Words from Yael's Corner
For more visit www.ifcj.org
January 19, 2009
I woke up this morning to the somewhat expected news that Israel has declared a unilateral cease-fire in the Hamas controlled Gaza Strip.I personally have mixed feelings about a cease-fire.But what really touched me was how the Israeli government implemented the decision. Instead of convening the security cabinet on Friday, the Jewish Sabbath, they waited until sundown on Saturday in order to make this crucial decision after God's commanded day of rest concluded.
Throughout the three week war in Gaza we have seen miracles which have assured us that God is with the Jewish people in this war for her survival. Even in the crowded Gaza Strip, where our brave young soldiers were repeatedly under attack by Hamas terrorists, we maintained a relatively low casualty rate.This can only be attributed to the grace of God. And in the seven years that Hamas has fired over 7,000 rockets at Israel's southern towns, most of them have landed in open fields and streets. Again, there is no natural explanation for this -- it is the work of God.The Jewish people are the apple of God's eye and we see how important we are to Him by the cloud of glory with which he surrounds us. That is why it made me so proud of my country when Israel convened the security cabinet after the Jewish Sabbath ended, in order to show proper respect, thanks, and recognition to God after the wonders that He has performed for His nation.
The war in Gaza began during Hanukkah, which everyone knows as the holiday of miracles -- the small can of olive oil which should have only lasted for one day that ended up burning for eight, and the small number of Maccabees who prevailed against the far greater number of soldiers of the mighty Greeks. The energy of Hanukkah was carried on throughout the war in Gaza and God sent both open and hidden miracles to inspire, encourage, and protect His nation during our fearful time of war. Just yesterday, on Shabbat, a rocket struck and destroyed a Synagogue near Ofakim, less than 10 minutes after the worshippers departed for home after concluding the morning prayers. Revealed miracles like this happened every day here in the Holy Land.
There are many miracle stories that the soldiers returning from Gaza are publicly recounting, yet one story I read stood out above the rest. There was a group of soldiers going house to house in Gaza looking for terrorists. As they entered one house, a woman approached and told them that the house was booby-trapped and they should run out immediately. They complied and 30 seconds later the house exploded. The soldiers went to the next house where the same woman approached and told them to run. Thirty seconds later the house exploded. She then led them to a house where she said high ranking terrorists were hiding and in fact she was correct.
When the soldiers asked the old lady how she knew all of these things she simply answered that she is our biblical foremother Rachel and was sent to watch out for the soldiers. She then walked away and was never seen again. According to many different accounts from the soldiers this story is true, yet whether you choose believe it or not, there is a lesson to be learned -- when we put our faith in God He will reveal Himself.
The chances for this cease-fire to succeed look remote at this moment. It has not even been 12 hours since the cease-fire was implemented and there have already been 9 Hamas rockets fired at southern Israeli towns. Hamas has vowed to continue fighting Israel and there have yet to be any resolutions put in place to halt the arms smuggling from Egypt into Gaza, which is one of the largest problems we face.
Although there are many factors which could point to this being just another failed peace initiative, we Israelis have been trained to believe in miracles and put trust in our democratically elected government. Together we all stand firm in our desire for peace and will continue to jump on every opportunity to attain it. We know that through prayer and faithfulness to God nothing is impossible -- even the elusive vision of peace in the Holy Land.
Tuesday, January 20, 2009
Friday, January 16, 2009
Israel troops closer to target
Go to this link to find out more: http://www.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idUSTRE50B7AV20090112
Civilian fatalities not as high as some think
A maximum of 25 percent of the Palestinians killed in the Gaza Strip since the beginning of Operation Cast Lead are innocent civilians, the head of the IDF's Gaza Coordination and Liaison Administration (CLA), Col. Moshe Levi, said Wednesday.
Gazan searches bombed home for family.
Photo: AP
Slideshow: Gaza op, day 20 According to Palestinian medical officials, Israel has killed some 1,000 Palestinians since the fighting began in late December and more than half of them are civilians. The toll included 11 Palestinians killed Wednesday, medical officials said.
Levi told reporters on Wednesday that the CLA had compiled a list with the names of 900 of the Palestinians killed during the fighting. He said that 150 names were of women, children and elderly and that the maximum number of civilians killed so far was 250.
The United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) released a report on Wednesday citing Palestinian Ministry of Health figures according to which 311 of the dead are children and 76 are women.
The number of wounded, the report claims is 4,418, of whom 1,549 are children and 652 are women.
Levi also dismissed OCHA's claim that 43 Palestinians were killed in an IDF attack on a Hamas terror cell that was firing mortars at Israeli forces from within an UNRWA school in Jabalya.
Levi said that the CLA knew of 21 Palestinians killed in the attack, including a number of Hamas operatives.
Gazan searches bombed home for family.
Photo: AP
Slideshow: Gaza op, day 20 According to Palestinian medical officials, Israel has killed some 1,000 Palestinians since the fighting began in late December and more than half of them are civilians. The toll included 11 Palestinians killed Wednesday, medical officials said.
Levi told reporters on Wednesday that the CLA had compiled a list with the names of 900 of the Palestinians killed during the fighting. He said that 150 names were of women, children and elderly and that the maximum number of civilians killed so far was 250.
The United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) released a report on Wednesday citing Palestinian Ministry of Health figures according to which 311 of the dead are children and 76 are women.
The number of wounded, the report claims is 4,418, of whom 1,549 are children and 652 are women.
Levi also dismissed OCHA's claim that 43 Palestinians were killed in an IDF attack on a Hamas terror cell that was firing mortars at Israeli forces from within an UNRWA school in Jabalya.
Levi said that the CLA knew of 21 Palestinians killed in the attack, including a number of Hamas operatives.
Aid from several countries brought to the Gaza strip
Since the beginning of Operation Cast Lead through 15 January 2009:
• About 1,175 trucks carrying over 28,119 tons of humanitarian aid, and over 1,436,350 litres of diesel fuel have been transferred to the Gaza Strip.
• 449 dual nationals were evacuated from Gaza.
• 3,000 units of blood were donated by Jordan.
• 5 ambulances were donated by Turkey.
• 5 ambulances were transferred from the West Bank on behalf of the Palestinian Red Crescent Society.
