Mahzor

New York Public Library

Churches

Sarajevo Haggadah

Mah Nishtanah

Sarajevo haggadah

Antaea Darom

Israeli women's art

Action

Torah as music

Ben Heine

Action

ceramic bowl

Mohammad Said Kalash, "Offering Reconciliation" exhibit (photo: Ilan Amihai)

Action

Punch and Judy/Pinchas and Jamila

Avi Katz

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David Grossman

Ben Heine

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Eldrige Street shul

Lower East Side

Action

Dove

Ben Heine

Action

Two birds

Hoda Jamal

Action

Israeli and Palestinian boys

from documentary, Promises

Action

Cat in the Hat

Yiddish version

Action

Daylight through the Wall

Banksy: graffiti art on Separation Wall

Action

Maurice Sendak's Brundibar set

New Victory Theater (photo: Nan Melville/NYT)

Action

Daniel Barenboim, West-Eastern Divan Orchestra

Palestinian-Israeli musical ensemble (photo: Kerstin Joensson/AP)

Action

Great Day on Eldrige Street

N.Y.'s klezmer greats celebrate shul rededication (photo: Leo Sorel)

Action

Joint Appeal for Peace

(Avi Katz)

Joint Appeal for Peace

Ketubah, Ancona, Italy (1772)

(Jewish Theological Seminary library)

Ancona ketubah

Archive for October, 2011

The Face of the Jewish Klan

Sunday, October 23rd, 2011
jewish settler terrorist

The face of the Jewish Klan

When I saw this picture I reacted with visceral, primitive fear, and then with hate, much the same way I imagine my ancestors must have when they faced odious, powerful, hateful enemies throughout Jewish history, whether they be Romans, Spanish Inquisitors, Nazis or Stalin’s henchmen.  This is an image of Jewish hate.  Jewish terror.  These men could be hooded, on horseback and swinging nooses in front on burning Jewish stars of David.  That would be all that’d be lacking for them to be modern exemplars of the Jewish Klan.

Would that Yeshaia Leibowitz were still alive to spit at these men and call them the name he made famous: Judeonazi.  For that is what they are.

In case anyone seeks to find any humanity in these pogromists, shortly after this picture was taken they fell upon the Israeli and Palestinian activists who’d come to help with the olive harvest and beat many of them senseless with those clubs.  At least one individual suffered broken fingers among other injuries.

I want my religion back.  I am Jewish, not them.  Let us stop calling them Jews and call them Judeans instead.  World, will you save Israel from these monsters before they destroy the State that so many of us love?  Israel clearly cannot or will not save itself.

Dagan: Iran Won’t Have Nuclear Weapon Until 2014-15, Hasn’t Even Yet Decided to Make One

Saturday, October 22nd, 2011

Haaretz reporters Amos Harel and Avi Issacharoff write about the political manuveuring within Israel over a potential attack on Iran.  They reveal that Meir Dagan, the former Mossad chief, proclaims that Iran will not have a nuclear weapon till 2014-15 at the earliest, and that in the meantime it hasn’t even definitively decided to make one.

They add that the senior ministerial committee that must approve such an attack is evenly split down the middle with Bibi, Barak, and Lieberman and one other in favor and four others opposed.  All the current military-intelligence chiefs oppose an attack, but as they are new to their positions, they may not yet pack enough clout to stand in the way.

Harel and Issacharoff write about Bibi’s view of the matter:

From Netanyahu’s perspective, whether or not his voters are aware of it, saving the Jewish people from a second Holocaust is the mission for which he was elected.

All of this accords with many other accounts written by other Israeli journalists over the past few weeks.  These are times that try men’s (and women’s) souls. H/t to Eyal Clyne.

 

Maariv on Palestine Statehood Vote: “We Lost Gabon”

Saturday, October 22nd, 2011
un general assembly november 29 1947

UN General Assembly deliberates on partition plan and recognition of State of Israel, November 29, 1947

With a headline that reminded me of the old Republican 1950s smear–”Who lost China“–Maariv’s headline today (h/t Didi Remez) says:

Fear in Jerusalem: We Lost Gabon

Apparently, Gabon’s strong man refused two offers by Bibi to meet him during the last GA meetings in New York.  The African leader was miffed when he heard all the goodies Bibi had offered Nigeria for their No vote; and he saw how little Israel was offering his country.

