by Diane Faber Veitzer
Having just turned 43, never married, no kids, I was having a tough
time getting up the enthusiasm to pray for these same things once again
Two years ago, I approached the High Holidays with a certain sense of
"here we go again." Having just turned 43, never married, no kids, I
was having a tough time getting up the enthusiasm to pray for these
same things. How many times can you ask for the same thing, and get the
same answer?
In shul Rosh Hashanah morning, I saw that two of the young women in our
community were standing up throughout the repetition of the Musaf
service. These two girls, Sara and Tova, were the daughters of close
friends my age. Both about 18 or 19, they were each just back from a
post-high-school year studying in Jerusalem, and now, according to our
community's custom, "ready to get married." I knew that these girls
would be praying fervently to find their basherts (soul mates) quickly
and easily.
I had some understanding of why they stood through Musaf. It is an
especially long prayer service, and one is not required to stand
throughout, but it is ... more »
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Tuesday, January 1
by
Publisher
on Tue 01 Jan 2008 10:58 PM CST
by
Publisher
on Tue 01 Jan 2008 10:35 PM CST
by Baruch Gordon(IsraelNN.com) In the upcoming days, billboards all
over Jerusalem will be plastered with a new poster on the eve of U.S.
President Bush’s visit to Israel. Pictured in the poster is a gigantic
Bible, towering over the walls of the Old City.
The caption says: “Bush, read your Bible. God gave Israel to the Jews.” Tzvi Fishman, of the Am K’Lavee organization, and an Arutz 7 blogger, says “The poster is designed to refocus Israel’s opposition to further withdrawals back to our Divine claim to the Land of Israel, as documented again and again in the Bible.” Am K’Lavee organizes the annual mass parade to the Kotel on Jerusalem Day, which is attended by tens of thousands. It is joining a broad spectrum of grassroots organizations that are planning protests during Bush’s three-day visit to Jerusalem.%ad% “The Biblical claim of the Jewish People to the Land of Israel was recognized by the British in the Balfour Declaration of 1917, which called for the establishment of a Jewish State in Palestine,” Fishman states. “The British believed in the Bible and what was written in it, and that was what guided Lord Balfour in winning the support of the British ... more »
by
Publisher
on Tue 01 Jan 2008 10:28 PM CST
By Yossi Verter and Eli Ashkenazi, Haaretz Correspondents
United States President George W. Bush has changed the itinerary of his trip to Israel in order to fit in a visit to Capernaum, the Christian holy site. The U.S. president has specifically requested that his January 9 trip to Israel include a stop at the place in which, according to the New Testament, Jesus chose his 12 apostles. Bush is likely to arrive there in his presidential helicopter under heavy protection. White House security personnel have already visited the Galilee site and have planned the security arrangements in coordination with the Israel Police. Church officials in Capernaum are preparing for the visit, which might also include a stop at the nearby Church of the Beatitudes. Seven years ago, Pope John Paul II visited the church and gave a sermon there. Officials at the Prime Minister's Office are preparing for Bush's visit to Israel, and have established a special task force dedicated only to his vist. The task force will be headed by Amnon Ben-Ami, deputy director of the PMO. At least 8,000 police officers will provide security for the visit. An official reception will be held at Ben-Gurion International Airport, with ... more »
by
Publisher
on Tue 01 Jan 2008 10:17 PM CST
Herb Keinon and David Horovitz
Israel needs to internalize that even its supportive friends on the international stage conceive of the country's future on the basis of the 1967 borders and with Jerusalem divided, Prime Minister Ehud Olmert has declared to The Jerusalem Post. At the same time, he made clear that he did not envisage a permanent accord along the '67 lines, describing Ma'aleh Adumim as an "indivisible" part of Jerusalem and Israel. In an interview at the start of a year that he hopes will yield a permanent Israeli-Palestinian peace accord, the prime minister said many rival Israeli political parties remain "detached from the reality" that requires Israel to compromise "on parts of Eretz Yisrael" in order to maintain its Jewish, democratic nature. If Israel "will have to deal with a reality of one state for two peoples," he said, this "could bring about the end of the existence of Israel as a Jewish state. That is a danger one cannot deny; it exists, and is even realistic." Indeed, his primary responsibility as prime minister, Olmert said, lay in ensuring a separation from the Palestinians. "What will be if we don't want to separate?" he asked rhetorically. "Will ... more »
by
Publisher
on Tue 01 Jan 2008 10:09 PM CST
By Ted Belman
Saul Singer advises How to pressure for peace. I go further and suggest that the peace process has it ass-backwards. Rather than arm and train the terrorists (Fatah) it should force their disarmament. Rather than finance them to the tune of $7.4 billion thereby enabling them to continue the “resistance”, they should be left to fend for themselves. Rather than force Israel to freeze settlement activity thereby removing time as an issue it should allow Israel to build to its heart’s content thereby forcing the Palestinians to compromise quickly rather than to allow an erosion of their position in a final settlement. Rather than force Israel to make goodwill gestures which merely encourages intransigence, it should force the Palestinians to make goodwill gestures. Whatever resistance Israelis have to the “peace process”, it will be reduced with such real gestures. This is so obvious that one must conclude that the peace process is designed to continue the conflict rather than end it. I should point out that no one is demanding peace at the end of the process. You will recall that one of the things Arafat balked at at Camp David, was signing an “end of conflict ... more »
