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Palestine: Hamas not against Jews but Zionism – Middle East Confidential

Posted By on May 3, 2017

Notorious for its strong stance against Israel, Hamas has released a document showcasing a shift in its policies by affirming that its conflict is with the Zionist project not with the Jews because of their religion. It also stressed that the group does not wage a struggle against Jews because they are Jewish but wages a struggle against the Zionists who occupy Palestine before blaming the Zionists who constantly identify Judaism and the Jews with their own colonial project and illegal entity. The document was made public in Qatar by Khaled Meshaal, Hamass leader in exile since 2004, who vowed that they will not back down from the Palestinian right to return. He said they will remain defiant towards the Zionist ideology or entity and to ensure Palestines freedom from the [Jordanian] river to the [Mediterranean] sea. It wants a Palestinian state based on the 1967 borders. Tel Aviv is cautious with the document and a spokesman for Prime Minster Netanyahu alleged that Hamas is attempting to fool the world, but it will not succeed. The real Hamas according to him is they (Hamas) dig terror tunnels and have launched thousands upon thousands of missiles at Israeli civilians. Hamas has refused to recognize Israel and the document didnt signal a change a position in that case. Palestinian activist, Raja Abdulhaq, doesnt think that there is a new initiative or new policy but rather a new way of qualifying what Hamas has been endorsing for the past 60 years. The Palestinian-Israeli conflict is expected to be at the limelight this week as President Donald Trump is expected to arrive in Israel this week.

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Palestine: Hamas not against Jews but Zionism - Middle East Confidential

In Hebrew and Yiddish, Donald Trump Declares May Is Jewish American Heritage Month – Breaking Israel News

Posted By on May 3, 2017

Thy testimonies have I taken as a heritage for ever; for they are the rejoicing of my heart. Psalms 119:111 (The Israel Bible)

President Donald Trump. (Gage Skidmore/Flickr)

President Donald Trump has continued the annual tradition of proclaiming May Jewish American Heritage Month, saying in a statement released last week, We celebrate our nations strong American Jewish heritage, rooted in the ancient faith and traditions of the Jewish people.

The proclamation included phrases in both Hebrew and Yiddish, referring in the first paragraph to the moral and ethical code of the Jewish people inspired by their spiritual vocation of tikkun olam the charge to repair the world.

In the second paragraph, the proclamation used a Yiddish term to refer to the Jewish ideal of America. Escaping religious persecution and ethnic violence and seeking political freedom and economic opportunity, American Jews, over centuries, have held firm in the belief that the United States was Di Goldene Medina the Golden Country.

The statement paid tribute to the towering success that the Jewish people have achieved in America through a unique synthesis of respect for heritage and love of country.

Those achievements are felt throughout American society and culture, in every field and in every profession, it continued, from the building of prestigious schools and hospitals to the creation of superheroes like Batman.

Trump added a personal message to his proclamation by referring to his Jewish family members, stating, This month, I celebrate with my family including my daughter, Ivanka, my son-in-law, Jared, my grandchildren, and our extended family the deep spiritual connection that binds, and will always bind, the Jewish people to the United States and its founding principles.

Ivanka converted to Orthodox Judaism in 2008 before marrying Kushner. The couple have three children together.

Now, therefore, I, Donald J. Trump, President of the United States of America, by virtue of the authority vested in me by the Constitution and the laws of the United States, do hereby proclaim May 2017 as Jewish American Heritage Month, the proclamation concluded.

I call upon all Americans to celebrate the heritage and contributions of American Jews and to observe this month with appropriate programs, activities and ceremonies.

The tradition of declaring May a month recognizing American Jewish heritage began in 2006 with former President George W. Bush, and has been continued by the sitting president ever since.

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In Hebrew and Yiddish, Donald Trump Declares May Is Jewish American Heritage Month - Breaking Israel News

Last Friday, Rep. Steve Cohen, a Democrat from Tennessee, and Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, a Republican from Florida … – Tablet Magazine

Posted By on May 3, 2017

In the Capitol building, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Sojourner Truth are honored for their contributions to American racial justice. Busts of these important figures, among others, sit alongside busts of all of the American Vice Presidents (Al Gores and Joe Bidens are still in progress) and of Raoul Wallenberg, a Swedish diplomat who saved tens of thousands of Jews from the Nazis. If a new bill introduced to the House goes through, Wallenberg will be joined by another important figure of Holocaust history: Elie Wiesel.

Last Friday, Rep. Steve Cohen, a Democrat from Tennessee, and Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, a Republican from Florida, introduced a bill in the House of Representatives last Friday to commission a bust of Elie Wiesel for the Capitol building.