The Maariv article does its own head count and finds that the PA is still one short of the nine votes it needs for approval.  But it’s counting Bosnia in the No category.  While I’m no expert on this, I think it makes no sense for a country that is one-third Muslim to vote against Palestine.  An abstention would be more likely.  But even with an abstention, the PA still needs those nine.  Failing that, the U.S. will breathe a sigh of relief, since it won’t have to veto the resolution, thereby betraying the utter hypocrisy of our professed policy supporting the creation of a Palestinian state.

I also think it’s tremendously symbolic that the Security Council has moved the date for consideration of the PA proposal to November 29th.  Zionist history buffs will recall this as the momentous date in 1947 when the UN voted to approve Israeli statehood.  It has been 64 years since the international body recognized Israel.  It’s about time they recognized Palestine as well.  64 years is long enough.

Eilat Terror Attack’s Iran connection

Saturday, October 22nd, 2011

I wrote yesterday about Alex Fishman’s expose of a hitherto secret IDF report on the Eilat terror attack. The most tantalizing claim in his piece is that Iran, which he overreaches in associating with “global jihad,” backed the attack. He offers no proof of the claim nor does he point to anything specific in the report that supports the claim. That’s why I believe Fishman’s report was likely censored or the reporter himself self-censored, so as not to expose anything to the Iranians themselves. Or, if the claim turns out to be unfounded, the lack of supporting evidence may be due to the fact that there is none, and this is yet another “flyer” by the IDF seeking to divert attention from its own operational failures.

But if the claim is true, then it’s intriguing to ask why Iran might involve itself in such an attack. It’s well-known in intelligence circles that the Mossad and possibly the MEK have had a hand in the assassination of three Iranian nuclear scientists over the past few years. Reporters like Yossi Melman, with good inside sources in the Mossad and IDF, have hinted at Israeli intelligence involvement in acts of violent sabotage and cyberwarfare (i.e. Stuxnet) against Iran.

It would be characteristic of Israel to act in its own perceived interest even if its behavior causes fierce blowback against its own citizens. If Iran supported or planned the Eilat attack it would have more than enough motivation to do so out of a need for revenge. Stuxnet too is a tool that, while it may damage Iranian nuclear production today, can be turned around Frankenstein-like to attack its creators somewhere down the line.

Recent news that a Son of Stuxnet virus named Duqu, surfaced in Europe, whose purpose seemed to be to surveill some of the same types of systems that Stuxnet attacked, indicates that these Israeli-U.S. cyberwarriors continue to troll searching for ways to damage Iranian interests.

Remember the monster that the CIA let out of the bottle when it helped create and arm the Afghan mujahedeen in the 1980s? Now, these former heroes of anti-Communist resistance become our worst enemy in the current day, killing American soldiers with equal ferocity to their former proficiency in killing Soviet soldiers.

If we in the U.S. choose to go down this road of covert terror attacks against Iran using dirty proxies like the MEK, we have only ourselves to blame when the dog turns on us and gives us a deadly mauling.

What goes around comes around. And when it does, there is no guarantee that the damage your enemy does to you won’t be as great or even greater than what you have previously done to him/her. This is a dirty, dangerous game.

I’m sure the thinking in intelligence circles is that sabotage is far less lethal than actually launching F-16s and bombing Iran and absorbing the Iranian counter attacks that would surely follow. That must’ve been the very argument Meir Dagan used in order to persuade the Israeli ministerial committee that rejected the motion of Israeli attack on Iran last year. Sabotage was a substitute for all-out war.

But even acts of discrete terror can create their own logic of counter-terror which open a very ugly Pandora’s box.

I wanted to return to the official lie-filled theory offered by the IDF for the Eilat terror, which claimed that the Popular Resistance Committee was behind the attack.  This is turn led to a sustained revenge assault on Gaza and 27 dead, including a two year old boy.  Israel launched these retaliatory strikes only two hours after the Eilat event occurred.  The question is why?  Why did they blame Gaza.  Why did they attack so quickly?  Now, from Alex Fishman’s reporting we know.  The IDF had word of an attack before it occurred.  Its intelligence said that attack would be launched from Gaza and be led by the PRC.  Only problem?  The attack didn’t occur when the IDF intelligence informed it it would.  Instead it occured during broad daylight.  Also, Gazans weren’t involved at all.  Sinai Islamists were the perpetrators.

Now, if you think to the Israeli attacks on Gaza, they make perfect sense in that lopsided way in which Middle East bloodletting makes “sense.”  Because Israel anticipated the Gaza based attack, it was already prepared with retaliatory measures.  It was already tracking the PRC leadership who it expected were the authors of the crimes.  Everything was prepared.  But then the tables were turned.  The actual event turned out radically different than what the IDF had expected.

