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Controversy Surrounds UN Gaza Casualty Figures Amid Accusations of Data Manipulation

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The United Nations has recently made a significant adjustment to its previously published data regarding the number of women and children killed in Gaza, leading to serious questions about data accuracy and the processes used to verify such critical information. Credit: AP

Edited by: Fern Sidman

The United Nations has recently made a significant adjustment to its previously published data regarding the number of women and children killed in Gaza, leading to serious questions about data accuracy and the processes used to verify such critical information, according to a report published on Saturday in The Jerusalem Post. This change in reported fatalities raises concerns about the reliability of the data provided by local sources and highlights the challenges in obtaining accurate casualty figures in conflict zones.

On May 6, the UN reported that 34,735 people had been killed in Gaza, including over 9,500 women and over 14,500 children. These figures were based on data collected from the Hamas-run Gaza Ministry of Health and the Government Media Office in Gaza, as well as Israeli authorities, as was reported by the JPost. Just two days later, on May 8, the numbers were revised. The updated data showed a total of 34,844 fatalities, but the number of women and children reported killed was significantly lower, with 4,959 women and 7,797 children listed.

The initial and revised figures were drawn from local administrative sources within Gaza and corroborative data from Israeli sources. The UN itself included a disclaimer below the data: “The UN has so far not been able to produce independent, comprehensive, and verified casualty figures,” as per the information provided in the JPost report.

The revised figures indicate that as of April 30, a total of 24,686 deaths had been identified. Among these, 10,006 were men, and 1,924 were elderly, the JPost report explained. The distribution of fatalities, according to the latest data, shows that men constituted 40% of the identified deaths, children 32%, and women 20%.

The integrity of casualty figures reported by Gazan authorities has been a subject of intense scrutiny and controversy, culminating in significant international criticism and accusations of data manipulation. The recent UN revision of the number of women and children killed in Gaza, which saw a dramatic halving of the previously reported figures, further fuels the ongoing debate about the accuracy of the data provided by Hamas officials at the Gaza Health Ministry.

For several months, prominent statisticians and policy analysts have questioned the casualty figures released by the Hamas operated health ministry in Gaza. Criticism peaked with the release of a report by the Washington Institute for Near East Policy in January, which pointed out major discrepancies in the fatality reports attributed to the Hamas authorities in Gaza, the JPost report pointed out. The institute’s analysis suggested that these discrepancies were likely due to deliberate manipulation of data.

Professor Abraham Wyner’s research that was published in Tablet Magazine further elucidates the statistical improbabilities found in the Hamas supplied data. The JPost reported that according to Wyner, the pattern of reported deaths was unnaturally consistent, showing a regular increase by approximately 270 plus or minus 15 percent. Wyner argued that such regularity is statistically impossible in the context of warfare, where the intensity and thus the fatalities should be highly irregular, as was indicated in the JPost report. His analysis implies that the figures might have been altered to present a misleading narrative or to serve specific political or humanitarian agendas.

Critics argue that the numbers reported by the Hamas-controlled Gaza Health Ministry are inflated or misrepresented, suggesting a strategic motive to garner international sympathy and support by portraying the conflict as disproportionately affecting civilians. The assertion that the majority of the casualties are women and children conflicts with other reports that suggest a significant portion of the deaths may be combatants from Hamas, an organization known for its military engagements with Israel.

The challenge in verifying these figures is compounded by the restricted access to Gaza, making independent verification nearly impossible. However, some statistical analysis of the casualty reports released by the Gaza Health Ministry from October 26 to November 10, 2023, offers potential insights. By analyzing the daily casualty figures, including specific counts of women and children, researchers can employ forensic statistical methods to detect anomalies or patterns that might indicate manipulation or exaggeration of data.

It is crucial to consider that while the international community relies heavily on these figures to understand the scope of the tragedy, the inherent bias and potential manipulation of data by a party directly involved in the conflict must be critically evaluated. The implications of these casualty figures are profound, impacting humanitarian aid, international relations, and policy decisions. As such, the integrity of this data is not just a matter of academic interest but of international ethical concern, highlighting the need for continued scrutiny and the pursuit of independent verification wherever possible.

The potential manipulation of casualty data has profound implications. Accurate and reliable data are crucial for:

Humanitarian Response: Misrepresentation of death tolls can lead to misallocation of international aid and resources, potentially diverting assistance away from other urgent needs.

Political Repercussions: Inflated or manipulated casualty figures can influence international opinion and policy decisions, possibly leading to escalations in conflict or affecting peace negotiations.

Public Perception: Accuracy in reporting affects public perception both locally and internationally. Inaccurate reporting can fuel propaganda and mistrust among the international community.

Verifying casualty figures in a conflict zone is fraught with challenges. The primary issues include:

Access Restrictions: Often, conflict zones are inaccessible to international observers, making independent verification difficult.

Reliability of Sources: In many cases, the only available sources are local authorities or organizations with potential biases.

Technological and Methodological Limitations: In the chaos of conflict, collecting precise data is often not feasible. Methods used may lack the necessary sophistication to ensure accuracy.

In recent research published in Fathom Journal, a detailed analysis by Dr. Tom Simpson, Prof. Lewi Stone, and Prof. Gregory Rose scrutinizes the categorization of fatality data by the Hamas-run Gaza Health Ministry, according to a report that appeared on Monday on The Times of Israel web site.

Dr. Simpson, an economist with a background from the University of Western Australia, together with Prof. Stone, a biomathematician associated with Tel Aviv University and RMIT University, and Prof. Rose, an international law expert at the University of Wollongong, have brought their diverse expertise to bear on this issue. The TOI reported that their analysis focuses on the ministry’s division of casualty data into “identified” deaths, those confirmed in hospitals, and “unregistered” deaths, which are based on reports from what the ministry calls “reliable media sources.”

This differentiation is critical because it sheds light on the discrepancies in the reported data. The researchers point out that the proportion of women and children in the recorded deaths is vastly different between these two categories, the TOI report said. For instance, from October 7 to December 31, the Gaza Health Ministry reported 21,978 deaths, with 15,349 being hospital-registered and 6,629 unregistered. According to the ministry, 60% of the hospital-registered fatalities were women and children. To claim that 70% of all deaths were women and children, an improbable 92% of the unregistered deaths would need to be women and children—a statistic the researchers argue is “statistically absurd.”

This analysis raises substantial concerns about the reliability of the unregistered data and suggests potential inflation or misrepresentation of the figures reported through media sources. Indicated in the TOI report is that this issue is compounded by the lack of clarity from the ministry on how these categories were determined and what sources were deemed reliable.

Furthermore, as noted by David Adesnik from the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies, the Gaza Health Ministry later adjusted its categorization to distinguish between cases with “complete data” and those with only “incomplete data,” affecting some 11,300 of the reported 33,000 fatalities at the time, according to the information provided in the TOI report.

In addition to the research published in the Fathom Journal, HonestReporting.com indicated that in his analysis for the Washington Institute, Gabriel Epstein observed an identical trend, with the number of total men killed in northern Gaza decreasing by 22 over five days in March 2024.

Epstein’s analysis points to a notable decrease in male casualties over a specific period in March 2024, which he correlates with a simultaneous increase in female casualties as noted by Wyner in October 2023. This pattern suggests potential manipulation of the data.

Wyner’s assertion that the statistical anomalies indicate a process “unconnected or loosely connected to reality” used in reporting these numbers highlights a critical issue. Such inconsistencies could indeed suggest that the figures are being manipulated. This manipulation could serve various purposes, including influencing public perception and international response.

The potential reasons behind the manipulation of these figures are complex. One plausible explanation is that male fighters, often away from civilian areas, might be underreported by Hamas. This underreporting could stem from several factors, including the strategic considerations of Hamas to not disclose actual militant casualties, possibly due to fears of retaliation or to maintain operational secrecy.

Furthermore, the manipulation of casualty figures could also be aimed at drawing international scrutiny towards Israel’s military actions, portraying them in a negative light to pressure Israel to reduce or cease its military operations. This strategy appears to be part of broader efforts by Hamas to sway public opinion and gain international sympathy by presenting an image of disproportionate aggression against Palestinians.

Israel Declares Independence from Biden

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Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and President Joe Biden -. (AP/Michele Euler)

Israel is fighting for its survival against Islamic genocidal violence and a corrupt political class in Washington D.C.

By: Daniel Greenfield – FrontpageMag.com

Today, Israel marked its 76th Independence Day. Usually a day filled with parades and fireworks, the Israeli people will instead buckle down to the grim business of being at war.

Too much of the population is either deployed in the field or may soon be, displaced from their homes near the Gaza border or aware that at any moment rocket alerts could sound for incoming missiles from Gaza, Lebanon, Yemen or Iran.

This year, Yom HaZikaron, Memorial Day annually observed for the fallen, will overshadow Yom Ha’atzmaut or Independence Day.

Much like America’s Greatest Generation, the men and women who scrappily fought for Israel’s independence using crude weapons and WWII surplus gear are passing out of history.

Few now remember a time when Israel did not exist and some have come to take it for granted. While Israeli Air Force jets won’t be doing flyovers for the 76th, the leftist protesters, some backed by foreign interests, will still continue their rallies and riots that only serve to aid Hamas.

And yet Israel did declare a new kind of independence before its latest Yom Ha’atzmaut.

After nearly half a year of pressure campaigns to end the war, the Biden administration followed through by announcing an embargo on offensive weapons to Israel. It’s not the first time.

In 1947, the Truman administration had imposed an arms embargo on Israel. Truman, like the current Democrat in the White House, had played a familiar double game, offering diplomatic recognition to Israel and enthusiastic speeches to Jewish voters, even while privately promising Muslims the opposite and making sure that Israel would not have the weapons to defend itself.

When the Republican Party platform declared that it took “pride in the fact that the Republican Party was the first to call for the establishment of a free and independent Jewish Commonwealth” and condemned the “vacillation of the Democrat Administration”, Truman shot back angrily claiming that he supported the Democratic platform and its call for “the revision of the arms embargo to accord to the State of Israel the right of self-defense.” This was a lie.

Truman had supported the arms embargo from the beginning. Three months before the Democrat platform had been adopted, the administration had backed a UN resolution that included an arms embargo.

Truman was saying one thing and doing another. Like Biden, Truman had been following political considerations.

That was why diplomats had been warned to stay away from making any anti-Israel moves at the United Nations before Election Day.

Even under the arms embargo, Israel survived an invasion by five Muslim nations.

“You just don’t understand. Forty million Arabs are going to push four hundred thousand Jews into the sea. And that’s all there is to it,” Secretary of Defense James Forrestal had predicted.

Three generations later, Israel is still here.

Israel’s 76th Independence Day has come around again. Once again the Jewish State is fighting for its survival against Islamic genocidal violence and a corrupt political class in Washington D.C.

It’s relearning the old lesson that presidents say one thing for public consumption and do another. And that independence is not just aspirational, it’s a simple matter of survival.

Biden’s betrayal of Israel was inevitable. The blindness of Israeli leaders to that eventuality, their conviction that if they followed every single guideline from the White House, they would have the support they needed to finish off Hamas in Gaza was a delusional fantasy.

Israel’s best bet lay in quickly doing what it needed to do. Everything the Biden administration wanted only slowed down the war effort and doomed the very support that Israel had been counting on.

A day after delivering a speech at the Holocaust Museum about his support for Israel, Biden told CNN that the support was gone.

But Truman had pulled a similar trick with a rally at Madison Square Garden when he told New York’s Jewish voters that he was responsible for setting up Israel “as a free and independent political state” even while it was fighting for its survival.

The Truman administration continued backing worthless UN truces (the predecessors of today’s equally duplicitous ceasefires) which allowed the Islamic terrorists of the Muslim Brotherhood (the parent organization of Hamas) to continue attacking Jewish towns and massacring Jews.

While Truman was telling one thing to Jewish voters in New York City ahead of Election Day, Israel was evacuating children as part of ‘Operation Baby’ from front line communities under siege by terrorists during the latest ‘truce’. In Kibbutz Manara, the children had to be evacuated from the mountaintop in vegetable crates in a scene later recreated in the movie ‘Exodus’.

Manara had to be evacuated again after the Hamas attacks of Oct 7 and it’s estimated that half the homes in the community have been destroyed after Hezbollah Islamic terrorists have shot a rocket every day at the village. The people living there can’t go home. But unlike the Hamas supporters crying in Gaza, you won’t see their faces on the evening news.

After the 1948 election, not only weren’t there any arms sales, but the White House was upset that Israel had begun winning. The Egyptians had not only failed to push the Jews into the sea, but the Jews were now pushing them back into the Sinai.

A month after the election, in which 75% of Jews had voted for him, Truman demanded that Israel immediately withdraw or his administration would “re-examine” its mostly non-existent relations.

Truman, who would later claim credit for creating Israel, had done little more than provide de facto (not de jure) recognition to Israel, while still maintaining the arms embargo.

