Saturday, January 31, 2009

Another Hamas Violation of the Ceasefire

A rocket launched from Gaza landed in Ashkelon Saturday morning. A siren was heard prior to the landing which warned residents to take cover. There were no injuries.

DEBKAfile also reports that Hamas launched a more advanced rocket last week than initially thought.
The missile fired from Gaza out to the Mediterranean last week was not a Qassam as reported but a C-802, the Iranian shore-to-ship Nur C-802 missile, which is based on the Chinese "Silkworm."

It was launched by Iranian officers who are training Hamas operatives in its use before delivering a large consignment. With its 120-km range and 165-kilo warhead, the C-802's mission is to break Israel's 40 km blockade of Gaza's waters. This is now the key objective of Tehran and the Palestinian Islamists.

The Israeli Navy's first brush with the C-802 was in the 2006 Lebanon war. On July 14, it was used by Hizballah to cripple the Hanit missile ship opposite Beirut.

The Israeli military says last week's launch was a serious provocation and a violation of Hamas' own declared ceasefire of Jan. 19. The amount of these missiles smuggled into Gaza and their date of delivery, whether before Israel's 22-day military operation or into the ceasefire, is unknown.

Our sources affirm that arms smuggling to Gaza continues by land and sea at the pre-war tempo notwithstanding the brave talk in Jerusalem, Washington and Cairo of a concerted effort to stem the flow.

An field officer dealing with the traffic says Israeli officials' threats to hit back at each smuggling incident as though it was a missile launch have not lessened the flow of weapons heading into Gaza through Egyptian Sinai and the Philadelphi border Corridor.

Since 2006, military experts note, Iran has upgraded the C-802 in an important respect. Then, Hizballah depended on the Lebanese army's sophisticated radar for accurate targeting of the Israeli warship. For Hizballah and Hamas, Iran's manufactures have come up with a version that operates without radar - 1,000 missiles have already been delivered to Hizballah.

The new version has the attributes of a cruise missile: It has small radar reflectivity, is armed with a strong anti-jamming capability and can skim as low as 5-7 meters from the water's surface under the targeted ship's radar. Tehran claims its updated Nur anti-ship missile has

98 percent targeting effectiveness.
Hamas has violated terms of the ceasefire over and over since Israel withdrew from Gaza following the Operation Cast Lead. There has, unfortunately, been very little UN or international condemnation of Hamas' acts of terror that have shown no signs of stopping. During the last eight years, Hamas has launched over 12,000 rockets into Israel. Yet I have been hearing quite a few arguments about how Israel does not respond "proportionally" to Palestinian terrorism. Should Israel have responded by launching 12,000 rockets into Gaza indiscriminately? That would be proportional, after all. The difference is that Israelis do not want to harm any civilians in Gaza and carefully targeted Hamas targets and launching facilities in Gaza instead. No other country in the world would tolerate perpetual attacks against their civilian population, which include the consistent suicide bombing attempts that rarely make international news.

The rocket and mortar attacks on Israeli cities have traumatized Israeli civilians and made life unbearable for them. I sincerely hope that one day Palestinians recognize that the Islamist and fascistic leadership they have elected not only hurts Israelis, but their own families in Gaza as well. Certainly Hamas' use of civilians as human shields and Hamas' disregard for their own civilians by looting humanitarian aid trucks is proof of that.

Related Posts:

- Hamas Violates Ceasefire Two More Times
- Palestinians Violate Ceasefire Yet Again
- Hamas violates ceasefire (again), UN doesn't care
- Iran Renews Efforts to Re-Supply Hamas
- Taking On Fraudulent White Phosphorus Allegations
- Scathing ‘insider’ report on UNWRA to hit Obama’s desk
- Letter to Gaza Citizen from an Israeli Soldier

News:
- Nasrallah vows revenge for Mughniyeh
- Israel discusses truce violations
- Iran and Syria trying to replace PLO
- Spain accuses Israel of war crimes for killing a terrorist
- Turkish PM leaves stage during debate about Gaza operation
- Egypt installs tunnel-detection devices along Philadelphi
- 'UNRWA staff not tested for terror ties'

Thursday, January 29, 2009

Yemen begins transfer of Jews to Sana'a

Yemeni Jews have been the recipients of extreme hostility and attacks in Yemen. Prior to 1949/50 the Yemeni Jewish population was over 60,000. Today it numbers at approximately 300. The presence of these Jews predates the rise of Islam and Christianity, making this one of the oldest Jewish Diasporas. Due to religious attacks against the population, however, most Yemeni Jews fled to Israel in the late 1940s to the early 1950s.

A Yemen News Agency reports that the "transfer" of Jews to Sana'a has begun:
Four Jewish families have arrived in Sana'a coming from Amran province launching the relocation of Jews to the city, a spokesman for head of the Parliament Committee on Freedoms and Rights.

As they arrived they were handed over four houses at the Sa'awan Tourist City, the spokesman said.

Among the arriving Jewish families was the family of the Jew who was murdered in September in the district of Raidah in Amran by an ex-pilot, a Jewish source said.

However, the four Jewish families have not yet settled in their new houses in Sana'a as they are being equipped.

Meanwhile, Jews are trying to convince authorities that houses allocated for them in the Sa'awan Tourist City are not suitable as they will not be sufficient to accommodate all Jews families.

A Jewish household consists of at least 16 members.

Moreover, many Jewish families in Amran refuse to move to new houses in Sana'a claiming there are not a warship place and a school to teach children.
President Ali Abdullah Saleh ordered authorities to transfer all Jews in Amran to Sana'a due to the religiously motivated crimes against the Jewish population. Yemeni Jews are dependent on the government for their survival. They have not been afforded the opportunity to leave the country. It is despicable that human rights groups have been so deafeningly silent about this issue.

Related Posts:
- Yemen: Man killed in religious hate crime
- Yemenite Jewish Community Under Attack (Again)
- The Yemenite Jews
- 1,000,000 Middle Eastern Jews
- The Persecution of Jews in Syria
- The Persecution of Jews in Iraq

Other Useful Information:
- Nazism and Radical Islam
- The Forgotten Refugees
- Don't Forget the Jewish Refugees from Arab Lands
- Intro to the Farhud
- The Silent Exodus of Jewish Refugees

Hamas Violates Ceasfire Two More Times

Thankfully there wasn't any damage or reported injuries with either of these attacks. However, I have a feeling that it is only a matter of time before a kassam or rocket destroys a civilian residence or wounds someone again. I hope that I am mistaken. Earlier this week a Bedouin Israeli soldier was killed in an attack which also violated the ceasefire. Three other IDF patrolmen were wounded. There has been no official condemnation from the UN regarding these blatant violations of the ceasefire.

YNet News reported that a rocket landed in Eshkol on January 28th:
A rocket fired from northern Gaza landed in Eshkol Regional Council limits. No injuries or damage were reported.
YNet also reported that a qassam landed in Sderot on January 29th:
A Qassam rocket fired from Gaza landed in an open field near Sderot Thursday morning, causing no injuries or damage.
News:
- Scathing ‘insider’ report on UNWRA to hit Obama’s desk
- Letter to Gaza Citizen from an Israeli Soldier
- Nasrallah vows revenge for Mughniyeh
- Israel discusses truce violations
- Iran and Syria trying to replace PLO
- Spain accuses Israel of war crimes for killing a terrorist
- Turkish PM leaves stage during debate about Gaza operation
- Palestinians Violate Ceasefire Yet Again

Related Posts and Information:
- Human Rights Groups Ignore Hamas Crimes
- Hamas militants using a mosque to store weapons, abusing civilians in Gaza
- TV station in Gaza serves as rocket launching facility, Gaza journalist finds this funny
- Iran Renews Efforts to Re-Supply Hamas
- Hamas: Exploitation of Civilians as Human Shields
- Sderot Victim to U.N.: Are Human Rights for Some, But Not Others?
- Sderot Mother Addresses United Nations: "Doesn't My Baby Have Right to Life?"
- 15 Seconds in Sderot, Israel