• 34 people were evacuated to Israel for medical needs, including two injured children.
• About 1,175 trucks carrying over 28,119 tons of humanitarian aid, and over 1,436,350 litres of diesel fuel have been transferred to the Gaza Strip.
• 449 dual nationals were evacuated from Gaza.
• 3,000 units of blood were donated by Jordan.
• 5 ambulances were donated by Turkey.
• 5 ambulances were transferred from the West Bank on behalf of the Palestinian Red Crescent Society.
• 34 people were evacuated to Israel for medical needs, including two injured children.
Day 20 - Israel defending herself
A brief update of events on the 20th Day of the War – 1.15.09:
On a day in which 22 rockets were fired into Israel, Amos Gilad, head of the Defense Ministry's military-political department is meeting in Egypt as that country attempts to broker a cease fire between Israel and Hamas. It is reported that one of the conditions required by Israel is that the cease fire be permanent and not limited to one year as Hamas has reportedly offered. There are reports that the Israel cabinet will meet tomorrow in order to announce whether it will agree to a cease fire.
At the moment, IDF Givati ground forces are still operating near Gaza city. The difficult pictures that will be shown around the world are those of the UNRWA headquarters, the Al Quds Hospital and a building housing foreign press services in Gaza city, having been hit by Israeli artillery. The context within which these incidents have occurred is that Hamas gunmen operating from all 3 of these structures were firing rocket-propelled grenades at Givati forces. In performing their function as back-up protection for the ground forces, IDF artillery forces returned fire at the source. There is no international convention that prohibits an army from firing on any target, no matter what it might be, when it is the origination point of hostile fire during wartime. All the same, Israelis, like all civilized people are happy to know that at the moment there have been no reports of any civilian casualties at these sites.
On a day in which 22 rockets were fired into Israel, Amos Gilad, head of the Defense Ministry's military-political department is meeting in Egypt as that country attempts to broker a cease fire between Israel and Hamas. It is reported that one of the conditions required by Israel is that the cease fire be permanent and not limited to one year as Hamas has reportedly offered. There are reports that the Israel cabinet will meet tomorrow in order to announce whether it will agree to a cease fire.
At the moment, IDF Givati ground forces are still operating near Gaza city. The difficult pictures that will be shown around the world are those of the UNRWA headquarters, the Al Quds Hospital and a building housing foreign press services in Gaza city, having been hit by Israeli artillery. The context within which these incidents have occurred is that Hamas gunmen operating from all 3 of these structures were firing rocket-propelled grenades at Givati forces. In performing their function as back-up protection for the ground forces, IDF artillery forces returned fire at the source. There is no international convention that prohibits an army from firing on any target, no matter what it might be, when it is the origination point of hostile fire during wartime. All the same, Israelis, like all civilized people are happy to know that at the moment there have been no reports of any civilian casualties at these sites.
Christian support when Israel needs it most
American Christians provide safety for Israelis in Gaza
By Charlie Butts
Rabbi Yechiel Eckstein is in Israel monitoring the war in Gaza firsthand.
The International Fellowship of Christians and Jews (IFCJ) has spent several hundred-thousand dollars donated by American Christians to fortify bomb shelters in northern and southern Israel.
IFCJ founder Eckstein is in Sderot, just north of Gaza, where one attack took place and the Code Red warning came over loudspeakers.
"Just 30 seconds ago, we experienced again what the people here in Sderot have experienced day after day after day for eight years. And that is a missile coming in," he notes. "You don't know where it's going to land. The siren goes off, which gives you roughly 15 seconds; and in this case, the missile hit just a few yards from where we are."
Rabbi Eckstein is safe and plans to return to the United States later this week. The Fellowship will continue to provide medical, food, and water supplies to hazardous areas in Israel.
By Charlie Butts
Rabbi Yechiel Eckstein is in Israel monitoring the war in Gaza firsthand.
The International Fellowship of Christians and Jews (IFCJ) has spent several hundred-thousand dollars donated by American Christians to fortify bomb shelters in northern and southern Israel.
IFCJ founder Eckstein is in Sderot, just north of Gaza, where one attack took place and the Code Red warning came over loudspeakers.
"Just 30 seconds ago, we experienced again what the people here in Sderot have experienced day after day after day for eight years. And that is a missile coming in," he notes. "You don't know where it's going to land. The siren goes off, which gives you roughly 15 seconds; and in this case, the missile hit just a few yards from where we are."
Rabbi Eckstein is safe and plans to return to the United States later this week. The Fellowship will continue to provide medical, food, and water supplies to hazardous areas in Israel.
Thursday, January 15, 2009
Facts and Figures
Hamas rocket attacks on Israel
Yesterday 20
Since 12/27/08 819
In 2008 3045
Since 2005 6141
Yesterday 20
Since 12/27/08 819
In 2008 3045
Since 2005 6141
European Jews standing with Israel
Amid anti-Semitic storm, Europe’s Jews stand for Israel
By Dinah Spritzer · January 13, 2009
Pro-Israel rallies like this one in London have attracted much smaller crowds than anti-Israel demonstrations throughout Europe. (Giora Hirsch) Related LinksAnti-Israel rally in Brussels (video) PRAGUE (JTA) -- Confronting a rising storm of anti-Semitism as the conflict in Gaza intensifies, European Jews are grappling with the best way to express their support for Israel's fight against Hamas.
Recent assaults on Jews in European capitals range from the beating of a Jewish teenager in a Paris suburb by assailants who vowed she would “pay for Israel's acts” to the compilation on an Islamist Web site of a hit list of prominent British Jews. Jewish monuments in France and Sweden have been firebombed. And in Italy, a workers’ political party called for a boycott of Jewish stores.
While Jews have taken to the streets in the hundreds or thousands to demonstrate for peace and Israel’s right to defend itself, they are dwarfed by the tens and hundreds of thousands participating in protests against Israel. In many cases, top European political figures have supported the protests. Sometimes the rallies have turned violent.
The 27-country European Union has approximately 1.8 million Jews and 17 million Muslims, and that difference is keenly visible in the size of events relating to the war in Gaza and southern Israel.