Truman’s move allowed Egypt to control Gaza and turn it over to the Muslim Brotherhood for regular terror raids on Israel. And that led directly to the rise of Hamas and the current war.

It’s also why Truman ought to get more credit for creating Hamas than for creating Israel.

Truman did not actually begin selling weapons to Israel until 1950, well after it had survived the war, and only in order to also be able to sell weapons to its Arab Muslim enemies as part of an agreement with the UK to “maintain a rough balance of power between Israel and the Arab states.“

American Jews have long lived with the comforting “Eddie Jacobson” myth that Truman had intervened on behalf of Israel because of a plea from his longtime friend and business partner.

The truth is that the Truman administration had opposed statehood, until Israel had gone ahead and declared it, had opposed any Israeli presence in Jerusalem, and blocked the pathway to victory, until Israel had gone ahead and won not because of Truman, but despite him.

Since then history has repeated itself again and again. And too many Israelis, who used to know better, bought into the silly myth that their country existed because Truman “liked” them.

Millions of Jews were murdered in Europe despite all the politicians who claimed to like them, but then did nothing for them. Hundreds of thousands of Jews in Israel held off armies and built a state, not because politicians liked them, but because they fought for their independence.

The Oslo Accords, made so that Israel would be liked, brought it to the brink of destruction. If Israel is going to undo that and the entire ‘palestinian’ colonial project, it has a limited time in which to act. Even after Oct 7, it was too consumed with being liked to do what had to be done.

Like America, Israel wants to be liked after Islamic terror attacks, when what it needs is to win.

On the 76th anniversary of its independence, Israel has once again been forced to declare its independence from a White House Democrat who publicly promised support while privately stabbing it in the back. Going into Rafah and finishing off Hamas will be a more meaningful celebration of Yom Ha’atzmaut or Independence Day than any flag-waving parades.

Independence is not in the fireworks you shoot off, it’s in taking independent action.

Contrary to popular myth, foreign aid to Israel isn’t proof that Jerusalem controls D.C. but that D.C. controls Jerusalem. What’s often misleadingly described as aid isn’t a big check, it’s an entanglement with the U.S. defense industry that prevents Israel from fighting an extended war without permission.

Since the War of Independence and the 1956 Suez Canal War, the priority has been to make sure that Israel won’t be able to unilaterally pursue a military campaign. Once denied weapons, Israel has been given them in exchange for being put on a leash out of D.C.

Oct 7 has become the ultimate test of Israel’s independence. And this Memorial Day and Independence Day will determine whether a nation of nearly 10 million is truly free to do more than mourn its dead, but once again take independent action to protect its living future.

          (FrontPageMag.com)

Israel Celebrates 76th Independence Day in the Shadow of Ongoing War, with Hostages Still in Captivity

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Lighting the Rescuers’ Torch during the Israeli Independence Day ceremony, May 13, 2024 (GPO/YouTube)

Protesters government held an alternative, torch-extinguishing ceremony in Binyamina.

By: Batya Jerenberg–World Israel News

The official ceremony marking Israel’s 76th birthday was different than any previous Independence Day Monday night, being pre-taped and displayed to no live audience, with content that was more moving than celebratory.

As the transition from Israel’s Remembrance Day, twelve memorial torches were first shown being lit at twelve sites that Hamas terrorists overran on October 7 during their invasion in which they massacred 1,200 people and abducted 253 back to the Gaza Strip.

In his brief speech, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu referred to the 132 remaining captives, promising to bring them all home, even the dead.

Mentioning Israel’s “secret weapon” – its “spirit of the ages,” that allowed the Jewish nation to defeat its enemies in 1948 – he reiterated his vow to defeat Hamas and praised the IDF soldiers who “fell in heroic battles” in the ongoing war.

Instead of honoring individuals for their contributions to the Jewish state in various fields, 44 people lit six torches as representatives of groups that have led the way in defending the country over the last seven months.

There were beacons honoring the Security Services, Rescue Forces, Civilian Rescuers, Communities’ Emergency Response Teams, Israel (online) Advocates, and Air Defense.

A seventh beacon was reserved for Diaspora Jewry, who rushed to help their brethren in Israel as soon as the war began. While the leading Jewish organizations raised hundreds of millions of dollars, dozens of grassroots initiatives began to bring in tons of items that IDF soldiers needed because Israel had never called up over 300,000 reservists at the same time before.

The final beacon was that of hope. Iris Haim raised it together with three musicians and the oldest IDF reservist, Ezra Yachin, 95, a member of the Lechi underground who fought the British in pre-state Palestine and has gone around the country’s bases during the war to instill his still-indomitable spirit in the soldiers of today.

Haim’s son Yotam, kidnapped on October 7, managed to escape his Hamas captors in December along with two other Israelis but all three were accidentally killed by IDF troops who feared they were terrorists in disguise. Haim inspired the country with her immediate, public message of love and understanding for those soldiers, and her call for national harmony.

She raised the torch and said, “In honor of my Yotam, in honor of the nation’s spirit that will never be broken, the ability to believe and to see the good in Israeli society. In honor of unity.”

In contrast to the state ceremony, others who oppose the government and blame it instead of Hamas for the continued captivity of the hostages, carried out a torch-extinguishing ceremony in an amphitheater in Binyamina.

Members of some hostages’ and bereaved families, survivors of the Hamas slaughter, evacuees and others put out such beacons as the “Security Breach” torch, the “Beacon of the Desolation of the Surrounding Settlements,” and “Abandonment of the Kidnapped.”

Some of the others that were extinguished were called beacons of “Arrogance,” of “Loss of Personal Security for Women,” of “Neglecting Mental Health,” and “Abandonment of the Citizens to their Fate.”

There was also one for the “Displaced Persons,” 80,000 residents who were told to leave their homes both in the south and north to keep them safe from both the aerial threat from Hamas and Hezbollah in Lebanon.

The speakers expressed their bitterness and pain over the horrific events of October 7 and harshly criticized the government’s conduct of the war and “abdication of responsibility” in not taking proper care of the needs of all those affected by it, whether directly or indirectly.

At the end, Iris Zangauker, the mother of 24-year-old hostage Matan from Kibbutz Nir Oz lit the Beacon of Hope.

While saying that “we have a nation but the country has been hijacked” and has “no leaders,” she stated that the people “who understand that what is most important is human life” will instead lead the way and not rest until all the hostages are returned.

“I light this beacon of mutual responsibility and hope for the rescue of the kidnapped [which] is the rescue of the country. Now!” she exclaimed.

Thousands watched the ceremony broadcast in HaBima Square in Tel Aviv, and after it ended they marched to the site where David Ben Gurion declared Israel’s independence, chanting, “It’s not independence without the hostages.”

          (WorldIsraelNews.com)

New Immigrants Making a Difference as IDF ‘Lone Soldiers’

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Ezequiel Pachter. Credit: Courtesy.

“These are difficult times, but we have to hold our heads up high,” says Ezequiel Pachter, who immigrated to Israel from Argentina in 2022 with the aim of joining the IDF.

By: Josh Hasten

On Yom Ha’atzmaut (Independence Day), Israelis celebrate the bravery and heroism of those who fought in the 1948 War of Independence to ensure the survival of the fledgling Jewish state.

In the wake of Hamas’s brutal Oct. 7 invasion of southern Israel, the country now has many more heroes to celebrate. Included in that group are immigrant “lone soldiers” (soldiers without family in Israel) who were forced to fight for the country’s survival very nearly “fresh off the boat,” just as their predecessors did 76 years ago.

Some of these soldiers immigrated from countries including Argentina with the assistance of the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews (IFCJ), an organization committed to helping Jews escape poverty and anti-Semitism and assist in their return to their biblical homeland.

Ezequiel Pachter, 22, immigrated from Buenos Aires, Argentina in 2022, and lives in Netanya. In Argentina, he was very active as a freestyle wrestler at the local Maccabi sports center and was also involved in serving as a security guard to protect the Jewish community.

He told JNS he decided to move to Israel “because I wanted something more important in my life,” namely to join the Israel Defense Forces. Upon arrival, Pachter enlisted and is now a commander in the IDF’s Search and Rescue unit. On Oct. 7, he was at home in Netanya when he got the call to head into battle against Hamas at the IDF’s Zikim base, just north of Gaza..

Pachter and his fellow soldiers succeeded in beating back the terrorists, but that “was the beginning of a very difficult and intense month of fighting,” in which he lost several friends.

“It’s tough to be a fighter, there’s a lot of responsibility but this is what I chose.” The key, he said, is “don’t think, just do,” as your training and experience take over. “The first time you stop to think, that’s when you can get hurt,” he said.

In about a month and a half, Patcher is set to become a commander leading a basic training course for new recruits. He said that his parents back in Argentina are very supportive and proud of him. His girlfriend, who is also a lone soldier from Argentina, has started her official immigration process.

Concerning the upcoming holiday, said Patcher, “These are difficult times, but we have to hold our heads up high. It will be challenging to celebrate Yom Ha’atzmaut this year, but we have to continue the fight and maintain our determination until there is peace.”

Uriel Ruetter, 25, immigrated as a lone soldier from Buenos Aires in 2022, settling in Kibbutz Nir Yitzhak along the border with Gaza. Ruetter, who has a degree in international relations from Argentina, serves in the Paratroopers Brigade.

On Oct. 7, Reutter was on leave at a friend’s house in Tel Aviv when Hamas terrorists attacked his community. He got a message from his commander telling him to head to base and pick up his equipment, as his unit was being sent into Sderot to fight the terrorists that had infiltrated that town.

“We were in the last phases of training when the war started,” he told JNS. “But once we entered Sderot, we had to make the switch from trainees to fighters.”

Ruetter’s commander, Itay-Eliahu Marchiano, was the first of the unit to fall that day, during the first hours of fighting. “He was the one who pushed us, but when he fell, we were forced to make that push instead of him, and we had to gain strength from him,” he said.

After the battle for Sderot, Ruetter and his unit were sent to the area of Kibbutz Re’im, where they witnessed the carnage Hamas had left at the Nova Music Festival. He recalls being shocked by the destruction. His unit was then deployed to Gaza for more than 30 days to continue the fight against Hamas. Ruetter said his parents back in Argentina are worried about him but very proud.

He is scheduled to complete his army service, after which he plans to pursue a career in his chosen field.

Ruetter reflected on this week’s Yom Hashoah—Holocaust Martyrs’ and Heroes’ Remembrance Day—saying, “Whether the Holocaust or Oct. 7, and witnessing what’s going on here in Israel, and the anti-Semitism all over the world, we must explore what can take away from it. We must push forward with strength and not weakness. That’s the only way.”

With regard to Independence Day, Ruetter said, “I feel I made the right decision to come to Israel. A few years ago, I had to explain and justify why I moved here. Now, people understand the dangers of living as a Jew abroad. [Since Oct. 7] I feel even more satisfied with my decision.”

Roman Karlin, 26, immigrated to Israel in 2019 from Rosario, also in Argentina. Karlin told JNS he was inspired to move to Israel after attending a year-long youth study program in Israel at the age of 18.

“I realized I wanted to live here and also to serve in the army. I felt I wanted to contribute to the country as much as I could, and that I wanted to give back some of what the country has given me,” he told JNS.

Upon arrival, he spent six months learning Hebrew in Jerusalem, before joining an elite Paratrooper Brigade unit in 2020 as a lone soldier.

He completed his army service at the end of 2022 but was called in for his first reserve duty stint just months later following the Oct. 7 massacre. Karlin spent 55 days in Gaza fighting against Hamas in Beit Hanoun, Jabalia and Gaza City, which he said was extremely difficult.

“It was hard, but I knew my mission was to protect Israel. I knew this was necessary to guarantee Israel’s security and to fight terror. That is why I made aliyah, to protect the place that I love,” he said, adding, “This is not a war we chose, but it is one we are forced to fight.”

In the midst of the war, on Dec. 9, while on leave, Roman decided to propose to his girlfriend Daniela, an immigrant from Bahía Blanca, Argentina. The couple has not set a date.

In January, Karlin was discharged from reserve duty (“for now,” he said), and returned to his job as a store manager in Tel Aviv.

Karlin feels Israel’s top priority must be to secure the release of the hostages still being held by Hamas in Gaza.

“The most important thing is to bring back the hostages ASAP. The Rafah operation will speed things up,” he said, referring to Gaza’s southernmost city, Hamas’s last stronghold in the Strip. “There is still work to do [fighting against terrorists] in the south of the country and in the north. But we must bring back the hostages. I’m always hoping for the best,” he said.

All three new immigrants expressed gratitude to the IFCJ for providing them with the support they needed from the minute they started the aliyah process, through arrival and integration into society and throughout their army service.

IFCJ President Yael Eckstein told JNS, “Throughout Israel’s modern history, our nation’s miraculous growth can be credited in large part to the successful ingathering of the Jewish people from all corners of the world, something the IFCJ is very proud and honored to be a part of.”