Letter to Gaza Citizen from an Israeli Soldier

The following is a letter that was originally published in the Hebrew-language daily newspaper Ma'ariv, and translated into English by the Independent Media Review and Analysis (IMRA).
Hello, While the world watches the ruins in Gaza, you return to your home which remains standing. However, I am sure that it is clear to you that someone was in your home while you were away. I am that someone. I spent long hours imagining how you would react when you walked into your home. How you would feel when you understood that IDF soldiers had slept on your mattresses and used your blankets to keep warm. I knew that it would make you angry and sad and that you would feel this violation of the most intimate areas of your life by those defined as your enemies, with stinging humiliation. I am convinced that you hate me with unbridled hatred, and you do not have even the tiniest desire to hear what I have to say. At the same time, it is important for me to say the following in the hope that there is even the minutest chance that you will hear me. I spent many days in your home. You and your family's presence was felt in every corner. I saw your family portraits on the wall, and I thought of my family. I saw your wife's perfume bottles on the bureau, and I thought of my wife. I saw your children's toys and their English language schoolbooks. I saw your personal computer and how you set up the modem and wireless phone next to the screen, just as I do. I wanted you to know that despite the immense disorder you found in your house that was created during a search for explosives and tunnels (which were indeed found in other homes), we did our best to treat your possessions with respect. When I moved the computer table, I disconnected the cables and lay them down neatly on the floor, as I would do with my own computer. I even covered the computer from dust with a piece of cloth. I tried to put back the clothes that fell when we moved the closet although not the same as you would have done, but at least in such a way that nothing would get lost. I know that the devastation, the bullet holes in your walls and the destruction of those homes near you place my descriptions in a ridiculous light. Still, I need you to understand me, us, and hope that you will channel your anger and criticism to the right places. I decided to write you this letter specifically because I stayed in your home. I can surmise that you are intelligent and educated and there are those in your household that are university students. Your children learn English, and you are connected to the Internet. You are not ignorant; you know what is going on around you. Therefore, I am sure you know that Kassam rockets were launched from your neighborhood into Israeli towns and cities. How could you see these weekly launches and not think that one day we would say "enough"?! Did you ever consider that it is perhaps wrong to launch rockets at innocent civilians trying to lead a normal life, much like you? How long did you think we would sit back without reacting? I can hear you saying "it's not me, it's Hamas". My intuition tells me you are not their most avid supporter. If you look closely at the sad reality in which your people live, and you do not try to deceive yourself or make excuses about "occupation", you must certainly reach the conclusion that the Hamas is your real enemy. The reality is so simple, even a seven-year-old can understand: Israel withdrew from the Gaza Strip, removing military bases and its citizens from Gush Katif. Nonetheless, we continued to provide you with electricity, water, and goods (and this I know very well as during my reserve duty I guarded the border crossings more than once, and witnessed hundreds of trucks full of goods entering a blockade-free Gaza every day). Despite all this, for reasons that cannot be understood and with a lack of any rational logic, Hamas launched missiles on Israeli towns. For three years we clenched our teeth and restrained ourselves. In the end, we could not take it anymore and entered the Gaza Strip, into your neighborhood, in order to remove those who want to kill us. A reality that is painful but very easy to explain. As soon as you agree with me that Hamas is your enemy and because of them, your people are miserable, you will also understand that the change must come from within. I am acutely aware of the fact that what I say is easier to write than to do, but I do not see any other way. You, who are connected to the world and concerned about your children's education, must lead, together with your friends, a civil uprising against Hamas. I swear to you, that if the citizens of Gaza were busy paving roads, building schools, opening factories and cultural institutions instead of dwelling in self-pity, arms smuggling and nurturing a hatred to your Israeli neighbors, your homes would not be in ruins right now. If your leaders were not corrupt and motivated by hatred, your home would not have been harmed. If someone would have stood up and shouted that there is no point in launching missiles on innocent civilians, I would not have to stand in your kitchen as a soldier. You don't have money, you tell me? You have more than you can imagine. Even before Hamas took control of Gaza, during the time of Yasser Arafat, millions if not billions of dollars donated by the world community to the Palestinians was used for purchasing arms or taken directly to your leaders' bank accounts. Gulf States, the Emirates - your brothers, your flesh and blood, are some of the richest nations in the world. If there was even a small feeling of solidarity between Arab nations, if these nations had but the smallest interest in reconstructing the Palestinian people – your situation would be very different. You must be familiar with Singapore. The land mass there is not much larger than the Gaza Strip and it is considered to be the second most populated country in the world. Yet, Singapore is a successful, prospering, and well-managed country. Why not the same for you? My friend, I would like to call you by name, but I will not do so publicly. I want you to know that I am 100% at peace with what my country did, what my army did, and what I did. However, I feel your pain. I am sorry for the destruction you are finding in your neighborhood at this moment. On a personal level, I did what I could to minimize the damage to your home as much as possible. In my opinion, we have a lot more in common than you might imagine. I am a civilian, not a soldier, and in my private life I have nothing to do with the military. However, I have an obligation to leave my home, put on a uniform, and protect my family every time we are attacked. I have no desire to be in your home wearing a uniform again and I would be more than happy to sit with you as a guest on your beautiful balcony, drinking sweet tea seasoned with the sage growing in your garden. The only person who could make that dream a reality is you. Take responsibility for yourself, your family, your people, and start to take control of your destiny. How? I do not know. Maybe there is something to be learned from the Jewish people who rose up from the most destructive human tragedy of the 20th century, and instead of sinking into self-pity, built a flourishing and prospering country. It is possible, and it is in your hands. I am ready to be there to provide a shoulder of support and help to you. But only you can move the wheels of history. Regards, Yishai, (Reserve Soldier)

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Scathing ‘insider’ report on UNWRA to hit Obama’s desk

The United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA) employs and provides benefits for terrorists and criminals, a former legal advisor who left the organization asserts in a report that is scheduled to be reviewed by US President Barack Obama and his administration.

James Lindsay, now a fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, served as an attorney with the US Justice Department for 20 years before joining the UN agency in 2000 and eventually serving as its general counsel. In his report, Lindsay notes that the US initially contributed over 75% of the funding for UNRWA and remains its largest single donor today, but the agency has long since parted ways with Washington in its policy aims and practices.

Lindsay warns that the agency currently offers "millions of dollars in humanitarian aid" to those that don't need it. He also recommends that UNRWA "halt its one-sided political statements and limit itself to comments on humanitarian issues," as well as taking "additional steps to ensure the agency is not employing or providing benefits to terrorists and criminals."

In many ways UNRWA acts a giant employment agency, as the vast majority of its 29,000 workers are local Palestinians who are listed themselves as refugees. But many of these employees are loyalists of Hamas and other terror militias, and its schools, clinics and other facilities have become outlets for anti-Israel indoctrination and weapon facilities for Hamas.

Lindsey also contends that his most important recommendation is the purging the UNRWA rolls of those with the oxymoronic “citizen-refugees” status. Currently UNRWA continues to grant refugee status to around two million Palestinians that hold citizenship in Jordan, Syria and Lebanon.

For the full report please visit this page.

News:
- Hizbullah attack against Israeli target in Europe foiled
- Iran rejects US call to halt nuke work
- Palestinians violate ceasefire yet again
- 'Israel has the right to self-defense'
- Livni: Israeli restraint in Gaza is over
- UN official skips Holocaust ceremony
- Noam Schalit in Paris: Sarkozy told me Gilad is alive
- Hamas executes fellow Palestinians

Related Posts and Information:

- Hamas militants using a mosque to store weapons, abusing civilians in Gaza
- TV station in Gaza serves as rocket launching facility, Gaza journalist finds this funny
- Iran Renews Efforts to Re-Supply Hamas
- Hamas: Exploitation of Civilians as Human Shields
- Sderot Victim to U.N.: Are Human Rights for Some, But Not Others?
- Sderot Mother Addresses United Nations: "Doesn't My Baby Have Right to Life?"
- 15 Seconds in Sderot, Israel



Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Human Rights Groups Ignore Hamas Crimes

HAMAS HIJACKING AMBULANCES

According to the Sydney Morning Herald:
Palestinian civilians living in Gaza during the three-week war with Israel have spoken of the challenge of being caught between Hamas and Israeli soldiers as the radical Islamic movement that controls the Gaza strip attempted to hijack ambulances.
Mohammed Shriteh, 30, is an ambulance driver registered with and trained by the Palestinian Red Crescent Society.

