Archive for the ‘Israel’Category

Crossing the Line: The Intifada Comes to Campus

Antisemitism on campus has always been an issue. For years now, Hasbara has been a major part of Jewish Organization’s efforts to spread information about the State of Israel and it’s legitimacy, spread understanding amongst university students, and educate campuses on Zionism. But most recently, anti-Israeli activism has risen to unprecedented levels. With official speaking platforms being given to the President of Iran, and riots on campuses burning Israeli flags, it’s obvious that new strides need to be taken to counter this hateful phenomenon.

The Campaign

Crossing the Line: The Intifada Comes to Campus is a film that follows the increasing anti-Israel sentiment that arose as a result of Israel’s Operation Cast Lead in Gaza during late 2008 and early 2009. According to the film’s website, “The documentary demonstrates the blurring of anti-Israel and anti-Semitic lines, showing how the War evoked deep anti-Jewish sentiments amongst college students and professors.”

An important issue addressed in the film is the connection between the famous Muslim Brotherhood (originated in Egypt, but widespread in many Arab countries,) and the Muslim Student Association.

What constitutes a Anti-Semitism?

For many people not familiar with the Middle-East conflict, it’s easy to see the lines between Anti-Zionism, Anti-Israel, and Anti-Semitism as extremely blurred. They’re all anti-Jewish stuff. Some are against ideology, some against the State, and some against the people. So are they all one and the same? Natan Sharansky, recently appointed head of the Jewish Agency makes the rule really clear:

Sharansky’s Anti-Semitism Test (the 3 D’s)

  • De-legitimize
  • Double Standard
  • Demonize
  • The images and video shown here is absolutely shocking. It’s not gory. It’s not lude. It’s just people saying things. But the things they say are the equivalent of hate-speeches. A speech saying “There will be peace when Israel is gone, and we’re in control again” is just a tiny example of the rhetoric being thrown around on campuses. How can Israel not take these statements seriously?

  • Getting Active

    First, before doing anything – Watch the film:

  • Once you’ve done that – click on the “Get Active” button on the right hand side. This will pop a window that gives you plenty of options on how to get active.

    You can click on any one of the tens of venues and opportunities for you to help bring education and understanding to your campus.

    Do not miss this opportunity to speak out in Israel’s favor. It’s your obligation as a member of the student body, and as a decent human being. Don’t let the hatred win out. Act now.

    Report: Gilad Shalit Deal Should Happen Friday

    From: Ynet

    A prisoner exchange deal securing the release of kidnapped soldier Gilad Shalit will be executed this Friday, Saudi network al-Arabiya reported Sunday, quoting sources in the Hamas organization.According to the report, 450 Palestinian prisoners will be released to the Gaza Strip and West Bank in exchange for Shalit’s transfer to Egypt. Shalit was kidnapped into Gaza 1,246 days ago.

    The al-Arabiya report added that the Hamas leadership from Damascus would meet with the Hamas leadership from Gaza in Cairo on Monday, to discuss the latest offer submitted by Israel.

    Sources in Gaza told Ynet that significant progress had been made over the past few days in the talks for the prisoner exchange deal, and that the last obstacles – related to a number of prisoners from the leadership of Hamas’ military wing – could be removed by Friday, the first day of the Muslim holiday of Eid al-Adha.

    23

    11 2009

    The 'New Jews' – An Article about Us (CNN)

     

    Kosher

    This Article was written by Jessica Ravitz, CNN – and there is a BEAUTIFUL Slideshow on the CNN website – check it out!

    (CNN) — When Moses came down from Mount Sinai about 3,300 years ago, he couldn’t have seen these Jews coming.

    A blogger writes about how one of Judaism’s holiest days ended, for him, in a strip club, while elsewhere a guy strolls into a tattoo parlor requesting a Star of David. Two women exchange wedding vows in a Jewish ceremony, and hipsters toss back bottles of HE’BREW, The Chosen Beer. A full-time software developer prepares to lead a group in Jewish prayer, as a PhD candidate in Jewish thought pens a letter criticizing Israel’s policies.

    Meet the “New Jews,” as some call them: pockets of post-baby boomers — or more accurately Generation X and Millennial (Gen Y) Jews — who are making one of the world’s oldest known monotheistic faiths and its culture work for them and others in a time when, more than ever, affiliation is a choice.