She added that “today, as our country faces one of its darkest and most challenging hours, the spirit of selfless love for Israel being put forth by these soldiers who are serving their new homeland, is something that is deeply inspiring and proves that whatever difficulties we face, the bond between our people and our land remains as strong as ever.”

(JNS.org)

Upholding Anti-Masking Laws to Preserve Accountability in Campus Protests

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The recent surge of campus protests, where masks have obscured the identities of those pro-Hamas, pro-terror protesters who spout anti-Semitic rhetoric, calls attention to the urgent need for such legislative measures. Photo Credit: AP

In the spirited debate surrounding the right to protest and the manner in which it is conducted, recent directives by Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost serve as a poignant reminder of the delicate balance between freedom of expression and public safety. The invocation of Ohio’s 1953 anti-masking law, originally crafted to combat the clandestine terrors wrought by the Ku Klux Klan, underscores a broader, often overlooked, principle: the safety of the community and the transparency of those within it are paramount.

The law, which prohibits the uniting of individuals committing misdemeanors while disguised, including the wearing of masks, was a direct response to a dark chapter in our nation’s history where masks served as shields for perpetrators of racial terror and hatred. This historical context is not merely an anecdotal backdrop but the foundation upon which the law rests, ensuring that such acts of masked intimidation are never normalized or allowed to fester unchecked in our society.

Attorney General Yost’s reminder to university presidents is timely and critical. It comes at a moment when the lines between peaceful protest and disruptive, sometimes dangerous, activism begin to blur. Protesting—indeed, a fundamental right and often a catalyst for necessary societal shifts—must not be a veil for illegal acts. The clarity provided by unmasked protest ensures accountability on all sides: protesters remain free to express their views openly, and law enforcement can appropriately differentiate peaceful demonstrators from potential agitators.

This law is not an anachronism but a bulwark against the resurgence of masked intimidation, irrespective of the cause it purports to support. The precedent set by the Georgia Supreme Court in upholding a similar statute in 1990 exemplifies this stance—not as an infringement on free speech but as a reinforcement of public safety and a counter to anonymous terrorism. The timeless words of the Rev. C.T. Vivian resonate with profound relevance today, highlighting how the court’s decision safeguarded Georgians from the “anonymous terrorism motivated by the bigotry of the Ku Klux Klan.” This historical context is essential in understanding why such laws are not relics of a bygone era but necessary instruments in our ongoing battle against hate-fueled violence. Masks, which have historically enabled perpetrators of hate crimes to evade accountability, must not be allowed to serve the same purpose in today’s protests.

This law, championed as a bulwark against hate, has stood the test of time, proving its worth as not only a legal measure but also a moral stance against the anonymity that fuels acts of terror and discrimination.

Critics may argue that such laws are a hindrance to the modern protester’s toolkit, particularly under circumstances where anonymity could protect demonstrators from potential retaliation. However, this perspective misses the crucial point: transparency in protest not only demarcates the boundary of lawful demonstration but also protects the integrity of the cause itself. It assures the public that protesters are willing to stand openly for their convictions, fostering a more honest and impactful dialogue.

The recent surge of campus protests, where masks have obscured the identities of those pro-Hamas, pro-terror protesters who spout anti-Semitic rhetoric, calls attention to the urgent need for such legislative measures. These masks do not merely hide identities; they embolden actions that, if conducted openly, might otherwise be self-censored. The disturbing trend of masked pro-Hamas protesters not only intimidates those on the receiving end of their vitriol but also erodes the integrity of the protest itself.

When one chooses to hide their face, they cast a shadow over their cause, miring it in suspicion and fear rather than framing it as a legitimate expression of dissent. The reality, however, is that these anti-Israel protesters are not orchestrated to express dissent but these protests are used as a platform to promulgate mendacious accusations against Israel and to extol a spurious narrative about the Jewish state in order to gain the world’s sympathy and support.

Ohio’s reaffirmation of this law is a necessary stance in an era where faceless actions increasingly cloud public perception and discourse. The First Amendment should indeed serve as a shield, protecting individuals against government overreach, not as a sword wielded to obscure accountability. By upholding this law, Ohio reinforces a commitment to civil discourse conducted in the open, free from the shadows of anonymity that have historically been used to foster fear rather than to facilitate freedom.

Thus, as campus protesters wave their flags—whether they be Palestinian or otherwise—they should do so unmasked, lest it be concluded that their objective is indeed intimidation, very much like that of the Ku Klux Klan. But then again, these are pro-Hamas demonstrators who laud terrorism, especially when the target are Jews and Israelis as was illustrated in the brutal massacre that the Iranian proxy group Hamas conducted on October 7th when 1200 Israelis were sadistically slaughtered. Just like the terrorists they claim to defend, these protesters also possess the predilection to hide behind masks to conceal the evil that lurks within them.

In this, Ohio leads not only in safeguarding public safety but in fortifying the very principles of transparency and accountability that form the bedrock of effective, democratic protest.

Furthermore, the presence of masks on campuses has created a logistical nightmare for university administrations. The inability to distinguish between genuine students and external agitators complicates efforts to maintain a safe and inclusive educational environment. It is one thing to protest; it is quite another to do so in a manner that allows for potential chaos instigated by those who do not belong to the campus community.

Attorney General Dave Yost’s exhortation for protesters to “own their advocacy” is not just a call for accountability but a reminder of the courage true activism requires.

Indeed, masks can dangerously embolden individuals, creating a false sense of impunity that can lead to criminal behaviors and violent acts under the guise of advocacy. By enforcing Ohio’s anti-masking law, Yost is not curtailing freedom of expression but reinforcing the principle that true courage in advocacy comes from standing openly for one’s beliefs.

In essence, the enforcement of anti-masking laws like those in Georgia and Ohio should be seen not as a restriction on civil liberties but as a reinforcement of them. It ensures that all individuals are held to the same standard of accountability, crucial in a society that values justice and equality. Let us then heed the wisdom of the past and the clarity of the present to forge a future where protests are powerful not because they are masked, but because they are brave. Kudos indeed to Mr. Yost for his steadfast commitment to these principles, serving as a reminder that in the fight for justice, transparency is not just beneficial; it is essential.

Letters to the Editor

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Biden Says U.S. Will Not Supply Israel With Weapons

Dear Editor:

When in the 5,000 years of recorded history has there ever been a more compassionate army than the IDF (Israeli Defense Forces)?

Hamas started a war with Israel on Oct. 7, 2023. They violated the 1949 Geneva Conventions by obliterating the lines between combatants and civilians. The Convention explicitly forbids rape or other forms of sexual violence, which were proudly documented by Hamas and celebrated throughout radical Islam’s sphere of influence.

By contrast, no other state has ever recognized the right of civilians to be protected from the dangers of war and to receive the help they need. Only Israel advises civilians to vacate areas where there will be fighting. Hamas does its best to force civilians to remain, to use them as human shields and to increase the death count for propaganda purposes.

Islamists are laser-focused in a manner the West will never be. For almost a hundred years the Muslim Brotherhood has worked to replace us with a Caliphate. Their vision is of the collective, the Ummah, a community of believers bound together to worship Allah and advance the cause of Islam.

Western societies are based on the individual. We believe in “Life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness” or “Peace, order and good government”. Our governments serve the people who elect them. In dictatorships, the people acquiesce to their masters. Islam means submission.

So, why do we have tent encampment polluting some of our most prestigious campuses? While they are being well-financed and organized by forces attempting to bring us down, part of the problem is of our own making.

We sold out to radical Islam’s oil dollars. We welcomed Saudi and Qatari billions into academia. We allowed them to buy chairs of learning. They started with Middle Eastern studies and then migrated to the social sciences and beyond. They filled the chairs with compliant professors. They sponsored thousands of students on visas to populate our classrooms and create a core Islamic belief system that goes unchallenged by pliable immature Western minds.

In the tent parks, the Great Satan is the villain because it won’t crush the Small Satan. Israel is denied the right of self-defense. Hamas is the hero for gang-raping, mutilating and murdering Jewish women, girls and babies. The Palestinians, created in 1964 by the Soviet KGB, are the victims and the rationale for anti-Semitism. Harassing students and interfering with the functioning of the university are merely collateral damage.

Will we ever take appropriate action to reverse the damage to our democracy? Can we reclaim our hallowed halls of learning? It is not likely while Biden is working to keep Hamas in power.

Sincerely
Len Bennett, Author of ‘Unfinished Work’
Deerfield Beach, Florida


 

Stop Playing by Everybody Else’s Rules

Dear Editor:

So now Hamas wants to trade the bodies of dead Jews for the release of live Palestinian terrorists who are in Israeli prisons. Well, here’s an idea: maybe Israel should give them the bodies of dead Palestinian terrorists in exchange for dead Jews. Why do Israel and the Jewish people always have to play by everybody else’s rules? Why do we always have to accept their term and their demands?

Sincerely,
George Stern
Boro Park


 

Released Terrorists Will Murder Again

Dear Editor:

I’m horrified by the thought that Israel is going to release hundreds, or even thousands of terrorists in exchange for a handful of hostages, some of whom will be dead. We know from past experience that many of the released terrorists will go out and murder more Jews. So releasing them will lead directly to the deaths others. How can the lives of the Israeli public be sacrificed in this way?

Sincerely,
Ned Kahn
Flatbush


 

National Waitress Day

Dear Editor:

Tuesday, May 21st is National Waitress Day. Your neighborhood restaurant waitress is on her feet all day long working long hours. She has to take and deliver meal orders, follow up to make sure your meal is up to expectations, refill your coffee, tea or water glass, box any leftovers you want to take home and prepare the check — all with a smile and friendly disposition.

On this day, why not show your appreciation and honor your favorite waitress? Leave a 25 percent tip against the total bill including taxes. Remember that they usually have to share the tips with the bus boys. Drop off some flowers, a box of candy or some cookies as well.

Sincerely,
Larry Penner


 

Schumer is a Fraud

Dear Editor:

Your May 9 article about Senator Schumer supporting Biden’s cut-off of weapons to Israel shows what a fraud he is. When Schumer recently made that speech calling for the ouster of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, he pretended that he wasn’t turning against all of Israel, “only against Netanyahu.” Well, now the mask is off. Biden isn’t cutting off weapons just to Netanyahu—he is stopping them from going to Israel, and Schumer is supporting it. This disgraceful senator has truly abandoned Israel.

Sincerely,
David Steinberg
Brooklyn


 

The Marxist Revolution Has Begun

Dear Editor:

I have been scrupulously monitoring your coverage of the pro-Hamas demonstrations at college campuses across the United States and the entire world, for that matter. Allow me to say that reporters have been doing an outstanding job in terms of capturing the dangerous nature of this frightening phenomenon. So, thank you Fern Sidman, Jared Evan and the other cracker jack writers at your fine publication for producing such detailed and exceptionally informative articles.

Having said this, I think that anyone who has eyes to see and ears that hear knows that we are witnessing a Marxist revolution, not only on our campuses but it has permeated our media and our lives. Let’s remember that historically, such revolutions were never built by the “numb and the dumb” as Rabbi Meir Kahane, of blessed memory would always say. So, there is no reason to be surprised that the ivy league universities are the ones leading the way on this pernicious political trajectory.

In my opinion, the Jew is the canary in the coal mine. It always begins with the Jew but never ends there. The ultimate goal of this campus protest movement is to not only eradicate Israel but to bring down the United States. Yes, folks, the future does not bode well for us unless we speak out and offer some concrete pushback.

Sincerely
Jenna Diamond

The Betrayal of Israel by the US Administration Is Almost Complete

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The campuses of several American and European universities — including, among other places, Yale, Harvard, Princeton, Columbia and New York University — became sites of acts of pure anti-Israeli and anti-Semitic violence, under the guise of “free speech.” Credit: AP

By: Guy Millière

The genocidal anti-Semitic attack on October 7, 2023 by the Islamic terrorists of Hamas at first aroused horror throughout the Western world. It took only a few hours, however for the horror to fade — long before Israel had even begun to respond. Demonstrations against Israel, and in support of the terrorist group, Hamas — sometimes “cleaned up” to be labeled “pro-Palestinian” — exploded just hours later on October 8, before hundreds of charred bodies had been removed from their homes. These well-planned and well-funded professional demonstrations, complete with instant Palestinian flags and, later, instant identical tents — rapidly metastasized throughout North America and Europe.

The slogan, “From the River to the Sea, Palestine will be free” — calls for the total destruction of Israel, which, by coincidence, happens to be located between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea – and “Death to America” were chanted by tens of thousands of self-described “progressives,” Muslims and their followers. The campuses of several American and European universities — including, among other places, Yale, Harvard, Princeton, Columbia and New York University — became sites of acts of pure anti-Israeli and anti-Semitic violence, under the guise of “free speech.” If the demonstrations had been against gays or Blacks, does anyone think that “free speech,” or violence masquerading as “free speech, would have lasted five minutes? Whatever happened to all those demonstrations against China’s genocide of the Uyghurs, or crushing Hong Kong; or Russia’s scorched-earth war in Ukraine; or Iran’s rape, torture and execution of women, children and, now, rappers, or North Korea’s “murder, enslavement, torture, [and] enforced disappearances”?