His first day of work in the al-Quds neighbourhood was January 1, the sixth day of the war. "Mostly the war was not as fast or as chaotic as I expected," Mr Shriteh told the Herald. "We would co-ordinate with the Israelis before we pick up patients, because they have all our names, and our IDs, so they would not shoot at us."

Mr Shriteh said the more immediate threat was from Hamas, who would lure the ambulances into the heart of a battle to transport fighters to safety.
HAMAS' USE OF CIVILIANS AS HUMAN SHIELDS

Der Spiegel reveals the abuse of Palestinian civilian homes by Hamas and their fear of the terrorist group:
Hail's house is just a few streets away and only suffered light damage. There are a few bullet holes in the living room walls and all of the window panes are broken. Hail also found out after the cease-fire that the militants had used his house as a base for their operations. The door to his house stood open and there were electric cables lying in the hallway. When Hail followed them they led to his neighbor's house which it seems Hamas had mined.

As Hail, in his mid-30s, sat on his porch and thought about what to do a man came by: He was from Hamas and had left something in Hail's home. He let him in and the man then emerged with a bullet proof vest, a rocket launcher and an ammunitions belt. An hour later a fighter with Islamic Jihad called to the door, then disappeared onto the roof and reappeared with a box of ammunition. "The abused civilians' homes for their own purposes. That is not right," Hail says with disgust while trying to remain polite.
DEATH TOLL MOSTLY HAMAS TERRORISTS AND OPERATIVES

YNet News reports:
A continuing IDF investigation into the number of civilian Palestinian casualties during the Israeli offensive in Gaza indicated that only 250 of the fatalities were civilians.

The military estimates that between 1,100 and 1,200 people were killed during the offensive. Some 700 of are believed to be militants and most are believed to be Hamas operatives.

The IDF is still trying to ascertain the identity of the remaining fatalities, but security sources said many would probably turn out to be militants as well. "Hamas is familiar with the numbers and is doing everything it can to concealed them," said an IDF source....

Many of the fatalities were considered to be civilians at first, because there were no weapons found with them, said a military source, "But that method of operation is consistent with the way Hamas was hiding in the midst of civilians, moving between their strongholds with no weapons. In many cases someone thought to be a civilian casualty turned out to be a Hamas operative after we ran our checks."
Recent News:
- Palestinians violate ceasefire yet again
- 'Israel has the right to self-defense'
- Livni: Israeli restraint in Gaza is over
- UN official skips Holocaust ceremony
- Noam Schalit in Paris: Sarkozy told me Gilad is alive
- Likud warns against overconfidence
- Hamas executes fellow Palestinians
- Former Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on 'Your World'
- Obama's first interview goes to pro-Jihadist station

Related Posts and Information:
- Hamas militants using a mosque to store weapons, abusing civilians in Gaza
- TV station in Gaza serves as rocket launching facility, Gaza journalist finds this funny
- Iran Renews Efforts to Re-Supply Hamas
- Hamas: Exploitation of Civilians as Human Shields
- Sderot Victim to U.N.: Are Human Rights for Some, But Not Others?
- Sderot Mother Addresses United Nations: "Doesn't My Baby Have Right to Life?"
- 15 Seconds in Sderot, Israel

Palestinians violate ceasefire yet again

A Bedouin Israeli soldier was killed in the attack. Three others were wounded. This latest attack forced Israel to close its crossings into Gaza, opening them only briefly for aid on Tuesday. Certainly these repeated ceasefire violations, as well as the recent Hamas executions in Gaza of Palestinians, does not indicate that there is a desire for stability and peace among Palestinians who control Gaza.

The Jerusalem Post reports:
The IDF has received a green light to respond harshly to the bomb attack Tuesday morning against a military patrol along the border with the Gaza Strip in which one soldier was killed and three others were wounded.

Defense officials would not provide details regarding the planned response but said that it would be in line with Israel's new policy to respond aggressively to any attack following Operation Cast Lead earlier this month.

Early Tuesday morning, a Bedouin tracker was killed and an officer was seriously wounded when a large bomb exploded next to their patrol along Israel's border with the Gaza Strip near the Kissufim Crossing. Two other soldiers were lightly wounded. The bombing was the first lethal attacks perpetrated by the Palestinians since Israel withdrew from Gaza last week.

The family of the fatality requested that neither his name nor his photo be published.

Following the incident, the IDF fired at several targets inside Gaza and IDF soldiers briefly crossed the border in search of the attackers. The troops left Gaza by nightfall and after discovering several additional explosive devices that had been planted nearby. IDF sources said that the terrorists likely took advantage of the heavy fog Tuesday morning to plant and detonate the device.

Defense Minister Ehud Barak called an urgent meeting of top defense officials after the bombing. "This is a difficult attack and we will respond, but there is no point in elaborating," Barak said.

Israel closed its crossings into Gaza to humanitarian aid traffic after briefly opening them Tuesday morning. Gaza border official Raed Fattouh said Israeli officials informed him the closure was due to the attack.

Head of the Defense Ministry's Diplomatic-Security Bureau Amos Gilad said that Israel's response would not be limited to closing the crossings into Gaza.

"The response will not be the way it used to be," Gilad said in a speech at the Institute for National Security Studies in Tel Aviv. "The equation has changed."
Other news:
- 'Israel has the right to self-defense'
- Livni: Israeli restraint in Gaza is over
- UN official skips Holocaust ceremony
- Noam Schalit in Paris: Sarkozy told me Gilad is alive
- Likud warns against overconfidence
- Hamas executes fellow Palestinians
- Former Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on 'Your World'
- Obama's first interview goes to pro-Jihadist station

Video:

- Young Gazan Cancer Patients Enter Israel for Treatment
- Hamas: Exploitation of Civilians as Human Shields
- Sderot Victim to U.N.: Are Human Rights for Some, But Not Others?
- Sderot Mother Addresses United Nations: "Doesn't My Baby Have Right to Life?"

Analysis:

- The UN's Orwellian Language on Israel

Monday, January 26, 2009

The Persecution of Jews in Iraq

Author's Note: This article is also available in French. With thanks to Sacha Bergheim.

"The dehumanization of the Jewish personality resulting from continuous humiliation and torment...have dragged us down to the lowest level of our physical and mental faculties, and deprived us of the power to recover." –Max Sawadayee, Iraqi Jew, in “All Waiting to be Hanged”

My paternal grandfather vividly recalled his experiences living as a Jew in Baghdad and the Farhud in 1941 which took place during the traditional Jewish harvest festival holiday of Shavuot. I learned from my grandfather (pictured on the left with me in 1987) that the Farhud literally translates to “pogrom” or “violent dispossession” in Arabic. This was a Nazi pogrom coordinated with genocidal leaders like the Mufti Haj Amin al-Husseini and Rashid Ali. In a two-day period Arab mobs went on a rampage in Baghdad and other cities in Iraq. Nearly 150 Jews were killed and more than 2,000 injured; some 900 Jewish homes were destroyed and looted, and hundreds of Jewish-owned shops were robbed and destroyed.

My older family members recall witnessing how Iraqi soldiers pulled small children away from their parents and ripped the arms off young girls to steal their bracelets; pregnant women were raped and their stomachs cut open. My grandfather hid his baby brother underneath his t-shirt when the violence began and ran home. My great-grandfather saved his entire family during the riots that broke out in Baghdad by claiming to be a Muslim when Iraqi troops came into their home with the intent of looting, raping, and killing. Unfortunately, the British did not intervene or seem to care about what was happening to the Jewish community. Eventually, when being a Jew was practically criminalized, my father's family escaped to Israel with only the clothes on their backs — their belongings were confiscated — leaving behind everything that they knew. Their experience was not a unique one and was shared by several thousand Baghdadi Jews.

Iraqi Jews take pride in their distinguished customs till today. The Iraqi Jewish community is among the oldest in the world and has an incredibly rich history of learning and scholarship. Abraham, the father of the Jewish people, was born in Ur of the Chaldees, in southern Iraq. Jews had prospered in what was then Babylonia for 1200 years prior to the Muslim conquest in 634 AD.

