Etgar Lefkovits
In a highly unusual move, the Chief Rabbinate will consider on Thursday
whether a long-planned Christian women's conference in Jerusalem
organized by the Knesset's Christian Allies Caucus violates Jewish law.
The two day-conference, which is set to start on Sunday, has drawn the
wrath of an Orthodox city councilwoman who is seeking to have it banned
by the Rabbinate.
The councilor, Mina Fenton of the National Religious Party, is a
prominent anti-missionary activist who has long tried to have the
cross-party parliamentary lobby dismantled for working with Christian
supporters of Israel, something she views as an anathema.
Last month, she teamed up with Lev Le'ahim, an anti-missionary group,
and persuaded a three-member Rabbinate panel to declare that the
conference was in violation of Jewish law due to allegations that
groups taking part in the event were involved in Christian missionary
activity.
That decision, which was taken without the knowledge of the chief
rabbis, will be reviewed in Thursday afternoon's meeting, after
protests by the chairman of the Knesset's Christian Allies Caucus, MK
Benny Elon (National Union-National Religious Party), who was not
present at the earlier meeting, officials said.
Elon, a modern Orthodox rabbi who has spearheaded Israel's relationship
... more »
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Thursday, May 17
by
Publisher
on Thu 17 May 2007 09:27 AM AKDT
by
Publisher
on Thu 17 May 2007 09:15 AM AKDT
By MUNIR AHMAD
(AP) Head of All Pakistan Minorities Alliance Shahbaz Bhatti, left, shows a threatening letter which... Full Image Google sponsored links Coffee Exposed - A shocking secret coffee co's don't want you to know. www.coffeefool.com ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (AP) - Christians in a Pakistani town beset by pro-Taliban militants sought government protection Wednesday, the eve of a deadline for them to convert to Islam or face violence. About 500 Pakistani Christians in Charsadda, a town in the North West Frontier Province bordering Afghanistan, received letters earlier this month telling them to close their churches and convert by Thursday or be the target of "bomb explosions." Several Christians, a tiny minority in the predominantly Muslim country, have fled town and others are living in fear, community leaders said. Some complained that police were not taking the threat seriously. "Police say someone is joking with us by writing these letters," Chaudhry Salim, a Charsadda Christian leader, said during a news conference in Islamabad. "They have deployed only two policemen at our churches ... this is the kind of security we are getting now." Shahbaz Bhatti, a prominent Christian leader and head of the All Pakistan Minorities Alliance, ... more »
by
Publisher
on Thu 17 May 2007 08:48 AM AKDT
By Joe Kovacs
Bibles could be wrapped with a warning label if authorities classify it as 'indecent' Hundreds of citizens are urging a media watchdog to classify the Bible as "indecent" due to the high amount of sex and violence throughout the Scriptures, and could force the Good Book to be sealed in plastic with a warning label. The Television and Entertainment Licensing Authority of Hong Kong said it received 1,406 complaints about biblical indecency by this afternoon. The sudden surge of complaints comes in the wake of the launch of an anonymous website, TruthBible.net, which claims the Bible "made one tremble" due to its graphic content, including rape, incest and bestiality. If authorities classify the book as "indecent," only people over 18 could purchase it, and the Scriptures would need to be sealed in a wrapper with a mandatory warning on the outside. "Wow, another excuse to try and remove Jesus or anything about Him from the world, so to speak," said one poster on an Internet messageboard. "The Enemy is hard at work in these last days." According to the Gospel Herald, the Chinese Christian News Service, the TruthBible site was created by an anonymous person introducing himself ... more »
by
Publisher
on Thu 17 May 2007 08:33 AM AKDT
Although the constitutional "right to keep and bear arms" is often
ridiculed as an archaic relic from America's past, the May issue of
WND's acclaimed Whistleblower magazine shows why private gun ownership
is actually more crucial to Americans' freedom and security today than
at any time in history.
Titled "FIREARMS AND FREEDOM: Why the Second Amendment is more important than ever," this eye-opening and spine-straightening Whistleblower edition documents how the contentious issue of gun rights – considered by many to be the linchpin of all Americans' rights – is dramatically coming to a head: The string of horrendous mass murders in "gun-free zones" – most recently at Virginia Tech, and before that October's slaughter of Amish schoolgirls in rural Pennsylvania as well as similar massacres at other schools around the nation – has fueled a furious debate over gun control, "gun-free zones" and "lax gun laws." Just like the Virginia Tech massacre, most violent crimes cannot be stopped by police, but only by citizens present during the commission of the crime. And research now shows conclusively that armed, law-abiding citizens have a huge impact on deterring and stopping violent criminal acts. Meanwhile, with terror attacks up 25 percent worldwide ... more »
by
Publisher
on Thu 17 May 2007 08:09 AM AKDT
The threat of a “coordinated, al Qaeda sponsored terrorist attack”
against and within the United States is “extremely high,” stated one
intelligence source interviewed yesterday by the Northeast Intelligence
Network. In particular, there is a “higher than average concern right
now, for the time period through the end of May,” including but not
specific to the Memorial Day holiday in the U.S. The threat is for
planned attacks “possibly like those we saw in the Madrid and London
attacks,” a reference to the coordinated terrorist bomb blasts that hit
Madrid’s commuter train system on March 11, 2004 and London's public
transportation system on July 7, 2005 respectively.
This veteran official, speaking under the customary condition of anonymity, said that despite this growing concern among high-level intelligence officials, he knows of no plans to raise the color-coded threat level in the U.S., and added that American interests outside of the U.S. considered to be at higher risk are already on increased alert status. “The threat obviously lacks the required specificity but warrants increased vigilance inside the U.S. as well as within other [Western] countries.” When asked what specific information is behind this increased concern, this official said that “there are several ... more »
by
Publisher
on Thu 17 May 2007 08:07 AM AKDT
By Donna Anderson
Portland -- Raiders News Network -- This week, researchers at the University of Manchester said they had uncovered new evidence which firmly placed the origins of modern medicine in ancient Egypt and not Greece. An article by Deborah Gabriel at Black Britain news said, "The researchers from the Knowledge Horizon Centre for Biomedical Egyptology (KNH) were examining ancient texts written on papyrus – made from the plant- which ancient Egyptians used to make scrolls. The medical papyri were written at least 3500 years ago, 1000 years before Hippocrates, who it is claimed was the father of medicine, was even born. "The Egyptian papyri contain medical treatments and prescriptions used in ancient Egypt. Professor Rosalie David, Director of the KNH Centre told Black Britain: “The evidence we are finding with the plants is that they did have these very valid remedies from at least 1500BC and almost certainly these were copies of earlier papyri which were also the same, so I think you could put the founding of medical science back in the time of the periods in Egypt.” "The papyri from ancient Egypt were discovered in the 19th century and translated from hieroglyphs into European languages, but ... more » |
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