How Taxpayer Funds Are Flowing to a Group Bankrolling Anti-Netanyahu Protests

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu Associated Press

The U.S. government has been funneling taxpayer money to the left-wing group bankrolling protests against Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu, according to Israeli funding documents reviewed by the Washington Free Beacon.

 

The documents indicate that, since 2020, Foggy Bottom has sent over $38,000 to the Movement for Quality Government (MQG), the Israeli nonprofit stoking nationwide anti-Netanyahu protests that have seen protesters clash with police and target Netanyahu’s family members. MQG is seeking to takedown Netanyahu’s government over his support for major reforms to the Israeli supreme court that would significantly limit its power. The organization petitioned Israel’s Supreme Court earlier this year to oust Netanyahu, claiming he is unfit for office due to ongoing investigations into allegations of political corruption and bribery.

Click here to read full article. 

Recycling

When one thinks of recycling, the generally accepted definition is the process of collecting and processing materials that would otherwise be thrown away as trash and turning them into new products.

Michael Kuttner

As Israel is yet again admonished to cease the so-called “cycles” of violence, it seems that the above explanation is nowadays most apt.

After millennia of the same old obsessive fetish about Jews and their supposed malign influence on humanity, it would be logical to think that in the twenty-first century of the civil calendar, these lies and myths could be consigned to the trash. Instead of being discarded and turned into a new and more enlightened reincarnation, unfortunately, they are recycled, albeit in an increased toxic version.

The annual commemoration of the events surrounding the saving of Persian Jews from genocide is upon us.

It is astounding how despite the passage of time, we are still currently faced with the same calamitous challenges and identical machinations. Whether it is plots to eliminate the nation State of the Jews or the age-old virus of virulent collective hate, the aims remain the same.

Every year as we celebrate Purim, the lessons of those events become starker and more relevant. Unfortunately, even when the signs and omens stare us in the face, there are still far too many who refuse to acknowledge the dangers.

Last night at a social event I happened to speak to a friend of mine who made aliyah about four decades ago from South Africa. He was recently back there visiting relations, and he recounted how the country has seriously deteriorated. There are daily power cuts, the water supply is intermittent at times, and crime has skyrocketed. The Government has adopted a virulent anti-Israel policy and, in fact, has these days moved closer to China and Russia. Inevitably the rhetoric about Israel must, at some stage, impact the South African Jewish Community. Past experience should teach us that what follows will not be good for the Jews.

My friend told me with a sense of incredulity that when he asked young Jews why, given the prevailing winds, they did not leave, the responses floored him. Where else, they responded, could they replicate the “wonderful” lifestyle they currently enjoyed? If this is not a recycling of past errors of judgment, I don’t know what else it is. The end result will inevitably be a rerun of historic disasters as the collective hate against Israel inevitably rebounds onto local Jews.

As I mentioned in my last op-ed the Islamic holiday of Ramadan is almost upon us. In past years without fail and as predictable as a Swiss cuckoo clock, this holy period is hijacked by Islamic fanatics in order to perpetrate terror outrages. Once upon a time, Israel’s existence and policies were the excuses for murder and mayhem but now the jihadist hatred of “non-believers” has equal billing.

Thanks to the mendacious hypocrisy and spineless reactions of the international community, the voices of moderate Muslims and interfaith activists are drowned out. All the terror-sponsoring nations and groups need to hear is a condemnation of Israel for actively resisting such mayhem. Sure enough, as is the case every year, Israel has again been admonished by all and sundry to show restraint and not engage in any provocative actions. The clear message is that any subsequent Ramadan murders and outrages are the fault of the victims because they refused to buckle under in the first place.

Thus it has always been, and so it is again this year.

In actual fact, the terrorists never needed to wait for Ramadan as an excuse to murder Jews. It is open season all year around. The trouble is that nobody remembered to tell the UN Secretary-General or his officials or any of the myriad of knee-jerk political commentators and politicians who lose no opportunity to collectively warn Israel.

The EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs pompously pontificated that the “use of force must be in full respect of international law.” He may be a “high” representative, but whatever he is smoking has certainly addled his brain.

The UN Special coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process (a misnomer if ever there was one) for the umpteenth time exclaimed that he was “deeply disturbed by the continuing cycle of violence.” The obsession with some sort of moral equivalence between murderers and their victims plays right into the hands of the perpetrators.

Once again, the UN Secretary-General managed to display his uncanny ability to skewer Israel. Speaking at a pro-Palestinian event at the UN, he warned against “provocations at Jerusalem holy sites and escalating violence in the West Bank.” In case his message was not clear enough as to who was really responsible, he “decried settlement activity and called for more support for Palestinians.” For the benefit of those still in doubt as to the guilty party, he added that “the situation in the occupied (sic) Palestinian territory is at its most combustible in years. The situation in Jerusalem/Al Quds is becoming more fragile amidst provocations and acts of violence in and around the holy sites. It radiates instability across the region and beyond.”

There you have it in a nutshell. Jews wanting to visit and pray at Judaism’s holiest site are basically responsible for acts of terror that ensue. Not to be outdone, Bernie Sanders blasted Israel for “demeaning the Palestinian people.” Following the same old recycled script, the White House tells us that we must “de-escalate tensions.”

The only additional accusation that our terror-supporting “partners” needed to hear was the affirmation of Israel’s original sin expressed by Jews. Sure enough, this materialised quicker than you can eat Hamantaschen. US Jewish progressives, supported by the likes of J.Street, Peace Now and the New Israel Fund, took to the streets with banners reading “no democracy with occupation” and similar slogans. Their Israeli counterparts followed suit.