After some 1,000 Jews turned out last week for a rally in Brussels in support of Israel -- held opposite the Embassy of Iran, which funds Hamas -- tens of thousands showed up Sunday for a march against what they called Israel's “massacre in Gaza.” The pro-Palestinian rally was organized by three of the four main political parities in the French-speaking part of Belgium, along with some 100 or so nongovernmental organizations.
Chanting “Death to Jews!” in Arabic, the crowd burned Israeli flags and carried signs calling Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni “Hitler's wife.”
“In a way, Jews feel alone,” said Joel Rubinfeld, the president of the umbrella group of French-speaking Jews in Belgium, known by the acronym CCOJB. “But lots of non-Jews are disgusted, too” with the anti-Semitic messages, he added.
Massive anti-Israel demonstrations last weekend in France, Brussels and Madrid have included anti-Semitic chants such as “Jews to the gas” and swastikas paired with the Star of David.
The Israeli Foreign Ministry, the European Jewish Congress, the Simon Wiesenthal Center and the Anti-Defamation League have implored European officials to acknowledge and combat the importing of the Middle East conflict to Europe and the scapegoating of Jews.
Countries with large Muslims populations, including France, Belgium and Britain, have seen the largest number of anti-Semitic incidents.
Britain's Community Security Trust, which monitors Jewish security issues, recorded a huge surge in anti-Semitic attacks -- 80 in total -- since Israel began bombing Hamas targets in Gaza on Dec. 27.
Undeterred, British Jews staged the largest European demonstration in support of Israel's right to security in this conflict. Sunday's demonstration, which also expressed sympathy for Palestinian civilians, drew 17,000 people to London's Trafalgar Square.
“I decided to do something after watching too much television and seeing the huge coverage of the anti-Israel demonstrations,” said one Jewish Londoner, Matt Freelander, who participated in a pro-Israel rally last week.
In France, Nicole Yardeni, the president of the CRIF Jewish umbrella group in Toulouse, decided not to hold a pro-Israel rally in the region after a car filled with Molotov cocktails rammed into the front gate of a synagogue Jan. 5.
“It's not that we are afraid,” she said of the community of approximately 20,000. But faced with consistent pro-Palestinian rallies that outnumber Toulouse Jews, Yardeni said the community “could not hold its own on the street” and thus could not have a “successful” protest.
In recent days, the CRIF held pro-Israel rallies in Paris, Marseilles and near Lyon.
The Marseilles rally was unusual in that every major local politician joined the crowd of about 4,000. The Paris rally did not have the same political backing. Many attendees said they left family and friends behind because they were afraid of publicly supporting Israel after seeing the violence and virulent anti-Zionism in a pro-Palestinian protest a day earlier.
"Once again, when in trouble, we've found ourselves alone," Patrick Gaubert, the president of the International League Against Racism and Anti-Semitism, wrote in a letter published Jan. 8 in a French Jewish weekly.
In Italy, whose prime minister, Silvio Berlusconi, has been honored by Jewish groups for being pro-Israel, pro-Israel rallies drew government officials.
In Germany, anti-Israel marches were relatively calm, but some marchers carried signs reading “Out with Jews” or "Israelis are child murderers.”
German Jews have turned out for pro-Israel rallies, too, albeit in small numbers. A rally in Frankfurt drew 2,000, while one in Berlin had 1,500 participants.
“When people see our small group,” said Sharon Adler, who co-organized the Berlin rally on Sunday, "perhaps they will understand that Israel is also a much smaller country than all the Arab countries around it, and that Jews in Germany are also a small minority."
In Stockholm, where the Jewish community numbers 5,000, a peace event in support of Israel held Saturday night at a church drew 800 people -- about half of whom were not Jewish, according to Lena Posner, the president of the Swedish Jewish community.
“There were about 100 people outside the church shouting insults against Israel,” Posner said. “The police had to close off the whole area around the church and we were escorted back to our cars in groups of 15.”
Earlier in the day, 8,000 protesters chanting anti-Israel slogans gathered for a mostly Muslim demonstration in Stockholm that included the head of the Swedish Socialist Party and the country’s former foreign minister. A Liberal Party legislator attended the pro-Israel event.
Elsewhere in the country, a burial chapel in the Jewish cemetery in central Malmo was firebombed for the third time since Israel began its operation in Gaza.
In Spain, violent incidents have been minimal, although an anti-Israel rally there on Saturday was Europe’s biggest such rally thus far, with crowd estimates ranging from 50,000 to 250,000.
Representatives of Spanish Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero and his ruling Socialist Party were among those who participated. Some participants called for jihad, or holy war, praised Hezbollah and cursed Israel. The Israeli Embassy in Madrid took the rare step of openly chastising the prime minister for fueling anti-Israel anger.
“There was hate speech definitely, and a few marched to the Israeli Embassy and threw stones and the police had to intervene,” said Derek Wise, the general manager of Madrid’s Jewish community. “Our prime minister incited what was going on.''
Wise said Spanish Friends of Israel was planning a public pro-Israel event for Jan. 18.
“I understand there might be people afraid to come," he said, "but we want to show it is not only Jews, it's normal Spaniards who also understand that a democratic state like Israel has a right to defend itself.”
(JTA correspondents Devorah Lauter contributed to this story from Paris, Toby Axelrod from Berlin and Daphna Vardi from London.)
By Dinah Spritzer · January 13, 2009
Pro-Israel rallies like this one in London have attracted much smaller crowds than anti-Israel demonstrations throughout Europe. (Giora Hirsch) Related LinksAnti-Israel rally in Brussels (video) PRAGUE (JTA) -- Confronting a rising storm of anti-Semitism as the conflict in Gaza intensifies, European Jews are grappling with the best way to express their support for Israel's fight against Hamas.
Recent assaults on Jews in European capitals range from the beating of a Jewish teenager in a Paris suburb by assailants who vowed she would “pay for Israel's acts” to the compilation on an Islamist Web site of a hit list of prominent British Jews. Jewish monuments in France and Sweden have been firebombed. And in Italy, a workers’ political party called for a boycott of Jewish stores.
While Jews have taken to the streets in the hundreds or thousands to demonstrate for peace and Israel’s right to defend itself, they are dwarfed by the tens and hundreds of thousands participating in protests against Israel. In many cases, top European political figures have supported the protests. Sometimes the rallies have turned violent.