In the weeks following thedeathof the prolific Holocaust survivor, writer, and activist this past July, Congress passed aresolutionaffirming their admiration for Wiesels moral leadership in regards to American education about the Holocaust. That resolution was introduced by three members of theU.S. Holocaust Memorial Council(of which Wiesel was the founding chair); Cohen absolutely supported it, one his stafferstold me. That same day, Cohenintroducedhis own bill specifically proposing a statue or bust to memorialize Wiesel. That bill expired, so Ros-Lehtinen joined Cohen in renewing the proposal last week. Bipartisan support for the bill grew substantially between this Congress and last Congress, according to the staffer. Currently, the bill has more than 50co-sponsors, with at least twelve of them Jewish, according toJTA. Prominent civil rights activist Rep. John Lewis is also among the co-sponsors.

The bipartisan proposal, refreshing in this political climate, makes a strong statement about the U.S. governments moral imperative to fight bigotry. The timing of the bill is also particularly apt: It was reintroduced, Ros-Lehtinen pointed out, in the same week as the first Yom HaShoah, Holocaust Remembrance Day, since Elie Wiesel passed. May is also Jewish American Heritage Month, according to Presidentialproclamation.In apress release, Cohen called Wiesel one of the greatest moral forces in the world, comparing his impact to Nelson Mandela, MLK, Jr., and Mahatma Gandhi.

Miranda Cooper is an editorial intern at Tablet. Follow her on Twitter here.

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Last Friday, Rep. Steve Cohen, a Democrat from Tennessee, and Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, a Republican from Florida ... - Tablet Magazine

Anti-Defamation League Blames Trump Supporters for Anti-Semitism Rise – Breitbart News

Posted By on May 3, 2017

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In his written testimony, ADL Chief Jonathan Greenblatt stated:

Nearly 30 percent of all [2016 anti-Semitic] incidents (369) occurred in November and December 2016, spiking immediately after the election. Our Audit includes 34 incidents linked directly to the election. For example, in Denver, graffiti posted in May 2016 said Kill the Jews, Vote Trump. In November, a St. Petersburg, Fla., man was accosted by someone who told him Trump is going to finish what Hitler started. Much of the vandalism and harassment used slogans sourced from the Trump campaign such as Make America Great Again.

Greenblatt omitted anytheanti-Semitism perpetrated by Democrats in the 2016 election, includingDemocratic National Committee (DNC) discussions to target Clintons opponent Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) for a being a Jew, and Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton embracing the Black Lives Matter (BLM) organization, whose platform accuses Israel of genocide. (Indeed, Greenblatts statement ignored BLM altogether.)

Referring to the 2016 election, Greenblatt noted:

We saw a level of anti-Semitism and a normalization of bigotry that deeply concerned us. This included stereotyping of many groups, including women and immigrants, threats to ban Muslims from entering or living in the country, pronouncements that Islam hates America, mocking of disabled people, and political candidates attacking one another based on their physical appearance.

Moreover, the subsequent denial or dismissal of such rhetoric by the candidates and their supporters was unlike anything we have seen in recent history.

Greenblatt also blamed Trump and his supporters, over Muslim extremists and white supremacists, for the rise in anti-Semitism in America, saying:

The majority of anti-Semitic incidents and other hate crimes are not carried out by extremists or organized hate groups. But the extraordinarily polarizing and divisive election campaign which featured harshly anti-Muslim rhetoric and anti- Semitic dog whistles has coarsened the public discourse and fostered an atmosphere in which white supremacists and other anti-Semites and bigots feel emboldened and believe that their views are becoming more broadly acceptable.

The campaigns repeated flirtation with these elements retweeting their content and quoting their heroes and the Presidents initial reluctance to address rising anti-Semitism, have helped to mainstream their ideas.

Greenblatt also appeared to accuse Trump and his followers of fueling a resurgence of white supremacist activity in the United States.

Meanwhile, Greenblatt said almost nothing about anti-Semitism on campus, including anti-Semitism associated with anti-Israel activism.

Citing the ADLs recently released 2016 audit, Greenblatttold senators that anti-Semitic incidents in the United States last year increased by more than one-third in 2016, to a total of 1,266 acts targeting Jews and Jewish institutions.

The ADLs data stand in stark contrast to data released last month by the global experts at Tel Aviv University in Israel, who documented only a slight increase in violent anti-Semitic incidents, and concluded that there wereno indications so far of a major increase connected to the tense U.S. election or Donald Trumps new presidency. (Indeed, the ADLs own audit concedes that violent anti-Semitic attacks in the U.S. fell last year.)

