Seven Killed in Shooting Attack in Jaffa, Central Israel, 16 Wounded

Seven people were killed and 16 others were wounded in a shooting attack in the city of Jaffa in central Israel on Tuesday, emergency services reported.

The police have identified two of the victims as 30-year-old Lod resident Shahar Goldman and 33-year-old Tel Aviv resident Inbar Segev-Vigder. One of the victims is a 17-year-old girl, the police added. Six of those wounded are in serious condition, four were moderately wounded and two were lightly wounded.
Shachar Goldman, who was a dancer, is survived by her husband Tai, her parents and three sisters. People paid tribute to the 33-year-old Goldman’s memory at the Havana Music Club in Tel Aviv and told Haaretz that she had “a captivating smile and great energy,” and that she “touched many lives.”
Inbar Segev-Vigder, 24, was the owner of a fitness and Pilates studio and worked as a coach at a CrossFit gym in Tel Aviv. A graduate of the Wingate Institute for Physical Education and Sportse, Segev-Vigder is survived by her husband Ya’ari and their nine-month-old son.

Her husband told in an interview with national broadcaster Kan on Wednesday that Segev-Vigder was carrying their son as the attack happened.

“Our miracle is that our son came out of it unharmed, really without a scratch. He was covered with blood a bit, but otherwise unhurt,” he said.

Nadia Sokolenco, 40, immigrated to Israel from Moldova 18 years ago. She is survived by her husband and 6-year-old daughter. She worked as an office manager at a high-tech firm, previously working as a stylist.

Haaretz reporter Rafaella Goichman, a close friend of Sokolenco, described her as “the embodiment of love of life, light and cosmic optimism.”
Revital Bronstein, 24, was earning a master’s degree in computer science. Before that, she attended an agricultural school, where she won awards related to computing and artificial intelligence. She was also an artist who created comics.
Ilia Nozadze, a 42-year-old Georgian citizen, was married and had two children. He worked as a truck driver.
26-year-old Yona Ionas Karussis, a Greek and Israeli citizen originally from Thessaloniki, who lived in Jerusalem and studied architecture in Tel Aviv, is the sixth named victim of the attack. He is survived by his parents, both doctors who immigrated to Israel.

According to police, one of the assailants was armed with a rifle and the other with a knife, and they attacked light rail passengers and passers-by near a station on Jaffa’s Jerusalem Boulevard.

Police say that the two assailants, later identified as Muhammad Khalef Saher Rajab and Hassan Muhammad Hassan Tamimi, were both in their 20s from the city of Hebron in the West Bank. They did not have a permit to be in Israel. At least one of them was shot dead by a passerby and a municipal security guard.

Tel Aviv district commander Haim Sargrof said that police ruled out that there were additional assailants after large police and IDF forces conducted extensive searches in the area.

A senior police officer said that footage from security cameras in the area shows that the assailants came out of a nearby mosque, attacked passers-by on Jerusalem Boulevard and killed two of them. Afterwards, at least one of them boarded the light rail car, killed four passengers and got off. According to police, the two were finally shot in the street.

Large police forces and the IDF counterterrorism unit conducted searches in the area, including a raid on the mosque from which the assailants emerged. Several individuals present were detained on suspicion of involvement in the attack.

In response to the attack, the IDF imposed a blockade on Hebron, the hometown of the attackers. Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich stated that during tonight’s cabinet meeting, he would demand that the terrorists’ family members be deported “to Gaza tonight” and that their homes be demolished. “Without the High Court of Justice and without B’Tselem,” he added.

National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir said, “If it turns out there is a connection to the mosque [from which the attackers emerged], the message is clear – it should be shut down and demolished.” He added, “We need to investigate; we’re not rushing to conclusions.”
An eyewitness who was at the scene of the attack said: “I saw a terrorist shoot a girl who was on the floor and another girl, then I saw the terrorist shoot a man on a bicycle who fell to the floor, but I don’t think he wasn’t hurt. At that moment a civilian arrived with a gun and shot the terrorist.”
Another eyewitness who was at a synagogue at the time of the attack said that he heard shots from an automatic weapon. “Among the worshippers were medics who volunteer at the MDA. We treated a man who was wounded in the synagogue and then ran to the street to help others who were wounded,” he said.