The 27-country European Union has approximately 1.8 million Jews and 17 million Muslims, and that difference is keenly visible in the size of events relating to the war in Gaza and southern Israel.
After some 1,000 Jews turned out last week for a rally in Brussels in support of Israel -- held opposite the Embassy of Iran, which funds Hamas -- tens of thousands showed up Sunday for a march against what they called Israel's “massacre in Gaza.” The pro-Palestinian rally was organized by three of the four main political parities in the French-speaking part of Belgium, along with some 100 or so nongovernmental organizations.
Chanting “Death to Jews!” in Arabic, the crowd burned Israeli flags and carried signs calling Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni “Hitler's wife.”
“In a way, Jews feel alone,” said Joel Rubinfeld, the president of the umbrella group of French-speaking Jews in Belgium, known by the acronym CCOJB. “But lots of non-Jews are disgusted, too” with the anti-Semitic messages, he added.
Massive anti-Israel demonstrations last weekend in France, Brussels and Madrid have included anti-Semitic chants such as “Jews to the gas” and swastikas paired with the Star of David.
The Israeli Foreign Ministry, the European Jewish Congress, the Simon Wiesenthal Center and the Anti-Defamation League have implored European officials to acknowledge and combat the importing of the Middle East conflict to Europe and the scapegoating of Jews.
Countries with large Muslims populations, including France, Belgium and Britain, have seen the largest number of anti-Semitic incidents.
Britain's Community Security Trust, which monitors Jewish security issues, recorded a huge surge in anti-Semitic attacks -- 80 in total -- since Israel began bombing Hamas targets in Gaza on Dec. 27.
Undeterred, British Jews staged the largest European demonstration in support of Israel's right to security in this conflict. Sunday's demonstration, which also expressed sympathy for Palestinian civilians, drew 17,000 people to London's Trafalgar Square.
“I decided to do something after watching too much television and seeing the huge coverage of the anti-Israel demonstrations,” said one Jewish Londoner, Matt Freelander, who participated in a pro-Israel rally last week.
In France, Nicole Yardeni, the president of the CRIF Jewish umbrella group in Toulouse, decided not to hold a pro-Israel rally in the region after a car filled with Molotov cocktails rammed into the front gate of a synagogue Jan. 5.
“It's not that we are afraid,” she said of the community of approximately 20,000. But faced with consistent pro-Palestinian rallies that outnumber Toulouse Jews, Yardeni said the community “could not hold its own on the street” and thus could not have a “successful” protest.
In recent days, the CRIF held pro-Israel rallies in Paris, Marseilles and near Lyon.
The Marseilles rally was unusual in that every major local politician joined the crowd of about 4,000. The Paris rally did not have the same political backing. Many attendees said they left family and friends behind because they were afraid of publicly supporting Israel after seeing the violence and virulent anti-Zionism in a pro-Palestinian protest a day earlier.
"Once again, when in trouble, we've found ourselves alone," Patrick Gaubert, the president of the International League Against Racism and Anti-Semitism, wrote in a letter published Jan. 8 in a French Jewish weekly.
In Italy, whose prime minister, Silvio Berlusconi, has been honored by Jewish groups for being pro-Israel, pro-Israel rallies drew government officials.
In Germany, anti-Israel marches were relatively calm, but some marchers carried signs reading “Out with Jews” or "Israelis are child murderers.”
German Jews have turned out for pro-Israel rallies, too, albeit in small numbers. A rally in Frankfurt drew 2,000, while one in Berlin had 1,500 participants.
“When people see our small group,” said Sharon Adler, who co-organized the Berlin rally on Sunday, "perhaps they will understand that Israel is also a much smaller country than all the Arab countries around it, and that Jews in Germany are also a small minority."
In Stockholm, where the Jewish community numbers 5,000, a peace event in support of Israel held Saturday night at a church drew 800 people -- about half of whom were not Jewish, according to Lena Posner, the president of the Swedish Jewish community.
“There were about 100 people outside the church shouting insults against Israel,” Posner said. “The police had to close off the whole area around the church and we were escorted back to our cars in groups of 15.”
Earlier in the day, 8,000 protesters chanting anti-Israel slogans gathered for a mostly Muslim demonstration in Stockholm that included the head of the Swedish Socialist Party and the country’s former foreign minister. A Liberal Party legislator attended the pro-Israel event.
Elsewhere in the country, a burial chapel in the Jewish cemetery in central Malmo was firebombed for the third time since Israel began its operation in Gaza.
In Spain, violent incidents have been minimal, although an anti-Israel rally there on Saturday was Europe’s biggest such rally thus far, with crowd estimates ranging from 50,000 to 250,000.
Representatives of Spanish Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero and his ruling Socialist Party were among those who participated. Some participants called for jihad, or holy war, praised Hezbollah and cursed Israel. The Israeli Embassy in Madrid took the rare step of openly chastising the prime minister for fueling anti-Israel anger.
“There was hate speech definitely, and a few marched to the Israeli Embassy and threw stones and the police had to intervene,” said Derek Wise, the general manager of Madrid’s Jewish community. “Our prime minister incited what was going on.''
Wise said Spanish Friends of Israel was planning a public pro-Israel event for Jan. 18.
“I understand there might be people afraid to come," he said, "but we want to show it is not only Jews, it's normal Spaniards who also understand that a democratic state like Israel has a right to defend itself.”
(JTA correspondents Devorah Lauter contributed to this story from Paris, Toby Axelrod from Berlin and Daphna Vardi from London.)
Soldier critically wounded a day after wedding
Critically Wounded Officer Went to War Day after Wedding
by Yehudah Lev Kay
(IsraelNN.com) IDF officer Aharon Karov was critically wounded Monday night in Gaza by a blast from a booby trap. Karov was married only a week and a half ago to Tzvia Mordechai, and the morning after his wedding, he was off to war.
Aharon, who is from the Samaria community of Karnei Shomron, is a second lieutenant in the Paratroopers Brigade. He commanded a company in ground fighting in North Gaza until being injured. Before joining the army, Aharon studied in a yeshiva (school for religious study) in Netzarim, one of the Jewish communities destroyed in the 2005 Israeli Disengagement from Gaza.
Aharon's family has asked that the public pray for his recovery. His Hebrew name is Aharon Yehoshua Ben Chaya Shoshanna.
