Patty Hayes
(31
July 2008)
"Arutz Sheva, Olmert, Obama PR stunt"
1. Hamas Warns of Revolt against PA
by Tzvi Ben Gedalyahu
Hamas
spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri warned Tuesday that the Fatah crackdown on the
rival Hamas terrorist party in Judea and Samaria could spark a revolt.
A Fatah leader dismissed the threats as being made by "irresponsible
people."
Fatah has arrested hundreds of Hamas members and
leaders and is closing down businesses, schools and institutions
associated with Hamas.
Hamas, which ousted Fatah from
political power in Gaza after bloody clashes in June 2007, has charged
that Palestinian Authority (PA) chairman Mahmoud Abbas and Prime
Minister Salam Fayyad are cooperating with Israel by trying to wipe out
Hamas's strength.
"Now the Zionists [Israelis] are protecting you,"
Hamas said in a statement addressed to PA forces in Judea and Samaria.
"You know that once the protection of the Zionists is over, people will
enter your headquarters and kick you out."
A Fatah military officer
challenged Hamas to try to stage a revolt. "What are they waiting for?
Why is it allowed for them to kill and arrest people in Gaza?" he said.
Hamas
has arrested more than 200 Fatah members in Gaza, and Fatah has
retaliated in Judea and Samaria, causing an overflow in PA jails.
2. President Shimon Peres Promotes Division of Jerusalem
by Hillel Fendel
President
Shimon Peres, following Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and Vice Prime
Minister Chaim Ramon, has become the latest mainstream politician to
intimate that Jerusalem must be divided.
Peres paid a condolence
call this morning (Tuesday) to the family of David Shriki, a policeman
who died of wounds he suffered in a Palestinian terrorist attack in
Jerusalem earlier this month. Shriki, 20, lived with his family in
Rishon LeTzion.
Peres said that there must be a separation between
the Arabs of Jerusalem and the Jews, and that it must be in the form of
a wall. Peres emphasized that the problem is also one of
education. He said that Arab doctors are a common sight in Israel, yet
Jews are not afraid to go under their knife. "This shows," Voice of
Israel reported that Peres said, "that when we reach a certain level of
education, the relations between the two sides change."
Teacher and Lawyer Murdered 41 Israelis Between Them
President
Peres did not mention the suicide-slaughter of 21 Israelis aboard a #2
bus from the Western Wall in August 2003, which was perpetrated by a
Moslem teacher and religious leader from Hevron. Nor did he mention the
massacre of 20 Jews two months later in the Maxim Restaurant in Haifa
commited by a female terrorist lawyer.
"Jerusalem has become a
security problem of late," Peres said. "We have to make both a wall and
a bridge in Jerusalem. We have to ensure separation and also let them
live differently, otherwise it will be like a pressure cooker that is
liable to explode. Without offering a carrot, there is no value
to using a stick; sticks alone cannot educate. In the meanwhile,
they are fortifying themselves, and Hamas is taking over the street,
instilling fear on the Arab street in Jerusalem. It is not simple
to solve this problem, and it can take time to find the right solution."
Olmert Sees Separation as the Way to Agreement With Fatah
Prime
Minister Olmert told a Knesset committee the day before that living
with such a large number of Arabs in the capital means more terrorist
attacks - implying that the reduction of terrorism is dependent upon
removing them from the city's borders. "Whoever thinks we can
live with 270,000 Arabs in Jerusalem must take into account that there
will be more bulldozers, more tractors, and more cars carrying out
attacks," the Prime Minister said.
On Sunday of this week, Olmert's
friend Vice Premier Chaim Ramon called for the detaching of eastern
Jerusalem neighborhoods such as Tzur Baher and Jabel Mukaber - homes to
the two tractor/bulldozer terrorists - from Jewish Jerusalem.
Arab
construction in Jerusalem flourished under Olmert's tenure as Mayor of
Jerusalem, charges WorldNetDaily's Jerusalem bureau chief Aaron
Klein. He writes that the police and the Jerusalem municipality
generally hesitated to act against illegal Arab construction, and thus
left a vacuum into which the PA's Fatah stepped (Peres said it was
Hamas that reigns in Jerusalem). Given Olmert's desire to conclude a
peace agreement as quickly as possible with Fatah, which demands parts
of Jerusalem as its own, Klein charges that the recent attacks in
Jerusalem serve Olmert's purposes in encouraging a public sense that
Jerusalem must be divided.