Another eyewitness who spoke to Haaretz said that he heard gunshots when he was in a store near the scene of the attack, and went out into the street to help administer first aid. “There was an injured girl on the road, there were already several people taking care of her, and then there were more shots from nearby,” he said. “We dragged the injured woman to a nearby restaurant’s kitchen and blocked the door with a heavy object. I put a tourniquet on her.”

Civilians near the scene of the shooting attack, in Jaffa, on Tuesday.Credit: Itai Ron

He added that after about 15 minutes security forces arrived in large numbers and began knocking on the door, and that the injured woman was conscious when she was taken to receive further treatment.

The attack occurred about 40 minutes before rocket sirens were activated in Jaffa due to the missile barrage from Iran. As the alarms sounded, many police officers sought shelter in nearby buildings, leading to a suspension of the searches in the area. Police Commissioner Danny Levy, who had arrived at the scene, also entered a building and continued commanding the forces from inside until the alarms ceased.

How did it happen that the head of the UN is forbidden entry into Israel?

My personal and professional​ experience with UN secretary general Guterres belies what has happened.​

I first met Guterres, after he visited UNRWA schools in Gaza, and then made a  presentation about the fate of the Jewish people at the Diaspora Museum in Tel Aviv

Mentioning that his wife is the head of the Jewish Museum in Lisbon,​Guterres introduced himself as a friend of the Jewish people.

I  approached Guettres and asked if he had seen UNRWA text books which our agency had been reviewing for years.

​Guterres said that he had heard that that the UNRWA texts were problematic and invited me to bring our UNRWA experts to his office, which resulted in four briefings for senior staff members of Guterres.

These briefings resulted in a request of Guterres to order UNRWA to remove UNRWA texts which praised those  who murdered Jews.

Since that time, Guterres has hosted a parade of Jewish groups affiliated with New Israel Fund, who describe Israel as  a criminal entity

Hence , the change in Guterres.

Israeli MP claims Australians are ‘paying the salary’ of terrorists amid uncovered UNRWA links to Hamas commander

Israeli MP Sharren Haskel has made the startling claim Australian taxpayers are “paying the salary” of members from terrorist groups Hamas and Hezbollah following fresh revelations regarding the UN’s Palestinian refugee agency.

New links to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees have emerged after the killing of a top Hamas commander in Lebanon earlier this week, who has been uncovered as a suspended employee of an UNRWA-run school.

Fateh Sharif Abu El-Amin, who was killed in an Israeli airstrike on Monday along with his wife and daughter, was placed under investigation and suspended from his job in March after concerns emerged regarding his politics, UNRWA’s chief Philippe Lazzarini revealed at a media conference.

However Lazzarini has denied knowing Abu El-Amin was a Hamas commander, saying, “I never heard the word commander before. What’s obvious for you today, was not obvious yesterday.”

Israeli MP Sharren Haskel has made the startling claim Australian taxpayers are “paying the salaries” of members from terrorist groups Hamas and Hezbollah.

The Australian government in August faced scathing criticism over its decision to continue funding to UNRWA despite there being sufficient evidence nine of the agency’s staff had links to the October 7 Hamas attack.

In light of the new revelations this week, Ms Haskel argued the Australian government had been warned “for years” about UNRWA’s alleged links to terrorism.

“There are thousands of terrorists of Hamas and Hezbollah who are on the paycheque of Australian taxpayers’ money. They are paying the salary of those terrorists,” Ms Haskel told Sky News host Sharri Markson on Tuesday night.

She said it was “very simple” for the federal government to check who the terrorist activists working with the agency were, through requesting a list of employees from the United Nations.

“If they just cross them, they know exactly who is a terrorist, but they just ignore it. It’s very easy to ignore the facts. It’s very easy to ignore the truth when you don’t want to accept it. But they know it, they’ve known it for years,” she said.

Children were shot and burned alive on October 7, forensic evidence shows

Israel Police data released on Thursday revealed 27 children between the ages of 0-17 were shot and burned alive on October 7. Commander Dudi Katz, the Israel Police special investigations unit’s Lahav 433’s cyber unit chief, was tasked with analyzing digital forensic evidence.