“Stop Calling Them ‘Pro-Palestine’ Rallies,'” wrote the Rochester Institute of Technology’s A.J. Caschetta. In blunt Australia, euphemisms were dispensed with altogether in favor of “Gas the Jews” and “F—-k the Jews.”

The whitewash of the terrorist group Hamas had begun. European politicians in France and Belgium, supporting Hamas, call it a “resistance movement.”

As Israel’s military response in the Gaza Strip progressed — meticulously crafted to avoid harming Palestinian civilians — many European leaders turned on Israel. They falsely accused it of acting “disproportionately” while Hamas’s widespread use of its own civilians as human shields was almost totally ignored. As Hamas also meticulously plans, the gullible international community accuses Israel of killing innocent civilians, not the Palestinian officials in Gaza who intentionally place them in harm’s way, even shooting at them to keep them from fleeing to safety in the south as the Israelis were urging them to do.

As early as March 19, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, like so many European political leaders, falsely accused Israel, not Hamas, of “causing a famine” in Gaza. He even added that “100 percent of the population in Gaza is at severe levels of acute food insecurity”. Credit: AP

Also ignored is that Hamas officials seize virtually all of the free humanitarian aid, then give it to their terrorists or sell it to civilians on the black market for extortionate prices.

Although there is “‘no food shortage’ in Gaza,” several of Israel’s most steadfastly hostile critics, such as EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs Josep Borrell, nevertheless falsely accuse Israel of causing a “famine” in Gaza.

As early as March 19, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, like so many European political leaders, falsely accused Israel, not Hamas, of “causing a famine” in Gaza. He even added that “100 percent of the population in Gaza is at severe levels of acute food insecurity”. Israel is now forced to allow hundreds of trucks into Gaza that Israeli soldiers escort. Gaza, in fact, reportedly receives far more food than the population of Gaza needs. Gee, what could be happening to it?

Soon, all the mainstream European media stopped talking about the horrors of Hamas and instead turned their attention to the suffering Palestinians of Gaza – without noting that the people responsible for their fate and the death count are Hamas. Hamas even freely admits that its strategy is to use human shields. As far as Hamas is concerned, the higher the Palestinian death-count, the better.

The United States has been Israel’s main ally for decades, discounting occasional fluctuations here and there. Historically, American leaders’ support for Israel has been unwavering – until now. In February, America’s Democrat politicians voted to block aid to Israel. As the Israeli author and historian Gadi Taub noted last week:

“The U.S. is holding Israel on a leash by rationing the American-made ammunition on which the war effort depends; it has forced us to supply our enemies with ‘humanitarian aid’ which Hamas controls and which sustains its ability to fight; the U.S. is building a port to subvert our control of the flow of goods into Gaza; it refrained from vetoing an anti-Israel decision at the U.N. Security Council at the end of March; it leaked its intention to recognize a Palestinian state unilaterally; it allowed Iran to attack us directly with a barrage of over 300 rockets and drones without paying any price whatsoever; and then told us that Israel’s successful defense against that strike (which was mostly stopped by a combination of superior Israeli tech and faulty Iranian missiles that crashed all over the Middle East, and to some extent by U.S. interceptors) should be considered “victory”; it consistently protects Hezbollah from a full-fledged Israeli attack; it did all it can to prevent the ground invasion of Rafah, which is necessary for winning the war; it is trying to stop the war with a hostage deal that would ensure Hamas’ survival.

“The U.S. is not protecting Israel from the kangaroo courts in The Hague which now threaten to issue arrest warrants against Netanyahu and others. Instead, it is goosing those warrants, in part by itself threatening to impose sanctions on a unit of the IDF, thus subverting the chain of command and pressuring IDF units to comply with American demands rather than with orders from their superiors. ”

By now, most mainstream American media are as negative towards Israel as most mainstream European media.

In the days that followed October 7, the Biden administration generously provided arms and ammunition to Israel, as well as positioning several warships in the area, presumably to keep the conflict from spreading. Yet even then, pressure was put on Israel’s government. US President Joe Biden bizarrely asked Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu “not to be consumed by rage”. Soon, as the Israeli military countered the terrorist threat in Gaza, US pressure on Israel was accompanied by harsh –and curiously public — criticism.

On January 9, despite unprecedented Israeli precautions to avoid harming civilians, Blinken announced, “the daily toll of war on civilians in Gaza is far too high”, and accused the Israeli Defense Forces of “indiscriminate bombing” — an accusation, as Blinken must have known, that could not have been less accurate.

Senator Chuck Schumer, after declaring himself a friend and defender of Israel, suggested overthrowing Israel’s democratically elected prime minister, and — as if Israel, and not America, were within his jurisdiction — called for new elections. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File)

John Spencer, chair of urban warfare studies at the Modern War Institute (MWI) at West Point, wrote:

“The Israel Defense Forces conducted an operation at al-Shifa hospital in the Gaza Strip to root out Hamas terrorists recently, once again taking unique precautions as it entered the facility to protect the innocent; Israeli media reported that doctors accompanied the forces to help Palestinian patients if needed. They were also reported to be carrying food, water and medical supplies for the civilians inside

“None of this meant anything to Israel’s critics, of course, who immediately pounced. The critics, as usual, didn’t call out Hamas for using protected facilities like hospitals for its military activity. Nor did they mention the efforts of the IDF to minimize civilian casualties.”

Not only were Blinken’s comments untrue, they seemed intended to give arguments to Israel’s enemies.

On February 7, Blinken went further and said that the October 7 massacre did not give Israel — trying to defend itself in a war it did not start — a “license to dehumanize others.” Unfortunately for Blinken, that is the last thing Israel is doing, but the main thing Hamas, Hezbollah, Qatar and Iran are doing.

On February 8, Biden himself said abruptly, “A lot of innocent people are starving. A lot of innocent people are in trouble and dying. And it’s got to stop.”

All right. If it has “got to stop”, why not demand that Hamas, Iran and Qatar stop it?

On March 25, the Biden administration refused to use the American veto and allowed the United Nations Security Council to adopt a resolution, proposed by Algeria, demanding an immediate unilateral ceasefire from Israel — with no condemnation of Hamas.

On April 4, Blinken tried to create a false moral equivalence between a terrorist group and a liberal democracy by charging that Israel had no reverence for human life and that if Israel did not do more to protect civilians in Gaza, Hamas and Israel could become “indistinguishable”. He then cited an old Jewish saying — that “whoever saves a life, saves the entire world” – contortedly, grotesquely implying that the Israel’s attempt to defend its own country and people is in contravention of the values of Judaism itself.

On April 4, according to journalist Barak Ravid:

“President Biden laid out an ultimatum to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in their call on Thursday: If Israel doesn’t change course in Gaza, ‘we won’t be able to support you,’ he said, according to three sources with knowledge of the call.”

According to the Times of Israel:

“During a security cabinet meeting after the call, Netanyahu noted that the White House readout similarly didn’t explicitly condition a ceasefire on a hostage deal. It said that Biden told the Israeli premier ‘that an immediate ceasefire is essential to stabilize and improve the humanitarian situation and protect innocent civilians…'”

The Biden administration does not appear ever to have issued the slightest threat, warning or ultimatum to the authors of the war: Hamas, Iran or Qatar. Hamas in Gaza, like the Taliban in Afghanistan, is now most likely seen universally as the tail wagging the American dog.

Although the UN Security Council resolution of March 25 was not binding, any further ceasefire would mean Hamas won the war, simply by surviving to repeat the October 7 attack, time and again, until Israel is annihilated, as Hamas official Ghazi Hamad said.

Hamas, on October 6, 2023, had a ceasefire with Israel. On October 7, Hamas violated it. Hamas did accept a second ceasefire a few weeks into the war and exchanged nearly half the hostages it held. A ceasefire now, especially a “temporary” one that would surely be pressured into becoming permanent, would just enable Hamas to regroup, rearm, and replenish its supply of terrorists from Israeli prisons.

US Senator Chuck Schumer, after declaring himself a friend and defender of Israel, suggested overthrowing Israel’s democratically elected prime minister, and — as if Israel, and not America, were within his jurisdiction — called for new elections:

“If Prime Minister Netanyahu’s current coalition remains in power after the war begins to wind down and continues to pursue dangerous and inflammatory policies that test existing US standards for assistance, then the United States will have no choice but to play a more active role in shaping Israeli policy by using our leverage to change the present course.”

Schumer’s speech, yet again putting America’s outsized foot in the middle of Israel’s domestic policy, and ordering its ally to take direction from the Biden administration — including accepting a terrorist Palestinian state on its borders — and effectively disregard what the Israeli people have democratically chosen — was seen by most in Israel as a vicious blow.

Biden immediately backed Schumer up. “He made a good speech,” the president said in the Oval Office during a meeting with Ireland’s prime minister. “I think he expressed serious concerns shared not only by him but by many Americans”.

Biden, it seems, is frustrated that Netanyahu is objecting to humanitarian aid — which basically resupplies Hamas. Hamas, Israel’s argument goes, released hostages only after unremitting pressure. Relieving that pressure by backing Hamas makes the probability of seeing any more hostages released less likely. Biden is also reportedly frustrated that Netanyahu, for some inexplicable reason, objects to the creation of a terrorist Palestinian state next door.

Hamas would doubtless love as many humanitarian aid workers in Gaza as possible; they would provide Hamas with a fresh batch of human shields to prevent Israel from entering Rafah and removing Hamas’s remaining four battalions and terrorist leaders. Hamas is apparently already killing aid workers to steal food. How much better if they could be used to obstruct Israeli soldiers from entering the tunnels where the remaining hostages are believed hidden.

Netanyahu, accused by his adversaries of needing a war to avoid new elections, is being praised by others as “Israel’s Churchill.” Israelis remember that he was the leader who had the courage to address the US Congress in 2015 to counter President Barack Obama lethal, illegitimate “Iran nuclear deal,” officially known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA).

Netanyahu, who has not been short on courage, either in combat or in refusing to submit to US pressure to go along with the JCPOA — despite the Obama administration’s interference in an Israeli election — may feel an overriding obligation, as he has said from the beginning, to make sure that Hamas will never again be able to launch another October 7; to take out the terrorist leaders presumed to be concealed in tunnels, as well as the four remaining Hamas battalions in Rafah, and above all, to rescue the hostages — many of whom may have since been murdered.

           (GatestoneInstitute.org)

Blind Acceptance: Media Outlets Take Hamas’ Lying Word on Ceasefire Approval

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Israeli tanks entering the Gazan side of the Rafah border crossing on May 7th, 2024. Photo credit: Israel Defense Forces via AP

By: Tamar Sternthal

Last week, major mainstream news outlets again displayed a stubborn propensity for taking the Hamas terror organization on its word. When Hamas issued a statement May 6 claiming to accept the ceasefire plan, numerous media outlets uncritically reported as fact that the terror organization had done exactly that.

The next day, the U.S. State Department explicitly stated that in no way did Hamas accept the ceasefire proposal. Yet, the same media outlets which adopted the Hamas fabrication as gospel completely ignored the American clarification debunking the terror organization’s falsehood.

Thus, the unequivocal Reuters headline about Hamas’ supposed approval of the ceasefire plan states: “Rafah: Hamas accepted Gaza ceasefire proposal, Israel ‘will continue its operation.’”

As of this writing, the false headline still stands although five days have passed since State Department spokesman Matthew Miller made absolutely clear on May 7 that Hamas’ claim to accept the ceasefire was untrue.

Thus, the unequivocal Reuters headline about Hamas’ supposed approval of the ceasefire plan states: “Rafah: Hamas accepted Gaza ceasefire proposal, Israel ‘will continue its operation.’”

In that May 7 briefing (1:28), Miller plainly stated:

Let me just make one thing clear which is that Hamas did not accept a ceasefire proposal. Hamas responded and their response made several suggestions. It’s not the same as accepting. That statement that was issued yesterday – that was widely reported – I don’t blame the reporting – it’s what the statement said – is not an accurate reflection of what happened. They responded as people do in a negotiation process but it was not an acceptance.

On May 8, CAMERA contacted Reuters to point out Miller’s important statement and urge correction of the erroneous headline. Reuters has yet to set the record straight.

Moreover, days after the State Department verified Israel’s insistence that Hamas’ claim of acceptance was fraudulent, Reuters continues to ignore the American information.

For instance, yesterday Reuters reported the question of Hamas acceptance as an unresolved he said/she said dispute between Israel and the terror organization (“Hamas says ceasefire efforts are back at square one“):

Hamas had said it agreed at the start of the week to a proposal by Qatari and Egyptian mediators that had previously been accepted by Israel. Israel said the Hamas proposal contained elements it cannot accept.

