By Caroline B. Glick
http://www.JewishWorldReview.com | From October 26-30, a mob of Druse
villagers in Peki'in in the Galilee launched what has all the markings
of a pogrom against the four Jewish families in the village. They
burned their cars and surrounded and torched their homes.
The police took a full day to come to the Jews' defense. And when they
did, the Druse mob kidnapped a policewoman and only set her free in
exchange for their cohorts who had been arrested. The police then set
about evacuating the Jews from their encircled homes and did nothing to
prevent their homes from being destroyed by the mob.
Now the Knesset's Interior Committee is demanding that a governmental
commission of inquiry be set up to investigate what the Druse claim was
police brutality in attempting to disperse the violent mob. For its
part the Olmert government is distancing itself from Internal Security
Minister Avi Dichter's decision to suffice with an internal police
investigation of the policemen's behavior at the scene.
The question that arises is whether the leftist-dominated Knesset and
the Olmert government act as they do out of fear or conviction. This
question is given increased urgency as the Olmert government, under
intense pressure from US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice moves
closer to officially committing Israel to surrender Judea and Samaria
and large swathes of Jerusalem including the Temple Mount to the
Palestinian Authority. Such a commitment would not merely induce Israel
to divest itself of the ability to defend itself while ensuring the
establishment of a terror enclave within mortar range of its major
cities. Given that the Palestinian state which everyone is so adamant
in championing will be an apartheid state which will legally bar all
Jews from owning land or acquiring residency or citizenship rights, the
Olmert government's acceptance of the demand for Palestinian statehood
involves an internalization of the anti-Semitic view which posits that
Jews have fewer rights than everybody else.
RELEVANT TO this discussion is last week's decision by a cabinet
committee to approve the 2005 election of Theophilos III as the Greek
Orthodox Patriarch. On the surface, the government's approval of the
appointment of a religious leader seems like a simple matter. But it is
not. Theophilos's election two years ago to head the Greek Orthodox
Church was the consequence of an anti-Jewish campaign of terror by
Hamas and Fatah and the Jordanian government against the church and its
leaders.
In the summer of 2004, Ma'ariv reported that the previous Greek
Patriarch Irineos I had approved a 99-year lease of two hotels inside
the Jaffa Gate of Jerusalem's Old City built on church-owned lands to a
Jewish-owned company. A maelstrom ensued within the church. Irineos was
illegally sacked and due to death threats has lived under armed guard
even since.
The Greek Orthodox Church is one of the largest landholders in Israel.
It owns the land on which both the Knesset and the President's
residence are built as well as vast land tracts throughout the capital
city and the country as a whole. Since the Patriarch oversees those
lands, his identity is anything but trivial.
After sacking Irineos, the church held elections for his successor.
According to a World Net Daily report, all the candidates were required
to sign a letter to the Palestinian Authority pledging, "We, the
candidates of the Greek Orthodox Church, hereby agree that…in the event
that we are elected, we shall act for the cancellation of all
transactions made during the period of Irineos I, and shall keep the
Orthodox religious trust."
In keeping with centuries-old practice, for the Greek Orthodox
Patriarch to formally assert his authority, he must first receive the
approval of all the relevant governments. Today this means he must
receive the approval of Jordan, the Palestinian Authority and Israel.
After Irineos was ejected from office, Theophilos immediately
distinguished himself from his fellow clerics with his enthusiasm for
barring Israel and Jews from using church lands. He secured Palestinian
and Jordanian backing ahead of the elections by pledging to operate in
accordance with Jordanian rather than Israeli law. Jordanian law
prohibits all land sales to Jews.
In light of this, it is obvious why, until last week Israel refused to
accredit Theophilos. Then too, like the government's response to the
anti-Jewish mob violence in Peki'in, the ministerial committee's
decision to approve Theophilis's election and so pave the way to formal
governmental acceptance of his credentials raises serious questions
about the Olmert government's commitment to defending the civil and
human rights of Jews and Israel's identity as a Jewish state.
By accepting Theophilos as Patriarch, Israel is siding with its enemies
against itself. It is signaling to Israel's antagonists that terror and
extortion continue to pay. Just as terror is viewed as the force which
compelled Israel to vacate Gaza and south Lebanon, so in the case of
the Greek Orthodox Patriarch, Israel's enemies would be justified in
believing that their decision to terrorize the church leadership and
force it to embrace anti-Semitism and the jihadist aim of ethnic
cleansing of Jews from the Holy Land was the right decision.
