Origins of Our Faith
News Letter


Home

Donate

News Letter         Elijah Project

The Blog

TV Show

Aleph

Radio


Spring 2008

  Current Newsletter    Winter 2008   Spring 2008   Summer 2008   Winter 2009   Elections 2009   Spring 2009   Fall 2009
                                 Winter 2010   Gaza Flotilla

Activists to Defy Bush
by Building Town in Judea

 

A new Jewish town will be established during US President George W. Bush's visit to Israel, in defiance of US governmental pressure to cease building in Judea and Samaria.

 

The new location, called Shdema, is on the site of a former IDF base located along the road between Jerusalem's southern Har Homa neighborhood and the eastern Gush Etzion towns of Nokdim and Tekoa. Located in Area C (under full Israeli security and administrative control), it was abandoned about 18 months ago.

 

The Olmert government, in negotiations with the Fatah-run Palestinian Authority, has agreed to turn the location into an Arab village, despite reported objections form the IDF that such a step would endanger the traffic artery linking the area to Jerusalem. The activists seek to instead turn the place into a thriving Jewish community providing contiguity between Jerusalem and the eastern Gush Etzion bloc.

 

"We have invited President George W. Bush and his entourage to join us at the ceremony of the laying of the cornerstone," organizers announced Tuesday evening. “Only an insane government that has no qualms abandoning its citizens to Arab terror can come up with such an outrageous idea as building the enemy new cities in strategic locations, thus endangering the lives of Jews in Jerusalem and Gush Etzion.”
 

The activist groups plan to post a large ad in Israel’s English-language newspapers, aimed at delivering their message to Bush during his visit.

 

The groups emphasizing that the struggle here is not only for Shdema per se but against the entire Olmert-Livni policy of building cities for the Arab enemy while freezing Jewish building.

 

Women in Green head Nadia Matar pointed out that the settlement of Shdema constitutes a new method of operation for Land of Israel activists. "Until Gush Katif, the national camp used to always react - to be passive," she told Arutz Sheva. "We used to wait till the day of the expulsion came to actually start doing something and getting organized. Now we understand that that is not the way. We must initiate. We must be active and lead the way. Whether it is building new outposts all over Yesha (Judea, Samaria and Gaza). We must not wait till it is too late, wait untill the bulldozers come in August to destroy the community of Migron, but rather launch the struggle already now."

 

Matar says that whereas the old model would wait until construction begins in Shdema for an Arab village to launch protests, the new model dictates embarking on a construction drive there right now. On Thursday, activists will leave from Kiryat Arba (8:30 AM), Efrat (8:45 AM), Tekoa (9:00 AM) and the Har Homa police station (9:00 AM) for a tour of Shdema, followed by the painting and refurbishing of the dilapidated army barracks there. Mezuzahs (Biblical holy items affixed to Jews’ doorposts containing parchment with central Jewish texts written on them) will be affixed to the barracks during the ceremony.

 

Rabbi Uzi Sharbaf, Attorney Elyakim HaEtzni, MK Arieh Eldad (National Union) and Rabbi Durani of Nokdim will participate in the event, which is being organized by the Action Committees of Har Homa, Efrat, Gush Etzion and Kiryat Arba-Hevron; The Committee to Save the People and the Land; The Yesha Rabbinic Council, The Nascent Sanhedrin; Women in Green;  Land of Israel Loyalists; Land of Israel Youth; Homesh First; Nahalal Forum; Virashtem Ota; Meginei Eretz; Mateh Tsafon; Mateh Eretz Yisrael; Mattot Arim; The New Jewish Congress and the Temple Mount Movement.

 

Friday will also be a day of touring and building in Shdema. For more information, called 050 550 0834, 050 577 7254, (02) 996 1292 or 050 524 6770.

 


 

Man strips
In Protest of Bread Sale During Passover

 

 

A 27-year-old man, claiming to be a yeshiva student, decided to launch an unusual protest against a court ruling allowing stores and restaurants to sell leavened food during the holiday of Passover.

 

The man, dressed as a haredi, arrived Monday afternoon at a store belonging to the non-kosher Tiv Taam supermarket chain in the city of Bat Yam, just south of Tel Aviv. Upon his arrival, he undressed and remained with only a sock covering his private parts.

