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So what have Gazans got to complain about?

When you read the statements from Israeli and U.S. politicians, and try to match them with the pictures of devastation, there seems to be only one explanation. They must have one of those conditions, called something like “Visual-Carnage-Responsibility-Back-To-Front-Upside-Down-Massacre-Disorder”.

(Watch video: Israel launches deadly air strikes on Gaza)

(Watch video: UN calls for Israel to open Gaza border to aid)

(Watch video: Staying alive in Gaza)

For example, Condoleezza Rice, having observed that more than 300 Gazans were dead, said: “We are deeply concerned about the escalating violence. We strongly condemn the attacks on Israel and hold Hamas responsible.”

Someone should ask her to comment on teenage knife-crime, to see if she’d say: “I strongly condemn the people who’ve been stabbed, and until they abandon their practice of wandering around clutching their sides and bleeding, there is no hope for peace.”

The Israeli government suffers terribly from this confusion. They probably have adverts on Israeli television in which a man falls off a ladder and screams, “Eeeeugh”, then a voice says, “Have you caused an accident at work in the last 12 months?” and the bloke who pushed him gets £3,000.

The gap between the might of Israel’s F-16 bombers and Apache helicopters, and the Palestinians’ catapulty thing is so ridiculous that to try and portray the situation as between two equal sides requires the imagination of a children’s story writer.

The reporter on News at Ten said the rockets “may be ineffective, but they are symbolic.” So they might not have weapons but they have got symbolism, the canny brutes.

It’s no wonder the Israeli Air Force had to demolish a few housing estates, otherwise Hamas might have tried to mock Israel through a performance of expressive dance.

The rockets may be unable to kill on the scale of the Israeli Air Force, said one spokesman, but they are “intended to kill”.

Maybe he went on: “And we have evidence that Hamas supporters have dreams, and that in these dreams bad things happen to Israeli citizens, they burst, or turn into cactus, or run through Woolworths naked, so it’s not important whether it can happen, what matters is that they want it to happen, so we blew up their university.”

Or there’s the outrage that Hamas has been supported by Iran. Well that’s just breaking the rules. Because say what you will about the Israelis, they get no arms supplies or funding or political support from a country that’s more powerful than them, they just go their own way and make all their weapons in an arts and crafts workshop in Jerusalem.

But mostly the Israelis justify themselves with a disappointing lack of imagination, such as the line that they had to destroy an ambulance because Hamas cynically put their weapons inside ambulances.

They should be more creative, and say Hamas were planning to aim the flashing blue light at Israeli epileptics in an attempt to make them go into a fit, get dizzy and wander off into Syria where they would be captured. But they prefer a direct approach, such as the statement from Ofer Schmerling, an Israeli Civil Defense official who said, “I shall play music and celebrate what the Israeli Air Force is doing.”

Maybe they could turn it into a huge national festival, with decorations and mince pies and shops playing “I Wish We Could Bomb Gaza Every Day”.

In a similar tone Dov Weisglas, Ariel Sharon’s chief of staff, referred to the siege of Gaza that preceded this bombing, a siege in which the Israelis prevented the population from receiving essential supplies of food, medicine, electricity and water, by saying, “We put them on a diet.”

It’s the arrogance of the East End gangster, so it wouldn’t be out of character if the Israeli prime minister’s press conference began: “Oh dear or dear. It looks like those Palestinians have had a little, er, accident. All their buildings have been knocked down — they want to be more careful, hee hee.”

And almost certainly one of the reasons this is happening now is because the government wants to appear hard as it wants to win an election. Maybe with typical Israeli frankness they’ll show a party political broadcast in which Ehud Olmert says, “This is why I think you should vote for me”, then shows film of Gaza and yells: “Wa-hey, that bloke in the corner is on FIRE.”

And Condoleezza Rice and her colleagues, and the specially appointed Middle East peace envoy, could then all shake their heads and say: “Disgraceful. The way he’s flapping around like that could cause someone to have a nasty accident.”

World urges Israel to end Gaza attacks

Protesters around the globe have continued their rallies against the Israeli bombardment of Gaza which has so far killed 783 Palestinians.

Algeria

Thousands of Algerians, wearing Palestinian headscarves and chanting “USA Terrorists” marched downtown streets of Algiers on Thursday in a show of support for Gazans and an attempt to denounce Israeli onslaught on the Gaza Strip. Police made several arrests.

Egypt

After the Friday prayers, more than 50,000 Egyptians rallied across the country to condemn atrocities committed by Israel against civilians in besieged Gaza.

In the Mediterranean port city of Alexandria, participants expressed their anger at the Zionist entity and at Arab regimes believed to have assisted the crippling Israeli blockade on the enclave that has barred the residents from getting out and humanitarian aid from getting in. The demonstration had been organized and led by lawmakers linked to the opposition Muslim Brotherhood.

The marchers echoed slogans such as “Down with Israel and with every collaborator” as well as “Gaza, excuse us — opening Rafah is not in our hands.” The latter made a reference to the Gaza-Egyptian border crossing that Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak’s government is refusing to open.

In the Egyptian capital, Cairo, riot police sought to foil protests outside a number of mosques. At least 35 opposition activists were held as ministry of religious affairs had earlier warned imams against addressing the Gaza crisis.

Greece

Also, over 2,000 people took to the streets in Athens and Thessaloniki, setting fire to US and EU flags outside the US embassy and the Israeli flag outside the Israeli mission.

Indonesia

About 200 women, holding posters of dead and wounded Palestinian children, demonstrated outside the Egyptian embassy in Jakarta, and call on Egyptian government to open Rafah border with Gaza.

Italy

A group of Roman merchants urged a boycott of Jewish companies as a sign of protest at continuing carnage in Gaza.

Jordan

[IMG] More than 2,000 demonstrators — wearing checkered Palestinian keffiyehs and carrying Palestinian and Jordanian flags – chanted “No Israeli embassy on Arab territory” and “Arab rulers are cowards in the capital Amman.”

The protestors had set off from Friday prayers at the Kaloti mosque towards Israeli embassy, nearly a kilometer (half a mile) away. Police however stopped the crowd. The marchers instead set up a symbolic cemetery with the word ‘Gazan’ written on each mock coffin.

Kashmir, India

Hundreds of Muslims staged a demonstration in the city of Srinagar in protest to Israel’s continued military offensive in the Gaza Strip. Protesters set fire to Israeli flags and chanted “Death to Israel” and “Long live Palestine”.

Kuwait

[IMG] Protesters in Kuwait burn an Israeli flag and hit it with shoes while shouting anti-Israel and anti-Hosni Mubarak (President of Egypt) slogans during a protest against Israel’s offensive in Gaza, in Kuwait City January 9, 2009. About 3,000 gathered outside Kuwaiti parliament and shouted ‘shame, shame against Arab inaction vis-Ã -vis Gaza.’

Malaysia

Islamic groups urged a boycott of US brands such as Coca-Cola and Malaysians working for Starbucks or McDonald’s were demanded to give up their jobs.

Norway

Around 1,000 pro-Palestinian protesters engaged in fight with a pro-Israeli demonstration in Oslo on Thursday. Six people sustained injuries and 31 were arrested in the incident.

Occupied Palestinian Territories

[IMG] A Palestinian youth uses a sling-shot to hurl a stone from behind a burning tire barricade during clashes with Israeli troops at a protest against Israel’s military operations in the Gaza Strip. In Khan Yunis , some 3,000 held a demo to show solidarity with Gazans. The demonstrators threw stones at Israeli soldiers who in return fired rubber bullets. Meanwhile, several thousand shouted “Death to Israel” in Nablus. In al-Quds, young Palestinians clashed with police.

Somalia

[IMG] Muslim protestors shout slogans during a demonstration in Somalia’s capital Mogadishu, January 9, 2009, against Israeli air strikes in the Gaza Strip. Hundreds of Somali demonstrators protested after Friday prayers in Mogadishu, and a number of other towns in Somalia, against the Israeli raids on Gaza Strip. People chanted slogans against Gaza bombing and called for an immediate halt to the bombing which has so far claimed many innocent children, women and the elderly.

How many must die before peace prevails?

by Harris Zafar, Guest opinion

Monday January 05, 2009, 5:00 AM

Harris Zafar

When Palestinians and Israelis both pray to God for help in destroying the other, who does God choose to help? Which of the two are the “good guys”?

Well, based on the actions of both parties, I fail to see why God would help either of them. Both parties claim loyal adherence to God and his teachings, but sadly, both parties violate the law of their respective faith. Let’s look at the facts.

As a practicing Muslim, I’m critical of Muslims who don’t act according to the teachings of Islam. So let’s begin with Hamas. Sure, some may argue the case of Gaza residents having their food, water and medical equipment supply cut off by Israel. Others may cite the Nov. 5 Israeli attack under the Gaza fence. But how does it help to fire rockets in return? Each rocket has the possibility of taking an innocent life, which is strictly forbidden in Islam.

Do those who fire them not understand the Holy Quran when it repeatedly says “create not disorder in the earth” or even when it says that killing even one person is like killing all of mankind? Reverence for life is a part of Islam, but the very nature of rockets is to put lives at risk.

And what about the Israeli Defense Forces? How can its leaders justify their response when their actions are breaking the very law they claim to follow? The Mosaic law of “an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth” teaches the principle of equitable retaliation. The purpose of this law was to limit the scope of a punishment and to discourage cruelty. Yet Israel has unleashed an all-out attack of warlike proportions, killing more than 400 Palestinians and wounding more than 2,000 more in merely seven days. Can we consider the death of 400 Palestinians in response to the death of four Israelis to be equitable retaliation?

Both Israelis and Palestinians are religious people, but when it comes to matters concerning one another, their respective leaders toss their religious beliefs to the side and act with raw emotion, with disregard for the value of life.

Israel and Palestine both consist of men, women and children who desire peace and security instead of violence and fear. Their respective faiths, as well as the principle of rationality, dictate that each must refrain from using violence to solve their problems. True peace can only be achieved by working together as children of God.

If both parties instilled humanity, mercy and forgiveness into themselves, perhaps God would find more value in their prayers. But how many must die before the God-given qualities of humanity and peace prevail?

Harris Zafar, a business analyst in the information technology industry, is the youth director of faith outreach within his mosque in Southwest Portland.

See more in Hot Topic, oped
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COMMENTS (46)Post a comment
Posted by dmbones on 01/05/09 at 8:02AM

Greetings Harris,

Thank you for your comments. I couldn’t agree with you more. Moses and Muhammad are Messengers from the same God, although separated in history by thousands of years. Their essential message to humanity, as Messengers from all of the world’s major religions agree, is one of ethical reciprocity.