At this point, Ehud Barak and the IDF brass had a decision to make: do they wait until they can properly analyze the facts before deciding what measures to take in response; or do they stick with Plan A and launch those strikes on Gaza despite the fact that it had to be clear by then that Gaza wasn’t to blame.  The answer in the skewed, bizarre, horrific calculus of Israeli military-intelligence: hit Gaza.  They figure: no one will know the difference.  They can conceal the facts long enough so that if the truth ever came out no one would remember those 27 dead.

And that’s pretty much as it’s been played out.  Israel lied through its teeth.  Avi Issacharoff and Eli Lake didn’t care.  They dutifully reported the company line (though Lake at least accounted for the possibility that radical Sinai Islamists might be involved–while hedging and blaming Gazans too).  Alex Fishman, Idan Landau and a few others knew different.  We were the dissidents.  But you know what?  Dissidents often report the truth.  However, it’s the generals, ministers and prime ministers who are the lying conpiracy-mongers, as they were in this case.

It still sticks in my craw that Avi Issacharoff in the stenography he published in Haaretz about the attack called my claim that the Gaza retribution attacks should be investigated as a war crime, insanity.  Now how insane does it appear?  Does killing 27 civilians in cold blood including a 2 year old child for no reason whatsoever except to save the face of the IDF not sound like a war crime?  It’s callous.  It’s disgusting.  I say it’s likely a war crime and hope to God someone starts investigating it as one.

If you’re a nation that is the victim of a terror attack, you may counter-attack.  But only against the perpetrators, not against innocents who aren’t even bystanders.  If you do, you deserve whatever you get.

If you read Hebrew, Idan has yet another excellent post going over the ground and adding his own perspective.

Iran Does It Again, Saudi Crown Prince Murdered in NYC Hospital Bed

Saturday, October 22nd, 2011
crown prince abdul azis

Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Abdul Aziz offed by Iranian agents

Don’t you believe a word of what you’re hearing from the U.S. media about the Saudi Crown Prince dying today in a New York hospital.  Nor a word about his long term illness which allegedly killed him.  Those of us who’ve lapped up the convincing conspiracy theories spun by the Justice Department about Iranian terror plots against Saudi targets in the U.S. know what really happened today in New York.

Those wily Al Quds agents fed Arbabsiar to the FBI dogs last week in order to put them off the scent of their real prey, Crown Prince Abdul Aziz.  It was a masterful bit of sleight of hand too, convincing the feds that a drug-dealing, low-life scum plotted with Mexican drug assassins to bomb the Saudi ambassador while he ate felafel in a DC restaurant.  While the G-men were looking for Gholam Shakuri and on the trail of the $100K in bounty money, those clever IRG assassins slipped into the Crown Prince’s hotel room while his entourage wasn’t looking and pumped him with an overdose of his favorite whiskey and pigs in a blanket, mixed with a bit of Saudi crude to wash it all down.  The chatter  I hear is that he died with a smile on his face and the feds are none the wiser.

But if FBI director Mueller and his boys read this blog don’t be surprised if you hear a press conference tomorrow at which they’ll announce criminal charges against the Iranian assassins who offed the Saudi Crown Prince.

Yediot: Secret Israeli-Egypt Efforts to Counter Iran Threat, IDF Report Confirms Eilat Terror Cells Not from Gaza

Friday, October 21st, 2011

Yediot Achronot’s veteran military correspondent, Alex Fishman, reveals for the first time the substance of the secret IDF report about the Eilat terror attack.  He also reveals secret Israeli-Egyptian meetings designed to unblock the Shalit prisoner exchange and counter the alleged Iranian regional threat.  I should add that I don’t agree with or accept many of the premises offered by Fishman below.  But it’s instructive to hear what he has to say because it reveals the thinking of the Israeli military-intelligence apparatus.

Fishman says that in the wake of the siege against the Israeli embassy in Cairo, a senior Israeli military official made a secret trip to Egypt where he met with Field Marshall Tantawi, Egypt’s de facto military junta leader.  According to the Yediot reporter, the primary goal of the meeting was how to stop the “Islamic wave” sweeping the region, in other words, how to sweep Iran from the field.  The implicit overarching goal of all future initiatives by Israel, Egypt and the U.S. would be to frustrate Iran’s Islamist agenda.

