יום רביעי, 22 בדצמבר 2021

Daily EoZ Digest

Egypt's third most popular news site: "Herzl wrote the Protocols, and screamed when they were leaked"noreply@blogger.com (Unknown), 22 Dec 05:51 AM

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Egypt's third most popular news site: "Herzl wrote the Protocols, and screamed when they were leaked"
noreply@blogger.com (Unknown), 22 Dec 05:51 AM

El Balad is Egypt's third most popular news site, with about 3 million visits per month.
It has been publishing a series of articles by Najat Abdul Rahman that seem to be concentrating on attacking the Muslim Brotherhood. But it is based on conspiracy theories, and all conspiracy theories lead to Jews.
Last week she mentioned that Egyptian cinema was overrun with immorality, and it seemed to her to be a fulfillment of the ninth Protocol of the Elders of Zion of spreading vice.
This week she delves a little more into the Protocols, and gives a new history of the fraudulent antisemitic document.
According to her, the Protocols were authored by a group that included none other than Theodor Herzl. They were leaked from the top-secret Jewish cabal and made their way to the Pope. Their publication caused Russians to slaughter tens of thousands of Jews, which prompted Herzl to scream about how the documents were stolen from the Jewish "holy of holies" and therefore exposed Jews to pogroms and calamities.
Rahman goes on to describe several of the Protocols, pointing out how the Muslim Brotherhood was following them in Egypt in concert with their Israeli mentors.
There will be more about the Protocols next week.
This is a mainstream and popular Egyptian newspaper that is spreading pure hate for Jews, today. And there is never a word...Read More

12/21 Links Pt2: Andrew Pessin: What All Antisemites Can Agree On; Irish media is helping to spread antisemitism; Welby, Israel and the meaning of persecution
noreply@blogger.com (Ian), 21 Dec 06:00 PM

From Ian:

Andrew Pessin: What All Antisemites Can Agree On

In October, in San Antonio, a neo-Nazi group protested outside a church holding a fundraiser for Israel. "Horrified" to see them there was a member of Jewish Voice for Peace, a far-left group that was also protesting the church. These two ostensibly ideologically-opposed groups are perhaps not, as we'll see, such strange bedfellows.

Those who follow the campus scene know that not all is well for Jewish students, especially for those who do not hate Israel. Swastikas, nasty graffiti, and hateful flyers; vandalism, even arson, against Hillels and Chabads; dorm room mezuzot and public menorahs torn down; "anti-normalization" campaigns promoting their ostracization; in May literally hundreds of academic departments and programs issuing hateful one-sided condemnations of Israel, all accompanied by frequent threats of violence from their student peers, such as this recent one from a "Diversity Senator" who proudly announced, "I want to kill every motherf\*\*king Zionist." It's no surprise that a recent poll of "openly Jewish" students found that more than 65% felt unsafe on campus, 50% felt the need to hide their Jewish identity, and 10% feared physical attack. Almost 70% were aware of or had personally experienced a verbal or physical attack.

Perhaps most alarming is that the hatred is also coming from the professors.

Enter Scott Shay...Read More

Elder Comix: Raising kids to be As-A-Jews
noreply@blogger.com (Unknown), 21 Dec 04:00 PM

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Children's book erases Jews and Israel from the Middle East
noreply@blogger.com (Unknown), 21 Dec 02:00 PM

Here is a map of the Middle East from the children's book, Amazing Women of the Middle East:

You will notice that there is no Israel in this map. It is replaced with "Palestine."
Modern nations like Jordan and the UAE are mentioned, so it cannot be that the map refers to a time period before 1948.
Iran and Turkey are shown, so this isn't a map of only Arab countries.
It is a clearly deliberate attempt to erase Israel from the map.
The list of women that the book discusses seems to be missing a certain type of people as well:

• Scheherazade, Persia, narrator
• Nefertiti, Ancient Egypt, 1370 BCE, Queen of Egypt
• Queen of Sheba, 1050 BCE, modern-day Ethiopia
• Semiramis, ancient Iraq, 811 BCE, Queen of Babylon
• Cleopatra VII, Egypt, 69 BCE, last queen of Egypt
• Zenobia, Syria, 240 CE, Queen of Palmyra
• Theodora, 497 CE, Empress of Byzantium
• Rabiya al Adawiyya, Iraq, 714, poet
• Shajarat al Durr, Egypt, early 13th Century, Sultana of Egypt
• Hurrem Sultan, Ukraine, 1502, Sultana of Ottoman Empire
• May Ziadeh, Nazareth, Palestine, 1886, writer
• Nazik el Abid, Syria, 1887, activist
• Anbara Salam al Khalidi, Lebanon, 1897, activist and feminist
• Saloua Raouda Choucair, Lebanon, 1916, painter
• Fairuz, Lebanon, 1933, singer
• Zaha Hadid, Iraq, 1950, architect
• Anousheh Ansari, Iran/USA, 1966, astronaut
• Somayya Jabarti, Saudi Arabia, 1970, editor-in-chief
• Nadine Labaki, Lebanon, 1974, film...Read More

