Thursday, April 21, 2011

A spring visit to the home of the Patriarchs

I was in Hevron yesterday. As always, a visit to the site of our forefather’s burial is an occasion for reflection. As is the bloody history of the city, including my old roommate Yaakov Zimmerman, HY”D.

This Pessach marks 43 years since the return of Jews to heron. The ancient Jewish community of Hevron dates back some 3400 years! (over 2000 years before Muhammad founded his Islamic empire). The first years of King David’s monarchy were spent in Hevron. After the destruction of the temple and the exile of majority of Jews from the land, the Jewish community was small but no less tenacious than today.  The Jews were expelled by the crusaders in the eleven hundreds, but returned. In the census of 1895, they numbered 10% of the population.
But in 1929, some of their Arab neighbors rose up and mercilessly slaughtered 67 people. (The duplicitous British authorities stood aside). Irregardless of the danger, Jews trickled back into their beloved town but in 1936, the British removed the remaining Jews from the city.  
In 1948 the Jordanians captured Hevron. In 1967 it finally returned to Jewish governance, after some 1900 years!

This should have been the start of a wonderful partnership. Mostly religious Jews returning to the mostly religious city of the forefathers. But instead of welcoming the returning Jews with friendship and reconciliation, the local Arabs started to murder again. Instead of recognizing an opportunity for asking forgiveness and building a joint future together, they sought to destroy. Much like the century past.

The cave of the Patriarchs - Me'arat HaMachpela in Hevron 
The potential for Hevron as a place of worship, tourism and spiritual light is immense. It is a pity that in the shadow of our common ancestors, we cannot find a common agenda that would make them proud of their offspring.

There are extremists on both sides that desecrate the legacy of our forefathers.
It is time to try again. 


The Arabs need to understand that this is the Jew’s G-d given land. The Jews need to help the Arabs understand that their personal property and civilian rights are recognized and respected. The Arabs need to feel secure in the knowledge that they can maintain their religion, culture and language in the Land of Israel.

With mutual respect and understanding, the future could be paradise on earth. I feel sure that the Forefathers would agree.

Sunday, April 17, 2011

37 DAYS LATER, IT TURNS OUT THAT THE OCCUPATION IS TO BLAME

The murder of the Fogel Family in Itamar, the neighbors in Awarta and what we need to understand about the facts as opposed to the myths in the west bank / Judea and Samaria

It took the Israeli security forces exactly a month and a week to put their hands on the Heinous murderers of sleeping children. That seems a long time since the tracks led to the village of Awarta and Palestinian society was beside itself in proclaiming their supposed shock at the murders, so you would have figured that their environs would readily give them up if not to the Israeli forces, then to the Palestinian security forces who were supposedly hot in pursuit. 

Meanwhile, all this time, local and international "civil rights" groups were braying about the Israeli security activity in the village. "The village suffered harsh collective punishment at the hands of the military...". How miserable their lives seem to be under occupation. 

After the murderers were caught, village council chief Kais Awad "refused to address the fact that the two received assistance in hiding the evidence from one of the families in the village" and only agreed to say that "Israel wishes to cover up the crimes it committed in Awarta over the last month". So much for shock at barbarity and complicity uncovered in his village.

It looks like occupation is the real cause. Let me point out some irrefutable facts to help you gain a better perspective.

Night view of Har Bracha from Awarta
Awarta was an Israeli town, settled by the tribes of Joseph. After the expulsion by the Assyrians, the Samaritans took over the town and it held one of their major Synagogues. With time, due to the violent Arab occupation of the area the town became an Arab village. Instead of respecting the holy shrines of prominent Jews (Pinhas the high Priest, his sons Itamar and Elazar and the 70 sages from the time of Joshua, the sites were repeatedly desecrated. These are some of the sad stories of the occupation.




Tomb of Itamar the Priest in Awarta
I was in Awarta a few months ago together with a friend and fellow priest, to visit the graves of our ancestors. It saddened me that due to the occupation of the village and the violent nature of its current occupiers, this visit had to be paid at night and with armed escort. 

When you put this in perspective, you can understand  how painful the occupation is for Jews who have returned to the land they were temporarily driven off of, to find it occupied by people of a violent nature, who want to make ludicrous claims to justify their racist, apartheid philosophy of usurping the land that belonged and still belongs to others. 


Unfortunately, all the attempts to try and let them live in the villages they have occupied expecting them to live in peace with their Jewish neighbors have resulted in continued atrocities, the latest, the brutal slaying of the Fogel family.

Contrary to the belief of some, time is running out not for the Jews, but for the Palestinians. They are going to have to decide whether they want to live in peace and harmony in our land or whether they will be removed by the wrath of G-D for their moral digressions.