Is it any wonder, therefore, that bitter and frustrated Israeli Jews riot after yet more terror attacks? While mob violence and vigilante mayhem cannot be condoned, it is not hard to understand why the accumulated anger was bound to boil over sooner rather than later. Kowtowing to international hypocrisy, political hot air and a refusal to deal firmly once and for all with those who seek our demise have all culminated in a rising tide of rage.

The US State Department has issued a travel advisory and demanded that Israeli authorities arrest and punish the perpetrators of the revenge attack on the Arab village from where the terrorist murderers of two Jewish brothers originated. It is precisely this sort of pompous interference in our affairs that roils many Israelis.

Of course, the authorities will investigate and arrest those responsible. That is what any responsible democratic country would do without having to be prompted.

With mass shootings in the US occurring almost daily, what would be the reaction if Israel issued travel advisories and demanded stern action from the US authorities?

There are several pertinent points to highlight.

Where are the demands for Abbas and his security forces to arrest and deal with the terrorists who are educated and inculcated with Jew hate courtesy of PA schools, media and officials? Why do Biden, Blinken and colleagues not demand the immediate cessation of “pay to slay” stipends for terrorists and their families? Why does the US continue to send millions of US taxpayers’ money to UNRWA?

The spectacle of the German Government lecturing Jews about moral behaviour is worthy of a special Purim shpiel on its own.

Also disseminating skewed reports are the likes of the NY Times, Washington Post, Guardian and others. Taking their cue from our own ultra-left and post-Zionist media, our brethren living in exile and the general public believe it is the whole story.

Instead of recycling failed pious pronouncements, how about actually tackling the root causes? Deal seriously with terror-supporting nations and entities so that their ability to foster murder is eliminated.

That will definitely remove the so-called cycles of violence once and for all.

Perhaps it may also eliminate the endless cycles of idiocy we are forced to face on a daily basis.

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.

Special Report: the Palestinian Education System Praises the Terror Attack in Neve Yaakov

On January 27th, Friday night, there was a terror attack in Jerusalem (Neve Yaacov) in which seven people were murdered and three injured. The terrorist, Alkam Hayri, was a 21-year-old Palestinian from East Jerusalem. He drove to the neighborhood, and after the Sabbath Eve services at Ateret Avraham synagogue he opened fire at the people outside the synagogue and those nearby.

Special-Report-the-Palestinian-Education-System-Praises-the-Terror-Attack-in-Neve-Yaakov-1-1

The Palestinian Nakba: Failure to Dismantle the Jewish State

In November 2022, IAM reported that “(Hebrew U) Amos Goldberg Continues Comparing the Palestinian Self-Inflicted Nakba to the Holocaust of the Jews by the Nazis.”

Professor Amos Goldberg, a Hebrew University Holocaust researcher, and Dr. Bashir Bashir of the Van Leer Institute, Jerusalem, co-authored a 2018 book that contends “the Shoah [Holocaust] and the Nakba are two interlinked catastrophes.” According to them, when a Palestinian is asked about the Holocaust, he often brings up the Nakba, “the displacement of Palestinians associated with the founding of the state of Israel.” Goldberg and Bashir have “developed a concept aimed at promoting dialogue about these two interlinked national traumas.”

According to Goldberg and Bashir, The “Shoah was, in terms of its scale, not comparable with any other event that as such is considered singular.” But since “the Holocaust has become the ultimate symbol of evil… any attempt to connect it even loosely with other chapters of the history of violence is quickly suspected of being an attempt to trivialize the Holocaust.” They argue, “while the Shoah is over as an historical event and the Jewish people have, despite the trauma, been able to get back on its feet again, the Palestinians are to this day, in a position of political, military, economic, and cultural weakness because of the consequences of the Nakba.” This “asymmetry in the national catastrophes of both peoples from a moral point of view: the Palestinians were not to blame for the Holocaust, but the Israelis were responsible for the displacement and flight of the Palestinians and for their discrimination in Israel and oppression in the Occupied Territories.” The “rapprochement between Israelis and Palestinians, who both see themselves as victim communities, is made more difficult above all because the Shoah and the Nakba are used equally to legitimize national claims.” They wish to integrate the catastrophe of the other into one’s own narrative without abandoning the “ultimate claim to justice.”

As IAM explained, an event hosting Goldberg and Bashir titled “Understanding the pain of the others.” by the Goethe institute in Tel Aviv and the Rosa Luxemburg Foundation was supposed to take place on November 13, 2022, but a week earlier, Goethe institute postponed the event.

According to the Goethe Institute, “The public discourse that has developed in Germany and Israel in the run-up to the event has made it impossible to carry out the event appropriately. Since we are expecting disruptions to the event, we cannot guarantee a safe implementation of the panel discussion at this point. The important topic of remembrance culture cannot be addressed in the way it needs to under these circumstances. The Goethe-Institute and the Rosa Luxemburg Foundation have therefore decided to postpone the event.”

 

Dani Dayan, the chairman of Yad Vashem, announced that the event would be canceled entirely.

 

However, disregarding the protest, the event took place in Germany on February 2, 2023. The Einstein Forum at the University of Potsdam held the roundtable discussion.

 

The speakers included Bashir, Goldberg, and Charlotte Wiedemann. According to the invitation, “In her book Understanding the Pain of Others, the author Charlotte Wiedemann pleads for a new inclusive memory culture that promotes solidarity instead of competition among victims. Doing justice to the victims of colonial crimes and their descendants does not call into question the specificity of the Shoah. On the contrary: the importance of human rights for all is a central lesson from the Holocaust. But tragically, Holocaust memory has not brought us much closer to such universal values. In their co-edited volume The Holocaust and the Nakba: A New Grammar of Trauma and History Amos Goldberg, Bashir Bashir, and the contributors to the volume explore the possibility of creating a shared language for discussing the memories of two entangled, but entirely different historical events: the genocide of European Jews and the displacement of Palestinians. At the center of this new language is the concept of empathic unsettlement which challenges the mutual denial of the suffering of the Other, recognizes the political asymmetries in Israel-Palestine, and gives rise to an egalitarian binationalism.”

