JED BABBIN: RED LINE FOR KOREA

http://washingtonexaminer.com/jed-babbin-a-red-line-for-north-korea/article/2527109 President Obama should be applying to North Korea now what Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu taught the world about “red lines” and nuclear weapons last year. After months of threatening South Korea, the United States and Japan — the last with nuclear holocaust — North Korea may launch ballistic missiles on Monday capable of […]

GERALD HONIGMAN: Israel Turns 65: Playing the Arab Name Game

http://www.israelnationalnews.com/Articles/Article.aspx/13146#.UW0TjLPD-Uk Any group can divide itself into several sub-groups and demand a nation for each one. The Jews have only one state. Gerald A. Honigman The author is an educator who has done extensive doctoral studies in Mid-East Affairs and has conducted counter-Arab propaganda programs for college youth. He gives lectures and participates in debates […]

ADL DOWNPLAYS CONTROVERSY OVER ANTI-ISRAEL TEXTS IN CURRICULUM IN NEWTON, MA. PUBLIC SCHOOLS…..SEE NOTE PLEASE

http://www.jns.org/latest-articles/2013/4/15/adl-downplays-controversy-over-anti-israel-texts-in-curriculum-of-newton-mass

The Anti-Defamation League (ADL) and Americans for Peace and Tolerance (APT) are at odds over the presence of anti-Israel materials in the public school system of Newton, Mass.
THE ADL LONG AGO ABDICATED ITS ROLE IN THE DEFENSE OF JEWS AND ISRAEL….AS A PHILANTHROPIC WAG ONCE PUT IT…THEY HUNT DOWN ANTI-SEMITIC GRAFFITI ON BATHROOM DOORS AND SPEND THE REST OF THEIR CONSIDERABLE RESOURCES IN DEFAMING ISRAEL’S FRIENDS…..RSK

APT—a Boston-based nonprofit “dedicated to promoting peaceful coexistence in an ethnically diverse America by educating the American public about the need for a moderate political leadership that supports tolerance and core American values in communities across the nation”—is calling for reforms in Newton schools to prevent the reappearance of those materials, most notably the Arab World Studies Notebook, which claims that Israeli soldiers murdered hundreds of Palestinian nurses in Israeli prisons.

According to the Newton School Superintendent David Fleishman, the Arab World Studies Notebook was removed from Newton’s public school curriculum. Nevertheless, many parents and other citizens have expressed concern about other anti-Israel materials they say remain in distribution. Local ADL leaders, however, are downplaying the uncertainty as to which anti-Israel texts are still being used in Newton classrooms.

“There is currently no evidence of ‘Saudi-funded hate education’ in Newton public schools,” Acting Director of ADL’s New England Region Robert Trestan and ADL New England Region Board Chair Jeffrey Robbins wrote in a recent letter to the editor in The Jewish Advocate of Boston.

OUR MAN IN BEIRUT: THE REMARKABLE STORY OF ISAAC SHUSHAN BY MATTI FRIEDMAN

http://www.timesofisrael.com/our-man-in-beirut-the-remarkable-story-of-isaac-shushan/ When the state of Israel was declared in the spring of 1948, Abdul Karim Muhammad didn’t know about it. A young Palestinian refugee recently arrived in Beirut, Muhammad knew only what was reported in the Arab papers: The victorious Arab Liberation Army was in Haifa. The Syrians were at Degania, on the shores of […]

WE SALUTE OUR BELOVED HEROES OF ISRAEL

‘We salute our beloved heroes of Israel’

http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_article.php?id=8625

Israelis stand in silence to remember and mourn the 23,085 soldiers who have fallen in the nation’s defense • Netanyahu: The IDF is stronger than ever. We will continue to strive for peace with our neighbors • Ya’alon: The battle, unfortunately, is far from over.
Shlomo Cesana, Lilach Shoval and Israel Hayom staff
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the Yad Lebanim memorial service for fallen soldiers, in Jerusalem, Sunday.
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Photo credit: GPO
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A two-minute siren sounded throughout Israel at 11 a.m. on Monday morning as Israelis stood in silence to remember and mourn the 23,085 soldiers who have fallen in the nation’s defense since 1860. Israel’s Fallen Soldiers and Victims of Terrorism Remembrance Day began with a one-minute siren at 8 p.m. on Sunday night, followed by an official state memorial ceremony at the Western Wall in Jerusalem.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu spoke at the state service held Monday at Mount Herzl in Jerusalem.

