Thursday, April 22, 2010

Terrorists Fire Qassams That Strike...Jordan!

This is getting complicated:-

Two Katyusha rockets were fired early Thursday morning from Egypt's Sinai Penninsula toward the southern Israeli city of Eilat. This was the first time a rocket has been fired at the resort town in almost five years.

The two rockets - each measuring 107 millimeters in diameter - struck a cooling storage house in Jordan's Red Sea port of Aqaba, said Jordanian officials. There were no casualties.



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Spelled Zimmer But Pronounced Tzimmer

A vacation cabin for tourism.

In Yesha.

Even Haaretz knows a good story.


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Another Perspective on the Anat Kamm Affair

Well, it could be Anat Kamm's affair - her affair with the media, with the police and GSS and with the judicisal system.

An affair of sympathy, warmth and even improper relations.

Some observations from a father with intimate knowledge of another "affair", Moshe Belogorodsky. We pick up in the middle of his letter:

...Although the story was troubling, even scary, I must admit I did not loose any sleep. After all, the Shabak and the police caught Anat and are keeping her locked up, far away from any possibility of causing further danger to the security and well-being of the Israeli public...And then came the real shock. For the past 3 months and up till this very day Anat Kamm is at home !!

I was puzzled, amazed, lost. I kept thinking there was some mistake. Surely there was a good reason why Shabak did not keep her in jail...That's when this story became personal for me, when my anger became real. I kept wondering: how did Anat's father, Mr. Kamm, pull it off? How did he succeed where I failed? What values did he instill in Anat that brought him victory where I tasted the bitter fruit of defeat? Or maybe it wasn't a questoin of values. Maybe it was his parenting skills, his superior pedagogical techniques that so impressed everyone?

You see, my daughter Chaya was also deemed a danger to public security and the State. Five years ago, at the age of 14, she was arrested during an anti-disengagement demonstration and accused of speaking rudely to a policewoman. She was brought before the juvenile judge in Tel Aviv, not far from where an 18-year old Anat was living at the time. The State prosecutor in our case asked the judge to keep my Chaya in jail until the end of the legal proceedings against her. On what grounds? Chaya was, you see, an ideologically motivated criminal. And because of her ideology she was unstopable. And dangerous to public and the State.

What was so dangerous about this girl? She participated in another non-violent civil disobedience demonstration a month before, was arrested, and released to yeshuv arrest, which forbade her from going to a similar demonstration. And now she disregarded that prohibition and refused to sit quetly while her friends were being thrown out of their homes. Thus, in the words of the prosecutor, her danger to the security of the State and the public was clear. Incredibly, the judge accepted this ridiculous argument.

In counter-argument I asked the judge to release my daughter to a full house arrest. I promised that we would keep her under 24/7 supervision. To no avail. The judge decided that we, the parents, could not be trusted to keep our dangerously criminal child from harming the Israeli public. She sent Chaya to jail, to await her trial. We appealed this outrageous decision, and our case went all the way to the Supreme Court of Israel. Ayalla Procaccia was the judge who heard our case there. When I found out that Ms. Procaccia was to be our judge, my heart fell. Ms. Procaccia is well known for her extreme leftist views, both before she came to the Supreme Court and during her work there. She accepted the prosecution's arguments. My 14-year old Chaya was indeed an ideplogical criminal. Her crime was "especially hard because it demonstrated utter disregard towards the law. Such behaviour cannot be treated lightly by the court, no matter what ideology stands behind such behaviour.

Freedom of speech and demonstration is the very symbol of democracy, as long as it remains within the confines of the law. Once it oversteps those boundries set by law, it becomes anti-democratic, seeking to impose by force those ideas that are deemed illegal. We must sent a clear message that no legitimacy will be given to act of law-breaking, done with the purpose of promoting a social or political ideology of any sort" Ms. Procaccia went even further, stating that " the illegal, disregardful behaviour of the accused leaves me no choice but to remove her from the ideological environment that pushed her into breaking the law". Not only did Ms. Procaccia refused to release Chaya to house arrest, she refused to release her to any place in Yehuda and Shomron! As a result of all the above Chaya spent 40 days in jail - before her trial even started.

Last week the State prosecution finally decided to ask the court to change the conditions of Anat Kamm's arrest...You can understand the relief I felt when I found out that it was Ms. Procaccia who was going to hear the case. Surely, she would know the right thing to do. I even faxed her office the copy of Chaya's protocol, just in case Mr. Procaccia forgot any details.

Well - it didn't work. I read Ms. Procaccia's decision regarding Anat. I am not a legal expert, and Procaccia's legal acrobatics are incomprehensible to me. But the bottom line of her decision was painfully clear: Anat can stay home! She is somehow less dangerous to the public than my Chaya was.

And now I am really scared. And the same questions keeps popping up: How could a person who is so clearly one-sided, so willing to shamelessly use her position to advance her own political agenda - how could such a person have the power to decide the fait of the citizens of this country??

Isn't it time for the Knesset Law Committie to hold a discussion regarding the simple question: How could a person like Ayalla Procaccia remain on Supreme Court??

Isn't it time for each one of us, citizens of Israel, to demand an answer to this question???



So, now you know why some people assume that the system works one way for those of the nationalist camp and another for the progressive, enlightened camp. Those of peace.


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Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Ms. Nir - How About Shiloh's Furrows?

Sarah Maslin Nir



is a native New Yorker who has spent two years working as a freelance writer in London. She has worked on Capitol Hill and as a presidential campaign aide. After the 2004 election, her career did a 180 and she became a fashion, music and travel writer for publications including the New York Times, The Times (UK), Vogue.com, Nylon Magazine and New York Magazine.

She's now a columnist for the New York Times. The Nightlife Column. Congrats!

Last October she reported on a Sukkah in Bryant Park. And she's been in the New York Weekly.

She even covered British vineyards.

With her name*, I'm guessing she's a member of the tribe (maybe Israeli parents?).

We have some great vineyards out here in Shiloh.


_______

*
Nir in Hebrew means furrow.

The Lost Left

Tzipi Livni, Yossi Beilin and Haim Ramon represent the "Lost Left" (the Hebrew word actually means suicidal), constantly "making peace" in a messianic belief, planting false hopes in the Israeli public.

More Eretz-Yisrael Scene Photos

Three scenes from a walk taken by a friend through the Wadi Reichan area in North-West Samaria, south of Um El-Fahm:



The Reality

Josh Hasten sent me this photo:



and added this note:

If Israel treats the "Palestinians" so poorly, how is it that I got passed today by an Arab driving a brand new Beamer (BMW) going at least 140 KM?

