Archive for May, 2007

Blogger: Baha’i Faith in Egypt
Article: Another Insightful Post in “Seeking Justice”
Originaly Posted On: 2007-05-06 15:32:00

A critical legal question was just raised yesterday in a post published on “Seeking Justice” blog. It addresses Egypt’s legal responsibility to uphold its obligations to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, to which it is a co-signatory. The post quotes articles 2 & 18 of the Covenant and analysis their meaning. It then emphasizes Egypt’s obligations of being a party to that Covenant and the impact of such obligations on the current Baha’i crisis in Egypt. In order to learn more about this particular issue, please click here….

Meeting in Jerusalem - Wasatia

Monday, May 7th, 2007

Blogger: Mideast Youth - Thinking Ahead
Article: Meeting in Jerusalem - Wasatia
Originaly Posted On: 2007-05-05 17:01:47

About two weeks ago I was invited to meeting by a friend and peace colleague who has a new organization called TRUST (building understanding and trust between
Israelis and Palestinians).
Dr. Mohamed Dajani, the Director of the American Studies Institute at
Al Quds University in Ramallah who made a presentation of
“Big Dreams, Small Hopes” and a presentation about Wasatia (Moderation) which is a new Palestinian organization of Moderate Islam that he has founded. He began his lecture by telling us he was alot more radical in his younger years, joining up with Fatah between the years 1967-1975, with a familiar “it’s either us or them” attitude. I say “familiar” because when I first came to Israel from Canada I had the exact same attitude. It wasn’t until he came to know Israelis on a human level that he no longer thought of them as enemies. Yup. Same thing happened to me over 4 years ago when I first met Palestinians - I also no longer thought of them as enemies - even though we met during the height of the 2nd intifada. This Dejani guy and I seemed like kindred spirits.
He asked us - “What is more important? Big dreams or small hopes?” He reported that with the Palestinian media you won’t see the victims of a Palestinian suicide bomber and generally in Palestinian textbooks there is a denial of the State of Israel, not showing Jewish holy sites, etc. And Israeli textbooks don’t mention much of what goes on in the Palestinian side of things either. So both sides prefer to be ignorant of the other. This we all knew.
He showed us propaganda slides from both sides - on the Israeli side, you see photos of the Temple Mount with the 3rd temple rebuilt - but no Dome of the Rock. On the Palestinian side, you see a slide showing an El Al plane loaded with “new Israelis” like myself - taking us all back to the cities of Europe and US from which we came. He said that current Palestinian education teaches Palestinians to love a place that doesn’t exist any more. And Israeli textbooks show Arabs as backwards and unproductive.
So how does one move on from this? One must “think out of the box”, he says. Less focus on the past but not let it dominate the future. We should teach religious commonalities and cultural commonalities. Learn historical narratives of the other. Stop blaming each other. Forgive. Initiative massive people-to-people activities.
So, on Wednesday, while I was with my Palestinian friend who got a permit to come to Jerusalem and I was taking her around to sell her embroidered crafts (which her women’s organization makes) to high-end hotel gift shops, there was a joint Jewish-Palestinian activity going on in the Sheikh Saed neighborhood just outside Jerusalem where both peoples were protesting the wall going up and dividing that neighborhood. This was a family event and people brought their children. And I do think that when we help each other out and support each other like this, the “higher ups” in the Israeli government may just listen - for once.
Blog, Events, General, Interfaith, Israel, Palestine

Blogger: Ihsan
Article: Poll Data on Muslim Attitudes to Darfur
Originaly Posted On: 2007-05-05 06:50:00

The Arab American Institute and Zogby International conducted a survey in several predominantly Muslim countries about the situation in Darfur.

http://aai.3cdn.net/c57541b60f206b0297_cmm6brl5d.pdf is the link for the survey report.

Shabbat eve in full bloom.

Saturday, May 5th, 2007

Blogger: Mideast Youth - Thinking Ahead
Article: Shabbat eve in full bloom.
Originaly Posted On: 2007-05-04 14:23:15

The good Jewish husbands bring their wives a bouquet of flowers on Friday afternoon for a shabbat shalom.
The great Jewish husbands take their wives on a Friday afternoon stroll through the Jerusalem Botanical Gardens so she can pick out her own.

Blog, Israel, Life, Photos

Petra - last bit

Saturday, May 5th, 2007

Blogger: jerusalem wanderings
Article: Petra - last bit
Originaly Posted On: 2007-05-04 14:48:00






Our last day in Petra we actually went out of our hotel (after 2 days just inside) to tour Petra which is up for the updated Seven Wonders of the World - which it should be. We were so knackered at the end of our trip that we took a horse and carriage back - after haggling with the driver of course. My Palestinian roommate haggled better in Arabic but one driver got so mad at her, he said “only the English speakers could get into the carriage” - eventually we got one that let us both on. I managed to even video tape this ride - shaky but you get the picture (pun intended).