“Last week I met with a group of young children and teens who lost their fathers in battle. To me, these wonderful children represent our family — the family of grief — a tribe made up of Israelis from all walks of Israeli life, Jews and non-Jews, whose lives have been touched by grief. I looked at these children and I thought — they are so young. So young, and already they have to carry the burden of grief.”

He spoke of his brother, Lt. Col. Yonatan Netanyahu, a commander in the Israel Defense Forces’ elite commando unit Sayeret Matkal, who was killed in 1976 during Operation Entebbe in Uganda. “One of the boys asked me, ‘how do you deal with the loss of your brother?’ I told him that with all honesty, I don’t know how to give anyone advice on how to deal with such a loss. ‘Mom says that we have to move on,’ another child said to me. It reminded me of my mother’s heroism, having to cope with the loss of her eldest son, and I said to him: ‘Your mother is a hero.'”

“Another child asked me, ‘Did it make you stronger?’ I stopped for a moment and then I said, ‘In a way — yes. Because nothing can compare to this kind of pain.’ Some of the children did not want to speak at all. I told them that I understood them, because talking about the loss can sometimes be too emotional and too difficult.”

“We know this pain will never go away, that this wound can never heal. Maybe, the answer to death is life itself,” Netanyahu said. “Our lives, each and every one of us, and the life of this people and this nation. Facing the threats we do now, the IDF is stronger than ever. We will continue to strive for peace with our neighbors and we will continue to protect our country. But we must always remember that we would not be here without the men and women who gave their lives to protect us.”

“We must always remember that Independence Day, the very independence that we celebrate, was achieved by our fighters — those who survived the battles and those who gave their lives. With hearts bursting with pride and with tears in our eyes, we salute our fallen soldiers. Our beloved heroes of Israel.”

The service was followed by a ceremony honoring the 2,493 civilians, including 120 foreign nationals, who were killed in terror attacks since Israel’s inception.

Speaking at the service, Netanyahu said: “The Zionist endeavor is soaked with the blood of terror victims. The names of these terror operations change but their aim remains clear — to kill us, to rattle our safety and security and to drive us from this land, our land. The terrorists believe that the end justified the means, but we will not give in and we will not give up.”

“We will always strive for peace with our neighbors but we will seek retribution for our victims. We will find [the terrorists], wherever they are, and we will defeat them. This terror is man-made and we will defeat it. We will continue to build in our land, to prosper, and our national strength will get us through every fight.”

On Sunday morning, Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon’s told bereaved families: “With great pain and relentless longing we see the lives of those who paid the ultimate price — family, friends, brothers in arms — flash before our eyes.”

“With their deaths they did more than bequeath us life — they gave us the right to fight for our existence here; the right to have independence in this land; to reach milestones only a few nations do; the right to be a part of this wonder called the State of Israel, which after 65 years of independence and hundreds of years of persecution against Jews, for nothing more than being Jews, has turned into a role model for the entire world.”

Ya’alon stressed that “the battle, unfortunately, is far from over. It takes on new shapes and places, making us fight over and over again and sacrifice our finest sons and daughters. We are a peace-loving nation. We have been and we will be, but we will not compromise our safety and security and we will cut off the hand that tries to harm us.”

Also on Sunday, IDF Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Benny Gantz issued a special Memorial Day order to the IDF: “For 65 years the State of Israel has been made to fight and win. Each generation has carried the mission of Israel’s defense on its shoulders and each generation, unfortunately, has known the pain of fallen soldiers.”

“Faced with an enemy who targets our nation and its civilians, an enemy who does not accept our existence in this land, we have only one option — to fight and win. Faced with the threats evolving around us, the IDF is ready. We will continue to hunt down those who seek to harm us and we will defend the State of Israel with resolve,” the order said.

“Our hope is that the family of grief will grow no more, and as we usher in Israel’s 65th Independence Day, we all pray for peace and security. We, the soldiers and commanders of the Israel Defense Forces will continue to stand guard of this nation and its people until the days of peace arrive.”

Gantz also spoke at Sunday’s state service at the Western Wall: “If it seems that the enemy is no longer knocking on our doors — don’t let the quiet fool you. A storm of threats is brewing beneath the surface and a courageous and insistent battle is being waged, constantly, on our borders and far from them, for the security of Israel.”

Fallen Israeli soldiers “have achieved eternity. They are forever embedded in the character of this country,” the chief of staff said.

Addressing bereaved families at the ceremony, President Shimon Peres said: “Here, before you, words are lost. Your routine lives will never be like ours. There are no words that can heal the pain. You the parents, the fiancés, the children, the brothers and the sisters — you are the real heroes of life.”

“The Israel Defense Forces is ready and prepared for any threat, against any danger,” Peres said. “Our enemies have tested this. They should not err again.”