 

The man explained that he could not be prosecuted for an indecent act in public, because according to the court's interpretation of the leavened food law, a supermarket is not considered a public place. He even wrote on his stomach, "This isn't public???"

 

The store employees alerted the police, who dressed the man, arrested him and took him to the police station. In his investigation, the suspect claimed that he was a yeshiva student studying in different yeshivot in Bat Yam.

 

He told the police that in light of the court ruling, he did not violate any law. The police were unconvinced by the young man's interpretation of the ruling, and are expected to ask the Rishon Lezion Magistrates' Court to send him to a mental observation.

 


The writing on the stomach: '
This isn't public???

'I left the sock on because I'm religious'

 

"I don’t know if they plan to prosecute me, but I plan to demand it. They opened an unjustified criminal record, and I plan to fight for my innocence," the young man, Arieh Yerushalmi, told Ynet on Monday night.

 

He explained his decision to strip despite his religious values, saying that "this is why I left the sock on, that's what I didn’t care. Sometimes one has to shout – the shame was not mine, but the other people's."

 

Yerushalmi said that he entered the Tiv Taam store in Bat Yam's industrial zone at 2:20 pm. He noticed a group of minors and waited for them to leave. After they left, he said, he called the police and reported that there was a nude person in the store. He then walked over to the bread counter and took all his clothes off, apart from a sock covering his private parts.

 

Following his arrest and investigation, Yerushalmi was put under house arrest. He claimed that he was released because the establishment was not interested in a "media party" at the courtroom.

 

What is considered a public place?

 

Several weeks ago, a Jerusalem Municipal Court judge decreed that the indictments against four restaurant owners charged with selling bread and leavened goods on Passover be scrapped.

 

In her verdict, Justice Tamar Bar Asher-Tzabann ruled that, by law, a store or restaurant is not deemed a public place because, unlike an open market, it is a closed off arena that cannot be seen by passersby. She said that leavened goods may be sold inside stores and restaurants, as long as they are not put on display outside or at the shop window.

 

 

 

Netanyahu: Israel suffers
from lack of leadership

In Likud event ahead of Passover, opposition leader paints gloomy picture of Israeli reality: 'Security is flawed, the government's policy is detached from reality, the economy is in a state of retreat and education is collapsing'

 


Netanyahu between MKs Rivlin (L) and Sa'ar (Photo: Yaron Brener)

 

Amnon Meranda

Published:  04.13.08, 20:01 / Israel News

 

Opposition leader Benjamin Netanyahu on Sunday harshly criticized the Olmert government's policy in all fields.

 

Speaking at a Likud event in Tel Aviv held ahead of Passover, the party chairman said that "security is flawed, the policy is detached from reality, the economy is in a state of retreat, and education is collapsing."

 

According to Netanyahu, the Olmert government is rushing into handing territories over to a non-existent Palestinian partner.

 

"The Likud faction is the best faction in the Knesset," the opposition leader told his party members. "I promise you that it will be the biggest faction in the Knesset in the next elections.

 

"On the eve of the feast of freedom, we first of all hope for the return of our captives – Shalit, Regev and Goldwasser. On the eve of Passover, we tell Israel's citizens that the State of Israel can succeed," he said.

 

According to Netanyahu, Israel should and could restore its security and resume the economic growth, while raising the education level.

 

"We will reduce taxes and resume growth. In the social field, we will help those who are really weak. Today I am still against helping imposters, those who can work but want to live at your expense."

 

'Government engaged in political survival'

 

Netanyahu went on to say that the current situation in Israel was "the result of the leadership's weakness, or to be precise, the lack of leadership and the lack of way.

 

"We have a government which escapes responsibility, and sometimes it seems that it is only cynically engaged in political survival. I believe that the State can be led differently, in a successful way. But this way compels us to look straight into reality and tell the people the truth."

 

The Likud chairman once again called on Shas ministers to leave the government. "For how long will you stay in this government? Until we return to the '67 lines? Until the flag of Palestine is waved on the Temple Mount? I ask you to get out of this government, get out of there."

 

Addressing political mistakes made over the past few years, the opposition chairman said, "(Defense Minister and former Prime Minister Ehud) Barak withdrew from Lebanon, strengthening Hizbullah. (Prime Minister Ehud) Olmert made a mistake with the disengagement, strengthening Hamas.