One of the recordings received by the cyber team investigating one of the kibbutzim near the Gaza border featured a child’s voice. The girl was on a call with the police emergency center while being held by a terrorist. She begged the terrorist to let her go, saying she was just a child and had school the next day. Despite the police dispatcher’s pleas, the terrorist shot her to death. Her burnt remains were later located.

This is just one of the many heartbreaking stories that police investigators have uncovered. The data, testimonies and hundreds of thousands of videos have been analyzed by Lahav 433, the national unit investigating the events of October 7.
“We collected 11,666 videos that provide a comprehensive evidentiary basis gathered from various sources from just one kibbutz, which will enable us to file some of the most severe indictments against the perpetrators of these brutal terror acts,” said Superintendent Reut Anoim, head of Lahav 433’ cyber investigation division.
The data and testimonies were also collected from ZAKA Search and Rescue volunteers who operated in the kibbutz. Six days after the deadly assault began, ZAKA personnel returned to ensure no evidence was overlooked, guided by the smell of decay, flies and other signs.
In one room, they found the small body of a child and the body of a woman in the stairwell. Both bodies were so badly burned they were nearly unrecognizable. The only thing left of the mother was her bra, and of the child, only ashes remained.
Each cyber unit and the International Crime Investigations Unit was assigned to gather and analyze evidence based on specific areas. We relied on a web of testimonies collected from CCTV cameras in the affected towns, private homes near the Gaza border, testimonies from hostages, ZAKA volunteers, Hamas terrorists’ body cameras and social media posts,” Anoim said.
Any evidence that could not be verified was dismissed. “All the materials we used helped complete an evidentiary framework as we worked hard to maintain the highest standards of verification and cross-referencing, compared to the fake materials circulating on social media,” she added,
Katz explained the challenge was interpreting the significance of the evidence they located. “As a law enforcement officer, I only work with definitive evidence. When I see a child shot with a severed finger, I can describe and document the scene but cannot definitively state the cause, as the finger may not have been intentionally severed but instead was injured by a fragment from the explosion in the safe room.”
However, Katz was unequivocal about one fact: the torture of children by Hamas’ Nukhba terrorists. “That children were burned, shot and murdered alongside their parents is a proven fact. Children witnessed their parents being murdered and we found a scene with a pile of bodies from the same family more than once.”
Among the other harrowing scenes was a photograph of a baby who was murdered alongside her father who tried to protect his family. She was the youngest victim of October 7. Another case that Katz said he would never forget was the tragic story of the Taasa family from Netiv HaAsara.
The father, Gil, threw himself on a grenade that terrorists had tossed into their home to save his children from witnessing the horror. In another video, “We identified a child around six or seven years old whose body was burnt, but his face remained intact. His glazed expression indicated that he had been burned alive,” Katz recounted.
Over 90 members of Kibbutz Be’eri were murdered on October 7. The kibbutz secretary, Gal Cohen, said that the highest number of children murdered was in his community. “What the children here went through is incomprehensible and we’re still burying our dead. This is an open wound, and we haven’t digested it yet.”
“We’re scarred, but we’re rebuilding and trying to recover. Parents and grandparents who lost their children and grandchildren have said they will never set foot in the kibbutz again because they see the victims everywhere they look,” he added.

The United Nations has betrayed its founding principles

This week the UN General Assembly met in New York. Born out of the Second World War, and the determination to prevent another all-consuming catastrophe, for almost 80 years the UN has carried the hopes of the world.

With its avowed good intentions for the 193 member states, to the ordinary man in the street it enjoys a virtuous cachet reserved in earlier generations only for saints.

Sadly, the reality is a deeply corrupt and irrevocably flawed organisation, defined at every turn by the lowest moral common denominator, thanks to the very worst of those member states being given a platform and authority.

Far from preventing war, the United Nations has become an enabler of conflict that empowers autocracies and allows its various subsidiary bodies to foment hate. Nothing embodies this failure more than the long sorry saga of the UN and Israel.

It is almost impossible to comprehend the perversity of the General Assembly’s repeated attempt to deny the right of the state of Israel to exist, in the 80 years since the holocaust.

In 2001, the World Conference Against Racism was held under UN auspices in Durban, South Africa.

It quickly descended into nothing more than a thinly veiled hate-fest, with delegates banding together to brand Israel a “racist apartheid state” that committed “war crimes, acts of genocide and ethnic cleansing”.

