tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12677825.post7879016256457569465..comments2024-03-14T02:22:26.957+00:00Comments on Point of No Return: Jewish Refugees from Arab and Muslim Countries: Genuine refugees protest the UN's Durban lll circusUnknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger4125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12677825.post-46098211185232365712011-09-25T00:32:22.148+01:002011-09-25T00:32:22.148+01:00February 7, 2011 2:57 PM
bataween said...
Simon ...February 7, 2011 2:57 PM <br /><a href="http://yaacovlozowick.blogspot.com/2011/02/jerusalem-biography.html" rel="nofollow">bataween</a> said...<br /><br />Simon Sebag-Montefiore bends over backwards to give equal weight to Christian and Muslim claims to Jerusalem. This kind of political correctness we can do without. Yaacov you have your work cut out!<br /><br /><br />Is Simon Sebag far-left radicals, also in your own color?<br /><br />Good luck reminding you with your hope "'Without truth, there can be no justice, and without justice, no reconciliation.' do you work on this advise you have stated by yourself, please follow it for the sick of truth.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12677825.post-45767635120532844322011-09-25T00:04:45.117+01:002011-09-25T00:04:45.117+01:00Shenhav and
Sami Michael are far-left radicals
Oh...<i><b>Shenhav and<br />Sami Michael are far-left radicals</b></i><br /><br />Ohhhhh.......Yes and You FAR RIGHT Radicals ..... no wander<br /><br />You know what you'r like Crimanl Bush and his Co when he said:<br /><br />"Either With US or Against US"<br /><br />we have troll every color, if you believe in open minded discussion you should seek treatment for your "FAR RIGHT Radicals " then come to listen to other people what will say.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12677825.post-91975803729673166502011-09-23T10:10:52.914+01:002011-09-23T10:10:52.914+01:00I'm sorry but Shenhav and
Sami Michael are fa...I'm sorry but Shenhav and<br /> Sami Michael are far-left radicals do not speak for the overwhelming majority of Iraqi Jews. A conference of Iraqi Jews in Israel rejected any notion that the Iraqi Jews want to be Arabs'. A liking for Oud music certainly does not make one an Arab.<br />The fact that the oriental Jews were not Zionists means they did not come to Israel of their own free will - their forced exodus is undeniable. <br />You are just indulging in apologetics for Arab antisemitism. What is your explanation for the 1941 Farhud? No doubt the Zionists caused that too.bataweenhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15829104245735619972noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12677825.post-85527122311389284152011-09-23T09:56:31.254+01:002011-09-23T09:56:31.254+01:00will draw attention to the plight of 900,000 genui...<i><b>will draw attention to the plight of 900,000 genuine Jewish refugees from Arab countries. Jewish refugees from Arab and Muslim lands and their descendants make up 50 percent of Israel's Jewish population. </b></i><br /><br />Is it Possible to tell why the other 50% came to "Promise land" so can we count them also as "Jewish refugees" BUT from other part of the world? Aren’t they?<br /><br />As for Human Rights you bring here in your post you should well reminded that your early "Israeli Leaders" well regarded as war criminals and they selected to head of state refused more than 100 UN resolutions dealing with international community and many regarding Human Rights abuse and war crimes against indigenous people on the land of Palestine.<br /><br /><br />I leave you to read through in hope to help you understanding your case better:<br /><br /><i> "he oriental Jewish Communities were not a part of the Zionist plan which essentially was a European, colonial one. Only after the creation of Israel did Israeli leadership turn their attention to the Arabic/Jewish Community." Abbas Shiblak, expert on Iraqi Jewry continues to comment on what happened then: "For me, as a refugee and a Palestinian Arab, the experiences of Iraqi Jews and all other Arabic/Jewish Communities are largely one of otherness" - loss, uprootedness and rejection.<br /><br />If one believes the Jewish Iraqi participant in the conference, "Remember Baghdad," which was organized by the Austrian Institute for International Politics (OIIP) and numerous other organizations, then it was not a particularly happy return to the promised land. The preliminary events leading up to- and the circumstances surrounding the exodus of Jews out of Iraq, which were related to the other participants at the conference, differ considerably from those of the Israeli mainstream narrative: it was, above all, one of "transfer" run by Zionist leadership.<br /><br />Deliberate Transfer<br />That the Jews had to leave behind their possessions - an historical view that involves only the Arabic countries - was, according to the sociologist, Yehouda Shenhav, deliberate: in order to protect Israel from Palestinian claims for compensation. Therefore, Israel supported no individual demands from Iraq made by the Iraqi Jews: "It was important that it remain "collective".<br /><br />Even in Israel itself the Iraqi immigrant expected a "systematic cultural cleansing," said Nisim Rejwan with great bitterness at the conference. He left Baghdad in 1951. By citing quotes from David Ben Gurion and Golda Meier, the eighty year-old Rejwan highlighted the colonial arrogance felt by the Eastern Jews at the time of integration.<br /><br />The author, Sami Michael, discovered that the ideological dictates of the Zionists made a neutral non-partisan depiction of the life of the Jews in Iraq impossible. Now these Jews want their history back. In fact, consideration is being made of a new museum, since the one in Tel Aviv fails to mention any Iraqi Jewish leader who defied Zionism.<br /><br />There was a broad consensus at the conference that giving the term "Jew" an ethnic twist in the Arabic world results from the Israelis having put a stamp on the opposites of Jew/Arab: In Baghdad, there were Arabic Muslims, Arabic Christians and Arabic Jews. It was scarcely mentioned that the bitter history of European anti-Semitism and the Holocaust had started here: the Austrian listener should, however, not forget it.</i><br /><br /><i>Common Music<br />The Arabic identity of the Iraqi Jews was celebrated at the beginning as well as at the end of the conference: Whereas the first part of the conference was dedicated to remembering times of division, the second day shared a sense of unity of "Oud Festival" (Arabic sounds) with Jewish and non-Jewish Arabic musicians from different generations playing music together.</i><br /><br /><b>Iraqi Jews Want to Be Arabs</b><br />Thursday, January 4, 2007Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com