On the way back to the hotel after our Petra tour we spoke with some of the young guys.

“You should have been at our room last night. We were smoking nargilas!”

“Thought you people weren’t allowed to smoke nargilas in your hotel room - wasn’t that one of the rules that A. spoke about at the beginning of the conference?”

He laughed at me. “But it was A.’s nargila we were smoking in his room.”

“What?”

“You must understand the Arab way - you can make the rules and then break the rules.”

I see. I guess that’s why the Palestinian man and woman, who at the beginning of the conference said they could not have any relationships with “settlers” meaning anyone who lives over the green line, which I do, maintained a warm relationship with me throughout the weekend. Perhaps because they were nonsensical rules anyways, made by politicians who don’t know their ass from their elbows.

That evening, after the main conference ended we had a wonderful women’s-only conference, where there was a lot of emotion, hugging, tears, laughter and promises. I had promised my Palestinian roommate that we would keep in touch and build up interfaith trust.

I had silently thanked God throughout the weekend that she didn’t faint, get sick or die in my room because having an Israeli roommate like myself might have looked mighty suspicious to outsiders, given the bad rap we have with Palestinians.

Blogger: Point of no return
Article: Absorption hardships for Yemenite Jews
Originaly Posted On: 2006-06-26 09:49:00

Touching story from Y-net News about the hardships facing new immigrants to Israel from Yemen. They are no longer eligible for state-subsidised mortgages, an anomaly that the government can surely rectify without too much difficulty. It has to be said that the numbers affected are minimal: fewer than 300 Jews still live in Yemen. (With thanks: Albert)

A year after arriving in Israel to be reunited with her son, Lauza Nahari asks to return to Yemen. ‘Son, please get me a ticket back to Yemen. This place is bad for me,’ she says.

Yechiel Nahari hadn’t seen his mother for 12 years. A year and two months ago, his friends from the Border Guard surprised him and brought his mother straight from Yemen to the ceremony marking the end of his basic training. But the originally joyful immigration has turned into a nightmare for the mother, who wanders between homes of distant relatives. It turns out that, unlike new immigrants from Ethiopia, immigrants from Yemen are not entitled to a state-subsidized mortgage.

A year and two months ago, Border Guard policemen surprised cadet Yechiel Nahari, then 19-years-old, by bringing his mother, whom he had not seen for 12 years, to the concluding ceremony of his basic training. Still on the courtyard, Nahari burst into tears as he hugged his mother. “Don’t cry, son. Don’t let people see a soldier cry,” scolded his mother. Yechiel Nahari was taken from his mother 12 years ago in Yemen, at the age of seven, by the Sumter hassidim (Sotmar? Ed) from the United States. After suffering from the strict regime at one of their yeshivot in New York, he wandered the streets until he met Shlomo Grafi, the patron of Yemeni immigrants to Israel in recent years. Grafi helped the boy immigrate to Israel and be accepted to the Border Guard. Grafi promised Nahari that he would do his best to help Nahari’s mother come to Israel also. A year ago, he stood by his word and, indeed, brought her to Israel as a surprise for Nahari’s military ceremony. Following the ceremony, the mother returned to Yemen and, a few months later, arrived in Israel, this time as a new immigrant.

Today, Nahari feels that he and his mother were abandoned in Israel. “They housed us in an absorption center in Ashdod, but all the immigrants there were Ethiopian or Russian. She doesn’t speak the language and she felt lonely and neglected. Since then, she has been wandering from distant relative to distant relative. I serve as a combat officer in the Border Guard and come home only once every two weeks. It’s heartbreaking to see my mother homeless.”

Added Nahari: “My mother is a very sick woman. In Yemen, they tossed a grenade into her house and she suffers from shrapnel wounds and has trouble walking. She also suffers traumas from her difficult life in Yemen. Every time she sees me, she says: ‘Son, please get me a ticket back to Yemen. This place is bad for me.’”

Yesterday, in her cousin’s house in Rehovot, in Yemenite peppered with Arabic (they speak Hebrew of Biblical purity - Ed), Lauza Nahari said: “I wander from house to house and cry night and day. They made me a new immigrant, but I’m actually lonely and abandoned. I don’t know the language and I have no possessions, not even a bed.”

Shlomo Grafi, the man responsible for the Yemeni immigration in the past decade and, specifically, for bringing Lauza Nahari to Israel, appealed several times to the exceptions committee in the Ministry of Immigration and Absorption in order for Lauza to receive government assistance for public housing.