Outside the conference, copies of the notorious antisemitic screed the Protocols of the Elders of Zion were distributed. Placards read: “If only Hitler had won.” Thus was proclaimed the utter moral turpitude of an organisation founded in the ashes of the war that vanquished the Nazis.

The decades since have confirmed this hatred of Israel has become institutionally systemic – not a bug but a feature of the UN.

In 2022, as war in Ukraine raged, and while the people of Iran, Myanmar, Syria and Venezuela suffered untold oppression and human rights violations, the UN General Assembly targeted 15 resolutions at Israel, while there were just 13 resolutions for the entire rest of the world.

And that was before the war against Hamas in Gaza.

The genocidal massacre committed against the people of Israel on October 7 saw barely a pause in the legitimisation of hate by the UN.

With scant lip service to condemn the slaughter of more than 1,200 men, women and children, Secretary-General Antonio Guterres was still unable to recognise Israel’s right to defend itself.

In Gaza itself, evidence has shown that hundreds of staff members of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) took part in the October 7 massacre.

The evidence was too strong even for the UN officials to entirely deny, even if only a paltry nine workers were eventually sacked.

Now, as conflict escalates against Hezbollah following many months of the terror militia launching unprovoked attacks against Israel, once again the UN has betrayed its peacekeeping role.

In 2006 UN Security Council Resolution 1701 called for the withdrawal of forces threatening Israel to the north of the Litani River, and demanded that Hezbollah disarm.

Needless to say, the resolution has been entirely ignored. Instead, a vast Hezbollah arsenal menaces the people of northern Israel from that territory.

It is even reported that the blue-helmeted UN peacekeeping troops are used effectively as human shields by Hezbollah, which places their launch sites close to the UN camps.

This year the United Kingdom gave more than £100m to the United Nations budget. The good intentions of the founders in 1945 have been irreparably betrayed. British taxpayers and the people of the world deserve a better deal.

Israeli duo bring speaking tour to Prince George

The Jewish Community of Prince George and the Jewish Federation of Greater Vancouver are hosting a presentation on September 29 at the Prince George Playhouse. The event will feature Isreali Husband and Wife duo Noam and Adi Bedein .

The presentation titled “A Journey of Healing: From Holocaust Remembrance to Environmental Renewal” will include two separate pieces followed by a Q&A session.

The first piece will led by Adi Rabinowitz Bedein and will be a 360-degree tour of The Car Wall, which is a pile of burnt cars west of the Tkuma in the Gaza envelope. The pile was originally created by evacuating the burnt cars from the Gaza envelope after the Hamas attack on October 7, 2023. Since then it has become a memorial piece recognizing the largest terrorist attack in the history of the State of Israel. Through the presentation Adi will bridge the gap between Holocaust Education with the Commemoration of October 7.

The second piece will be led by Noam Bedein and will be a discussion on how Israel’s water resource can be innovated to develop sustainable tourism that fosters social resilience and post-traumatic healing while protecting and revitalizing Israel’s natural environment. Noam has dedicated his career in documenting the restoration of historic water sources, promoting ecotourism, and strengthening the Abraham Accords for water and marine conservation.

“The Jewish community of Prince George is so thrilled to welcome Noam and Adi to Prince George for this illustrious event,” says Eli Klasner, local community member. “Noam and Adi are exploring the Pacific Northwest, sharing their message of hope and resilience from their unique Israeli perspective and we are certain that their presentations will hold tremendous meaning and interest for people from all walks of life. Additionally, we are so very honoured to have the support of the Jewish Federation of Greater Vancouver and appreciate their interest in helping to support this event.”

Tickets are 10 dollars each and will take place at 2:00 p.m.

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Eyes wide open

We are living in volatile and uncertain times.

Michael Kuttner

At this time last year I predicted that peace would not break out any time soon. That was before the 7 October pogrom when some people still harboured illusions about the real intentions of the fake Palestinians and their terrorist enablers.

Amazingly, despite all evidence to the contrary, many of these hallucinatory individuals and groups still refuse to open their eyes and see the evil which is convulsing in front of them. Instead of condemning the terrorists and the haters they prefer instead to blame the “evil Zionists.” In their warped world there would be universal peace and love if only the Jews would roll over and allow themselves to be slaughtered.