A second Reuters story yesterday likewise concealed the fact the U.S. confirmed that Hamas falsely claimed to have accepted the proposal on the table (“Israel orders Palestinians to evacuate more areas of Gaza’s Rafah“):

The latest evacuation orders came hours after internationally mediated ceasefire talks appeared to be faltering. Hamas said Israel’s rejection of a truce offer it had accepted returned things to square one. Israel said the terms did not meet its demands.

The Los Angeles Times was another major media outlet to publish a false headline stating as fact that Hamas had accepted the ceasefire proposal. The front-page print edition headline May 7 falsely stated as fact: “Hamas says yes to truce; Israel mulls over terms; Announcement comes after leaflets dropped in Rafah ordered civilians to evacuate.”

Matthew Miller at the May 7, 2024 U.S. State Department press briefing: “Hamas did not accept a ceasefire proposal” (Screenshot from State Department video)

The accompanying article was a touch more cautious. Tracy Wilkinson’s article begins: “Hamas announced Monday that it accepted a cease-fire agreement with Israel in Gaza, a diplomatic breakthrough . . . “

Sixteen long paragraphs later, the article buries: “U.S. officials accused the militant group of moving the goalpost in the negotiations.”

As of this writing, The Los Angeles Times has yet to correct the erroneous print headline. Nor has it reported the American information that Hamas lied about accepting the ceasefire.

The Associated Press also published headlines which stated as fact that Hamas accepted the cease-fire including “Hamas accepts Gaza cease-fire; Israel says it will continue talks . . . ” and “The Latest | Israel launches strikes in Rafah, hours after Hamas agrees to a Gaza cease-fire.”

Similarly, in “Here’s what’s on the table for Israel and Hamas in the latest cease-fire plan,” Samy Magdy and Drew Callister began: “Hamas has formally accepted a cease-fire deal that could end the war in Gaza.”

Even after Miller’s briefing, the AP continued to state as fact on May 8 that Hamas accepted the proposal. For example, “The Latest: Israel forces block Gaza’s Rafah border crossing. . . ” (2:10 AM GMT) stated as fact in the second paragraph: “The Israeli assault into Rafah came just hours after Hamas accepted a cease-fire proposal mediated by Egypt and Qatar” (May 8).

Though AP reporters were present at Miller’s May 7 press briefing and therefore the news agency was well aware of his revelation about Hamas’ fabrication, the wire service nevertheless continued to uncritically report Hamas’ claim to have accepted the deal. Completely disregarding the fact that the United States had debunked Hamas’ fallacious acceptance, AP yesterday reported (“Israel orders new evacuations in Gaza’s last refuge of Rafah as it expands military offensive“):

Another round of cease-fire talks in Cairo ended earlier this week without a breakthrough, after Israel rejected a deal that Hamas said it accepted.

Even with a straightforward State Department statement explicitly substantiating Israel’s information, journalists adamantly refuse to acknowledge that Hamas sold them a lie. Lacking the integrity to set the record straight, journalists reject a longstanding deal — the one in which ethical journalism provides the public with “the free exchange of information that is accurate, fair and thorough.”

(CAMERA.org)

Tamar Sternthal is director of CAMERA’s Israel Office. She monitors both U.S. publications and English-language Israeli publications, and heads up CAMERA’s “Haaretz, Lost in Translation” project. Her columns have appeared in numerous American and Israeli publications, including the Times of Israel, Jerusalem Post, Ynet, Algemeiner, Philadelphia Daily News, St. Petersburg Times, and the Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles. Sternthal is interviewed on radio about the media’s coverage of the Arab-Israeli conflict and regularly participates in panels about the media, hosted by universities and think tanks in Israel. Twitter handle: http://twitter.com/TamarSternthal

The Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting and Analysis (CAMERA) is an international media-monitoring and educational organization founded in 1982 to promote accurate and unbiased coverage of Israel and the Middle East. CAMERA is a non-profit, tax-exempt, and non-partisan organization under section 501 (c)(3) of the United States Internal Revenue Code. To learn more or receive our newsletters please visit CAMERA.org.

AFP Amends After Reporting Israeli Participation Clouded Whole Eurovision

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Israeli contestant Eden Golan (Image from Kan 11 X account)

By: CAMERA.org

In response to communication from CAMERA’s Israel office, Agence France Presse has commendably corrected after charging that Israel’s participation in the 2024 Eurovision clouded the whole song contest.

The May 8 article, “Palestinian symbol protest clouds Eurovision contest,” had claimed: “The whole contest has been clouded by the participation of Israel, which has faced criticism over humanitarian conditions in Gaza amidst the war against Hamas.”

It’s not Israel which clouds Eurovision. It’s the haters of Israel who do so.

Eden Golan, the Israeli contestant, did not call for anyone to be excluded from the event. Neither she nor her team threatened any participants or pose any security threats. To the contrary, she was reportedly the target of potential threats, and was instructed to stay in her hotel room for her own safety, aside from official Eurovision events.

And Golan is hardly the only potential target. As Israel’s National Security Agency warned in raising the travel warning from Sweden from level to 2 to level 3:

Malmo is recognized as a hub for anti-Israel protests, given its high concentration of immigrants from Syria, Lebanon, Iraq, and Iran. These protests are a weekly occurrence and often involve demonstrations, calls for harm against Jews and Israelis, and the burning of Israeli flags, among other actions. Notably, on October 7 (the day of Hamas’ attack on Israel), anti-Israeli elements in Malmo openly celebrated the tragic events that occurred in Israel . . .

Furthermore, alongside the protests in Malmo, there has been a recent surge in calls from global jihadist groups and radical Islamists to carry out attacks against Western targets. This includes specific threats against Israelis and Jews worldwide, with a particular focus on events garnering significant media attention. In light of this, it’s worth mentioning that just recently (on March 19), two ISIS activists were apprehended for plotting an attack on the Swedish parliament.

In response to communication from CAMERA’s Israel office, AFP commendably amended the article, replacing the problematic sentence with the following:

This year’s competition has faced calls for Israel to be excluded over the war in Gaza, which the organizers refused. Thousands of people are expected to attend pro-Palestinian rallies throughout the week in Malmo.

Media outlets including Yahoo, Barron’s and France24 which published AFP’s initial problematic wording subsequently corrected, underscoring the importance of CAMERA’s vital and timely work correcting wire service stories which appear in multiple media outlets around the world.

In addition, AFP’s Eurovision coverage the next day included the following information about threats and fears which clouded Eurovision festivities (“Sweden’s Eurovision brings kitsch in the shadow of Gaza“):

Security is a major concern, especially as Sweden raised its terror alert level last year following a series of protests involving desecrations of the Koran.

Security checks have been stepped up, in particular for access to the various sites, where bags will mostly be prohibited.

The police presence has also been strengthened, with reinforcements coming from Norway and Denmark.

But police spokesman Jimmy Modin said the first days of Eurovision week were calm and that there was no threat directed at the competition.

Some members of the Jewish community are planning to leave the city for the weekend.

“With Eurovision, there’s a kind of intensification. The feeling of insecurity increased after October 7, and many Jews are worried,” said Fredrik Sieradzki, a spokesman for local group The Jewish Community of Malmo.

“I can’t really be happy about Eurovision, even though as a congregation we think it’s good that everyone is welcome here in Malmo, including Israel,” he added.

Security around the synagogue has been stepped up, while on social networks, threats have been directed at Israel‘s singer Golan.

(CAMERA.org)

The Six Top Jew Hating Female Columbia U Agitators You Never Heard Of

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Jew hater Amelia Fuller. Credit: screenshot

By: Lieba Nesis

After the travesty at Columbia University where Jewish students were forced to flee anti-Semitic mobs and Hamilton Hall was stormed and barricaded by students Columbia President Minouche Shafik wrote an editorial for the Financial Times on May 9th. Appallingly, she lauded the student agitators as “a broad representation of young people of every ethnic and religious background-passionate intelligent and committed.” Her admiration of this Pro-Hamas contingency is why the 270 year old institution currently is fighting for its life while Shafik’s academic career should have been terminated months ago. Here are a list of the top Shafik heroines that have taken over Columbia:

Amelia Fuller-The 23 year old from Old Bridge, NJ was charged with third degree burglary on the night of the Columbia Hamilton Hall break-in on April 30th. Fuller was previously arrested at a pro-Hamas rally on January 8th when she and other protestors handcuffed themselves to the Williamsburg Bridge to prevent police from removing them. Following the October 7th Hamas atrocities Fuller was captured on video saying she felt “proud” and was subsequently fired from her job as a digitization intern at the New York Botanical Garden in December 2023.

Fuller graduated George Mason University with a major in Environmental and Sustainability Studies and a minor in Biology. She was a member of Mason’s Students Against Israeli Apartheid where she headed to Washington in 2019 to meet Rashida Tlaib and oppose an anti-BDS bill. Her arrest at CUNY campus on the night of the Columbia break-in illustrates once again the same agitators repeat their violence since there are no consequences. Currently residing in Brooklyn on April 30th she was charged with burglary, reckless endangerment, obstruction of governmental administration, criminal mischief, conspiracy and criminal trespass and subsequently released. She also denied Hamas’s rape of Israeli women and instead blamed it on the IOF (Israeli Occupation Forces).

Nora Fayad Rauhouse continues harassing Jewish students as she says she is a member of Hamas. Credit: canarymission.org

Nora Fayad Rauhouse -a self proclaimed member of Hamas she was apprehended on April 30th at 160 Convent Avenue for illegal entry with intent on CUNY’s campus. She is affiliated with groups Ceasefire Now, Schools Out for Palestine, and Gracie Mansion Pop-up. She became famous as the “keffiyeh” clad girl shouting at a Jewish student outside of Columbia’s campus “We are all Hamas-pig”. On April 30th she was charged with burglary in the Third Degree-a Class D Felony, criminal mischief, criminal trespass, conspiracy, obstructing governmental administration, and reckless endangerment. Her next court appearance is June 12th where she is being represented by public defender Elizabeth Paige White. The 22 year old Palestinian attended Tempe High School in Arizona and was orphaned at the age of 15 after her mother died and her father kicked her out for being part of the LGBT community. She claims to be a UX designer with a background in the coffee industry and video editing.

Isabella Giusti in high school, per the New York Post. This was taken before she became a radical Jew hater wearing keffiyehs. Credit: Savannah Country Day School/Facebook

Isabella Giusti-A student at Barnard College her parents Peter and Leanne Giusti, own a $3 million, 3,000 square foot home in Savannah Georgia’s posh South Historic District complete with five bedrooms and bathrooms which they purchased for $2.25 million in 2020 and was featured in the Wall Street Journal in March. Peter Giusti was a former Savannah assistant city attorney who has been involved in financial scandals and lost his law license for failing to pay fees.

Barnard student Isabella Giusti taunts Jewish protestors with death threats on the Columbia U campus on April 19th. Credit: screenshot

Isabella attended the $25,000 per year Savannah Country Day School, and her aunt Ellen Giusti is the Director of the American Museum of Natural History. Isabella was arrested on Columbia’s campus April 18th for being part of the Gaza Columbia tent encampment and was seen wearing a keffiyeh while holding a sign that said “Al Qassams (Hamas’s military wing) Next Targets” in front of a group of peaceful Jewish students-in other words calling for the death of Jews.

Maryam Iqbal, the Palestinian leader of SJP arrested numerous times. Credit: Credit: Twitter @maryamalwan

Maryam Alwan– a proud member of Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) and its main leader she was one of the first to express support for the Hamas terror of October 7th. The Palestinian American graduate of Albermarle High School in Virginia she was heavily involved in Computer Science before turning to harassing Jewish students. A fourth year at Columbia she majors in politics and government with a focus on the Middle East and has repeatedly called on Columbia to divest from “genocidal Israel.” A major supporter of BDS and an on campus leader during the Columbia encampments and Hamilton Hall break in she is active in Jewish Voice for Peace (JVP) and domestic terror organization Within Our Lifetime (WOL).

Arrested on April 18th by NYPD for refusing to leave the Columbia tent encampment she returned that same day, according to her own ABC News interview, despite being told not to do so. Despite her suspension she remained on campus the next 8 days with no repercussions and participated in the infamous Hamilton Hall break-while telling ABC News “she has never been more proud to be a part of the student body” and was hoping to “reforge a new Columbia dictated by the students.” Despite SJP being banned in November under the leadership of Maryam they have held biweekly demonstrations. Her suspensions have all been lifted along with her access to campus and free for all break-in at Columbia’s Hamilton Hall-all thanks to bumbling Minouche Shafik!

Layla Saliba, a Columbia U Social Work student has been suspended and arrested numerous times. She continues to call for Israel’s destruction as a head of the SJP chapter at Columbia U. Credit: twitter @itslaylas

Layla Saliba–a supporter of SJP and the BDS movement she has engaged in numerous unlawful protests on campus including one in January where she was sprayed with fart spray and falsely said it was a chemical attack. A former psychology major at North Carolina State University she is currently pursuing a masters degree in social work at Columbia while working as a nanny for high net worth families. A proud Palestinian leader of Columbia University Apartheid Divest (CUAD) who claims to have lost 14 family members in Gaza she was the first to condemn the NYPD clearing of the Gaza encampment at a news conference.