Two and a half weeks ago, before Operation Cast Lead began, Aharon received leave from his unit to attend the traditional Sabbath celebration before his wedding. On the morning of that Saturday, the air force began bombing Gaza. Aharon had just finished the Sabbath prayers and sat down to eat lunch when his commanders decided to call him back to base in case a ground offensive in Gaza began.
The following week, Aharon was in the army preparing for the ground offensive set to begin any moment. On Tuesday evening his commanders decided to allow him to go home to prepare for his wedding on Thursday night. Aharon and Tzvia were married as planned, but the next morning the IDF already called Aharon back to base. By Saturday evening the army had begun its ground offensive, and with them, Aharon Karov in command of his Paratrooper company.
On Monday night, Aharon was wounded critically and two other soldiers moderately from a blast within a booby trapped home in Northern Gaza. Searches of the home after the blast uncovered another explosive device and a Hamas military vest.
Aharon's father, Rabbi Zev Karov, explained how a newly married groom could make such a sacrifice. "According to Jewish law, in a war of self defense even a newly married groom must fight," he explained. "More than that, [Aharon] is a commander who knows his soldiers, has prepared them, and knows what must be done. He couldn't just leave them on their own." Karov added that, "The bride was at first shocked, but then she understood that sometimes personal interests must be second to the common good."
by Yehudah Lev Kay
(IsraelNN.com) IDF officer Aharon Karov was critically wounded Monday night in Gaza by a blast from a booby trap. Karov was married only a week and a half ago to Tzvia Mordechai, and the morning after his wedding, he was off to war.
Aharon, who is from the Samaria community of Karnei Shomron, is a second lieutenant in the Paratroopers Brigade. He commanded a company in ground fighting in North Gaza until being injured. Before joining the army, Aharon studied in a yeshiva (school for religious study) in Netzarim, one of the Jewish communities destroyed in the 2005 Israeli Disengagement from Gaza.
Aharon's family has asked that the public pray for his recovery. His Hebrew name is Aharon Yehoshua Ben Chaya Shoshanna.
Two and a half weeks ago, before Operation Cast Lead began, Aharon received leave from his unit to attend the traditional Sabbath celebration before his wedding. On the morning of that Saturday, the air force began bombing Gaza. Aharon had just finished the Sabbath prayers and sat down to eat lunch when his commanders decided to call him back to base in case a ground offensive in Gaza began.
The following week, Aharon was in the army preparing for the ground offensive set to begin any moment. On Tuesday evening his commanders decided to allow him to go home to prepare for his wedding on Thursday night. Aharon and Tzvia were married as planned, but the next morning the IDF already called Aharon back to base. By Saturday evening the army had begun its ground offensive, and with them, Aharon Karov in command of his Paratrooper company.
On Monday night, Aharon was wounded critically and two other soldiers moderately from a blast within a booby trapped home in Northern Gaza. Searches of the home after the blast uncovered another explosive device and a Hamas military vest.
Aharon's father, Rabbi Zev Karov, explained how a newly married groom could make such a sacrifice. "According to Jewish law, in a war of self defense even a newly married groom must fight," he explained. "More than that, [Aharon] is a commander who knows his soldiers, has prepared them, and knows what must be done. He couldn't just leave them on their own." Karov added that, "The bride was at first shocked, but then she understood that sometimes personal interests must be second to the common good."
Hamas to blame
Hamas is Responsible
Michael J. Totten - 01.12.2009 - 11:24 AM
Steven Erlanger wrote a revealing article in the New York Times about the methods of urban warfare used by the Israel Defense Forces and Hamas in Gaza. He shows that Hamas is committing war crimes against both Israelis and Palestinians, and that Hamas knows better than most that Israelis take great care to avoid harming civilians despite propaganda saying otherwise.
“Unwilling to take Israel’s bait and come into the open,” he wrote, “Hamas militants are fighting in civilian clothes; even the police have been ordered to take off their uniforms.”
Hamas is in clear violation of the Geneva Conventions here, but that’s nothing new. Hamas never agreed to uphold the Conventions in the first place. Its raison d’ĂȘtre is the destruction of an entire country, after all. The laws and ethics of civilized warfare are anathema to groups like Hamas.
Nevertheless, everyone should be familiar with what the Geneva Conventions actually say. The Society of Professional Journalists provides a good summary explanation that most of my colleagues should know well by now:
The Geneva Conventions and supplementary protocols make a distinction between combatants and civilians. The two groups must be treated differently by the warring sides and, therefore, combatants must be clearly distinguishable from civilians… In order for the distinction between combatants and civilians to be clear, combatants must wear uniforms and carry their weapons openly during military operations and during preparation for them… Combatants who deliberately violate the rules about maintaining a clear separation between combatant and noncombatant groups and thus endanger the civilian population are no longer protected by the Geneva Convention.
These protocols have been carefully crafted by leaders of civilized nations and are not to be lightly dismissed. It may be convenient to blame the Israelis when civilians are killed by their air strikes in Gaza, but the Geneva Conventions clearly state that Hamas fighters endangered those civilians by disguising themselves.
Not only do Israelis have a harder time figuring out who is a target and who needs protection, we all have a harder time identifying those who have already been wounded and killed. Hamas says mostly civilians have been wounded and killed in the fighting in Gaza, but its fighters look just like everyone else. They can trot out the bodies of two dead terrorists in front of the cameras and say they’re civilians, thus easily fooling just about anyone. The number of civilian casualties, therefore, appears much higher than it really is. But even if that weren’t the case, far more civilians are being killed in this war because Hamas is fighting dirty.
Israelis, in the meantime, go far out of their way to avoid harming the civilians of Gaza. They have even developed weapons for precisely this purpose.
“A new Israeli weapon,” Erlanger writes, “is tailored to the Hamas tactic of asking civilians to stand on the roofs of buildings so Israeli pilots will not bomb. The Israelis are countering with a missile designed, paradoxically, not to explode. They aim the missiles at empty areas of the roofs to frighten residents into leaving the buildings, a tactic called ‘a knock on the roof’.”
If Israelis were targeting civilians, as Hamas and hysterical critics like to claim, it ought to go without saying that they would never have developed a “weapon” that scatters civilians away for their own protection.