It is this myopic malady which has spread to all corners of the globe and unsurprisingly also infects our own self-loathers.

As I write these lines, sirens are wailing in many parts of Israel as Iranian-sponsored Hezbollah and Hamas hurl rockets indiscriminately into Israeli communities.

This sets the scene for what lies ahead as we prepare to usher in the three religious festivals of Rosh Hashanah, Yom Kippur and Succot.

The civil anniversary of the 7 October massacre and abductions will this year occur during the Ten Days of Repentance leading up to Yom Kippur. It will undoubtedly unleash a whirlwind of worldwide hate. Instead of fury at the fact that the kidnappers have been absolved of any guilt and that they continue to hold their still-living captives in the most inhumane conditions, the unhinged haters will vilify Israel.

Simchat Torah this coming year will be a painful celebration and one which has the possibility or probability of sparking more acts of terror from those whom the international community are determined to excuse, appease and mollify.

There is no point in looking to the corrupt United Nations and its irredeemably corrupted associated bodies for any sort of support in the twelve months which lie ahead. From the Secretary General himself down to the most minor officials there is no willingness to challenge the moral malaise which has now overtaken these failed institutions. What we should be aware of is the further rapid collapse of any sort of supposed even-handedness from the likes of the misnamed UN Human Rights Council and Criminal Courts at The Hague.

The anti-Israel venom spouting forth from UN-appointed Francesca Albanese, the so-called “Rapporteur for the Occupied Palestinian Territories”, will escalate to even further absurd heights. Other such appointees will also have a field day while representatives of democratic countries prefer to either ignore their ranting or will willingly agree.

A perfect example of the latter is provided by Penny Wong, the Australian Foreign Minister who has taken Australian Government’s animosity against Israel to new heights. Attending the annual hate fest in New York she claimed that “the UN is where the world comes together to agree and uphold the rules.” Anything more detached from reality would be difficult to find. Her assertion is however typical of the lunacy which has gripped hitherto sane and sensible foreign ministries in what used to be level headed democracies. It also explains why the takeover of the UN by the despots, tyrants and hypocrites has been successfully accomplished.

The outgoing EU Foreign Policy Chief accused Israel this week of “spreading terror by targeting Hezbollah leaders.” Can you think of a more deranged conclusion as Israel seeks to eliminate the planners and perpetrators of actual terror?

The French can always be relied on to show their true animosity when it comes to Jews. Macron, in a telephone conversation with Netanyahu, laid the entire responsibility for preventing an escalation on the Israeli PM’s shoulders. With typical Gallic insincerity, he maintained that “you can opt for a diplomatic solution. Your activity in the north is pushing the region to war.” This incredible piece of pontification comes after thousands of Hezbollah rockets embedded among Lebanese civilians have been fired at Israeli communities.

Proving that one can always fool some people most of the time is the fact that Ronald Lauder, head of the World Jewish Congress, after a meeting with Macron gushed that ”the French President is an unwavering ally to the Jewish People.”  With Jew hate running rampant and anti-Israel policies being promoted, one has to wonder what sort of parallel universe some of our “machers” inhabit.

Meanwhile, a former NZ Prime Minister and now self-described “elder” of the UN, Helen Clark, speaking at the UN Security Council, demanded that “all States cease any assistance to or trade with illegal Israeli settlements.”

Instead of forceful and uncompromising US leadership, what we have in Washington is an Administration totally detached from reality on the ground. When you hear phrases such as “diplomatic off ramp” being repeated you know that Israel is expected to fold in the face of terror. Appeasement in all its obscene incarnations is the prevailing policyIt is obvious that failed diplomatic tactics are preferred in preference to crushing bullies and terror sponsors.

These few examples of international idiocy demonstrate what can be expected in the coming year.

The automatic spinoff of all these unhinged reactions to Israel’s legitimate responses against terrorist groups is an increasingly virulent rise in hate against Diaspora Jewish communities. The virus is spreading uncontrollably and infecting all continents.

Jewish students are facing levels of hate not seen since the rise of Nazism with not only verbal assaults but also physical violence becoming the norm.

Fueled by the general and social media there is very little that can be done to defeat or even mitigate its toxic effects. Increasingly woke policies by democratic governments will ensure major challenges for communities hitherto insulated from this plague.