"Things are reversible," Klein
concludes. "Israeli forces can go into troubled eastern Jerusalem
hotspots and wipe out the terrorist infrastructure there if they so
desired. Israel can allow Jews to build communities in the eastern
Jerusalem neighborhoods that were purchased for that very purpose.
Jerusalem does not need to be divided."
3. Report: Obama Kotel Note Leak was PR Stunt
by Gil Ronen and Hana Levi Julian
Democratic
presidential hopeful Barack Obama's campaign seems to have purposely
leaked the contents of the note that he placed in the Kotel, web
magazine Israel Insider wrote Tuesday. While Israel's Hebrew newspaper
Maariv came under fire for publishing the note, "it now appears that
Maariv had collaborated with the Obama campaign in getting the
'private' prayer, with its 'modest' supplication to the Lord, out to
the public, buffing his Christian credentials and showing his
"humility," the web magazine said.
Last Friday, on the morrow of
Obama's visit to the Kotel, Maariv published a close-up picture of the
note written by Obama to G-d, supposedly after a yeshiva boy took it
from the crack between the Kotel stones in which Obama deposited it.
Maariv's competitor Yediot Acharonot slammed the paper for violating
Obama's privacy.
Filched or released for publication?
In a
statement issued following the public outcry over the leak, Maariv said
that "Barack Obama's note was approved for publication in the
international media even before he put it in the Kotel, a short time
after he wrote it at the King David Hotel in Jerusalem." A third
newspaper, Haaretz, quoted Maariv as saying that "Obama submitted a
copy of the note to media outlets when he left his hotel in Jerusalem."
Based
on these statements by Maariv, Israel Insider concluded that the Obama
campaign "managed the event brilliantly, if deceptively, getting the
double benefit of appearing to be victimized by the invasive Israeli
press and prayer-thieving Jew while at the same time leaking out his
humble Christian plea to the Lord." The report noted that by the week's
end, "a (relatively) slick video appeared on [public video website]
YouTube that blended Obama's Western Wall prayer with various church
scenes, crosses aplenty, a dove of peace, and a soundtrack based on
Amazing Grace. The video closes with a "vote" button and an invitation
to visit the official campaign website."
Pro-Obama video features Obama's "note to G-d."
Apparently
unaware that the leaking of the note was coordinated by the Obama
campaign and Maariv, Kotel Rabbi Shmuel Rabinovitz called the
publication a "sacrilegious action" which "deserves sharp condemnation
and represents a desecration of the holy site." He stated: "Notes which
are placed in the Western Wall are between the person and his Maker;
Heaven forbid that one should read them or use them in any way. The
custom of placing notes between the stones of the Western Wall is
ancient and is used as a means of expression by a person praying to his
Creator."
Maariv's editors, Doron Galezer and Ruth Yovel, are
considered to be hard-core leftists. The paper said that it was
"pleased" with its "journalistic accomplishment."
"It now appears
that Maariv had collaborated with the Obama campaign in getting the
'private' prayer, with its 'modest' supplication to the Lord, out to
the public."
"In any case," Maariv added, "since Obama is not a Jew,
publishing the note does not constitute an infringement on his right to
privacy."
Campaign denies
An Obama campaign spokesman claimed
that the campaign hadn't approved the publication of any kind of prayer
note. "Prayer notes at the Wall should remain private," a campaign aide
said.
Israeli Channel 2 TV reported Sunday that the note was
returned to the Kotel. It showed an interview with an anonymous yeshiva
student, whose face was not shown, who did not want to say how he got
possession of the note and claimed that the note was filched from the
Kotel by a yeshiva student as a prank.
Call for boycott
Jerusalem
lawyer Shahar Alon asked Attorney General Menachem Mazuz Monday to
order a police investigation into the removal and publication of
Obama's note.
"By making the note public," Alon wrote to Mazuz,
"Maariv violated the law protecting holy sites, several clauses in the
penal code and also infringed upon the basic rights of a person's honor
and freedom."