Why doesn’t CNN feature this “poor soul” and how he is suffering with his new roadster?????

So, "Palestine" Was Betrayed But By Whom?

How is this for material you identify with?

Zionist Jews were not interlopers in Palestine. The creation of the Jewish state was not an "original sin" foisted upon the Arab world. The tragic flight of the Palestinian refugees was overwhelmingly not the fault of the Zionists. To the contrary, at every momentous junction the Zionists opted for compromise and peace, the Arabs for intransigence and belligerency.

This, in summary, is how most people once understood the Arab-Israel conflict. Today, however, as Israel marks its Independence Day, an entire generation has come to maturity believing a diametrically opposite "narrative": namely, that the troubles persist because of West Bank settlements, because of Israeli building in east Jerusalem, because of the security barrier, because of heavy-handed Israeli militarism-in brief, because of a racist Zionist imperialism whose roots stretch back to 1948 and beyond.


Read more or the interview with Efraim Karsh, "1948: Palestine Betrayed".

CAMERA to the Rescue

...an entirely separate error, an AP photo of Jerusalem on the Guardian site is accompanied by a grossly misleading caption. The caption of the Nov. 11, 2009 photo reads: "An ultra-Orthodox Jew pauses in front the al-Aqsa mosque, Islam's third holiest site and known by Jews as Temple Mount." The problems with this caption are three-fold:

1) This caption gives the misimpression that the man is actually standing in front of the mosque, on the Temple Mount. Given the tensions surrounding the Temple Mount especially at that time, the presence of an ultra-Orthodox Jewish man standing in front of the mosque could be enough to set off additional Arab rioting, both on the mount and in nearby eastern Jerusalem neighborhoods.

In reality, he is apparently standing at the top of the steps that lead down to the Western Wall. He is resting his left arm on something, most likely the wall at the overlook at the top of those steps. From where he stands, he is separated from the Temple Mount by the Western Wall plaza. Especially in light of the sensitivity of the site, there is a huge difference between an ultra-Orthodox man standing on the entrance steps to the Western Wall, an area next to the Temple Mount and completely under Israeli control, versus an ultra-Orthodox man standing in front of the Al-Aqsa Mosque, on the Temple Mount itself, which is under the day-to-day control of the Islamic Waqf.

2) Why refer to the Temple Mount as the third holiest site in Islam and not point out that it is the holiest in Judaism?

3) The Al-Aqsa Mosque is not known by Jews to be the Temple Mount, it is known to Jews to be on the Temple Mount.

After being alerted of the errors, the BBC commendably corrected the incorrect description of the man's position in relation to the mosque. The more accurate BBC caption reads: "An ultra-Orthodox Jewish man pauses near the al-Aqsa mosque in Jerusalem, an area which Jews know and revere as Temple Mount." (Click on the second photo at the BBC link.) We urge the Guardian to follow the BBC's lead on this issue and improve the caption.

Laying of the Wreath

Following a previous post, here am I laying the wreath:




An Eliteful Insight

The insight of Martin Sherman:-

...So if the most dramatic political initiatives over the last two decades cannot be attributed to international pressure, or to the far-sighted wisdom of Israeli leaders, or the preferences of the Israeli electorate, what can it be ascribed to?

Trinity of influence

The answer is to be found more in Israel's sociological structure than its political mechanisms. More specifically, it lies in composition of its civil society elites who control the legal establishment, dominate the mainstream media, and hold the sway in academia (specifically in the social sciences and humanities faculties - where the politically-correct dominates.) These groups comprise an interactive trinity of influence that in effect dominates the socio-political process in Israel, sets the direction of the national agenda at the strategic level and imposes, with great effectiveness, its views on elected politicians and the general public.

Thus, for example, the legal elite can impede any assertive initiative that the elected polity may wish to implement. Similarly, the media elite can promote any concessionary initiative that the elected polity may be loath to implement. And when the stamp of professional approval is required for either, the amenable academic elite is ever-ready to provide it.

It requires little analytical acumen to identify that these were the mechanisms that generated most of the major political processes over the last two decades. Accordingly, the ability to understand the political realities in Israel is contingent on understanding the worldview and the cost-benefit analysis of these powerful and influential elites.

For them, the approval of peer groups abroad is far more important in determining their agenda than the approval of Israeli citizens at home. Invitations to deliver keynote speeches at high-profile conventions, sought-after appointments as visiting scholars at prestigious institutes, lucrative grants for research projects are far more forthcoming if one in identified as empathetic to the Palestinian narrative than as committed to the Zionist one...

US Officials Threaten Right of Free Speech

United States administration officials have voiced harsh criticism over advertisements in favor of Israel's position on Jerusalem that appeared in the U.S. press with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's encouragement. The authors of the most recent such advertisements were president of the World Jewish Congress Ronald Lauder and Nobel Peace Prize laureate Elie Wiesel. "All these advertisements are not a wise move," one senior American official told Haaretz.


Or is the above just wishful-thinking by Ha-Ha-Haaretz?

or worse, instigated by the paper?

Once Again, Roy Farran and Alexander Rubovitz

A Calgary newspaper reflects on Roy Farran's past:


Roy Farran's Long Shadow

Does a recently released book prove that Alberta's one-time top cop killed an Israeli teen 64 years ago?


The description of the murder is brutal and brief.

It takes place more than 60 years ago, somewhere along a lonely stretch of road between Jerusalem and Jericho. A 16-year-old boy, Alexander Rubowitz, is abducted by a shadowy team of "special forces" British policemen...

...the identity of the murderer, at least according to British author David
Cesarani's historical book Major Farran's Hat: Murder, Scandal and Britain's War
Against Jewish Terrorism, is no longer in question.

"Roy Farran picked up a rock and smashed it against the boy's head," Cesarani writes. "After one or more blows Alexander Rubowitz died."

This part of the story, Cesarani insists, is not conjecture. In 2004, declassified files from a nearly 60-year-old police report surfaced in the National Archives in London, England. For Cesarani, a University of London research professor who has made his academic name as an expert in Jewish history, this puts to rest the mystery
surrounding the fate of Rubowitz.

He was murdered in cold blood by war hero, newspaper publisher and one-time solicitor-general of Alberta Roy Farran.

A military court in Jerusalem acquitted Farran of the murder in 1947 and his family believes he's not guilty.

