by Sara Yoheved Rigler
Pulling our misdeeds out by their roots.
It's not that I mind giving charity to all and sundry, but I do mind
being rooked. That's why my "don't think you can fool me" persona went
on high alert when the girl approached our table at an outdoor cafe one
evening this summer.
My husband and I were having supper with another couple, distant
relatives from America. The girl wore blue jeans, a halter-top,
dangling pink earrings that must have been six inches long, and gobs of
makeup. Her hair was streaked with purple. I guessed that she was
probably 16 years old. She mumbled that she belonged to a religious
youth group called B'nei Akiva and that she was collecting for
disadvantaged children, and she limply displayed her receipt book.
As an American living in Israel, I often miss the cultural clues that
would save me from being conned. This time, however, I was savvy. I
knew plenty of B'nei Akiva girls, and they didn't dress like that. In
fact, at their meetings and when on "official business," they wear a
uniform of a white top, blue skirt, and blue neckerchief. Because we
were speaking English, ... more »
|
|
||||
|
Shabbat Times
Subscribe 4 Updates
About Us
Search
Donations
This Month
Month Archive
Recent Photos
Login
|
Monday, September 17
by
Publisher
on Mon 17 Sep 2007 12:42 PM CDT
by
Publisher
on Mon 17 Sep 2007 12:39 PM CDT
Washington boosts aid to Jordan to bolster the country's defenses,
bringing this year's total assistance to $532 million
Washington on Monday gave Jordan, a staunch ally in the Middle East, a supplement of $78 million in mostly security aid to bolster the country's defenses, bringing total assistance this year to $532 million, officials said. Jordanian Planning Minister Suhair al-Ali told reporters after signing the agreement with US ambassador David Hale that the kingdom was lobbying to raise the amount of supplemental aid it received in recent years for its strong backing of US policies in the region. "As a government we continue to work with the US to increase that percentage of cash assistance to the budget," al-Ali said. The extra aid is beyond the annual economic and military aid package of $454 million that has been appropriated for the current fiscal year, which ends on September 30, 2007. Most of the supplemental aid is earmarked to boost border security and anti-terrorism training, officials said. After the US led invasion of Iraq in 2003, Washington doubled its annual grants to Jordan to around $450 million - $250 million in economic aid and $200 million in ... more »
by
Publisher
on Mon 17 Sep 2007 12:37 PM CDT
Animal rights activists slam traditional practice of kaparot
Animal rights group calls on Rabbi Ovadia Yosef to annul ritual killing of chickens as part of kaparot ceremony. 'Why should chickens pay for people's sins?' they ask Neta Sela Members of the animal rights organization Let the Animals Live (LAL) made their way to Rabbi Ovadia Yosef's home in Jerusalem Monday, in an attempt to convince him to support their efforts to nullify the traditional custom of kaparot, in which chickens are waved over a person's head before being slaughtered. In the ceremony, the person's sins are "transfered" to the chicken. Animal rights groups have been trying to meet with Rabbi Yosef for several years, but have always been turned down. This morning, they were finally able to deliver him a letter with their request. According to Etti Altman, chairwoman of LAL, the practice is extremely cruel: "Why should a chicken pay for a person's sins?" she asked. "Thousands of chickens are cramped together, with no food or water, for days before kaparot… they are abused and then they are slaughtered. People ask for their sins to be forgiven? They should be asking for the chicken's forgiveness." ... more »
by
Publisher
on Mon 17 Sep 2007 12:34 PM CDT
By Yoav Stern, Haaretz Correspondent and The Associated Press
The United States has signed an accord with Jordan aimed at supporting the peaceful development of the kingdom's nascent nuclear program, the U.S. Embassy said Sunday. The agreement comes at a time of heightened tensions over Iran's controversial nuclear program, which the U.S. suspects is a cover for weapons development - a charge Tehran denies. Jordan and several other Sunni Arab countries have recently announced plans to develop peaceful nuclear programs. U.S. Secretary of Energy Samuel Bodman and Jordanian Minister for Scientific Research Khaled Toukan signed Sunday's memorandum of understanding on the sidelines of a nuclear energy summit in Vienna. Under the agreement, the two countries will work together to develop requirements for appropriate power reactors, fuel service arrangements, civilian training, nuclear safety, energy technology and other related areas, the U.S. Embassy said in a statement. Jordanian King Abdullah II announced his intention to develop a peaceful nuclear program in January, saying alternative energy sources were needed to generate electricity and desalinate water in the kingdom. Jordan has signed the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty and has long called for a Middle East free of weapons of mass destruction. Last month, Toukan said ... more »
by
Publisher
on Mon 17 Sep 2007 12:31 PM CDT
Six hundred Iranian Shihab-3 missiles are pointed at targets throughout
Israel, and will be launched if either Iran or Syria are attacked, an
Iranian website affiliated with the regime reported on Monday.