During Islamic rule Jews found that they were living at the mercy of rulers. In the 9th century, Jews found themselves living as second-class citizens or Dhimmis. Under shariah law the Jews of Babylonia wore yellow patches and were forced to pay heavy taxes for their survival. Residence restrictions were also enforced. Extreme oppression of some Arab caliphs in 1000 AD saw that the taxation of the Jews amounted to expropriation. In 1333 persecution against Jews culminated in the pillaging and destruction of the Baghdad Sanctuary. In 1776 is a year that Babylonian Jewry recalls the slaughter of Jews at Bosra. Many of these indigenous Jews fled to places like India due to anti-Jewish measures taken by Turkish Muslim rulers in the 18th century.

Throughout their presence in Babylonia, the Jews maintained strong ties with the Land of Israel. With the aid of rabbis from Israel they succeeded in establishing many prominent rabbinical academies.

A Baghdadi rabbi with Hasidic students and Syrian Jews at a wedding celebration in Jerusalem, 1904.

By the 3rd century, Babylonia became the center of Jewish scholarship. The community's most influential creation was the Babylonian Talmud.

While the situation of the Jewish community fluctuated under Islamic rule, some leaders were merciful. In some cases Jews held high positions in government or prospered in commerce and trade. At the same time, Jews were subjected to special taxes, restrictions on their professional activity, and anti-Jewish incitement among the masses. The situation changed for Jews during British rule, which began in 1917. Jews fared better economically and many were elected to government posts. This traditionally observant community was also allowed to found religious organizations and to pursue Hebrew studies.

All of this progress ended when Iraq gained independence in 1932. Nazi propaganda and antisemitism had a huge presence on Iraqi radio broadcasts. Mein Kampf had been translated into Arabic by Yunis al-Sab'awi, and was published in a local newspaper, Al Alam al Arabi (The Arab World), in Baghdad during 1933-1934. Yunis al-Sab'awi also headed the Futtuwa, a pre-military youth movement influenced by the Hitlerjugend (Hitler Youth) in Germany. Al-Sab'awi eventually became a minister in the new Iraqi government.

In June 1941 a pro-Nazi coup inspired by Haj Amin al-Husseini and orchestrated by Rashid Ali sparked one of the most bloodiest pogroms in Iraqi Jewish history. This pogrom is referred to as the Farhud and is comparable to Kristallnacht, a pogrom carried out in Nazi Germany. Armed Iraqi mobs, with the complicity of the police and the army, murdered hundreds of Jews and wounded many others.

Although emigration was prohibited, many Jews made their way to Israel during this period. Many had come to terms with the fact that Iraq was no longer safe.

In 1950 the Iraqi parliament finally legalized emigration to Israel, and between May 1950 and August 1951, the Jewish Agency and the Israeli government succeeded in airlifting approximately 110,000 Jews to Israel in Operations Ezra and Nehemiah. This figure includes 18,000 Kurdish Jews, who have their own distinct traditions and customs. Some 20,000 were smuggled out through Iran.

Jewish refugees who fled Iraq in 1951 register upon arrival in Israel. Photo courtesy of Babylonian Heritage Center

In 1952, Iraq's government barred Jews from emigrating and publicly hanged two Jews after falsely charging them with hurling a bomb at the Baghdad office of the U.S. Information Agency.

With the rise of competing Ba'ath factions in 1963, additional restrictions were placed on the remaining Iraqi Jews. The sale of property was forbidden and all Jews were forced to carry yellow identity cards. After the Six-Day War, more repressive measures were imposed: Jewish property was seized; Jewish bank accounts were frozen; Jews were dismissed from public posts; businesses were shut; trading permits were canceled; telephones were disconnected. Jews were placed under house arrest for long periods of time or restricted to the cities.

Persecution was also prevalent at the end of 1968. Fourteen men--eleven of them Jews--were sentenced to death in staged trials and hanged in the public squares of Baghdad and others died of torture. On January 27, 1969, Baghdad Radio called upon Iraqis to "come and enjoy the feast." 500,000 men, women and children in Iraq paraded and danced past the scaffolds where the bodies of the hanged Jews swung; the mob rhythmically chanted "Death to Israel" and "Death to all traitors." This display brought a world-wide public outcry that Radio Baghdad dismissed by declaring: "We hanged spies, but the Jews crucified Christ."

The Iraqi Jewish population once numbered at 150,000 in 1947. Today there are 7 Jews living in Iraq who hide their Jewish identity and live in fear. The community has been totally ethnically cleansed and destroyed.

Sources:
Bard, Mitchell. "The Mufti and the Fuhrer." Jewish Virtual Library. 26 Jan. 2009

Ben-Porat, Mordechai. To Baghdad and Back. Gefen Publishing House, Ltd, 1998.

Farrell, Stephen. "Baghdad Jews Have Become a Fearful Few." 1 June 2008. New York Times. 26 Jan. 2009 .

Laqueur, Walter and Barry Rubin. The Israel-Arab Reader: a Documentary History of the Middle East Conflict. Penguin, 2008.

Lewis, Bernard. The Jews of Islam. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1984.

Mylroie, Laurie and Judith Miller. Saddam Hussein and the Crisis in the Gulf. City: Ballantine Books Inc, 1990.

Roumani, Maurice et.al. The Case of the Jews from Arab Countries: a Neglected Issue. WOJAC Books, 1983.

Ye'or, Bat et.al. Islam and Dhimmitude. Madison: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 2002.

Related Posts:
- 1,000,000 Middle Eastern Jews
- The Persecution of Jews in Syria

Other Useful Information:
- Nazism and Radical Islam
- The Forgotten Refugees
- Yemenite Jewish Community Under Attack (Again)
- Don't Forget the Jewish Refugees from Arab Lands
- Intro to the Farhud
- The Silent Exodus of Jewish Refugees

CAMERA Alert: CBS’s "60 Minutes" Scapegoats Israel

The Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting in America (CAMERA) has been proactively monitoring and challenging anti-Israel biases in news reporting. The organization has issued an alert regarding the January 25th episode of CBS's 60 Minutes. At the end of this entry there is a list of things that you can do to dispel the misinformation of this program.

Correspondent Bob Simon teamed up with Palestinian politician and partisan Mustafa Barghouti in a segment entitled "Is Peace Out of Reach," to promote the Palestinian view of the Arab-Israeli conflict, which heaps blame on Israel and exculpates the Palestinians for lack of peace. He ignores the Palestinians' responsibility for their own situation and reduces everything to a two-dimensional, villain-and-victim scenario, with Israel cast in the role of villain and Palestinians in the part of victim.

To support this one-sided and extremely distorted view, CBS gives a welcoming platform to Palestinians and other harsh critics of Israel. The Israeli perspective, by contrast, is given a fraction of the time. And most of that time is devoted to an Israeli settler leader whose views represent neither the Israeli mainstream, the Israeli government or even most of the settlers.

But the program itself is much more lopsided than even the imbalance of speakers indicates, since correspondent Bob Simon — whose voice dominates the segment — clearly sides with the "blame Israel" chorus.

While parroting Palestinian talking points and accepting without challenge the most extreme Palestinian anti-Israel propaganda (e.g. the slur that Israel practices apartheid and that settlements are like "crusader fortresses"), Simon overlooks recent history and key events and at one point even heckles an Israeli soldier as if in a schoolyard argument. ("Have you lost your voice?," he contemptuously asks an Israeli soldier who is seemingly not authorized or prepared to speak with the press.)

Here is information that can be useful for understanding exactly how the program on 60 Minutes was biased:
FALSE PREMISE

The entire premise of Bob Simon's segment — that the key to solving the Arab-Israeli conflict lies entirely with the Israelis, who make peace impossible by building settlements in the West Bank — is false and devoid of connection to recent history.

Israel withdrew from the Gaza Strip and dismantled all of its settlements there. The Gaza disengagement, though, did not bring peace to Israel's south, but rather the opposite. What makes Simon think a similar withdrawal from areas closer to Israel' s major cities won't bring even more violence? And why does he also ignore reasonable Israeli concerns that if it withdrew from the West Bank "Hamas would take over the institutions and apparatuses of the Palestinian Authority within days"?

Simon also ignores the fact that the Palestinians were offered, in exchange for peace, a state eight years ago in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. They not only failed to accept the peace offer, but chose a terror war against Israel instead. Had they accepted the offer, the Palestinians would have a state, settlements deep inside the West Bank would be gone, and, the hope was, Palestinian terrorism that fuels the conflict would be reined in. Instead, Palestinian terrorism prompted Israeli defensive measures, and thus changed the face of the West Bank.