OBVIOUSLY, as owner of the lands, the Greek Orthodox Church is entitled
to do whatever it wishes with its properties. The issue here is not
whether the Church has the right to be anti-Semitic. The issue is the
Olmert government's apparent acceptance of anti-Semitic norms of
behavior. Israel is under no obligation to accept Theophilos. By
approving his appointment, the cabinet committee did not passively
tolerate his anti-Semitism. It took an active step to legitimize it.
And herein lays the final aspect of the perfidy of the government's
behavior. At the same time that the Olmert government is taking active
steps to enable the Greek Orthodox Church to implement its new
anti-Jewish land policies, it is leading an all out war against the
Jewish National Fund's right to advance its pro-Jewish charter.
Since its founding by Theodor Herzl at the end of the 19th century, the
JNF has used donations from world Jewry to purchase land in the land of
Israel for Jewish settlement in accordance with its charter. Over the
past three years, the government, prodded by the post-Zionist
Attorney-General and the post-Zionist Supreme Court, has worked to
compel the JNF to lease its lands to Arabs in open breach of its
charter and its fiduciary commitment to its donors, the Jewish people,
who provided the funds through which those lands were purchased for
specifically Jewish settlement.
Here again, there is some question of what is motivating the government
to behave as it does. Is it treating Jews as second class citizens and
denying the JNF's legal right to use its land as it deems fit while
enabling the Greek Orthodox Church and the Islamic Wakf to openly
implement anti-Semitic land policies simply because it cannot stand up
to outside pressure? Is the government's behavior merely the
consequence of its incompetence or meekness?
THE ANSWER to this question was provided last week by Interior Minister
Meir Sheetrit in his address before the Jewish Agency's Board of
Governors. Standing before the men and women who lead the agency tasked
with encouraging and facilitating Jewish immigration to the Jewish
state, Sheetrit announced that he believes that "Israel should no
longer grant automatic citizenship to Jews." He continued that Jews
should be forced to live in Israel for five years and then take a
citizenship test before being granted citizenship; that no effort
should be made to encourage Jews to move to Israel; and that
underprivileged Jewish communities should be barred from immigrating to
the country.
Since the dawn of modern Zionism, the Jewish people built and secured
our massive majority in Israel through the encouragement of Jewish
immigration to Israel. The Law of Return, which grants automatic
citizenship to any Jew who requests it, is the embodiment of Zionist
ideals of Jewish nationalism.
Today, the government defends its desire to surrender Judea, Samaria
and parts of Jerusalem to the Palestinians by claiming that doing so is
the only way to ensure the continued Jewish majority in Israel. This of
course strains belief since establishing a Jew-free state in Israel's
heartland will not remove one Arab or add one Jew to Israel's
population rolls. It will merely make it impossible for Jews to live
securely in their truncated state. Obviously, if the government's chief
concern is maintaining Israel's Jewish majority, then its main goal
should be to encourage and increase Jewish immigration to the country.
But in his address before the Jewish Agency, Sheetrit renounced Jewish
immigration and with it, the central pillar of Zionism. That is,
speaking as the representative of the Olmert government, and as the
minister empowered to grant citizenship, Sheetrit stated that he wishes
to undermine Israel's identity as a Jewish state.
All of this leads inevitably to but one conclusion. While international
pressure, cowardice and incompetence no doubt play a role in inducing
the Olmert government to side with Israel's enemies against the
country, these are not the sole sources of the government's behavior.
What Sheetrit made clear is that the Olmert government's favoritism
towards anti-Semites and anti-Zionist causes stems also from the
ideological convictions of its members.
Original
Source
|
|
|||||||||
|
Shabbat Times
Subscribe 4 Updates
About Us
Search
Donations
This Month
Month Archive
Recent Photos
Login
|
Does the Jewish state's government act as they do out of fear or conviction?
Comments
No comments found.
Trackbacks
TrackBack URL: |
||||||||
|
|
|||||||||


![Validate my RSS feed [Valid RSS]](http://www.battalionofdeborah.org/logos/valid-rss.png)