The following day, Francesca Albanese, UN Special Rapporteur oPt, wrote on Twitter: “‘Understanding the Pain of Others: The Holocaust, the Nakba and German Memory Culture’- An outstanding event yesterday night at the @einsteinforum , in Potsdam. I was deeply moved by it, & the eloquence & strength of the speakers on such a sensitive topic.”

As IAM indicated, efforts to equate the Holocaust and the Nakba are insidious cases of propaganda to demonize the Jewish state.

Goldberg, a Professor of Holocaust Studies, should know well that Jews had no choice when loaded on trains to be murdered in extermination camps. On the other hand, the Palestinians made their own choice, albeit flawed. The Palestinian leader, Mufti Haj Amin al Husseini, a Nazi collaborator, ordered the riots of 1936-39, where numerous Jews were killed. His ultimate goal, which he discussed with Hitler in Berlin, was establishing extermination camps in Palestine. The British victory over the Nazis in El Alamein spared the Jews in Palestine the fate of their European brethren.

 

In 1947, when the United Nations voted to divide Palestine into two states – a larger one for the Palestinians and a smaller one for the Jews – the Palestinians made another flawed decision. They rejected the Partition Proposal and – together with their Arab Allied States started a war against the new Jewish states, which they lost.

It is easy to understand why the Palestinians would want to minimize their responsibility. It is more difficult to explain why Goldberg would spend much of his academic career producing propaganda-like literature to this effect. Unfortunately, he is not the only one. IAM has repeatedly pointed out that radical academic activists have used the lax rules of academic freedom to write about topics that further their political agenda. The Israeli taxpayer who supports the universities deserves better.

 

Understanding the Pain of Others. The Holocaust, the Nakba and German Memory Culture
Podiumsdiskussion
Donnerstag, 2.2.2023, 19:00h

Bashir Bashir, Amos Goldberg, Charlotte Wiedemann

Understanding the Pain of Others
The Holocaust, the Nakba and German Memory Culture

Gesprächsleitung: Susan Neiman, Potsdam

Live im Einstein Forum. Das Tragen einer medizinischen Maske wird empfohlen.
Auch im Live-Stream via Zoom (hier registrieren)

In her book Understanding the Pain of Others, the author Charlotte Wiedemann pleads for a new inclusive memory culture that promotes solidarity instead of competition among victims. Doing justice to the victims of colonial crimes and their descendants does not call into question the specificity of the Shoah. On the contrary: the importance of human rights for all is a central lesson from the Holocaust. But tragically, Holocaust memory has not brought us much closer to such universal values.
In their co-edited volume The Holocaust and the Nakba: A New Grammar of Trauma and History Amos Goldberg, Bashir Bashir, and the contributors to the volume explore the possibility of creating a shared language for discussing the memories of two entangled, but entirely different historical events: the genocide of European Jews and the displacement of Palestinians. At the center of this new language is the concept of empathic unsettlement which challenges the mutual denial of the suffering of the Other, recognizes the political asymmetries in Israel-Palestine, and gives rise to an egalitarian binationalism.
This debate was originally scheduled to take place in the Goethe Institute Tel Aviv but was cancelled due to political pressure.


Charlotte Wiedemann
 is a journalist and author. She has published numerous books on international topics, most recently Den Schmerz der Anderen begreifen. Holocaust und Weltgedächtnis (2022). Afflicted by silence in her own family, she has followed debates about German responsibility for National Socialism for four decades.

Bashir Bashir
 is associate professor of political theory at the Open University of Israel and senior research fellow at the Van Leer Jerusalem Institute. His research interests are: democratic theory, nationalism and citizenship studies, liberalism, decolonization, and reconciliation. His most recent publication is The Arab and Jewish Questions: Geographies of Engagement in Palestine and Beyond (2020).

Amos Goldberg is associate professor of Jewish History and Contemporary Jewry at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. For decades he has researched Holocaust memory at the intersection of history, critical theory, and literature. His publications include Trauma in First Person: Diary Writing during the Holocaust (2017) and his co-edited volume Marking Evil: Holocaust Memory in the Global Age (2015).

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4bs-JNnCv-k

Bashir Bashir, Amos Goldberg, Charlotte Wiedemann: Understanding the Pain of Others