Another phenomenon, albeit an ancient one, is the spectacle of detached, disaffected and woefully ignorant individuals claiming some sort of Jewish identity joining the ranks of the anti-Israel lynch mobs. Joining those who hate you in the belief that you will be spared has always been a losing proposition. Current followers of this self-loathing fraternity are obviously oblivious to this.

Our entire historical experience has been one of overcoming the most formidable obstacles. We have survived the most horrendous genocides and exiles from our Promised Land. We have revived our ancient language and we have finally returned to the places which since the dawn of time have been connected to our heritage.

For most of the last three thousand years, we had no sovereignty and no army, and we remained at the mercy of alien cultures and empires which mainly despised us. Despite barriers designed to shun, ban and delegitimize us we overcame them and contributed to the betterment of humanity.

Our biggest mistake was and still is the naïve belief that the nations of the world will be so grateful for the contributions we make that somehow all prejudices would disappear and Jews would be accepted as equals. While in theory this is the situation today in democratic nations, the veneer of tolerance is thin and it does not take much for the ancient virus to reactivate.

Jews reclaiming their ancient sovereignty and defending it is too much for all those who expect them to meekly submit and be the eternal victims. The perversion of Islamic jihadist Jew hate combined with a surrender of Christian mainstream Churches to anti-Zionist dogmas presents a lethal challenge. Bible-believing Evangelicals remain some of our only true allies. Increasing secularization and total ignorance of history guarantee a future generation of brain-dead morons devoid of any knowledge of historical facts.

The irrefutable fact remains that the Jewish People have survived the mightiest empires of evil. We have achieved this impossible feat because we did not remain passive victims but devised communal and religious strategies of survival. This necessitates leadership unafraid to speak out and expose cynical double standards. It needs anti-woke leaders who are willing to put their collective heads above the parapets. Do these persons exist, or have they all run for cover, preferring politically correct gestures instead?

As we prepare to face an uncertain future, we need to remember that God helps those who help themselves. We are an eternal People with a road map leading to a more just and better world. The journey may be long and fraught with serious challenges but the objectives are clearly articulated in our Covenant sealed at Mount Sinai.

Shana Tova and Geula Shleima.

Kamala Harris’ new consultant: ‘Zionists control much of American politics’

In the complex landscape of U.S. politics, where alliances often shift like the sands of the desert, Kamala Harris’ presidential campaign has found itself navigating turbulent waters once again. The latest stir comes from the appointment of Brenda Abdelall, an American attorney of Egyptian descent, to spearhead outreach efforts to Arab-American voters. Her mission is clear: to galvanize support from the influential Arab communities in swing states like Michigan, a state she calls home.

But in the relentless 24-hour news cycle, less than a day passed before Abdelall’s past remarks about Jews and Israel surfaced in conservative media outlets. These comments, dating back to a 2002 conference of the American Muslim Council (AMC), where Abdelall reportedly stated that “Zionists control much of American politics,” have ignited a firestorm. Her words were a reaction to a panelist’s more severe accusation that “Zionists are destroying America.” Abdelall nuanced her stance by suggesting that while “destroy” might be an overstatement, Zionists undeniably wield significant influence in American political spheres.

Further comments from Abdelall on the panel referenced the electoral defeat of Democratic Congressman Earl Hilliard in Alabama. His loss, she suggested, followed his opposition to a pro-Israel resolution condemning Palestinian suicide bombings. The defeat was, in Abdelall’s view, a testament to the “considerable Jewish influence in politics,” fueled by the support and fundraising efforts of pro-Israel groups and Jewish donors for Hilliard’s rival.