They not only failed to accept the peace offer, but chose a terror war against Israel instead. Had they accepted the offer, the Palestinians would have a state, settlements deep inside the West Bank would be gone, and, the hope was, Palestinian terrorism that fuels the conflict would be reigned in. Instead, Palestinian terrorism prompted Israeli defensive measures, and thus changed the face of the West Bank.

BLAMELESS PALESTINIANS

Just as Simon ignores Israel's offer to dismantle settlements and create a Palestinian state, he also ignores the violence that followed Palestinian rejection of the offer. The words "terror," "terrorism" or "terrorist" do not appear even once in the transcript of the segment. Nor do the words "violence," "war," "gunmen," "militants," "attacker," or "suicide bombers."

The one reference to guns during the 60 Minutes segment, in fact, was Simon's assertion that "the Israelis," as opposed to the Palestinians, "have the guns." The one reference to "security" was Mustafa Barghouti's claim that most Israeli checkpoints cannot be justified by security concerns.

Although Simon ignores Palestinian violence against Israel, he nonetheless faults Israeli response to the violence. Stripped of its context, Israel's attempts to protect its civilians is framed as gratuitously causing inconvenience, oppression, and "humiliation" to Palestinians.

The security barrier (which Simon absurdly says Israel refers to as a "wall") is said to "appropriate" land and "separat[e] farmers from their land." But its essential purpose, to protect Israelis and prevent suicide bombers from reaching their targets, is ignored. Likewise, Simon describes checkpoints as "humiliating," and allows Barghouti to allege that they primarily exist "to block the movement of people from one place to another," but fails to reference the number of Palestinian attacks that they prevented, and fails to mention that, like the barrier, most checkpoints didn't exist before the Palestinians initiated their war of terror in late 2000.

(CAMERA recently examined incidents at one checkpoint, the Hawara over the course of one month, October 2008. on October 5, a Palestinian was stopped carrying a suspicious parcel containing two pipe bombs; on October 12, a female soldier prevented an attack when she discovered nine pipe bombs in the bags of three Palestinian traveling companions; on the following day, soldiers stopped a man who was trying to cross the checkpoint with explosive devices. He was shot and lightly wounded as he tried to escape in a get-away car; on October 15, soldiers confiscated a 10 cm knife from a man trying to pass through the checkpoint; a week later on October 22, the checkpoint was temporarily closed as a 17-year-old youth was detained with several firebombs and an explosive device. On October 25, a Palestinian youth was taken for questioning after soldiers found a pipe bomb in his bag.)

IN NABLUS, TOO, ONLY ISRAELIS TO BLAME

Likewise, Israel's periodic use of a strategically-located Palestinian home in Nablus owned by the Nassif family, which is discussed at length in the segment, can't be understood in a vacuum. After Simon and the Palestinian residents slam Israel for taking over the upper floors of the house on certain days, the CBS correspondent's paraphrasing of a brief statement by Israel — he said that "an army spokesperson told us the army uses the Nassif's house for important surveillance operations" — does little to explain Israel's concerns and rationale.

Israel sees Nablus as a continuing hotbed of terrorist efforts and the central district of the West Bank from which attempted attacks on Israel emanate. According to the Intelligence and Terrorism Information Center, in 2007 the Hamas networks in Samaria, especially in the Nablus region, were defined by the Israel Security Agency as dangerous and working avidly to rehabilitate themselves after the damage done by Operation Defensive Shield. In 2007 a series of counterterrorist activities was directed against the networks including the detention of many operatives, some of them senior.

(See, e.g., here and here) The terrorist activity and murder of hundreds of Israelis in 2001-2003 has been dramatically diminished through a combination of the security barrier and intense, round-the-clock vigilance inside the West Bank. Because much of Nablus lies in a valley, Israel can survey the camps, casbah and city below from strategic hills, and this surveillance sometimes entails using private homes. IDF soldiers are instructed not to harm anyone or to damage property.

Even the BBC, which is not generally regarded as sympathetic to Israel, alerted its readers to Israel's position in a more journalistically responsible manner. In a piece about the house, a reporter notes:
Over the last six years, the Israeli army has made frequent incursions into the city, to arrest and kill militants. When it does, the soldiers often return to bang on Mr Nasif's door. ...

Nablus does have a history of militancy. In the past, perpetrators of bombings in which Israeli civilians were killed, came from the city.

Although those attacks have dramatically decreased in number over recent years, the army says that does not mean attacks are not still being planned. That is why it says it needs to keep on making its raids into Nablus.
In other words, unlike 60 Minutes, the BBC acknowledges that the murder of Israeli civilians, and Israel's attempts to act against potential killers, is an essential part of the story.

JERUSALEM ARABS

As with his discussion of the West Bank, Simon misleads viewers to present Palestinians in Jerusalem as blameless victims of Israeli oppression:
The army is evicting Arabs from their homes in East Jerusalem, which Palestinians hoped to make their capital. Outraged, Arabs tried to save their homes, but the Israelis have the guns. Israel demolished more than 100 Arab homes in the past year, ruling they'd been illegally built. Arabs say this is just another tactic to drive them out.
"Drive them out"? Under Israeli control, the Arab population of eastern Jerusalem has increased dramatically, and in fact grew much faster than the Jewish population of western Jerusalem. And Israel also demolishes illegal structures in western Jerusalem. Does this mean it is trying to "drive out" Jews from Jerusalem? And Palestinians themselves have also demolished illegal homes under their control. Would CBS take seriously allegations that the Palestinian Authority is trying to "drive out" Palestinians from Gaza because it demolished illegal building?

ECHOING FALSE PALESTINIAN CLAIMS

Simon abandoned all pretense of journalistic impartiality with prejudicial language that clearly echoed Palestinian allegations. For example, he talked of Israelis "slic[ing] up [land on which] Palestinians had hoped to establish their state"; of Palestinians having to "submit to humiliating delays at checkpoints"; of Israeli settlements "dominating the lowlands like crusader fortresses"; of Israeli soldiers who "corral" Palestinians as they requisition their houses for security reason. He similarly championed and emphasized the Palestinian spokesman's claims, as well, telling viewers "here's what [Barghouti] is up against"; and "Here's how they block Barghouti."

By contrast, he shows utter contempt toward an Israeli soldier, heckling him: "Why don't you tell us what you're doing here? Have you lost your voice?"

Moreover, Simon did much on his own to mislead viewers. Here is one typical statement by the correspondent:
Palestinians had hoped to establish their state here on the West Bank, an area the size of Delaware. But Israelis have sliced it up with scores of settlements and hundreds of miles of new highways that only settlers can use. Palestinians have to drive or ride on the older roads. When they want to travel from one town to another, they have to submit to humiliating delays at checkpoints and roadblocks. There are more than 600 of them on the West Bank.
Here, in just a few seconds of monologue, Simon falsely asserted that there are "hundreds of miles of new highways that only settlers can use" (in fact all Israelis, whether Jewish or Arab, Christian or Muslim, can use Israel's bypass roads, as can West Bank Palestinians who are believed to pose no threat to commuters); that Israelis prevented a Palestinian state because they "sliced ... up" the West Bank (in fact, as mentioned above, the lack of a Palestinian state is not because Israel "sliced up" — as Bob Simon and pro-Palestinian activists describe it — the West Bank, but because they rejected a state, started a terror war, and used territory abandon by Israel as a base for deadly attacks); and relayed the Palestinian view of checkpoints as "humiliating" while ignoring the fact that Palestinians' violent rejection of a state prompted most of the checkpoints).

THE CAST OF CHARACTERS

Simon carefully chose his guests to bolster his points, guaranteeing a warped picture of the conflict to accompany a skewed narration.

Mustapha Barghouti is quoted and paraphrased more than any other guest and is given an unchallenged platform to level a variety of extreme charges. Referring to him only as a "former candidate for Palestinian president" Simon gives no hint that he is a long-time partisan whose statements are often patently false and propagandistic – notwithstanding his role as a PA legislator.

* Commenting on the death of arch-terrorist George Habash, founder of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine and mastermind of airplane bombings and hijackings, the Lod Airport massacre and the Entebbe hijacking, Barghouti praised the PFLP leader who he said left a legacy of "loyalty to the Palestinian cause in a very principled manner – honest, clean politics and great devotion to the Palestinian cause and to humanity." (Jerusalem Post Jan 29, 2008)

* On Dec 30 as the Gaza conflict erupted he stated on CNN that not a "single" Israeli had been killed since Dec 27, when in fact four had been killed.