Says Grafi, “In March of 1995, the state decided to stop providing mortgages for apartments such as the ones they gave to Ethiopian immigrants. Recent immigrants (from Yemen) are neither able to leave the absorption centers or to become integrated within them.” The spokeswoman from the Ministry of Immigration and Absorption said in response, “In the past, Yemeni immigrants were eligible to receive state-subsidized mortgages but today, pursuant to an order from the Ministry of Finance, only Ethiopian immigrants are eligible for them. The Ministry of Immigration and Absorption appealed to the Ministry of Finance to extend the eligibility also to Yemeni immigrants, but to no avail. The issue has since been appealed again and is awaiting Minister Zeev’s response on whether all immigrants from troubled countries, including Yemen, will be eligible for mortgages. In the meantime, if Lauza would like to move to the absorption center in Ashkelon, where two Yemeni families are currently residing, we would be happy to help her.”

Read article in full

More about the last Jews of Yemen here

Bishara: Alleged use of free speech

Wednesday, May 2nd, 2007

Blogger: Mideast Youth - Thinking Ahead
Article: Bishara: Alleged use of free speech
Originaly Posted On: 2007-05-02 14:52:50

Allegations against former Israeli MK Azmi Bishara threaten to cover up the real scandal of the Israeli-Lebanese war!
I have been following the publicity surrounding the Winograd Committee’s report, published two days ago, with great interest. The Commitee, convened by the government of Israel, was charged with investigating the actions of the Israeli military and governement leading up to and during the war.
I was living in the Galilee during the war, and joined many others in Tel Aviv to protest the actions of the military. When thousands of Palestinian Israelis and Jewish Israelis filled the streets of the city to call the Minister of Defense, the Chief of Staff and the Prime Minister to account, people jeered at us from the sides of the street, waved Israeli flags and called us “traitors.” I’m not Israeli, but those marching beside me felt the insult–is it treachery to voice an opinion?
It was a small victory to read that the committee that investigated the war concluded that the Minister of Defense, the Prime Minister and the Chief of Staff of Israel were all negligent, acted with hubris and unwarranted bravado, and in doing so endangered or extinguished the lives of many Israeli civilians and soldiers. The committee does not call them to account for the deaths of Lebanese civilians in the areas that Israel bombarded and invaded–but this essential disregard for humanity does weigh heavily on the hearts of many Israelis as well.
I opened YNet to read further news of the committee and its effect this morning and was sickened to find that the lead story is that Azmi Bishara, former Balad member of Knesset, is now being investigated for aiding Hezbollah and acts of treachery. This is an unconscionable distraction from the real issue of holding the government responsible–I’d even go so far to say it’s incitement and libel. The entire news story lays out the elaborate way that Bishara collaborrated with Hezbollah…(allegedly). Exactly.
Is is possible that the allegations against Bishara are true? About as possible as John Kerry not having actually served in Vietnam. What is similiar is the way that pretty bogus allegations are being used to cover up an issue much more pressing and divert public attention in a dangerous way. When we were dodging Katyushas in northern Israel, we used the sarcastic phrase “binaqu adas” to say that the rockets would sort out the Jews and the Arabs. It was entirely and sadly sarcastic, as everyone knew that Nazareth and Majd Al-Krum (where Bishara’s party, ironically, is very strong) were getting hit along with Haifa.
Azmi Bishara voices a minority opinion, that of a one-state solution and a right of return for all Palestinian refugees. I would not be part of Balad were I a citizen of Israel, but I certainly support free speech and diversity of opinion within the political arena. I find Avigdor Liberman’s calls for transfer of Palestinian Israelis to the West Bank as part of a “solution” to the conflict as offensive and unconstitutional, but he obviously has a right to voice this opinion as he is deputy Prime Minister.
Bishara got out of the country…but where does that leave Israel?
Blog, Freedom of speech, General, Israel

Blogger: Baha’i Faith in Egypt
Article: “Seeking Justice” A new Blog on the Baha’is of Egypt
Originaly Posted On: 2007-04-26 06:06:00

A new blog entitled “Seeking Justice” has just emerged. It is authored by two attorneys. In their introductory statement to the blog, they state: “This blog is inspired by a principle shared by all religions–the need to seek truth and promote justice. In this spirit, our goal is to understand in greater depth the current situation of the Baha’is of Egypt and their efforts to obtain basic human rights. We look forward to your collaboration in this inquiry!”

The blogs first post dated 22 April 2007, and named “Who Is Entitled To Human Rights In Egypt?” addresses the 16 December 2006 Egypt’s Supreme Administrative Court ruling denying the Egyptian Baha’is of their right to be issued government mandated identification documents, thus denying them the right of citizenship.

To read the expert opinion of these prominent legal professionals, please connect to their blog here…. I strongly recommend that, if you are indeed interested in following the legal implications and analysis of the plight of the Egyptian Baha’is, you would be well served by following SEEKING JUSTICE on a regular basis.