    “I could wake up tomorrow and say, ‘I don’t want to be Jewish.’ There would be no social, political or economic consequences,” said Shawn Landres, the 37-year-old co-founder of Jumpstart, a Los Angeles-area organization that pushes forward out-of-the-box ideas in the Jewish world. “It’s true for the first time in thousands of years that we can build the identities we want.”

    Many of those at the forefront of innovative Jewish construction are rabbis, religious educators, people who know their stuff. But they’re not interested in foisting labels on people — like the denominational terms Reform, Conservative or Orthodox — nor do they want to perpetuate the pressures that come with fitting into religious, political and social molds.

    For Atlanta, Georgia, punk-rock musician Patrick A, or Aleph (the first letter in the Hebrew alphabet), this means he can seamlessly blend who he’s been with his newly embraced religious observance.

    “When I’m on stage screaming, hitting my face with a microphone and pouring beer on my head, at least I’m singing about the Torah,” said the 26-year-old founder ofPunkTorah, an outreach effort to inspire Jewish spirituality.

    Turns out the traditional synagogue model doesn’t have a lock on religious offerings. One alternative that’s sprouted up: independent prayer groups that invite the spiritually hungry to study text, as well as shape and lead their own services.

    “It’s tapping into a need that stems from people wanting to take hold of their Jewish life,” said Rabbi Elie Kaunfer, 36, executive director of Mechon Hadar, a New York-based organization that tracks and empowers such groups. He said there are about 60 nationwide. “When the institution wasn’t serving the need, people stood up to create their own communities.”

    It’s this kind of innovation that Jonathan Sarna, of Brandeis University and a leading scholar of American Jewish history, can get behind.

    “When there’s religious complacency, when there’s boredom, we’re much more likely to see people check out,” said Sarna, who is a member of an Orthodox synagogue. The more pressing issue, he added, is whether cultural ties alone can keep Jewish life going.

    That concern is a real one, said Steven Cohen, a sociologist at Hebrew Union College in New York. He said about half of young Jews are not marrying Jews, and that only 25 percent of children born to interfaith couples grow up to see themselves as Jewish.

    But by making Judaism and its rituals more accessible and meaningful, “Emergent Jews,” as they’re also often referred to, hope they can inspire a long-lasting connection to their faith.

    It’s why volunteer-driven educational retreats, sponsored by a group called Limmud (Hebrew for learning), are cropping up in Colorado, Illinois, Georgia and across the globe. It’s why Jewish Milestones in Berkeley, California, is helping interfaith, same-sex and other couples have Jewish weddings. And it’s why another Bay Area group, Wilderness Torah, hosts Passover in the desert, where participants combine Jewish traditions with their commitment to the outdoors and sustainable living.

    Unlike their parents and grandparents, who may have gathered to fight anti-Semitism, remember the Holocaust, rally around Israel and liberate Soviet Jews, many Gen X and Y Jews see their worlds as wide open.

    These Internet and media savvy Jews are behind what Ari Wallach, a 34-year-old social entrepreneur and consultant in New York, likes to call “Judaism 2.0.”

    “They want to re-engage in the world as Jews, but not solely for Jewish causes,” said Wallach, who was one of the forces behindThe Great Schlep, an online push, featuring comedian Sarah Silverman, that encouraged young Jews to fly to Florida and convince their grandparents to vote for Barack Obama.

    “If asked, ‘Would you rather fund raise for trees in Israel or for solar-powered ovens for refugees in Darfur,’” he said, “they’re more likely to go with Darfur,” which is why the American Jewish World Service, an organization that fights poverty, disease and hunger in the developing world, resonates with many of them in a way other Jewish organizations don’t.

    In fact, they may not have a relationship with Israel. And if they do, it’s often complicated. They might support the country and people while being critical of the government’s policies and wanting a Palestinian state, too, as evidenced by J Street, a new left-leaning lobbying group in Washington.

    Jay Michaelson, a 38-year-old writer, activist and scholar received a torrent of responses when he recently wrote in The Forward, a daily Jewish newspaper, about his ambivalent love for Israel, where he lived for three years.

    The reactions that interested him most came from rabbis and Jewish Federation leaders who wrote, “You’ve said what I cannot say,” said Michaelson, who was the founding editor of Zeek, an online journal to push discussions about the Jewish tomorrow. “There’s a climate of fear, and they cannot speak out on this issue.”

    But many of these “New Jews” aren’t afraid to be who they are, say and show how they feel.

