March Madness

As explained by Wikipedia, “mad as a March hare” is a common British English phrase, both today and in Lewis Carroll’s time in the 1800s.

This March seems no exception as far as Israel is concerned. In fact it qualifies as yet another vintage example of lunacy exceeding anything written by Lewis’s “Alice in Wonderland.”

Any month of the year is open season for Israel phobic individuals and groups but this current month has attracted a record number. With Passover and Ramadan coinciding, the stage is set for an orchestrated symphony of mayhem. Ramadan is supposed to be a month of fasting, prayer, reflection and community.

No amount of hypocritical exhortations by international and local politicians will avert the annual hate festival generated by Islamic extremists at this particular time. Any gestures Israel will make in a misguided attempt to avert violence will fail as it has done in the past.

As most Israelis know from past bitter experience, Islamic religious observances are inevitably the perfect occasion for incitement and terror. The tragedy is that instead of tackling the root problem it is usually the victims who get the blame especially if they retaliate.

When masses are brainwashed and historical truths are inverted and most critically when the next generation is educated with lies it is certain that the problem will never be rectified. UNRWA schools controlled by Hamas and the PA continue to use textbooks which preach delegitimisation of Israel and Jews. Despite this, international aid continues to flow. No wonder increasing numbers of teenage Palestinian Arabs find it legitimate to murder Israeli men, women and children.

A perfect example of how this plays out is illustrated by a speech given a few days ago by the PA Prime Minister on behalf of Abbas, President for Life and internationally anointed saint of democratic values.

“This land has been ours since the time of the Canaanites. We do not need to provide proof that we are the original owners of the land.” 

The land he is talking about is all of Israel including Judea, Samaria and Jerusalem. Note that he claims that no proof is necessary to validate their fantasy. The reason of course is that there is no proof to back up these claims. That is why the PA frantically disposes of all evidence validating the presence of Jews here well before the advent of Islam and the fake Palestinians.

Wouldn’t you think that following this fictional historical connection to the Canaanites there might be some sort of rebuttal from our own Government as well as from overseas officials, commentators and academics? Unfortunately this is not the case. Our own politicians are either too busy attacking each other or have abandoned the fight in the name of woke political correctness. As the international community remains mute the lies and fables manufactured by so called peace partners multiply and become the accepted gospel. My guess is that the garbage spewed forth from Ramallah is deliberately ignored in world capitals because it suits the nauseous narrative that Israel must surrender parts of its homeland in exchange for genuine peace.

Continuing the March hare madness theme one must hand out prizes for “chumps of the month” to the following (in no particular order of insanity).

It has been reported by several news media sources that the Biden Administration proposes to provide five thousand Palestinian Arabs with commando training in Jordan. These commandos in training who will be provided with 5,000 rifles and presumably enough ammunition will in effect join the thousands of Fatah and Hamas supporters who already are in possession of illegal weapons. Does anyone in their right mind actually believe that these enforcers (many of whom may already have carried out terror attacks) will fight the terror groups now running rampant in the PA territories?

This hare-brained scheme which could only have been hatched in the warped minds of totally detached progressive officials ought to be literally shot down before it can gain traction and menace every single Israeli. So far, there has been silence and as we all know where there is silence acquiescence follows.

Meanwhile, the annual Jerusalem marathon has taken place with participants from all over Israel and also from abroad. Many ran as part of groups raising money for various worthy charitable causes.

Not by chance, but by deliberate design, the PA decided to organise their own marathon event in Bethlehem. Organised by the PA Olympic Committee whose head is a well-known inciter of anti-Israel rhetoric (Jibril Rajoub) this event should normally elicit no criticism. The only problem however is that like everything else Abbas and his cohorts are involved with, it has been used as a means to once again delegitimise Israel. The T-shirts worn by the runners displayed a map of Palestine which unsurprisingly encompassed all of present-day Israel. Anyone with even a superficial understanding of the way the warped minds of our “peace partners” work will have received the message loud and clear. The marathon uniform made the ultimate objective of the PA perfectly unambiguous.

Pretending that this plain message is really a harbinger of peace remains the prevalent default position for hallucinatory progressives and UN members. Proof of this assertion was provided by the staff members of the UK Consulate to the PA. They participated as Team UK and proudly posed for photos wearing the T-shirts which wiped Israel off the map.