...On June 12, 2006, Farran was given a hero's burial with a military guard leading a procession 10 blocks to his final resting place in Calgary...

...Working for an unnamed client, a fast-talking Brooklyn private eye named Steven Rambam has become the public face of efforts to close the case, find the boy's body and declare Farran a murderer. To Farran's supporters, the book and the accusations prove nothing and are a continued assault on the reputation of a good man no longer
around to defend himself. But to Rubowitz's family, the 64-year ordeal continues to take its toll. They've never doubted who was responsible.

..."We believe we are close to finding the body. We have almost certainly determined who assisted Farran in hiding the body. We believe we know the exact area in which it's hidden. We believe we've identified a number of people who, if they chose to, could identify the exact location of the grave."

... On May 6, 1947, Cesarani says, Farran and his men came across Alexander Rubowitz clutching an armful of anti-British posters on Ussishkin Street in Jerusalem.

According to the book, Farran confessed to killing the teen to his superior officer the next day. Other incriminating evidence surfaced...But through legal manoeuvring, the alleged confession never made it to the trial, Cesarani notes. The hat could not be proven to be Farran's.

The next day, without a body or any eyewitnesses, Farran was acquitted, commanding front page headlines in British newspapers. Cesarani says evidence, including the alleged confession, was carefully destroyed by lawyers following the trial.

Rubowitz's disappearance remained officially unsolved. But the case didn't end there.

Retribution was quick and lethal. Almost a year to the day Rubowitz was abducted, a parcel arrived by mail to Farran's parents' United Kingdom home in Codsall,
Wolverhampton. It was addressed to "R. Farran." Farran was away visiting friends in Scotland. His brother, Rex, opened it.

The package was rigged and a bomb exploded. Rex was rushed to hospital, but died
days later. The device was widely rumoured to have been the work of the Lehi, also known as the Stern gang, an underground Jewish military group Rubowitz was part of.

...Despite Farran's position of power, accusations of the past murder and a long-standing coverup by the British military were never far behind. "That rumour's been floating around for a long time. I remember in the Senate people asking about that," says former senator and Lougheed-era MLA Ron Ghitter. "A lot of us knew about it, particularly in the Jewish community. It seems that there have been a number who feel he did murder the boy. I don't know if it's really been proven," he says. "You get wrapped up in hearsay and rumours. He was there, he was on the scene, he did escape . . . there was a lot of circumstantial stuff. Clearly, there was a price on Roy's head."

Farran's family did not respond to requests for an interview by the Herald. But a close friend says they do not believe he murdered Rubowitz. "He told me personally that he never committed such a crime," says Andre Lorent. "As far as I'm concerned and the family is concerned, we don't believe it. I don't believe that Roy would have committed this."

"If I have to choose between somebody who wrote a book (60) years removed from that time and Roy, I would side behind Roy Farran 100 per cent. We think it's sad to accuse Roy of things he cannot refute."

Gerald Green, who served alongside Farran in the Palestine police, told The Telegraph
newspaper in England last year that he believes his friend was innocent. Green, now in his 80s, suggested the documents that surfaced in 2004 could have been doctored by a superior officer to frame Farran.

...But Cesarani insists proof of Farran's guilt is now on file. He acknowledges it was impossible to challenge the not guilty verdict of the court martial until 2004 when parts of a police report surfaced in the National Archives. First discovered by an Israeli journalist, his findings were only published in Hebrew. Cesarani's book
is the first to record, in English, what this evidence suggested. "When I went to the public records . . . and had a look at that file there was absolutely no doubt from what it contained," Cesarani says.

"The police investigation into the disappearance into Alexander Rubowitz concluded that Roy Farran had murdered him and that Roy had himself admitted to the killing of
Alexander Rubowitz in a statement he made to his boss and superior."

Still, Cesarani concedes this evidence would probably be considered hearsay in a court of law, since it's a second-hand report told to a police inspector by Farran's superior. The book has been enough to convince at least one Farran supporter of his guilt.

Maurice Yacowar, a film studies professor from the University of Calgary, looked to Farran as a mentor in the 1950s when he was hired as a cub reporter for the North Hill News, a paper Farran founded. Last year, Yacowar wrote an article for Alberta Views that began with the alarming opening sentence: "Apparently I have idolized a sadistic war criminal."

Yacowar says he had heard rumblings about the Rubowitz affair when he was working for Farran, but didn't want to believe it. Because of Cesarani's book, he now does. Still, Yacowar can't help but speak admiringly of his former mentor, who he said had more influence on his life than anyone, other than his parents. "I met him when I was 16," he says. "That's one of the ironies that struck me. When he hired me, this Jewish kid, I was the age of the Jewish kid he killed."

University of New Brunswick history professor David Charters studied the Farran case as early as the 1970s when he wrote an article on the matter. He again touched on the subject in his 1989 book The British Army and Jewish Insurgency in Palestine,
1945-47. He acknowledges Major Farran's Hat seems to offer the definitive account of what really happened.

"When I wrote my article 30 years ago there was one very thin file on the Farran case and there were clearly gaps in it," Charters says. "Because of that I had to be very careful about what I wrote. There was enough ambiguity and uncertainty that I wasn't prepared to come out and say, 'This guy committed murder.'

"There was not enough evidence there for that to have stood up to a libel case, so I had to be very careful. Now I think the story is pretty much out there. I don't think there are any surprises waiting in the wings, and it's pretty clear that he did do it."

Still, 64 years later, Rubowitz's body has not been found.

Many of the witnesses that may have been able to back Cesarani's claims have long
since died. Farran is no longer around to defend himself. In Israel, Alexander Rubowitz remains a symbol of the Zionist struggle, a teenage warrior who paid the ultimate price for the Jewish state. Certainly the incident came at a key time in Middle East politics. Within a few weeks of Farran's acquittal, Britain pulled out of Palestine. In November 1947, the United Nations voted in favour of the partition of Palestine and proposed the creation of a Jewish state, an Arab state, and a UN-administered Jerusalem. Israel declared independence in 1948.

In Jerusalem, a plaque dedicated to Rubowitz commemorates the abduction on the street where it allegedly happened, boldly stating the teen was abducted by "Special Forces" of the British police. Moshe Rubowitz and wife named their son, now 42, after Alexander.

"I am proud to be a nephew to that boy who gave his life for a state that (had) not
existed at that time. Most of us did not have a chance to know him, but we all
grew up on his memory as a hero."