“It is our duty to spare no effort or cost to eliminate war from the land and to bring security and peace … Israel is as dear to us as the bravery of her fighters, and as dear as the depth of the sorrow for each fallen soldier. Here, next to the sacred stones of the Western Wall, I say on behalf of all of Israel, that you, the fallen of Israel’s wars deserve eternal glory and our ultimate gratitude.”

RUTHIE BLUM: A MATTER OF LIFE AND DEATH

http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_opinion.php?id=3993

A matter of life and death

Every year at this time, there is renewed discussion in Israel about the abrupt shift from mourning to celebration that takes place at the end of Memorial Day for fallen soldiers and victims of terrorism — on the eve of Independence Day.

As soon as the 24-hour period during which the country focuses on lost loved ones comes to a close, there is an almost immediate eruption of jubilation. Fireworks appear in the sky; people of all ages rush home from memorial services to get dressed up for parties; plastic hammers and cans of string spray appear; and smells of beer and barbecued meat begin to waft through the air.

The coupling of these seemingly clashing events and the emotions surrounding them was not accidental. The idea behind it was that to engage in festivities marking the birth of the Jewish nation-state, Israelis must first pay tribute and give thanks to all those citizens who tragically paid with their lives for it — and for us.

This assertion that the State of Israel is a gift that must not be taken for granted, particularly while wars against its establishment continue to be waged, is as pure as it is patriotic.

Still, some of the bereaved families consider the leap from tears to laughter insensitive, in bad taste or simply too hard to bear. Others say that the pain of their personal loss accompanies them all year round, and that it would not be minimized by having the calendar date for its public expression moved.

Ben Shapiro Exposes Leftist Bullies at Horowitz’s Wednesday Morning Club Posted By Paul Schnee

http://frontpagemag.com/2013/paul-schnee/ben-shapiro-exposes-leftist-bullies-at-horowitzs-wednesday-morning-club/print/ To order Bullies, How the Left’s Culture of Fear and Intimidation Silences America, click here. When fighting a bully you must punch twice as hard. It’s war. Conservatives must define who the bullies are: Democrats. This was Ben Shapiro’s message during his talk about his new book, “Bullies, How the Left’s Culture of Fear and […]

Hollywood’s Undying Love for Communist Angela Davis Posted By Arnold Ahlert

http://frontpagemag.com/2013/arnold-ahlert/hollywoods-undying-love-for-communist-angela-davis/print/

Recently, The Daily Beast disgraced itself by providing a platform for communist Bill Ayers to spread unchallenged lies about his background in the Weather Underground terrorist organization, which is presently the subject of an exonerating new film by leftist actor Robert Redford. The film, The Company You Keep, is not unlike the prior whitewash of communism Redford presented in the 1973 film The Way We Were, co-starring fellow left-winger Barbra Streisand. Following in Redford’s footsteps, some of the biggest names in Hollywood have just released an equally mendacious portrait of radical Angela Davis in the documentary Free Angela & All Political Prisoners, a work that further popularizes Davis’s fictional persona as a “social justice” advocate and racial equality icon of the Sixties. What audiences will be robbed of in this historical distortion, however, is a truthful look at Davis’s “political” career — filled as it is with violent militarism, racial hatred and complicity in murder. The documentary will also not reveal the destructive work Davis continues today by promoting the release of black criminals back into black communities to further terrorize their populations (90% of the victims of black criminals are black).

Thus, while Davis’s celebrity followers set out to whitewash a brutal totalitarian’s legacy, it would seem to be an appropriate occasion to take a look back at the true historical record of Angela Davis’s life.

Davis grew up in a middle class family from Birmingham, Alabama, and later attended New York’s communist Little Red Schoolhouse (LRS). Later at Brandeis University, she spent her junior year in France, meeting Algerian revolutionaries during the visit. After graduating, she spent two years as a member of the faculty at Goethe University in Frankfurt, Germany. She came back to America for a teaching position at UCLA, where she worked for Herbert Marcuse, a fellow Marxist.

ISRAEL’S FALLEN

Remembrance Day: Israel’s fallen number 25,578

Year 2012 sees 92 names added to list of fallen Israelis including 37 soldiers, 12 members of security forces

The number of Israelis who fell while in the line of duty stands at 23,085 on the eve of Israel’s Fallen Soldiers and Victims of Terrorism Remembrance Day.
The passing year has seen 92 names added to the list, including 37 Israel Defense Forces soldiers, 12 members of the security forces and 43 disabled IDF veterans. The number of fallen soldiers whose place of burial remains unknown stands at 555.