* On CNN, he charged that Israel had broken the June 2008 cease-fire, when the Palestinians had broken it repeatedly by with the firing of rockets, mortars and light arms and with attempted infiltrations aimed at abducting Israelis.

* Barghouti's lies sometimes catch up with him as, for example, when the San Francisco Chronicle had to correct an absurd allegation he made that Israel's security barrier "was claiming 58% of the West Bank."

Barghouti and Simon lament that Barghouti cannot "ever" enter Jerusalem, implying he's barred because he moved away from the city. But Simon does not bother to investigate. Barghouti has been arrested several times for violating agreements not to engage in political electioneering in Jerusalem without a permit, and according to London's Independent (Jan. 8, 2005), he has deliberately "sought confrontations with the security forces as a tactic to gain badly needed publicity." Moreover, after an arrest in January 2006, he was ordered by Jerusalem police to stay out of Jerusalem for the next 30 days (Jerusalem Post, Jan. 4, 2006) -- not as Simon claims "forever." Apparently, the story is more complicated than the 60 Minutes host implies.

The Nassif family is granted almost as much time as Barghouti to give their view of events at their home overlooking Nablus, a sharp contrast with the ultra-brief paraphrased Israeli comment that "important surveillance operations" occur from the house.

Daniella Weiss, resident of the West Bank, is presented as a counterweight to Barghouti and voice for the settlement movement. Yet she represents the most extreme position of Israeli settler opinion, has sparred with settler leadership and advocates for illegal outposts – all of which are not positions of the vast majority of Israelis and Israeli settlers. Casting her comments as representative produces a highly distorted picture of settlements, ignoring the relevant legal, historical and religious issues.

Meron Benvenisti is identified as a supposedly "moderate" Israeli; but his stated views are far from moderate. He claims Israelis are not actually victims of Arab violence, but that "Jewish immigrants settled on the lands of Arab natives, met with violent resistance and responded as if they were the victims and the natives the aggressors" (The Nation, June 18, 2007). In the August 7, 2003 Ha'aretz, he wrote: "... the basic story here is not one of two national movements that are confronting each other; the basic story is that of natives and settlers." (Like Hamas extremists, he uses "settlers" here to refer to all Israelis, not just those living in the West Bank.)

He even claims Israel is worse in some respects than apartheid South Africa and he argues for a single binational state over the entirety of Israel, the West Bank and Gaza Strip — a proposal far outside the Israeli political mainstream.

Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni is very briefly interviewed, representing the official voice of Israel. She is only quoted discussing the possible need to remove settlements. If she commented on the need for checkpoints and other security measures or other context, it didn' t make it on the air.
WHAT YOU CAN DO:

1) Contact 60 Minutes and program advertisers who may not realize their products are being associated with such an inflammatory, biased and false program.

Contact 60 Minutes by:

a) E-mailing: 60m@cbsnews.com

b) Calling Senior Producer Robert Anderson: (212) 975-6977

c) Submitting a complaint online by clicking here: http://www.cbsnews.com/htdocs/feedback/fb_news_form.shtml
and selecting 60 Minutes from the drop down menu.

* Comment on how the program was used to promote a Palestinian perspective while failing to convey the views and legitimate concerns of the Israeli mainstream. (Emphasize that Meron Benvenisti is not, as Bob Simon claims, a moderate, and that neither he nor Danielle Weiss represent the mainstream Israeli voice.)

* Note that Simon ignored historical facts that are essential for understanding the situation in the West Bank, especially Palestinian violence against Israeli civilians and soldiers, the Palestinian rejection of the peace offers in 2000, and the backfiring of Israel's withdrawal from the Gaza Strip.

* Comment on how blaming only Israelis and ignoring Palestinian actions is irresponsible and unethical journalism – not what would be expected from 60 Minutes.

* Contact as many advertisers as you can from the list below. Politely inform them that their ads supported a 60 Minutes segment that unfairly demonized Israel and ignored Palestinian terrorism and rejectionism. Remind them that having their product associated with such a shoddy, unfair program taints their reputation. Ask them to contact 60 Minutes and their ad manager to protest having their product advertised during such a controversial and unfair segment.

List of Advertisers:

Capital One
Chairman, Pres and CEO — Richard Frank
703-720-1000

JP Morgan Chase
Chairman, Pres and CEO — James Dimon
212-270-6000

AT&T
Chairman, President and CEO — Randall Stephanson
210-821-4105

Tylenol — Johnson & Johnson
Chairman and CEO — William C. Weldon
732-524-0400

Fresh Step (cat litter) — The Clorox Co.
Chairman and CEO — Donald R. Knauss
510-271-7000

Truvia (sweetener) — Cargill Inc.
Chairman and CEO — Gregory page
952-742-7575

Flomax — Boehringer Ingelheim Pharmaceuticals, Inc
President and CEO — J. Martin Carroll
203-798-9988

NetZero — United Online
Chairman, President and CEO — Mark Goldston
818-287-3000

2) Consider sending blind copies (bcc) to letters@camera.org

Israeli Facts



Israel, the 100th smallest country, with less than 1/1000th of the world's population, can make claim to the following:

- A portable electrocardiograph machine developed by Israeli company SHL can transmit highly detailed data on heart activity to physicians by mobile phone.

- Israeli startup Audiodent has developed an innovative hearing aid that clips easily inside the mouth, using the teeth and jawbone to transmit sound to the brain.

- Israeli researchers are developing the second generation of drugs to treat diseases like Alzheimer's and Parkinson's Disease.

- The new American state-of-the-art F-35 Joint Strike Fighter aircraft will be equipped with Israeli-developed mounted display systems in their helmets which incorporate and display all vital flight data.

- A group of American airport directors came to Israel to learn about security methods employed at Ben-Gurion Airport.

- Israeli company Ultrashape has developed a safe replacement for liposuction - a unique new body-contouring device that "blasts" unwanted fat from the body.

- Israeli researchers have discovered the molecular trigger that causes psoriasis.

- A 100-member Israeli delegation flew to Kenya to rescue survivors of a building collapse.

- Israeli research has shown that dancers display consistent differences from the general population in two key genes.

- An Israeli-initiated project is drastically lowering the mortality rate of Ethiopian children infected with the AIDS/HIV virus.

- Israel annually exports more than 1.5 billion flowers to the US and Europe.

- Israeli infectious disease experts have been recruited by the World Health Organization to help prevent the spread of avian flu.

- Israeli scientists have found that a drug once used to treat vertigo can now help people lose weight.

- Israeli basketball star Shay Doron helped the University of Maryland win the women's college basketball championship.

- Israeli companies are going to require models in their advertisements to take tests to insure that they have a normal BMI (Body mass index).

- Israel has one of the world's only playgrounds totally suitable for special needs children.

- An Israeli discovery of a gene that could cure a blinding eye disease has been licensed by pharmaceutical giant Pfizer.

- A team of Israeli airport security experts is advising the Los Angeles International Airport on ways to improve passenger safety.

- An Israeli computer program has been clinically proven to accurately provide a prognosis of how effective chemotherapy will be for breast cancer patients.

- Israeli medical teams are training Ethiopian doctors to fight AIDS.

- Professional baseball is coming to Israel in the summer of 2007.

- Israel is one of the leading countries in providing ornamental fish to aquariums around the world.

- An Israeli study has shown that people who suffer from job burnout may be prone to developing type 2 diabetes.

- An Israeli scientific team from the Technion has succeeded in creating in the laboratory beating heart tissue from human embryonic stem cells

- The Israeli film 'Sweet Mud' won the jury prize for world cinema at the 2007 Sundance Film Festival.

- Israeli mini-unmanned aerial vehicles are being used by US forces in Iraq and Afghanistan.

- The success of GlaxoSmithKline's once-a-day breast cancer pill Tykerb - which has won approval by the FDA for use by women with metastatic or advanced breast cancer - is thanks in part to clinical trials conducted by Israeli researchers.

- An Israeli innovation could make many diagnostic catheterizations for clogged arteries unnecessary.

- An Israeli strategist has guided numerous UK sporting organizations to new heights with his 'Winning Formula'.

