Elder of Ziyon Daily News |
- Tueslinks
- EoZ regarded as "controversial" by Israeli/American writer at AllAfrica
- The Siyum HaShas
- Morsi's surprising letter to Peres (UPDATE)
- Boycott Jennifer Lopez!
- Abbas continues to whine and doubletalk
- Are sanctions against Iran working? Um, no.
- Scandal! Lebanese using Israeli cosmetics products! (updated)
Posted: 31 Jul 2012 02:19 PM PDT From Ian: Honest Reporting Searching For Israel's Capital (Video) Israel Made Me Beat My Wife "It's truly amazing just how far The Guardian can go when it comes to blaming Israel. Angela Taylor takes a look at the status of women in Gaza and carries out some interviews." Hamas Forces Attack Judge & Family in Gaza "The Palestinian Centre for Human Rights (PCHR) strongly condemns the attack carried out by members of the 'Izziddin al-Qassam Brigades (the armed wing of Hamas) against a judge and his family in 'Abassan village, east of Khan Yunis. The attackers beat and insulted the judge, in addition to treating him cruelly and inhumanely at the Palestinian police station. PCHR calls upon the Attorney General in Gaza to open an investigation into the incident and bring the perpetrators to justice." Israel indicts man suspected of spying for Syria A Druze resident of the Golan Heights studying in Syria is arrested on espionage charges 16 Year Old Stopped From Suicide Attack in Israel "A 16 year old boy was arrested near the Kerem Shalom kibbutz recently in connection with a planned suicide attack against Israeli Jews." Turkey's Press Freedom Day: 95 Journalists Behind Bars "The courts sentenced eight suspects to nine years in jail and five suspects to pay fines in the amount of 29,880 TL [$16,580], three of them directly to the person of Prime Minister Tayyip Recep Ergogan." Libya Jew returns to UK post-Benghazi jailing "Businessman Raphael Luzon held, interrogated by 'preventive security' for four days, doesn't advise any Jew to go to Libya." Hava Nagila inspires USA's Aly Raisman to victory at the empy seat Olympics. Also: When the Right Is Right About the Left Ehud Barak sings praises of Obama administration Romney's Warsaw speech "Israel is "like an octopus... flames shooting out between its fangs" The Israeli Wild, Wild West (h/t Yerushalimey, Stan) | ||||
EoZ regarded as "controversial" by Israeli/American writer at AllAfrica Posted: 31 Jul 2012 12:35 PM PDT From Joel Schalit at AllAfrica.com: On May 23, Hatikva had the dubious distinction of hosting the worst race riots since Israel's founding. Egged on by politicians from Israel's governing Likud Party, local Jewish residents brutally assaulted migrants and looted their stores.I never heard of Schalit, but I am disappointed that he didn't have enough confidence in his thesis that the refused to link to, or post, the poster that got him so hot and bothered: He is also factually wrong in saying that StandWithUs made the poster and I distributed it - it was actually the other way around. I was intrigued that he referred to me as "controversial." As I wrote in a comment to his article, I was not aware that my blog was "controversial." Is there a controversy I am unaware of (or have forgotten about) or do you just consider opinions you disagree with to be "controversial"? I hope you will admit that using a term like that is prejudicial; you could have said "well-regarded" or "popular" and been at least as accurate, I suppose. His main point in the article - which seems to be that Israelis are inherently racist - is just as sloppy as his fact checking. Not to mention that someone on Reddit using my poster as an argument against Israeli racism is hardly the work of the organized Zionist community as he implies. But he is apparently above such concerns. After all, he is a former editor of the nutty-left journal Tikkun and current editor of equally far-left European-American webzine Souciant. Which I suppose is "mainstream" in his opinion. | ||||
Posted: 31 Jul 2012 11:10 AM PDT Tomorrow evening, some 93,000 Jews will gather in MetLife Stadium, along with hundreds of thousands of other Jews worldwide (including in Tel Aviv's Nokia Stadium and Jerusalem's Teddy Stadium), to celebrate the 12th Siyum HaShas of Daf Yomi. Daf Yomi is a study program initiated in the 1920s by Rabbi Meir Shapiro of Poland. His idea was that Jews worldwide would study a folio (2 pages) of Talmud every day, in sync. The entire Talmud - 2,711 folios - would be completed in roughly seven and a half years. (The English Artscroll translation spans 73 volumes, and each folio of Talmud is between 6-10 English pages.) The Siyum HaShas is the celebration of the completion of the entire Babylonian Talmud. Think about it: Every day, tens of thousands of Jews take time out to study the day's "Daf." Many go to lectures in synagogues or in ad-hoc workplace conference rooms, and some have been doing it on the Long Island Railroad for over twenty years. Lectures usually take an hour or so. Others started off the current cycle in 2005 listening to lectures on cassette tapes or CDs; now many listen on MP3 players, or online. Still others learn it in pairs, or by themselves.