Sunday, April 03, 2011

There are some positive alternatives to a Palestinian State

There are some ideas here that would be worth considering if they were intended seriously. The problem, unfortunately with the Arab Citizens around the world and in the Land of Israel is that they do not want to face the real facts. When Nour writes about "indigenous population" she forgets (or doesn't know?) that the Jews are the natural inhabitants of the land !!! This land was promised to Abraham  (who bequethed it to Isaac,then Jacob then on to the Tribes of Israel for eternity. Our forefathers lived and ruled  in this land nearly 2000 years before Muhammad roamed the dessert. When they were forcibly expelled from their land, they never forgot where home was, and the return to Israel and its eternal capital Jerusalem are part of the daily prayers since then.
Hypocrisy does not create legitamacy!
Ignoring the facts cannot change history!
However, if the Arab nation wants to attain peace and progress, they can begin by doing G-d's will and stop trying to userp the land that HE has given to the "Jews". Isn't doing ALLAH's will what being a pious muslim is all about?

The Only Solution for the Problems of the Middle East - by Prof. Moti Keidar

I totally agree with This analysis. Sometimes, for the sake of peace separation is necessary. This we learn from our Forefather Abraham who after discerning that his nephew Lot had diffrent moral attitudes suggested that they separate.


Center for the Study of the Middle East and Islam (under formation)
Bar-Ilan University
Middle Eastern Insights
No. 4, 1 April, 2011
The Only Solution for the Problems of the Middle East
Mordechai Kedar
We are currently witnessing social unrest in many Arab states, and street
riots have already succeeded in ousting two presidents – in Tunisia and in
Egypt – and in unsettling the governmental fabric in Libya, Yemen, Morocco,
Syria and Bahrain. The ease and swiftness with which the flames have spread
from country to country in the last two months is due to a common trait
shared by these countries: all of their regimes are dictatorships headed by
non-legitimate rulers who ruthlessly hold sway over a starving, neglected
and abused populace which has decided to put an end to its oppression and
humiliation.
The fundamental problem characterizing Middle Eastern states is that they
have no legitimacy in the eyes of their citizenry because their borders were
marked by European colonial interests. Great Britain created the borders of
Bangladesh, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Iran, Iraq, Jordan, Israel, Egypt, Sudan,
Yemen and the Gulf Emirates; France was involved in determining the borders
of Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Syria and Lebanon; Italy was responsible for
the borders of Libya. Included within these borders were ethnic, religious,
denominational and tribal groups who, throughout history, were often unable
to live together in peace.
The human mosaic of Arab states is traditionally grouped along several
lines:
A. Ethnic: Arabs, Kurds, Turkmen, Persians, Berbers, Nubians,
Circassians, Armenians, Greeks and others;
B. Religious: Moslems, Christians, Druze, Alawis, Bahá'ís, Ahmadis,
Yazidis, Sabians, Mandeans, Zoroastrians and Jews;
C. Denominational: Sunnis, Shi’ites, Sufis; Catholics, Protestants,
Orthodox;
D. Tribal: Hundreds of large and small tribes dwell in the deserts,
rural areas and cities.
Every one of the Arab states, except the Gulf Emirates, is a conglomeration
of these traditional groups: living in Iraq are Arabs, Kurds, Turkmen and
Persians who practice at least seven faiths; the Moslems consist of both
Sunnis and Shi’ites, and most of the population is splintered along tribal
lines. Saddam Hussein imposed his Dulaim tribe on Iraq and his harsh regime
claimed the lives of a million Iraqis throughout the years, including the
period of the 1980-1988 Iran-Iraq war.
In Syria, the population consists of Arabs, Kurds and Turkmen who are
Muslims, Christians, Druze or Alawis. The Muslims are both Sunnis and Shi’ites,
and the tribal element is dominant in some areas as well. The Alawis, a
group of idol-worshipping tribes, seized power, and the other faiths are
forced to suffer the rule of illegitimate infidels.
The population in Jordan is Arabic and Circassian, the Arabs both Bedouin
and Palestinian; ruling them is a foreign royal family brought in from Saudi
Arabia by the British. There are several dozen tribal groups in Libya,
where, in 1969, Colonel Mu’ammar Qaddafi imposed the power of his tribe
Qaddaf a-Dam (“the blood-shedder”).
For a state to be considered legitimate by most of its citizens it must be
the political embodiment of their national, communal, historical and,
perhaps, religious desires. In Israel, the State is indeed the fulfillment
of the sixty-generation-old Jewish dream originating with the destruction of
the Jewish kingdom in the Land of Israel in 70 C.E. There is not even one
Arab country that fulfills the historical hopes of most of its citizens. In
Israel and in European nation-states, such as Holland and France, the
governing body is elected for a several-year period, after which its actions
are subject to public judgment and the people either extend its term of
office by elections or replace it.
In the Arab world, by contrast, the state is considered illegitimate by the
majority of its citizens because its borders were determined by colonial
interests; because it does not politically embody the will of its populace;
because the group in power rules with an iron hand and the torture chambers
of its security agencies. The only group that views the state as legitimate
is that of the ruling minority, which establishes media organs – newspapers,