- An Israeli company has developed the world's first video ringtones for cell phones - the Vringo.

- NASA is interested in knowing what Israeli researchers can learn about conditions on Mars by studying the Negev desert.

- A team of Israeli genetic researchers has identified a genetic defect that causes a severe neurodegenerative disease in Bedouin children resulting in premature death.

- A team from the Weizmann Institute has demonstrated for the first time how tissues transplanted from pig embryos might, in the future, be able to induce the human body to produce blood-clotting proteins for hemophilia patients.

- Israeli researchers have discovered a new way to create effective substitutes for antibiotics based on a combination of amino acids and fatty acids.

- An Israeli ornithologist is utilizing barn owls to rid large cities of rodent problems.

- An Israeli company has developed a device that helps nurses locate those hard-to-find veins.

- Israeli actress Hanna Laslo took home the "Best Actress" award at the 2005 Cannes Film Festival this year for her performance in Amos Gitai's "Free Zone."

- An Israeli system to help dyslexic readers is being used throughout the US and Europe.

- Voice over internet protocol (VoIP) technology was pioneered in Israel.

- The Israeli women's national flag football team won the largest and most important open football tournament in Europe in 2005.

- An Israeli FDA-approved device - the VelaSmooth - reduces the appearance of cellulite.

- Israeli laser technology is powering the latest hair removal devices on the American market.

- Intel's new multi-core processor was completely developed at its facilities in Israel.

- An Israeli doctor headed the Merck team that developed a vaccine against cervical cancer.

- Prof. Robert Aumann is the fourth Israeli in the last four years to win a Nobel prize.

- Israel's premier basketball team Maccabi Tel Aviv beat the Toronto Raptors in an exhibition game in 2005.

- AirTrain JFK - the 8.1-mile light rail labrynthe that connects JFK Airport to New York City's mass transit - is protected by the Israeli-developed Nextiva surveillance system.

- Bill Gates called Israel a major player in the high tech world.

- The Weizmann Institute of Science has been voted the best university in the world for life scientists to conduct research.

- An Israeli 'super-sensor' has been installed in Sealy mattresses to control snoring problems.

- Hawaiian singer Don Ho underwent an Israeli-developed stem cell treatment to strengthen his heart.

- Israeli company Ultrashape has developed a safe replacement for liposuction - a unique new body-contouring device that "blasts" unwanted fat from the body.

- Israeli researchers have discovered the molecular trigger that causes psoriasis.

- A 100-member Israeli delegation flew to Kenya in January, 2006 to rescue survivors of a building collapse.

- Israeli research has shown that dancers display consistent differences from the general population in two key genes.

- Israeli research shows that we can find out more about what is buried beneath the earth's surface by launching a satellite into the sky.

- An Israeli company has unveiled a blood test that via the telephone diagnoses
heart attacks.

- The Israeli-developed Ex-Press shunt is providing relief for American glaucoma sufferers.

- An Israeli research team has found that the combination of electrical stimulation
and chemotherapy makes cancerous metastases disappear.

- Israel has designed the first flight system to protect passenger and freighter aircraft against missile attack.

- Jewish and Arab students at Hebrew University participate in the 'Billy Crystal Workshops - Peace Through the Performing Arts' project.

- Israel has the highest ratio of university degrees to the population in the world.

- Israel produces more scientific papers per capita than any other nation by a large margin - 109 per 10,000 people - as well as one of the highest percapita rates of patents filed.

- In proportion to its population, Israel has the largest number of startup companies in the world. In absolute terms, Israel has the largest number of startup companies than any other country in the world, except the US (3,500 companies mostly in hi-tech).

- Israel is ranked #2 in the world for venture capital funds right behind the US.

- Israel has the highest average living standards in the Middle East. The per capita income in 2000 was over $17,500, exceeding that of the UK.

- Israel's $100 billion economy is larger than all of its immediate neighbors combined.

- On a per capita basis, Israel has the largest number of biotech start-ups.

- Israel has the largest raptor migration in the world, with hundreds of thousands of African birds of prey crossing as they fan out into Asia.

- Twenty-four percent of Israel's workforce holds university degrees - ranking third in the industrialized world, after the United States and
Holland - and 12 percent hold advanced degrees.

- Israel is the only liberal democracy in the Middle East.

- In 1984 and 1991, Israel airlifted a total of 22,000 Ethiopian Jews at risk in Ethiopia to safety in Israel.

- When Gold Meir was elected Prime Minister of Israel in 1969, she became the world's second elected female leader in modern times.

- When the U.S. Embassy in Nairobi, Kenya was bombed in 1998, Israeli rescue teams were on the scene within a day - and saved three victims from the rubble.

- Israel has the third highest rate of entrepreneurship - and the highest rate among women and among people over 55 - in the world.

- Relative to its population, Israel is the largest immigrant-absorbing nation on earth. Immigrants come in search of democracy, religious
freedom, and economic opportunity.

- Israel was the first nation in the world to adopt the Kimberly process, an international standard that certifies diamonds as "conflict free."

- According to industry officials, Israel designed the airline industry's most impenetrable flight security. U.S. officials now look to Israel for advice on how to handle airborne security threats.

- Israel's Maccabi basketball team won the European championships in 2001.

- Israeli tennis player Anna Smashnova is the 15th ranked female player in
the world.

- Mighty Morphin' Power Rangers was produced by Haim Saban, an Israeli whose family fled persecution in Egypt.

- Israel has the world's second highest per capita of new books.

- Israel is the only country in the world that entered the 21st century with a net gain in its number of trees.

- Israel has more museums per capita than any other country.

- Israel has two official languages: Hebrew and Arabic.

- Israeli scientists developed the first fully computerized, no-radiation, diagnostic instrumentation for breast cancer.

- An Israeli company developed a computerized system
for ensuring proper administration of medications, thus removing human error from medical treatment. Every year in U.S. hospitals 7,000 patients die from treatment mistakes.

- Israel's Given Imaging developed the first ingestible video camera, so small it fits inside a pill. Used the view the small intestine from the inside, the camera helps doctors diagnose cancer and digestive disorders.

- Researchers in Israel developed a new device that directly helps the heart pump blood, an innovation with the potential to save lives among those with congestive heart failure. The new device is synchronized with the heart's mechanical operations through a sophisticated system of sensors.

- With more than 3,000 high-tech companies and start-ups, Israel has the highest concentration of hi-tech companies in the world (apart from the Silicon Valley).

- In response to serious water shortages, Israeli engineers and agriculturalists developed a revolutionary drip irrigation system to minimize the amount of water used to grow crops.

- Israel has the highest percentage in the world of home computers per capita.

- Israel leads the world in the number of scientists and technicians in the workforce, with 145 per 10,000, as opposed to 85 in the U.S., over 70 in Japan, and less than 60 in Germany. With over 25% of its work force employed in technical professions. Israel places first in this category as well.

- Motorola has its largest R&D center outside of the US in Israel.

- Most of the Windows NT operating system was developed by Microsoft-Israel.

- The Pentium MMX Chip technology was designed in Israel at Intel.

- Voice mail technology was developed in Israel.

- Both Microsoft and Cisco built their only R&D facilities outside the US in Israel.

- The technology for AOL Instant Messenger was developed in 1996 by four young Israelis.

- A new acne treatment developed in Israel, the ClearLight device, produces a high-intensity, ultraviolet-light-free, narrow-band blue light that causes acne bacteria to self-destruct - all without damaging surroundings skin or tissue.

- An Israeli company was the first to develop and install a large-scale solar-powered and fully functional electricity generating plant, in southern California's Mojave desert.

- The first PC anti-virus software was developed in Israel in 1979.

- Christopher Reeve called Israel the "world center" for research on paralysis treatment.

- That Israel is becoming integrally involved in helping to reshape the post-war Iraqi landscape.

- Israeli researchers are playing an important role in identifying a defective gene that causes a rare and usually fatal disease in Arab infants.

- An Israeli company has been given a U.S. grant to develop an anti-smallpox first aid treatment kit.

- The top women's magazine in the world - Cosmopolitan - is launching a Hebrew version in Israel.

- An Israeli company M-Systems was the first to patent and introduce key chain storage.

- Israeli microbiologists have developed the first passive vaccine against the mosquito-borne West Nile virus.

