PA would not do well on a game show
What was that TV game show that Monty Hall hosted? Where contestants got to choose “Door Number 1″ OR “Door Number 2.” No one ever got to say, “Monty, I’ll take both doors!” Or, after finding out that there was a goat and a spokesmodel in a “Heidi” costume behind the door they picked, no one got to say, “Monty! I don’t want the goat — I want ‘Door Number 2′ now!”
Wouldn’t have worked on TV, but apparently it works in the Middle East “peace process.”
“We want to resume the talks from the point where they ended in December 2008,” Chief Palestinian Authority negotiator Saeb Erekat announced recently,which means that he wants the new Israeli government’s opening offer to include everything the PA rejected from previous Israeli government (which was, er, voted out of office).
“We have every right to talk about a Palestinian state within the June 4, 1967 borders, including Jerusalem,” Erekat avowed.
Um, not really. The Palestinians could have had a state many times over, if they’d decided to accept Israeli peace offers. Instead, they usually decided to attack and kill a bunch of Jews, and eventually would be pushed even further back by the IDF. Israel is the only country that is expected to offer ever greater concession after concession in response to the most violent of rejections:
- In 1937, the Peel Commission proposed the partition of Palestine and the creation of an Arab state.
- In 1939, the British White Paper proposed the creation of an Arab state alone, but the Arabs rejected the plan.
- In 1947, the UN would have created an even larger Arab state as part of its partition plan. Israel accepted the plan; Arab states attacked when Israel declared independence.
- The 1979 Egypt-Israel peace negotiations offered the Palestinians autonomy, which would almost certainly have led to full independence.
- The Oslo process that began in 1993 was leading toward the creation of a Palestinian state before the Palestinian-sponsored terror scuttled the agreements.
- In 2000, Prime Minister Ehud Barak offered to create a Palestinian state, but Yasser Arafat rejected the deal.
- In addition, from 1948 to 1967, Israel did not control…
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Saturday, January 9th, 2010 at 6:08 PM | Stand For Israel
Come again?: Ancient Hebrew fragments of Jewish Bible are part of Muslim country’s “cultural heritage”

This ancient Hebrew scroll of the Book of Psalms is part of... the Muslim cultural legacy?
Here’s how this will get reported: Canada declined to get involved in a controversy over ownership of the famous Dead Sea Scrolls, which Jordan alleges Israel seized illegally from east Jerusalem during the Six-Day War.
What actually happened: Canada didn’t get involved when Jordan–ostensibly the most moderate of Israel’s neighbors–demanded that Canadian authorities seize a traveling exhibit of the Dead Sea Scrolls. The scrolls, ancient Hebrew manuscripts including segments of the Hebrew Bible, are of enormous significance to Christians and Jews and have little or nothing to do with Islam, the religion of the majority of Jordanians. Canadians are too polite to have snorted in the Jordanians’ faces.
***
So let’s go over this again: Jordan told Canada that, according to the Hague convention, the scrolls are their ”cultural property.” Back in April, Salam Fayyad, Prime Minister of the Palestinian Authority, wrote to the Canadian Prime Minister to claim ownership and tried to get the Canadians to refuse the show altogether. When that didn’t work, a bunch of “pro-Palestinian” groups demonstrated outside the museum for daring to show them. (Around 200,000 people viewed them anyway.)
As a reminder, the Dead Sea Scrolls are ancient Hebrew parchments that were discovered in caves near Qumran, a valley in the desert between Jerusalem and the Dead Sea, between 1947 and the late 1950s. The scrolls are believed to have been written by the Essenes, a Jewish sect that lived there around the time of the Second Temple. (Many scholars believe that Jesus might have been an Essene.)
The scrolls include fragments from most books of the Hebrew Bible, including Psalms and Isaiah, as well as a number of other books from the Aprocrypha –…
Read More » Comments (3) »Monday, January 4th, 2010 at 5:04 PM | Stand For Israel
The heroine of Palestine’s heroines? Really?
Who someone admires is revealing. After all, what parent wouldn’t breathe a sigh of relief knowing that his daughter’s heroine was Hillary Clinton or Sarah Palin (depending on one’s political preferences), rather than the all-too-common Paris Hilton or Kardashian sisters? So, too, do a society’s heroes reveal much about where its priorities and values lay.