...For those who knew Farran in Alberta, reopening the Rubowitz case is a pointless assault on his memory. "He's gone and dead now. What can be gained? It's better to
keep in him in fond memory," says Ghitter. "I prefer to remember him in a very positive light. He contributed considerably during his public life in Alberta. He had a remarkable life."

Investigator Steven Rambam is less forgiving. "I have no doubt that somewhere in Alberta or in Canada there is someone that Mr. Farran spoke to about this matter and has information that can assist us," he says. "The decent thing to do is to provide this information so we can give this kid a decent burial."

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

You Going?

THOUSANDS TO GATHER AGAINST OBAMA’S PUSH AGAINST ISRAEL - RABBIS, JEWISH LEADERS TO JOIN THOUSANDS OUTSIDE OF ISRAEL CONSULATE THIS SUNDAY


Thousands of American Jews are expected to gather this Sunday at 1 PM outside of the Israeli Consulate, located at 800 Second Avenue (42nd Street & 2nd Avenue) to protest President Barack Obama’s scapegoating of Israel and his increasingly hostile anti-Israel proposals, and actions. Numerous rabbis and heads of Jewish organizations will also be present.

“We are outraged that President Obama is scapegoating Israel and wants to expel Jews from their homes in Jerusalem. President Obama and Secretary Hillary Clinton show more anger about a Jewish family building a home in Jerusalem than Iran building a nuclear bomb,” states Beth Gilinsky of the Jewish Action Alliance. “Vast segments of the Jewish community will not tolerate the President’s continuing attacks on Israel. Grassroots Jewry will not be silent.”

Protesters will raise large signs that read: “Jerusalem: Israel’s United and Eternal Capital,” “Hillary Clinton: Pressure Iran, Not Israel!”, “Obama: Stand up for America, Stop Bowing to Saudi Kings!”, and “Obama: Jews Will Not Be Silent.”

A taped statement by former NYC Mayor Ed Koch, who has vigorously expressed his shock and displeasure with President Obama’s hostility toward Israel, will be played to attendees.

The rally is being sponsored by the Jewish Action Alliance, an organization well known for activism and speaking out on issues of Jewish security. The event will be MC’d by radio talk show host Steve Malzberg and columnist Rabbi Aryeh Spero. It is endorsed by AISH Center, Americans for a Safe Israel, Artists 4 Israel, Children of Jewish Holocaust Survivors, Christians and Jews United for Israel, Coalition for Israel, Crown Heights Women for the Security and Integrity of Israel; Dr. Joseph Frager, Jerusalem Reclamation Project; Assemblyman Dov Hikind; IsraelAlive; Israel Day Concert in the Park; Jewish Political Education Foundation; Dr. Michael Ledeen of Center for Defense of Democracies; Unity Coalition for Israel; Dr. Herbert London of The Hudson Institute; AMCHA, Coalition for Jewish Concerns; Stand With Us; Endowment for Middle East Truth; World Committee for the Land of Israel; Zionist Organization of America; Z Street; and many other Jewish, Christian and Hindu groups.

She's So Incontinent

She has this to say about Judaism/Jewishness:-

“I personally don’t have religion, but I’m Jewish in the ways I can’t — and don’t want to — escape. Ethnically, culturally, it oozes out of me,” Silverman said. “Susan, my rabbi sister, has, of course, embraced it in every part of her life. We are different, but not that different.”


And she had this early childhood experience:-

At age 13, she started to experience depression and was sent to a psychiatrist who had hanged himself the day of her appointment and was discovered while she was in the waiting room. Soon after, a doctor prescribed Silverman 16 Xanax a day, and at one point she didn’t go to high school for two months. She eventually got better, and in 1988 she headed to New York University, but dropped out after a year to do comedy.


Yes, Sarah Silverman (see from Jan. 2007).

Her autobiography.

For grownups only.

Great J Street News - For A Moment Anyway

I found this headline from October 15, 2009:


J Street is "not going anywhere"


and thought, wow, just great.

Then I read the body of the report:


“I guess it’s our turn to be the rumor of the week,” says J Street's chairman, Bruce Baschuk. “We’re not going anywhere, you don’t have to worry.” Apparently, anybody who works the cocktail circuit in Washington’s commercial real estate community has heard rumors about the imminent demise of a handful of firms.

...The J Street Companies, as you may know, is the product of a couple of mergers of local companies in different sectors of real estate: J Street Development, which Baschuk founded in 2005, picked up Randall Hagner Residential in 2007 and Woodmark Commercial Services in 2008...



Oh well.




----

So Equitable

The father of Eyal Press is an Israeli doctor who stayed on in Buffalo, New York after coming to do advanced medical studies. Press himself is a Nation contributing writer and the author of Absolute Convictions: My Father, a City, and the Conflict That Divided America (Picador). He is working on a book about disobedience and dissent.

I found this a brief mention of his family in that book among others in which he noted:

a rift within my family: between the defiant Israelis on one side, and those with a vivid memory of surviving the Holocaust on the other.


His book provides insight into the abortion debate in Buffalo where a friend of his father, an abortion provider, was assassinated. His father, too, ran an abortion clinic. He touches on "the religious fundamentalism of his father's homeland" and "the lives of Press's defiant father, Shalom, who "at the core of his identity" couldn't "back down in the face of a threat," and his mother, Carla, a Holocaust survivor who endured comparisons of abortion clinics to Nazi death camps".

Well, Mr. Press has a book review essay out in the New York Review of Books, which is as left and Israel-critical as you can get within the sophisticated, liberal and progressive camp among the East Coast elite.

Called Israel’s Holy Warriors, and I do not as of this writing have the full text (*), he reviews these books: "Israel and Its Army: From Cohesion to Confusion" by Stuart A. Cohen, Routledge, 210 pp., $39.95 (paper); "Soldiers’ Testimonies from Operation Cast Lead, Gaza 2009" by Breaking the Silence, 112 pp.; "Israel’s Religious Right and the Question of Settlements a report by the International Crisis Group", 45 pp.; "Israel’s Materialist Militarism" by Yagil Levy
Lexington, 285 pp., $34.95 (paper).

His lead-in is the protest by two members of the Shimshon Battalion who held up the banner at their induction ceremony. He asserts that they

...were letting their commanders know that, if ordered to dislodge the settlers from Homesh again, they would refuse, out of loyalty to God.