Einstein Forum
3.29K subscribers

Feb 5, 2023

Understanding the Pain of Others: The Holocaust, the Nakba and German Memory Culture In her book »Understanding the Pain of Others«, the author Charlotte Wiedemann pleads for a new inclusive memory culture that promotes solidarity instead of competition among victims. Doing justice to the victims of colonial crimes and their descendants does not call into question the specificity of the Shoah. On the contrary: the importance of human rights for all is a central lesson from the Holocaust. But tragically, Holocaust memory has not brought us much closer to such universal values. In their co-edited volume »The Holocaust and the Nakba: A New Grammar of Trauma and History« Amos Goldberg, Bashir Bashir, and the contributors to the volume explore the possibility of creating a shared language for discussing the memories of two entangled, but entirely different historical events: the genocide of European Jews and the displacement of Palestinians. At the center of this new language is the concept of empathic unsettlement which challenges the mutual denial of the suffering of the Other, recognizes the political asymmetries in Israel-Palestine, and gives rise to an egalitarian binationalism. This debate was originally scheduled to take place in the Goethe Institute Tel Aviv but was cancelled due to political pressure. Chair: Susan Neiman, Potsdam Charlotte Wiedemann is a journalist and author. She has published numerous books on international topics, most recently »Den Schmerz der Anderen begreifen. Holocaust und Weltgedächtnis« (2022). Afflicted by silence in her own family, she has followed debates about German responsibility for National Socialism for four decades. Bashir Bashir is associate professor of political theory at the Open University of Israel and senior research fellow at the Van Leer Jerusalem Institute. His research interests are: democratic theory, nationalism and citizenship studies, liberalism, decolonization, and reconciliation. His most recent publication is »The Arab and Jewish Questions: Geographies of Engagement in Palestine and Beyond« (2020). Amos Goldberg is associate professor of Jewish History and Contemporary Jewry at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. For decades he has researched Holocaust memory at the intersection of history, critical theory, and literature. His publications include »Trauma in First Person: Diary Writing during the Holocaust« (2017) and his co-edited volume »Marking Evil: Holocaust Memory in the Global Age« (2015).

Francesca Albanese, UN Special Rapporteur oPt
@FranceskAlbs
“Understanding the Pain of Others: The Holocaust, the Nakba and German Memory Culture”- An outstanding event yesterday night at the

, in Potsdam. I was deeply moved by it, & the eloquence & strength of the speakers on such a sensitive topic. Recording available.

Einstein Forum
@einsteinforum·
Feb 2
Bashir Bashir, Amos Goldberg, Charlotte Wiedemann: Understanding the Pain of Others twitter.com/i/broadcasts/1
69.3K

Views

Filippo Passerini
@f_passerini94
Replying to

and

there is not room at all ever to even think of equiparating the nakba with the holocaust. no. way. ever.

Francesca Albanese, UN Special Rapporteur oPt
@FranceskAlbs
If you took the time to listen to the event & the speakers you would realize that no one here or there is trying to equate anything. As Professor Goldberg masterfully said, it is about understanding the nexus between the two tragedies as key to understand ‘the pain of the other’.
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https://www.jpost.com/israel-news/article-722205

German event comparing Holocaust to ‘Nakba’ canceled after Yad Vashem intervenes

The planned panel faced stark criticism from the Israeli Foreign Ministry and Jewish organizations.

Published: NOVEMBER 13, 2022 03:16

The German state-funded Goethe Institute pulled the plug on a slated Sunday event in Tel Aviv that draws a line of connection between the Holocaust and the Palestinian “Nakba,” Yad Vashem chairman Dani Dayan announced on Friday.

Nakba (catastrophe) is the term Palestinians use for their defeat and exile at the hands of Israeli forces during the 1948 War of Independence.

Dayan wrote on Twitter: “At the end of our in-depth conversation, [Goethe Institute Board chairman Mr. Johannes] Ebert assured me that the event will not take place. Wise decision.”

Earlier today, I spoke at length with the Chairman of the Board of the worldwide Goethe Institute Mr. Johannes Ebert. At the end of our in-depth conversation, Mr. Ebert assured me that the event will not take place. Wise decision. https://t.co/O60L0CYtQM

— Dani Dayan (@AmbDaniDayan) November 11, 2022

When The Jerusalem Post queried the institute on Monday, Jessica Kraatz Magri, a spokeswoman for Goethe, told the Post that the organization “postponed the event” until Sunday and provided an updated link to the discussion. The event was sponsored by left-wing German political party Rosa Luxemburg Foundation (RLS).

Foreign Ministry, Jewish and Zionist organizations express outrage at planned panel

Following a hailstorm of criticism on Wednesday about the event just as Jews around the world were commemorating Kristallnacht, Goethe stuck with its postponement.

The Foreign Ministry called for the cancellation of the event and expressed “shock and disgust” after the original announcement, calling it “blatant contempt of the Holocaust” and a “cynical and manipulative intent to create a connection whose entire purpose is to defame Israel.”

Dayan tweeted prior to the event that it “constitutes intolerable distortion of the Holocaust. Holding it on the anniversary of the November Pogrom (‘Kristallnacht’) is unforgivable.”

The event planned by the German cultural institute @goetheinstitut in Israel constitutes intolerable distortion of the Holocaust. Holding it on the anniversary of the November Pogrom (“Kristallnacht”) is unforgivable. pic.twitter.com/T1ifmEwVqc

— Dani Dayan (@AmbDaniDayan) November 8, 2022

Israel’s Ambassador to Germany Ron Prosor told 103FM Radio that the event is “an attempt to make an inappropriate comparison at the expense of Holocaust survivors.” He added that “if it wasn’t ironic it would be tragic. This must not become an accepted discourse under the pretense of ‘holding a civilized discussion.’ It’s not.”

Alrun Kaune-Nüßlein, the director of political communication for RLS, told the Post that “we try to enable a debate between different democratic and emancipatory positions, as it corresponds to the tasks of an institution for social analysis and political education. As a left-wing institution in and from Germany, dealing with the numerous Nazi mass crimes – and in particular the murder of six million Jews – is central to us. Relativizing the Shoah is unacceptable for the Rosa Luxemburg Foundation,” she said.

“We regret that the date of the event caused irritation. We are therefore postponing the event to November 13, 2022.”

Journalist at center of panel has faced criticism for anti-Israel views

At the now-canceled event, journalist Charlotte Wiedemann was set to discuss her book Grasping the Pain of the Others with Bashir Bashir, associate professor of Political Theory at the Open University of Israel; Amos Goldberg, associate professor of Holocaust History and director of the Research Institute for Contemporary Judaism at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem; and Inge Gunther, a journalist covering Israeli and Palestinian affairs.