Activists, professors, journalists, bloggers, and other uninformed individuals may believe Israelis kill civilians either negligently or on purpose, but even Hamas knows that’s a lie. Otherwise, Hamas would not ask “civilians to stand on the roofs of buildings so Israeli pilots will not bomb,” as Erlanger reports.
Hamas knows the truth but uses its lie as a weapon. And it works. Millions all over the world believe Israel massacres civilians in Gaza and that claims to the contrary from the military are disinformation and smokescreen.
Israelis, by contrast, don’t use human shields to deter Palestinian rocket attacks. The very idea is absurd. Hamas aims at civilians on purpose, as much as it can aim its crude rockets. A congregation of Israeli human shields would only make a bulls-eye at which Hamas could aim.
In any case, the use of human shields is strictly prohibited. The Law of Armed Conflict is absolutely clear on this point. It “requires defenders to separate military objects from civilian objects to the maximum extent feasible. Therefore, it would be inappropriate to locate a hospital or POW camp next to an ammunition factory.”
It is likewise inappropriate to place civilians atop buildings that are known to be targets. Israeli pilots should not have to warn these people with “knocks on the roof.”
Hamas routinely turns civilian buildings into military assets and targets. “Weapons are hidden in mosques,” Erlanger reports, “schoolyards and civilian houses, and the leadership’s war room is a bunker beneath Gaza’s largest hospital, Israeli intelligence officials say.” Ynet also reports that Israeli soldiers found a school and even a zoo rigged to explode. You can see a video of that booby-trapped school here on YouTube.
Hamas leaders couldn’t endanger more Palestinians if they tried.
“Israeli press officers call the tactics of Hamas cynical, illegal and inhumane,” Erlanger writes. “[E]ven Israel’s critics agree that Hamas’s regular use of rockets to fire at civilians in Israel, and its use of civilians as shields in Gaza, are also violations of the rules of war.”
He’s right that Israel’s fair-minded critics acknowledge Hamas is an army of war criminals. But few seem bothered by the fact that Hamas violates the laws and ethics of war as a matter of course. Perhaps that’s because few expect any better from a violent fascist regime that aspires to genocide. But the record should show, even so, that Hamas is morally, ethically, and legally responsible for civilian deaths in Gaza as well as in Israel.
Michael J. Totten - 01.12.2009 - 11:24 AM
Steven Erlanger wrote a revealing article in the New York Times about the methods of urban warfare used by the Israel Defense Forces and Hamas in Gaza. He shows that Hamas is committing war crimes against both Israelis and Palestinians, and that Hamas knows better than most that Israelis take great care to avoid harming civilians despite propaganda saying otherwise.
“Unwilling to take Israel’s bait and come into the open,” he wrote, “Hamas militants are fighting in civilian clothes; even the police have been ordered to take off their uniforms.”
Hamas is in clear violation of the Geneva Conventions here, but that’s nothing new. Hamas never agreed to uphold the Conventions in the first place. Its raison d’ĂȘtre is the destruction of an entire country, after all. The laws and ethics of civilized warfare are anathema to groups like Hamas.
Nevertheless, everyone should be familiar with what the Geneva Conventions actually say. The Society of Professional Journalists provides a good summary explanation that most of my colleagues should know well by now:
The Geneva Conventions and supplementary protocols make a distinction between combatants and civilians. The two groups must be treated differently by the warring sides and, therefore, combatants must be clearly distinguishable from civilians… In order for the distinction between combatants and civilians to be clear, combatants must wear uniforms and carry their weapons openly during military operations and during preparation for them… Combatants who deliberately violate the rules about maintaining a clear separation between combatant and noncombatant groups and thus endanger the civilian population are no longer protected by the Geneva Convention.
These protocols have been carefully crafted by leaders of civilized nations and are not to be lightly dismissed. It may be convenient to blame the Israelis when civilians are killed by their air strikes in Gaza, but the Geneva Conventions clearly state that Hamas fighters endangered those civilians by disguising themselves.
Not only do Israelis have a harder time figuring out who is a target and who needs protection, we all have a harder time identifying those who have already been wounded and killed. Hamas says mostly civilians have been wounded and killed in the fighting in Gaza, but its fighters look just like everyone else. They can trot out the bodies of two dead terrorists in front of the cameras and say they’re civilians, thus easily fooling just about anyone. The number of civilian casualties, therefore, appears much higher than it really is. But even if that weren’t the case, far more civilians are being killed in this war because Hamas is fighting dirty.
Israelis, in the meantime, go far out of their way to avoid harming the civilians of Gaza. They have even developed weapons for precisely this purpose.
“A new Israeli weapon,” Erlanger writes, “is tailored to the Hamas tactic of asking civilians to stand on the roofs of buildings so Israeli pilots will not bomb. The Israelis are countering with a missile designed, paradoxically, not to explode. They aim the missiles at empty areas of the roofs to frighten residents into leaving the buildings, a tactic called ‘a knock on the roof’.”
If Israelis were targeting civilians, as Hamas and hysterical critics like to claim, it ought to go without saying that they would never have developed a “weapon” that scatters civilians away for their own protection.
Activists, professors, journalists, bloggers, and other uninformed individuals may believe Israelis kill civilians either negligently or on purpose, but even Hamas knows that’s a lie. Otherwise, Hamas would not ask “civilians to stand on the roofs of buildings so Israeli pilots will not bomb,” as Erlanger reports.
Hamas knows the truth but uses its lie as a weapon. And it works. Millions all over the world believe Israel massacres civilians in Gaza and that claims to the contrary from the military are disinformation and smokescreen.
Israelis, by contrast, don’t use human shields to deter Palestinian rocket attacks. The very idea is absurd. Hamas aims at civilians on purpose, as much as it can aim its crude rockets. A congregation of Israeli human shields would only make a bulls-eye at which Hamas could aim.
In any case, the use of human shields is strictly prohibited. The Law of Armed Conflict is absolutely clear on this point. It “requires defenders to separate military objects from civilian objects to the maximum extent feasible. Therefore, it would be inappropriate to locate a hospital or POW camp next to an ammunition factory.”
It is likewise inappropriate to place civilians atop buildings that are known to be targets. Israeli pilots should not have to warn these people with “knocks on the roof.”