The ADLchose to include hundreds of fake bomb threats aimed at Jewish community centers even though the vast majority of those threats were perpetrated by a Jewish, Israeli-American teen as a hoax. The ADL tries to justify the inclusion of that data as follows:

Some have questioned whether these truly should be counted as anti-Semitic incidents because of the identity of the suspect. ADL does so because of the impact such threats had on the Jewish community. We never know the faith or nationality of someone when they are wearing a white hood or hiding behind their computer. But regardless of the alleged culprit, systematically targeting institutions of only one faith and terrorizing the members of that community bears all the hallmarks of hate crime.

The ADL gives no credit to President Trump for prioritizingthe investigation into the bomb threats, even though they had been going on for two years, dating back well into President Barack Obamas administration.

Echoing Greenblatt, fellow congressional witness Vanita Gupta, the incomingpresident and CEO of the Leadership Conference For Civil And Human Rights, also blamed Trump supporters for the rise in hate crimes against Jews, Muslims, and immigrants.

Like the ADL director, Gupta, who served as former President Barack Obamas top civil rights prosecutor overseeing federal hate crimes prosecutions at DOJ,suggestedTrump supporters are primarily responsible for the rise in the number of nationwide hate crimes.

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ADL urges Senate committee to create hate crime task force | The … – The Times of Israel

Posted By on May 3, 2017

The national director of the Anti-Defamation League urged the establishing of a federal task force to coordinate hate crimes responses across the executive branch in testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee.

Jonathan Greenblatt set forth a series of policy recommendations during a Tuesday hearing on an increase in religious hate crimes, according to an ADL statement.

All of us are deeply concerned about the ongoing harassment of Jews, Muslims, Sikhs and others who are being targeted because of their religion, Greenblatt told committee members. The federal government has an essential leadership role to play in confronting hate crimes and in alleviating intolerance. And we need to make sure that we call out bigotry whenever it happens.

Greenblatt recommended creating a task force that would help law enforcement agencies improve hate crimes data collection and training, enacting laws to combat hate crimes, exploring approaches to cyberhate and calling out bigotry.

On Monday, the American Jewish Committee praised members of the Senate Judiciary Committee for sending a letter to Attorney General Jeff Sessions urging him to undertake effective action to address the increasing number of religious hate crimes in the US.

Effectively combating hate crimes demands a concerted federal government response, said Richard Foltin, the AJCs director of national and legislative affairs. It is imperative that federal authorities help state and local authorities in carrying out their responsibility to monitor and prosecute hate crimes, and bring cases under federal hate crimes laws, where necessary.

Nearly 150 JCCs and other Jewish institutions have received bomb threats and three Jewish cemeteries have been vandalized this year. In March, an Israeli-American teen was arrested in Israel on suspicion of calling in more than 100 bomb threats. Last month, the US Justice Department charged the teen, Michael Kadar, with making threatening calls to JCCs in Florida, conveying false information to the police and cyberstalking.

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ADL urges Senate committee to create hate crime task force | The ... - The Times of Israel

For This Israeli Settler, Zionism Isn’t Nearly Radical Enough – Forward

Posted By on May 1, 2017

Yom Haatzmaut, Israels Independence Day, is an opportunity to take stock of where Israel has been and consider where were headed. Geopolitics being as they are, theres a reasonable tendency to limit the debate to those within the mainstream. But this year may present an opportunity to challenge standard operating procedure.

2017 marks 50 years since Israels return to the region of Judea-Samaria/West-Bank. The TALK17 project has seized the day, inviting 50 speakers to deliver weekly TED-style presentations, thereby providing a platform to otherwise muffled Israeli and Palestinian voices from the region. Whether onlookers are curious or dismissive, these diversified voices represent many of the forces that are shaping Israels long term trajectory.

One of these speakers, Yehuda HaKohen, is a self-declared extremist revolutionary; he prides himself on living beyond consensus. Living in a disputed region with his ear to the ground, his unconventional ideas provide the mainstream viewer with thought provoking insight.

For starters, Yehuda considers himself a post-Zionist. That may come as a surprise to some, who assume that his place of residence in Bet-El - an Israeli settlement located adjacent to Ramallah - indicates that hes an ultra-Zionist. But HaKohen clearly considers Zionism a pass movement of yesteryear.

HaKohen believes that Israel outgrew its narrow nationalist ideology back in 1967. With the reclamation of territory came the need to undergo a fundamental transition, allowing Israel to develop, define and articulate its purpose among the family of nations. Needless to say, this revolutionary overhaul has yet to take shape.