Maryam Iqbal–One of the leaders of Columbia SJP and its BDS and CUAD movements she claimed in March 2024 to have written out “every single chant” for the SJP organization which included calling for the destruction of Israel and glorifying the intifada! As a Palestinian she is also active in the pro-terrorist WOL group! Currently a student at Barnard she is slated to graduate in May 2027! She claims on LinkedIn to be an English tutor and journalist focusing on the Middle East. She was arrested on April 18th for participating in the Gaza tent encampment. After being suspended she complained bitterly about being forced to wait outside her Barnard dorm for an hour before she was able to pack her belongings. Whether she has been back on campus since April 18th is unknown.

Spotlighting Wespac’s Pro-Hamas Funder Howard Horowitz

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Howard Horowitz, Head of Westchester’s People’s Action Coalition Foundation (Wespac), a nonprofit 501(c)(3), has emerged as one of the leading funders of the pro-Hamas demonstrations across the United States. Credit: David Waterston/Facebook

By: Lieba Nesis

Howard Horowitz, Head of Westchester’s People’s Action Coalition Foundation (Wespac), a nonprofit 501(c)(3), has emerged as one of the leading funders of the pro-Hamas demonstrations across the United States. Founded in 1974, Wespac’s supposed guiding principle is “nonviolent protests against injustice, discrimination, war and the causes of climate change.” While keeping its sources of revenue’s secret its lack of transparency has raised a number of red flags.

Knowing these protests have been anything but peaceful as calls to annihilate Jews, to repeat October 7th thousands of times, coupled with violent punching, stomping, and pushing of Jewish students as they are forced to flee college campuses for their lives, has made Horowitz’s orthodox upbringing all the more troubling. Wespac is the financial linchpin for dozens of Jew hating organizations including Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP), Jewish Voice for Peace (JVP) and Within Our Lifetime (WOL) a group led by Muslim Nerdeen Kiswani that has physically harassed students outside the Columbia gates.

Kiswani likes to say things such as, “I hope that pop-pop is the last noise Zionists hear in their lifetime.” Wespac does not make its fiscal sponsorships public and its sole employee other than Horowitz is Nada Khader, a Palestinian who has joined Horowitz in placing the blame for October 7th on Israel. Supporting over 15 anti-Israel groups, Wespac’s laser-like focus remains on the obliteration of Israel. A major proponent of BDS the group’s ties to anti-Semite Rep. Jamaal Bowman and AOC are no surprise. Wespac’s website and tax documents give no indication of its pro-Palestinian activism making it difficult to track the money that ends up in pro-Palestinian hands. The last revenue statement in 2021 revealed they had assets amounting to over $1 million-however, that amount has increased exponentially since October 7th.

Howard Horowitz is a member of the Israel Action Committee of Temple Israel of New Rochelle, a founding member of Westchester Jewish Coalition for Immigration and an active member of Westchester’s Jewish Voice for Peace. Credit: Screenshot

Wespac’s sole office is in White Plains as its traces its roots to the 1970’s as a proponent of the civil rights and anti-Vietnam war movements. Immediately following October 7th Horowitz stated his outrage at Israel “for its ongoing implementation of genocide involving forced death marches and indiscriminate bombing of 27,000 Gazans” remarking the future of the Jewish people depends on “Justice for Palestine.” Wespac has been named as one of the key funders of tent-city encampments at universities and for training protestors on how to wreak havoc after receiving hundreds of thousands from George Soros and his Open Society Foundations.

Horowitz’s murky origins have him claiming to have been brought up in Monticello, New York where he attended a Jewish elementary school and public high school. With an orthodox mother and father, the eighty-something year old’s undergraduate work began at NYU where he got both his degree in Psychology and his graduate degree in Political Science with a sociology degree from Bucknell University. He worked on Bill Clinton’s Arkansas governor campaign in the late 70’s and founded Horowitz Associates in 1985 as well as Horowitz Research which currently has 18 employees and which specializes in the marketing of television, computer and internet services for consumers-whatever that means.

He is a member of the Israel Action Committee of Temple Israel of New Rochelle, a founding member of Westchester Jewish Coalition for Immigration and an active member of Westchester’s Jewish Voice for Peace. After several stints living in Jerusalem and on a kibbutz in the early 70’s Horowitz moved to Westchester where he became anti-Zionist having felt the partition plan robbed the Palestinians of their homes, livelihood and lands.

Professor Alisse Waterston is Howard Horowitz’s wife. Credit: Wikipedia.org

He then met Alisse Waterston, Professor of Anthropology at John Jay College CUNY, who is also the President of the American Anthropological Association and they have three children together, Dan, Matthew and Leah, and a number of grandchildren. Howard has for years called on Jewish institutions to abandon Israel and has remained a pass-through between larger institutions and pro-Palestinian radicals as groups conducting flood-themed protests including bridge and highway blockades have been funded by Horowitz. As Congress seeks to crack down on domestic terrorist organizations its first steps must be accessing the opaque accounts of covert organizations such as Wespac.

Book Review: ‘The Holocaust: An Unfinished History’ by Dan Stone

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Dan Stone’s The Holocaust: An Unfinished History is a book that is difficult to describe; indeed one might say that it is two books in one, a joining of scholarship and screed. Credit: Amazon.com

By: Meir Y. Soloveichik

Dan Stone’s The Holocaust: An Unfinished History is a book that is difficult to describe; indeed one might say that it is two books in one, a joining of scholarship and screed. One of these books, which comprises most of the pages of the volume, is an eloquent, invaluable, and heartbreaking history of the Holocaust that emphasizes often overlooked aspects of this utterly evil event. The second is Stone’s application of his own research to the political world of the present, to those he sees as the heirs of the anti-Semites of yesteryear, and here his writing becomes suddenly one-sided.

For Stone, parallels to the purveyors of the hate that brought the Holocaust about are to be found today entirely on the political European and American right; he seems to evince little concern for the anti-Jewish sentiment found among the progressive left or in the modern Middle East. Nor is anti-Israel sentiment a source of tremendous concern to Stone; in fact, one target of Stone’s ire in his book is contemporary Germany—which, in Stone’s estimation, is too strongly pro-Israel in its identification of anti-Zionism with anti-Semitism.

All this makes reading Stone’s book a particularly painful experience. The Holocaust: An Unfinished History was clearly written before October 7, 2023; and since then, at least to this author, the anti-Semitism festering in progressive circles, especially in parts of the academy, has become manifestly clear. To read Stone’s piercing descriptions of Germany’s descent into evil, and the embrace of Jew-hate by much of Europe in the 1940s, is to be reminded of the purchase that Jew-hate has had on our world. Yet at the same time, Stone’s descriptions of anti-Semitism of the past sound eerily similar to anti-Semitism manifest today in spheres regarding which the author seems unconcerned. To put it another way, Stone’s analysis of the past has much to teach us about the present—but the lessons to be learned are not necessarily all the same as those derived by Dan Stone.

Why, for Stone, is the history of the Holocaust “unfinished”? The answer, at least in part, lies in the fact that there is much of this terrible tale that has yet to be fully understood. Stone describes how anti-Semitism was not, for the early years of the Nazi regime, merely an effective method of PR; but rather lay at the heart of its ideology and at the center of its policies from the very moment it seized power. Yet another terrible legacy of Nazi Germany is that its victims suffered long after it was defeated. As Stone further tells us, the suffering of Jews continued long after the Holocaust was over, as “survivors quickly found out, with rare exceptions, that their families and communities had been decimated; they were alone in the world.”

But the book’s most important finding is that when the Nazis unleashed its genocide of the Jews, they found willing accomplices across Europe. One incredibly engrossing chapter—and one that should be included in a college course on the Holocaust—is titled “A Continent-Wide Crime,” which documents how European regimes, from Vichy France in the West to Romania in the East—were willing to facilitate the extermination of the Jews when it served their purposes. In one of the most significant passages in the chapter, Stone describes the horrors that unfolded in Bogdanovka, in Transnistria, then part of Ukraine on the Romanian border. The perpetrators there were an international alliance of murderers, committing “the single largest massacre of the Holocaust,” in which “as many as 48,000 mostly Soviet Ukrainian Jews” were “massacred, burned alive and shot by Romanian gendarmes, Ukrainian auxiliaries and local ethnic German militia.”

What, then, are we to learn from the pervasiveness of anti-Jewish evil from the 1940s? One might suggest, to utilize a metaphor of Rabbi Jonathan Sacks, that Jew-hate is a virus that mutates and makes itself manifest in region after region and age after age, and from which no society should assume itself immune. But that is not the lesson that Stone himself seems to draw; the danger today, for him, seems to lie particularly in the province of the political right.

It is of course true that anti-Semitism has haunted the history of the European right; and that, sadly, libelous commentary about Jews can be found today in certain spheres of the American right as well, as revealed by the recent ravings of Candace Owens and Tucker Carlson. But little mention is made in the book of anti-Semitism on the left; indeed, for Stone it is critics of the extremes of the woke progressivism that are part of the problem. As his book draws to a close, Stone singles out several ideological descendants of the Nazis. Here is part of the paragraph, which contains one of the very few references to the political left in the book:

It suffices only to think of the levels of European collaboration seen above, however, from Croatia to Romania, France to Norway, Ukraine to Latvia, to see that Europe as a whole was susceptible to the “collective intoxication” of Nazism. It remains so, as we see when radical right protestors give Hitler salutes on marches purportedly called to “defend” statues of the likes of Churchill, who, whatever his faults, was no Nazi sympathizer. We see it in the incel culture of the manosphere, in which gender-based complexes merge into fantasies of sexual and racial annihilation. We see it in the “anti-woke” response to attempts to do away with structural forms of racism. (Emphasis added.)

Thus are critics of woke progressivism unfairly tarred not only as racists, but as the heirs to the Nazis themselves. That woke-ism may itself be a hotbed of anti-Semitism is never discussed.

Similarly, while Stone writes movingly about the anti-Semitic “collective intoxication” that occurred in the past, he says little about such intoxication when it comes to any part of the Middle East, despite the region being one in which Holocaust denial is rampant. He tells us: “Even though Holocaust denial has been promoted in countries where it has traditionally been a marginal concern—notably Iran, where President Ahmadinejad sponsored a well-publicized conference on the topic—Holocaust denial per se is less of a concern than the bundle of far-right narratives which it usually comes wrapped up in.” This dismissing of the dangers of Iranian Holocaust denial seems to be joined with the author’s insistence, at the conclusion of the book, that anti-Zionism should not be identified with anti-Semitism. Stone is therefore irked at the fact that in 2019 the German parliament passed a resolution against the movement to “boycott, divest, and sanction” the Jewish state:

Thanks to the Bundestag’s May 2019 decision to pass a resolution branding the BDS campaign as antisemitic, the German attempt to, in [Jürgen] Habermas’s words, create a country in which Jews can breathe has the consequence of shutting down debate about Israel. A well-intentioned ethical position which seeks moral repair with Jews ends by equating Jews as such with Israel, in the fetishized manner of both hardline Zionist and anti-Zionist thought a particularly unfortunate result when one is trying to create an atmosphere for making Jews feel at home.

In truth, however, condemning BDS does not assert that all Jews are Israelis; rather, it asserts, correctly, that Israel, a democracy, is a target of discrimination to which truly tyrannical regimes have never been subjected, leading to the inevitable conclusion that it is the Jewishness of Israelis that is the source of this profoundly dishonest double standard. This is why understanding BDS as a moral monstrosity is not the province only of “hardline” Zionists but of Zionists in general, as a brief Google search would reveal. Stone’s suggestion that German support for Israel should make Jews feel less comfortable in Germany is very strange—and his description of Jewish critics of BDS as “fetishized” is, to put it mildly, entirely inappropriate.

The truth is that the Bundestag’s anti-BDS proclamation is one of the greatest moments in the history of postwar Germany, one of which every German should be proud. And if the proposition was passed because Germany remains haunted by the Holocaust—and if that very same haunting has inspired both Germany and Austria to maintain largely pro-Israel postures in a post October 7 world—then that is a fact for which anyone concerned about anti-Semitism ought to be grateful. For if anything, the terrible events following October 7 have vindicated the German anti-BDS position, revealing before the eyes of the world how profoundly anti-Zionism and anti-Semitism are intertwined.