Wiedemann has faced criticism for her attacks on Israel’s existence. She wrote in the left-wing German daily newspaper taz: “There is no need to agree on the extent to which the founding of the State of Israel was also an act of settler colonialism.”

The left-wing and pro-Israel weekly paper Jungle World criticized the author for her pro-Iran regime views. Danyal Casar wrote that “Charlotte Wiedemann can nowhere see such an opposition in the taz.” Wiedemann wrote that ‘there is no opposition’ which could take responsibility in Tehran if the current system implodes.”

Tzvi Joffre contributed to this report.

SWC Condemns Murder of Two Brothers in Huwara by Palestinian Terrorist

Leading Jewish Human Rights NGO Reiterates Call for US and Other Donor Nations to Demand Palestine Authority Revoke Law that Financially Rewards Terrorists and Their Families

JERUSALEM – Monday, February 27, 2023 ­– The Simon Wiesenthal Center (SWC) condemns yesterday’s cold-blooded murder by a Palestinian terrorist of two young Israeli brothers on the main road of the Arab town of Huwara. The brothers, who were shot in their car, lived in a nearby Jewish Community in Samaria. This is the latest murders of Israeli civilians including two Jewish children runover by a Palestinian terrorist two weeks ago.
Rabbi Abraham Cooper, Associate Dean and Director of Global Social Action for the SWC, issued the following statement:
“We mourn the latest innocent victims of Palestinian terrorists and the lurid celebrations of these killing on social media and on the streets of Arab communities. The SWC also deplores the attack on Huwara by a number of Jews last night, during which arson fires were started, destroying buildings and injuring Palestinian civilians. Israel is a democratic society and anyone who breaks its laws should and will be held fully accountable.
The SWC reiterates its call for the US and other donor nations to demand that Palestine Authority revoke its law that financially rewards terrorists and their families with financial rewards for the murder of Jews and that they demand, once and for all, that UNRWA finally and totally remove from its curriculum the veneration of Palestinian terrorists.”
Rabbi Abraham Cooper is currently in Jerusalem to speak at the Global Coalition for Israel, which brings together 200 Jewish leaders from dozens of countries.

For further information contact the Center’s Communications department at pressinquiries@wiesenthal.com, join the Center on Facebook, or follow @simonwiesenthal for news updates sent directly to your Twitter feed. Media can also contact James Lambert, Vice President at Rubenstein Public Relations, at jlambert@rubensteinpr.com or at 212-805-3024.

Israel was hit by 5,000 Palestinian terror attacks in 2022. It has to defend itself

Jalal Abukhater’s article (There’s no cycle of violence in Jerusalem – only Israel’s lethal oppression of my people, 7 February), published days after a Palestinian terrorist murdered seven innocent people at a synagogue in Jerusalem on Holocaust Memorial Day, subordinates the value of Israeli lives.

Palestinians and Israelis are both suffering, and this pains me. This is precisely why the article illustrates a problem in the wider discourse – the denial of, and refusal to accept, Israeli suffering. In 2022, Israelis suffered from over 5,000 Palestinian terror attacks, including car-rammings, shootings, stabbings and bombings targeting innocent men, women and children on the streets of Israel. This is the reality on the ground. On 10 February, for example, a Palestinian drove his car into a crowded bus stop, killing three people, including two brothers aged six and eight. Just imagine you or your loved ones falling victim to such abhorrent terror on your way to work. This is precisely why Israel’s counter-terrorism apparatus exists, because without it I dread to think how many more zeros would be added to that 5,000 total.

Israel has shown its desire for peace with the Palestinians throughout the years, including several attempts to sign peace agreements in 1993, 2000, 2008 and 2014 and we continue to reach out for peace. However, violence is rife. Just this month, three Palestinian teenagers carried out three terror attacks targeting Israeli civilians. This does not happen in a vacuum. Unfortunately, Palestinian incitement is embedded within the society from a young age. Textbooks at schools, social media and Palestinian Authority policy are all geared towards violence against innocent Israelis. I am hopeful that there will be peace. For this to happen, there must be recognition from the Palestinian leadership that incitement and violence must end.

Orly Goldschmidt
Spokesperson
, Embassy of Israel to the UK

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Information Request on UNRWA

RESPONSE SENT TO A  MEMBER OF THE UK PARLIAMENT FOLLOWING  A  REQUEST AS TO WHAT UNRWA POLICY QUESTIONS SHOULD BE ASKED OF THE UK GOVERNMENT APPLICABLE TO ANY UNRWA DONOR NATION

David Bedein
Director

23 February 2023

To: A Senior Parliamentary Assistant to …

House of Lords SW1A 0PW Parliament

Dear Ms.

I am pleased to respond to your request to suggest questions about UNRWA to raise in the UK Parliament.

Context: The UK is a major donor to UNRWA and can influence UNRWA policy.

https://www.unrwa.org/how-you-can-help/government-partners/funding-trends

The following questions, in bold, challenge UK lawmakers to ask UNRWA to act in accordance with the values of the United Nations.