While, of course, God is central for religious people, the fact that from every other ideological/political/security point of view the disengagement was a failure, and thus, all secular people would feel comfortable being in dissent, somehow escapes Press' scrutiny. He is focused on fundamentalist religious interference with the regular world.

He does record that

Until recently, displays of disobedience in the Israeli army were mainly carried out by so-called “refuseniks” on the left who risked being branded traitors (and sent to prison) to avoid serving in the occupied territories.


The rest of his thinking on this issue is, as I noted, beyond my reach but I see that something called New America Foundation is sponsoring Press at an event. The details:

Time and Location
Wednesday, April 21, 2010 - 9:00am - 10:30am
New America Foundation
1899 L Street NW Suite 400
Washington, DC, 20036

Israel’s Holy Warriors
Religious Fundamentalism, Settlers, and the Israeli Defense Forces

In the current issue of the New York Review of Books, Eyal Press takes an in depth look at the explosive issue of settler religious nationalism in Israel’s army...Join us for a conversation about how the right-ward shift in Israel and growing strength of the religious settler movement is being reflected in Israel’s security establishment and how this can impact the bigger regional peace picture.

A light breakfast will be served.

Participants

featured speaker
Eyal Press
The Bernard L. Schwartz Fellow
New America Foundation

respondent
Yoram Peri
Director, Joseph and Alma Gildenhorn Institute for Israel Studies
University of Maryland

moderator
Daniel Levy
Director, Middle East Task Force
Senior Fellow, New America Foundation


Well, isn't that a nicely balanced and fair panel?

Actually, it isn't. I know Yoram. Left of center. Levy is far left. Press seems to be way-left (he's into the economic inequality concern now.

The radical progressive camp - did I leave out democratic, humanist, ethical, et al.? - is so, er, equitable.



----

(*) Found it here

Israel and Its Army: From Cohesion to Confusion
by Stuart A. Cohen
Routledge, 210 pp., $39.95 (paper)

Soldiers’ Testimonies from Operation Cast Lead, Gaza 2009
by Breaking the Silence
112 pp., available at www.breakingthesilence.org.il

Israel’s Religious Right and the Question of Settlements
a report by the International Crisis Group
45 pp., available at www.crisisgroup.org

Israel’s Materialist Militarism
by Yagil Levy
Lexington, 285 pp., $34.95 (paper)

I.

One evening last October, several hundred new recruits to the Shimshon Battalion filed into the vast plaza adjoining the Western Wall in Jerusalem. At a site normally thronged with worshipers, the soldiers gathered to be sworn in to the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), surrounded by parents and well-wishers who snapped pictures and recorded the proceedings with handheld video cameras. One of the videos would soon make news, capturing the moment when, instead of proudly reciting the oath of loyalty in which military induction ceremonies traditionally culminate in Israel, two of the recruits unfurled a banner that left the nature of their loyalties unclear. ‘Shimshon Does Not Evacuate Homesh,’ the banner proclaimed.

Homesh is a Jewish settlement whose existence may have slipped the minds of some Israelis, not least since, officially speaking, it doesn’t exist anymore. Situated on a steep hill a few miles northwest of Nablus, the remote, sparsely populated outpost was one of four West Bank settlements from which Israel withdrew in 2005 in connection with the Gaza disengagement plan carried out by Ariel Sharon. Houses were demolished, residents were relocated, and the area surrounding the vacated village was turned into a closed military zone. This hasn’t stopped some messianic Jewish settlers from returning to rebuild it. Again and again in recent years, the IDF has dispatched soldiers to remove them, but the settlers keep coming back, organizing pilgrimages, opening a yeshiva, and turning the ruins of Homesh into a symbol of their spiritual resolve.

The members of the Shimshon Battalion who held up the banner at the induction ceremony were letting their commanders know that, if ordered to dislodge the settlers from Homesh again, they would refuse, out of loyalty to God. The Israeli military wasted no time in dismissing their gesture of defiance as ‘a disgraceful disciplinary aberration.’ Those responsible were sentenced to twenty days in prison, expelled from the brigade, and denounced in a speech before the Israeli Knesset by Defense Minister Ehud Barak. Yet a few weeks later, another sign appeared, this one suspended from the roof of a dining hall on a military base by members of the Nahshon Battalion, which declared, in solidarity, ‘Nahshon Also Does Not Expel.’ Two of the soldiers involved were squad leaders who, earlier that day, had refused an order to block right-wing activists from reaching another West Bank settlement where the Israeli Civil Administration had ordered the demolition of two illegal buildings. This was followed by a third sign, put up at the training base of the Kfir Brigade: ‘Kfir Does Not Expel Jews.’

Until recently, displays of disobedience in the Israeli army were mainly carried out by so-called ‘refuseniks’ on the left who risked being branded traitors (and sent to prison) to avoid serving in the occupied territories. The refuseniks making noise today come from Israel’s religious right, and they want to preserve the occupation, not end it. ‘Today, over a quarter of young officers wear skullcaps, ‘an Israeli general recently told the International Crisis Group, which devoted part of a July 2009 report to the trend. ‘In the combat units, their presence is two or three times their demographic weight. In the Special Forces it’s even higher.’

Some of these soldiers enter the military after attending pre-army Torah colleges, state-funded preparatory schools where high school graduates enroll for one year of ‘spiritual fortification’ before joining their peers. Others go to places like the Birkat Yosef Hesder Yeshiva, a religious academy funded by the government under a formal arrangement with the Ministry of Defense, where roughly 250 students divide their time between Torah instruction and military service over a five-year period. The first hesder yeshiva opened its doors in 1965: around 50 such institutions are spread across Israel and the West Bank today. Some of the soldiers responsible for the recent sign-waving incidents were graduates of Birkat Yosef.

Last November, I visited Birkat Yosef, which is set on a hillside overlooking the orange-roofed houses of Elon Moreh, a settlement near Nablus. The adjoining valley is where, according to Genesis, Abraham first entered the land of Israel, and where in the 1970s members of Gush Emunim, the movement dedicated to establishing Jewish settlements in the West Bank, began appearing with prayer books in hand. I met the academy’s director, Rabbi Elyakim Levanon, in his office, where he sat beneath a framed photograph of his mentor, the late Rabbi Tzvi Yehuda Kook, the spiritual father of the settlement movement, with whom he studied for sixteen years. I asked him what would happen if the army ever ordered a large-scale removal of Jewish settlers from the West Bank, which he regards as sacred Jewish land. ‘This will destroy the army,’ he said. ‘The order to do it will destroy the army.’ He compared it to being asked to eat nonkosher food. ‘If a [religious] soldier is told to eat milk and meat, what will he say? ‘Because they’re telling me, I’ll eat it?’ He won’t eat it.’

