arabian Jews paid a fifty-percent “tribute,” or tax, for the “protection” of the new plunderers. As Professor Lewis writes, “The Muslim victory in Khaibar marked the first contact between the Muslim state and a conquered non-Muslim people and formed the basis for later dealings of the same type.”20

(More Information/Resource)

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But for the murder, ethnic cleansing, occupation, massacre, atrocity, destruction, and rape of the Jews of Medina by Islam, Medina would probably still be a major Jewish city today!  Instead, it is a completely Islamic city where non-Muslims by law are not even allowed to enter.

Therefore, remember, and mention the next time you hear someone opine about the splitting of Jerusalem, that if any wrong is going to be righted by a transfer of land to its supposedly “rightful” owner to ensure that Jews and Muslims can live together in peace, the world should start with returning at least one-half of Medina to the Jews.  Only thereafter should it even begins to ponder the future of Jerusalem!