- A team of Israeli and US researchers has designed a watermelon-picking robot endowed with artificial vision to do the job of harvesting.

- Israeli researchers are using video games to investigate future treatments for memory disorders such as Alzheimer's disease.

- An Israeli company has developed sensors that pick up signs of stress in plants.

- Israeli medical researchers have shown that lycopene - the red pigment found in tomatoes - lowers blood pressure.

- A small Israel company called Lenslet has developed a revolutionary electro-optic processor which operates one thousand times faster than any known Digital Signal Processor.

- Israeli stem-cell technology is being used in the U.S. to regenerate heart tissue.

- An Israeli company has developed a device that could enable millions of American diabetics to painlessly inject themselves with insulin.

- An Israeli company is providing the technology behind an American all-electric bus for urban use.

- An Israeli medical delegation from the 'Save a Child's Heart' project recently spent two weeks in China performing open heart surgery on children.

- Israeli-developed security precautions have been adopted in Maryland and Washington.

- Scientists in Israel have used strands of DNA to create tiny transistors that can literally build themselves.

- A week-old Iraqi infant underwent an emergency operation in Israel to correct a congenital heart defect.

- A new generation of "Sesame Street" programs aimed at teaching tolerance is being produced and broadcast in Israel, Jordan, and in the Palestinian Authority.

- Some 500 million birds representing 300 species migrate across Israel's skies twice a year in the autumn and spring along the Great Valley Rift.

- Israeli research shows that a tonsillectomy could be the key solving sleep apnea in children.

- An Israeli company has developed a new device for monitoring coronary disease that will be integrated into future generation of cellphones.

- An Israeli-developed alogrithm enabled NASA to transmit images from Mars.

- An Israeli has invented a 'bone glue' that will reduce the need for bone transplants and heal bone defects caused by cancer.

- An Israeli team competed in the Women's International Flag Football Championships.

- Israeli researchers have developed a 'bone glue' that respectively stimulate speedy bone and cartilage repair, and enable faster and improved healing of injuries.

- Research by three scientists from the Haifa Technion made the transmission of video pictures Video transmissions from Mars by the NASA explorer "Spirit" have been made possible thanks to a unique algorithm developed by Technion graduates.

- A joint Israeli-Palestinian expedition recently scaled a peak in Antarctica in the name of coexistence.

- Over 50 million Israeli flowers were sent to Europe for sale on Valentine's Day.

- The families of the Columbia shuttle astronauts are going to be the Israeli government's guests on a week long visit in March.

- Israeli researchers have found a connection between sleep apnea and impotence.

- Israel, American and Canadian researchers are working together to develop nanotech-based solutions to the water shortage in the Middle East.

- The founder of the Cancer Prevention and Wellness Program at New York's prestigious Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center is Israeli.

- Between 150 to 200 multinational clinical trials are regularly taking place in Israel.

- An Israeli company is the world's leading sleep disorder sensors manufacturer.

- Israeli biologists have successfully managed, for the first time, to prepare the flowering of the "Madonna Lily" - a rare white Easter lily - in time for Easter.

- Over 65,000 patients worldwide have swallowed the M2A capsule, the incredible 'camera in a capsule' technology developed by Israel's Given Imaging.

- Israel hosts IBM's largest R&D facilities outside the United States.

- Israeli researchers have developed an engineless, nano-RPV (remote piloted vehicle).

- Israeli researchers are successfully using magnets to treat post-traumatic stress disorder.

- Israeli scientists have created a DNA nano-computer that not only detects cancer, but also releases drugs to treat the disease.

- Tel Aviv has been named a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

- The U.S. Marines in Iraq are using an Israel-developed hand-held computer for communication purposes.

- Israel engineers are behind the development of the largest communications router in the world, launched by Cisco.

- An Israeli company - Evogene - is developing cotton plants that are resistant to adverse salinity conditions and drought.

- An Israeli company has developed the world's first jellyfish repellent.

- Israel has helped farmers in Niger develop a horticultural production system called the African Market Garden (AMG).

- Jerusalem hosted an international gay rights parade WorldPride in 2005.

- A newly developed Israeli cooking oil is capable of breaking up blood fats such as cholesterol.

- Israeli scientists have alleviated Parkinson's-like symptoms in rats.

- Israeli scientists are developing a nose drop that will provide a five-year flu vaccine.

- Israeli researchers have solved the mystery of Lenin's death.

- An Israeli vaccine for West Nile virus is being tested in the U.S.

- Israeli scientists have discovered how to turn mismatched cells into cancer fighters.

- Over 20 Israeli companies provided security and services for the 2004 Olympic games in Athens.

- Israeli scientists have shown that hypnotism doubles the chances of success of in vitro fertilization.

- An Israeli two-flush system can save Americans billions of gallons of water a year.

- A group of 40 American sheriffs were in Israel to learn about Israeli counter-terrorism techniques.

- An Israeli-developed device can painlessly administer medications through microscopic pores in the skin.

- Israeli air force pilot technology is being used to train American college basketball players.

- Israeli researchers have shown that a daily dosage of Vitamin E is effective in helping to regain hearing loss.

- Israeli researchers have created a 'biological pacemaker' which corrects faulty heart rhythms when injected into the failing hearts of pigs.

- Two Israelis won the 2004 Nobel Prize for Chemistry for their groundbreaking work in cancer research.

- An Israeli physicist-turned-inventor has developed the world's first air-conditioned motorcycle.

- Israeli researchers have proven that Prozac can improve the effectiveness of chemotherapy.

- An Israeli-developed elderberry extract is one of America's best-selling flu prevention medicines.

- Millions of American youngsters are able to surf safely in Internet chat rooms thanks to Israeli technology.

- Children injured in the school siege in Beslan, Russia in 2004 were able to convalesce at an Israeli coastal resort in Ashkelon - at the invitation of that city's mayor.

- An Israeli company has developed a simple blood test that distinguishes between mild and more severe cases of MS.

- Israeli scientists have discovered the cause of chronic bad breath and a painless solution.

- Israeli technology is behind the successful testing of in-flight cell phone use.

- Israeli research has found that citrus oils may hold the key for asthma treatment.

- An Israeli study has shown that anger may trigger strokes.

- An Israeli company - Patus Ltd. - has donated thousands of its OdorScreen olfactory gel product to counter the crippling odors faced by on-scene Tsunami disaster workers.

- An Israeli company has developed a nano-lubricant that one day could mean the end of changing your car oil.

- A young Israeli scientist was among those chosen as an example of carrying on the work of Albert Einstein 100 years later.

- Intel has sold more than $5 billion worth of the Israeli-developed Centrino chipsets since they were introduced in March 2003.

Related Posts:
- So You Want to Boycott Israel?

Saturday, January 24, 2009

Jenin: Same Lies, Same Propaganda


In 2002, after more than 20 suicide attacks inside Israel which claimed the lives of over 100 civilians, Israel went after the terror infrastructure in Jenin and other Palestinian towns. Palestinians staged a "massacre" which the world believed.

The same lies permeated by terrorists are perpetuated by the media. Not much has changed since 2002. Much of the international community consistently ignores terrorism against Israelis but denounces Israel when military action is taken against terrorists. Consider that Sderot was under constant attack for more than eight years by Islamic terrorists. There was little condemnation from the international community.

Like every other sovereign nation, Israel has the right and duty to defend its citizens from attack. Hamas' acts of terror left Israel no choice but to take stronger measures to defend its citizens. Israel did what was necessary to limit civilian casualties during the Operation Cast Lead. This was especially difficult as Hamas terrorists use civilians as shields and launch rockets from civilian locations. However, Israel's actions specifically targeted Hamas command centers, security installations, rocket-launching sites, weapons stockpiles and weapons smuggling tunnels.

Related Posts:
- Mohammad Al-Dura "murder" a HOAX! Karsenty wins case!
- Pallywood: Bloggers Uncover Possible CNN Video Fraud
- Taking On Fraudulent White Phosphorus Allegations
- Indoctrination of innocent Arab kids in Gaza
- Inside a Hamas meeting
- Hamas violates ceasefire (again), UN doesn't care
- Hamas: Exploitation of Civilians as Human Shields
- Welcome to Pallywood
- Sderot Victim to U.N.: Are Human Rights for Some, But Not Others?

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