In the meeting, the Israeli official and Egyptian leader tried to resolve the disagreements resulting from the Eilat terror attack during which five Egyptian security officers were killed by Israeli fire on Egyptian territory.  The general subject of Islamist terror originating in the Sinai was also discussed.  Implicit in all these discussions was the notion that Egypt needed to be built up as a regional power in order to combat the influence of Iran.

One element in this process would be negotiating the release of Shalit, whom Iran wished to see continue in captivity.  As long as he was held, it was a fire burning in relations between Israel and the Palestinians, which helped Iranian interests.

The visits of U.S. defense secretary to both Israel and Egypt in recent weeks was also intended to advance this goal of turning Egypt into a buffer against Iran in the region.  Similarly, Egypt is meant to act as a stabilizing force among those Arab regimes that remain pro-western.  Fishman uses the term “etrog” to describe Egypt alluding to the Sukkot fruit used by observant Jews in their holiday ritual.  The fruit must be perfect, not injured in any way.  An etrog with a blemish, bruise or any damage is not permissible for the ritual.  In this sense, Egypt becomes a delicate fruit which must be coddled so that it can perform its proper function as a bulwark against Islamist militancy.

Israel too has a role to play in this grand strategy and it is expected to pay a price for bringing such stability.  Part of the price was agreeing to the Shalit deal.  Another part was Ehud Barak’s public apology to Egypt for Israel’s assault on Egyptian territory and its police forces.  Egypt needed the apology in order to establish its street cred and could not act as an honest mediator without it.  The apology, according to Fishman’s Israeli military sources, reinforced Egypt’s status in the region, thereby diminishing Iran’s.

Fishman notes that the most important consequence of the IDF secret report on the Eilat terror attack is the fundamental error that it made in anticipating that the attack would come from Gaza instead of from Sinai.  He offers a shocking, but unsubstantiated claim that the Sinai terrorists were affiliated with Iran.

This confirms the judgment of independent analysts like myself and Israeli bloggers like Idan Landau, that the Israeli government lied when it claimed the Popular Resistance Committees were behind the attack and when it launched a targeted killing campaign against the PRC.  Israel’s post-Eilat Gaza assault was a bluff, an attempt to mollify Israeli public opinion because Israel couldn’t or wouldn’t attack the real originators of the attack whether they were in Sinai or Teheran.

The Yediot reporter notes that even the IDF concedes that despite the report’s minute analysis of what happened in Eilat, gigantic holes remain in its fundamental understanding of the event.  The most fundamental of the collapsing theories formerly held by the IDF, was its expectation that it was trying to trap a Gaza terror cell.  In doing so, the IDF itself fell into a trap set for it by the actual Sinai-based terrorists.

Israel expected the attack was planned in Gaza and executed by Gazans and that it would follow a route from Gaza through Sinai to Israel.  The military capabilities of the Gazans were known, which caused Israel to led down its guard.  Though Israel knew the Sinai terror option was present, until the genie popped out the bottle, the IDF simply hadn’t expected it.  The possibility was right in front of them, Fishman says, but they never saw it because they didn’t think it was possible.  From now on, the demon of global jihad will hover over Israel-Egypt relations.

The actual attackers brought far more firepower and far more sophisticated tactics and numbers than Israel had anticipated.  There were, in fact, three groups which attacked and coordinated their complex assault.  This is likely why Israel believes that a force like Iran must be involved, though again no proof of the charge is offered.  Therefore, it must be taken with a grain of salt.

I’m expecting Avi Issacharoff, Eli Lake and all the other analysts who swallowed the IDF line that the terrorists were from Gaza to apologize for failing in their journalistic duty to ferret out the truth.  But I may be waiting quite a while to hear it from them.  By the way, Avi and Eli, those 20 Gazans killed in Israeli revenge attacks after the Eilat tragedy?  Killed for nuthin’  Avi said I was nuts for calling that a potential war crime.  Now who’s nuts?

Kahanists Offer $100,000 Bounty on Heads of Freed Palestinian Prisoners

Thursday, October 20th, 2011
$100,000 bounty on heads of palestinian prisoners

Settlers place $100,000 on heads of freed Palestinian prisoners. E-mail address is "Vengeance1998."

Proving that they believe they are a law and a state unto themselves, Kahanists have offered a $100,000 bounty on the heads of those Palestinian prisoners freed as part of the Shalit exchange.  The particular prisoners who are to be killed are those who murdered Meir Kahane’s son, Binyamin and the latter’s wife.  The particularly astonishing fact here is that given the multitude of Kahanists who will seek to carry out this mission, there appears to be a need for an objective judge to determine who deserves real credit for the deed.