 

"These two mistakes by Barak and Olmert have set up two radical Islam bases controlled by Iran. Some 8,000 missiles and rockets have been showered on the top of Israelis' heads from these two bases. In the north and in the south, our enemies are arming themselves with lethal Iranian weapons."

 

'Israel buying peace in Abbas' supermarket'

 

Netahyahu noted that "the Likud is a party of peace. It has made peace and will make peace, but the greatest mistake in diplomacy is giving in to dreams and being detached from reality.

 

"Our political rivals choose to picture a non-existent reality, invent a non-existent partner. The Palestinians who might want peace can't bring it, and those who could bring it don’t want it. So I ask Olmert and Barak: Who will be given the homeland territories which you are so glad to give away in such remarkable generosity? Do you have a real partner for peace on the other side?

 

"I read this week a commentator's column claiming that in closed forums Olmert says that Abu Mazen (Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas) can't even make a decision about adding a floor to his house. If this is what you believe, Mr. Olmert, how can let Abu Mazen build a state when he cannot even build a room?

 

"We all know the truth – the IDF leaves, Hamas enters. This is exactly what will happen if Olmert continues to blindly advance the withdrawal agreement, which is today called 'the shelf agreement.' They found themselves a term, as if peace can be bought in Abu Mazen's supermarket.

 

"In this supermarket Israel pays everything in advance without receiving anything in return. This is amateurism endangering the entire country, including the Tel Aviv Metropolitan area and Jerusalem," Netanyahu concluded.

 


 

You`ll Know It's Passover in Israel Because...

 

Judy Lash Balint          

 

For the past several years I've been putting out a light-hearted '18 Ways You Know Pesach is Coming In Israel’ piece to describe the frenetic days leading up to Pesach in the holy city.

This year, there are a few additional notable events that are driving the news cycles over here.

Apart from the Mid-East visit of the vile Jimmy Carter, who sets off sometime in the next few days for his tete-a-tete with arch-terrorist Hamas leader Khaled Mashaal in Damascus, there’s the controversy over the Chametz Law. Never heard of it? Well, since 1986, Israel has had a law on the books that forbids leavened products from being displayed in public during Pesach. For the duration of the holiday, supermarkets cover their shelves containing non-Pesach items with thick white paper—whether to abide by the law or to avoid causing further pain to customers suffering from bread withdrawal is not clear.

Last week, all hell broke loose when a Jerusalem judge overturned the law (that no one had ever been charged with violating…) opining that it’s permissible to sell chametz, as long as it’s not publicly displayed. Shas is trying to get the Knesset to discuss the matter before the Pesach recess. Meanwhile, Haaretz revealed in a poll published last Friday that 68 percent of the population answers “no” when asked if they are planning on eating chametz during Pesach.

Citizens of southern Israel have far weightier concerns, as they face the prospect of a Passover under fire—for the seventh year running. The ceaseless daily barrage of Kassam and Katyusha rockets toward our southern cities and surrounding western Negev kibbutzim has shattered any semblance of the 'enhanced security' we were promised by the 2005 Gaza pullout. Almost everyone who supported and promoted the "disengagement" plan now acknowledges that destroying 22 Jewish communities in the Gush Katif section of the Gaza strip has done nothing to further the path to peace.

As if that weren’t bad enough, almost all the former Gush Katif residents are still in temporary housing almost three years since their eviction. Many who moved into the vast and dismal caravilla camp of Nitzan, near Ashkelon are still unemployed and dealing with the emotional and psychological effects of displacement.

Meantime, on Pesach the extent of the dire poverty of hundreds of
thousands of Israelis is exposed. Latest figures indicate that roughly 20.5% of Israeli families live below the poverty line in 2008, a slight increase from last year’s 20%. Moreover, 24.7% of Israel’s residents and 35.9% of its children live in impoverished families. Families and the elderly form almost endless lines in every city around the food banks and soup kitchens that do their best to provide the basics necessary to celebrate the holiday. The Mesamche Lev group distributed 46,278 pairs of shoes to 10,200 needy families last week, while all the other voluntary social welfare organizations report unprecedented demand for their services this Pesach.

In every Charedi neighborhood during the week before Pesach, men and boys block the narrow streets with handtrucks piled high with sacks of carrots, potatoes, oranges and cartons of eggs--all courtesy of the Kimcha D'Pischa funds that funnel donations from abroad to the Charedi
communities, specifically for Pesach food.