On the path to a new, authentic Israeli ethos, HaKohen rejects the two-state-solution, he rejects moderates and he rejects the notion of compromise. He believes that these three nos are necessary means towards a new Hebraic ideology. The ideology, he explains, will make at least one significant game-changing contribution; it will pave the way to a sustainable peace.

For the pro-Palestinian activist, long committed to a particular construct that equates Israeli land concessions with peace, HaKohens ideas and recommendations can seem disorienting at first. But the attentive listener will note a coherent, if unfamiliar, approach that undermines the superficiality of old-school two-state jargon.

HaKohen wants to see the West out of Israel: no American money, no American dictates. He sees the Semitic Jewish people as an inherent and organic part of the Middle East while looking to further clarify our singular character. And herein, of course, lies his game-plan; once Israelis and Palestinians are both free to fully explore the nature of their people-hoods, the two populations will be able to make room for one another, to live side by side and, ultimately, synergize.

His theory points to essential, deep seated flaws that have influenced the past 50 years of traditional Zionist thinking. For example, both Israelis and Palestinians, he observes, are fighting what he calls the fantasy of the other. It just may be that the historic and cultural premises of the conflict are flawed, just as classic attempts to find a remedy are pushing us in the wrong direction.

Is the success of one population necessarily the downfall of the other? Is it possible that both sides can move forward, side by side, as protagonists of the same story?

Although TALK17 presentations are only brief introductions to ideas and perspectives, they provide the viewer with enough material to think further and ask critical questions. Personally, Im pleased that we gave Yehuda HaKohen the floor. But theres a central element of his argument that I have yet to come to grips with.

My question is whether the shift from Zionism to Post-Zionism requires an active revolution. I recognize that the extremists who are ready and willing to kill and die for their beliefs must be taken into consideration, but I wonder if they are driving change or delaying it.

I want to believe that Israel is coming of age, that this is a gradual process and that a natural ideological evolution is both sufficient and desired. As I see it, Yehuda HaKohens long game is the bedrock of a healthy regional horizon; we need to appreciate that Israelis and Arabs will continue living side by side, and substantiate a win-win climate for everyone. Its his revolutionary, liberation-aspiring, anti-colonialist terminology that makes me wonder; shouldnt there be a softer, more amicable path forward?

The views and opinions expressed in this article are the authors own and do not necessarily reflect those of the Forward.

The Forward's independent journalism depends on donations from readers like you.

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For This Israeli Settler, Zionism Isn't Nearly Radical Enough - Forward

Film director tackles the complicated story of Zionism – Kansas City Star

Posted By on May 1, 2017


Haaretz
Film director tackles the complicated story of Zionism
Kansas City Star
A film director who grew up viewing the state of Israel as a beacon of hope is telling a more complicated story of Zionism. Eric Alexman tells the Morning Sentinel that the passivity and victimhood of the Jewish people is long gone and has been ...
Why Is Zionism Called Zionism?Haaretz
Yet another young American Jew has had it with IsraelMondoweiss
Divestment isn't anti-Semitic, but ignoring members of Jewish community isThe Badger Herald
Jewish Journal -Algemeiner
all 246 news articles »

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Film director tackles the complicated story of Zionism - Kansas City Star

Ynetnews Opinion – With ‘Zionists’ like that, who needs enemies? – Ynetnews

Posted By on May 1, 2017

Several days ago, Haaretz publisher Amos Schocken tweeted that there was a link between Islamic terror in Europe and European support for Zionism for more than 100 years. He further explained that it was important for terrorists to balance it out Europe's supposedly pro-Zionist approach and that the terrorists are helping do this.

Scene of ISIS terror attack in Istanbul. Turkey supports Hamas, yet it is hit by terror. According to Schocken, Erdoan is apparently a Zionist too (Photo: Reuters)

We have been in this situation before. The unenlightened of the pastyes, the Nazisblamed the Jews for Europe's troubles. That was the old anti-Semitism. Todays unenlightened, mostly on the left, argue that the Jewish state is also responsible for Europe's troubles. That is the new anti-Semitism. Schocken, might I add, defines himself as an opponent of terrorism and a Zionist. And with Zionists like him, who needs enemies anyway?

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Ynetnews Opinion - With 'Zionists' like that, who needs enemies? - Ynetnews

Trump proclaims May Jewish American Heritage Month – jta.org

Posted By on May 1, 2017

President Donald Trump speaking at a White House news conference, Feb. 16, 2017.(Mario Tama/Getty Images)

(JTA) President Donald Trump proclaimedMay Jewish American Heritage Month, continuing a tradition maintained by every president since 2006.