The Talmud, the richest source of the Jewish legal tradition, discusses every conceivable topic, from fanciful stories of ancient rabbis to heavily detailed discussions of the dimensions of every portion of the Temple and all its parts, from the laws of blessings to the laws of sex, from geometry to astronomy. It records intricate arguments using a unique logical framework, painstakingly parsing every letter in some Torah verses to extract hidden meanings. Pairs of rabbis became famous for their arguments with each other - Hillel and Shammai, Rav and Shmuel, Abaye and Rava. The arguments are perhaps the most fascinating, and integral, part of the Talmud. The two sides must not only back up their arguments, but they must show how their arguments are consistent with the teachings of earlier, more authoritative rabbis, how they are not redundant, and how they are consistent with their own teachings in other areas of law. Each side would bring challenges to the others' arguments and they must defend themselves, each building an edifice of logic that ensures consistency even as they come to different conclusions. (Or, as often happens, one of them fails and cannot answer the final challenge. ) Sometimes the arguments are three- or four-way, and sometimes there are disagreements as to what the earlier arguments were, where the later interpreters must defend their own ideas of the basis of the earlier discussions. (And this is only in the Talmud itself - I'm not even talking about the arguments among the commentaries, written hundreds of years later!)
Jews learn to argue from the Talmud. And, in a sense, much of the entire Western legal system was heavily influenced by the Talmud as well, through the early innovators such as John Seiden, who was amazingly prolific in portions of Talmudic law. (The entire Mishnah - which outlines the Talmud - was translated into Latin in the late 17th century, along with commentaries by Maimonides and the Bartenura; here it is.) To study the entire Talmud is a remarkable achievement, and it is almost beyond belief that so many people have managed to do it. The current Daf Yomi cycle started before Twitter existed, before Facebook was anything beyond a college phenomenon, before the iPhone. Over seven years of dogged study have occurred in every Jewish community worldwide. Daf Yomi is a modern manifestation of Jewish unity - and a remarkable proof of Jewish continuity. The Siyum is a real celebration for every Jew, whether you have ever studied Talmud or not. But even if you haven't - the new cycle starts on Thursday. Feel free to join! | ||||
Morsi's surprising letter to Peres (UPDATE) Posted: 31 Jul 2012 10:00 AM PDT From the Ha'aretz' Barak Ravid via Twitter, and verified by the MFA: The MFA writes: President Peres has previously sent two letters to the Egyptian president. The first was sent upon his election as president and the second was sent on the occasion of the month of Ramadan. In his first letter, President Peres congratulated President Morsy for winning the elections, emphasized the importance of peace between Israel and Egypt and expressed his hope for the continued cooperation between the two nations. In the letter, dispatched on 28 June, President Peres wrote: "As a person who participated in the process that led to the establishment of the peace agreement between your country and mine, I know that both Egypt and Israel attach supreme importance to the peace and stability that serve the interests of all peoples in the region. All of us in Israel respect both Egypt and the Egyptian people, which served as the pioneer that outlined the path to peace and reconciliation in the region. We know that the work is not yet finished. The people of Israel congratulate you on the democratic elections and hope that under your leadership Egypt will meet the complex challenges facing your nation. We look forward to continued cooperation with you, based on the peace agreements that were signed more than 30 years ago. It is our duty to preserve and nurture these agreements for the benefit of both our peoples. Peace has saved the lives of countless young people in Egypt and in Israel. Our commitment to the younger generation will always be valid. Unlike war, peace means victory for both sides." UPDATE: Egypt denies sending this "telegram" and said that Morsi has not initiated any contact with Israel so far. Maybe because it is a fax, not a telegram. (h/t CHA) | ||||