Alon also initiated a boycott of the newspaper. In a
public letter, he called on all who felt that Maariv had desecrated the
holiness of the Kotel to refrain from purchasing the newspaper.
4. Online Project Tries to Unite Secular & Religious
by Elana Eden
An
online project is attempting to reconnect increasingly alienated
Israeli subcultures. The “People-Israel: Guide to Israeli Society”
project, created in part by Professor Oz Almog, a sociologist at Haifa
University, explores the gap between growing Israeli subcultures,
mainly the divide between the religious and the secular.
[video:123344]
Can't see video? Click here.
Almog
explains that Zionism was once universal in Israel, a national fervor
that united Israeli Jews as brothers. With a common goal – to
strengthen the Jewish nation in Israel – other differences or
disagreements became irrelevant.
But the decline of
traditional Zionism in secular society has created a rift between the
secular and religious public, the latter of whom perceive a
“spiritual vacuum” in today’s increasingly post-Zionist climate.
However, tensions also exist within the religious Zionist public,
according to Almog.
The tensions between religious and secular
Israelis, as well as within religious communities, were perhaps
exemplified best during the pullout from Gush Katif and northern
Shomron, three years ago this month.
Though recently more secular
Israelis have begun adopting religious traditions, Almog speculates
that this is merely a popular trend and not a true return to Judaism.
Through
the People-Israel website, Almog hopes to promote contact and
understanding between Israelis and to explore the possibilities of
brotherhood between diverse groups. The project is located at
www.peopleil.org.
5. Olmert Ready to Give Away Golan in Exchange for Direct Talks
by Ze'ev Ben-Yechiel
Prime
Minister Ehud Olmert has told Damascus that he is prepared to cede the
Golan to Syria in exchange for Syria’s agreement to enter into direct
talks with Israel, according to sources in the Knesset.
The sources
from the opposition parties told Army Radio Wednesday morning that
Olmert is wiling to make “painful concessions” in order to promote
negotiations between the two countries. The sources did not specify
what, if anything, Olmert asked the Syrians to sacrifice on their part.
According
to the report, Olmert promised Damascus that Israel would withdraw from
the Golan Heights on the sole condition that the Syrians would agree to
direct talks between the two governments, including a discussion on
cutting ties with Iran, Hizbullah and Hamas.
The Prime Minister's Office denied the claims. Officials for the PM said that Olmert has not made any promises to Damascus.
Meanwhile,
according to MK Yisrael Katz (Likud), the Syrians have agreed to direct
talks with Israel on the condition that Israel gives them the Golan
Heights in advance.
Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni criticized Olmert
Tuesday, saying that he would easily give up too much Israeli land
without appropriate concessions from the other side. Livni pointed out
that there are "issues regarding negotiations with Syria that still
require internal planning."
The FM’s remarks came the same day
that Olmert declared a willingness to present Syria with a “true
alternative” to partnership with Iran and Hizbullah. Olmert also
expressed his desire that the ongoing indirect talks become direct
talks "at a certain stage."
6. Bill Pardons Pullout Protestors; Gal'on Equates Right with Nazis
by Ze'ev Ben-Yechiel
A
bill granting amnesty to protestors arrested during Israel's 2005
Disengagement from Gaza passed its first reading in the Knesset plenum
Tuesday night. During the session, MK Zahava Gal'on (Meretz) infuriated
her colleagues when she equated the opposition nationalist parties with
the Nazis.
In denouncing the bill, Gal'on declared, "I
want to tell you, and you better internalize it, even if it's
unpleasant – the State of Israel's problem is that for years it has
been turning a blind eye to the crimes of the right-wing parties. For
years. So the role of democracy…is to learn the lessons of the Weimar
Republic's collapse. I remind you that democracy in Germany collapsed
because it enabled its enemies on the radical right to exploit it…and
it undermined its basic powers."
This remark, equating Knesset
members from the nationalist parties with Nazis, incensed a number of
MKs. Zevulun Orlev (NU-NRP) stood up and angrily yelled, “You have gone
crazy. You crossed all the red lines. It is unthinkable that an Israeli
Knesset member will stand at the Knesset podium and say that the
nationalist public in Israel conducts itself like the Weimer parliament
that brought Hitler to power."