Hamas routinely turns civilian buildings into military assets and targets. “Weapons are hidden in mosques,” Erlanger reports, “schoolyards and civilian houses, and the leadership’s war room is a bunker beneath Gaza’s largest hospital, Israeli intelligence officials say.” Ynet also reports that Israeli soldiers found a school and even a zoo rigged to explode. You can see a video of that booby-trapped school here on YouTube.
Hamas leaders couldn’t endanger more Palestinians if they tried.
“Israeli press officers call the tactics of Hamas cynical, illegal and inhumane,” Erlanger writes. “[E]ven Israel’s critics agree that Hamas’s regular use of rockets to fire at civilians in Israel, and its use of civilians as shields in Gaza, are also violations of the rules of war.”
He’s right that Israel’s fair-minded critics acknowledge Hamas is an army of war criminals. But few seem bothered by the fact that Hamas violates the laws and ethics of war as a matter of course. Perhaps that’s because few expect any better from a violent fascist regime that aspires to genocide. But the record should show, even so, that Hamas is morally, ethically, and legally responsible for civilian deaths in Gaza as well as in Israel.
Wednesday, January 14, 2009
In the line of fire
Machers In Line Of Fire
By Stewart Ain
Close calls are becoming a staple of solidarity missions to the south of Israel (witness Mayor Michael Bloomberg ducking into a bomb shelter on a recent trip to Sderot just before a Hamas-launched rocket hit nearby).
But a delegation of Jewish federation leaders visiting the south this week got a more complete, and poignant, taste of what life is like for Israelis living in the shadow of the Gaza border.
Not only did the group dash into a bomb shelter when the alarm sounded Monday in Ashkelon, it also heard the blast and then visited the home it hit. The rocket missed by seconds the three children in the house who fled into the family’s basement bomb shelter.
The group, which included UJA-Federation CEO John Ruskay, also met an elderly couple, Holocaust survivors, whose home was built before bomb shelters were required in each building.
“The man had a stroke and is immobilized,” said Joe Kanfer, chairman of the United Jewish Communities. “When the [bomb] alert goes off, they are unable to run to a shelter. All they can do is sit and hold hands.”
And they met a counselor in Sderot hired by the Israel Trauma Coalition, which represents 50 trauma providers and which UJA-Federation of New York helped establish; it is now funded by the UJC. “She said she was counseling a single mother the other day when schools were closed [because of increased Hamas rocket attacks],” Kanfer recalled. “The alert was sounded during the middle of their session. The two crawled under a table, and each used their cell phones to check on the well-being of their children. “The constant stress of having the sirens go off and not knowing where their children are is disruptive to their emotional well-being and to their work. The emotional stress is really unbearable. Until you have looked people in the eyes and talked to them of what they have lived through, you don’t realize what it is like.”
The UJC last week authorized a $10 million grant to assist programs in Israel that are primarily working with the elderly and helping people to cope with the stress and trauma of the Hamas rocket attacks. More than $428,000 was allocated this week by the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany to assist Nazi victims living in areas under Hamas rocket fire, who may be especially traumatized. Among other things, the money is to be used to provide shatterproof glass windows in three nursing homes in southern Israel in which 290 Holocaust survivors live.
“We are supporting these projects because the constant rocket attacks trigger anxiety and dark memories in Nazi victims,” said Julius Berman, chairman of the Claims Conference. “Having lived through a constant threat of danger and death decades ago, Nazi victims now living under missile fire suffer even more trauma and fear than other Israelis.”
In another close call in Sderot, Rabbi Yechiel Eckstein, who heads the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews, which raises funds among Evangelical Christians for the support of Israel, barely escaped injury last week when a rocket landed “not more than 100 yards away.” The rabbi told The Jewish Week he was in an open field with no shelter in sight. “I did the only thing I could do — trembling, I raised by hands to the heavens and prayed to God for protection.”
By Stewart Ain
Close calls are becoming a staple of solidarity missions to the south of Israel (witness Mayor Michael Bloomberg ducking into a bomb shelter on a recent trip to Sderot just before a Hamas-launched rocket hit nearby).
But a delegation of Jewish federation leaders visiting the south this week got a more complete, and poignant, taste of what life is like for Israelis living in the shadow of the Gaza border.
Not only did the group dash into a bomb shelter when the alarm sounded Monday in Ashkelon, it also heard the blast and then visited the home it hit. The rocket missed by seconds the three children in the house who fled into the family’s basement bomb shelter.
The group, which included UJA-Federation CEO John Ruskay, also met an elderly couple, Holocaust survivors, whose home was built before bomb shelters were required in each building.
“The man had a stroke and is immobilized,” said Joe Kanfer, chairman of the United Jewish Communities. “When the [bomb] alert goes off, they are unable to run to a shelter. All they can do is sit and hold hands.”
And they met a counselor in Sderot hired by the Israel Trauma Coalition, which represents 50 trauma providers and which UJA-Federation of New York helped establish; it is now funded by the UJC. “She said she was counseling a single mother the other day when schools were closed [because of increased Hamas rocket attacks],” Kanfer recalled. “The alert was sounded during the middle of their session. The two crawled under a table, and each used their cell phones to check on the well-being of their children. “The constant stress of having the sirens go off and not knowing where their children are is disruptive to their emotional well-being and to their work. The emotional stress is really unbearable. Until you have looked people in the eyes and talked to them of what they have lived through, you don’t realize what it is like.”
The UJC last week authorized a $10 million grant to assist programs in Israel that are primarily working with the elderly and helping people to cope with the stress and trauma of the Hamas rocket attacks. More than $428,000 was allocated this week by the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany to assist Nazi victims living in areas under Hamas rocket fire, who may be especially traumatized. Among other things, the money is to be used to provide shatterproof glass windows in three nursing homes in southern Israel in which 290 Holocaust survivors live.
“We are supporting these projects because the constant rocket attacks trigger anxiety and dark memories in Nazi victims,” said Julius Berman, chairman of the Claims Conference. “Having lived through a constant threat of danger and death decades ago, Nazi victims now living under missile fire suffer even more trauma and fear than other Israelis.”
In another close call in Sderot, Rabbi Yechiel Eckstein, who heads the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews, which raises funds among Evangelical Christians for the support of Israel, barely escaped injury last week when a rocket landed “not more than 100 yards away.” The rabbi told The Jewish Week he was in an open field with no shelter in sight. “I did the only thing I could do — trembling, I raised by hands to the heavens and prayed to God for protection.”