1.  In 2017, UNRWA introduced a textbook which features a woman named  Dalal el Mugrabi – whose terror squad commandeered a civilian bus and murdered more than 30  passengers, including 13 children – as a role model for UNRWA pupils. In the new UNRWA text, Dalal is portrayed in full terror garb, followed by a lesson plan which presents her life story for adulation and emulation. Why does the UK not ask for the removal of this and other such texts taught at United Nations schools?

https://israelbehindthenews.com/2021/11/30/dalal-al-mughrabi-a-murderous-terrorist-as-a-role-model-in-palestinian-authority-schoolbooks-used-by-unrwa-2/

2. UNRWA contracts for exclusive use of Palestinian Authority schoolbooks in Judea, Samaria, Jerusalem and Gaza. Like all UN agencies, UNRWA administers its schools under the UN slogan of “Peace Begins Here.” PA education, however, runs schools based on the ideology of the Palestine Liberation Organization, which is “the conquest of Palestine by force of arms”. In another new text, UNRWA pupils are taught to sing a song which encourages children to “exterminate the usurpers” after the Arabs return to control of Palestine Why does the UK not ask UNRWA to instead offer a curriculum based on peace and reconciliation?

https://israelbehindthenews.com/2014/04/07/the-u-n-s-child-death-cult-education/

https://israelbehindthenews.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/Jews-in-Palestinian-Authority-Schoolbooks-in-UNRWA-Use.pdf

https://www.terrorism-info.org.il/en/?s=GROISS

3. El Kutla youth clubs in UNRWA schools, affiliated with Hamas, inspire pupils with the mantra of the armed struggle from a young age. https://israelbehindthenews.com/2022/02/11/new-research-hamas-operation-of-unrwa-youth-clubs-in-unrwa-schools/

Why does the UK not ask UNRWA to demand that youth clubs on UNRWA premises cease and desist from violent incitement?

https://israelbehindthenews.com/2022/03/08/hamas-islamic-bloc-in-unrwa-schools-in-the-gaza-strip-activities-modus-operandi/

4. UNRWA now presents 125 new maps in their schools with Arab names that delete the Jewish names of all Jewish communities. Meanwhile, Israel is wiped off the UNRWA maps. Since Israel is a member state of the United Nations, why does the UK not insist that Israel be included on UNRWA maps?

https://israelbehindthenews.com/2022/09/24/revealing-maps-the-palestinian-vision-as-taught-in-unrwa-schools/

5. UNRWA schools in Jenin and in Gaza have become virtual arsenals. Why does the UK not ask for a weapons and ammunition inspection of UNRWA facilities?

6. At this point in time, UNRWA holds out the “right of return” as the only option for the future of 6.7 million descendants of Arab refugees from the 1948 War who dwell as “refugees for perpetuity” in the indignity of 59 “temporary” refugee camps since 1949. However, the UNHCR, which protects the rights of refugees all over the world, has enforced the most important human right for all refugees to be settled in permanent homes, with dignity.

Why, then does the UK not endorse a plan for Arab refugees for the voluntary resettlement of UNRWA residents who wish to leave the squalid conditions of UNRWA refugee camps?

7. In light of the continued incitement at UNRWA facilities, the US and UNRWA signed an accord in July 2021 that requires UNRWA to eradicate incitement from its educational system as a condition for funds. When UNRWA refused to make such changes in the UNRWA curriculum, the US placed funds for UNRWA education in escrow. Would the UK also condition funds for UK education until UNRWA makes the relevant changes in its schools?

8. Hamas, defined by the UN as an illegal terrorist group, dominates some UNRWA facilities.

Since the UK defines Hamas as a terrorist group, why does the UK not demand the removal of Hamas from UNRWA?

Following murders committed by thirteen- and fourteen-year-old children from UNRWA, along with the widespread militarization of Palestinian Arab youth, will the UK seek to stem violent indoctrination of UNRWA youth, which violates the UN statute on the rights of the child?

https://www.terrorism-info.org.il/app/uploads/2023/02/E_039_23.pdf

9. UNRWA schools are often adorned with murals of “martyrs” who died while killing Jews. Will the UK ask UNRWA to remove these murals?

https://israelbehindthenews.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/UNWRA-OCT-21-02.jpg

Los Memorables Sabores de Garum

Rosh Chodesh Adar (the new month of Adar) has arrived, and that means Purim is not far away.

Michael Kuttner

In Israel, schools are blaring forth joyous music heralding the approaching Festival, and children are busy deciding which fancy dress costumes to choose.

A very old custom that has revived in recent years is the annual “shpiel”, which is a glorious opportunity for amateur thespians to demonstrate their acting skills. At the same time, it is opportune to write scripts that lampoon politicians and current events.

This year there will be no lack of material, given local political upheavals and continuing international farcical developments. In fact, one can confidently predict the expected scenarios because the agendas are so blatantly clear.

There is no need to wait for the advent of Purim because hysteria and unhinged conduct seems nowadays to be the normal default condition. Festival skits are no longer a match for the absurdities which are staged at the UN and other international and local forums.

The frenzy being generated at present over the Israeli Government’s plans to reform the selection process of Justices for the Supreme Court and its power to strike down any legislation which the Knesset may pass is at a peak. Unhinged tantrums by those still not reconciled to the results of the elections are the order of the day. Breast beating and predictions of apocalyptic doom resound from locals and foreigners. The latter comprise many who have never visited Israel but think that they have the divine right to tell us how to act. Also hopping on the bandwagon are long-time haters of the Zionist dream and knee-jerk self-loathers.

The United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights has already sprung into action and warned us of the dire consequences if we dare to reform our courts and enact related measures. Wouldn’t you think that he might have plenty on his plate at the moment with the epidemic of human rights abuses taking place in a myriad of UN member nations? You may also well ask why he is not convulsing over the blatant abuse of human rights taking place with the official connivance of the Arab Palestinian Authority. Where is his demand that Abbas and his corrupt crew cease paying rewards and stipends to murderers of Israelis?