"Iran will shoot at Israel 600 missiles if it is attacked," the Iranian news website, Assar Iran, reported. "600 missiles will only be the first reaction." According to the report, dozens of locations throughout Iraq, which are being used by the US Army, have also been targeted. The Shihab missile has a range of 1,300 km, and can reach anywhere in Israel. On Sunday, French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner said that the nuclear Iranian crisis forces the world "to prepare for the worst," and said that in this case it "is war." Kouchner emphasized, however, that negotiations should still be the preferred course of action. Kouchner, quoted by French daily Le Figaro, added that "Iran does whatever it pleases in Iraq ... one cannot find in the entire world a crisis greater than this one." In response to Kouchner's comments, Iran's state-owned news agency accused France of pandering to the interests of the United States. "The new occupants of the Elysee (Presidential palace) want to copy the White ... more »
by
Publisher
on Mon 17 Sep 2007 12:28 PM CDT
Israeli officials say global jihad terrorists planning attack on
Israeli cruise ship sailing in Mediterranean
Eitan Glickman Israeli officials fear that terror groups are planning attacks against Israeli holidaymakers abroad, Yedioth Ahronoth reported on Monday. An Israeli official told the newspaper that security officials believe terror groups plan to use a boat laden with explosives to sink an Israeli cruise ship in the Mediterranean. "We have warning about terror plans to carry out attacks abroad," the official said. "One scenario is an attack using a ship or a boat carrying explosives." 'Ships attractive target' The official said that security would be boosted onboard Israeli cruise ships whose sailing lines would be altered. "There are various scenarios: booby-trapped boats, using boats to fire explosives at passenger ships and more. Over Sukkot many Israelis are leaving for cruises from Haifa and Ashdod and we have to ensure that these ships are well protected," the official added. But officials at the counter-terrorism bureau said that global jihad terrorists were always planning attacks against Israelis abroad. "The intentions of members of the global jihad to attacks Israeli ships are well known. Over the last two years there were two ... more »
by
Publisher
on Mon 17 Sep 2007 12:26 PM CDT
Past experience shows Iran likely to retaliate for Syria incident
Zaki Shalom On February 16, 1992 Israeli gunships attacked a convoy traveling in south Lebanon that included Hizbullah secretary-general Abbas Musawi, his wife, six-year-old son, and several escorts. All of them were killed in the attack. The initial plan was to abduct Musawi in the framework of efforts to secure the release of Air Force navigator Ron Arad. However, it quickly became apparent that an abduction operation was impractical. Therefore, then Chief of Staff Ehud Barak decided to assassinate Musawi. Israel admitted it was behind the attack. Meanwhile, Musawi was quickly succeeded by a young cleric called Hassan Nasrallah. Iran, who views itself as Hizbullah's patron, could not have seen the IDF's operation as anything but a provocation and challenge. Therefore, so it seems, it decided to escalate matters, likely in consultation with its allies Syria and Hizbullah. On March 17, 1992, several weeks after Musawi's assassination, a serious terror attack targeted Israel's embassy in Argentina. A total of 29 people were killed and more than 240 were wounded. On May 21, 1994 an IDF force abducted Mustafa Dirani. Based on information available to Israel, he was ... more »
by
Publisher
on Mon 17 Sep 2007 12:21 PM CDT
WASHINGTON (AFP) — US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice heads to the
Middle East next week to lay the groundwork for a US-sponsored regional
peace conference, as talks between Israelis and Palestinians begin to
intensify.