Posted: 31 Jul 2012 08:30 AM PDT CAMERA notes: As a bonus, this state was also involved in one of the worst genocides of the twentieth century. The answer to question 1): Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Turkey's Prime Minister. Erdogan's unapologetic resort to military force in dealing with Kurdish militants contrasts with his condemnation of Israel's response to the Gaza flotilla in 2010 which resulted in the deaths of 9 Turkish militants who attacked an Israeli boarding party initially armed with paint guns. Erdogan continues to demand an Israeli apology even though a UN investigation found Israel's interception of the flotilla to be legal. Now, as far as the lovely Ms. Lopez is concerned: Renowned Latin singer Jennifer Lopez will give a concert in Istanbul and meet her Turkish fans for the first time on November 16 as part of her tour "Dance Again".Anyone calling for J. Lo to boycott this genocidal state that denies the rights of an indigenous nation from self-determination? Any "human rights" organizations who are aghast that Lopez could even consider playing in such a country? Any Facebook groups popping up demanding that unless J. Lo. cancels the concert, she will be ostracized and hounded on Twitter as an accomplice to murder? Didn't think so. | ||||
Abbas continues to whine and doubletalk Posted: 31 Jul 2012 07:00 AM PDT Want to hear Mahmoud Abbas' latest howler? Speaking to Turkey's Anadolu news agency, according to Palestine Press Agency, he criticized the US and whined that "the United States does not pay attention to the peace process at this time because of concern about the country's presidential election in November." And what exactly has Abbas done to further the peace process? Translating the whining into English, what he is really saying is that the US is not pressuring Israel to give in to all of Abbas' demands and preconditions before "negotiations" can even start. (His implication is that should Obama win, then things can get back to how they were before the campaign began, when Abbas was quite pleased with the US role in pressuring Israel.) Which has been his entire strategy for years - wait and try to get the world to pressure Israel, rather than actually do anything that might involve making concessions or compromises. Will this revealing bit of doubletalk that shows Abbas' hypocrisy make it into the mainstream media? Ha! | ||||
Are sanctions against Iran working? Um, no. Posted: 31 Jul 2012 05:15 AM PDT During Mitt Romney's visit to Israel's capital: Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu Sunday told Romney in a Jerusalem meeting that diplomacy and sanctions leveled against Iran have not worked so far.In response: Defense Secretary Leon E. Panetta sent a tacit message to Israeli leaders on Monday, urging that diplomacy and economic pressure be given more time to work before they move ahead with any military strike on Iran.It is beyond belief that this administration, after watching Iran's use of "diplomacy" over the years to buy more and more time, still believes that Iranians are interested in a diplomatic solution. The fact is that the only US action that helped to delay Iran's nuclear program was not diplomacy or sanctions, but cyberwar, presumably via Stuxnet and perhaps other covert computer espionage. While delays are welcome, they are not a strategy to stop the program and they will not reduce the Iranian desire for nuclear weapons one bit. And the last word has to go to the Wall Street Journal, which in early July revealed that even the latest round of economic sanctions are riddled with holes to allow Iran to withstand them: Though economic sanctions still haven't slowed or stopped Iran's nuclear drive, the Obama Administration has decided to make them even weaker. The Iran sanctions regime is looking like the U.S. tax code—filled with loopholes. | ||||
Scandal! Lebanese using Israeli cosmetics products! (updated) Posted: 31 Jul 2012 02:00 AM PDT Al Akhbar proudly published the results of an investigation that must have taken months, as they uncover the scandal of the century! An investigation by the Campaign to Boycott Israel Supporters in Lebanon has exposed that Israeli-made products are being widely used in the beauty and cosmetics sector in Lebanon.It goes on like this for another 30 paragraphs or so, in exacting detail of every Israeli company and their aliases. How outrageous to think that Lebanese women are beautifying themselves with Israeli products! Better they be ugly! I'm really waiting for when these hypocritical groups - which are little more than small Facebook groups - will finally decide to boycott Microsoft, Intel, Apple and Google, and put themselves out of business. Notice also that Al Akhbar, a liberal Arab newspaper, refers to Israel as "occupied Palestine." The paper also has a very funny story that claims that Israel is siphoning off water from the Nile in South Sudan - without a single piece of evidence. (Israel signed a water infrastructure agreement with South Sudan last week. ) (h/t tall midget) UPDATE: Commenter Zvi notes: Key point: these are not simply cosmetics products. While the author of the article focused on cosmetic laser technology from Israel - no doubt because attacking high-value, life-saving Israeli technologies would risk alienating even their readers - Israeli medical products and technology includes many unique, world-class products at practical prices. Israel is one of a very small number of world leaders in the med-tech arena. |
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