Apologists for this blatant display of perfidious British hypocrisy will excuse it by suggesting that either the Consulate representatives did not understand the logo or they did not notice it. Both excuses, of course, are rubbish.

Confirmation that this shameful episode was no accidental lapse of Foreign Office protocol was subsequently revealed.

The UK Consul General to the PA based in “occupied” Jerusalem has met with a senior PA cleric (Mahmoud al – Habbash) who also happens to be an advisor to President Abbas. Sounds innocent enough, doesn’t it? Well, this Islamic man of the cloth has claimed on TV that “Jews are cursed by Allah and are like apes and pigs.” In case this message was not clear enough, he also stated that “the Temple Mount must be returned, liberated, defended and purified from the defilement of the occupation (i.e. Jews) and theft.” This was reported by PMW and the UK Jewish Chronicle.

Think about this for a moment. An official UK diplomatic representative meets a PA official who is on record spouting this sort of incitement. Is this another case of “we didn’t know” or rather a deliberate display of what the UK really thinks about Israel and its citizens?

It should not be too difficult to arrive at an answer, especially when you take the reaction of the UK Foreign Office into consideration. After being challenged by the JC to explain this miserable piece of British diplomacy, the Foreign Office completely ignored the questions and responded that “British policy is to support a 2 State solution.” If that does not clarify exactly where the UK stands, then nothing else does. With proclaimed “friends” like these, who needs enemies?

Proof that drippy diplomats are not confined to the Court of St. James is provided by the incredible response of the German Ambassador to the attempted lynching of two German tourists who drove in their Israeli rental car into Nablus. They wished to purchase some coffee and were attacked by mobs of Palestinian Arabs convinced that the tourists were Jews. Shaken and one hopes now wiser as to the realities of the situation here, they were rescued.

Incredibly the German Ambassador’s subsequent reaction included these words: “we know the pain of the Palestinians. We support their peaceful aspirations towards a State.”

These totally inane sentiments explain why level-headed sane Israelis have long since lost any respect for those who burble such unhinged tripe.

I mentioned that this March was madder than usual.

One wonders how loonier it can get.

Michael Kuttner is a Jewish New Zealander who for many years was actively involved with various communal organisations connected to Judaism and Israel. He now lives in Israel and is J-Wire’s correspondent in the region.

Harvard’s Hijacked Center for Middle Eastern Studies

The Center for Middle Eastern Studies (CMES) at Harvard University will host on March 30, 2023, Prof. Nadera Shalhoub-Kevorkian, chair in Law, Institute of Criminology-Faculty of Law, The Hebrew University; and Chair in Global Law, Queen Mary University of London.

The invitation states, “Her research focuses on trauma, state crimes and criminology, surveillance, gender violence, law and society. She studies the crime of femicide and other forms of gendered based violence, violence against children in conflict ridden areas, crimes of abuse of power in settler colonial contexts, surveillance, securitization and social control. As a resident of the old city of Jerusalem, Shalhoub-Kevorkian is a prominent local activist. She engages in direct actions and critical dialogue to end the inscription of power over Palestinian children’s lives, spaces of death, and women’s birthing bodies and lives.”

The CMES homepage directs the reader to “Readings and Digital Resources on Palestine,” a list of readings on Palestine gathered by Rosie Bsheer and Cemal Kafadar, CMES core faculty members. The reading list aims to “contextualize current events in Palestine,” offering “analyses and histories of expulsion, occupation, settler colonialism, forced evictions, home demolitions, and annexation that situate the current struggle as part of the ongoing Nakba of 1948 and in relation to the Naksa of 1967. These resources also point to the myriad attempts to control knowledge production on Palestine and to silence critical speech that attempts to humanize Palestinians.”