The tourists, largely oblivious to our problems and cheerfully putting up with our current hot and dusty spell, have descended on us with a vengeance. Most visible are the busloads of pilgrims from eastern Europe, Nigeria and an assortment of Asian countries--the Jews arrive in much smaller family groups, excited to be in Israel for one of the three pilgrimage festivals.

So, as the popular Israeli expression goes, "We overcame Pharoah, we'll overcome this too..." This year, as always, we'll celebrate Pesach, the festival of our liberation and the birth of the Jewish people as a nation in the hope that we'll soon merit a saner reality.

Meanwhile, for those who have read this far…here's an updated version of the 18 (now 20) Ways You Know Pesach is Coming To Israel:

1. The Israeli Army presses into service some 200 IDF chaplains including reservists, to commence the massive task of kashering the hundreds of kitchens, mess halls and eating corners used by soldiers all over the country.

2. Street scenes in Israel change every day before Passover according to what's halachically necessary: In the days before the holiday, yeshiva students wielding blow torches preside over huge vats of boiling water stationed every few blocks on the street and in the courtyard of every mikveh. The lines to dunk cutlery, kiddush cups and the like start to grow every day, and, at the last minute, blow torches are at the ready to cleanse every last gram of chametz from
oven racks and stove tops lugged through the streets.

3. No alarm clock needed here--the clanging garbage trucks do the trick as they roll through the neighborhood every morning during the two weeks before Pesach to accommodate all the refuse from the furious cleaning going on in every household. Two days before the Seder there's the annual pick-up of oversized items and appliances. Dozens of antiquated computer monitors and old toaster ovens stand forlornly next to the garbage bins on their way to the dump.

4. The day before Passover, families replace the yeshiva students, using empty lots to burn the remainder of their chametz gleaned from the previous night's meticulous search. In vain, the Jerusalem municipality sets up official chametz burning locations and issues trict orders banning burning in any other areas. Yeah, right…

5. Most flower shops stay open all night for the two days before Pesach, working feverishly to complete the orders that will grace the nation's Seder tables.

6. Meah Shearim and Geula merchants generally run out of heavy plastic early in the week before Pesach. In a panic, I make an early morning run to the Machane Yehuda market to successfully snap up a few meters of the handy counter-covering material.

7. No holiday in Israel is complete without a strike or two. In years past the Histadrut Labor Union threatened to launch a general strike 10 days before the holiday to protest planned economic cuts. Ben Gurion Airport was included… This year, it's government workers who are out on strike... The Civil Servants Labor Union launched a two-day strike this week, partly halting many services at the Interior and Finance ministries in protest against what they say is unfair promotion of Israel Discount Bank over Bank Yahav in providing services to civil servants. Yes, you heard that right…

8. Observant Jews mark the seven weeks between Passover and Shavuot by carrying out some of the laws of mourning--one of these is the prohibition against cutting hair.

Good luck if you haven't scheduled an appointment for a pre-Pesach/Omer haircut. You can't get in the door at most barber and beauty shops.

9. Mailboxes are full of Pesach appeals from the myriad of organizations helping the poor celebrate Pesach. Newspapers are replete with articles about selfless Israelis who volunteer by the hundreds in the weeks before the holiday to collect, package and distribute Pesach supplies to the needy.

This year, Hazon Yeshaya Soup Kitchens plan on serving 7,000 meals per day during Passover. More than 15,000 food parcels will be distributed before the holiday, just by this one organization.

10. The biggest food challenge to those of us ashkenazic, non-kitniyot (legume) eaters is finding cookies, margarine etc. made without kitniyot, but an increasing number of ashkenazic rabbis are coming out with lenient rulings regarding legumes.

11. Since most of the country is on vacation for the entire week of Pesach, all kinds of entertainment and trips are on offer. Ads appear for everything from the annual Boombamela beach festival, kid's activities at the Bloomfield Science Museum and concerts in Hebron,
the City of David, Sderot and the Dead Sea.

12. Pesach with its theme of freedom and exodus always evokes news stories about recent olim. This year, general immigration numbers are significantly down, but American aliya has enjoyed a mini-boom. For a couple of thousand new Israeli-Americans, it'll be their first Seder at home in Israel. Israel Radio announces that 700 prisoners will get a furlough to spend the holiday with family.