Orlev’s sentiments were shared by his
colleague, Uri Ariel, who told Gal'on, "What you did is an
abomination." Fellow MK Aryeh Eldad added, "As a doctor, I’m telling
you – sickening self-hatred is a serious mental disorder…the
self-hatred of the Israeli left is sick and reflects a deeply rooted
mental disorder – it has no cure."
The new legislation, if passed
in subsequent readings, would apply to 400 of the 482 criminal cases
that were opened in the period before and during the expulsion of 9,000
Jews from Gaza and northern Samaria in 2005.
The bill would
effectively halt all pending legal proceedings against Gaza expulsion
protestors and expunge the criminal records of all those arrested. The
new law would also promptly suspend any sentences handed down in court
against anyone convicted of a crime whose motive was to stop the
expulsion. The bill was submitted by MKs Reuven Rivlin (Likud) and Eli
Gabbai (NU-NRP), together with a third of all MKs in the Knesset.
The
law would mainly exonerate those who incurred no risk of personal
injury or loss of life. This category includes the majority of those
arrested for their protest activities.
Commenting on the vote after
its passing, one of its supporters praised the initiative. "There are
days when democracy needs to forgive and leave the past behind. The
disengagement was a national trauma, and it cannot be compared to any
other social crisis," said MK Rivlin.
"The clemency law will assist
in mending the rift within Israeli society and correcting the injustice
done to families of the evacuees, those who paid the price of democracy
in the harshest manner," he said.
7. Arabs, Anarchists To Test Israeli Rule off Gaza Coast Next Week
by Tzvi Ben Gedalyahu
Arabs
and anarchists will sail a small fishing vessel from Cyprus to Gaza
next week in order to challenge Israeli sovereignty off the Gaza coast.
The ship's 60 passengers expect to be arrested after leaving
international waters approximately seven miles off the Mediterranean
Coast.
The Carter Center, headed by former American President Jimmy
Carter, and South African Archbishop Desmond Tutu are sponsoring the
trip, designed to create negative publicity against Israel. The Arabs
and anarchists claim that Israel has no sovereignty over the Gaza coast
because it withdrew from the area three years ago under the
Disengagement program. However, Israel specifically said at the time
that it will retain control over the air and seas until the Palestinian
Authority can prove it can guarantee security.
Organizers of the
trip said they will stay on board for at least two weeks as a public
protest if Israel naval forces stop it in international waters instead
of arresting them when they approach the coast.
One of the
passengers is Jewish, Holocaust survivor Hedy Epstein, who said the
event is designed to "remind the world that we will not stand by and
watch 1.5 million people suffer death by starvation and disease."
Gaza's economy was flourishing before the Oslo War broke out in 2000
and worsened three summers ago when Israel forced out of the area more
than 9,000 Jews, many of whom had employed Arabs.
The Palestinian
Authority (PA), which last year was taken over by Hamas terrorists in
Gaza, has blamed Israel for causing poverty by closing crossings into
Gaza following thousands of rocket attacks on the western Negev the
past eight years.
The aim of the Arab groups participating in the
journey is to open up the port in Gaza. Israeli intelligence
authorities have said that a large number of terrorists, weapons and
explosives have been smuggled into Gaza via the Gaza coast.
Ten of the protestors are from Britain and Ireland.
8. Land of Israel Hikers Attacked by Arabs, Police Stand By
by Hillel Fendel
Some
200 youths and adults on a week-long "Land of Hilltops Trek" were
attacked by Arabs with clubs and rocks. The police arrested Jews,
including one who fired in the air.
The trek, which began on
Sunday, is being led by veteran Yesha (Judea and Samaria) settlement
pioneer Daniella Weiss, former Mayor of Kedumim. She described
what happened:
"This is the third day of our beautiful march
through the hilltops of the Land of Israel, which we began in Sa-Nur
[one of four Jewish communities in Samaria that were destroyed in Ariel
Sharon's Disengagement plan - ed.], and are planning to end up in
Asa'el in southern Judea. We have already been to Shvut Ami
[adjacent to Kedumim], Kol Tzion near Adei Ad [just outside Shilo], and
we are now at Maoz Esther, near Kokhav HaShachar.