So Baruch Marzel, one of the inheritors of the mantel of leadership of Meir Kahane and a wannabe MK, will be such a judge.  In Israel, it’s no problem.  After all, Marzel isn’t putting the bullet into the guy’s brain himself.  He’s only awarding the reward to the blessed Jewish soul who does the deed.  What’s the problem?

The family of another victim is circulating flyers in Israel, Turkey and other locations, in which they too offered the same bounty on the heads of the two killers of their relative (read Maariv story in Hebrew).  They note that the vengeance they seek is sanctioned in the Torah, which seems again to supercede the laws of the State.  They also forget that the Torah arrogates vengeance to the Lord, not to man.

Aside from all the other astonishing issues raised by this story, there is the minor problem of Israel’s Kahanists who reject the policy of its democratically elected government.  For them, there’s no problem in creating a vigilante system which supersedes Israel’s in order to execute true Jewish settler justice.  Kahanists remind me a great deal of Hitler’s Nazi Party say around 1928.  Witnessing the chaos and anarchy of Weimar era Germany, they sought to fill the vacuum with their own brand of vigilantism.  Because the state was so weak it could not exert any countervailing force to rein in the fascists.

The problem in Israel isn’t that the government is too weak.  The problem is that the current government doesn’t oppose the goals of the settlers.  It would be no sweat off Bibi’s brow if a few of the freed prisoners were killed.  In fact, he’d make a pro forma statement about not taking the law into one’s own hands and after the cameras left, he’d drink a toast to the murderer and then phone Marzel to say mazal tov.

One has to wonder where all this dough in coming from.  Of course it could all be a bit of hocus pocus and a sham.  But the thought crosses my mind that someone like Irving Moskowitz or his friends at the Central Fund of Israel or Hebron Fund would be only to happy to put up the funds for the bounty.  In fact, I’d even suggest that the next Moskowitz Prize for Zionism be awarded to the first Jew who murders a Palestinan ex-prisoner.  And all of this is, of course, tax-deductible if you’re an American citizen courtesy of the IRS, which condones Jewish terrorism by offering it a tax break.

Bibi’s Fake Settlement Freeze Offer

Thursday, October 20th, 2011

I do so love it when Israeli political figures seek to appear to offer Palestinian leaders a leg up, only to stab them in the back as they’re doing it.  Haaretz reports today that Bibi Netanyahu has offered a vague formula for a settlement freeze that has, as far as I can tell, no provision for duration and only refers to construction on government land.  This, of course, is supposed to mark Bibi as a generous fellow willing to lend a hand to his Palestinian interlocutor.

Haaretz notes that by far most settlement building is carried out by private companies and/or on private land.  So the gesture is quite an empty one.  It allows Bibi once again to pretend that he’s a good guy doing his all for peace, all the while winking as he pulls the wool over everyone’s eyes.  The only problem is that we’ve seen this magic act before and it’s not fooling Palestinians or anyone else.

Then comes this comment, which refers to the Colombian foreign minister who is trying to broker direct talks between Israel and the PA:

Abbas told Holguin that he did not oppose a resumption of negotiations with Israel, but Netanyahu would have to commit to certain steps regarding settlement construction, even if only a symbolic gesture that would let Abbas present it to the Palestinian public as an accomplishment.

There are two ways to read this: either the Israeli official who said this to Barak Ravid is incredibly tone-deaf and unintentionally created the image of Abbas as an Israeli stooge; or the official is much slyer than that and wishes to do two things–make Bibi smell like a rose while cutting Abbas down to size.  Whatever the ultimate meaning, it undermines Abbas profoundly both among Israelis and Palestinians.

We know from the Palestine Papers published by Al Jazeera, that the PA were patsies in the face of Israeli and U.S. pressure.  They were willing to sell their birthright for 30 silver coins (or less).  So portraying Abbas as weak and spineless already fits what many think about him.  So the fact that Israel seeks to reinforce the notion can only mean that Israel really doesn’t want him to succeed ultimately.

That may explain why Bibi was so willing to do a deal with Hamas.  He knows neither he nor any Israeli will ever seriously negotiate with Hamas over anything more serious than a prisoner exchange.  So building up Hamas, at the expense of the PA, is a grand strategy.  Not to mention that Abbas has deliberately stuck his finger in Israel’s eye (in Bibi’s view).  So the Palestinian is only getting what he deserves.

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