Rice will travel to Jerusalem and Ramallah from September 18-20, State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said Wednesday. She will meet with top officials "in order to continue the discussions on advancing the development of a political horizon and the two-state solution," McCormack said. During the long-anticipated trip, Rice "wants to build upon some of the progress the two parties themselves have made during their discussions recently," he added, referring to recent meeting between Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and Palestinian leader Mahmud Abbas. US President George W. Bush has called for the international conference, expected to be held in November, in order to jumpstart Israeli-Palestinian peace talks. Olmert and Abbas on Monday reaffirmed their commitment to a two-state solution to the Middle East conflict, and a senior Israeli government official told reporters that both sides would work "very intensely in the coming weeks to try to reach an understanding, preferably before the summit." Israelis and Palestinians "decided to form some negotiating committees and that is ... more »
by
Publisher
on Mon 17 Sep 2007 12:16 PM CDT
Anita Finkelstein almost tossed the personally addressed letter from
the "One House" movement warning that her home in the Tekoa settlement
would soon be in "trapped in hostile territory" because it is located
on the Palestinian side of the security barrier.
"I almost threw it in the rubbish before I even opened it because it looked like an advertisement," Finkelstein told The Jerusalem Post on Sunday. But because she wasn't sure, she opened the one-page letter that was sent over the last few weeks to 10,000 residents of Judea and Samaria living outside the fence's boundaries. The letter was peppered with strong language explaining the "life-threatening reality" that awaited her should she stay in the settlement she has lived in for the last 21 years. "We have already learned that military power cannot promise security for those stuck within Palestinian sovereignty. The terror threat that hovers over the heads of thousands of families will only increase," said the letter. It added that settlers' lives outside of the fence were at a greater risk because of the growing unrest in the Palestinian Authority. Time was of the essence, the letter warned, because "work on the fence will be completed in a ... more »
by
Publisher
on Mon 17 Sep 2007 12:13 PM CDT
By Israel Insider staff
The independent Palestinian news agency Maan published a Hebrew document late last week that purports to represent the "principles" apparently agreed on in negotiations between Palestinian Authority Chairman Mahmoud Abbas and Prime Minister Ehud Olmert. While the offices of both men denied any connection to it, comments by Israeli President Shimon Peres confirm some of the main points. On one of the most controversial points, that Israel has agreed to surrender sovereignty the Old City of Jerusalem, Peres pointedly refused to comment. Despite the denials, then, there is reason to believe that the draft does represent or approximate, the emerging joint declaration between Olmert -- who has kept negotiations from almost all of this minister -- and Abbas, who has doubtful authority to negotiate a deal since his supporters were expelled from Gaza and his headquarters there conquered by Hamas. That apparently hasn't stop the Israeli Prime Minister, evidently with the blessing of eminence grise Peres, who long has pushed for a deal that would redivide Jerusalem. In its first point, the document states -- adopting Arab language for the disputed territories of Judea and Samaria -- that Israel has agreed to "end ... more »
by
Publisher
on Mon 17 Sep 2007 12:11 PM CDT
Six hundred Iranian Shihab-3 missiles are pointed at targets throughout
Israel, and will be launched if either Iran or Syria are attacked, an
Iranian website affiliated with the regime reported on Monday.