Hence the tragedy of the veneration of Dalal Mughrabi, one of the more twisted proto-feminists in history’s annals. Mughrabi was the leader of what became known as “the Coastal Road Massacre,” a 1978 terrorist attack in which 38 civilians–among them 13 children–were murdered.
Mughrabi, then around 20, headed a group of 12 terrorists who floated on rubber dinghies from Lebanon and landed on Israeli beaches early on the Sabbath morning of March 11, 1978. The group’s ultimate intentions, according to news reports at the time, was to get to Tel Aviv, where they’d take tourists and foreign ambassadors hostage in order to force the release of Palestinian prisoners being held by Israel.

The charred remains of the bus in which dozens were immolated stands at a memorial in Holon, Israel.
Things didn’t go quite as planned: They murdered an American on the beach, hijacked a cab (killing its passengers), and hijacked two buses driving on Highway 2, the main road that runs along the coast between Tel Aviv and Haifa. News reports described Ms. Mughrabi’s work:
The bus continued driving south on the Coastal Road (Highway 2) while the terrorists fired and threw grenades at passing cars, shot passengers and dumped at least one body out of the bus. At one point, they hijacked another bus and forced the passengers from the first bus to board it. An explosion caused either by an exploding fuel tank or a grenade set the bus on fire, killing 38 civilians, 13 of them children. 71 Israelis were wounded.
The passengers had been burned alive. Mughrabi and several of the other…
Read More » Comments (6) »Monday, January 4th, 2010 at 2:00 PM | Stand For Israel
Man who escaped Nazis as toddler knighted for charitable work
One of the thousands of Jewish children who survived the Holocaust because of the kindertransport was knighted over the weekend by Queen Elizabeth. Erich Reich, 74, was among hundreds of unknown Britons who are honored by the queen for a lifetime of good work, Ha’aretz reports.
The kindertransport was a rescue mission that brought some 10,000 Jewish children from Germany and other countries occupied by the Nazis to England. England agreed to accept the children in the weeks after Kristallnacht, a massive, coordinated attack by Nazis and mobs throughout Germany on the night of Nov. 9, 1938. Ninety-one people were murdered outright, between 25,000-35,000 rounded up and sent to concentration camps, and 267 synagogues were destroyed, along with Jewish homes and businesses that were ransacked or destroyed. Desperate to get their children to safety, thousands of parents agreed to send their children alone to England, hoping that they would be able to be reunited with them once they escaped the Nazis as well.
The vast majority of the children survived the war, but few parents survived. Some children were raised in England as orphans (the Jewish community there supported and absorbed them) and some made their way to Israel.
Reich, who was born in Vienna in 1935, arrived in the UK as a toddler – at the end of August 1939. He has helped raise around 60 million pounds for charity (about $97 million) through his company, Classic Tours, which organizes international fundraisers.
“It is a tribute to the work of my team at Classic Tours who tirelessly support my original concept to help charities fundraise through overseas challenge events, and to my kindred spirits and fellow survivors of the Holocaust who benefited from, and in turn give back to, the Kindertransport movement,” Reich told London’s Telegraph.
“I want to thank the people of Britain for allowing the Kinder to come to the U.K. and for this amazing honor,” he…
Read More » Comments (2) »Monday, January 4th, 2010 at 9:18 AM | Stand For Israel
Holocaust museum racing to identify all Nazi victims
JERUSALEM | Motivated by the principle that “every victim has a name,” Israel’s Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial museum has identified nearly 4 million Jews who lost their lives to Nazi Germany’s genocide and is trying to identify the rest while survivors are still alive.
“We are in a race against time,” said American-born Cynthia Wroclawski, outreach manager of the Shoah Victims’ Names Recovery Project. “Our mission is to reach people who have information.”
Ms. Wroclawski said 3.6 million names – just over half the estimated Jewish death toll – have been registered to date.
The monumental task began in 1955, two years after Yad Vashem was established by Israel’s parliament, and accelerated in the 1990s in part because of technical advancements such as the creation of a computerized database.
Once completed, the list could help put to rest arguments over whether the death toll has been inflated for political reasons, such as to justify the creation of the modern Jewish state.
Read the rest at the Washington Times.
For information on how you can help needy Holocaust survivors, read about IFCJ’s Guardians of Israel program.
Comments (0) »Saturday, January 2nd, 2010 at 11:14 AM | Stand For Israel