I know that these questions are a futile exercise because neither the UN nor all the great champions of “two states for two people” have the slightest interest in confronting the real facts staring them in the face. That is why the US has no problem in acquiescing to yet another totally detached statement condemning the rights of Jews to live in Judea, Samaria and Jerusalem. While this frenzy continues the real threats from North Korea, Iran and others are consigned to the “too hard” basket.

We are supposed to remain “shtum” when the White House and US State Department express “dismay” because houses are being built for Jews. Iran continues to overtly transfer missiles and other weapons to Syria and Lebanon. Israel is targeting these sites and Russia, that great champion of international legitimacy, calls our efforts a “flagrant violation of international law.”

The European Union has stated that there is no legal basis to designate the Iranian revolutionary guards as a terror organisation. Obviously, the urge to appease is so ingrained that despite clear proof of terror intent the threat can be dismissed by performing a dubious legal somersault.

The South African Government is now among the most fervent deniers of Israel’s sovereign rights and was instrumental in expelling the Israeli observer to the recent African Union meeting. One would think that the increasing efforts to delegitimise Israel might wake up South African Jews to the proverbial writing on the wall. Unfortunately, just like their compatriots in Russia, Germany and other countries they prefer to ignore the increasingly hostile omens.

In a recent survey, it was revealed that one in four American Jews avoid wearing anything that may identify them as Jews.

A survey of British Jews revealed that 52% view Israel’s Government with “dread.” Meanwhile, the Jewish Chronicle reported this message issued by a pro-Palestinian group: “Is your co-worker a Zionist?  Is your teacher or lecturer a Zionist? Campaign for them to be fired. Zionism justifies the genocide of Palestinians.”  If this is not explicit enough and a sign of things to come, I do not know what else is. Yet the message falls on barren ground much like the increasingly strident messages of hate in pre-war Germany, and we all know how that ended.

The uncanny ability of otherwise educated and level-headed Jews to self-flagellate and identify with those seeking our demise goes back a long way, but it still leaves one amazed.

Gershon Baskin, a long-time op-ed writer for the Jerusalem Post and a veteran left-wing devotee, recently penned this gem: “In my mind, the creation of a Palestinian State was the ultimate fulfilment of the Zionist dream.”  I naively thought that the fulfilment of the Zionist dream was the creation of a Jewish State, but obviously, all who followed this dream must have been deluded. There seems to be no realisation by the flagellators that the offer of an Arab State has been rejected time after time in preference to the elimination firstly of the Jewish nation.

This perversion of history and desperation to appease those determined to murder Jews is an old story. We don’t need to go back all the way to the Biblical narrative. As recent as May 1936, the Labour Zionist leader Berl Katznelson asked: “Is there another people on earth whose sons are so emotionally twisted that they consider everything their nation does despicable and hateful, while every murder, rape and robbery committed by their enemies fills their heart with admiration and awe? As long as a Jewish child can come to the Land of Israel and here catch the virus of self-hate, let not our conscience be still.”

Proof that Purim parodies are no match for reality is provided by the reaction to the decisions of our security Minister who is routinely described as ultra-right or an extremist.

Apparently, as part of their ongoing campaign to damage and harm Israel in any possible way, security prisoners in Israeli jails have been taking lengthy showers in order to waste as much precious water as possible. Please note that the term security prisoners is a woke way of describing murderers and terrorists. The Minister has now instructed that showers are to be no longer than four minutes.

At the same time, he has announced that cosmetic surgery will no longer be available.

Spokespersons for the terror groups have denounced these measures and threatened to go on a hunger strike. You can be sure that the UN Security Council will soon be called into an emergency session to discuss these latest Israeli threats to world peace.

Meanwhile, the PA Minister of Justice (a misnomer if ever there was one) has approved certificates to be awarded to terror prisoners in Israeli jails who have successfully completed a course of study in international law and human rights.

Ramadan this year coincides with Passover. Normally this is the signal for Islamic violence and incitement to break out, and there is no reason to believe that it will be any different this time around. Despite all evidence, we are being warned by so-called friends and serial appeasers not to do anything that might upset the terror planners.

Purim is often described as a time when truth is inverted and logic is upended.

Observing current developments, one can heartily agree.

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.

Hostile Press: The New York Times vs The State of Israel

It’s almost embarrassingly easy to find headlines that reflect anti-Israeli bias in The New York Times.

“At Least 2 Dead as Driver Rams Bus Stop in East Jerusalem”, reads a laconic headline describing a deadly terror attack in the Ramot neighborhood.

The subheading – “A man drove a car into a group of civilians outside an Israeli settlement in what the police described as a terrorist attack. A 6-year-old was among those killed” – elaborates a bit, but leaves the reader with a geographical question – did the incident happen in East Jerusalem, or was it near an Israeli settlement?

Click here to read full article. 

The Palestinian Authority donor machine

When it comes to humanitarian aid to the Palestinian Authority, transparency does not exist.

The result is a rich Palestinian elite, which builds exclusive neighborhoods around Ramallah, leaving thousands of shoddily constructed apartments without services for the rest of Palestinian society.

Yasser Arafat set the tone for the PA when he arrived in Gaza in 1994. Arafat took control of every contract and investment, using donor money to build a secret $1 billion portfolio, including investments in Coca Cola, a Tunisian cellular phone company and venture capital funds in the US and Cayman Islands.

Arafat stole $1 b. in tax revenue relayed by Israel for Palestinian workers. The money went to Arafat’s personal account in Israel’s Bank Leumi in Tel Aviv.

Some $100,000 a month went to Arafat’s wife, Suha, living in Paris. Arafat was estimated by US investigators to be worth between $1 b. and $3 b.

Within three years of the PA’s establishment, Palestinian auditors found that 40% of the PA budget, $326 million, was misappropriated, a figure that rose to $700 m. a decade later.