"Iran will shoot at Israel 600 missiles if it is attacked," the Iranian news website, Assar Iran, reported. "600 missiles will only be the first reaction." According to the report, dozens of locations throughout Iraq, which are being used by the US Army, have also been targeted. The Shihab missile has a range of 1,300 km, and can reach anywhere in Israel. On Sunday, French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner said that the nuclear Iranian crisis forces the world "to prepare for the worst," and said that in this case it "is war." Kouchner emphasized, however, that negotiations should still be the preferred course of action. Kouchner, quoted by French daily Le Figaro, added that "Iran does whatever it pleases in Iraq ... one cannot find in the entire world a crisis greater than this one." In response to Kouchner's comments, Iran's state-owned news agency accused France of pandering to the interests of the United States. "The new occupants of the Elysee (Presidential palace) want to copy the White ... more »
by
Publisher
on Mon 17 Sep 2007 08:20 AM AKDT
Chuck Baldwin Chuck Baldwin
Many conservatives (including Christian conservatives) seem to be jumping on the Fred Thompson bandwagon. As far as Republican presidential contenders go, the biggest loser of the Thompson surge is Mitt Romney. Many conservatives were supporting Romney only because they perceived him as being the best chance to beat Rudy Giuliani. A Hillary Clinton vs. Rudy Giuliani presidential election is a conservative's worst nightmare. Romney has the charm and money and is now saying the "right" things. Hence, he has enjoyed moderate support in the early goings of this campaign season. However, Romney's liberal track record is very disconcerting to conservatives. In their hearts, conservatives cannot trust Romney. The entrance of Fred Thompson in the presidential race immediately took a toll on the Romney campaign. Romney's support is dropping like the temperature in northern Idaho in the wintertime. That trend will probably continue, as more conservatives catch the Thompson wave. The problem is, Thompson is not a conservative. Worse still (for the GOP), Thompson cannot beat Hillary in a general election. Mark my words, if Fred Thompson is the Republican nominee next November, Hillary Clinton is your next president. For that matter, I see only one Republican ... more »
by
Publisher
on Mon 17 Sep 2007 08:12 AM AKDT
By Humphrey Hawksley
The US and UK governments are developing increasingly sophisticated gadgets to keep individuals under their surveillance. When it comes to technology, the US is determined to stay ahead of the game. "Five nine, five ten," said the research student, pushing down a laptop button to seal the measurement. "That's your height." "Spot on," I said. "OK, we're freezing you now," interjected another student, studying his computer screen. "So we have height and tracking and your gait DNA". "Gait DNA?" I interrupted, raising my head, so inadvertently my full face was caught on a video camera. "Have we got that?" asked their teacher Professor Rama Challapa. "We rely on just 30 frames - about one second - to get a picture we can work with," he explained. Tracking individuals I was at Maryland University just outside Washington DC, where Professor Challapa and his team are inventing the next generation of citizen surveillance. They had pushed back furniture in the conference room for me to walk back and forth and set up cameras to feed my individual data back to their laptops. Gait DNA, for example, is creating an individual code for the way I walk. Their goal is ... more »
by
Publisher
on Mon 17 Sep 2007 07:54 AM AKDT
Group's takeover plot emerges in Holy Land case
By JASON TRAHAN / The Dallas Morning News jtrahan@dallasnews.com Amid the mountain of evidence released in the Holy Land Foundation terrorism financing trial, the most provocative has turned out to be a handful of previously classified evidence detailing Islamist extremists' ambitious plans for a U.S. takeover. Also Online Link: See the documents presented as evidence in the case Archive: Read previous DMN stories about the Holy Land Foundation case A knot of terrorism researchers say the memos and audiotapes, many translated from Arabic and containing detailed strategies by the international Islamist group the Muslim Brotherhood, are proof that extremists have long sought to replace the Constitution with Shariah, or Islamic law. But some academics and Muslim leaders say that the ideals contained in the documents were written by disgruntled foreign dissidents representing a tiny radical fringe. The documents also pre-date the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, and the 80-year-old Muslim Brotherhood is now either inactive or largely underground in America. The documents – introduced in recent weeks as part of the prosecution's case in the trial of the now defunct Holy Land Foundation and five of its organizers – lay out the Brotherhood's ... more »
by
Publisher
on Mon 17 Sep 2007 07:48 AM AKDT
By Richard Wolf, USA TODAY
WASHINGTON — An obscure provision slipped into a $120 billion Iraq spending bill in May threatens to leave some poor and disabled Medicaid recipients without prescription drugs in October. In a case of unintended consequences, Congress inserted a rule cracking down on Medicaid fraud that requires that all non-electronic prescriptions for Medicaid patients be written on tamper-resistant paper. The rule was devised as a way to raise nearly $150 million over five years for public hospitals, the amount that Medicaid fraud costs the federal government. It has been criticized as too much, too soon by pharmacists, doctors, patient advocacy groups and state Medicaid officials. They say doctors could leave Medicaid, pharmacists could lose money and patients could be denied drugs. "Nobody really knew where this came from," says Jamila Edwards of the California Primary Care Association. "The patient's going to be in the middle thinking, 'How come I didn't get my medication?' " Today, the state Medicaid directors and more than 100 organizations will send a letter to congressional leaders asking for a one-year delay to the rule, according to Martha Roherty, director of the National Association of State Medicaid Directors. Under the rule, if ... more »