In the past months, we have come to comprehend the evil wrought by an Iran-funded regime that, like the Nazis, placed Jew-hate at the heart of its education and propaganda. We have seen that if there is an heir to the anti-Semitic Nazi regime, it can be found in Hamas, whose society in Gaza produced the ultimate “collective intoxication” of Jew-hate. It was this regime that produced a massacre in which the most Jews since the Holocaust were, to echo Stone’s description of Bogdanovka, “massacred, burned alive, and shot.” If there is one brief recording from October 7 that should be played in Holocaust history courses, one which indicates the way in which anti-Semitism can be made manifest not just in Europe but around the world, it is of a Hamas terrorist calling his parents to crow that he had killed “10 Jews”—not “10 Zionists”—with his bare hands. Recent months have also revealed the willingness of all too many on the progressive left to deny, or even defend, the most unspeakable of acts as long as its victims are Jews. What has also become clear is the festering anti-Semitism within woke circles and the intertwining of anti-Semitism with hatred of the Jewish state.

As I finished writing this review, my internet feed was filled with videos of Jews being told to “go back to Poland,” a phrase which takes on renewed horror thanks to my reading of Dan Stone’s book. The videos were taken at Columbia University, which, we might remember, welcomed the Holocaust-denying Ahmadinejad into its midst, revealing the intellectual rot that had laid hold of part of the academy many years before.

The news from Columbia reminds one of the Washington Free Beacon’s report from Stanford, where, already months ago, Jews were told by an instructor to stand in a corner of the classroom as a form of public shaming. I had already been reminded of this article when I read, in The Holocaust, of the first manifestation of Jew-hate in 1930s Germany, in which Jews were “shamed or humiliated on the street, in a tram or at school.” Meanwhile, as I typed this sentence, I paused to ponder another photo of an anti-Israel demonstration at George Washington University, not a bastion today of the American right. It features a man holding a sign featuring both an Israeli and Palestinian flag, a sign emblazoned with two words: “Final Solution.”

This book has helped me appreciate the dangers facing our society. It is my hope that in a post-October 7 world, Dan Stone can see these dangers too.

            (FreeBeacon.com)

The Holocaust: An Unfinished History

By: Dan Stone

Mariner Books, 464 pp., $32.50

Meir Y. Soloveichik is the rabbi of Congregation Shearith Israel in New York City and the director of the Straus Center for Torah and Western Thought at Yeshiva University.

Ziv Kipper, Murdered in Egypt, Had a ‘Big Jewish Heart’

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After welcoming the visiting rabbis, Kipper put on tefillin and spoke to them for hours about his life and how he lives in Egypt as a Jew. Credit: Mendel Goldman

From Ukraine to Alexandria, Kipper dedicated himself to community

By: Mordechai Lightstone

When news broke of Israeli-Canadian Ziv Kipper’s murder in Alexandria, Egypt, on May 7, a widely shared photo showed him smiling widely, wearing tefillin, with two Chabad rabbinical students at his side. It was taken in the Alexandria home of the frozen fruit and vegetable exporter in the fall of 2023.

Born in the Soviet Ukraine, Kipper’s life journey had taken a circuitous route—emigrating with his family to Israel when he was a child; followed by time in Canada, where he attended college; and then running various businesses that brought him back to Ukraine, and ultimately, to Egypt.

Rabbis Mendel Goldman and Mendy Konikov visited Alexandria in September to lead Rosh Hashanah services at the magnificent Eliyahu Hanavi Synagogue in the heart of the Egyptian port city. During Roman times, as much as 35 percent of Alexandria’s population was made up of Jews, and it remained home to tens of thousands of Jews until they were expelled after 1948.

Rabbi Mendel Goldman and Rabbi Mendel Konikov stand outside the Eliyahu Hanavi Synagogue in Alexandria, Egypt, on their recent trip before Rosh Hashanah.Credit: Mendel Goldman

“We went to Alexandria before Rosh Hashanah to visit the local community,” Goldman says. As he and Konikov walked down the street near their hotel on Friday afternoon before Shabbat, a car pulled up in front of them. “The driver rolled down the window and gave us this huge ‘Shabbat Shalom!’”

The driver left quickly, but later sent a message via mutual contacts that the visiting students should probably swap out their black hats and jackets for something less conspicuous when out on the street.

Goldman and Konikov spent the time before Rosh Hashanah visiting the tiny expat Jewish community, and when the pair went to visit Ziv Kipper—one of their main contacts in the community—they were pleased to see that he was the driver who’d wished them a Shabbat Shalom.

“He was very welcoming,” Konikov recalls. “He put on tefillin, and we spent a few hours speaking.” Later, Kipper drove them around, showing them the sites of the beautiful city once known as the “Bride of the Mediterranean.”

Kipper liked to travel to his hometown in Chernigov, Ukraine for the Jewish holidays and often helped lead them. Credit: Jewish Community of Chernigov

Kipper was shot and killed by unknown assailants on Tuesday in Alexandria. Reports state he was not robbed in the attack, and a previously unknown Islamic terrorist group took credit for the murder. Egyptian security sources told Reuters that the murder was being investigated as a criminal matter and security services said on Wednesday that they’d taken a suspect into custody. On the same day a graphic video purporting to be of Kipper’s murder began circulating online. In the video, shot with a go-pro camera, the attacker can be heard saying “shalom” before shooting, and then “shalom from the children of Gaza.”

 

‘He Had Such a Warm, Jewish Heart’

The Soviet-born Kipper’s status as a global wanderer meant that over the years, he’d forged many warm relationships with Chabad-Lubavitch emissaries.

“Ziv used to tell me that when he retires, he would be a rabbi’s assistant,” says Rabbi Yisroel Silberstein, Chabad emissary to Chernigov, Ukraine. “He was just this incredibly warm and gregarious person.”

Silberstein recalls meeting Kipper shortly after the rabbi and his family moved to Chernigov in 2010.

“Even when he traveled Ziv always made a point of being back home in Chernigov for the holidays,” Silberstein recalls. There, he would assist the rabbi during the Passover Seder, translating portions of the Haggadah from Hebrew to Russian, or bringing new fruit from Egypt in honor of Rosh Hashanah. A generous person, Kipper would bring suitcases of toys he manufactured for needy children in the Ukrainian cities he lived in. For a while he operated a limousine service in Chernigov, and would treat children from the Chernigov community to a limo drive during the Jewish community’s annual Lag BaOmer parade.

When war broke out in Ukraine in February of 2022, Kipper made Alexandria his home base. Even while in Egypt, he remained in touch with Silberstein. “You know, I’m almost like a Chabad rabbi here,” Kipper would tell him.

Kipper was a favorite of the children in Chernigov, often bringing toys on his visits and treating children to a limo drive during the Jewish community’s annual Lag BaOmer parade. Credit: Jewish Community of Chernigov

The two would text regularly, as recently as this past Sunday, when Kipper sent the last of the Shabbat Shalom GIFs and memes he was known to share via WhatsApp with the many people he knew.

Goldman and Konikov likewise kept in touch with Kipper after they left Egypt.

“There was a depth in the bond we formed with Ziv,” Goldman says. “In many ways, we felt like perhaps the whole trip had been for us to connect with him. He had such a warm, Jewish heart.”

Kipper told the young rabbis that he never hid the fact that he was Jewish from his employees or neighbors. After the Oct. 7 terror attacks in southern Israel, both Silberstein and Goldman asked Kipper if his plans had changed.

“When we spoke in March, Ziv was very clear that he felt safe in Alexandria,” says Silberstein. “He had a sense of purpose about where he was.” (Chabad.org)

Addendum: On Friday, May 10th, the Jewish News Syndicate reported that Ziv Kipper, a Jewish businessman with Israeli, Canadian and Russian citizenship who was killed earlier this week in Alexandria, Egypt, was murdered in an anti-Semitic attack, his wife told Hebrew media on Wednesday.

“He wasn’t robbed,” Oksana Kipper claimed in an interview with Israel’s Kan News public broadcaster, adding that Egyptian authorities had offered her little information on the circumstances of the incident.

An Egyptian security source has told Reuters that Kipper’s death was being investigated as a criminal act, rejecting any link to his Israeli background and denying knowledge of the claim of responsibility.

Also on Wednesday, a previously unknown pro-Palestinian terror organization in Egypt claimed responsibility for the alleged murder.

In unconfirmed footage of the shooting released by the nascent Vanguard of Liberation–Martyr Mohammed Salah terrorist group, a gunman can be seen executing a man sitting in a parked vehicle. JNS has decided not to publish the graphic propaganda video on its website.

Mohammed Salah was a police officer from Cairo who killed three Israel Defense Forces soldiers in a cross-border terrorist attack last year.

“Wait for the next one. Shalom from the children of Gaza,” read a caption on the video, which was shared through the Telegram messaging application. The statement claimed that Kipper had been gathering intelligence on behalf of the Mossad, using his job as a cover.

Rabbi Mendel Goldman (right of image) told Chabad.org that “in many ways, we felt like perhaps the whole trip had been for us to connect with him. He had such a warm, Jewish heart.” Credit: Mendel Goldman

Kipper owned a vegetable processing factory in Egypt for nearly 10 years and used to enter the country using his Canadian passport.

The slain businessman served as the CEO of O.K Group LLC, one of the largest Egyptian exporters of frozen vegetables, citrus, and other fruits and vegetables, “with the head office in Alexandria, Egypt, and offices in Ukraine and Israel,” according to his LinkedIn page.

Kipper’s identity has yet to be confirmed by the Foreign Ministry in Jerusalem, which is handling the incident along with the Cairo embassy.

Kipper is the third Israeli national to have been killed in Alexandria since Hamas’s Oct. 7 massacre in the northwestern Negev.

On Oct. 8, the day after Hamas launched its latest war against Israel, two Israelis were killed and another was moderately injured in a shooting attack directed at a group of tourists also in the Egyptian port city.

 (JNS.org)

The Jewish Story of the UNC Frat Boys Who Held up the American Flag

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A dozen members of the Jewish fraternity AEPi were among the young men who held the American flag aloft after anti-Israel protesters tore it down. Credit: Parker Ali/Daily Tar Heel

Proud AEPI brothers stand up for Jews and America

By: Faygie Levy Holt

Images of a small group of students at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill holding up an American flag amid violent anti-Israel protests last week captured the attention of the nation. The boys were caught on camera struggling to keep the Stars and Stripes from falling onto the ground after the protesters sought to replace it with a Palestinian flag.

What isn’t as widely known is that about a dozen of the 25 or so students who kept the American flag flying were young Jewish men—brothers from the Jewish fraternity Alpha Epsilon Pi, or AEPi—and members of Chabad-Lubavitch at UNC. All of them participate in Fra-Torah, a weekly Torah class at Chabad, attend Friday night Shabbat dinners, and are part of Chabad at UNC’s Lions of Israel tefillin club.

Among them was 19-year-old Jacob Harris, who told Chabad.org that while he didn’t initially plan to challenge the protesters, when he heard that friends and other supporters of Israel and the Jewish people’s rights to dwell there were being called “fascists and Nazis,” and worse, he had to do something.

“I realized these protests had evolved. For the first time here in college, I felt as if my presence at my university as a Jewish student was being scrutinized,” Harris said.

Joining up with a few friends, Harris went to the quad—the central area on campus—carrying an Israeli flag. What he saw when he arrived upset him deeply.

“We watched in horror and disgust as the protesters tore the American flag in the center of the quad off its pole and replaced it with a Palestinian one,” he recounted. “This demonstration had become completely out of hand.”

Police arrived soon after, and the American flag was returned to its rightful spot. However, once the authorities left, protesters again targeted the flag.

That was when Harris and his friends jumped into action. They encircled the flagpole and held the American flag aloft over their heads to ensure that it didn’t touch the ground. Photos of the young men standing proud in the face of blatant hate quickly spread across the country.

“The scene that stood before us was just awful,” said Harris. “The same people that had promoted their protest as peaceful were pelting us with all sorts of projectiles—a metal water bottle gave my friend a black eye simply for standing up for his identity and defending the Stars and Stripes.

“The American flag is a symbol of freedom—the freedom represented by that flag allows me to express my identity just as it allows individuals to protest. Seeing the flag being taken down by the same people that it gives the right to protest felt like a slap in the face of every American citizen,” Harris said.

‘Standing Up for What They Believe In’

Rabbi Zalman Bluming, co-director with his wife, Yehudis, of Chabad at UNC at Chapel Hill, wasn’t surprised to see the young men jump into action.

“[They] have in spades what so many of their peers are sorely lacking: common sense, love of their country and a willingness to defend it,” he said. “Moreover, these boys see one another as brothers and defend their highest common commitments as brothers should. We Jews will stand up for America’s flag when others are prepared to trample it. And our true brothers in this great country stand united with us.”

While some have sought to define the violent protests on campus as one of fighting oppression, those who have gone to the encampments and watched the protests say there’s much more going on.

“This is an American fight,” Bluming said. “It’s not just Jewish values being threatened on campus; it is American freedom and American values. There is a tremendous synergy between Jewish values and American values, and I am very proud of what these young men did in standing up for what they believe in.”

He added that Judaism encourages people to be upright and upstanding citizens, to take part in their communities and support their government, something he said the Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson, of righteous memory, encouraged. “He wanted people to go vote, to be involved in civic service,” said the rabbi. “The boys weren’t wearing tefillin at the time, but I believe that’s where they get the strength to stand up for what they believe and be successful doing so.