13. This just in: According to Israel's Brandman Research Institute study, 43 million people hours will be spent nationwide in Israel's cleaning preparations for Passover this year. How does that break down? Of those cleaning hours, 29 million are done by women and 11 million by men. Persons paid to clean do the remaining 3 million hours at a cost of NIS 64 million ($15.6 million).

14. Israel's chief rabbis sell the nation's chametz to one Hussein Jabar, a Moslem Arab resident of Abu Ghosh and manager at Jerusalem's Renaissance Hotel. Estimated worth: $150 billion secured by a down payment of NIS 20,000. Jabar tool over the task some 14 years ago, after the previous buyer, also from Abu Ghosh, was fired when it was discovered his maternal grandmother was Jewish.

15. Radio commercials for all sorts of products and services are set to Seder melodies. Last year, Volkswagen used the Mah Nishtana tune to advertise its cars. Another favorite is "Echad Mi Yodeya?--Who Knows One?" that has become a jingle for one brand of coffee. "Four mothers, three fathers, two sugars, one cup of coffee!"

16. For those of us too lazy to go to our rabbis to sell chametz, one Israeli website offers the possibility of performing this ritual in cyberspace: For those of you out there with Hebrew enabled computers, take a look at http://www.kipa.co.il/passover/sell.asp

17. Sign of the times? A few years ago, former Sephardi Chief Rabbi Mordechai Eliyahu issued a ruling that Viagra may be taken on Pesach provided the pill is encased in a special empty capsule so that the drug itself is not in direct contact with the body. In a move to ease another kind of Pesach yearning, the Israeli branch of Ben & Jerry's ice cream has developed Matza Crunch flavor. French vanilla with chips of chocolate-covered matza make up the new flavor, which is being sold for $4.50 a pint in Israeli supermarkets.

18. At the Kotel last week, I watched as workers performed the twice-yearly ritual (pre-Pesach and pre-Rosh hashanah) of removing thousands of personal notes from the crevices of the Kotel to bury them on the Mt of Olives.

19. Guess Who's Buying Matza? According to Iyad Sharbaji, the manager of Gadaban Supermarket at the entrance to the the Galilee Arab town of Umm al Fahm, his Matza is consumed entirely by local Arabs. Sharbaji told Haaretz that he generally stocks up on Matza for Passover and has to replenish stock before the end of the holiday, due to keen demand by locals.

It turns out the avid consumption of matza is not a new trend in Arab towns and villages, whose inhabitants view the traditional Jewish food as nothing more or less than a welcome and refreshing change in the menu. "It's not a religious issue, and certainly not a political one," Sharbaji explains.

20. A sign of our economic times--supermarkets entice shoppers with a promise to allow us to settle up the bill in six equal monthly payments on the credit card. Yes, many of us will still be
paying for the Seder come Rosh Hashana!

 


Israel's Knesset began debate Monday
on a court ruling allowing the sale of bread
and other forbidden foods during Passover week.

The special session, which interrupted the Knesset recess, was called to debate a ruling that appeared to green-light the sale of foods forbidden on Passover. Jewish law forbids the sale and consumption of leavened bread and a range of other foods beginning on Passover, which begins this year on April 19.

Knesset Speaker Dahlia Itzik declared that the issue of selling bread and other religiously prohibited foods is for the Knesset to decide, not the courts.

 

"The issue at hand belongs to the Knesset and not to the courts," she said. "It is this Knesset that must decide."

 

The special session was called by Shmuel Halpert, leader of the United Torah Judaism party, who said that eating forbidden foods was a sin punishable by death or excommunication, the Israeli newspaper Haaretz reported.

Jerusalem Municipal Court Judge Tamar Bar Asher-Zaban ruled recently that Israeli law permitted selling non-Passover foods, such as bread, in groceries, restaurants and pizzerias during the Passover holiday. The judge said the businesses included in her ruling were not considered "public" places by law, the newspaper reported.

Immediately after the ruling, various religious parties in the Knesset proposed a a bill intended to neutralize the ruling.

 

The Knesset met Sunday to discuss the proposal, but the attempt to change the ruling failed, the newspaper reported.

 

Trade Minister Eli Ishai, head of the ultra-Orthodox Sephardi Shas party, insisted that the powerful religious parties will continue their efforts to try to change the law.

 

Ishai told the newspaper that Israelis consider the selling of forbidden Passover food "repellent" and that the public will surely ignore the "bizarre" court decision.