by
Publisher
on Mon 17 Sep 2007 07:37 AM AKDT
By BETH FOUHY
Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton is unveiling a sweeping health care proposal Monday that would require everyone to carry health insurance and offer federal subsidies to help reduce the cost of coverage. Fulfilling a pledge to bring health care to all, Clinton's "American Health Choices Plan" has a price tag of about $110 billion per year. It represents her first major effort to achieve universal health coverage since 1994, when the plan she authored during her husband's first term collapsed. "It is long past time that Americans and the richest of all countries realize that health care is a right and not a privilege," Clinton said at a labor forum in Chicago. "And that goes especially for people who work hard every single day." The former first lady says she has learned from the 1990s experience, which almost derailed Bill Clinton's presidency and helped put Republicans in control of Congress for years to come. Aides say she has jettisoned the complexity and uncertainty of the last effort in favor of a plan that stresses simplicity, cost control and consumer choice. The centerpiece of Clinton's plan is the so-called "individual mandate," requiring everyone to have health insurance ... more »
by
Publisher
on Sun 16 Sep 2007 09:20 PM AKDT
by Heshy Friedman, Ph.D
There can be no peace without apology. In 2005, teenager Ryan Cushing threw a 20-pound frozen turkey from a speeding car, as part of a prank. The ice-hard poultry crashed through the windshield of a bypassing car, crushing the face of Victoria Ruvolo, a woman from Long Island. It took numerous painful surgeries to rebuild her face. In the courtroom, Cushing cried uncontrollably as he apologized to Ruvolo. He kept repeating "I'm so sorry," to his victim. Ruvolo, instead of seeking retribution, actually comforted Cushing in the courtroom; the prosecutor said that he had never seen such a forgiving victim. Cushing's sentence was six months in jail; it could very well have been 25 years had Ruvolo not shown compassion and forgiveness, asking the judge to exercise leniency. Judaism emphasizes the importance of teshuva (repentance), from the Hebrew root meaning "return." But what is perhaps often overlooked is that the return it envisions is a two-way street. An apology does not count as repentance unless it is sincere, heartfelt, and has the ability to lead to genuine forgiveness. Teshuva is about renewing a relationship that has been sundered, not simply curing one party's guilt. It is ... more »
by
Publisher
on Mon 17 Sep 2007 12:01 AM CDT
By Barak Ravid, Avi Issacharoff and Amos Harel, Haaretz Correspondents,
Haaretz Service and News Agencies
Former United Nations ambassador John Bolton said Sunday that Israel's reported military operation inside Syria earlier this month should be regarded as a 'clear message to Iran' that its nuclear efforts will not be ignored by the international community. "I think it would be unusual for Israel to conduct a military operation inside Syria other than for a very high value target, and certainly a Syrian effort in the nuclear weapons area would qualify," Bolton told Channel 10 in an interview broadcast Sunday. "I think this is a clear message not only to Syria, I think it's a clear message to Iran as well, that its continued efforts to acquire nuclear weapons are not going to go unanswered," Bolton said Bolton, who has long called for a hard line against the Syrian and Iranian regimes, did not indicate that he had first-hand information about the incident. The U.K. newspaper The Sunday Times quoted an Israeli source on Sunday as saying that Syria had been planning a "devastating surprise" for Israel, in the wake of reports that the Israel Air Force carried out an ... more »
by
Publisher
on Sun 16 Sep 2007 11:55 PM CDT
Latest in a series of violations as Israeli PM likely to pardon more
gunmen
By Aaron Klein JERUSALEM – Israel today arrested a terrorist from a group of over one hundred gunmen from Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas' Fatah forces who were granted amnesty in July by Prime Minister Olmert. In a gesture to Abbas', Olmert granted the amnesty to 178 West Bank-based members of the Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades, Fatah's declared military wing which took responsibility along with the Islamic Jihad terror group for every suicide bombing in Israel the past two years. In line with the amnesty agreement, most Brigades terrorists on Olmert's list pledged their resignation from any so-called paramilitary organizations and were required to disarm, spend a week in a PA holding area and restrict their movements to the area in which they reside for three months. After that, they would be allowed to move freely throughout the West Bank. Today, the Israeli Defense Forces arrested Brigades member Fadi Al-Kene after he was caught smuggling explosives in the West Bank city of Nablus, or biblical Shechem. Al-Kene was carrying a small pistol at the time of his arrest. The incident was the latest in a string ... more » |
|||
|
|
||||


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