Abdelall’s connection to the American Muslim Council was more than incidental; her mother was a founding member of the Council’s Ann Arbor, Michigan chapter. The Council itself, however, is no stranger to controversy, having a history of antisemitic statements, including a former CEO’s claim that the Columbia shuttle disaster, which included Israeli astronaut Ilan Ramon, was “divine retribution” against Israel.
The Harris campaign has responded by distancing itself from Abdelall’s past remarks, emphasizing that “these 2002 comments do not reflect Brenda’s current views, nor those of the campaign.” They also highlighted Abdelall’s integral role in shaping the White House’s national strategy to combat antisemitism.
This appointment follows closely on the heels of another controversial hire: Nasrina Bargzie, named as an advisor for Muslim community affairs – a decision that ruffled feathers within the Jewish community. Bargzie, who has previously described Jewish students’ complaints about anti-Semitism as “legal bullying,” has sparked concern among Jewish organizations about the implications for campus antisemitism policies.
In this saga of appointments and affiliations, the Harris campaign remains steadfast in its defense, with a spokesperson affirming Bargzie’s contributions to implementing the state’s first strategy to combat antisemitism at the White House and expressing pride in her role within the campaign.
As Harris’ team maneuvers through the intricate dynamics of identity politics, these appointments underscore the delicate balance required to maintain both diversity and sensitivity in an increasingly polarized political landscape.

Israel faces unavoidable showdown with Hezbollah

Despite a series of severe blows, Hezbollah and its leader Hassan Nasrallah show no signs of backing down. Instead, the group appears more determined than ever to demonstrate its resilience and capability to strike Israel, even after losing thousands of operatives and senior leaders, including its last two military chiefs and the command of its elite Radwan Force.

Nazism at Columbia University

Columbia university activist Mahmoud Khalil is calling for more pro-Palestinian, anti-Israel protests this fall.  Perhaps he has been buoyed by the success he enjoyed as lead negotiator for campus protesters last April.  Maybe he has been further encouraged by the administration’s apparent revocation of his suspension.

In any case, Khalil vows to continue agitation against Israel.

The Times of Israel reports that he has stated, “As long as Columbia continues to invest and to benefit from Israeli apartheid, the students will continue to resist.  Not only protests and encampments, the limit is the sky.”  (Italics mine.)

Recently, Hamas leader Khaled Mashal also made it clear that there are to be no limits.  He has issued calls to renew “martyrdom” operations, a phrase that indicates that suicide bombings and surprise attacks on civilians such as the one that happened on October 7, 2023 are to continue.  No tactic is off limits, as Hamas’s recent execution of six innocent hostages proves.

Doubtless neither Mr. Khalil nor Columbia University’s anti-Israel protesters would dare to display a flag with a swastika on it.  Nor would they carry a banner with the word “Judenrein,” a term meaning a given territory is to be “clean of Jews.”

But there is no hesitancy on their part to employ terms and phrases that are the equivalent.  The board of Meta has debated the legitimacy of allowing the phrase “from the river to the sea” on the social media platform.  There has been a lot of hemming and hawing, with some saying the phrase can be used many ways.  But when said by Hamas and other terrorist groups, it unequivocally has but one meaning: the elimination of the state of Israel and the Jews who live there.

In other words, there is a reason Hamas and like-minded groups, including anti-Israel protesters, display maps of the Middle East that eliminate Israel entirely — “from the river to the sea.”

As a number of historians have pointed out, the Third Reich had plans for the extermination of the Jews in Palestine, a plan taken over by Islamists.

The anti-Jew hatred the characterized Nazi ideology remained influential and have been appropriated by Islamist terrorist groups since the 1930s.  German and American universities have been targeted by and influenced by that ideology for decades.  As Jeffrey Herf point out in his meticulously researched article “Nazi Antisemitism and Islamist Hate” in Tablet Magazine,

Nazism, which ended as a major political factor in Europe with defeat in 1945, had enjoyed a robust afterlife in the Muslim Brotherhood and its offshoots, such as Hamas and al-Qaida…their campaigns have had a continuing impact in Western universities, where they serve as the ideological foundation of academic anti-Zionism and the resulting BDS campaigns of recent decades, which have aligned the Western left with the afterlife of Hitler’s Nazi Party and its larger designs for the Middle East.

Herf adds that Hitler always intended the Final Solution “to be a global policy, implemented wherever his armies met with success and working through local allies like [Grand Mufti] Husseini, with whom the Nazi leadership had cultivated intimate political relations based on a shared passion for Jew-hatred.”

Administrators at America’s top universities may want to consider the Nazi origins of Hamas’s ideology.  Critical proof of the absorption of Nazi ideology by Hamas is the Hamas Covenant of 1988, which calls for the total rejection of the Jewish state and a religious war to destroy that state completely.