12/21 Links Pt1: Arab Party Leader Abbas: Israel 'Will Remain' Jewish State; IOC: Countries banning Israel can't hold competitions; Apartheid in Israel? Look at how Lebanon treats Palestinians
noreply@blogger.com (Ian), 21 Dec 12:00 PM

From Ian:

Emily Schrader: Two-state solution still is Israel's only option

It has suddenly become very popular on the Left and Right to declare the two-state solution dead. In fact, recent statistics bolster such claims, with popularity and support for the two-state solution decreasing over time.

Last week, former adviser to former prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Mark Regev, wrote about how the two-state solution is problematic when you have the Palestinians refusing to accept the legitimacy of a Jewish state. He's not wrong, but he's also not providing realistic solutions for what that means.

Here is the reality: there is no alternative to the two-state solution unless you either support an apartheid state, or don't care about having a Jewish majority state. The only option for the survival of a Jewish and democratic state of Israel is a two-state solution where compromises will have to be made for peace. Both Israelis and Palestinians are refusing to accept reality when it comes to a long-term solution, and in doing so, they have made it even more complicated and unpleasant to find a lasting agreement that respects the rights to self-determination of both peoples.

Palestinian rejectionism, I believe, is the core reason for the lack of peace and a long-term solution. It is absolutely true that Palestinians have refused every opportunity for peace, and that public opinion is very much against a compromise that...Read More

What The Media Is Missing In Their Reports On Campus Antisemitism (Daled Amos)
noreply@blogger.com (Unknown), 21 Dec 10:15 AM

By Daled Amos

Vicious antisemitic attacks against Jewish students on campus are certainly nothing new, but one particular incident led to a potential tool that could both help protect Jewish students and offer acknowledgment of their Zionist identity.

Let's take a look back.

In 2016, San Francisco State University was rated 10th on The Algemeiner's List of the US and Canada's Worst Campuses for Jewish Students, based on the ongoing disruption of activities and deliberate intimidation of the students. One of the incidents that earned SFSU their inclusion on The Algemeiner's list was their response to an appearance by the then-Mayor of Jerusalem, Nir Barkat when he came to speak. Anti-Israel students disrupted the speech.

But it was more than just a disruption.
And it resulted not only in being included on a list -- it led to a lawsuit.

According to a Lawfare Project press release, the disruption in 2016 demonstrated that the administration of San Francisco State University itself was part of the problem:

The lawsuit was triggered following the alleged complicity of senior university administrators and police officers in the disruption of an April, 2016, speech by the Mayor of Jerusalem, Nir Barkat. At that event organized by SF Hillel...Read More

The @ACLU human rights head rails about "Jewish supremacy." A brief history of that term.
noreply@blogger.com (Unknown), 21 Dec 08:00 AM

Jamil Dakwar is the director of the ACLU Human Rights Program. He is a lecturer at various New York colleges. He formerly worked for Human Rights Watch.

And this human rights leader uses language that mimics that of antisemites of the past 150 years.
He tweeted:

Ah, so it's "Jewish supremacy." I'm not sure how that explains the exception Israel made for the Miss Universe pageant, or the Flag Football championships, which both occurred after Israel shut down travel (and caused grumbling among Jews who couldn't visit Israel.)
It isn't the first time Dakwar has used that phrase. When Ilhan Omar issued a clarification for her comparison between the US/Israel and Hamas/Taliban, she said "I was in no way equating terrorist organizations with democratic countries with well-established judicial systems." Dakwar responded, "disappointed she had to clarify her statement and affirm that Israel is a democracy with well-established judicial system. Israel, at best, is a democracy for Jewish citizens with well established legal system protecting Jewish supremacy and institutional racism."
The earliest mentions of the phrase "Jewish supremacy" I could find werereferring to Germany in the 1880s.
The Chicago Tribune, December 12, 1880, discussed the German Anti...Read More

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