The central teaching of all of the religions is the same:

Bahá’í Faith:
“Ascribe not to any soul that which thou wouldst not have ascribed to thee, and say not that which thou doest not.” “Blessed is he who preferreth his brother before himself.” Baha’u’llah

Brahmanism: “This is the sum of Dharma [duty]: Do naught unto others which would cause you pain if done to you”. Mahabharata, 5:151

Buddhism:
Hurt not others in ways that you yourself would find hurtful.” Udana-Varga 5:18

Christianity:
“And as ye would that men should do to you, do ye also to them likewise.” Luke 6:31, King James Version.

Confucianism:
“Do not do to others what you do not want them to do to you” Analects 15:23

Ancient Egyptian:
“Do for one who may do for you, that you may cause him thus to do.” The Tale of the Eloquent Peasant, 109 – 110 Translated by R.B. Parkinson. The original dates to 1970 to 1640 BCE and may be the earliest version ever written.

Hinduism:
This is the sum of duty: do not do to others what would cause pain if done to you. Mahabharata 5:151

Humanism:
“Don’t do things you wouldn’t want to have done to you, British Humanist Society.

Islam: “None of you [truly] believes until he wishes for his brother what he wishes for himself.” Number 13 of Imam “Al-Nawawi’s Forty Hadiths.”

Jainism:
“In happiness and suffering, in joy and grief, we should regard all creatures as we regard our own self.” Lord Mahavira, 24th Tirthankara

Judaism:
“…thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself.”, Leviticus 19:18
“What is hateful to you, do not to your fellow man. This is the law: all the rest is commentary.” Talmud, Shabbat 31a.

Native American Spirituality:
“Respect for all life is the foundation.” The Great Law of Peace.
“All things are our relatives; what we do to everything, we do to ourselves. All is really One.” Black Elk

Roman Pagan Religion: “The law imprinted on the hearts of all men is to love the members of society as themselves.”

Shinto:
“The heart of the person before you is a mirror. See there your own form”
“Be charitable to all beings, love is the representative of God.” Ko-ji-ki Hachiman Kasuga

Sikhism:
“Don’t create enmity with anyone as God is within everyone.” Guru Arjan Devji 259
“No one is my enemy, none a stranger and everyone is my friend.” Guru Arjan Dev : AG 1299

Sufism: “The basis of Sufism is consideration of the hearts and feelings of others. If you haven’t the will to gladden someone’s heart, then at least beware lest you hurt someone’s heart, for on our path, no sin exists but this.” Dr. Javad Nurbakhsh, Master of the Nimatullahi Sufi Order.

Taoism:
“Regard your neighbor’s gain as your own gain, and your neighbor’s loss as your own loss.” T’ai Shang Kan Ying P’ien.

Unitarian:
“The inherent worth and dignity of every person;”
“Justice, equity and compassion in human relations…. ”
“The goal of world community with peace, liberty, and justice for all;”
“We affirm and promote respect for the interdependent web of all existence of which we are a part.” Unitarian principles.

Wicca: “An it harm no one, do what thou wilt” (i.e. do what ever you will, as long as it harms nobody, including yourself). One’s will is to be carefully thought out in advance of action. This is called the Wiccan Rede.

Yoruba: (Nigeria): “One going to take a pointed stick to pinch a baby bird should first try it on himself to feel how it hurts.”

Zoroastrianism:
“Whatever is disagreeable to yourself do not do unto others.” Shayast-na-Shayast 13:29
Humanity has been consistently informed throughout history on the path to peace and security, but we have failed thus far to live up to what we know is right. How long indeed…!

Passages taken from: http://www.religioustolerance.org/reciproc.htm

Posted by portlandpoet on 01/05/09 at 9:07AM

Here’s a thought; how about if we just leave everyone’s God out of the scenerio? Why can’t everyone realize that the impetus behind these centuries of killing each other is “God”; whether it’s your God or the other guy’s.

In the Holy Bible for example; there were only 4 human beings on earth before the first murder occured. Cain killed his brother and 1/4th of the world’s population was wiped out. Later; God wiped out the entire population of the earth save Noah’s family and 2 of each animal species.

According to the same book; the end is no more promising than the beginning. The battle of Armageddon will take place here on earth and “the blood will be as high as the horse’s mouth”.

To many people in the Middle East are willing to strap explosives to their bodies and blow themselves and anyone in the vicinity up in the name of their God. Not only do they not consider this a bad thing; it is thee thing that will ensure that they get to the promise land.

How much blood has to seep into the sands of The Middle East land before their own Martin Luther King steps forward, condems the violence and convinces the warring factions that their sons and daughters will continue dying until someone steps up and says “enough”!

The Gaza Strip and the political and military battles that are fought in an attempt to claim it are both built on sand and will crumble and blow away with the winds. How can you look into your children’s eyes and not realize that no God would want them brutally killed; especially in his name.

All I am saying is give peace a chance.

Posted by dtroutma on 01/05/09 at 9:53AM

I just find it interesting that the bloodiest and most heartless “religions”(with their hundreds of warring sub-sects) on earth today all use the same baseline book of laws, the Old Testament. The only two real laws seem to be: “Do as I say, not as I do.”, and “Do unto others, before they can do it to you.”

It’s also interesting that the battles rage over one of the least valuable parcels of land on Earth, it doesn’t even have oil under it!

Posted by xlntzee56 on 01/05/09 at 10:05AM

Mr. Zafar,
Very thoughtful article. Well said!

Posted by goldfoot on 01/05/09 at 10:07AM

Shalom, Harris Zafar,
I was very impressed with your letter and am thankful to be able to have a dialogue with you. I appreciate your thoughtful outlook on today’s situation in Gaza.
May I point out some facts that were omitted. Israel has not closed the gate in Gaza for no reason. It’s only in response to the constant shelling that Hamas has done since 2001. Hamas shells; we close the gate. For 8 years Israel has been shelled. What would Arab countries do if this happened to them? What did Iran (not an Arab country) and Iraq do to each other? We didn’t go in and slaughter people in response. We tried every civilized method to get Hamas to stop, and it didn’t work. Finally, even with a peace party with Olmert, after 8 years, we have had enough. Weren’t you amazed that Hamas shot and destroyed electric sources from Israel whereby Israel was still giving Gaza electricity? They destroyed their own source of power and then cried foul. It’s like the child who kills his parents and then cries that he’s an orphan.
As to the difference in casualties, it is shocking that their casualties benefit them. They can cry to the international world how terrible we are. We have an army that is pinpointing targets of the source of rockets, missiles, and mortars. They shoot these into our southern population indiscriminately, hitting civilians. We’re not trying to kill civilians. They are. We protect our people with bomb shelters. They put their arms amid their women and children.
They are also terrorizing our people. After 8 years they have better and better missiles that are reaching far more of Israel. We are forced into this. When the “Palestinians” change their charter to accept Israel as being there and not try to wipe us out, and to live within the concept of the Muslim religion as you speak of it, we will have reached peace. It’s too bad that you’re not one of the leaders. You sound like a very wise person. Remember, Jews don’t want to take a life either. Our toast is “L’Chaim! To life. That’s all life.

Posted by johnsonc20 on 01/05/09 at 10:53AM

Goldfoot,

Why respond so negatively to this heartfelt plea to both sides to follow the peaceful tenets contained within their own religions? Is it necessary for you to justify Israel’s actions?

I think that Mr. Zafar has made some interesting points and it would behoove you to reflect on what the “L’Chaim” toast means if it is given at the same time massive death from the sky is being dealt by those doing the toasting.

It is time for ALL of us to walk the talk. That includes Israel, who is in the stronger military position and therefore has the most need to show mercy.

May God bless us ALL.

Posted by dontsmoke on 01/05/09 at 11:29AM

I agree with johnsonc20. Mr. Zafar is not taking sides in this battle; he is simply pointing out that the violence must stop.

Even though you may be justified in your response Goldfoot; it’s time to stop the tit for tat about who is attacking whom and who owns what strip of land. Dialogue is the only way to stop the killing not continuing to prove that you and your people are right and someone else (your enemy), is wrong. Mr. Zafar’s article is a good start toward such dialogue.

I too would defend my home and protect my family with every means available to me but if I could sit down with those who wish me harm and come to an agreement so that we could live in peace forever; let’s talk.

The natural response to violence is to justify your own actions by saying you were attacked first. Unfortunately; in the Middle East that argument could go back to the days of Moses and will never be decided. Don’t argue about who’s ox was gored first, just stop goring the other guys ox and get along for the sake of your children.

Peace to all in the Middle East and around the world.

Posted by dell4100 on 01/05/09 at 11:41AM

Islam is a violent religion and you can dress it up any way you like, but it still comes down to the same thing. If it looks like a duck, it is most certainly a duck! Actions speak louder than words and Hamas has proven to the world that they are nothing but a bunch of rabid dogs!

Posted by dontsmoke on 01/05/09 at 12:03PM

dell4100 do you think you would be more inclined to sit down with your Mid Eastern brother if he started the conversation by calling you a rabid dog or if he approached you in an intelligent peaceful manner as Harris Zafar does in his article?

The State of Israel was born the same year as I, 1949. I have lived a peaceful and fruitful life here in the United States for those 60 years and my children have grown up knowing nothing but peace and love.

I spent a year in combat in the Viet Nam war and came to realize that war is not the solution to man’s problems; peace is.

Why don’t you stop calling names and join in the peace process so children in your part of the world can enjoy the next 60 years in peace as well.

We’re all brothers and that includes you dell4100.

Simply choose to stop the violence.

Posted by ozrms on 01/05/09 at 12:06PM

Palestine is an OCCUPIED territory. Blaming those who choose to fight the occupation with homemade rockets (that are wholly symbolic and highly ineffective) as responsible for the killing and maiming of thousands of civilians is like blaming Anne Frank for the murder of her family.

Moralizing notwithstanding, Palestine has endured 60 years of occupation, under a colonialist Israel-U.S. regime. Most of Palestine remains unarmed, impoverished, and weak. Attacking this population with white phosphorous, cluster bombs, navy shells and 33,000 troops is absolutely ridiculous.

Mark my words, this incursion will be as effective as the U.S. occupation of Iraq. It will galvanize more and more people to fight against occupying forces and continue a war that has already gone on for much too long.

Posted by patpilot on 01/05/09 at 12:22PM

The problem, as I see it, is that organized religions are organized by people. Despite all the good intents of their deity, messages of faith, love, and worship are suborned by those leaders who bend their religions to suit personal and political needs. When religions are organized inside of geo-political boundaries, that is, when the state becomes the religion becomes the state, religions gain the killing efficiency of modern weaponry and tactics. You can say “Not my religion” but you conveniently forget things like inquisitions, crusades, witch trials, and the destruction of much of the extant civilization of the New World. Mark Twain said the bible has an omission; “Ye shall be indifferent as to what your neighbor’s religion is.” Until religions are ready to accept that concept, humanity will continue to suffer in the names of gods.