The Center’s one-sided list of readings includes: “Fayez Abdullah Sayegh, Zionist Colonialism in Palestine, Vol. 1 (Beirut, Lebanon: Research Center, Palestine Liberation Organization, 1965). Walid Khalidi, From Haven to Conquest: Readings in Zionism and the Palestine Problem Until 1948 (Institute for Palestine Studies, 1971). Fouzi Al-Asmar, To Be an Arab in Israel (Institute for Palestine Studies, 1978). Rosemary Sayigh, The Palestinians: From Peasants to Revolutionaries (Zed Press, 1979). Edward W. Said, The Question of Palestine (Vintage, 1992). Nadia Abu El-Haj, Facts on the Ground: Archaeological Practice and Territorial Self-Fashioning in Israeli Society (University of Chicago Press, 2002). Rafi Segal and Eyal Weizman, A Civilian Occupation: The Politics of Israeli Architecture (Verso, 2003). Sara Roy, Failing Peace: Gaza and the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict (Pluto Press, 2006). Ussama Makdisi and Paul A. Silverstein, Memory and Violence in the Middle East and North Africa (Indiana University Press, 2006). Omar Jabary Salamanca, Mezna Qato, Kareem Rabie, and Sobhi Samour, “Past is Present: Settler Colonialism in Palestine,” Settler Colonial Studies 2.1 (2012). Shira Robinson, Citizen Strangers: Palestinians and the Birth of Israel’s Liberal Settler State (Stanford University Press, 2013). Jasbir Puar, “Rethinking Homonationalism,” International Journal of Middle East Studies 45.2 (2013), 336-39. Ella Shohat, On the Arab-Jew, Palestine, and Other Displacements (Pluto Press, 2017). Tareq Baconi, Hamas Contained: The Rise and Pacification of Palestinian Resistance (Stanford University Press, 2018). Rana Barakat, “Lifta, the Nakba, and the Museumification of Palestine’s History,” Native American and Indigenous Studies 5.2 (Fall 2018), pp. 1-15. Sherene Seikaly, “How I Met My Great-Grandfather: Archives and the Writing of History,” Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa, and the Middle East 38.1 (May 2018), p. 6-20. Ussama Makdisi, Age of Coexistence: The Ecumenical Frame and the Making of the Modern Arab World (University of California Press, 2019). Matthew Hughes, Britain’s Pacification of Palestine: The British Army, the Colonial State, and the Arab Revolt, 1936–1939 (Cambridge University Press, 2019). Noura Erakat, Justice for Some: Law and the Question of Palestine (Stanford University Press, 2019). Rashid Khalidi, The Hundred Years’ War on Palestine: A History of Settler Colonialism and Resistance, 1917–2017 (Metropolitan Books, 2020). Seth Anziska, Preventing Palestine: A Political History from Camp David to Oslo (Princeton University Press, 2020).”

Clearly, Harvard’s Center for Middle Eastern Studies was hijacked by Palestinian and pro-Palestinian advocates, providing anti-Israel bias. As can be seen, the first monograph on the reading list is Zionist Colonialism in Palestinepublished by the Palestinian Liberation Organization research center in Beirut. The author, Fayez Abdullah Sayegh, was born in 1922 in Kharaba, Mandatory Syria; as a child, the family moved to Tiberias, and he went to school in Safed. He joined the Syrian Social Nationalist Party in 1938 and was later expelled. In 1949, he earned his Ph.D. in philosophy, with a minor in political science, from Georgetown University. Sayegh worked for the Lebanese Embassy in Washington, DC and at the United Nations. He taught at several universities, including Yale, Stanford, and Macalester College, as well as at The American University of Beirut – his alma mater and the University of Oxford. Sayegh founded the Palestine Research Center in Beirut in 1965. That year, the Center published his historical study entitled Zionist Colonialism in Palestine.

Nothing on the CMES reading list acknowledges that the Palestinians and their Arab allies were belligerent and attacked the Jewish Yishuv. They lost the war between November 30, 1947, and July 20, 1949, which they started. As a result, the Palestinian Nakba in 1948 and Naksa in 1967 were the outcomes of their own making. Moreover, during this period, both Jordan, which occupied the West Bank, and Egypt, which occupied the Gaza Strip, did not find the Palestinians meritorious for independence.

Shalhoub-Kevorkian, who wrote in the past about the “Honor Killing” in Palestinian society, where family members kill the daughter of the family because she is independent, switched her focus to blaming Israel for the “unchilding” (that is, “the authorized eviction of children from childhood for political goals”) of Palestinian children, who are fighting against the Israeli security forces. Stone-throwing, knifing, and shooting are among the Palestinian children’s methods.

Equally important, her switch to writing on settler colonialism is equally egregious. The settler colonialism in Palestine began during the Ottoman Empire era and lasted 402 years.

Contrary to Shalhoub-Kevorkian and CMES assertion, the Jews received the right to establish their national home in their ancestral homeland in Palestine from the League of Nations in 1922. Britain was appointed the executor of this decision. At this time, Transjordan was created for the Arabs in Palestine. The CMES at Harvard University should teach facts, not false.