II.

The Israeli army has long maintained that it is up to commanders, not soldiers or their rabbis, to decide which missions to perform. But the IDF has never been a purely secular institution. As Stuart A. Cohen notes in Israel and Its Army, the desire to integrate religious soldiers into the military led Israel’s secular founders to chart an accommodating path. From the start, army bases were equipped with synagogues; mess halls observed kosher dietary laws. Copies of the Old Testament were given out to soldiers at induction ceremonies, and all troops were required to attend ceremonies such as the blessing of the wine before the Friday evening Sabbath meal. The goal, in part, was to foster cohesion. ‘Our army will be a united army, without ‘trends,’‘David Ben-Gurion insisted. The IDF’s accommodation of religious observances had the added benefit of imbuing military service with spiritual meaning.

Still, for many years religious young people either had an inconspicuous part in the army or avoided being drafted by requesting a deferment available to yeshiva students who wished to pursue full-time Torah instruction. The IDF’s senior levels were dominated by secular Ashkenazi Jews of European extraction and its elite battalions manned disproportionately by soldiers raised on kibbutzim. To some extent, the changes simply mirror how Israel itself has changed. A few decades ago, when becoming an officer was regarded as a means of upward mobility, young Israelis from the secular middle class competed fiercely for spots in the army’s top units. Today, many such young people aspire to be tech workers, patent attorneys, or filmmakers. They live in and around the prosperous commercial center often referred to as the ‘Tel Aviv bubble,’ where few people go around boasting of being officers anymore.

Practically all secular Israelis still fulfill the basic terms of military service required of citizens once they reach the age of eighteen-three years for men, two years for women, followed by reserve duty whose length and frequency varies depending on the unit. But many no longer grow up hoping to serve in elite front-line units or become officers, a trend dating back several decades. New groups-immigrants, religious soldiers-have taken their place. Not only are some 30 percent of officers openly orthodox but an estimated 50 percent of soldiers in officer training colleges are now religious. While many secular recruits from less nationalistic backgrounds have gravitated to noncombat units, their religious counterparts have volunteered for infantry battalions in which they not only serve but also lead. ‘In a few years, religious soldiers will make up the majority of brigade commanders in all areas,’ a ‘military Torah college head’ told the International Crisis Group.

The transformation of the political landscape has accelerated the shift. The nationalism that swept through Orthodox circles after the1967 Six-Day War created a large pool of highly motivated religious conscripts. Later, the 1982 Lebanon war and the first Palestinian intifada disillusioned many secularists, some of whom went on to become refuseniks. Meanwhile, the hesder yeshivas and, later, pre-army Torah colleges emerged, smoothing the recruitment and advancement of religious soldiers.

As a result of these changes, religious soldiers now ‘see themselves as leading the army,’ said Amos Harel, the military correspondent for Haaretz. Harel told me the story of a recent ceremony for an elite paratroopers’ brigade at which a female soldier rose to sing an anthem, unaware that she was violating a Jewish religious ruling known as kol haisha arve, which holds that listening to the voice of a woman is improper. The religious soldiers in the audience decided to boycott the performance. ‘I think about one hundred soldiers left, because they refused to listen to or watch a woman singing,’ Harel said. At the Shimshon Battalion’s swearing-in ceremony where soldiers held up the protest sign, three different religious leaders delivered sermons during the proceedings, interspersed with spiritual songs, according to Dror Ze’evi, a professor of Middle East studies at Ben-Gurion University, who was there because his son was among the inductees. Ze’evi himself had been inducted into a paratroop brigade a few decades earlier, also at the Western Wall, in a simple service with no preaching. The contrast with his son’s ceremony, he told me, disturbed him.

Overt preaching has cropped up on the battlefield as well. While serving in the Gaza war last January, a reservist I’ll call Avi Shalev (he did not want his real name used) attended a pep talk on his military base by a rabbi who cast the Gaza war as a battle between bnei ha-or-the children of light-and bnei ha-hosheh-the children of darkness. ‘In Hebrew literature, this is an eschatological war, a messianic war,’ Avi, who was himself brought up in the religious education system, told me. His disquiet deepened after he acquainted himself with some of the religious pamphlets strewn around the base.

One called for soldiers to show no mercy toward the enemy. Another consisted of a series of questions and answers. ‘Is it possible to compare today’s Palestinians to the Philistines of the past?’ it asked. ‘A comparison is possible because the Philistines of the past were not natives…. The Palestinians claim they deserve a state here, when in reality there was never a Palestinian or Arab state within the borders of our country.’ The pamphlets were inscribed with the insignia of the army rabbinate and the IDF, which Avi said would have troubled him whether or not he agreed with the message. ‘Every person in the country is supposed to go to the army and in order for that to take place the army has to be a neutral place,’ he said.

Avi eventually took his concerns and some copies of the pamphlets to the group called Breaking the Silence, which recently published a collection of soldiers’ testimonies from the Gaza attack-called Operation Cast Lead-that features similar accounts from other reservists. An official in the army’s education department said that the more incendiary rabbis were outsiders. The IDF affirmed in a written statement that its chief rabbi, Avichai Rontzki, did not see or approve any published material that deviated from the ‘inclusive policy’ he set, a characterization that some of the army’s own officers might find curious. Before the war, Rabbi Rontzki expanded the activities of a unit responsible for inculcating soldiers with Jewish values but that some officers complained was engaging in religious proselytizing and political ‘brainwashing.’[1] Appointed by then Chief of Staff Dan Halutz in 2006 in an effort to appeal to the national-religious community, Rabbi Rontzki lives in the settlement of Itamar. (He wouldn’t be interviewed for this article, and will soon be replaced by Rafi Peretz, a rabbi from a similar background who is regarded as less divisive.)

Some Israeli commentators regard the growing influence of the religious right in the IDF as an ominous development. ‘Up until this period, the military prided itself on being very just-war oriented-that was the language we spoke,’ said Mikhael Manekin, co-director of Breaking the Silence (and himself a former IDF officer). ‘That’s the military ethical code and I think it’s common to most Western militaries. Now you’re talking about a different voice within the military. And a different voice openly within the military and sometimes prominent in the military.’

III.