    Heeb magazine, a hipster quarterly based in Brooklyn, does this and leaves some cringing. The magazine recently raised a collective “oy” — and stirred outrage — when it published a photograph of Roseanne Barr standing at an oven, dressed as Hitler, holding a tray of burnt-Jew cookies. The intention, said publisher Josh Neuman, was to force a conversation about how pervasive Hitler references are in modern culture.

    “We aim to elicit responses, even if they’re illicit responses,” said Neuman, 36, who formerly taught Jewish culture and thought, and worked at the Museum of Jewish Heritage — A Living Memorial to the Holocaust.

    If they can’t easily find what inspires them, some create it themselves.

    Sarah Lefton, 36, of San Francisco, California, said she developedG-dcast, weekly cartoon webisodes — narrated by a wide cast of characters, including an indie rocker — to make Jewish learning more engaging, “because God knows we all grew up in boring Sunday school classes.”

    Allowing younger Jews to connect with their faith while living in a secular world is what drives Aaron Bisman, 29. Inspiration came for him at a 1996 Phish show, when the rock band busted out with a performance of “Avinu Malkeinu,” a Jewish prayer. Hearing a non-Jew sing in Hebrew a song to thousands of fans showed this rabbi’s son that Jewish expression could go mainstream, without being limited to Larry David shtick.

    So he formed JDub Records, the original label for Matisyahu, the Hasidic Jewish reggae phenom. Bisman’s New York nonprofit promotes cross-cultural understanding by putting out innovative Jewish sounds, like hip-hop meshed with Israeli folk songs. JDub also recently adopted Jewcy, an online media outlet rich in blogs and discussions, to help build more bridges.

    And mixed in with all this are those who — irrespective of where they are religiously or in the Jewish community — advertise their identities with Jewish-themed tattoos, as Andy Abrams, who is behind “Tattoo Jew,” a documentary in development, found out.

    They’re not swayed by the long-perpetuated myth that Jews with tattoos cannot be buried in Jewish cemeteries. While tattoos are prohibited by Jewish law, Rabbi Joel Roth, a professor of Talmud and Jewish law at the Jewish Theological Seminary in New York said he knows of “no Jewish legal source that would prohibit the burial of a Jew who violated that law.” If such a prohibition existed, added Florence Pressman, executive director of Jewish Funeral Directors of America, “how would we honor our Holocaust survivors?”

    When they’re getting inked with Hebrew letters or Jewish symbols, these Jews are not fretting about laws followed by the most observant. Nor are they haunted by the numbers tattooed on arms during the Holocaust, said Abrams, the 40-year-old filmmaker of St. Louis, Missouri. They’re taking a bold stand today that they’ll carry with them, permanently, into the future.

    “They’re being overtly Jewish,” Abrams said. “They’re saying, ‘I’m Jewish. I’m proud. And I’m willing to wear it on my skin.’ ”

     

    30

    10 2009

    Feiglin: Deciding Others' Fate?

    Moshe Feiglin

    Moshe Feiglin

    According to Ynet, MK Moshe Feiglin sent Ehud Barak a statement requesting that he not negotiate his release, if he were kidnapped:

    “What our betrayed hero who is rotting in his cell understands, must be understood by any Israeli citizens as a free person. We must not buy one person’s freedom in exchange for risking the lives of many and encouraging additional abductions.”

    He went on to claim that “this order is the product of a sound mind.” A statement that would be unnecessary unless one actually considered what they’d just said to at least sound insane. Kind of like when you say “with all due respect” and everyone knows that whatever comes next will be offensive.

    Feiglin keeps digging himself deeper:

    “Since then and to this day, Jonathan has been imprisoned under disgraceful conditions. Israel, which sent him and for which Jonathan sacrificed his life, has done and is doing all in its power to keep him in prison and see him die there.”

    That would have been fine – had Feiglin not said just a sentence before, that Jonathan Pollard turned down release deal offers. You can’t possibly accuse a country of not trying to get a prisoner out of prison, when you’re turning down offers for your own release. Feiglin ripping a page right out of martyrism 101. Turn down offers for your release – and you can no longer complain that nobody is trying!