The CMES has a long history of catering to Palestinians. In one infamous case, it received a donation from the Alawi Foundation, a regime’s charity that specialized in tarnishing Israel in American universities. In return, it hosted as a visiting scholar Ali Akbar Alikhani from the Faculty of Worlds Studies at the University of Tehran, an anti-Semite and a propagandist for the regime. Alikhani suggested that criticisms of the modern Israeli state are immaterial given the “historical violence of Zionism… Israel is a country that from its inception was based on force, coercion and oppression of others.” Among Alikhani’s “academic” sources was the notorious Holocaust denier Roger Garaudy.

An Ivy League University such as Harvard should provide its students with a marketplace of ideas, not one-sided propaganda.

References:

Jerusalem: Examining Settler Colonialism and Undoing Colonial Knowledge Production

Date:

Thursday, March 30, 2023, 4:30pm to 6:00pm

 Location:

CGIS Knafel 262, 1737 Cambridge St, Cambridge, MA 02138

The WCFIA/CMES Middle East Seminar is pleased to present

Nadera Shalhoub-Kevorkian 
Lawrence D Biele Chair in Law, Institute of Criminology-Faculty of Law, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem; and Chair in Global Law, Queen Mary University of London

Discussant: M. Brinton Lykes, PhD, Professor of Community-Cultural Psychology and Co-Director of the Center for Human Rights and International Justice, Boston College

Nadera Shalhoub-Kevorkian is the Lawrence D. Biele Chair in Law at the Faculty of Law-Institute of Criminology and the School of Social Work and Public Welfare at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and the Global Chair in Law- Queen Mary University of London. Her research focuses on trauma, state crimes and criminology, surveillance, gender violence, law and society. She studies the crime of femicide and other forms of gendered based violence, violence against children in conflict ridden areas, crimes of abuse of power in settler colonial contexts, surveillance, securitization and social control.

Shalhoub-Kevorkian is the author of numerous books among them “Militarization and Violence Against Women in Conflict Zones in the Middle East: The Palestinian Case Study” published in 2010;  “Security Theology, Surveillance and the Politics of Fear”, published by Cambridge University Press, 2015.  She just published a new book examining Palestinian childhood entitled: “Incarcerated Childhood and the Politics of Unchilding”, and a new edited book entitled: Understanding Campus-Community Partnerships in Conflict Zones”, and is currently co-editing two new book on the sacralization of politics and its effect on human suffering, and Islam and gender based violence.

She has published articles in multi-disciplinary fields including British Journal of Criminology, Feminist Studies, Ethnic and Racial Studies, State Crime, Violence Against Women, Social Science and Medicine, Signs, Law & Society Review, International Journal of Applied Psychoanalytic Studies.  As a resident of the old city of Jerusalem, Shalhoub-Kevorkian is a prominent local activist.  She engages in direct actions and critical dialogue to end the inscription of power over Palestinian children’s lives, spaces of death, and women’s birthing bodies and lives

Contact: Liz Flanagan

===========================================
CMES.png

Readings and Digital Resources on Palestine

May 21, 2021

Rosie Bsheer, Assistant Professor of History, and Cemal Kafadar, Vehbi Koç Professor of Turkish Studies, both core faculty members of the Center for Middle Eastern Studies, recommend the following English-language materials and resources to contextualize current events in Palestine. These resources offer analyses and histories of expulsion, occupation, settler colonialism, forced evictions, home demolitions, and annexation that situate the current struggle as part of the ongoing Nakba of 1948 and in relation to the Naksa of 1967. These resources also point to the myriad attempts to control knowledge production on Palestine and to silence critical speech that attempts to humanize Palestinians.

Samir
                                                          Mansour
                                                          Bookshop in
                                                          Gaza, Before
                                                          and After
                                                          Israeli
                                                          attack, May
                                                          18, 2021Samir Mansour Bookshop in Gaza, Before and After Israeli attack, May 18, 2021. Credit: @samirbookshop

 

ACADEMIC READINGS

Fayez Abdullah SayeghZionist Colonialism in Palestine, Vol. 1 (Beirut, Lebanon: Research Center, Palestine Liberation Organization, 1965).

Walid KhalidiFrom Haven to Conquest: Readings in Zionism and the Palestine Problem Until 1948 (Institute for Palestine Studies, 1971).

Fouzi Al-AsmarTo Be an Arab in Israel (Institute for Palestine Studies, 1978).