by
Publisher
on Tue 01 Jan 2008 10:07 PM CST
by Daniel Pipes
January 2, 2008 Palestinians have a hidden history of appreciating Israel that contrasts with their better-known narrative of vilification and irredentism. The former has been particularly evident of late, especially since Israel's prime minister, Ehud Olmert, floated a trial balloon in October about transferring some Arab-dominated areas of eastern Jerusalem to the Palestinian Authority. As he rhetorically asked about Israeli actions in 1967, "Was it necessary to annex the Shuafat refugee camp, al-Sawahra, Walajeh, and other villages, and then to state that these are part of Jerusalem? One can ask, I admit, some legitimate questions about this." In one swoop, this statement transformed pro-Israel statements by Palestinians (for a sampling, see my 2005 article, "The Hell of Israel Is Better than the Paradise of Arafat") from the mostly theoretical into the active and political. Indeed, Olmert's musings prompted some belligerent responses. As the title of a Globe and Mail news item puts it, "Some Palestinians prefer life in Israel: In East Jerusalem, residents say they would fight a handover to Abbas regime." The article offers the example of Nabil Gheit, who, with two stints in Israeli prisons and posters of "the martyr Saddam Hussein" over the cash ... more »
by
Publisher
on Tue 01 Jan 2008 10:05 PM CST
"[Ali] Dandis worked as a clerk at the Sharia courts in Hebron. Both
are residents of the West Bank city, security officials said. They
noted that Friday's attack was not the first time that Palestinian
security officials or policemen were involved in terror attacks. Last
month, Ido Zoldan was gunned down in the West Bank by Palestinian
terrorists that turned out to be members of the PA security forces."
Act of war. Imagine the outrage if Israeli soldiers had killed two Fatah men under the same circumstances; indeed, there is an appalling double standard, but it also underscores the fact that the forces of any legitimate state are expected to conduct themselves with order and discipline. (Then again, it also begs the question: were they following orders?) Is "Palestine," in any form, at any point in time, to be exempt from that expectation? "'Killers were from Fatah, one was Palestinian police'," by Yaakov Katz for the Jerusalem Post: As first published in The Jerusalem Post on Sunday , one of the terrorists who killed two Israeli hikers on Friday near Hebron is a policeman in the Palestinian National Security Force, and the other is a known Fatah operative and a ... more »
by
Publisher
on Tue 01 Jan 2008 10:01 PM CST
“O thou that tellest good tidings to Zion, get thee up on a high
mountain; O thou that tellest good tidings to Jerusalem, lift up thy
voice with strength; lift it up, be not afraid; say unto the cities of
Judah, “Behold, your God!” (Isaiah 40:9 ASV)
How beautiful upon the mountains are the feet of him who brings good news, who proclaims peace, who brings glad tidings of good things, who proclaims salvation, who says to Zion, “Your God reigns!” (Isaiah 52:7 NKJV) In 2008, Israel will celebrate the 60th Anniversary of its miraculous rebirth. That it has survived to reach this year must really stick in the craw of the devil and of all those who have sought to be useful to him in trying to bring about the destruction of the Jewish state. Some people think Israel is spelled I-S-R-A-E-L and Jew is spelled J-E-W. They’d be wrong on both counts. Both “Israel” and “Jew” are spelled: M-I-R-A-C-L-E. There is no getting away from it. That the Jews still exist as a nation; that Israel still exists as a state flies in the face of all probability. They survive against all the odds. Take the Jews: Egypt, ... more »
by
Publisher
on Tue 01 Jan 2008 08:27 PM CST
Etgar Lefkovits
The Knesset's Christian Allies Caucus is marking its fourth anniversary next week, at a time of burgeoning ties between Israel and the predominantly supportive evangelical Christian community around the world. But as the relationship flourishes, the lobby also faces growing challenges from opponents of Israel's ties with the evangelical world, both in Israel and abroad. The increasingly influential parliamentary lobby, currently made up of 13 Knesset members from seven political parties across the political spectrum, has come to epitomize Israel's newfound interest in garnering the support of the Christian world, especially the largely pro-Israel evangelical community, at a time when radical Islam is on the rise. "Evangelical Christians are the most strategic ally the state of Israel has and we have to be stupid not to understand this," said caucus chairman MK Benny Elon (NU-NRP), who spearheaded Israel's campaign to court evangelical Christian support during his tenure as tourism minister. "This is not just friendship as a means to an end but true friendship," Elon said, negating ongoing concerns in certain streams of Judaism over ulterior motives evangelicals may have in their relations with Israel. Established in January 2004 amid a wave of Palestinian suicide bombings, the parliamentary ... more » |
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