Harris, who participates in Chabad activities at UNC as often as possible, believes that his Jewish identity played a role in his stepping up and getting involved.

“I went out there because I wanted to provide a voice for the Jewish students who felt unwelcome on campus and show that it’s OK to be proud of an identity,” Harris said. “I’ve seen the impact our presence in those protests had on other college campuses as Jewish students have become more comfortable expressing their identities. I’m very grateful for the impact of our actions.”

          (Chabad.org)

Mothering Jewish Students in the Shadow of the Hateful Encampments

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Chabad at the University of Chicago set up a stand to encourage Jewish students to perform a mitzvah for the People of Israel.

By: Baila Brackman

I want to share with you a snapshot of what has been happening to our community of students—a community to which my husband and I have dedicated the past 23 years of our lives.

The Rohr Chabad Center serves the Jewish students at the University of Chicago, known for its rigorous academics and particularly for its economics department.

For two decades we have cared for the students’ emotional, social, and spiritual needs—as well as providing them with a comfortable home away from home.

We have friends and family who serve as Chabad emissaries in remote and developing countries, and we marvel at their bravery. We thought we had it easy, surrounded by the gleaming ivory towers of academia.

But today, as we look around the once-friendly neighborhood where we raised our children—both our biological children and the many students for whom we’ve become a second set of parents—the place is unrecognizable.

People shout, scream, and curse Israel, Jews, and America, the land that provided them the freedom of expression they’re glibly exploiting. A place of learning and discovery has dissolved into tension and conflict.

Our work began the moment the news broke on Simchat Torah morning that something was amiss. Days later, a student, Yair, came to our Chabad House with a heavy heart, having decided to leave school and return to Israel to fight. I was struck by the gravity of his decision and felt a mother’s instinct to offer him a blessing for safety and success. Watching him leave, knowing the risks he was taking, filled me with a sense of awe and fear.

A Jewish Student at the University of Chicago is assisted with putting on tefillin.

We worked relentlessly to support our students and the wider community in the following weeks. Students came to us from every corner, their souls seeking light amidst the darkness. We distributed mezuzahs and stood on campus—even surrounded by anti-Israel slurs and comments—putting tefillin on the young men, encouraging women to light Shabbat candles, and providing comfort to those grappling with hate and fear on campus.

We even invested in beautifully crafted books of Psalms with English translation, gifting them to students and explaining how these sacred psalms have served as a wellspring of inspiration for the Jewish people through the ages, starting with King David during his tribulations.

The students have been channeling their emotions into positive action, committing to mitzvahs and living more Jewishly.

One woman, a grad student, told me she’d been in a committed relationship with a Christian man and looked forward to marrying him. After the attacks, it became clear to them both that the gulf between them was too great. There was no way for him to understand how deeply she connected to people in a country halfway across the globe. She’s now committed to only marrying a Jew.

There’s Lily, who came to Chabad one day asking for Shabbat candles. She felt that lighting candles was the one mitzvah she could do for Israel. Later, she sent me a photo of her Shabbat table in New York, complete with challah and candles. Her parents, Russian Jews without a strong Jewish upbringing, had joined her in embracing the beauty of Shabbat. Lily now comes to our Shabbat dinners almost every week. These moments of connection and inspiration are what sustain us through the most difficult times.

We did everything possible to shield our young children from the antisemitic shouts and slurs they should never have had to witness. It was hard to explain to their teachers what they were seeing and what they were holding in their hearts each day. Just the other week, during a walk around the neighborhood, they counted over 80 anti-Israel signs and we hadn’t even walked onto the actual campus grounds.

One day, things on campus were especially tense. A loud and aggressive anti-Israel rally was taking place, and a student came rushing into Chabad, crying uncontrollably. I embraced her and held her close as she sobbed. She didn’t need words—just the presence of someone who cared. Later, I learned that a visiting mother had taken a picture of me holding this young woman, her tears soaking my shoulder. She sent me the photo, writing, “I took this so that you would remember, and I could show my friends what a rebbetzin is for during challenging times.”

In such moments, the Rebbe’s teachings have always guided me. I draw strength from his words, whether in times of joy or deep despair.

Preparing for over 250 people for both Seders seemed daunting, but the joy of watching Jewish souls shine made every effort worthwhile. More than ever, students came to us asking where they could find something to eat during Passover.

There were days when we felt like there were two wars, one in Israel and one on college campuses around the country. Unfortunately, this campus war is still strong and frightening to the young Jewish students.

We woke up on the last day of Passover to a Gaza encampment on our quad. It was worse than you can imagine and more disgusting than you can envision. I ran with my son onto the quad to support the students, hug the girls who were crying, and just be a familiar face. We grabbed some kippahs and encouraged the boys to put them on. One young man whom I had never seen before came up to me and asked for a kippah. “I never wear a kippah,” he said, “it’s not my thing, but today I want to. I want to show them that I am a proud Jew.

Last Friday, things devolved to about the worst I had seen.

There were hundreds of students on the quad, and things had erupted terribly, both sides were facing off. It was scary and appalling and I honestly could not believe what I was seeing with my own eyes. I will have these horrific images in my head for a long time. We had our sons and interns setting up emergency tefillin stations, blaring Jewish music over their speakers, which was hard to hear with all the shouting.

The protestors were defacing the American flag, and students loyal to America had come to hold up the American flag and also bring some of their own.

My son was bravely holding one such flag, and his picture ended up on the front cover of the next day’s Chicago Tribune. But it was frightening, sickening, and all-around horrible.

Just as I did not think I could handle another minute of the chaos, a couple came over to us with their son.

He was a prospective student and had simply come to see the campus. Never did they expect to see the anti-Jewish and anti-American display they’d stumbled into. Meanwhile, my son was helping Jewish men put on tefillin.

The boy turned to my husband and asked if he, too, could put on tefillin—something he’d never done before.

I cried as I watched him put on tefillin for the first time in his life, and we sang and danced with chaos erupting everywhere.

His mother, who was also emotional, said to me, “Maybe this is the real reason we came today—so our son could celebrate his bar mitzvah.”

And maybe this is the reason we’ve been here for 23 years—so that young Jewish people, who’d otherwise be swallowed up by the hatred and lies that surround us so thickly, can find a lifeboat of Judaism to tide them over the groundswell of insanity that has engulfed us.

And if it is, I thank G‑d for the opportunity.

(Chabad.org)

Baila Brackman is the co-director of the Rohr Chabad Center for Jewish Life and Learning at the University of Chicago.

Parshas Emor–Fly the Flag

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El Al has recently introduced a new slogan: Fly the Flag

By: Chaya Sora Jungreis-Gertzulin

This week’s parsha, Emor, tells us about HaShem’s eternal gift to Bnei Yisroel. The gift of Shabbos.

“Sheishes yomim tay’aseh melacha, Six days you shall do work, u’vayom ha’shvii Shabbos Shabboson mikra kodesh, and the seventh day, a day of complete rest, a holy day…. Shabbos hu l’HaShem b’chol moshvoseichem, a Shabbos for HaShem, in all your dwellings.” (Vayikra 23:3)

Six days we are busy with the daily grind of living. Work, appointments, keeping up with our emails, texts, WhatsApp messages, etc. Come Shabbos, we put it all to rest. We have one day a week to elevate ourselves, to envelope ourselves in spirituality, to connect to HaShem.

Shabbos is spelled shin-beis-tuff. Within the word Shabbos, we find the word “shov – shin, beis”, to return. A message to us. With Shabbos comes the opportunity for the neshama to soar, to reach the heavens, to return and reconnect to HaShem. A bond that fuels us all week long.

Achad Ha’am is famously quoted as saying, “More than the Jewish people have kept Shabbos, Shabbos has kept the Jew.” The late Senator Joseph Lieberman was once asked, “How can you be a senator and still keep Shabbos?” to which he replied, “I don’t think I could be a senator and not keep Shabbos.”

Rabbi Shimshon Pincus zt”l teaches that we prepare for Shabbos as if we are welcoming royalty into our home. We set a beautiful table, dress in special Shabbos clothes, and serve the finest foods. Our discussions are elevated, and we sing heartwarming z’miros. We bless our children, and encourage them to share the Torah teachings of the past week. It’s not just about doing for Shabbos; it’s also about breaking away from the mundane and giving our minds a twenty-four hour rest from the pressures of our week.

All for the seventh day. All for Shabbos.

We even speak as if Shabbos itself is our guest. We’re shopping, cooking, preparing “for Shabbos”. For on Shabbos, we welcome the Shabbos Queen.

Leil Shabbos. Friday night. Time for Kabbolas Shabbos, welcoming the Shabbos. We sing the words of Lecha Dodi, Come my Beloved. Likras Shabbos l’chu v’neilcha, To welcome Shabbos, come, let us go. Kee hee m’kor ha’bracha, For it is the source of blessing.

At the Shabbos daytime seudah, many sing the tune Kee eshmerah Shabbos, If I guard and protect Shabbos, Keil yishmereinee, HaShem will protect me. Shabbos not only elevates us, but protects us.

Prime Minister Menachem Begin understood this message well. It was May 3, 1982. While still in pain from a recent hip surgery, the Prime Minister made his way to Knesset, prepared to deliver a powerful message. A message that cemented a new policy that remains to this day. A message that brought the entire nation to understand the importance and holiness of Shabbos. A message about El Al, the national airline of Israel.

“Forty years ago, I returned from exile to Eretz Yisroel,” he said. “Engraved in my memory are the lives of millions of Jews, simple, ordinary folk, eking out a livelihood in that forlorn Diaspora, where the storms of anti-Semitism raged. They were not permitted to work on the Christian day of rest, and they refused to work on their day of rest. For they lived by the commandment, ‘Remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy.’ Each week, they forswore two whole days of hard-won bread. This meant destitution for many. But they would not desecrate the Sabbath day.”

Despite the hissing and jeering from secular opposition members of the Knesset, and many in the public gallery, Begin was not deterred. He continued, “Shabbat is one of the loftiest values in all of humanity. It originated with us. It is all sours. No other civilization in history knew of a day of rest. Ancient Egypt had a great culture whose treasures are on view to this day, yet the Egypt of antiquity did not know a day of rest. The Greeks of old excelled in philosophy and the arts, yet they did not know of a day of rest. Rome established mighty empires, and instituted a system of law still relevant to this day, yet they did not know of a day of rest. Neither did the civilizations of Assyria, Babylon, Persia, India, China – none of them knew of a day of rest. One nation alone sanctified the Shabbat. A small nation, the nation that heard the voice at Sinai. Ours was the nation that enthroned Shabbat as our sovereign Queen.”

The jeering intensified, but the approving voices of those who were about to make history overtook them. Begin’s voice reached a crescendo, and he was not going to be intimidated from delivering his message. He was a man on a sacred mission, about to drop the gauntlet. “So, are we, in our own Jewish state, to allow our blue and white El Al planes to fly about, broadcasting to the world that there is no Shabbat in Israel? Should we now deliver a message to all, through our blue and white El Al planes – ‘No, don’t remember the Shabbat! Forget the Shabbat! Desecrate the Shabbat!’ I shudder at the thought.”

“Know this,” Begin told his audience, “We cannot assess the religious, national, social, historical and ethical values of Shabbat by the yardstick of financial loss or gain. In our revived Jewish state, we cannot engage in such calculations when dealing with an eternal and cardinal value of the Jewish people – Shabbat – for which our ancestors were ready to give their lives.”

Begin ended with an enduring statement. “One thing more. One need not to be a pious Jew to accept this principle. One need only to be a proud Jew.”

The Prime Minister’s motion was put to a vote. The tally was 58 in favor, 54 opposed. Menachem Begin breathed a sigh of relief, as he limped his way out of Knesset. He had made history. El Al would no longer fly on the Shabbos and Yomim Tovim.

My mother, the Rebbetzin a”h had the privilege of meeting with Prime Minister Begin on several occasions. At one such meeting he said to her: “Kavod HaRabbanit,” I want to share my most personal tefilla (prayer) with you. When I daven to Hashem in my most serious moments, I always make sure to use the words of Tehillim, asking and beseeching the Master of the world with the prayer, ‘V’ruach kadshecha al tikach mimeni.’ Pease do not remove the spirit of Your holiness from me.’ ” This prayer was certainly on the Prime Minister’s lips as he delivered the powerful “El Al speech” on that historic day.

El Al has recently introduced a new slogan: Fly the Flag. Prime Minister Begin foresaw this over forty years ago, when he declared that the flag of the Jewish nation would not be in the skies on Shabbos.

Yehi zichro boruch. May his memory be for a blessing.

Shabbat Shalom!

Chaya Sora

Chaya Sora can be reached at [email protected]

This article was written L’zecher Nishmas /In Memory Of HaRav Meshulem ben HaRav Osher Anshil HaLevi, zt”l and Rebbetzin Esther bas HaRav Avraham HaLevi, zt”l