Wednesday, June 2, 2010

June 2, 2010 The world aligns against Israel


 Israpundit
Bibi should shout to the world this statement, short and sweet: “We will not passively walk into the gas chambers, we will employ every measure necessary to defend ourselves including lethal force, against those trying to commit another genocide against us”.
As for those feckless Europeans, given their own long, ugly history of anti-Semitism, pogroms against Jews and ultimately the holocaust, they owe it to the Jewish people to back Israel 100%. Instead they have chosen to come down on the side of the jihadists.
The Lynching of Israel: The Global Propaganda Wars Gather Force
Phyllis Chesler, Pajamas Media

United Nations Just Condemned “Acts” Which Caused Flotilla Deaths

Once, Jews were persecuted because they had no ancestral home — and no army, navy, or air force. Now, Jews, both in Israel and around the world, are persecuted precisely because they have an ancestral home which dares to defend its citizens from deadly harm. This Jew-hatred refuses to die. And Jewish-American, Jewish-European, and Israeli leaders have refused to recognize that the contemporary war against the Jews is bigger, and the consequences graver, than ever before in history and that this war is primarily being fought — and won or lost — through propaganda and the manipulation of ideas. Leftist progressives and journalists in the West have joined forces with Islamists, the United Nations, and human rights groups in propagating Big Lies against the small Jewish state.

I first wrote about this in 2001-2002 and published a book on the subject in 2003 titled The New Anti-Semitism. It made no difference. Jewish-American leaders pooh-pooed the book, or paid no attention to it. Many insisted that “right wing Christians” were the most dangerous Jew-haters. I disagreed then and I disagree now. Since then, many Jewish-American intellectuals have insisted that such “alarmism” should not be encouraged, that things have been “worse in the past” and that matters are not “that bad” now.

Oh, speak for yourself — but dare not speak for Israel. And do not think that Israel’s fate is not your fate too, as well as the fate of Western civilization. And it gives me no pleasure that, seven years later, more and more American Jewish organization leaders are beginning to sound as I once did. The unfunded and poorly funded grassroots groups are way ahead of the Fat Cats.
Here’s what we are up against. Palestinian terrorists call themselves “freedom fighters;” Turkish terrorists call themselves “humanitarians.” When propagandists appropriate and misuse language, reality is blurred, confusion reigns. When the “good people” label (Israeli) “self defense” as “aggression” — and this includes feminists who should know more about the importance of self-defense — one despairs, or at least hopes that serious people, including leaders, will see through the deception and set matters right. Failing that, one experiences vertigo.

Some Jewish-Americans believe that Israel only has itself to blame. And so they blame Israel before anyone else can do so — as if the Islamist mobs would spare such Righteous Jewish Exceptions from the kind of collective lynch mob-like fury that is currently taking place worldwide against Israel and that specifically took place on the Turkish boat Mavi Marmara.
No matter what the intellectuals say, the Jews are on the move again. They are leaving Europe, where they were born, and emigrating to Israel or to the United States and Canada.

For example: Recently, at a small and lovely Shabbat dinner, a Frenchman in his sixties calmly and pleasantly explained that nine years ago, “when the anti-Semitism suddenly became wildly aggressive, when it invaded dinner parties and people nearly came to blows, I knew it was time to leave.” This is a man whose Jewish ancestors had lived in France for nine centuries. His parents survived the Holocaust there. He considers himself lucky. He found work here almost immediately and eventually became an American citizen. A scientist and intellectual, he is completely unfazed by having to live in an outer borough, where Jewish immigrants once clustered a century ago. He has persuaded a reluctant wife and grown children to join him.
A few years ago, the sweetest young family from Lille, France, joined my synagogue. They left France five years ago and for the same reason; they, too, rather happily, now live in an outer borough. Like their Parisian counterpart, above, they have professions that “travel” well. Still, they had to micromanage the move of their extended family, beginning with their parents and elderly grandparents.

Not an easy thing to do.

Less than two years ago, my good friend, the filmmaker Pierre Rehov, about whom I’ve written many times, also decided to leave Paris. His reasons were more complicated and involved legal retribution for his pro-Israel stands, but he is in America now, in a house near the sea, where he can sail his boat. He, too, has persuaded one grown child to relocate, but not the other grown child, and not his ex-wife. This is Rehov’s third exile: from Algeria, from Israel, now from France.