During Jewish American Heritage Month, we celebrate our nations strong American Jewish heritage, rooted in the ancient faith and traditions of the Jewish people. The small band of Dutch Jews who first immigrated in 1654, seeking refuge and religious liberty, brought with them their families, their religion, and their cherished customs, which they have passed on from generation to generation, read the proclamation issued late Friday by the White House.

The moral and ethical code of the Jewish people is inspired by their spiritual vocation of tikkun olam the charge to repair the world. Through that vocation, the Jewish people have left an indelible mark on American culture. Today, it is manifested in the towering success Jewish people have achieved in America through a unique synthesis of respect for heritage and love of country.

PresidentGeorge W. Bushfirst proclaimed May Jewish Heritage Month in 2006, and it has beenproclaimed annually by the sitting president ever since.

The proclamation by the Trump White House used the Yiddish term DiGoldene Medina, or the Golden Country, to describe how Jews looked to the United States to escape religious persecution and seek economic opportunity.

The statement specifically mentioned Trumps daughter, Ivanka, and her husband, Jared Kushner, who both serve as senior advisers in the White House. Ivanka Trump converted to Judaism before marrying Kushner in 2008.

This month, I celebrate with my family including my daughter, Ivanka, my son-in-law, Jared, my grandchildren, and our extended family the deep spiritual connection that binds, and will always bind, the Jewish people to the UnitedStates and its founding principles, the proclamation said. We recognize the faith and optimism exemplified by American Jews is what truly makes America The Golden Country, and we express our Nations gratitude for this great, strong, prosperous, and loving people.

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Trump proclaims May Jewish American Heritage Month - jta.org

Trump Did Not Introduce May as Jewish American Heritage …

Posted By on May 1, 2017

Photo Credit: Gage Skidmore via Wikimedia

On occasion, the news media get it wrong, as in the headlines in the Jerusalem Post (President Trump proclaims May Jewish American Heritage Month) and Haaretz (Trump Declares May Jewish American Heritage Month and Asian and Pacific Islander Month Too). Haaretz went further to explain the declaration, saying that Trumps relations with American Jews have been dogged by accusations of anti-Semitism since his election campaign and into his presidency.

The fact is JAHM was proclaimed by President George W. Bush on April 20, 2006, and the proclamation was the work of Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D-FL) and the late Sen. Arlen Specter (R-PA), in collaboration with the Jewish Museum of Florida and the South Florida Jewish Community. Since then, annual proclamations have been made by both Presidents Bush and Barack Obama.

On February 14, 2006, Congress issued House Concurrent Resolution 315 which stated: Resolved that Congress urges the President to issue each year a proclamation calling on State and local governments and the people of the United States to observe an American Jewish History Month with appropriate programs, ceremonies, and activities.

The concurrent non-binding resolution was passed unanimously, first in the House of Representatives in December 2005 and later in the Senate in February 2006.

So, while it is technically true that the JAHM proclamation needs to be re-made each year, presenting its re-make as news is tantamount to running a headline saying Trump to Propose Annual Budget for 2018. Its true, but not in the man bites dog category.

During Jewish American Heritage Month, we celebrate our nations strong American Jewish heritage, rooted in the ancient faith and traditions of the Jewish people, President Trump declared on Saturday. The small band of Dutch Jews who first immigrated in 1654, seeking refuge and religious liberty, brought with them their families, their religion, and their cherished customs, which they have passed on from generation to generation.

In 1654, 23 refugee men, women and children fleeing from the former Dutch colony of Recife, Brazil, landed in New Amsterdam. The ships captain, one Jacques de la Mothe, filed suit against his passengers for failure to pay the balance of their passage. The Dutch colonial governor Peter Stuyvesant seized the Jews possessions and ordered them sold at auction, but the amount raised was not enough to pay their debts in full. The governor then jailed two members of the group and wrote to the Dutch West India Company in Amsterdam for permission to expel all the Jews of New Amsterdam.

And that is how Jewish American Heritage started. In the end, after the Dutch government finally permitted Jews to live Holland, the Jews of New Amsterdam, and the Dutch West India company granted Jews permission to live in the colony, so long as they do not become a burden to the company or the community.

After pouring much praise on the US Jewish community today and throughout history, the White House statement also noted that American Jews have even brought us our greatest superheroes Captain America, Superman, and Batman.

By the way, Asian and Pacific Islander Month, also celebrated in May, was originally proclaimed by President Jimmy Carter, in 1978. So, to be fair, its the Jews moving into the Asian calendrical neighborhood and not the other way around.

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