Not one Western government objected. This set the tone for theft at all levels in the PA. PA officials paid themselves high salaries and skimmed from others.

Under Arafat’s successor, Mahmoud Abbas, nepotism reached every level of civil service. Officials, often related to Abbas, commanded salaries of $10,000 per month, more than 10 times that of ordinary civil servants, and opened secret accounts in Jordan with money received in bribes.

The difference between Abbas and Arafat: Instead of stealing from the PA, Abbas employed his two sons, Tareq and Yasser, to set up businesses that dominate foreign investment, building a consortium called Falcon, which took over Palestinian commerce.

Abbas has pumped at $890,000 into Falcon, with branches in Jordan and the United Arab Emirates and a monopoly on the sale of US cigarettes.

Then there is Al Mashreq Insurance Co., operating 11 branches in the PA with a worth of $35 m., headed by Yasser Abbas.

In all, the wealth of Abbas’ sons is estimated at $300 m.

Mohammed Dahlan, a challenger to Abbas, asserts that he received $1.4 b. from Arafat’s personal finances after the latter’s death in 2004. Dahlan asserts that Abbas concealed $600 m. of this fund. Mohammed Rashid, economic adviser to Arafat, reckons that Abbas’s embezzlement reaches $100 m.

Abbas fosters his own elite, builds palaces and approves construction of closed communities for his supporters around Ramallah. One such community is known as the “Diplomatic Compound,” where Abbas approves construction of a shopping mall under his control.

In 2011, Abbas’s adviser, Majdi Khaldi, asked $4 m. from Bahrain for that community. The PA ensured the feasibility of the project by transferring public land at 60% of its market value.

Khaldi approves the entry of PA officials, security commanders and members of Fatah to the “Diplomatic Compound.”

Abbas uses a multi-million-dollar palace under PA security control. Unauthorized visitors, particularly television crews, are threatened with arrest.

Abbas involves loyalists in business deals, such as Mohammed Mustafa, former deputy prime minister in the PA until 2015, appointed head of the Palestinian Investment Fund, linked to Abbas, which holds 18% of Arab Palestinian Investment Corporation (APIC).

Abbas controls the PIF and chooses all of its directors.

By 2009, Mustafa was appointed chief executive officer of one of the two cellular phone companies in the West Bank, Wataniya Mobile. PIF owns 34% of Wataniya’s shares.

Mustafa is allegedly involved in tax evasion and money laundering, as documented in the Panama Papers. Yet Abbas grants Mustafa protection from prosecution.

In February 2016, Palestinian Legislative Council member Najat Abu Bakr demanded an investigation of Abbas’s Governance Minister Hussein Al Araj. Abbas threatened Abu Bakr with arrest, who fled to a PLC building for safe haven. The matter was silenced.

Abbas has fought against corruption of his rivals – mainly Dahlan, who often calls for Abbas’ resignation. A PA court sentenced Dahlan in absentia to three years in prison on charges of embezzling public funds in 2007.

However, in 2010 , Dahlan and his wife were granted citizenship in Montenegro. Two years later, Dahlan served as liaison between Serbia and UAE Vice President Mohammed Bin Zayed Al Nahyan, crown prince of Abu Dhabi. Not long after, Dahlan was also granted citizenship by Serbia, allowing him safe passage throughout Europe.

The fortunes of Abbas and Dahlan have played a role in the succession battle for the Palestinian leadership. At 84, Abbas seeks to protect the his sons’ economic empire. Abbas sought to groom PA chief negotiator Saeb Erekat as his successor but was opposed by the PLO Executive Committee – a blow to Abbas, who rewarded loyalty in the committee, where members receive a stipend of $30,000 a month as well as a luxury car and VIP privileges.

Abbas has instead offered the mantle turned to a trusted aide – intelligence chief Majid Freij, deputy of Abbas. Yet the opponent of both Erekat and Freij has been Jibril Rajoub, former PA security chief.

The sentiment of Palestinians is that the PA is corrupt. From 1,200 Palestinians polled, 95.5% – or virtually everybody – declared there was rampant corruption in the Abbas regime.

PA corruption manifests itself in the black market, money laundering, human trafficking and profits accrued from foreign bank accounts – activities deemed secret until a new ruler emerges.

Western governments confirm embezzlement of their aid to the PA.

In 2013, the European Union determined that the PA mismanaged €2 b. between 2008 and 2012. The European Court of Auditors found that PA civil servants receive monthly salaries without reporting to work while tens of thousands of others actually working were not even paid. Brussels acknowledges it does not press the PA to reform the civil service.

The US State Department has done little better, continuing to withhold release of its reports of PA embezzlement.

US Aid has blindly provided the PA with over $5 b. over the last 25 years. Washington has consistently paid PA debts to private companies, bypassing concern over Abbas’ fiscal responsibility and priorities.

Instead, US taxpayers have ended up paying companies controlled by Abbas’ sons. Abbas’ Sky Advertising even won a contract from the US to improve the image of the United States in the PA.

From 2005 through 2009, Tareq and Yasser Abbas received at least more than $2 m. in contracts and subcontracts, most of them from the United States Agency for International Development (USAID). The agency will not release contracts to Abbas’s sons and has redacted key pieces of information, including executives and employees involved in the contracts.

Western donor humanitarian funds have one purpose: to act as a political resource for Abbas and his supporters.

The notion that humanitarian aid to the PA reaches the Palestinian Arab people has no basis in reality.

The first step for any effort to ameliorate this situation would be to ask for conditions for aid to the PA, requiring accountability and transparency and the right to protect Palestinian whistleblowers.

At this point, no one in the world advocates such a change in policy.