Rabbi Moshe Hagar-Lau, a tall, rangy man with a bristly black beard, runs the Beit Yatir pre-army Torah college in the southern Hebron Hills, across the Green Line. In his sparely furnished office, I spotted a familiar picture on the wall, a photograph of Rabbi Yehuda Kook, who he affectionately referred to as ‘my rabbi.’ Pinned up next to Kook’s picture was another photo, however, of the person Rabbi Hagar-Lau called ‘my commander’-Defense Minister Ehud Barak. ‘In the army, there is only one commander,’ he said, which is why students at his academy were taught to obey orders whether they agreed with them or not.

Rabbi Hagar-Lau led me to the dining room, where lunch was being served. I asked a cluster of students in jeans, T-shirts, and yarmulkes what they would do if given an order to evacuate settlers. One who used to live in Gush Katif, a bloc of seventeen settlements in the Gaza Strip that was dismantled in 2005, told me this would be extremely difficult for him. But he said he would do it. All the others nodded.

Some analysts, including Stuart Cohen, believe that the threat of insubordination is overblown. Back in 2005, before Gush Katif was evacuated, numerous observers predicted that an attempt by the IDF to close such settlements would divide Israel and lead to mass refusal among the several thousand soldiers deployed for the mission. In the end, sixty-three soldiers were punished for disobeying orders, but there was no mass refusal. The event showed how strong the bonds of loyalty and discipline are in the army. Yet as the sociologist and IDF analyst Yagil Levy has shown, the smoothness of the disengagement owed a great deal to the meticulous planning that preceded it. Before a single settler was removed, units with a high percentage of religious conscripts were not allowed to deal directly with the settlers. [2]

A senior IDF official told me that commanders are being trained to deal with future outbreaks of disobedience. But if a similar withdrawal from the West Bank were planned, Levy does not believe that such a smooth operation could be repeated; in the West Bank, there are far more settlers. For Israel’s religious right, he said, settlements such as Hebron and Elon Moreh are ‘the real game.’ A senior Israeli military officer told the International Crisis Group that he would ‘rather give back Tel Aviv than Hebron,’ which he described as ‘Jewish land’ that ‘is promised to us by the Bible, by God…This ideology is the backbone of the army, and so I will not obey such an order.’

During the Gaza disengagement, many settler leaders and rabbis called on soldiers not to disobey because, as they saw it, disobedience would turn the country and the security establishment against them. By contrast, when the Israeli government introduced a plan to dismantle twenty-six illegal settlement outposts in the West Bank last May, a coalition of rabbis based in the settlements advocated refusal. ‘The holy Torah prohibits taking part in any act of uprooting Jews from any part of our sacred land,’ they wrote. After the incidents in which conscripts waved signs, some of the same rabbis met to praise them as ‘heroes.’ An organization on the far right called SOS Israel, which strenuously opposes ceding any part of the Holy Land to non-Jews, held a ceremony in Jerusalem to bestow 20,000-shekel cash prizes on the members of the Shimshon Battalion who started the trend.

Although Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned after the sign incidents that challenging the IDF’s hierarchy could ‘bring about the collapse of the state,’ Aryeh Eldad of the National Union party and Tzipi Hotobeli of Likud responded by introducing a bill that would prohibit the army from carrying out any future evacuations; eleven ministers joined as cosponsors. The measure calls for restricting such politically sensitive missions to the police-a force without the manpower or resources to execute them. Although the bill stands little chance of passing, it shows how much the political climate in Israel has shifted to the right since the Gaza disengagement, with a bloc of Knesset members now openly challenging the IDF’s authority to carry out missions in the territories that they believe, perhaps not wrongly, could spark mass mutiny.

Until recently, Ilan Paz, a retired brigadier general who served as head of civil administration in the West Bank, regarded pro-settler disobedience as a minor danger. He no longer feels this way: ‘I’m less worried about the problem of the soldiers-because with soldiers the army knows how to deal-than with the public support this phenomenon gets from the more right-wing sectors of society, from rabbis, from heads of the yeshivot hesder…from members of the Knesset.’ Paz noted the irony of right-wing Israelis-long-standing allies of the settlers-suddenly demanding that the IDF not intervene in political matters related to the occupied territories. ‘If we don’t find a way to stop this phenomenon, in my opinion it will proliferate, and the army won’t be able to do anything in the territories,’ he said.

In December, Defense Minister Ehud Barak ended the IDF’s relationship with the Har Bracha Hesder Yeshiva, whose leader, Rabbi Eliezer Melamed, had published a book distributed to its graduates that unabashedly promoted refusal.[3] It was an unprecedented step, a signal from the defense establishment that rabbis preaching insubordination will not go unpunished. Yet the other academies in the program, including the one run by Rabbi Levanon, are still being funded by the government, despite evidence that some of their leaders occasionally preach a similar line. In January, it was revealed that Rabbi Haim Druckman, who heads the committee that oversees hesder yeshivas and is considered a relative moderate, endorsed insubordination in a leaflet distributed in synagogues. At a subsequent meeting with an aide to Prime Minister Netanyahu, Rabbi Druckman insisted that he did not support refusal, but went on to say that there were times when a soldier could not obey an order that violated his conscience, which in his view did not constitute insubordination.

For a generation of national-religious youth who grew up in its aftermath, the Gaza disengagement has become a symbol of shameful acquiescence. Some of them are in the IDF now; others, like Moshe Frumberg, will be soon, unless they or their commanders have second thoughts. A seventeen-year-old settler with six-inch side-curls, Frumberg was recently summoned to a draft center in Jerusalem to undergo an initial round of tests the army conducts for recruits. Before leaving, he and two friends hung a sign at the entrance that declared, ‘We Won’t Be Drafted to Evacuate Jews!’

Frumberg lives in Havat Gilad, an illegal settlement outpost populated by young people known for their militant views. An admirer of the late Meir Kahane, he told me he’d slash the tires of trucks to prevent settler evacuations. Where was the limit to what he would do, I asked? ‘There is no limit,’ he said. Even among settlers, such views are extreme. But opposition to giving up more land-and a stated willingness to act on this belief-is increasing. While I was in Israel, a television reporter asked new recruits whether they would refuse orders to evacuate settlements. One after another said they would. A poll commissioned in February by the Maagar Mochot, an Israeli research institution, found that 48 percent of Israeli high school students would disobey evacuation orders. Of this group, 81 percent described themselves as religious.