    On Gilad Shalit, Feiglin says:

    “The Israeli government has refrained from carrying out the simple and most required actions for Gilad Shalit’s release,” he accused. “Hamas, which at first avoided admitting that it was the kidnapper, understood quite quickly that Israel’s leaders would not endanger themselves with international arrest warrants and is no longer afraid to claim full responsibility for this act. Thousands of its detainees in Israel are getting the royal treatment and conditions no Israeli detainee can even dream of.”
    This is true. Palestinian terrorists do get treated really well in Israeli prisons. But really, Feiglin? Are you about to argue that Shalit should not be released in return for Palestinian prisoners? What authority do you have? Who died and gave you the power to decide what Gilad Shalit’s life is worth?

    “In this situation, the responsible Israeli citizen is faced with one of two choices: One – to come to terms with the described process and wait for the blow that will terminate this historic episode called ‘The State of Israel’. The other option is that, like in past wars, the simple soldiers will know how to save the state from its leaders’ failures, as today, we, the civilians and the simple soldiers order that no negotiations be held for us.”

    Oh well, I guess he did go there. And when you take any argument and put the opposite arguement in the place of anti-Israeli thought – you’re hitting below the belt. Releasing prisoners for Gilad Shalit is not anti-Israeli, and is not ‘terminating the historic episode called ‘The State of Israel.’ Feiglin – stop it. You’re sounding more and more ridiculous every time you open your mouth.

    And please – don’t make decisions as to what others’ lives are worth.

    11

    10 2009

    Pic: Lady Gaga Jewish Star!

    Yup! You saw right!

    Lady Gaga is wearing no pants – a fishnet, and a Jewish Star of David made of spikes on the back of her Israel-blue jacket!

    Lady Gaga Jewish Star

    Lady Gaga Jewish Star

    05

    10 2009

    Ahmadinejad is Jewish (rumor refuted)

    UPDATE: Turns out this rumor was refuted. Mosey along now … nothing to see here … (still, a funny thought – eh?)

    So it turns out that Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s roots are Jewish. Yup, his family converted. So he’s not Jewish the way Hitler was – what with the Jewish grandma or something. His family name was changed from  Sabourjian to Ahmadinejad when he converted to Islam from Judaism. I guess hindsight is 20/20. Only a Jew could become the Jews worst enemy.

    Remember – in Judaism there’s no way out:

    • You can convert to Catholicism and become the Pope and you’re still Jewish.
    • You can defraud hundreds of people and companies out of billions of dollars and you’re still Jewish.
    • You can join the SS and you’re still Jewish.
    • You can convert to Islam and become President of Iran and condemn Israel to death and threaten it with nuclear bombs – and you’re still Jewish!

    Oh well, welcome to the clan, Sabourjian.

    The fact was revealed when a close-up of his papers, which he showed on various occasions, showed the name Sabourjian – which is Iranian for “cloth weaver.” The ending of the name, ‘jian,’ is commonplace for Jewish families in Iran – I guess it’s the same as ’stein’, or ‘berg’. Not only that, but apparently the name Sabourjian is a common Jewish name in Iran.

    Imagine if some guy who’s last name was Cohen was screaming ‘death to Israel.’ Would you take him seriously?

    Jewish Mahmoud Ahmadinejad

    Jewish Mahmoud Ahmadinejad

    Apropos, here’s a cute video by Birthright about it!

    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AWjcHryH8zo]

    BREAKING NEWS: Gilad Shalit Video

    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rDAsGS_gOeI]

    Jerusalem – After over three years in which IDF St.-Sgt. Gilad Schalit has been held in Hamas captivity in the Gaza Strip, Israel breathed a sigh of relief on Friday afternoon after it was verified…

    02

    10 2009

    Video: Benjamin Netanyahu's Speech at the UN

    Comment below and let us know what you thought of Bibi’s Speech!


    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NOkHZgh1Dbc]

    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DqvE8Kqhw2k]

    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RnRbW0p9LoM&feature=player_profilepage]

    25

    09 2009

    Warning: Twitter Phishing Attemp

    I was just approached in a DM on twitter with the following message, which led to the below address.

    PLEASE note that this link does NOT go to Twitter – as seen in the URL below. It goes to a phishing site. If you put your password in here, it will be sent to the phisher, and your account will be compromised.

    If you have already put your info in, please change your password.

    Israeli Phishing Attempt

    23

    09 2009

    President Barack Obama: Rosh Hashana Wishes

    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GzDRAZDR3ps]
    President Obama extends his warm wishes for Rosh Hashanah. Rosh Hashanah marks the start of a new year – a time of humble prayer, joyful celebration, and hope for a new beginning. September 18, 2009. (Public Domain)

    18

    09 2009