Rosemary SayighThe Palestinians: From Peasants to Revolutionaries (Zed Press, 1979).

Edward W. SaidThe Question of Palestine (Vintage, 1992).

Nadia Abu El-HajFacts on the Ground: Archaeological Practice and Territorial Self-Fashioning in Israeli Society (University of Chicago Press, 2002).

Rafi Segal and Eyal WeizmanA Civilian Occupation: The Politics of Israeli Architecture (Verso, 2003).

Sara RoyFailing Peace: Gaza and the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict (Pluto Press, 2006).

Ussama Makdisi and Paul A. SilversteinMemory and Violence in the Middle East and North Africa (Indiana University Press, 2006).

Omar Jabary SalamancaMezna QatoKareem Rabie, and Sobhi Samour, “Past is Present: Settler Colonialism in Palestine,” Settler Colonial Studies 2.1 (2012).

Shira RobinsonCitizen Strangers: Palestinians and the Birth of Israel’s Liberal Settler State (Stanford University Press, 2013).

Jasbir Puar, “Rethinking Homonationalism,” International Journal of Middle East Studies 45.2 (2013), 336-39.

Ella ShohatOn the Arab-Jew, Palestine, and Other Displacements (Pluto Press, 2017).

Tareq BaconiHamas Contained: The Rise and Pacification of Palestinian Resistance (Stanford University Press, 2018).

Rana Barakat, “Lifta, the Nakba, and the Museumification of Palestine’s History,” Native American and Indigenous Studies 5.2 (Fall 2018), pp. 1-15.

Sherene Seikaly, “How I Met My Great-Grandfather: Archives and the Writing of History,” Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa, and the Middle East 38.1 (May 2018), p. 6-20.

Ussama MakdisiAge of Coexistence: The Ecumenical Frame and the Making of the Modern Arab World (University of California Press, 2019).

Matthew HughesBritain’s Pacification of Palestine: The British Army, the Colonial State, and the Arab Revolt, 1936–1939 (Cambridge University Press, 2019).

Noura ErakatJustice for Some: Law and the Question of Palestine (Stanford University Press, 2019).

Rashid KhalidiThe Hundred Years’ War on Palestine: A History of Settler Colonialism and Resistance, 1917–2017 (Metropolitan Books, 2020).

Seth AnziskaPreventing Palestine: A Political History from Camp David to Oslo (Princeton University Press, 2020).

 

FICTION / POETRY

Emile HabibiThe Secret Life of Saeed: The Pessoptimist (1974, 2001).

Sahar KhalifehWild Thorns (Interlink Books, 1976).

Ghassan KanafaniMen in the Sun and other Palestinian Stories (Lynn Rienner, 1999).

Susan AbulhawaMornings in Jenin (Bloomsbury, 2010).

Mahmoud DarwishIn the Presence of Absence, trans. Sinan Antoon (Archipelago Books, 2011).

Basma Ghalayini (ed.), Palestine +100 Anthology: Stories from a Century after the Nakba (Commapress, 2019).

Ibtisam AzemThe Book of Disappearance (Syracuse University Press, 2019).

 

HUMAN RIGHTS REPORTS

Al-HaqAnnual Report on Human Rights in the Occupied Palestinian Territories, 1989.

UN Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia (ESCWA)Israeli Practices towards the Palestinian People and the Question of Apartheid, 2017.

UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial DiscriminationConcluding Observations on the Combined Seventeenth to Nineteenth Reports of Israel, 2019.

Al Mezan Center for Human RightsJoint Submission to the United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Situation of Human Rights in the Palestinian Territories Occupied Since 1967, 2020.

Human Rights WatchA Threshold Crossed: Israeli Authorities and the Crimes of Apartheid and Persecution, 2021.

B’TselemA Regime of Jewish Supremacy from the Jordan River to the Mediterranean Sea: This Is Apartheid, 2021.

 

MAINSTREAM MEDIA

Mohammed El-Kurd, “Tomorrow My Family and Neighbors May Be Forced From Our Homes by Israeli Settlers,” The Nation, November 20, 2020.

Noura Erakat and Mariam Barghouti, “Sheikh Jarrah Highlights the Violent Brazenness of Israel’s Colonialist Project, The Washington Post, May 10, 2021.

“Israel v Palestine Conflict,” Last Week Tonight with John Oliver, S08E12, May 16, 2021.

Nora Erakat, interview by Becky Anderson, CNN, May 18, 2021.