Posted by kzvezda on 01/05/09 at 1:38PM

Posted by ozrms on 01/05/09 at 12:06PM
Blaming those who choose to fight the occupation with homemade rockets (that are wholly symbolic and highly ineffective)
——-
Those “symbolic” rockets you speak of have killed people and disrupted the lives of many more. It’s easy for you to say “symbolic” from halfway around the world. If someone targeted you with those “symbolic” rockets, you’d be singing another tune.

Posted by kzvezda on 01/05/09 at 1:41PM

If both parties instilled humanity, mercy and forgiveness into themselves, perhaps God would find more value in their prayers. But how many must die before the God-given qualities of humanity and peace prevail?
—————
Unfortunately, when dealing with fanatics like Hamas (whose charter calls for the destruction of Israel), the answer is that many must die.

Israel’s spokesman said today that if Israel was guaranteed that the rocket fire would stop permanently, they’d pull out of Gaza immediately. But the likelihood of that approaches zero.

Posted by dmbones on 01/05/09 at 1:59PM

Hi Pat,

Instead of Twain’s call for tolerance, I prefer to think that all of the world’s religions are essentially the same. They come from the same source and they tell us essentially the same thing at their core, differing only in the transient realities of the time their founders appeared on earth. For example, eating pork is forbidden in the Jewish Talmud, not because pork is unclean, but because people didn’t know then how to avoid trichinosis. Religious truth is relative to the time in which it appeared. If we could just see this for what it is, then much of the so-called culture wars and clash of civilizations would be moot.

I wholeheartedly agree with you that the good intentions of the Prophets is waylaid by the clergy for their own small vested institutional interests. It’s a matter of historical record. The clergy are by far the ones most responsible for the regress of civilization, including the wars we are involved in today.
But, as for democracy and religion, Twain is right: our neighbors religion or lack of it is subsumed in being an American.

Posted by dmbones on 01/05/09 at 2:10PM

Harris,

In earlier online blogs I’ve had exchanges with self-proclaimed Muslim scholars. One that troubled me was with a man honest enough to admit that telling the truth to a non-Muslim was not necessary as apostates are undeserving. Could you comment on this, please?

I would really like to have more Muslim voices online here. I applaud your courage in standing up for Muhammad’s teaching, Peace be upon Him. If more of your co-religionists were as brave, we could make real progress in seeing one another as sharing common interests.

Thanks again for your calming voice. It’s a rare and timely input.

Posted by lennyp on 01/05/09 at 3:37PM

Shalom

The god the Palestinians pray to and the god the Jews pray to are one and the same, the god of Abraham. If either one or both are god’s chosen, I, for one, would rather not be god’s choice.

As an American Jew, thank you. When the Muslims ruled the “world” it was a time of great enlightenment, learning and tolerance for those that lived under their rule including Jews. I believe, left to their own devices the Palestinians and Jews have the ability to create a wonderful society for themselves and their children. Both the Palestinians and Jew have much more in common then divides them. There are far more reasons for them to be friends than enemies.

Both allow their fundamentalist leaders to use them for their leaders own aims. These leaders display an utter disregard for well-being of their peoples under the guise of what they want their god to be. Funny how their leader’s god always agrees with them rather than they agree with god.

Here is an excellent piece written by a Jewish writer that I suggest everyone read:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/marty-kaplan/eyeless-in-gaza_b_155204.html

From what you have written, I would be proud to call you a friend.

as-salaamu ‘alaykum

Posted by zidar on 01/05/09 at 4:13PM

Which side has God chosen? With the score running 5 dead Jews and 500 dead Arabs, looks to me like he’s taken the side of the Jews.

Posted by portlandpoet on 01/05/09 at 4:34PM

Not necessarily zidar. If the ultimate goal is to die and meet your God, then more Arab’s prayers are being answered. See how rediculous the issue is regarding who’s side God is on?

How about we stop killing each other and let “God” decide when it’s our time to go and meet him ?

Posted by imoksoami on 01/05/09 at 4:53PM

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2009/jan/06/gaza-israel-hamas

LOL, a letter to gullible idiots from a leader of Hamas. Now Arafat was poisened by Israel and no bombs have been delivered by Hamas, LOL.

Posted by dell4100 on 01/05/09 at 5:39PM

dontsmoke, should I try to talk to them before or after they cut my head off? Wake up fool, terrorists don’t want peace. They want to impose their religious views on others!

Posted by dell4100 on 01/05/09 at 5:44PM

People under attack have two choices, either defend themselves or lay down and die. I choose the former rather than the latter. I do not impose my beliefs on others and wish to be afforded that same courtesy. However, I am not naive nor was I born yesterday. Terrorists do not want peace, they want to cut off your head, because you are not one of them. So each individual needs to decide whether they want to stand up and fight or be a doormat! Your choice.

Posted by Laetitia on 01/05/09 at 5:58PM

The day man created god our fate was sealed. Too bad we still haven’t figured that out in the 21st century. Long live superstition; come to think of it that is all that is going to survive.

Posted by BishopDave on 01/05/09 at 6:03PM

Dear Harris,

I’ve read your article in the Newark airport on my way from Portland to Tel Aviv. I and 40 some other bishops of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America are on our way to Israel right now – primarily to visit friends in the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Jordan and the Holy Land. This community includes both Palestinian Christians and Israeli Christians who paint for us a picture similar to yours. I wish more people had your heart and insight. Thank you for writing.

Anyone interested in our trip can read more at

Dave

Posted by BishopDave on 01/05/09 at 6:05PM

So much for my html coding! Try http://blogs.elca.org/09cobacademy/

Dave

Posted by xlntzee56 on 01/05/09 at 6:17PM

dell4100 says: “Wake up fool, terrorists don’t want peace. They want to impose their religious views on others!”
So, by your definition, that includes the religious right-wing Christians you so often align yourself with dell.

Posted by bloggod on 01/05/09 at 8:09PM

Zafar says:

“Both Israelis and Palestinians are religious people, but when it comes to matters concerning one another, their respective leaders toss their religious beliefs to the side and act with raw emotion, with disregard for the value of life.”
_____________

those ordering the killing on both sides aren’t “leaders;” they are following ignorance.

the citizens of these nations are NOT all of the same cloth. just like the USA:
(hello world, we here in Oregon ain’t Bush.)
Olmert is a convicted criminal.

Bush is sliding out the back door as bloody as can be, shredders deleting history 24-7.

i think the Gaza war is what Biden meant about Obama being tested right off with a crisis. an extra crisis that is.

Posted by sameric on 01/05/09 at 8:49PM

At the core, is this really about religion at all? From what I’ve read Islam and Judaism have more in common than differences – especially when each is compared to Christianity. Just maybe this continuing mess is all about keeping control of the masses through the provision of a common enemy.

Posted by jaybug45 on 01/05/09 at 9:56PM

This is about OIL! When the price did not increase after OPEC cut production, then the rockets started launching around the clock. Thank you Ahmedinijhad.

Eye for an eye? So Isreal is supposed to launch cheesy rockets into Gaza, and it’s according to the law? Okay. Sounds stupid to me, but I didn’t write the law.

What I fear is that genocide is going to happen someday. And that until then we will have no peace. Perhaps when America is not dependent upon foreign oil for our energy, we will let the Middle East go Rwanda itself. Nothing else has worked. And I fear nothing else will.

Maybe they need a little M.A.D.ness to figure things out. Worked for us anyway, ask Russia, they still exist to be able to ask.

Posted by amalfi01 on 01/06/09 at 9:43AM

The facts of life: Islam allows only three ways in which the true believer can confront the infidel: Conversion, submission or death. There is no option for peaceful coexistence. The infidel ignores this at his peril.

Posted by dell4100 on 01/06/09 at 11:58AM

xlntzee56, I must take issue with your assertion that I am aligned with the right wing religious zealots. I am an agnostic and if you don’t know what that means, then look it up. Since you are always making excuses for Hamas, does that mean I can assume you are also a terrorist?

Posted by dell4100 on 01/06/09 at 12:00PM

amalfi01 hit the nail on the head. Common sense seems to elude most of these other posters. They won’t realize their error in judgement, until they are looking at their bodies from their severed heads!

Posted by rwnobles on 01/06/09 at 1:20PM

I think the point of “symbolic” is that the Hamas rockets are not very effective.

When you have two equally wrong poeple, the one with the more effective weaponry is more dangerous.

Israel has killed 100 Innocent lives for every single Israeli that is killed. Talk about “actions speak louder than words” dell4100!

Irael has the more accurate weaponry but they are killing 100 times the civilians. It is hard for me to imagine that that is not an intentional attempt at genocide.

Posted by harriszafar on 01/06/09 at 1:49PM

dmbones: Thank you for your question. It is rather easy for someone to proclaim themselves a scholar online. The example you cite is quite disturbing because this so-called scholar is making a claim that has no basis in Islam. In all my readings of Islamic scripture, I have seen countless references calling for honesty and truthfulness. The Prophet Muhammad even said that dishonesty leads to vice and vice leads to hell. And he never said “except when you lie to a non-Muslim.” That sounds ridiculous, and I am sorry that a Muslim told you this. It is not true.

BishopDave: Thank you for sharing your thoughts. I will certainly keep an eye on your blog to see how things are going for you. Please convey my greetings and message of Peace to those you will be working with.

I do not find meaningless abuse of anyone’s faith to be beneficial nor genuine, which is why I will not address the comments by some posters who only want to defame a group or a religion. All I can do is pray that someday their sense of tolerance and cooperation will awaken so that more of us can respectfully coexist and solve real issues with meaningful discussion. This way, we can put our words into action. Thank you all once again.

Posted by amalfi01 on 01/06/09 at 3:05PM

rwnobles

Hamas broke the ceasefire. So the best thing to tell them is not to bring a knife to a gunfight. The Israelis have a right to live in peace. When the Palestinians allow Israel the right to exist, and exist in peace there will be peace.

Posted by rwnobles on 01/06/09 at 3:14PM

amalfio1: So a few militants tossing glorified rocks justifies Israel’s killing of thousands of innocent civilians?

I agree with Mr. Harris, both sides of this fight are wrong. I just have sympathy for the innocent lives that are being taken. So few innocent Israelis have been hurt, so I have little sympathy on that side in comparison to mounting innocent deaths on the Palestinian side.

I wish they would both stop. I wish they both were inneffective at killing innocence. Israel is just very effective in killing innocent people. The death tollspeaks for itself, 100:01

Posted by Abdulameer on 01/06/09 at 3:49PM

Harris Zafar is a business analyst in the information technology industry. What are his credentials for teaching us the truth about Islam? He writes: “As a practicing Muslim, I’m critical of Muslims who don’t act according to the teachings of Islam.” AND “Do those who fire them not understand the Holy Quran when it repeatedly says “create not disorder in the earth” or even when it says that killing even one person is like killing all of mankind? Reverence for life is a part of Islam,..” But, what, exactly, are the teachings of the Koran? They are NOT what Zafar thinks they are. One wonders whether he has even bothered to read the Koran. Please see next post.