radio and television – whose primary purpose is to create legitimacy for the
state and the regime. These biased media operate in Soviet-Pravda (=
“truth”) fashion. Statues of “the leader” adorn public squares and
gigantic portraits of him are displayed on building fronts as part of an
intensive and blatant personality cult. The educational system is also
mobilized to cultivate an image of the ruler as a beloved leader. As
illegitimate regimes need an external “enemy” to unite the ranks behind the
“leader”, he tends to involve his country in wars and conflicts.
Nevertheless, the more such regimes try to justify their existence to the
citizenry, the less successful they are. The modern Arab state, as an
organized political entity, has failed in its main task: to take root in the
hearts of its citizens, who will then abandon the focus of their original
ethnic, religious, denominational or tribal loyalty. This is most evident
in Syria, where the regime attempted to reduce Islam's hold on the public,
since Islam represents the main challenge to infidel, Alawi rule. As a
result, the Muslim Brotherhood rose to increasing prominence among the
Sunni-Muslims until 1976-1982, when it posed a real threat to the regime's
survival; the government brutally liquidated the Brotherhood, and fifty
thousand men, women and children were killed over a seven-year period.
The Converse Model
Nine Arab states, the Gulf Emirates, do not conform to the above pattern:
independent Qatar and Kuwait, and the seven states of the United Arab
Emirates: Abu Dhabi, Dubai, Ajman, Fujairah, Ras al-Khaimah, Sharjah and Umm
al-Quwain. Every one of these emirates, in common, is based on one tribe to
which most of its citizens belong. National law reflects traditional tribal
customs; since the leadership consists of the traditional tribal elite, the
state is perceived as legitimate by its tribesmen citizens. The
sociological stability in the emirates is the basis for legitimate, stable
government and allows for a well-developed economy that exploits oil profits
for the benefit of all. Dubai has no oil or gas, and its economy is based
on commerce and real estate.
By comparison, Iraq's fragmented and conflicted society, with its multiple
ethnic, religious, denominational and tribal groups, cannot establish a
stable political system; the Iraqi economy, therefore, is failing as well,
despite its huge oil reserves. Bahrain, also in the Gulf, is the model of
the failed Arab state because the Shi’ite majority, ruled by the Sunni
minority, does not recognize the legitimacy of the regime. The primary
reason for the lack of Bahraini stability, it enables Iran to influence the
Shi’ites and incite against the government.
Accordingly, the more a modern Arab state mirrors traditional society, and
bases itself on ethnic, religious, denominational or tribal homogeneity, the
more legitimate, stable and peace-oriented it will be, and the less
dictatorial. And countries composed of groups in conflict with each other
will be less stable and legitimate, more dictatorial and warlike.
What Can Be Done?
If the world wishes to bring stability and calm to the Middle East, there is
no choice but to let the modern Arab countries – those whose boundaries were
set by colonialism – collapse and break up into small states, each based on
one homogeneous group. Allowing the residents of these states to decide for
themselves the group upon which to build the future state is the important
element in this process. It is time to re-think colonialism and the
problematic legacy it bequeathed the Arab world.
Legitimate states based on traditional social groupings would be able to
create partnerships, federations or other types of unions. Witness the
Gulf: each of the seven members of the United Arab Emirates is completely
independent, and the emirates, together with Kuwait, Qatar and Saudi Arabia
established the Gulf Cooperation Council, an effective security body that
recently deployed forces to Bahrain, forces that succeeded in restoring
order there and in quashing the Shi’ite majority’s demonstrations.
Relief to the chronic ailments of the Arab world, immersed as it is in
corruption, poverty and violence, will come only through the establishment
of homogeneous states which accommodate the traditional Arab social
framework; these ailments are all the result of the modern Arab state's
failure to become the focal point of individual and collective identity.
The creation of legitimate states which provide for the welfare, health and
employment of their citizens will significantly reduce emigration from the
Arab world to European and other western countries. Afghanistan is the
first candidate for such a process, which is the only way to bring calm to a
country with more than ten ethnic groups which lack the basis to form and
maintain one political entity. The current Libyan crisis offers an historic
opportunity to partition the country into tribally homogeneous areas, which
will thereby gain legitimacy and stability. It is still possible to divide
Iraq into homogeneous states, and if the internal crises there persist, it
would be wise to advance the idea of establishing the Iraqi Emirates on the
ruins of the failure called “Iraq”.
The Kurds in Iraq are already implementing this idea, having formed their
own state in the north. Sudan and Yemen – two very tribal countries – are
also poised to break up. The West should acknowledge this emerging trend;
it should encourage the dismantling of failed, heterogeneous Arab states and
the establishment of legitimate, homogeneous ones in their stead.
The process is liable to be long and difficult, but it is the only way to
bring stability and prosperity to the Middle East.