Nimer Sultany, “Peaceful Coexistence in Israel Hasn’t Been Shattered – It’s Always Been a Myth,” The Guardian, M

Diplomacy between Saudi Arabia and Iran could isolate and constrain Israel

Suppose the Israeli defense establishment, the prime minister, and the inner security cabinet decide that Iran’s uranium enrichment at 84 percent, close to what’s needed for a nuclear weapon, and its progress in weaponizing a warhead is making a nuclear breakout imminent. They share the information with their ally, the United States, which has promised never to allow Iran to have a nuclear weapon. What next?

Although America is unhappy that China appears to be the new kingmaker in the Middle East, having brokered a deal for Iran and Saudi Arabia to restore diplomatic ties, it may conclude the region is more stable, at least for the short term, with the adversaries talking and less saber-rattling. Perhaps the Biden administration thinks this diplomacy has created an opportunity to convince Iran to rejoin the nuclear agreement known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA). Negotiations regarding the JCPOA have been suspended, but President Biden’s Iran envoy, Robert Malley, has not given up his attempts at diplomacy.

Important news item

Arab attacks continued unabated this week against Jews on the roads of Israel. 145 attacks occurred this week alone, with bullets, stones and molotov cocktails.
Since the US government granted more than a billion dollars to the PA since Joe Biden became president, I have asked US ambassador Tom Nides, after each murder, if the US will use its leverage with the PA to ask that the PA repeal its law which provides a salary for life as an incentive to murder Jews.
The PA also pays the family of the killer, if the assailant dies while committing the murder of a Jew.

This is the law at hand:

https://jcpa.org/paying-salaries-terrorists-contradicts-palestinian-vows-peaceful-intentions/

The answer from Ambassador Nides is that he condemns “pay to slay” and “all forms of violence”. Yet Nides is not willing to ask the PA to repeal their unprecedented law. Asked why he will not ask the PA to repeal its “pay for slay” statute, Ambassador Nides acknowledges the inquiry and declines to respond.

While it is common knowledge that the Palestine Liberation Organization authorizes the PA to remunerate anyone who murders a Jew, the fact that this policy was enshrined in law by the PA in August 2015 is less well known.

A German Tourist in Israel describes an Arab terror attack against German tourists whom they thought to be Jews

Now 14 is proud to present a value-based television that has repented of its flag to bring the true news without interests, the values ​​of Judaism, Zionism, Shabbat and the Land of Israel. The channel symbolizes the media correction for the responsible right, after many years of discrimination. On our website and networks you can enjoy a variety of content, such as: the program “Israel this morning” with the media personality Shay Golden, “Riklin and Co” with Shimon Riklin, “Seva” with the political commentator Yaakov Bardugo and the presenter Tal Meir, “The Main Edition” presented by the media woman Maggie Tavibi And with the participation of the channel’s selected reporters and of course the intriguing panel of “The Patriots” with the participation of Yanon Magal, Itamar Fleishman, Irit Linor, Tal Gilboa, Yiki Adamkar, Dror Kapah, Ari Shamai and more.

Förintelsens minnesdag 2023

Bertil Oppenheimer föreläser i Lindesberg.

Click here to see the video. 

Stoppa alla svenska skattepengar som göder det palestinska hatet

Itamar Marcus, grundaren av organisationen Palestinian Media Watch, som granskar det som sägs i palestinsk media och lärs ut i palestinska skolor, besökte riksdagen förra veckan med ett tjugotal ledamöter i åhörarskaran.

Det var inte första gången som Itamar Marcus besökte riksdagen med samma budskap: Barn indoktrineras i hat mot judar och Israel i palestinska skolor, även under UNWRA:s regi, och palestinska officiella medier används för att göda allt mer hat och förespråka terror mot Israel bland annat genom att hylla självmordsterrorister och visa små barn som sjunger om våldets väg.

Dessutom betalar den Fatah-styrda palestinska myndigheten lön till dem som mördat israeliska judar – ju fler mördade desto högre lön. Lönen kan uppgå till miljoner svenska kronor till dem som har mest blod på händerna. Och ju längre fängelsestraff desto mer hedras dessa ”martyrer” av den palestinska myndigheten, som namnger gator, torg och skolor efter dem.

Samtidigt straffas de som söker samarbete med israeler, med fängelse och ibland även död.