Posted by Abdulameer on 01/06/09 at 3:58PM

Here are some “troublesome” passages from the Koran. Any reader can verify on the Internet that the Koran really does say these things.

–Surely the vilest of animals in Allah’s sight are those who disbelieve. (8.55)

— The unbelievers are your inveterate enemy. (4:101)

— Mohammed is God’s apostle. Those who follow him are ruthless to the unbelievers but merciful to one another. (48:29).

— It is unlawful for a believer to kill another believer, accidents excepted. (4:92)

— Believers, take neither the Jews nor the Christians for your friends. (5:51)

— Make war on them (non-Moslems)until idolatry shall cease and God’s religion shall reign supreme. (8:40)

— Fight against them until idolatry is no more and God’s religion reigns supreme. (2:193)

— The true believers fight for the cause of God, but the infidels fight for the devil. Fight then against the friends of Satan. (4:76)

— We will put terror into the hearts of the unbelievers. (3:151)

— I shall cast terror into the hearts of the infidels. Strike off their heads, strike off the very tips of their fingers. (8:12)

Muhammad, who all religious Moslems are required to consider the perfect model to follow, said this:
“You (i.e. Muslims) will fight with the Jews till some of them will hide behind stones. The stones will (betray them) saying, ‘O ‘Abdullah (i.e. slave of Allah)! There is a Jew hiding behind me; so kill him.’ ”

“I have been ordered to fight with the people till they say, “None has the right to be worshipped but Allah,..”

“Whoever changes his Islamic religion, kill him.” Vol. 9:57

“No Muslim should be killed for killing a Kafir”

There are many more quotations like these from the Koran and the sayings of Muhammad (Hadith). What will Zahar tell us about these verses which are considered sacrosanct by all believing Moslems — even if they have never read the Koran.

Posted by Abdulameer on 01/06/09 at 4:07PM

DMBONES writes above: “The central teaching of all of the religions is the same:…” This is totally absurd. This makes as much sense as to say that all philosophies are the same, or that all political ideologies are the same. In fact, Islam is totally unique because, in addition to a set of rituals, it also contains an ideology, that is, a plan for organizing all of society and then imposing this plan on the entire world, willingly or by force. No other religion has such an ideology built into it. Here is what a Moslem religious scholar says about Islam:

Dr. Muhammad al Alkhuli writes:
Islam is a religion, but not in the western meaning of religion. The western connotation of the term “religion” is something between the believer and God. Islam as a religion organizes all aspects of life on both the individual and national levels.
Islam organizes your relations with God, with yourself, with your children, with your relatives, with your neighbor, with your guest, and with other brethren. Islam clearly establishes your duties and rights in all those relationships.
Islam establishes a clear system of worship, civil rights, laws of marriage and divorce, laws of inheritance, code of behavior, what not to drink, what to wear, and what not to wear, how to worship God, how to govern, the laws of war and peace, when to go to war, when to make peace, the law of economics, and the laws of buying and selling. Islam is a complete code of life.
Islam is not for the mosque only, it is for daily life, a guide to life in all its aspects: socially, economically, and politically.
Islam is [a] complete constitution”

Here is what one of the most respected and widely read Islamic writers of the 20th century said, Abul Maududi:

“The goal of Islam is to rule the entire world and submit all of mankind to the faith of Islam. Any nation or power that gets in the way of that goal, Islam will fight and destroy.”

Does business analyst Zahar pretend to know more about Islam than the respected Islamic religious authorities and scholars? More than Muhammad? More than Allah (the Koran)????

Posted by rwnobles on 01/06/09 at 4:13PM

Hope I don’t double post due to “error on page”

Wow! News flash! Believers lives are more valuable than non-belivers lives in the Muslim religion!

Nearly every religion teaches that.

Julia Sweeney has documented a lot of equally objectionable quotes from the Bible.

Can we agree that religion is a big part of problems in this world?

Posted by Abdulameer on 01/06/09 at 4:20PM

Dmbones write this fatally misleading comment: “Islam: “None of you [truly] believes until he wishes for his brother what he wishes for himself.” Number 13 of Imam “Al-Nawawi’s Forty Hadiths.”

This is fatally misleading because it looks something like the Golden Rule. In fact, it is no such thing. Notice that the quotation uses the word “brother”, not “others”, not “fellow man”, not “all creatures”, like the other religions say. Everything depends here on the meaning of “brother”. Non-Moslems need to know that in Islam “brother” refers ONLY to another Moslem, NOT to non-Moslems. How do we know? Muhammad himself said that believers (i.e. Moslems) are brothers to one another.
And, remember the injunction from the Koran cited above:
“Mohammed is God’s apostle. Those who follow him are ruthless to the unbelievers but merciful to one another.” (48:29).
This sure doesn’t sound like the Golden Rule to me!

Posted by Abdulameer on 01/06/09 at 4:37PM

rwnobles errs when he wants us to believe that all religions are equally bad or that the Bible has verses that are equally objectionable compared to the Koran. If you look at the specific verses of the Bible and the specific verses of the Koran, you will see that they are not equivalent. Of course, there are plenty of cruelties in the Bible. However, they are limited to those ancient times, places and peoples. Christians and Jews do not follow those precepts today. The verses of the Koran apply generally to non-Moslems. Furthermore, all Moslems are required to believe that the Koran is Allah’s literal word — perfect, complete, immutable and valid for all of eternity. This is different from the Bible. We speak of the “Five Books of Moses”. Nobody refers to them as the “Five Books of God”. We speak of the Gospels of Mark, Luke, Matthew and John. Only metaphorically do we refer to the Gospels as the “Word of God”. In Islam, it would be considered blasphemy (punishable by death according to Islamic law!) to call the Koran “the Book of Muhammad”. To sum up:
1) The specific passages of cruelty in the Bible are fundamentally different from the specific passages of cruelty/bigotry/violence in the Koran;
2) Christians and Jews do not view the Bible in the same way that Moslems view the Koran.
These differences are crucial.

Posted by jaybug45 on 01/06/09 at 5:37PM

It’s only a horror when you shoot at someone hiding in a school? Not when you shoot from a school?

All you Gahndi-ists remember that his non-violence worked on the United Kingdom, it didn’t do squat for the 5 wars India had with Pakistan after independence. Reasonableness only works with reasonable people. This is why cops have guns, for the unreasonable people.

Israel has had to end being reasonable regarding their enemies. The only other choice is to allow rockets to rain down on Israel ad infinitum.

Posted by amalfi01 on 01/06/09 at 5:41PM

rwnobles

Your ignorance of religions in general is really astounding!

You said this: “Wow! News flash! Believers lives are more valuable than non-belivers lives in the Muslim religion!

Nearly every religion teaches that.”

You need to start doing some reading.

Posted by thebigjim on 01/06/09 at 7:38PM

How did the media scrub the blood out of the coverage of 9/11?
bloody pictures of broken and dead Arab children are all over the place.
I guess no one is paying attention. Too busy? you got other worries?

Posted by Love4all on 01/06/09 at 8:52PM

AbdulAmeer

Peace be upon you.

1.) There is no punishment for blasphamy in Islam. None what so ever. This is fact. Search www.alislam.org if you would like further evidence.

2.) ANY religious book can be taken out of context if the intent is impure. The Qur’an says it is a “guidance for the righteous” – meaning also that those who have a twisted heart will find twisted meanings to verses. Every verse from the Qur’an you cited as “violent” was taken out of context and refers to particular situations, many of which the very laws of the US agree with whole heartedly.

Your logic that the Bible refers to “ancient laws and people” is pathetic and immature. Would a Christian ever admit they follow a book that is ancient and outdated? Would they admit that their book has flaws? Thus, if they follow they book, they must accept what is in the book.

The Bible clearly gives advice of violence and compulsion. For example, the following verses are from Deuteronomy. As you can see, in this case I’m not picking one random verse, but 8 verses to show that those who follow the Bible are commanded to kill those who are not with them, i.e. disbelievers.

20:10 When thou comest nigh unto a city to fight against it, then proclaim peace unto it.

20:11 And it shall be, if it make thee answer of peace, and open unto thee, then it shall be, that all the people that is found therein shall be tributaries unto thee, and they shall serve thee.

20:12 And if it will make no peace with thee, but will make war against thee, then thou shalt besiege it:

20:13 And when the LORD thy God hath delivered it into thine hands, thou shalt smite every male thereof with the edge of the sword:

20:14 But the women, and the little ones, and the cattle, and all that is in the city, even all the spoil thereof, shalt thou take unto thyself; and thou shalt eat the spoil of thine enemies, which the LORD thy God hath given thee.

20:15 Thus shalt thou do unto all the cities which are very far off from thee, which are not of the cities of these nations.

20:16 But of the cities of these people, which the LORD thy God doth give thee for an inheritance, thou shalt save alive nothing that breatheth:

20:17 But thou shalt utterly destroy them; namely, the Hittites, and the Amorites, the Canaanites, and the Perizzites, the Hivites, and the Jebusites; as the LORD thy God hath commanded thee:

***********************************************
Now, only a fool would think that followers of the Bible are bent on killing non followers of the Bible – despite what these verses say.

Likewise, only a fool would think that Islam (the very word which means Peace) would teach Muslims to kill non Muslims.

If you want a living example of Islam practiced peacefully, search the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community in the news around the world. You will find that this community comprises of 10’s of millions of Muslims in 200 countries of the world – all dedicated to peace. In their 120 year history, there has been NOT A SINGLE incident of violence. They have been martyred, exiled, beaten, and tortured, but have always responded with love and peace. They have opened schools for children of all back grounds to become educated in. They have opened hospitals for all people to get free medicine from. They feed over 50,000 families in America alone every year, with their own financial donations.

And they do this because the Qur’an and Muhammad (sa) teach peace and love for mankind.

So don’t believe me, but believe the actions of tens of millions of Muslims over the past 120 years. Actions speak louder than words my friend, and the pristine record of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community speaks for itself.

And just for the record, don’t bother pointing out I’m not a Muslim scholar – I never claimed to be one anyway. For that matter, neither did Mr. Zafar. It wasn’t his scholarship talking anyway, it was his righteousness.

Posted by amalfi01 on 01/06/09 at 10:57PM

Love4all

The examples you quote are from the Old Testament. When Christ was born and died on the cross, the Old Testament became just history. Nowhere in the New Testament can you find Christ or his apostles advocating anything but love and forgiveness.

The Invasion of Gaza: “Operation Cast Lead”, Part of a Broader Israeli Military-Intelligence Agenda

by Michel Chossudovsky
Global Research, January 4, 2009

The aerial bombings and the ongoing ground invasion of Gaza by Israeli ground forces must be analysed in a historical context. Operation “Cast Lead” is a carefully planned undertaking, which is part of a broader military-intelligence agenda first formulated by the government of Prime Minister Ariel Sharon in 2001:

“Sources in the defense establishment said Defense Minister Ehud Barak instructed the Israel Defense Forces to prepare for the operation over six months ago, even as Israel was beginning to negotiate a ceasefire agreement with Hamas.”(Barak Ravid, Operation “Cast Lead”: Israeli Air Force strike followed months of planning, Haaretz, December 27, 2008)

It was Israel which broke the truce on the day of the US presidential elections, November 4:

“Israel used this distraction to break the ceasefire between itself and Hamas by bombing the Gaza strip.  Israel claimed this violation of the ceasefire was to prevent Hamas from digging tunnels into Israeli territory.

The very next day, Israel launched a terrorizing siege of Gaza, cutting off food, fuel, medical supplies and other necessities in an attempt to “subdue” the Palestinians while at the same time engaging in armed incursions.

In response, Hamas and others in Gaza again resorted to firing crude, homemade, and mainly inaccurate rockets into Israel.  During the past seven years, these rockets have been responsible for the deaths of 17 Israelis.  Over the same time span, Israeli Blitzkrieg assaults have killed thousands of Palestinians, drawing worldwide protest but falling on deaf ears at the UN.” (Shamus Cooke, The Massacre in Palestine and the Threat of a Wider War, Global Research, December 2008)

Planned Humanitarian Disaster

On December 8, US Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte was in Tel Aviv for discussions with his Israeli counterparts including the director of Mossad, Meir Dagan.  “Operation Cast Lead” was initiated two days day after Christmas. It was coupled with a carefully designed international Public Relations campaign under the auspices of Israel’s Foreign Ministry. Hamas’ military targets are not the main objective. Operation “Cast Lead” is intended, quite deliberately, to trigger civilian casualities.  What we are dealing with is a “planned humanitarian disaster” in Gaza in a densly populated urban area. (See map below)

The longer term objective of this plan, as formulated by Israeli policy makers, is the expulsion of Palestinians from Palestinian lands:

“Terrorize the civilian population, assuring maximal destruction of property and cultural resources… The daily life of the Palestinians must be rendered unbearable: They should be locked up in cities and towns, prevented from exercising normal economic life, cut off from workplaces, schools and hospitals, This will encourage emigration and weaken the resistance to future expulsions” Ur Shlonsky, quoted by Ghali Hassan, Gaza: The World’s Largest Prison, Global Research, 2005)

“Operation Justified Vengeance” A turning point has been reached. Operation “Cast Lead” is part of the broader military-intelligence operation initiated at the outset of the Ariel Sharon government in 2001. It was under Sharon’s “Operation Justified Vengeance” that  F-16 fighter planes were initially used to bomb Palestinian cities.  “Operation Justified Vengeance” was presented in July 2001 to the Israeli government of Ariel Sharon by IDF chief of staff Shaul Mofaz, under the title “The Destruction of the Palestinian Authority and Disarmament of All Armed Forces”.

“A contingency plan, codenamed Operation Justified Vengeance, was drawn up last June [2001] to reoccupy all of the West Bank and possibly the Gaza Strip at a likely cost of “hundreds” of Israeli casualties.” (Washington Times, 19 March 2002).

According to Jane’s ‘Foreign Report’ (July 12, 2001) the Israeli army under Sharon had updated its plans for an “all-out assault to smash the Palestinian authority, force out leader Yasser Arafat and kill or detain its army”.   “Bloodshed Justification” The “Bloodshed Justification” was an essential component of the military-intelligence agenda. The killing of Palestinian civilians was justified on “humanitarian grounds.” Israeli military operations were carefully timed to coincide with the suicide attacks:

The assault would be launched, at the government’s discretion, after a big suicide bomb attack in Israel, causing widespread deaths and injuries, citing the bloodshed as justification. (Tanya Reinhart, Evil Unleashed, Israel’s move to destroy the Palestinian Authority is a calculated plan, long in the making, Global Research, December 2001, emphasis added)

The Dagan Plan  “Operation Justified Vengeance” was also referred to as the “Dagan Plan”, named after General (ret.) Meir Dagan, who currently heads Mossad, Israel’s intelligence agency.  Reserve General Meir Dagan was Sharon’s national security adviser during the 2000 election campaign. The plan was apparently drawn up prior to Sharon’s election as Prime Minister in February 2001. “According to Alex Fishman writing in Yediot Aharonot, the Dagan Plan consisted in destroying the Palestinian authority and putting Yasser Arafat ‘out of the game’.” (Ellis Shulman, “Operation Justified Vengeance”: a Secret Plan to Destroy the Palestinian Authority, March 2001):

“As reported in the Foreign Report [Jane] and disclosed locally by Maariv, Israel’s invasion plan — reportedly dubbed Justified Vengeance — would be launched immediately following the next high-casualty suicide bombing, would last about a month and is expected to result in the death of hundreds of Israelis and thousands of Palestinians. (Ibid, emphasis added)

The “Dagan Plan” envisaged the so-called “cantonization” of the Palestinian territories whereby the West Bank and Gaza would be totally cut off from one other, with separate “governments” in each of the territories. Under this scenario, already envisaged in 2001, Israel would:

“negotiate separately with Palestinian forces that are dominant in each territory-Palestinian forces responsible for security, intelligence, and even for the Tanzim (Fatah).” The plan thus closely resembles the idea of “cantonization” of Palestinian territories, put forth by a number of ministers.” Sylvain Cypel, The infamous ‘Dagan Plan’ Sharon’s plan for getting rid of Arafat, Le Monde, December 17, 2001)


From Left to Right: Dagan, Sharon, Halevy

The Dagan Plan has established continuity in the military-intelligence agenda. In the wake of the 2000 elections, Meir Dagan was assigned a key role. “He became Sharon’s “go-between” in security issues with President’s Bush’s special envoys Zinni and Mitchell.”  He was subsequently appointed Director of the Mossad by Prime Minister Ariel Sharon in August 2002. In the post-Sharon period, he remained head of Mossad. He was reconfirmed in his position as Director of Israeli Intelligence by Prime Minister Ehud Olmert in June 2008.  Meir Dagan, in coordination with his US counterparts, has been in charge of various military-intelligence operations. It is worth noting that Meir Dagan as a young Colonel had worked closely with defense minister Ariel Sharon in the raids on Palestinian settlements in Beirut in 1982. The 2009 ground invasion of Gaza, in many regards, bear a canny resemblance to the 1982 military operation led by Sharon and Dagan.

Continuity: From Sharon  to Olmert

Olmert and Sharon

It is important to focus on a number of key events which have led up to the killings in Gaza under “Operation Cast Lead”:  1. The assassination in November 2004 of Yaser Arafat. This assassination had been on the drawing board since 1996 under “Operation Fields of Thorns”. According to an October 2000 document “prepared by the security services, at the request of then Prime Minister Ehud Barak, stated that ‘Arafat, the person, is a severe threat to the security of the state [of Israel] and the damage which will result from his disappearance is less than the damage caused by his existence'”. (Tanya Reinhart, Evil Unleashed, Israel’s move to destroy the Palestinian Authority is a calculated plan, long in the making, Global Research, December 2001. Details of the document were published in Ma’ariv, July 6, 2001.).  Arafat’s assassination was ordered in 2003 by the Israeli cabinet. It was approved by the US which vetoed a United Nations Security Resolution condemning the 2003 Israeli Cabinet decision. Reacting to increased Palestinian attacks, in August 2003, Israeli Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz declared “all out war” on the militants whom he vowed “marked for death.”

“In mid September, Israel’s government passed a law to get rid of Arafat. Israel’s cabinet for political security affairs declared it “a decision to remove Arafat as an obstacle to peace.” Mofaz threatened; “we will choose the right way and the right time to kill Arafat.” Palestinian Minister Saeb Erekat told CNN he thought Arafat was the next target. CNN asked Sharon spokesman Ra’anan Gissan if the vote meant expulsion of Arafat. Gissan clarified; “It doesn’t mean that. The Cabinet has today resolved to remove this obstacle. The time, the method, the ways by which this will take place will be decided separately, and the security services will monitor the situation and make the recommendation about proper action.” (See Trish Shuh, Road Map for a Decease Plan,  www.mehrnews.com
November 9 2005

The assassination of Arafat was part of the 2001 Dagan Plan. In all likelihood, it was carried out by Israeli Intelligence. It was intended to destroy the Palestinian Authority, foment divisions within Fatah as well as between Fatah and Hamas. Mahmoud Abbas is a Palestinian quisling. He was installed as leader of Fatah, with the approval of Israel and the US, which finance the Palestinian Authority’s paramilitary and security forces.

2. The removal, under the orders of Prime Minister Ariel Sharon in 2005, of all Jewish settlements in Gaza. A Jewish population of over 7,000 was relocated.

“It is my intention [Sharon] to carry out an evacuation – sorry, a relocation – of settlements that cause us problems and of places that we will not hold onto anyway in a final settlement, like the Gaza settlements…. I am working on the assumption that in the future there will be no Jews in Gaza,” Sharon said.” (CBC, March 2004)

The issue of the settlements in Gaza was presented as part of Washington’s “road map to peace”. Celebrated by the Palestinians as a “victory”, this measure was not directed against the Jewish settlers. Quite the opposite: It was part of  the overall covert operation, which consisted  in transforming Gaza into a concentration camp. As long as Jewish settlers were living inside Gaza, the objective of sustaining a large barricaded prison territory could not be achieved. The Implementation of “Operation Cast Lead” required “no Jews in Gaza”.    3. The building of the infamous Apartheid Wall was decided upon at the beginning of the Sharon government. (See Map below).  

4. The next phase was the Hamas election victory in January 2006. Without Arafat, the Israeli military-intelligence architects knew that Fatah under Mahmoud Abbas would loose the elections. This was part of the scenario, which had been envisaged and analyzed well in advance.

With Hamas in charge of the Palestinian authority, using the pretext that Hamas is a terrorist organization, Israel would carry out the process of “cantonization” as formulated under the Dagan plan. Fatah under Mahmoud Abbas would remain formally in charge of the West Bank. The duly elected Hamas government would be confined to the Gaza strip. Ground Attack On January 3, Israeli tanks and infantry entered Gaza in an all out ground offensive:

“The ground operation was preceded by several hours of heavy artillery fire after dark, igniting targets in flames that burst into the night sky. Machine gun fire rattled as bright tracer rounds flashed through the darkness and the crash of hundreds of shells sent up streaks of fire. (AP, January 3, 2009)

Israeli sources have pointed to a lengthy drawn out military operation. It “won’t be easy and it won’t be short,” said Defense Minister Ehud Barak in a TV address.  Israel is not seeking to oblige Hamas “to cooperate”. What we are dealing with is the implementation of the “Dagan Plan” as initially formulated in 2001, which called for:

“an invasion of Palestinian-controlled territory by some 30,000 Israeli soldiers, with the clearly defined mission of destroying the infrastructure of the Palestinian leadership and collecting weaponry currently possessed by the various Palestinian forces, and expelling or killing its military leadership. (Ellis Shulman, op cit, emphasis added)

The broader question is whether Israel in consultation with Washington is intent upon triggering a wider war.

Mass expulsion could occur at some later stage of the ground invasion, were the Israelis to open up Gaza’s borders to allow for an exodus of population. Expulsion was referred to by Ariel Sharon as the “a 1948 style solution”. For Sharon “it is only necessary to find another state for the Palestinians. -‘Jordan is Palestine’ – was the phrase that Sharon coined.” (Tanya Reinhart, op cit)

Airline Apologizes For Booting 9 Muslims

Airline Apologizes For Booting 9 Muslims

Group Plans Discrimination Complaint

PHOTOS
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Atif Irfan and his wife, Sobia Ijaz, were among nine passengers removed from a flight Thursday after commenting on the safest place to sit.
Atif Irfan and his wife, Sobia Ijaz, were among nine passengers removed from a flight Thursday after commenting on the safest place to sit. (By Phelan M. Ebenhack For The Washington Post)
Kashif Irfan with his sons Luqman, 4, Sinan, 2, and Murad, 7. Irfan and other family members are attending a religious retreat in Orlando, but were delayed on the way when AirTran kicked them off a flight from Washington.
Kashif Irfan with his sons Luqman, 4, Sinan, 2, and Murad, 7. Irfan and other family members are attending a religious retreat in Orlando, but were delayed on the way when AirTran kicked them off a flight from Washington. (By Phelan M. Ebenhack For The Washington Post)
From left, Atif Irfan, Sobia Ijaz, Sumayya Sahin, Murad Irfan, Inayet Sahin, Sinan Irfan, Kashif Irfan and Luqman Irfan pose in Orlando. Family members say that their conversation aboard their flight was misconstrued and that they were profiled at least in part because of their appearance.
From left, Atif Irfan, Sobia Ijaz, Sumayya Sahin, Murad Irfan, Inayet Sahin, Sinan Irfan, Kashif Irfan and Luqman Irfan pose in Orlando. Family members say that their conversation aboard their flight was misconstrued and that they were profiled at least in part because of their appearance. (Phelan M. Ebenhack – Phelan M. Ebenhack)

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Washington Post Staff Writers
Saturday, January 3, 2009; Page A01

A U.S. airline apologized yesterday to nine Muslim American passengers from the Washington area who were removed from a flight out of Reagan National Airport, but a Muslim civil rights group said it intends to press a discrimination complaint against the airline for its treatment of the passengers.

This Story

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“It is incumbent on any airline to ensure that members of the traveling public are not singled out or mistreated based on their perceived race, religion or national origin. We believe this disturbing incident would never have occurred had the Muslim passengers removed from the plane not been perceived by other travelers and airline personnel as members of the Islamic faith,” said the complaint filed with the U.S. Department of Transportation by the Washington-based Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), an advocacy group.

The New Year’s Day incident aboard an AirTran flight to Orlando marked the latest case in which Muslim or South Asian travelers have alleged that they were illegally singled out for scrutiny. Contradictory accounts given by airline and federal aviation security authorities also highlight the difficulty of decision-making and affixing responsibility in tense situations involving a perceived threat.

Profiling by security agencies based on race, religion or ethnicity has concerned civil rights groups since at least 2001, when airport security escalated in the aftermath of the Sept. 11 attacks. CAIR, for example, publishes a brochure advising Muslim passengers about how to protect their rights during air travel, including how to request respectful searches and how to avoid confrontations with airport security personnel.

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Laila Al-Qatami, a spokeswoman for the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee, said her group tracked about 20 such reports in 2008, although the AirTran case was unusual because the airline initially refused to rebook the passengers.

“It seems in this case the airline has to take another look at what its policies are, how it handles a situation like this and what it considers suspicious behavior,” Al-Qatami said.

In 2008, the Transportation Department said it handled 87 complaints alleging discrimination by airlines based on race, ethnicity, national origin or color, but only four were security related, spokesman Bill Adams said. However, Adams said security checkpoints staffed by the Transportation Security Administration are outside the department’s jurisdiction.

TSA spokesman Christopher White said the agency’s office of civil rights has received 32 complaints since Oct. 1.

AirTran initially defended its actions in removing the nine passengers after others reported their remarks about the safest place to sit on an airplane.

But as reports of the incident spread yesterday, the airline said in a statement that it had offered the group a refund for their replacement tickets and free return airfare. It also apologized to 95 other passengers whose flight was delayed about two hours.

“We regret that the issue escalated to the heightened security level it did on New Year’s Day, but we trust everyone understands that the security and the safety of our passengers is paramount and cannot be compromised,” AirTran spokesman Tad Hutcheson said. “Nobody on Flight 175 reached their destination on time . . . and we regret it.”

Brothers Kashif Irfan, 34, an anesthesiologist, and Atif Irfan, 29, a lawyer, both Alexandria residents, said they believed that their families and a friend were profiled at least in part because of their appearance. All but one of their group are native-born U.S. citizens, and the ninth is a legal permanent U.S. resident, they said; six are of Pakistani descent, two are of Turkish descent, and one is African American. All five adults and a teenager appeared traditionally Muslim, with the men wearing beards and the women in head scarves, they said. They were on their way to a religious retreat in Orlando.

CONTINUED 1 document.write(‘<a href=”http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/01/02/AR2009010201695_2.html’+unescape(location.search)+'” onclick=”try{appendSidToAnchor(this);appendPositionToAnchor(this,”);}catch(e){}”>2</a>’)2<a href=”http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/01/02/AR2009010201695_2.html”>2</a> document.write(‘<a href=”http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/01/02/AR2009010201695_2.html’+unescape(location.search)+'” onclick=”try{appendSidToAnchor(this);appendPositionToAnchor(this,”);}catch(e){}”>Next</a>’)Next<a href=”http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/01/02/AR2009010201695_2.html”>Next</a> >

Preaching Moderate Islam and Becoming a TV Star

Preaching Moderate Islam and Becoming a TV Star

Bryan Denton for The New York Times

Ahmad al-Shugairi, host of a TV show on religious themes, with students at his cafe in Jidda.

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Published: January 2, 2009

JIDDA, Saudi Arabia — As Ahmad al-Shugairi took the stage, dressed in a flowing white gown and headdress, he clutched a microphone and told his audience that he had no religious training or titles: “I am not a sheik.”

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Robert F. Worth on a new generation of television preachers in the Muslim world.

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Generation Faithful

Crossing Cultures

This is the last in a series of 11 articles examining the lives of the young across the Muslim world at a time of religious revival.

Previous Articles in the Series »

Bryan Denton for The New York Times

The Saudi preacher Ahmad al-Shugairi leading his staff in prayer during a break from work on his show “Khawater.” It runs daily during Ramadan.


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But over the next two hours, he worked the crowd as masterfully as any preacher, drawing rounds of uproarious laughter and, as he recalled the Prophet Muhammad’s death, silent tears. He spoke against sectarianism. He made pleas for women to be treated as equals. He talked about his own life — his seven wild years in California, his divorce, his children — and gently satirized Arab mores.

When he finished, the packed concert hall erupted in a wild standing ovation. Members of his entourage soon bundled him through the thick crowd of admirers to a back door, where they rushed through the darkness to a waiting car.

“Elvis has left the building,” Mr. Shugairi joked, in English, as he relaxed into his seat.

Mr. Shugairi is a rising star in a new generation of “satellite sheiks” whose religion-themed television shows have helped fuel a religious revival across the Arab world. Over the past decade, the number of satellite channels devoted exclusively to religion has risen from 1 to more than 30, and religious programming on general interest stations, like the one that features Mr. Shugairi’s show, has soared. Mr. Shugairi and others like him have succeeded by appealing to a young audience that is hungry for religious identity but deeply alienated from both politics and the traditional religious establishment, especially in the fundamentalist forms now common in Saudi Arabia and Egypt.

In part, that is a matter of style: a handsome, athletically built 35-year-old, Mr. Shugairi effortlessly mixes deep religious commitment with hip, playful humor. He earned an M.B.A. during his California years, and he sometimes refers to Islam as “an excellent product that needs better packaging.”

But his message of sincere religious moderation is tremendously powerful here. For young Arabs, he offers a way to reconcile a world painfully divided between East and West, pleasure and duty, the rigor of the mosque and the baffling freedoms of the Internet.

“He makes us attached to religion — sometimes with our modern life we get detached,” said Imma al-Khalidi, a 25-year-old Saudi who burst into tears when Mr. Shugairi, uneasy with his rock-star departure from the auditorium, returned to the hall to chat with a group of black-clad and veiled young women. There was an audible intake of breath as the women saw him emerge. A few bold ones walked forward, but most hung back, seemingly stunned.

“Before, we used to see only men behind a desk, like judges,” Ms. Khalidi said.

Mr. Shugairi is not the first of his kind. Amr Khaled, an Egyptian televangelist, began reaching large audiences eight years ago. But the field has expanded greatly, with each new figure creating Internet sites and Facebook groups where tens of thousands of fans trade epiphanies and links to YouTube clips of their favorite preachers.

Mr. Shugairi’s main TV program, “Khawater” (“Thoughts”), could not be more different from the dry lecturing style of so many Muslim clerics. In one episode on literacy, the camera follows Mr. Shugairi as he wanders through Jidda asking people where to find a public library (no one knows). In another, he pokes through a trash bin, pointing to mounds of rotting rice and hummus that could have been donated for the poor. He even sets up “Candid Camera”-style gags, confronting people who pocket a wallet from the pavement and asking them if the Prophet Muhammad would have done the same.

At times, his program resembles an American civics class disguised as religion, complete with lessons on environmental awareness and responsible driving.

Criticized From Both Sides

Inevitably, hard-line clerics dismiss Mr. Shugairi as a lightweight who toadies to the West. From the other side, some liberals lament that Mr. Shugairi and the other satellite sheiks are Islamizing the secular elite of the Arab world.

And while most of these broadcast preachers, including Mr. Shugairi, promote a moderate and inclusive strain of Islam, others do not. There are few controls in the world of satellite television, where virtually anyone can take to the air and preach as he likes on one of hundreds of channels.

Moreover, some observers fear that the growing prevalence of Islam on the airwaves and the Internet could make moderates like Mr. Shugairi steppingstones toward more extreme figures, who are never more than a mouse-click or a channel-surf away.

“There is no one with any real authority, they can say whatever they want to say, and the accessibility of these sheiks is 24/7,” said Hussein Amin, a professor at the American University in Cairo. “That’s why so many who were liberals are now conservatives, and those who were conservatives are now radicals.”

Independent, Tajiks Revel in Their Faith

Carolyn Drake for The New York Times

Tajiks gathered in Dushanbe last month to welcome pilgrims returning from Saudi Arabia.
DUSHANBE, Tajikistan — The crowd in the airport parking lot was jubilant despite the cold, with squealing children, busy concession stands and a tangle of idling cars giving the impression of an eager audience before a rock concert.

But it was religion, not rock ’n’ roll, that had drawn so many people: the Tajik families were waiting for their loved ones to land on a flight from Saudi Arabia, where they had taken part in the hajj, the annual Muslim pilgrimage to Mecca.

This did not use to happen. Tajikistan, a Muslim country north of Afghanistan, used to be part of the Soviet Union. Religion was banned, and any public expression of it, like prayer or making the hajj, was harshly punished.

A resurgence of Islam began here almost immediately after independence, in 1991, but years of civil war kept outward reflections of it, like the hajj, from appearing much.

Now, though, expressions of faith are flowering. At least 5,200 citizens of Tajikistan went on the hajj in 2008, more than 10 times the number who went in 2000, according to this country’s State Committee on Religion. Religious leaders have become important community figures, and Islamic political parties are permitted.

That enthusiasm was thick in the greeting crowd here, one of many that met the more than a dozen hajj flights in December. A woman whose first name is Marhabo, a 25-year-old mother of three, was waiting in the bitter cold with a 40-member extended family, most of them children.

“We’re Muslims,” she said brightly, hugging her small daughter closer to her in the cold. “Now there’s no limiting. Before, there were no mosques. Now there are many.”

It was close to midnight and the children were getting cranky. Marhabo’s sister-in-law bounced her own daughter, Medina, a small girl in a pink snowsuit, who was starting to cry.

There were many Medinas in the crowd, actually, named after another holy city in Saudi Arabia, in a fad that began here after the Soviet collapse.

The group was largely segregated, with women in bright scarves standing in clusters with the children behind the main arrivals area, where the men, some in traditional velvet robes, waited with camcorders to record the moment of arrival.

One old man with a long gray beard said he first made the pilgrimage in 1998. He took a bus that went through Iraq, “before,” his friend pointed out, “George Bush showed up.”

It used to be hard to be a believer here.

A man in his 30s whose first name is Akbar remembered running away from the Soviets when they caught him praying. His teacher ridiculed him for it, leaving him with a distinct dislike for school.

“Everyone was looking at me,” Akbar said. “I felt like a criminal.”

While the Tajiks’ newfound faith is thrilling for some, it has alarmed others, who worry that Islam’s popularity, combined with an economic crisis here, could lead to a surge of fundamentalism or militancy.

More than half the population lives on less than $2 each a day, and the country is currently experiencing a reverse industrialization: 77 percent of its population lives in rural areas, compared with 63 percent in the mid-1980s, said Khojamakhmad Umarov, a professor at the Institute of Economic Studies here.

Now, with migrant Tajik workers, the single largest contributors to the economy, facing an uncertain future in Russia, experts like Muzaffar Olimov worry that religious leaders will gain disproportionate power in society and that with the state education system in collapse, families will turn to religious schools for their children.

“The mullahs will make the weather,” said Mr. Olimov, who is director of Sharq, a research center here. “We have a model: our neighbor Afghanistan.”

But Tajik society is still strongly Soviet. New Year’s, a holiday celebrated in Soviet times with a decorated tree and presents, is still cherished, even in observant Muslim families.

“It’s not a Muslim holiday, but we like it,” Marhabo said, her small daughter reciting poetry she had learned in school for the occasion.

Marhabo talked about the meal they would have when they arrived at their home — a baked sheep. The government recently issued a rule forbidding families to spend too much money on weddings and other celebrations, a directive she said they were observing.

The plane from Saudi Arabia finally arrived. People threw candies, as if at a wedding, when they met their loved ones. Marhabo’s father, in a long white robe and a traditional hat, strode regally into their midst. He was met with an explosion of kisses.

More oddities in the U.S. “debate” over Israel/Gaza

(updated below – Update II – Update III)

This Rasmussen Reports poll — the first to survey American public opinion specifically regarding the Israeli attack on Gaza — strongly bolsters the severe disconnect I documented the other day between (a) American public opinion on U.S. policy towards Israel and (b) the consensus views expressed by America’s political leadership. Not only does Rasmussen find that Americans generally “are closely divided over whether the Jewish state should be taking military action against militants in the Gaza Strip” (44-41%, with 15% undecided), but Democratic voters overwhelmingly oppose the Israeli offensive — by a 24-point margin (31-55%). By stark constrast, Republicans, as one would expect (in light of their history of supporting virtually any proposed attack on Arabs and Muslims), overwhelmingly support the Israeli bombing campaign (62-27%).

It’s not at all surprising, then, that Republican leaders — from Dick Cheney and John Bolton to virtually all appendages of the right-wing noise machine, from talk radio and Fox News to right-wing blogs and neoconservative journals — are unquestioning supporters of the Israeli attack. After all, they’re expressing the core ideology of the overwhelming majority of their voters and audience.

Much more notable is the fact that Democratic Party leaders — including Harry Reid and Nancy Pelosi — are just as lockstep in their blind, uncritical support for the Israeli attack, in their absolute refusal to utter a word of criticism of, or even reservations about, Israeli actions. While some Democratic politicians who are marginalized by the party’s leadership are willing to express the views which Democratic voters overwhelmingly embrace, the suffocating, fully bipartisan orthodoxy which typically predominates in America when it comes to Israel — thou shalt not speak ill of Israel, thou shalt support all actions it takes — is in full force with this latest conflict.

Is there any other significant issue in American political life, besides Israel, where (a) citizens split almost evenly in their views, yet (b) the leaders of both parties adopt identical lockstep positions which leave half of the citizenry with no real voice? More notably still, is there any other position, besides Israel, where (a) a party’s voters overwhelmingly embrace one position (Israel should not have attacked Gaza) but (b) that party’s leadership unanimously embraces the exact opposite position (Israel was absolutely right to attack Gaza and the U.S. must support Israel unequivocally)? Does that happen with any other issue?

Equally noteworthy is that the factional breakdown regarding Israel-Gaza mirrors quite closely the factional alliances that arose with regard to the Iraq War. Just as was true with Iraq, one finds vigorous pro-war sentiment among the Dick Cheney/National Review/neoconservative/hard-core-GOP crowd, joined (as was true for Iraq) by some American liberals who typically oppose that faction yet eagerly join with them when it comes to Israel. Meanwhile, most of the rest of the world — Europe, South America, Asia, the Middle East, the U.N. leadership — opposes and condemns the attack, all to no avail. The parties with the superior military might (the U.S. and Israel) dismiss world opinion as essentially irrelevant. Even the pro-war rhetorical tactics are the same (just as those who opposed the Iraq War were demonized as being “pro-Saddam,” those who oppose the Israeli attack on Gaza are now “pro-Hamas”).

Substantively, there are certainly meaningful differences between the U.S. attack on Iraq and the Israeli attack on Gaza (most notably the fact that Hamas really does shoot rockets into Israel and has killed Israeli civilians and Israel really is blockading and occupying Palestinian land, whereas Iraq did not attack and could not attack the U.S. as the U.S. was sanctioning them and controlling their airspace). But the underlying logic of both wars are far more similar than different: military attacks, invasions and occupations will end rather than exacerbate terrorism; the Muslim world only understands brute force; the root causes of the disputes are irrelevant; diplomacy and the U.N. are largely worthless. It’s therefore entirely unsurprising that the sides split along the same general lines. What’s actually somewhat remarkable is that there is even more lockstep consensus among America’s political leadership supporting the Israeli attack on Gaza than there was supporting the U.S.’s own attack on Iraq (at least a few Democratic Congressional leaders opposed the war on Iraq, unlike for Israel’s bombing of Gaza, where they virtually all unequivocally support it).

* * * * *

Ultimately, what is most notable about the “debate” in the U.S. over Israel-Gaza is that virtually all of it occurs from the perspective of Israeli interests but almost none of it is conducted from the perspective of American interests. There is endless debate over whether Israel’s security is enhanced or undermined by the attack on Gaza and whether the 40-year-old Israeli occupation, expanding West Bank settlements and recent devastating blockade or Hamas militancy and attacks on Israeli civilians bear more of the blame. American opinion-making elites march forward to opine on the historical rights and wrongs of the endless Israeli-Palestinian territorial conflict with such fervor and fixation that it’s often easy to forget that the U.S. is not actually a direct party to this dispute.

Though the ins-and-outs of Israeli grievances and strategic considerations are endlessly examined, there is virtually no debate over whether the U.S. should continue to play such an active, one-sided role in this dispute. It’s the American taxpayer, with their incredibly consequential yet never-debated multi-billion-dollar aid packages to Israel, who are vital in funding this costly Israeli assault on Gaza. Just as was true for Israel’s bombing of Lebanon, it’s American bombs that — with the whole world watching — are blowing up children and mosques, along with Hamas militants, in Gaza. And it’s the American veto power that, time and again, blocks any U.N. action to stop these wars.

For those reasons, the pervasive opposition and anger around the world from the Israeli assault on Gaza is not only directed to Israel but — quite rationally and understandably — to America as well. Virtually the entire world, other than large segments of the American public, see Israeli actions as American actions. The attack on Gaza thus harms not only Israel’s reputation and credibility, but America’s reputation and credibility as well.

And for what? Even for those Americans who, for whatever their reasons, want endlessly to fixate on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, who care deeply and passionately about whether the Israelis or the Palestinians control this or that West Bank hill or village and want to spend the rest of their days arguing about who did what to whom in 1948 and 1967, what possible interests do Americans generally have in any of that, sufficient to involve ourselves so directly and vigorously on one side, and thereby subject ourselves to the significant costs — financial, reputational, diplomatic and security — from doing so?

It’s one thing to argue that Israel is being both wise and just by bombing the densely populated Gaza Strip. It’s another thing entirely to argue that the U.S. should use all of its resources to support Israel as it does so. Those are two entirely separate questions. Arguments insisting that the Gaza attack is good and right for Israel don’t mean that they are good and right for the U.S. Yet unstinting, unquestioning American support for whatever Israel does is just tacitly assumed in most of these discussions. The core assumption is that if it can be established that this is the right thing for Israel to do, then it must be the right thing for the U.S. to support it. The notion that the two countries may have separate interests — that this may be good for Israel to do but not for the U.S. to support — is the one issue that, above all else, may never be examined.

The “change” that many anticipate (or, more accurately, hope) that Obama will bring about is often invoked as a substance-free mantra, a feel-good political slogan. But to the extent it means anything specific, at the very least it has to entail that there will be a substantial shift in how America is perceived in the world, the role that we in fact play, the civil-liberties-erosions and militarized culture that inevitably arise from endlessly involving ourselves in numerous, hate-fueled military conflicts around the world. Our blind support for Israel, our eagerness to make all of its disputes our own disputes, our refusal to acknowledge any divergence of interests between us and that other country, our active impeding rather than facilitating of diplomatic resolutions between it and its neighbors are major impediments to any meaningful progress in those areas.

UPDATE: One related point: I have little appreciation for those who believe, one way or the other, that they can reliably predict what Obama is going to do — either on this issue or others. That requires a clairvoyance which I believe people lack.

Some argue that Obama has filled key positions with politicians who have a history of virtually absolute support for Israeli actions — Hillary Clinton, Joe Biden, Rahm Emanuel — because Obama intends to continue, more or less, the Bush policy of blind support for Israel. Others argue the opposite: that those appointments are necessary to vest the Obama administration with the credibility to take a more active role in pushing the Israelis to a negotiated settlement with the Palestinians, and that in particular, Clinton would not have left her Senate seat unless she believed she could finish Bill Clinton’s work and obtain for herself the legacy-building accomplishment of forging an agreement between the Israelis and Palestinians (this morning’s NYT hints at that scenario).

I personally find the latter theory marginally more persuasive, but there is simply no way to know until Obama is inaugurated. Whatever else is true, the more domestic political pressure is exerted demanding that the U.S. play a more even-handed and constructive role in facilitating a diplomatic resolution, the more likely it is that this will happen.

UPDATE II: Donna Edwards, the newly elected, netroots-supported Democratic Congresswoman from Maryland, who removed the standard establishment Democratic incumbent Al Wynn from office this year, has the following to say about Israel/Gaza:

I am deeply disturbed by this week’s escalation of hostilities in the Gaza Strip, as I have been by the ongoing rocket fire into southern Israel. To support Israel and to ease the humanitarian crisis facing the people of Gaza, the United States must work actively for an immediate ceasefire that ends the violence, stops the rockets, and removes the blockade of Gaza.

That’s much further than most national Democrats have been willing to go. And it illustrates that primary challenges can — slowly but meaningfully — change the face of the Democratic Party.

UPDATE III: An abridged version of this post was published in today’s Chicago Sun-Times, here.

Crowded hajj also an intense personal experience

Like most Muslims, I had been preparing my entire life to one day embark on the hajj, the pilgrimage to Mecca, that is one of the five Pillars of Islam. Yet when my wife and I set off to Saudi Arabia the first week of December, I could not have imagined what an intensely spiritual journey it would be.

By Aziz Junejo

Special to The Seattle Times

Like most Muslims, I had been preparing my entire life to one day embark on the hajj, the pilgrimage to Mecca, that is one of the five Pillars of Islam.

God says in the Quran:

And proclaim that the people shall observe hajj pilgrimage. They will come to you walking or riding on various exhausted (means of transportation). They will come from the farthest locations.

Quran, chapter Al Hajj, 22:27
When my wife and I set off to Saudi Arabia the first week of December, I could not have imagined what an intensely spiritual journey it would be.

During the annual hajj, Muslims from every corner of the planet gather in Mecca to participate in a five-day set of rituals to attain complete forgiveness from God for their sins. We arrived in Mecca at night. The warm desert air, carrying bits of sand, brushed my skin softly as I started to repeat the obligatory beginning to hajj:

Here I am, O God. Here I am.

That first night, at around 3 a.m., as we descended by bus from the granite mountains that surround Mecca, we got our first glimpse of the Kaaba, the most sacred site in Islam.

For more than a billion Muslims worldwide, the Kaaba is the holiest spot in the universe. This stone cube-shaped structure was built by Abraham as a place to worship God. When Muslims pray five times a day, they face the Kaaba, bowing in praise of the one God.

The Kaaba is today encircled by the Grand Mosque with its majestic minarets illuminated by glowing lights.

That same morning, I walked barefoot through the huge doors of the Grand Mosque with nothing but the required two pieces of plain white cloth wrapped around me. It is what all men wear during hajj.

The sight was both stunning and deeply moving: My fellow pilgrims represented all humanity’s faces and cultures, black, white, rich, poor. We spoke different languages, yet dressed all as one, a symbol of the human equality of hajj and of our unity before God.

I was overwhelmed as I observed thousands and thousands of Muslims circling the Kaaba — a sea of white cloths in smooth, slow motion. My tears expressed what words never could.

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Over five days, the majority of us traveled on foot among the ancient cities of Mina, Arafat, Muzdalifa, and then back to Mecca, simultaneously performing rituals of worship in unison. It’s how the hajj has been done for more than 1,400 years.

The Prophet Mohammad said “hajj is Arafat,” and that second day was, indeed, the pinnacle event. For as long as the sun was in the sky, I stood with 3 million other Muslims on the desert plain of Arafat, my hands raised toward the heavens asking God to forgive my sins. This was an intensely personal and emotional journey, and yet I was most emphatically not alone.

By the end of this day, Muslims believe, forgiveness is granted to those present who ask with sincerity.

That day in the valley of Arafat, I had a glimpse of Judgment Day, when, Muslims believe, humanity will be raised up and gathered in one place to petition God for Paradise.

There were many occasions where hajj proved to be my ultimate test of patience; from the seemingly endless waits, the gridlock, and the eventual fatigue from heat and miles of walking with sand-filled sandals among crowds of millions of people, but I continually uttered aloud, “Here I am, O God. Here I am,” with patience and perseverance.

Returning to Sea-Tac Airport and hugging my loved ones, I recognized how thankful I was for the opportunity to have experienced this life-changing event. Having completed the fifth and final pillar of my faith, I pray I have returned a more tolerant person, an improved person and a more thankful person.

Aziz Junejo is host of “Focus on Islam,” a weekly cable-television show, and a frequent speaker on Islam. Readers may send feedback to faithcolumns@seattletimes.com

Copyright © 2009 The Seattle Times Company

Letter of support to the people of Palestine from Jewish Rabbis

The letter has been signed off by Rabbi Moshe Dov Beck, Rabbi Yisroel Dovid Weiss, Rabbi Meir Hirsh and Rabbi Ahron Cohen.
Rabbi Yisroel Dovi Weiss
Rabbi Yisroel Dovi WeissImage source: Frummer Than Thou

Below are excerpts of the letter addressed to Dr. Mamoud Al-Zahar:

“We speak to you as the voice and the messengers of true Jewry — the Jewish people, true to the Almighty’s Torah, from around the world. Although we are limited in the means of expressing our deepest and true feelings, by the barriers of words, nevertheless, the Jewish people humbly offer to you and all of Gaza and the entire Palestine, a few words, to attempt to convey our deepest sorrow and heartfelt sympathy that we all feel for you, in this present tragic and traumatic time.

Great pain and sorrow has engulfed us by the tragic news of what has befallen you and your family, by the senseless murder of your dear son, Hussam and prior to this calamity, your other precious possession, your other son, Khaled.

We have not the words to console you, but our prayers are to the great Almighty, to console and comfort you and yours, upon this great tragedy. Amen…..

…True Jews around the world, of course including in the entire Palestine, never have and with the help of the Almighty, never will accept the ideology of Zionism and never will recognize the realization of its heretical plan, the state of “Israel”.

Our sole bond is with the Almighty and His Torah. Our sage’s state that we are required to emulate the Almighty, “just as the Almighty is compassionate, so are we to be compassionate.”

We always have and always will, with the help of the Almighty, remain unaffiliated and estranged from this aberration and the will of Satan, “Zionism and the state of Israel”….

…In the Torah it states, that transgressing against the Almighty, will not be successful. This state of “Israel”, according to the Almighty’s Torah, must and will eventually end.

Let us all pray and beseech Him, to bring about the total, peaceful and speedy dismantlement of this illegitimate state soon in our days. With the Almighty’s benevolence, may He make this happen, without any further pain or suffering. Amen….

…We implore you to convey the message to the people in Gaza and Palestine, that there are untold thousands of Jews worldwide and in Palestine who stand with you and who entirely oppose Zionism and the state of “Israel” and bear no responsibility for the actions of the Zionists. Educate your people that when you meet Jewish people, do not consider them your enemy. We all serve the one God.

Once again, we constantly pray — worry and hope for you all.

May we merit to see soon in our days, the total, speedy and peaceful dismantlement of the state of “Israel”. (Source: Neturei Karta)
Posted by Kashmiri Nomad at 18:53:00
Labels: Israel , Jews , Terrorism
Anonymous says:
Yesterday, 5:49:17 AM
“The truth of the matter is that until the 19th century, religious Jews, even those who wanted the establishment of a Jewish State, were opposed to such a State being established in the Holy Land.

Then the secular Jew Hertzl came along and convinced non-religious Jews and later even many religious Jews that Zionism–the establishment of a Jewish State in the Holy Land–was the way forward.

After World War II, Western nations, hoping to assuage their guilt over their inaction or even complicity in the Shoa, made it possible for Hertzl’s secular, “political Zionism” to be imposed on the people of the Holy Land.

Sixty years later, this blasphemy before the Face of Hashem continues to poison the Holy Land. The modern State of Israel is NOT Zion, is not the land to which Moses led the Hebrew Children. The secular government of modern Israel is usurper. It has no validity in the sight of the Almighty. The throne of King David is vacant and will remain so until the Messiah comes.

The radical settler movement claims to base their policies on the Torah are bogus. They twist and pervert true Judaism. Some of their Rabbis justify the massacre of innocents in Gaza by trying to invoke collective guilt.

The only times in the past when it was Hashem’s will that entire collectivities were to be destroyed, the Almighty himself acted directly or he sent a Prophet to reveal his commandment.

The savagery now being wrought by the Israeli Defense Forces is NOT a act of Hashem; it is a blasphemy and a violation of the Torah.

Our Father Abraham held himself to a very high standard. He feared that he might have killed innocent people during the wars he waged (described in Genesis 14). According to midrash Tanhuma:

“Abraham excoriated himself mercilessly saying, ‘Perhaps among those whom I have killed there were some righteous men…’ (Tanhuma 3:14 on Gen. 15:1 )

The concept of individual responsibility for wrongdoing is encapsulated in the prohibition towards the end of the Torah:

“The fathers shall not be put to death for the children, neither shall the children be put to death for the fathers; every man shall be put to death for his own sin.” (Deuteronomy 24:16)

This moral and religious norm appears elsewhere, in the Tanakh. For example, the prophet Ezekiel warns that:

“The soul that sins, it shall die. The son shall not bear the iniquity of the father, neither shall the father bear the iniquity of the son: the rigor the righteous shall be upon himself, and the wickedness of the wicked shall be upon himself alone.” (Ezekial 18:20)