"The plan is to
continue to Migron, then Shaar HaMizrach (Gateway to the East) between
Jerusalem and Maaleh Adumim, and then we will sleep in Shdemah
(south-eastern Jerusalem, near Har Homa), and then to Maaleh Halhoul
and Asa'el. Each of this places has important significance in
terms of Jewish presence in the area.
Click here for map of Judea and Samaria, about 1/6 of the way down the
page.
"Everything was going very well, until we arrived in Maoz
Esther. A bunch of Arabs swooped down upon us with rocks and
clubs, and three of our people were injured; they have just been
evacuated by ambulance. At one point, one of our escorts tried to
protect one of our boys, and he shot in the air. Right then,
something amazing happened:
"From behind a little hill suddenly
emerged some cars and policemen wearing civilian clothes, but with
police hats - and they arrested the one who shot in the air, as well as
some of our other escorts who were carrying weapons!
"Apparently,
the police were waiting and watching the whole time, doing nothing
until our boy shot in the air. They want to leave us without
weapons, and thus cause us to call off our entire trek, because they
see - and want to discourage - the wonderful and pioneering spirit that
we bring."
"But we will of course not stop, though we are now
trying to figure out the best course of action. I can tell you that
there will be some sharp measures and protests against the security
forces."
Other participants accused the police of outright cooperation with the Arabs in their ambush of the Jews.
When
told of a report that two Arabs were also arrested, Daniella seemed
surprised and skeptical. "We saw no such thing," she said.
MK Eldad: Police State in Service of Olmert Gov't
MK
Prof. Aryeh Eldad (National Union) said in response, "This is just
another step in the police agreeing to become a 'political police' in
the service of the Olmert government."
Eldad noted the decisions
this week to place three Shomron Jews under house arrest and restrict
Jewish entry to certain areas of Samaria. "If the security forces
do not revert immediately to protecting Jews instead of fighting
against them alongside the Arabs, a catastrophe can be expected - and
the responsibility will lie squarely with the Defense Minister [Ehud
Barak] and the Public Security Minister [Avi Dichter]."
9. Drive to Raise Pollard Awareness
by Hillel Fendel
Supporters
of Jonathan Pollard refuse to allow him to drop from the news - and
have ideas as to how to ensure he is pardoned soon.
Rabbi Shlomo
Aviner, head of the Ateret Cohanim yeshiva in the Old City of
Jerusalem, co-Chief Rabbi of Beit El, and a long-time outspoken
supporter of Pollard, has publicized a list of 12 ideas, many of them
new, as to how to keep Pollard on the agenda. The goal, he
writes, is to ensure that outgoing U.S. President George Bush issues
him a pardon, and the way to do that is to have the Israeli government
make an official request for such - and the way to do that is to keep
Pollard high in the public awareness, so as to influence the
government.
On November 21 of last year, Jonathan Pollard
entered his 23rd year of a life sentence for his activities on behalf
of Israel. He was convicted not on charges of treason, as some
mistakenly believe, but on one count of passing classified information
to an ally. The median sentence for this offense is 2-4 years,
but Pollard received a life sentence - the result of a plea bargain
which he honored and the U.S. government violated.
On Rabbi Aviner's list of ideas are the following:
1.
Talk about Pollard wherever possible - with friends, in the store, in
classes, on the radio, in written articles, and wherever possible.
2. Wear a blue Pollard bracelet.
3. Recite prayers, including public prayers in the synagogue during the Torah reading.
4. Mention Pollard in wedding and Bar-Mitzvah invitations and Grace After Meals cards.
5. Post bumper stickers and the like wherever permitted.
6. Give to the cause; helping to redeem captives is the best charity there is.
7.
Involve non-religious people. "For some strange, illogical reason," the
rabbi writes, "almost all those who have joined the struggle for
Pollard are religious. If you know high-ranking secular people,
please try to interest them in the struggle..."
8. Write to MKs, Prime Minister Olmert, and U.S. President Bush.
9. Write to Pollard himself, though only in English. His address:
JONATHAN POLLARD 09185-016
P.O.B. 1000
BUTNER N. C.
U.S.A. 27509-1000
Former
officials of the U.S. government such as ex- CIA director James Woolsey
and former top U.S. Middle East negotiator Dennis Ross have come out in
favor of clemency for Pollard.