On November 25, Netanyahu announced a ten-month freeze on some settlement construction. Settlers responded by blocking roads to prevent inspectors from handing out orders and, in one case, torching and desecrating a mosque, part of a new strategy to exact a heavy ‘price tag’ for any measure detrimental to their interests.[4] So fierce a reaction can be viewed as a sign of their fear that, like Ariel Sharon, Netanyahu may betray them. It can also be viewed as the predictable consequence of policies that have led settlers to feel they are entitled to take the law into their own hands. For all the outrage at the freeze, Dror Etkes, a researcher who has observed settlement activity for nearly a decade, told me that a halt in settlement construction has been observed at no more than a dozen West Bank sites and ignored at roughly fifty others. There is, he said, more construction underway across the Green Line today than a year ago.

Back in November, just before the freeze made headlines, Etkes took me to Haresha, a hilltop community near Ramallah that was established more than a decade ago without a legal permit. Today it has a synagogue, a school, an outdoor basketball court, and several houses built on what Etkes said used to be private Palestinian land, which the Israeli Civil Administration now claims is ‘state land.’ A paved road connects houses that have been hooked up to the same electricity grid and water supply that serve other legal and illegal settlements nearby. The Ministry of Housing helped subsidize construction. Orders to demolish the houses have been ignored. At one point, Etkes pulled to a stop in front of a bus station where a poster had been taped up on a glass window. It was a notice alerting residents to the event being held to honor ‘the loyal soldiers’ of the Shimshon Battalion who disrupted their swearing-in ceremony.

Notes:

[1] See Amos Harel, ‘Israel Military Rabbi Under Fire for ‘Brainwashing’ Soldiers,’ Haaretz, October 23, 2008. ‘In a number of cases it is religious brainwashing and, indirectly, also political [brainwashing],’ a senior officer quoted in the story complained about Rontzki’s activities.

[2] See Yagil Levy, ‘The Embedded Military: Why Did the IDF Perform Effectively in Executing the Disengagement Plan,’ Security Studies, Vol. 16, No. 3 (2007), pp. 382-408.

[3] In the book, Revivim, Rabbi Melamed writes, ‘A simple halakha [law] is that it is forbidden for any person, whether a soldier or an officer…to participate in the strictly forbidden act of expelling Jews from their homes and handing over any portion of the Land of Israel to enemies.’ See Amos Harel and Anshel Pfeffer, ‘Meet the Rabbi Spurring IDF Troops to Refuse Orders,’ Haaretz, November 18, 2009.

[4] The strategy is described in detail in the report ‘Israeli Settler Violence and the Evacuation of Outposts,’ United Nations, Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, occupied Palestinian territory, November 2009.

Monday, April 19, 2010

Earth Day vs. Israel's Independence Day

Hillary Clinton congratulated Israel on its Independence Day.

And she used 234 words.

Count them.

For Earth Day (?) she managed to use 239 words.

Really.

Hillary, who do you love?

A Conversation of the Deaf?

I received a mail that was sent out from Iraq that contained a horrific propaganda message in that it compared the Holocaust to what the Arabs of Eretz Yisrael experienced. Maybe you have seen it.

I wrote back to all the attached addresses and here is my reaction:-

The PowerPoint Presentation making a comparison between what was done to the Jews and what Arabs suffer as a result of the Arab-Israel conflict over the Palestine Mandate is, at first glance, horrifying.

But besides that, some people may presume that the message is genuine: what the Nazis did do the Jews, the Jews do to Arabs.
That, of course, is not only wrong but facile.
a) Jews have no ideology that Arabs are vermin like Nazis called the Jews or worse. The conflict, from a Jewish point-of-view is nationalist; not theological. And as always, there are a few who break that rule but we are still looking for an Arab "Peace Now" which would indicate there is someone on the other side for balance.
b) In Europe, Jews were herded up, killed and placed in concentration camps only because they were Jews. None of them bombed pizza parlors, supermarkets, blew themselves up in churches, on buses, on rail trains unlike what Arabs practice.
c) worse, the Grand Mufti Amin El-Husseini fled to Berlin after the pro-Nazi revolt in Iraq failed and made broadcasts on behalf of Nazis, mobilized Muslim Bosnians to the Waffen SS and successfully halted rescue efforts of Jews to flee Europe.
d) I guess someone could be clever and compare marriage to prostitution, or a doctor operating to a serial killer.

One person out of 30 responded:-

With all due respect, I did not ask for your opinion on this. So please refrain from sending me e-mails moving forward.

I replied:-

Sorry, I thought that an inquisitive mind and willingness to hear varied opinions is the basis of a human being, which permits dialogue, bettering each person's own personal worth and and contributing to an improved society.

You will not hear from me again.


VH then wrote:

You stated:

a) Jews have no ideology that Arabs are vermin like Nazis called the Jews or worse. The conflict, from a Jewish point-of-view is nationalist; not theological.

What about the claim of "the promised land" that is not theological? One reason I am not interested in your opinion. Furthermore, when I requested that you refrain from e-mailing me, you did not have the decency to consider my wishes; very indicative of your society.

I would appreciate you NOT/NOT writing me again.


I didn't.

But as my veteran readers know, one need not believe in a God or that he promised us a land. The Land of Israel for over 3000 years has been the residency, the homeland of the Jews. Non-Jewish source as well as archeology support this.

In fact, it was promised to us: by the League of Nations, following the Balfour Declaration, following the Versailles Peace Conference and the San Remo Conference. And the United Nations recommended it be established.

We, of course, refer to this "promise" as no more than a recognition of our historical, legal, natural, cultural and religious rights, as all other nations, to our homeland.

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Fomer Underground Fighters at Memorial Day Ceremony

Today is Israel's Memorial Day for the Fallen in all the campaigns for the independence of the state.

I participated in the one held at the Gallows Room at the former Central Jerusalem Prison where Meir Feinstein and Moshe Barazani took their own lives rather than permit themselves to be hanged by the British occupiers.

In the picture below, you can see Yosef Avni, "Abu-Jildah", who fired the Bren gun at Deir Yassin and was in many other operations including the King David Hotel (leaning on his cane), Yonah Artziel of Lechi and Prof. Ra'anan Meridor, widow of Eliyahu Meridor, former Irgun Jerusalem commander (touching her necklace):


The woman in the white hat is Yael Ben-Dov (Chaya) who was in Lechi and attempted an assassination of General Evelyn Barker and was to meet Alexander Rubovitz on the evening he was kidnapped and then murdered: