Masorti Australasia http://www.masorti.org.au Masorti means traditional posterous.com Wed, 16 May 2012 08:36:59 -0700 Sydney Jewish Museum http://www.masorti.org.au/sydney-jewish-museum http://www.masorti.org.au/sydney-jewish-museum
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Sun, 13 May 2012 00:20:21 -0700 How big is Masorti in Israel? How big could it be? http://www.masorti.org.au/how-big-is-masorti-in-israel-how-big-could-it http://www.masorti.org.au/how-big-is-masorti-in-israel-how-big-could-it

Quote:"Of course, we still confront the fact the government provides more than $450 million a year to Orthodox programs and institutions and pays the salary of 3,000 or more Orthodox rabbis, while Masorti gets less than $50,000"

https://app.e2ma.net/app/view:CampaignPublic/id:33444.5638605/rid:


Dear Friends,
 
I’ve been saying for years that Masorti in Israel is a dynamic, growing movement.
Now, we have solid proof, hidden in plain sight.
 
Would you believe that more Israelis self-identify as Masorti and Reform than say they are Haredim? What if I told you there is independent data that 30% of all Israeli Jews have been to a Masorti or Reform service?
 
Where does this information come from?
 

You may recall an end of January Guttman Center-AviChai report about religiosity and tradition in Israel. There were press reports trumpeting the news that 80% of Israeli Jews believe in God and 76% eat kosher at home.
 
What Guttman-AviChai did not tell us, and we might not have known but for some thorough reporting by Shmuel Rosner in the Los Angeles Jewish Journal, was that 8% of Israeli Jews define themselves as Masorti (with a capital M) or Reform and only 7% say they are Haredi.
 
Lest you think there might be some ambiguity possible with the self-identity question, here is another one narrowly tailored and with no ambiguity:
 
“Did you ever attend/did not attend a service or religious ceremony in a Conservative or Reform synagogue?”
 

In response, 30% said they had attended. While most did so “rarely,” it is still quite a significant number. I should also note that although I am a proponent of the use of “Masorti” rather than “Conservative,” in this case the use of “Conservative” in the Hebrew removed any element of ambiguity about whether it was Masorti with a capital or lower-case mem.
 
One final note: the data collection for this survey was in 2009. Especially given the attention Masorti has garnered in the last two years, it would not be unrealistic to think the poll results would be even a bit more positive today.
 
Click here to read Rosner’s report, “Can you believe it? Israel has more Conservative and Reform Jews than Haredi?” (February 23, 2012).
 
Of course, we still confront the fact the government provides more than $450 million a year to Orthodox programs and institutions and pays the salary of 3,000 or more Orthodox rabbis, while Masorti gets less than $50,000. Without your financial support, we cannot continue to make progress.
 
...
 
Sincerely,
 
David H. Lissy
Executive Director & CEO
Masorti Foundation for Conservative Judaism in Israel 
 


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Thu, 10 May 2012 06:09:37 -0700 Question: Can the same set of glass dishes be used for both meat and milk foods? http://www.masorti.org.au/question-can-the-same-set-of-glass-dishes-be http://www.masorti.org.au/question-can-the-same-set-of-glass-dishes-be

Glass Dishes « A Question of Jewish Law

http://jewishlaw.wordpress.com/2012/01/17/meat-and-milk/


Question: Can the same set of glass dishes be used for both meat and milk foods?

Answer: The prohibition of mixing meat and milk is based on a verse from the Torah: You shall not boil a kid in its mother’s milk. [Ex 23:19; Lev. 34:26; Deut. 14:21] This verse is repeated three times – from which the Rabbis derived that there are three different prohibitions against mixing meat and milk: it is forbidden to eat meat and milk together; it is forbidden to cook meat and milk together even if you don’t eat it; and it is forbidden to profit from cooking meat and milk together, even if you are not the one doing the cooking or consuming the meal. This is one of the strictest prohibitions in the Torah.

The Rabbis understood that cooking utensils absorb the flavour of the food that is cooked in them. The reason for maintaining separate dishes and utensils for meat and for milk is to prevent any possible mixing of the flavours of meat and milk. If the same utensil was used for both meat and milk, it would inevitably lead to a transgression.

The Rabbis also understood that materials absorb and release flavours differently. This idea is deduced from a passage in the Torah: when the Israelites captured the Land of Midyan, they were commanded to purify the utensils they had taken. Moses commands the Children of Israel: Any article that can withstand fire – these you shall pass through fire and they shall be clean … and anything that cannot withstand fire you must pass through water. [Num 31:23] Based on this statement, intricate procedures were formulated to ‘kosher’ dishes that have become forbidden.

The status of glass is unique. Avot D’ Rabbi Natan, an early Tana’itic source, states that a glass vessel doesn’t absorb and doesn’t release. [Version A, Chapter 41] The majority of the Poskim consider glass to be completely non-absorbent. If we follow this reasoning, a glass dish can be used for both milk and meat because no flavour can be transferred. It is sufficient to give it a good wash between uses. This is the opinion of Joseph Karo in the Shulchan Aruch [OC 451:26], and is the standard practice of Sefardi Jews.

However, Moses Isserlis, [Poland, 16th century] when recording the Ashkenazi custom wrote: there are those who say that glass cannot even be [koshered by] immersion in boiling water, and this is the custom in Ashkenaz and in these lands. The Ashkenazi custom equates glass to earthenware, because glass is made from sand. Earthenware can never be koshered because it is fragile and would break if placed in boiling water. This is also a verse in the Torah the specifically says earthenware can’t be koshered. An earthen vessel in which it was boiled shall be broken … [Lev 6:21]. Therefore, Ashkenazi communities do not Kosher glass, and insist on separate dishes for meat and milk.

Finally, there is an Aggadic Source [Yalkut Shimoni, Esther 3] which mentions washing a vessel three times as the appropriate way to Kosher glass. Therefore, some authorities allow glass to be koshered if it is left to soak for three days, and washed each day.

When there are multiple established customs we follow the principle of Nahara Nahara u’Pashtei – literally, ‘each river flows down its own course’. Therefore, we do not affirm either practice, and the members of each community should follow their communal custom. On a practical note, when catering for a mixed public from different communities, one should have separate dishes for meat and milk. However, if glass dishes are inadvertently confused, one can take a lenient view when koshering them for reuse.

Rabbi Chaim Weiner

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    Sat, 28 Apr 2012 16:25:36 -0700 Article: IDF nabs Palestinian carrying 2 bombs - Israel News, Ynetnews http://www.masorti.org.au/article-idf-nabs-palestinian-carrying-2-bombs http://www.masorti.org.au/article-idf-nabs-palestinian-carrying-2-bombs

    http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-4221715,00.html

    Terror attack averted: Security forces arrest man in possession of two explosive devices at West Bank roadblock Saturday; suspect taken in for interrogation

    Itamar Fleischman: Latest Update:  04.28.12, 21:14 / Israel News

    Terror attack averted: IDF troops nabbed Saturday evening a Palestinian in possession of two explosive devices near the Hawara roadblock in the West Bank, south of Nablus.

     The bombs were later blown up by sappers in a controlled detonation. The Palestinian terror suspect was taken in for interrogation by security authorities.

     Saturday’s arrest marks the latest in a string of incidents involving Palestinian terrorists detained in possession of arms.

     Last Saturday, Border Guard and Judea and Samaria police forces thwarted a terror attack in the area after detaining two Palestinians armed with four pipe bombs, a handgun and some ammunition. The two suspects disembarked from a taxi at a West Bank junction and aroused the suspicion of policemen on routine operations at the site.

     Some three weeks ago, another terrorist was detained in possession of seven improvised explosive devices, three knives and rifle bullets. The suspect was nabbed while going through a West Bank roadblock.

     Officials estimated that the Palestinian planned to carry out attacks against Israeli civilians or soldiers during the Passover vacation

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    Thu, 26 Apr 2012 05:34:02 -0700 Good one Google... http://www.masorti.org.au/good-one-google http://www.masorti.org.au/good-one-google
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    Thu, 26 Apr 2012 02:59:03 -0700 Full Recording - Israeli Declaration of Independence - David Ben Gurion http://www.masorti.org.au/full-recording-israeli-declaration-of-indepen http://www.masorti.org.au/full-recording-israeli-declaration-of-indepen

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    Wed, 25 Apr 2012 04:57:00 -0700 Chag Atzma'ut Sameach & 2nd annual MERCAZ Olami Awards http://www.masorti.org.au/chag-atzmaut-sameach-2nd-annual-mercaz-olami http://www.masorti.org.au/chag-atzmaut-sameach-2nd-annual-mercaz-olami
     
     
     

    Yom Ha'atzmaut 2012
    April 25, 2012 ~ 3 Iyar, 5772

    Shalom, 

     

    As we celebrate Yom Ha'atzmaut this year, the 64th year since the declaration of the State of Israel, I'd like to take a moment to acknowledge the hard work and tremendous energies of the individuals who contributed to Zionism and building of the State. From the times of Herzl and David Ben Gurion until today, the Zionist enterprise has been reliant on those who subscribe to its values, and seek to carry out its purpose. 

     

    In the Masorti/Conservative movement, this is no less true; Zionism and the State of Israel continue to be at the center of our core values. Our movement could not be where it is today without these values, as well as the spirit and passion of those who work so hard to promote and actualize our Zionist ideals. 

     

    It is for this reason that MERCAZ Olami once again will recognize the work of people who do so much for Israel and the place of Israel within our movement. We add to the simcha of Yom Ha'atzma'ut by announcing the names of the three recipients of the MERCAZ Olami Awards. 

    MERCAZ Olami is proud to recognize the work of 
    Mr Claude Machline 
    Mrs Evelyn Seelig 
    Rabbi Yoav Ende 

     

    who will receive the second annual 
    MERCAZ Olami Awards 
    At a ceremony on Tuesday, June 19th, 2012 
    כ''ט סיון תשע''ב 
    At the Schechter Institute, Jerusalem

    Mazal tov to our award recipients.
    Chag Atzma'ut Same'ach,

    Rabbi Tzvi Graetz
    Executive Director
    Masorti Olami & MERCAZ Olami
    About the MERCAZ Olami Awards recipients
     
    CLAUDE MACHLINE
    Claude was born in Paris in 1941 to a Russian father and a mother of Polish descent. In April 1942, Claude and his parents escaped from Paris, living as refugees in parts of southern and central France, returning to Paris upon the liberation of France by the allies. The Machlines lost much of their family, and all of their possessions but picked themselves up and started again.
    Claude attended school in the Jewish quarter of Paris, and afterwards went to the University of Sciences of Paris to study Dentistry. He then changed paths and worked first for an architecture company and later built a successful career in a large, Jewish owned, international grain brokers.
    Claude's search for a meaningful Jewish life began when his first child was born. Even though his great-grandfather had been a Rabbi in Ukraine, Claude admits that he had little or no Jewish knowledge, but he and his wife Annette were determined to ensure that their children had strong Jewish identity and education.
    Claude at first joined a Reform congregation in Paris and helped it to become the second largest in the country. However, in 1988, the Machlines along with 7 other families founded Adath Shalom, the first Masorti community in France. Today, Adath Shalom has more than 500 family members, with Jewish and Zionist programming for members of all ages.
    Claude was a founder of Masorti Europe, a regional body for the co-operation of Masorti communities in 10 different European countries, and continues to be an Honorary President.
    Claude is a member of the Zionist Federation of France, and has worked very hard to ensure that the Zionist Federation and Zionist programming in Masorti kehillot in France are always on the top of the agenda. Claude has represented MERCAZ France as Zionist Congresses, the Va'ad HaPoel, and is a member of the Jewish Agency Board of Governors. He also currently serves as the secretary of the Executive Operations Committee of Masorti Olami.
    EVELYN SEELIG
    Evelyn is a life-long member of the Conservative/Masorti movement, from her involvement as a youngster at Temple Emanuel in Englewood, NJ to her charter membership of Temple Beth Torah, Westbury, NY where she is still an active member of the Board of Directors after serving as its third Sisterhood President.
    She had various leadership roles on the international level of Women's League for Conservative Judaism which led to her being elected as the President of the organization from 1994-98. She served as President of MERCAZ USA, the Zionist Organization of the Conservative Movement from 1998-2002. During this time she was significantly involved in the process of elections for the 34th Zionist Congress, ensuring that the MERCAZ delegation was stronger than ever before. This delegation worked to ensure that funding from the World Zionist Organization and Jewish Agency for Zionist activity in Israel and around the world was no longer given only to Orthodox implementing bodies.
    Evelyn has sat on the Boards of the Jewish Theological Seminary, Jewish Braille Institute, Jewish Council for Public Affairs, United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism and the Jewish Agency for Israel, among others. She currently serves as Vice President of the American Zionist Movement, and on the Boards of the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society, MERCAZ USA and MERCAZ Olami. She has served as a delegate to World Zionist Congresses beginning in 1987, and continues to attend Congresses, the Va'ad HaPoel and Jewish Agency Assembly meetings as a committed Zionist. She has a Bachelor of Arts degree from New York University in Banking and Finance and worked on Wall Street as a Municipal Bond Analyst. She and her husband Burton have two children and one grandchild.
    YOAV ENDE
    Yoav was born in Israel to an American father and an Iraqi mother and grew up in Herziliya. He attended a TALI school, was an active participant, counselor and coordinator of NOAM (the Masorti youth movement), a camper and staff member of Camp Ramah NOAM in Israel and served in the Israel Defense Forces as a member of a NOAM army unit in the Nachal brigade.
    Rabbi Ende was ordained by the Schechter Rabbinical Seminary in Jerusalem in December 2008. He also has a B.A. in Jewish Philosophy and General Studies from Haifa University, and an M.A. in Conflict Resolution and Management from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
    Rabbi Ende has worked extensively in formal and informal education, with both youth and adults from different sectors of Israeli society. He served for four years as student Rabbi in the Neve Hanna Children's Village in Kiryat Gat, where he was responsible for the full range of Jewish programming for the children,"greening" the children's home,  training the staff and teaching Judaic texts. He also worked for two years as a coordinator of field activities for Rabbis for Human Rights using nature as a way to bridge gaps between nations. In July 2008, Rabbi Ende became the Director of the Hannaton Educational Center and the Rabbi of Kibbutz Hannaton, a Masorti pluralistic kibbutz in the Lower Galilee where he lives today. Due to his efforts and charismatic leadership, the kibbutz is undergoing a revitalization process. Forty new families have now joined the kibbutz and are working together to create a Masorti, pluralistic, spiritual, ecological community. He is spearheading a number of new, innovative programs at the Hannaton Educational Center with the goal of creating a center of pluralistic, and environmental learning in the Galilee. Rabbi Ende represents MERCAZ Olami on the Directorate of Keren Kayemet L'Yisrael (JNF). Rabbi Ende and his wife, Shira, are the proud parents of three children.
     
     

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    Thu, 19 Apr 2012 15:24:38 -0700 An inspiring image... http://www.masorti.org.au/an-inspiring-image http://www.masorti.org.au/an-inspiring-image
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    Thu, 19 Apr 2012 15:23:00 -0700 An image to contemplate... http://www.masorti.org.au/an-image-to-contemplate http://www.masorti.org.au/an-image-to-contemplate
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    Thu, 19 Apr 2012 15:14:10 -0700 Yom HaShoah in Israel http://www.masorti.org.au/yom-hashoah-in-israel http://www.masorti.org.au/yom-hashoah-in-israel

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    Thu, 19 Apr 2012 15:08:03 -0700 JTA: "Israel’s Masorti movement to ordain gays and lesbians as rabbis " http://www.masorti.org.au/jta-israels-masorti-movement-to-ordain-gays-a http://www.masorti.org.au/jta-israels-masorti-movement-to-ordain-gays-a

    April 19, 2012

    http://www.jta.org/news/article/2012/04/19/3093281/masorti-to-ordain-gay-and-...

    JERUSALEM (JTA) — Gay and lesbian students will be ordained as Conservative rabbis in Israel.

    The Board of Trustees of the Schechter Rabbinical Seminary voted Thursday night to accept gay and lesbian students for ordination beginning with the 2012-13 academic year. The Conservative movement in Israel is known as Masorti.  

    A seminary statement said the decision comes following a “long process.”

    “The Schechter Rabbinical Seminary views the serious process leading to this decision as an example of confronting social dilemmas within the framework of tradition and halachah,” or Jewish law, Hanan Alexander, chair of the seminary’s Board of Trustees, said in the statement. “This decision highlights the institution’s commitment to uphold halachah in a pluralist and changing world.”

    Students are ordained by a beit din, or rabbinical court, made up of three members of the Rabbinic Advisory Committee of the seminary, all of whom are members of the Rabbinical Assembly of the Masorti/Conservative movement. The beit din members are chosen by the candidate and subject to the approval of the seminary’s dean. They have different opinions regarding the ordination of gay and lesbian students, according to the seminary. 

    “This unique mechanism is an expression of halachic pluralism, one of the founding principles of SRS,” the seminary said in its statement. “The Seminary is a religious institution of the Masorti/Conservative Movement, bound by Halacha, whose inclusive approach allows for a variety of Halachic opinions.”


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    Wed, 18 Apr 2012 09:13:18 -0700 Acknowledging Israeli Olympic Massacre http://www.masorti.org.au/acknowledging-israeli-olympic-massacre http://www.masorti.org.au/acknowledging-israeli-olympic-massacre https://www.change.org/petitions/jacques-rogge-minute-of-silence-at-the-2012-...

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    Thu, 05 Apr 2012 15:12:42 -0700 Tips for a Healthier Pesach http://www.masorti.org.au/tips-for-a-healthier-pesach http://www.masorti.org.au/tips-for-a-healthier-pesach http://kemachtorah.wordpress.com/2012/03/30/the-kemach-torah-2012-passover-gu...

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    Thu, 05 Apr 2012 13:01:37 -0700 Malmö's Mayor Blames Jews for Wave of Anti-Semitism – Tablet Magazine http://www.masorti.org.au/malmos-mayor-blames-jews-for-wave-of-anti-sem http://www.masorti.org.au/malmos-mayor-blames-jews-for-wave-of-anti-sem http://www.tabletmag.com/jewish-news-and-politics/96146/swedens-damn-jew-prob...


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    Thu, 05 Apr 2012 12:56:21 -0700 At Passover, Political Repression in China Casts a Shadow Over Every Seder Table – Tablet Magazine http://www.masorti.org.au/at-passover-political-repression-in-china-cas http://www.masorti.org.au/at-passover-political-repression-in-china-cas http://www.tabletmag.com/jewish-life-and-religion/96090/fighting-pharaohs-in-...


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    Mon, 02 Apr 2012 04:45:42 -0700 Huffington Post: RABBI BRADLEY SHAVIT ARTSON - Pesach http://www.masorti.org.au/huffington-post-rabbi-bradley-shavit-artson-p http://www.masorti.org.au/huffington-post-rabbi-bradley-shavit-artson-p

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    Thu, 29 Mar 2012 19:27:23 -0700 Observances : Exhibition at Sydney Jewish Museum http://www.masorti.org.au/observances-exhibition-at-sydney-jewish-museu http://www.masorti.org.au/observances-exhibition-at-sydney-jewish-museu This clipping is from the March 30 issue of The Sydney Morning Herald Digital Edition.
    How one observer can click into human souls
    SMH - Friday, 30 Mar 2012 - Page 9

    AT 55, Philippines-born Melbourne photographer Emmanuel Santos is still searching for order out of chaos and what is inside human beings to make us “criminals or saviours or heroes” . His aim, usually behind a 1950s Rolleiflex twin-lens reflex loaded with black and white film, is not to ponder guilt in war but to promote healing.

    Practising tribal animist beliefs among his Igorot people in the village of Sagada in the northern Philippines , Santos underwent baptism to get an education with a Catholic missionary school but, at 19, a series of discussions with a visiting Israeli couple inspired a curious proposition: perhaps he had Jewish blood. Santos’s theological and historical studies had taught him that marrano refugees – Jews forced to convert to Christianity during the Spanish Inquisition – had fled the Iberian Peninsula and come to the Philippines , where they practised an underground Judaism that appeared to have influenced animism. “A lot of our beliefs and traditions were based on ceremonies and rituals pertaining to the God of nature, the God of sun, wind, water, rain,” Santos recalls in his east St Kilda studio. “All of this I recognised has an equivalent, be it in Greek mythology or in Judaic traditions in the mystical realm.” Having migrated to Australia in 1982 with his Australian wife, Suzanne, Santos set off to document the Jewish diaspora. Observances, now showing at the Sydney Jewish Museum in Darlinghurst , covers 25 years of his work, which has been shown in many countries including Israel, Italy, the Czech Republic, and the US. In one image, two teenage girls, daughters of Ethiopian “falashas” or wanderers brought to Kiryat Malakhi in southern Israel and the Israeli Government’s Operation Moses rescue destination in 1984, peer out from under a white prayer shawl. The material forms a heart shape. Santos’s inspiration to pursue photography came from an unlikely person. Born in 1957, Santos was always aware growing up that his wider family and community had been traumatised during the Japanese occupation of the Philippines from 1942 to 1945. He completed an engineering degree to satisfy his parents’ dreams but feared becoming an engineer and dealing with the “corrupt officials and institutions during the Marcos era” . He met Masao Endo, arguably Japan’s leading war photographer, who was covering the Philippines tribal wars. In Endo he found someone who could discuss photography as philosophy, a conduit for inspiring better human beings. In his early 20s, Santos began work as an official photographer for the United Nations High Commission for Refugees in the Philippines, hearing boat peoples’ stories of torture , rape and escape. “I thought, maybe as a human being if I start to do something good, it will then create an exponential reaction; a molecular reaction among people I encounter.” iPad — more pictures Observances is at the Sydney Jewish Museum until July 15.
    Copyright © 2012 The Sydney Morning Herald

    Smh-friday30mar2012-page9

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    Tue, 27 Mar 2012 15:15:25 -0700 ZC NSW: Israel Update 28 Mar http://www.masorti.org.au/zc-nsw-israel-update-28-mar http://www.masorti.org.au/zc-nsw-israel-update-28-mar
    Hasbara Israel Updates

    From Dr. Ron Wiseman | Board of Directors | Zionist Council of NSW

    Hasbara20header1

    Zionist Council of NSW | Level 3, 146 Darlinghurst Road, Darlinghurst NSW 2010

    t: +61 2 9360 6300 | f: +61 2 9360 6004 | e: info@zionistcouncil.com.au

    w: www.zionistcouncil.com.au | fb: www.facebook.com/ZCNSW | b: www.ozi-zion.com

    N. Korean satellite launch pretext for Iran missile test

    The satellite that North Korea intends to launch into space next month is apparently merely a front, with the real reason behind the planned launch being to test a long-range ballistic missile for another country – apparently Iran. This, at least, is what defense officials in the West have come to believe. The launch is also intended to possibly test a new launcher.

    North Korea has moved a long-range rocket to a launching site, apparently determined to press ahead with its plan to launch a satellite in defiance of international condemnation, the South Korean military said Sunday, The New York Times reported. The Times article said that the North Koreans moved the main body of the Unha-3 rocket to the newly built launching station in Dongchang-ri, a village in northwest North Korea.

    The satellite launch is expected to take place between April 12 and 16. North Korea has claimed that the launch is for “peaceful purposes only,” and to celebrate the April 15 centenary of the birth of its founder, Kim Il Sung. Kim’s grandson, Kim Jong Un, has led the nation of 24 million since his father, Kim Jong Il, died in December. North Korea has also claimed that the launch will not affect its neighbors and that it wasn’t violating an agreement with the West under which North Korea has agreed to suspend its nuclear program in exchange for food shipments. Within the agreement, North Korea has agreed to halt the testing of ballistic missiles and to stop enriching uranium at its nuclear facility in Yongbyon.

    Pyongyan's neighbor and nemesis, Seoul, warned Monday that it might shoot down parts of the North Korean rocket if they violate South Korean territory, as worries about what Washington calls a long-range missile test overshadowed an international nuclear security summit, AP reported on Monday.

    Western security officials now believe that sending the satellite into space is only a pretext for the primary goal of the launch, and that the actual purpose is to test a long-range ballistic missile belonging to another country. Suspicions, as stated, have fallen on Iran.

    The Islamic Republic has close ties to North Korea, depending on it during different stages of its nuclear and long-range missile program. Based on this assessment, Iran is concerned that testing its long-range missiles from its own territory will be interpreted by the West as another sign that it is advancing its nuclear weapons program, including an accelerated effort to develop its arsenal of long-range missiles.

    Iran’s arsenal presently consists of a few hundred “Shihab” long-range missiles, which have a range of 1,500 kilometers (932 miles). In recent years Iran has developed its “Sejil” missiles, which according to estimates by military experts have a range of 2,500 kilometers (approximately 1,553 miles).

    Last November an explosion that occurred at a missile base outside of Tehran killed 17 people, including a senior commander described as the architect of the Islamic Republic’s missile program. At the recent Herzliya Conference Israeli Vice Prime Minister and Strategic Affairs Minister Moshe (Bogey) Ya’alon revealed that the explosion took place at the same time the Iranians were conducting tests on a missile with a range of 10,000 kilometers (approximately 6,214 miles). That missile, Ya'alon said, was designed to reach the U.S.

    Three years ago Iran launched its first “homemade” satellite into space, carried on the “Safir” long-range missile. According to analyses conducted in the West, the Safir is predicated on technology used to build the Shihab, which itself is predicated on technology from the North Korean “Nodong” long-range missile.

    Western defense officials believe that the upcoming launch is a continuation of Iran and North Korea’s cooperation. According to this assessment, North Korea’s new president, Kim Jong Un, is seeking to demonstrate to his people that he is no less hawkish or determined than his father, but wouldn’t risk suspending the nuclear-freeze-for-food agreement with the West unless a significant economic interest convinced him otherwise.

    According to the assessment, the launch is part of an existing comprehensive agreement that North Korea has obligated itself to, and that its concern about losing income from the deal with Iran has forced it to announce the satellite launch, despite unease over open confrontation with the West.

    The United States has expressed outrage at the intended launch. U.S. President Barack Obama and South Korean President Lee Myung-bak urged North Korea in a joint news conference Sunday to immediately stop its launch plans, warning they would deal sternly with any provocation launch. The United States maintains the launch amounts to a test of North Korea's long-range rocketry.

    Obama also reiterated his warning to Iran, which the U.S. and its allies contend is defying its international obligations by pursuing an illicit nuclear program.

    "Iran's leaders must understand that there is no escaping the choice before it. Iran must act with the seriousness and sense of urgency that this moment demands," Obama said. "Iran must meet its obligations."

    Facing down Iran and North Korea, Obama said a "new international norm" was emerging to deal with the two nations' intransigence. "Treaties are binding. Rules will be enforced. And violations will have consequences," Obama said. "Because we refuse to consign ourselves to a future where more and more regimes possess the world's most deadly weapons."

    Israel severs ties with UN Human Rights Council

    Following its decision Monday to cut off all ties with the UN Human Rights Council, the Foreign Ministry must now draft guidelines regarding what this entails and how long the ban will be in effect, a diplomatic source said Monday.

    One issue that needs to be determined is whether Israel would work through other friendly countries on the council, such as the US, when it wants its input to be heard.

    Foreign Minister Avigdor Liberman decided at a meeting of the ministry’s top staff Monday morning to sever ties with the UNHRC, following the body’s decision last Thursday by a vote of 36-1, with 10 abstentions, to dispatch a fact-finding team to Israel to probe the impact of the settlements on Palestinian human rights. Only the US voted against the move.

    From now on, a senior diplomatic official said, Israel’s ambassador to the UN organizations in Geneva will not appear before the council, answer any of its phone calls or cooperate with Human Rights Commissioner Navi Pillay in any way.

    Israel will also bar the settlement fact-finding mission from entering Israel.

    Israel’s ambassador to the UN is not going to be withdrawn from Geneva, however, because there are a number of other UN organizations there that Israel does fully cooperate with and will continue to do so.

    In addition, the ministry decided that efforts will be made to convince other supportive countries on the council – first and foremost the US – to cut ties with the organization as well, even though this seems unlikely. One senior official said that even if success was not guaranteed, an attempt must still be made.

    A Foreign Ministry spokesman said Israel summoned on Monday the ambassadors of several of the countries that voted for the factfinding commission to protest their support for the move. He would not specify which countries were involved, beyond saying that they were the countries with whom Israel has friendly ties, and from whom Israel expected “more.”

    Austria and Belgium – which are EU members – and Norway and Switzerland – which are not – were the four western European countries that voted for the measure. By contrast, EU countries Italy, Spain, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland and Romania all abstained.

    Although Israel decided to cut ties with the council, no decision has been made as yet regarding what sanctions to take against the Palestinian Authority, which initiated this action.

    Amid speculation that Israel may once again cut off monthly tax revenues that it transfers to the PA, as it did following UNESCO’s decision to accept the Palestinians into the organization in November, one senior diplomatic official said that there were other measures that could be taken. He did not elaborate.

    The official said it was clear that the PA-originated push for the fact-finding mission was part of the Palestinian strategy of unilateralism, and that having given up on negotiations, the PA is now trying to take a series of unilateral steps that would push Israel into a corner. They are focusing on the settlement issue, the official said, because they view it as Israel’s “Achilles heel” in the international arena.

    At a certain point, the official said, Israel would need to reevaluate its whole policy toward the diplomatic process with the Palestinians, because the current track was not working.

    UN Human Rights Council President Laura Dupuy Lasserre, meanwhile, said she had not received official confirmation of Israel’s decision to sever ties, though she had seen a number of press reports on the matter.

    “If it is indeed the case, this would be most regrettable,” she said. “The decision to dispatch a fact-finding mission, one of more than 40 resolutions approved by the Human Rights Council at the end of its session last week, revealed widespread cross-regional support with only one of the 47 member states of the Council voting against the decision.”

    Lasserre said it was in Israel’s “interest” to cooperate with the fact-finding panel so it could “explain its own policies and actions to the independent commissioners once they are appointed.”

    She said the council “always valued Israel’s participation.”

    Father and five children killed in Rehovot house fire

    A father and his five children, ages 2 to 12, died Monday night when a blaze erupted in a caravan in Rehovot. Two more people were taken to the hospital for treatment for smoke inhalation.

    The dead were identified as Guy Shire, 38, and his children Eliav, 12, Eviatar, 8, Amitai, 7, Shira, 3, and Itamar, 2. The mother of the family, who stood outside calling for help, did not suffer any physical injuries.

    Neighbors said the father tried to save his children but got trapped in the blaze. The house, at 61 Israel Najara street, was already engulfed in flames when firefighters arrived. According to reports, the fire was in a caravan in the yard of the mother’s parents home in Rehovot.

    Neither parents was present when the fire broke out and police announced they will form a special investigation team to probe how the fire started and whether the caravan was up to fire code.

    Initial reports indicated the blaze may have been sparked by an electrical fault.

    “The building was not fit for habitation,” fire chief Shahar Ayalon told Channel 10 Monday night. “It lacked basic fire safety protection.”

    Initial reports indicated that the small rooms and large number of mattresses helped the fire spread. Fire official Gamliel Fadida said it seemed the six died from smoke inhalation.

    “All of them were dead when we found them,” the general-manager of rescue service Magen David Adom, Eli Bean, said at the scene. “There was nothing for us to do but formally pronounce them dead…” The fire “burned down the entire house,” he said.

    The family was reportedly ultra-Orthodox. The father is an optician and the mother a teacher in a local girls school, according to media reports.

    The funerals are scheduled to take place mid morning In the Rehovot city cemetery.

    Israeli diplomat evacuated from Morocco following anti-Israel protest

    An Israeli diplomat had to be evacuated from the Moroccan capital of Rabat on Sunday after tens of thousands of locals demonstrated in “support of Jerusalem” and burned Israeli flags in front of the parliament building where the diplomat was attending a conference.

    Israeli delegate to the European Parliament in Brussels, David Saranga, was attending the annual EUROMED conference, a joint forum of European and Mediterranean countries, on Sunday when protesters marched toward the Moroccan parliament building, waving Palestinians flags in the air and even burning Israeli ones on the ground.

    Days before the start of the conference, Morocco’s Islamist ruling Justice and Development Party (PJD) declared a boycott on the conference to protest the Israeli diplomat’s participation. Aziz Ammari, PJD’s parliament head, told Al Arabiya that his party has a long-held position of boycotting “all forms of activities with Israel.” Ammari was quoted by Al Arabiya as telling Morocco’s Hespress website that his party “will not participate in any parliament activity attended by the Zionist entity.”

    Saranga said on Monday that as “unpleasant” as the protests were, they were no reason for him not to return to Morocco in the future, adding that he hoped Rabat and Jerusalem could one day enjoy proper diplomatic relations.

    The Israeli diplomat said that countries choosing to boycott future EUROMED conferences because of the participation of Israeli representatives could miss out on an “amazing project that promotes partnership in the area, an important and constructive process, which is a benefit for all sides.”

    “We have to remember that [EUROMED] is an international forum, composed of European and Mediterranean countries. No countries that want to be a part of this process can deny any other member,” Saranga said, “So I hope Israel’s partners in this international forum will understand the benefits of cooperation with all members.”

    The massive protest, which numbered tens of thousands of demonstrators, peaked following several days of quieter protests and calls for Saranga’s expulsion from Morocco. According to Reuters, at least 40,000 people took to the streets as part of the march organized by the Al-Adl Wal Ihsan (Justice and Spirituality) group. However, organizers said some 100,000 participated in the demonstration.

    At the end of the conference, security forces opted to escort Saranga out via a back door, due to concerns that the mob outside would try to attack him as he exited the building.

    Saranga was then taken under heavy security to the airport, where he opted not to wait for his scheduled flight back to Brussels that night, but instead boarded an earlier flight to Paris, connecting back to his Brussels office in Europe.

    Palestinian Authority Arab Stabs Soldier

    A Ramallah area Arab stabbed and lightly wounded an IDF soldier Monday night during a counterterrorist operation. The combat unit shot and wounded three terrorists.

    The wounded soldier received first aid at the scene, east of the Palestinian Authority's headquarters in Ramallah, adjacent to the Jewish community of Beit El and several miles north of Jerusalem.

    The IDF was conducting a maneuver in a Ramallah area village when a gang attacked. It was not clear if the terrorists had planned an ambush or acted spontaneously during the IDF operation for arresting suspects.

    The wounded terrorists were treated at an Israeli hospital, under guard of security personnel.

    The Palestinian Authority is committed to eradicating the terrorist infrastructure in the Ramallah area, but the IDF frequently has to conduct nighttime maneuvers to arrest terrorists. The maneuvers usually are coordinated with the Palestinian Authority.

    Monday night's stabbing follows almost daily knife attacks by Palestinian Authority terrorists on Israeli civlians and terrorists, and the escalatoin has accompanied continung incitement against in PA media aganst Israel.

    Iron Dome Deployed in Greater Tel Aviv Area

    For the first time since entering operational use, the Iron Dome battery was positioned in the greater Tel Aviv area on Monday.

    According to a report on the Israel Defense website, the position of the battery is for training purposes, to familiarize IDF soldiers stationed in the area with the system, and to adapt the system to the area’s requirements.

    In a statement, the IDF Spokesperson Unit said, “The Iron Dome system is in the process of operational reception. Within the framework of this process, the battery is periodically positioned in various locations across the country. Currently, the system is positioned in the greater Tel Aviv area as part of the operational plan.”

    According to the report in Israel Defense, the training that starts in central Israel this week was supposed to take place more than a month ago, but was postponed due to the escalation in Israel's south.

    During the recent escalation, the Iron Dome displayed its capabilities with a high rate of rocket interceptions. It reportedly intercepted 90 percent of missile attacks on urban centers.

    Terrorists fired more than 200 rockets at southern Israel during the week of escalation. Periodic rocket and mortar fire at southern Israel continues even when Gaza terrorists agree to a ‘ceasefire’.

    Jailed Terrorist Barghouti Calls for ‘Resistance’

    Palestinian Authority terrorist Marwan Barghouti, considered the most popular PA leader, has called from his jail cell for “resistance,” the Arab code word for violence.

    In a statement released Monday and published on Arab websites, Barghouti said, "The launch of large-scale popular resistance at this stage serves the cause of our people.” He also called for "stopping all forms of security and economic coordination (with Israel) in all areas immediately."

    He is serving five life sentences for planning and involvement in some of the worse terrorist attacks during the Intifadas and was convicted for responsibility in the murder of dozens of Jews. Several Israel governments have resisted attempts by Israeli political and academic leaders to free him.

    “His leadership and charisma were seen as a driving force behind the last intifada, or uprising, against Israeli occupation launched in late 2000,” wrote the Bethlehem-based Ma'an news agency.

    Barghouti is a leading figure in the Fatah movement, headed by PA Chairman Mahmoud Abbas, and he occasionally has been mentioned as a candidate to replace Abbas.

    "Stop marketing the illusion that there is a possibility of ending the occupation and achieving a state through negotiations after this vision has failed miserably," wrote Barghouti in a message that was to be read at a rally in Ramallah, the headquarters of the PA.

    Barghouti previously has said he urged "civil disobedience” and not violence, but Palestinian Authority media incitement have left the “street” to understand “resistance” as meaning attacks on Jews in the name of a PA state.

    Ma'an wrote, “The call to action comes at a combustible period in the West Bank, occupied by Israel since a war in 1967, as economic malaise, moribund diplomacy, and simmering popular discontent bode ill for any peaceful breakthroughs."

    “Some fear that planned Palestinian commemorations of an annual protest against Israeli land confiscations on Friday, including marches to Jerusalem, could erupt in violence.

    "A 40-day long hunger strike by female detainee Hana Shalabi and a similar campaign by dozens of other Palestinians in Israeli custody are also firing popular anger.”

    Israel Takes On J Street

    A senior Israeli diplomat told a silent J Street audience Monday that unlike Americans, Israelis face life and death decisions every day.

    Baruch Binah, Deputy Chief of Israel’s Mission in Washington, spoke to the annual J Street conference after a government policy of shunning the group, which has been a constant critic of the Netanyahu government and which promotes “engagement” with Hamas and Iran.

    His appearance brought a round of applause, but the crowd quickly sank into silence after Binah began to speak. “Unlike your secure existence at these happy shores, at our borders there are missiles and mayhem,” Binah told an unresponsive crowd.

    “Unlike you, sometimes we have to make decisions of life and death. We welcome your opinion, but we must pay the ultimate price. We have no margins of error. We need you to stand with us."

    Former Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, who faces a series of indictments and court hearings on charges of bribery and abusing public trust, was the star speaker and reiterated his belief that Palestinian Authority Chairman Mahmoud Abbas is a “peace partner” for Israel.

    J Street’s choice of Olmert to deliver the keynote address was roundly criticized in an article in the left-wing Forward, not because of Olmert’s legal scandals but because he “orchestrated the punishing siege on Gaza, launched two wars, killing 2,500 Lebanese and Palestinians and pulverizing their infrastructure.”

    Nicolas Pelham, a journalist for The Economist, also noted that J Street’s invitation to Olmert gave a platform to “a man indicted for corruption” and who “has not come to J Street to promote the cause of peace. More likely, he has come to whitewash his reputation and airbrush his past. Israel’s public will see through the charade, even if J Street, in a far-off fantasyland, cheers.”

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    Thu, 22 Mar 2012 13:22:12 -0700 Zionist Council of NSW: Israel Update 23 Mar http://www.masorti.org.au/zionist-council-of-nsw-israel-update-23-mar http://www.masorti.org.au/zionist-council-of-nsw-israel-update-23-mar
     Israel Updates

    From Dr. Ron Wiseman | Board of Directors | Zionist Council of NSW

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    French siege ends as shot to head kills Toulouse gunman

    A 23-year-old gunman who said al-Qaida inspired him to kill seven people in France died from a gunshot wound to the head on Thursday as he scrambled out of a ground-floor window during a gunbattle with elite police commandos.

    Mohamed Merah, a Frenchman of Algerian origin, died in a hail of bullets at the end of a 30-hour standoff with police at his apartment in southern France and after confessing to killing three soldiers, three Jewish children and a rabbi.

    He was firing frantically at police from a Colt 45 pistol as he climbed through his apartment window onto a verandah and toppled to the ground some 5 feet (1.5 meters) below, in a suburb of the city of Toulouse, according to prosecutors and police.

    Two police commandos were injured in the operation - a dramatic climax to a siege which riveted the world after the killings shook France a month before a presidential election.

    "At the moment when a video probe was sent into the bathroom, the killer came out of the bathroom, firing with extreme violence," Interior Minister Claude Gueant told reporters at the scene.

    "In the end, Mohamed Merah jumped from the window with his gun in his hand, continuing to fire. He was found dead on the ground."

    Paris prosecutor Francois Molins said Merah had taken refuge in his bathroom, wearing a bullet-proof vest under his traditional black djellaba robe, as elite police blasted his flat through the night with flash grenades.

    Police investigators were working to establish whether Merah had worked alone or with accomplices, Molins said, adding that Merah had filmed his three shooting attacks with a camera hung from his body and had indicated that he had posted clips online.

    The most disturbing image of the attacks showed him grabbing a young girl at a Jewish school on Monday by the hair and shooting her in the head before escaping on a scooter.

    The killings have raised questions about whether there were intelligence failures, what the attacks mean for social cohesion and race relations in France and how the aftermath will affect President Nicolas Sarkozy's slim chances of re-election.

    Sarkozy called Merah's killings terrorist attacks and announced a crackdown on people following extremist websites.

    "From now on, any person who habitually consults websites that advocate terrorism or that call for hate and violence will be punished," he said in a statement. "France will not tolerate ideological indoctrination on its soil."

    Elite RAID commandos had been in a standoff since the early hours of Wednesday with Merah, periodically firing shots or deploying small explosives until mid-morning on Thursday to try and tire out the gunman so he could be captured.

    Surrounded by some 300 police, Merah had been silent and motionless for 12 hours when the commandos opted to go inside.

    Initially, he had fired through his front door at police when they swooped on his flat on Wednesday morning, but later he negotiated with police, promising to give himself up and saying he did not want to die.

    By late Wednesday evening, he changed tack again, telling negotiators he wanted to die "like a Mujahideen", weapon in hand, and would not go to prison, Molins said.

    "If it's me (who dies), too bad, I will go to paradise. If it's you, too bad for you," Molins quoted Merah as saying.

    Greatest heartbreak the smallest body

    IT was a heartbreaking ceremony in every way, but there was one moment that was too much for many to bear, when the smallest of the bodies was carried from an ambulance.

    At a ceremony held at the Givat Shaul cemetery in Jerusalem yesterday, the four victims of Monday's shooting in France were farewelled.

    Before the ceremony, a convoy of police cars and ambulances made their way through Jerusalem with the bodies. People stood watching. At 10.07am (7.07pm AEST) , the first of the bodies, 30-year-old Rabbi Jonathan Sandler, was brought from the ambulance covered in traditional Jewish cloth. Next came his son, Arieh, 5. But the next body was unbearably small -- it was on the smallest of stretchers, but did not even fill the length of it.

    It was the body of Gabriel, 4, who like his brother and father was shot in the head at point-blank range as they turned up to the Ozar Hatorah School in Toulouse.

    The tiny Gabriel -- the photo of him standing next to his father with a dummy in his mouth having gone around the world in recent days -- lay in the sun alongside his father and brother as some of Israel's leading religious and political figures addressed the service.

    French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe, who had flown from France with the families and bodies, said all of France was in pain.

    "Your grief, your pain, is ours too," he said.

    Shlomo Amar, Israel's chief official rabbi, began crying when he spoke of one of the victims, eight-year-old Miriam Monsonego. Miriam's older brother, Avishai, spoke directly to his dead sister.

    "I'm not worried about where you are now, but I have never asked a lot from you and I have one request now," he said. "Ask God to give Mum and Dad the strength to survive the toughest and most painful test."

    He then addressed his parents: "God has given you wonderful qualities. Continue leading, you have no idea what inheritance you have given us."

    Miriam's father, Yaakov, is the principal at the school.

    He was so distressed last night he had to be carried into the service and helped into a seat.

    Emotions were high. One woman screamed through much of the service while others gathered around Eva Sandler, the wife of Jonathan and mother of Arieh and Gabriel.

    They held a sheet over her to try to shield her from the sun.

    Even the translator standing next to Mr Juppe seemed overcome. When she first saw the bodies brought in she covered her face and, later, for a few moments, she seemed unable to continue translating.

    Lying on stretchers in front of us was a devastated family.

    Eva and the French-born Jonathan Sandler had gone to France last July, presumably with dreams of a new life.

    Yesterday, Eva flew back to Israel a widow with two dead children. Her other child, a two-year-old girl, was too young to be at the school. Eva is pregnant with what would have been their fourth child.

    PA Prime Minister Salam Fayyad : Stop using Palestinians to justify terror

    PA Prime Minister Salam Fayyad on Wednesday condemned the killing of three children and a rabbi at a Jewish school in France, rejecting the suspected gunman's motive of avenging Palestinian children killed by Israel.

    "This terrorist crime is condemned in the strongest terms by the Palestinian people and our children ... No Palestinian child can accept crimes against innocent people," Fayyad said in a statement.

    The suspect Mohamed Merah, 24, claimed to belong to al-Qaida, and to want revenge for Palestinian children and French military involvement abroad, according to France's Interior Minister Claude Gueant.

    He is also suspected by authorities of killing three soldiers of North African origin last week.

    After an hours-long siege in a Toulouse neighborhood in southwestern France on Wednesday -- in which he wounded three officers -- Merah said he would hand himself over to police in the afternoon.

    Fayyad slammed the shootings as an "attack on innocent lives ... a cowardly terrorist act," and he denounced the attempt to link the crime to solidarity with Palestinians.

    "It is time for these criminals to stop exploiting the name of Palestine through their terrorist actions, and to stop pretending to stand up for Palestinian children, who only seek a decent life for themselves and for all children of the world," he added.

    The PLO's diplomatic mission to Paris also denounced the attack. Palestinians "condemn in the strongest possible terms the hateful attack carried out in Toulouse," a joint statement of the missions to France and UNESCO said.

    Noting the prior attack had targeted Muslim soldiers, the diplomats said the reported links between the shootings suggest "the murderer is driven by a multi-faceted racist hatred."

    "We warn against any political exploitation of these events, and wish to assure the families and relatives of victims of our solidarity, and we join them in their pain and their grief," it added.

    Israeli defense minister says Israel and US disagree on timetable for effective Iran action

    Israel and the US disagree on what would be a realistic timetable for stopping Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons, Israel’s defense minister said Thursday, but stopped short of threatening unilateral Israeli action.

    Ehud Barak reiterated concerns that Iran is trying to make its suspected nuclear weapons program immune from attack before taking a decision on assembling atomic bombs.

    However, several more months can be given to allow sanctions and negotiations to work, he said. During this period, it would become clear “if the Iranians intend or don’t intent to stop their nuclear weapons program.”

    In the interview, Barak argued that superior U.S. military capabilities and America’s position as a world power lead to its different stance on the subject of Iranian nuclear threats.

    Israel feels directly threatened by a nuclear Iran, Barak stressed.

    In a separate interview with German television, Barak said that 2012 is a “highly important” year for a possible strike and speculated that a “surgical intervention” — a precision hit on Iranian targets — is not a matter of weeks, but also not a matter of years.

    Iran denies it is trying to develop nuclear weapons, and insists its nuclear program is meant for peaceful uses such as generating electricity.

    Barak said Israel and the U.S. agree on the final objective of preventing Iran from building nuclear weapons, but that “the difference between us and the U.S. is the perspective on timetables.”

    “America has more abilities than Israel,” Barak said. “You can think of a time when Israel would be very limited in its ability to act.”

    'IAF, intelligence succeeded against Gaza terror'

    Close cooperation between the Air Force, the IDF's Southern Command, and the intelligence services led to one successful strike after another against Gazan terrorist targets during the recent round of escalation, the IDF's Southern Command said Thursday.

    The comments came following an examination by the Southern Command into its performance during the five-day period of escalation.

    Palestinian Islamic Jihad, which led the firing of rockets at Israeli cities, towns and villages, and Hamas, which sat on the sidelines, are more deterred by the IDF now than before the escalation, according to the findings.

    Additionally, a senior officer from the Gaza Division said the relatively low casualty rate among Palestinian noncombatants was made possible by surgical strikes on rocket-launching crews that were carefully assessed beforehand. His comments were made available in a report by the IDF Spokesperson's Unit.

    Keeping strikes away from Palestinian non-combatants is a very important priority for the IDF, the officer said, adding that decision makers "thought twice before every attack" to ensure that civilians were not harmed.

    "We succeeded in coming full circle and hit rocket and mortar launching squads before they attacked, or afterwards in a short period of time," a senior officer said.

    "Our attacks were better [than previous rounds] from an overall view. We succeeded in locating terrorists and thwarting their activities," he added.

    The officer described the damage sustained by Islamic Jihad as being "significant." Although he acknowledged that a large number of rockets were fired into Israel, those behind the rockets were hit on many occasions, the officer said.

    "We will be even better prepared for the next escalation," he added.

    UN human rights body to probe Israel's settlement activities in West Bank

    The United Nations' Human Rights Council voted on Thursday to appoint a panel charged with evaluating the effects of Israeli settlement construction on Palestinian human rights in the West Bank and East Jerusalem.

    According to the text of the decision, the UN will "dispatch an independent international fact-finding mission, to be appointed by the President of the Human Rights Council, to investigate the implications of the Israeli settlements on the civil, political, economic, social and cultural rights of the Palestinian people throughout the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem."

    The committee's mandate will be to submit a report on the topic to the council. The decision also called on Israel "not to obstruct the process of investigation and to cooperate fully with the mission."

    Thirty-six states voted in favor of the decision, while ten states abstained, including the Czech Republic, Romania, Hungary, Poland, Costa Rica, Italy and Spain. The United States was the only country to vote against it.

    Israel's ambassador to the UN in Geneva Aharon Leshno-Yaar criticized the decision. "Despite the fact that this is my fourth year in Geneva, I am still stunned by the hypocrisy of the Human Rights Council," he said in a speech.

    "This council itself is adding fuel to the fire and fanning the flames which it should be trying to put out. Today will not be remembered as a great day for this council," he added.

    Palestinian ambassador to the UN Ibrahim Khraishisaid Israel's occupation should be condemned as a violation of human rights.

    "We don't want to isolate Israel, but when we see that Israel hasn't stopped taking over our lands, we must act. If this situation continues, how will we be able to apply a two-state solution? The occupying power is violating international law… one day there will even be limits on the air that we breathe," he added.

    U.S. ambassador to the UN in Geneva said that the decision harmed efforts to restart negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians and would not help protect the human rights of Israelis and Palestinians. "We don't accept the legitimacy of construction in the settlements, but we are disturbed by this one-sided and biased decision," she said.

    "Anyone who supports the creation of an independent Palestinian state must support efforts to renew negotiations and refrain from taking steps that harm this effort… This won't promote peace, it will only push the sides further away from one another," the ambassador added.

    Syria's ambassador accused Israel of accelerating settlement construction, which he deemed a violation of the Geneva Conventions and an "act of piracy."

    The decision was one of five decisions approved by the council on Thursday which were critical of Israel. Others dealt with Israel's occupation of the Golan Heights, the Palestinian's right to self-determination, the state of human rights in the West Bank and East Jerusalem and the implementation of the Goldstone report's recommendations following Operation Cast Lead in the Gaza Strip in 2008-2009.

    Knesset bans ads with photos of overly-thin models

    Israel has become the first country in the world to legislate “beauty” by making it illegal for the media to publicize models who appear severely underweight. The Knesset passed on its second and third reading late Monday night a private member’s bill initiated by MK Rachel Adatto (Kadima) aimed at minimizing media images that contribute to the prevalence of eating disorders.

    The Knesset passed the bill unanimously. While other countries have shown interest in the legislation process as they face the same dangers, they have not made the presentation of sickly skinny models a crime.

    Adatto, who is chairman of the Knesset Women’s Lobby and has held conferences on anorexia in the Knesset, said the law was a “revolution in the concept of beauty, smashing the anorexic model that has served young people who tried to copy it.”

    As a result of their skin-and-bones ideal of advertised beauty, media consumers lost so much weight that five percent of all victims have died.

    Some people suffering from anorexia weigh only 30 kilos in the most serious stages, the Kadima MK said, but they nevertheless contend that they are “overweight.”

    “This law returns the model of beauty to healthy and possible bounds, which will prevent our children from falling victims to this epidemic,” Adatto said. “Thanks to the law, our youth will get the message that being thin is accepted [by some] but even thinness has a limit. It is possible to be too thin,” she said, referring to the famous quote to the contrary (and included wealth) by the Duchess of Windsor.

    The law determines that models who have a body-mass index (BMI) of 18.5 or less may not appear in advertisements.

    Such a person will be examined by a doctor to ensure she or he is not underweight. The conditions also cover foreign models and imported images. Models cannot be made to look too thin using graphics editing programs either.

    Adatto said the vote was “the first step in halting the insufferable condition in which people starve themselves because of poor body image and the influence of the culture and media.”

    MK Danny Danon (Likud), who worked with Adatto on the bill, said the law will “be a breakthrough in fighting eating disorders” and show models and those who are behind them that anorexia endangers life.

    Doctors who treat eating disorders had approached Adatto about preparing such a bill. They told her they felt helpless when the adult sufferer refuses to be hospitalized. A second bill she initiated, which passed its first reading on Monday, makes it possible to hospitalize anorexic adults against their will so they can get treatment.

    In an average year, 35 people (mostly women and girls) die of anorexia. Annually, some 1,500 Israelis are diagnosed with an eating disorder.

    Tolerating Hamas Invites a Mideast War

    The United Nations ignores 12,000 rockets launched into southern Israel.

    By RON PROSOR                The Wall Street Journal

    'War is the unfolding of miscalculations." So noted historian Barbara Tuchman decades ago, yet this principle continues to fall on deaf ears in the international community. As terrorism in the Gaza Strip increases, threatening to set off instability across the region, the continued roar of rockets into Israel should keep world leaders up at night. But most remain mute and missing in action.

    Their choice to stand idle is a grave miscalculation. The consequences for the region could be tragic.

    This month, a targeted strike by the Israel Defense Forces canceled the travel plans of arch-terrorist Zuhair al-Qaisi as he headed from Gaza to the Sinai Peninsula. His itinerary included much more than snorkeling in the Red Sea. He aimed to launch another mass murder of innocent Israelis from the Sinai—and undermine the foundation of regional stability by driving a wedge between Israel and Egypt.

    In the five days that followed, terrorists in Gaza stepped up their attacks on Israeli cities to 60 rockets per day (up from a years-long average of "only" two to four a day). As these terrorists sought to maximize civilian deaths, Israel worked to minimize them, with a precise and targeted offensive and defensive response.

    Israel's new "Iron Dome" antimissile system intercepted more than 50 rockets over major cities, preventing more than 50 potential tragedies. Israel's Air Force hit Palestinian rocket squads with minimal civilian casualties, even though they had been intentionally using neighborhoods and schools as launching pads.

    The situation in Israel's south remains as stable as a house of cards. Rockets continue to fly in from Gaza. Despite its spectacular performance, the Iron Dome is still only 90% effective at its best, whereas the terrorists in Gaza remain 100% determined to kill Israeli civilians. The clock is ticking until the next major escalation.

    You don't have to be a rocket scientist to understand that if rockets fall on your head, you have a right to defend yourself. It's a simple equation. Calm will return to Gaza when rockets stop falling on Israel. However, one rocket that explodes in the wrong place at the wrong time—in a grocery store, shopping mall or school—and Israel will be forced to respond in a completely different manner.

    Time and time again, Israel has warned the world that Gaza is a disaster waiting to happen. Yet, over the past decade, the ratio of rocket attacks to words of condemnation from the United Nations Security Council is 12,000 to zero.

    Instead of sending a clear message that terrorism in Gaza is a grave danger, much of the international community continues to point fingers at Israel for its legal and legitimate efforts to stop the flood of arms into the area. Energy that could have been spent preserving stability in the region has been diverted to attacking Israel's responsible policies aimed at preventing future escalations.

    With the Middle East locked in a struggle for a democratic future, a significant escalation in Gaza would tip the scales toward the fundamentalists. From Marrakech to Manama, it would provide cannon fodder for radical clerics and politicians to promote their hateful ideology. The Arab world would be forced to drop its focus on the atrocities of the Assad regime, giving the region's most cynical eye doctor the opportunity once and for all to blind his people's vision for freedom.

    Iran understands this well. The Iranian Revolutionary Guards are loading Bashar al-Assad's tanks, funding his government, and training his troops—all while funneling weapons to Hamas and other terrorist proxies in Gaza.

    Today, a conflict in Gaza would answer all the prayers of Iran's leaders, distracting the world as they take their final steps toward nuclear capability. For the Iranian regime, every dead Israeli or Palestinian provides an opportunity to install another centrifuge.

    The terrorists in Gaza do not pose a threat only to the citizens of southern Israel. Each rocket is armed with a warhead capable of causing a political earthquake that would extend well beyond Israel's borders. Our message to the international community is clear: Your silence is pounding the drums of war.

    Mr. Prosor is Israel's ambassador to the United Nations.

    Yom20hazikaron2020122

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    Wed, 21 Mar 2012 22:00:00 -0700 Creating a buzz ... http://www.masorti.org.au/113700213 http://www.masorti.org.au/113700213
    Young Jewish entrepreneur Ariel Beery made waves around the Diaspora a few months ago. Not for some incredibly cool new Jewish social innovation which, as the co-founder of PresenTense Group, he often has occasion to spotlight, but rather for an article he co-wrote with his wife Erin Kopelow for Tablet Magazine, called “State of Her Own.” The impetus of the piece was the impending birth of their first daughter, who regardless of being born in Israel to a religiously observant couple, will not be considered Jewish.

    The Beery-Kopelow story is deeply personal and indicative of the broadening ideological divide between Diaspora Jewry and the Chief Rabbinate of Israel. The facts: Because Kopelow’s mother converted to Judaism in Canada in a Conservative ceremony, Kopelow is not considered Jewish by the rabbinate, regardless of the fact that she was raised in the religion and culture. And neither will her daughter.

    The couple couldn’t marry in Israel and, if things don’t change, neither will their daughter be able to.

    In the much-shared article, the couple describes their frustration at the rabbinate’s stranglehold control over all life-cycle events in the State of Israel and what they call “systematic discrimination against women.” The couple’s solution? A battle cry to concerned Diaspora communities to take action and put their money where their mouths are regarding the issues of who is a Jew and equality for women.

    Close-up of Ayela Ruth. (Photo credit: Courtesy)

    Close-up of Ayela Ruth (photo credit: Courtesy)

    Ayela Ruth’s birth last week makes these issues that much more real.

    “Then [before the birth] I was frustrated. Now I get a violent rage thinking about it,” a tired Beery says. He then asks incredulously, “Somebody will call into question the membership of my daughter to the Jewish People?”

    But Beery, who made aliya alone from the US and served in the IDF before going back to the States to earn two degrees and founding PresenTense with partner Aharon Horwitz, is not one to take a passive approach. Capitalizing on the article’s buzz, he’s helped bring together what he calls a “swarm” of organizations, thinkers and activists into a network in which they will have the opportunity to work in tandem on projects promoting basic rights in Israel.

    “The second we realized it will not be the choice of our daughter to marry here, that the only community in the world where she can’t marry in the Jewish tradition is here in Israel, that she can’t even aspire to be a religious judge, deciding on religious issues. And not because she’s not considered Jewish; because she’s a woman. If there was a law that a woman couldn’t be a surveyor, would we accept that? You start realizing, like, Holy crap! That’s ridiculous!”

    The original thought was to influence the Israeli political system through Diaspora donors withholding funds unless things started to tip toward equal rights. Now he’s taking a more grassroots approach of educating and enlisting the Diaspora first.

    “In the past two months I’ve had to get a little more realistic in the possibilities. It’s one of the things that on the one hand I’m worried, on the other hand there’s so much time [until any potential change in her personal status, i.e., wedding]. But if I don’t worry about it now, we’ll get there and there won’t be anything to do.”

    Like PresenTense, the informal network Beery is helping to put together is all about community and leverage. “It gives the ability for people to work together, and at the same time on their own; find ways to do what they’re already doing, but with each other to increase success.”

    Though Israel-based at the moment, come Passover, the network hopes to start a US campaign, which currently has the working title of “Double Down.” The idea is based on a poker concept in which players, instead of folding, up their stakes in a game.

    ‘We say, “Don’t fold, double down: Mobilize your community and make sure the rabbinate will respect your Judaism”‘

    “All the Conservative, Reform, even Orthodox rabbis while studying in Israel, learn their Judaism isn’t acceptable to the rabbinate. It causes a discord, or disconnect between their communities and Israel. We say, ‘Don’t fold, double down: Mobilize your community and make sure the rabbinate will respect your Judaism.”

    On the US side, a major Jewish Federation has been enlisted to build a fund, which will make grants available to Israelis to address these issues.

    Speaking as an American Jew, he says, ”If you don’t think we’re legitimate, why should we support you, feel community with you?

    “For thousands of years we’ve celebrated the differences of Jewish practice. Now, with the foundation of the State of Israel, to drop it doesn’t make sense, but desecrates the memory of our ancestors.”

     

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