Denna systematiska indoktrinering av barn från tidig förskoleålder har börjat bära sin dåliga frukt. Allt yngre palestinska tonåringar har börjat förverkliga sin livsmålsättning att bli ”martyrer”, alltså att själva dö med ”ära” genom att döda judar. Och deras mödrar berättar på palestinsk tv hur hedrade de är över barnens martyrskap.

Detta budskap, bekräftat med en mångfald av bild- och videobevis, har slutligen börjat gå hem hos allt fler riksdagsledamöter. Sverige har ju traditionellt varit en av de största understödjarna av den palestinska myndigheten och FN-organet UNWRA. Och inte bara det – stödet har varit villkorslöst. Men nu vill KD, SD, L och vissa i M se en förändring.

Den nya regeringen halverade därför detta stöd i sin första budget. Det är ett viktigt steg i rätt riktning. Men det måste åtföljas av en fortsatt stark neddragning i kommande höstbudget. Och stödet behöver inte bara villkoras och följas upp, utan omdirigeras. Om nu regeringen, enligt Tidöavtalet, samt i princip alla riksdagspartier förespråkar en tvåstatslösning, där två stater, Israel och Palestina, ska leva fredfullt och säkert sida vid sida, så behöver regeringens agerande stödja det, inte motverka det.

Allt stöd till den palestinska myndigheten möjliggör i dagens läge betalningen av löner till terrorister och uppviglandet till hat i samhället. Om den kan spara på kostnader till andra delar av civilsamhället genom det villkorslösa stöd som den får från svenska skattemedel, så frigörs medel till det som direkt motsätter regeringens utsagda mål.

Till detta hör att BDS-rörelsen (bojkott, desinvestering och sanktion av judiska företag och verksamheter, i synnerhet med koppling till Judeen och Samarien) borde definieras som antisemitisk, såsom den redan har gjorts i många andra västländer. Rörelsen skadar inte bara judiska företag utan i allra högsta grad palestinier, som får samma arbetsvillkor och lön som sina judiska kollegor i dessa företag – vilket är betydligt bättre än i palestinska företag.

Dessa företag bidrar till fredlig samexistens. Ingen organisation som förespråkar BDS borde få stöd från svenska staten.

Om regeringen vill fortsätta att stödja det palestinska samhället borde stödet riktas strikt till fredsundervisning och initiativ som främjar fredlig samexistens med israeler, inte hatfull separation. Samma krav borde regeringen ställa på EU:s stöd till de palestinska araberna, med full transparens om vart pengarna slutligen och verkligen går.

On World Water Day, boat undertakes maiden Dead Sea voyage

After a successful crowdfunding campaign, the Dead Sea Revival Project is launching eco-educational boat excursions in the Dead Sea, the lowest land point on Earth.

The announcement was timed to coincide with World Water Day on March 22. The tours are designed to raise awareness of the shrinking sea and the ecosystems it supports.

“Today, 98 percent of the natural coastline of the northern Dead Sea is inaccessible due to over 7,000 sinkholes,” said Noam Bedein, founder of the Dead Sea Revival Project.

“The only way to truly explore the Dead Sea and experience its wonders is by boat. I have been privileged to do this for the past seven years and capture photos of the changing landscape. Now I can offer this experience to the general public and continue accompanying, researching and documenting the Dead Sea’s disappearance to share with the world.”

After a two-hour, 50-kilometer journey starting at the southern end of the Dead Sea, the boat docks at Neve Midbar Beach, a location that is accessible for Israelis and Palestinians.

On World Water Day, boat undertakes maiden Dead Sea voyage
The Dead Sea Boat docks at Neve Midbar Beach after a two-hour journey. Photo courtesy of the Dead Sea Revival Project

Ari Leon Fruchter, an art patron and social entrepreneur who cofounded the Dead Sea Revival Project, says, “As people travel to the Dead Sea through Jerusalem they will for the first time be able to discover the Dead Sea’s environmental secrets, and explore it from the water itself.”

As well as boosting awareness and education, Fruchter said he hopes that profits from the boat tours will bring his dream of a Dead Sea Museum closer to realization.

The Dead Sea Boat operates Sunday to Friday. Guests have complete access to all the facilities of Neve Midbar beach and can spend the entire day there. For more information and to book a boat tour, click here.

Israel’s judicial reform: strengthening democracy

A short explanation on how the judicial reforms in progress will address the anomalies of the Israeli system and bring Israel closer to the rest of the Western democracies