There is a reason academia has been and is being targeted by agitators influenced by Nazi ideology centered on Jew-hatred.  Academia is the seedbed of ideas that filter down to other institutions, including government.  In fact, it was academia’s support for Nazism that helped Hitler to effectuate his anti-Semitic agenda.

The capture of nearly all of Germany’s institutions began with the capture of academia, according to Paul Johnson.  As he noted in A History of the Jews, “the Nazis effectively controlled the campuses two or three years before they took over the country.”

Johnson added, “It was not that the professors were pro-Nazi.  But they were anti-Weimar and anti-democratic and, above all, they were cowardly in standing up to student acts which they knew to be wrong — an adumbration of the more general cowardice of the nation later.”

As pointed out in “University Student Groups in Nazi Germany,” Jewish and other “undesirable” faculty were dismissed as “political opponents” of the regime, partly because of the effectiveness of student radicals:

The passage of the “Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service” on April 7, 1933, propelled the Student League to the forefront of university politics. … The law … authorized the release of Jewish and “politically undesirable” faculty members from service.

The National Socialist German Student League directly targeted Jewish students and the remaining Jewish faculty members, interrupting lectures and physically attacking Jewish students.  Anti-Jew protesters targeted Germany’s Frankfurt University, which was a leading academic institution of the West, much as today’s protesters are targeting Ivy League universities and other top-tier institutions of learning such as Columbia.

It is useful to consider the testimony of Peter Drucker, an economist who was a lecturer at Frankfurt University during the 1930s.  It was a Nazi-led faculty “restructuring” meeting that persuaded Drucker to leave.  Columbia and other universities might want to take notes from his experience:

Frankfurt was the first university the Nazis tackled, precisely because it was the most self-confidently liberal of major German universities, with a faculty that prided itself on its allegiance to scholarship, freedom of conscience, and democracy. The Nazis knew that control of Frankfurt University would mean control of German academia. And so did everyone at the university.

Drucker continued:

The new Nazi commissar wasted no time on the amenities. He immediately announced that Jews would be forbidden to enter university premises and would be dismissed without salary on March 15; this was something that no one had thought possible despite the Nazis’ loud antisemitism. Then he launched into a tirade of abuse, filth, and four-letter words such as had been heard rarely even in the barracks and never before in academia. … [He] pointed his finger at one department chairman after another and said, “You either do what I tell you or we’ll put you into a concentration camp.”

The results of “restructuring” were soon evident.  It was not long before Jewish professors and students were no longer teaching or learning in German academia.

As CBN Israel notes, what was happening at Frankfurt University was reflected in American campuses during the 1930s and is being reflected in today’s protests at places such as Princeton, Harvard, and Columbia:

Examples of pre-World War II anti-Semitism on elite campuses such as Columbia and Harvard are easy to find. Administrators welcomed Nazi leaders to campus, enrolled Nazi-trained German exchange students, and promoted the idea of American students studying in Germany under Nazi oversight. Some returned to the United States mesmerized into supporting Hitler’s “New Germany.”

The protesters who are calling themselves pro-Palestinian are modern examples of students who favor terrorist organizations committed to the eradication of Israel and Jewry worldwide.

As Johnson wrote, there is justifiable reason for the existence of the state of Israel:

The Jews had grasped that the civilized world, however defined, could not be trusted.  The overwhelming lesson the Jews learned from the Holocaust was the imperative need to secure for themselves a permanent, self-contained and above all sovereign refuge where if necessary the whole of world Jewry could find safety from its enemies. … Jews [knew] that such a state had to be created and made secure whatever the cost, to themselves or to anyone else.

Jews in America may not think Nazism restructured as Islamism would establish itself in America in any significant way.  But it has.  And if not stopped, it will be as dangerous to Jews as were the events that happened during the Weimar Republic and the Third Reich.

The radicalization of America’s universities must not continue.  Terrorist organizations must not have a cadre of young radical sympathizers who tacitly or directly support genocide and the eradications of nations.

Terrorist groups and sympathizers committed to genocide and terrorist tactics, be it directly or indirectly, must be banned from American’s campuses.

“Never again.”


Fay Voshell holds a M.Div. from Princeton Seminary, which awarded her the prize for excellence in systematic theology.  Her thoughts have appeared in many online magazines, including American Thinker.  She may be reached at fvoshell@yahoo.com.