The number of those killed in terrorist attacks stands at 2,493 including 120 foreign citizens. The past year has seen 10 civilians killed in terror attacks. Terror attacks have left 2,848 people orphans, 976 bereaved parents and 799 widows and widowers.

More than a million and a half people are slated to visit the graves of their loved ones on Remembrance Day.

הר הרצל בשבוע שעבר. כאב המשפחות (צילום: EPA)

Mount Herzl last week (Photo: EPA)

(צילום: רויטרס)

Photo: Reuters

On Saturday evening, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his wife Sara visited the grave of his brother Yoni Netanyahu who was killed in Operation Entebbe in Mount Herzl.

Remembrance Day events will be launched on Sunday at 4 pm with a state ceremony at Jerusalem’s Yad Lebanim Center. A one-minute siren will sound at 8 pm and will be followed by ceremonies across Israel.

President Shimon Peres and IDF Chief of Staff Benny Gantz will attend a ceremony at the Western Wall.

ראש הממשלה ורעייתו במוצאי שבת ליד קברו של יוני נתניהו (צילום: קובי גדעון, לע”מ)

Benjamin and Sara Netanyahu at Yoni Netanyahu’s grave (Photo: Kobi Gideon, GPO)

Another two-minute siren will sound on Monday at 11 am and will be followed by a state memorial ceremony at Mount Herzl in memory of the 1,396 fallen police officers.

בהר הרצל (צילום: רויטרס)

Mount Herzl (Photo: Reuters)

(צילום: EPA)

Photo: EPA

DANIEL GREENFIELD: WHO CAN COUNT THE DUST OF JACOB? ****

http://sultanknish.blogspot.com/

“Who can count the dust of Jacob or number the seed of Israel.” Numbers 23:10

The sun sets above the hills. The siren cries out and on the busy highways that wend among the hills, the traffic stops, the people stop, and a moment of silence comes to a noisy country. Flags fly at half mast, the torch of remembrance is lit, memorial candles are held in shaking hands and the country’s own version of the Flanders Field poppy, the Red Everlasting daisy, dubbed Blood of the Maccabees, adorns lapels. And so begins the Yom Hazikaron, Heroes Remembrance Day, the day of remembrance for fallen soldiers and victims of terror– Israel’s Memorial Day.

What is a memorial day in a country that has always known war and where remembrance means adding the toll of one year’s dead and wounded to the scales of history. A country where war never ends, where the sirens may pause but never stop, where each generation grows up knowing that they will have to fight or flee. To stand watch or run away. It is not so much the past that is remembered on this day, but the present and the future. The stillness, a breath in the warm air, before setting out to climb the slopes of tomorrow.

Who can count the dust of Jacob. And yet each memorial day we count the dust. The dust that is a fraction of those who have fallen defending the land for thousands of years. Flesh wears out, blood falls to the earth where the red daisies grow, and bone turns to dust. The dust blows across the graves of soldiers and prophets, the tombs of priests hidden behind brush, the caverns where forefathers rest in sacred silence, laid to rest by their sons, who were laid to rest by their own sons, generations burying the past, standing guard over it, being driven away and returning each time.

On Memorial Day, the hands of memory are dipped in the dust raising it to the blue sky. A prayer, a whisper, a dream of peace. And the wind blows the candles out. War follows. And once again blood flows into the dust. A young lieutenant shading his eyes against the sun. An old man resting with his family on the beach. Children climbing into bed in a village beneath the hills. And more bodies are laid to rest in the dust. Until dust they become.

In this land, the Maker of Stars and Dust vowed to Abraham that his children would be as many as the dust of the earth and the stars of heaven. In their darkest days, they would be as the dust. But there is mercy in the numberless count of the dust. Mercy in not being able to make a full count of the fallen. In remaining ignorant of that full measure of woe. Modern technologies permit us terrible estimates. Databanks store the names of millions, village by village and city by city. Terrible digital cemeteries of ghosts. But there is no counting the dust. And when we walk the length and breadth of the land, as the Maker told Abraham to do, it the dust that supports our feet, we stand upon the shoulders of giants. We walk in the dust of our ancestors.

Some new countries are built to escape from the past, but there is no escaping it in these ancient hills. IDF soldiers patrol over ground once contested by empires, tread over spearheads and the wheels of chariots buried deep in the earth. The Assyrians and the Babylonians came through here in all their glory. Greek and Roman soldiers and mercenaries pitted themselves against the handful of Judeans who came out of the Babylonian exile. The Ottoman and the Arab raged here, and Crusader battering rams and British Enfield rifles still echo in the quiet hills.