Day 19 - Israel's war to defend herself
Report From Day 19 Of Israel's War To Defend Her People
Wednesday, January 14, 2009
The people of Israel woke up to the disturbing news that in addition to the sixteen rockets that were fired on southern Israel today, three rockets fired from Lebanon had struck an open area in the north, near the city of Kiryat Shmona. The Israeli army launched a counter strike, firing artillery shells at the assumed location of the Lebanese rocket launchers. Israelis are deeply worried about the prospect of a war opening on a second front. We were, however, relieved to hear that today the Lebanese army took action to dismantle three rocket launchers used in the attack. We pray that the Lebanese government continues to act responsibly, and inhibit the Iranian-backed Hezbollah terrorist group from igniting the situation.
Reports from Egypt indicate that Hamas has accepted ceasefire terms - with reservations. Ironically, this war began when Hamas refused to extend the last temporary truce (which they had been continuously violating). As of this time, the terrorist organization has said that they will agree to a one year cease fire if Israel withdraws from Gaza and if the border to Gaza remains open. But there is no one in Israel who would be happy with a temporary ceasefire without an end to the rocket attacks as well as the smuggling of weapons into Gaza.
The people of Israel feel that this is a just war, and that it represents the only way to bring an end to the indiscriminate rocket fire of Hamas. Images of wounded Gaza citizens on television do not make Israelis happy. However, we remember that it is Hamas that uses their own people as human shields. It is Hamas that attacks Israel from schools, mosques, and residential areas. The IDF, in turn, must respond with their defensive operations.
As Operation Cast Lead continues, the mood and unity of the people remains strong. In every synagogue in Israel, the daily service is concluded with the recital of Psalms on behalf of the IDF soldiers and the innocent Israeli civilians threatened by Hamas terrorists. And we, at The Fellowship, continue to do our part by traveling through the war-torn areas and trying to fill the emergency needs of the people.
We continue to be in awe of the outpouring of love and support from our Fellowship donors who have helped renovate the bomb shelters that many Israelis are now living in, provided food coupons for the poor who cannot get to soup kitchens and food pantries, increased support for trauma centers, provided transportation to medical treatments for the elderly and infirm, and so much more. Your continuous support and love for Israel and her people during their time of need is truly making a difference during this most difficult time.
Today I want to leave you with the words of Moshe, a simple man who resides in the southern city of Netivot, an area continuously hit by Hamas rockets. In his words of thanks, he expresses the feelings of so many Israelis who now know they have Christian friends they can count on.
"It's good to know we are not alone," Moshe told Fellowship staff. "The Jewish people have gone through the worst of times again and again, but we always survive. We’ll survive this time as well because God protects us. There are a lot of needs in Netivot. If this war lasts a long time the needs are only going to get greater. Knowing that we have friends who are willing to help makes it a lot easier. Let everyone know that we appreciate them."
Wednesday, January 14, 2009
The people of Israel woke up to the disturbing news that in addition to the sixteen rockets that were fired on southern Israel today, three rockets fired from Lebanon had struck an open area in the north, near the city of Kiryat Shmona. The Israeli army launched a counter strike, firing artillery shells at the assumed location of the Lebanese rocket launchers. Israelis are deeply worried about the prospect of a war opening on a second front. We were, however, relieved to hear that today the Lebanese army took action to dismantle three rocket launchers used in the attack. We pray that the Lebanese government continues to act responsibly, and inhibit the Iranian-backed Hezbollah terrorist group from igniting the situation.
Reports from Egypt indicate that Hamas has accepted ceasefire terms - with reservations. Ironically, this war began when Hamas refused to extend the last temporary truce (which they had been continuously violating). As of this time, the terrorist organization has said that they will agree to a one year cease fire if Israel withdraws from Gaza and if the border to Gaza remains open. But there is no one in Israel who would be happy with a temporary ceasefire without an end to the rocket attacks as well as the smuggling of weapons into Gaza.
The people of Israel feel that this is a just war, and that it represents the only way to bring an end to the indiscriminate rocket fire of Hamas. Images of wounded Gaza citizens on television do not make Israelis happy. However, we remember that it is Hamas that uses their own people as human shields. It is Hamas that attacks Israel from schools, mosques, and residential areas. The IDF, in turn, must respond with their defensive operations.
As Operation Cast Lead continues, the mood and unity of the people remains strong. In every synagogue in Israel, the daily service is concluded with the recital of Psalms on behalf of the IDF soldiers and the innocent Israeli civilians threatened by Hamas terrorists. And we, at The Fellowship, continue to do our part by traveling through the war-torn areas and trying to fill the emergency needs of the people.
We continue to be in awe of the outpouring of love and support from our Fellowship donors who have helped renovate the bomb shelters that many Israelis are now living in, provided food coupons for the poor who cannot get to soup kitchens and food pantries, increased support for trauma centers, provided transportation to medical treatments for the elderly and infirm, and so much more. Your continuous support and love for Israel and her people during their time of need is truly making a difference during this most difficult time.
Today I want to leave you with the words of Moshe, a simple man who resides in the southern city of Netivot, an area continuously hit by Hamas rockets. In his words of thanks, he expresses the feelings of so many Israelis who now know they have Christian friends they can count on.
"It's good to know we are not alone," Moshe told Fellowship staff. "The Jewish people have gone through the worst of times again and again, but we always survive. We’ll survive this time as well because God protects us. There are a lot of needs in Netivot. If this war lasts a long time the needs are only going to get greater. Knowing that we have friends who are willing to help makes it a lot easier. Let everyone know that we appreciate them."
Tuesday, January 13, 2009
Supporting Trauma Centers in Israel
Between 75 and 94 percent of Sderot children ranging in age from four to eighteen are displaying symptoms of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder due to the constant rocket attacks on their homes.
Typical symptoms from such rocket attacks include: insomnia; lack of focus; irritability; anger; blackouts; nightmares; heightened anxiety; and nearly phobic avoidance of people and places associated with the trauma.
The Fellowship is participating as a full partner along with Israel’s Ministries of Health, Welfare, and Pensioner’s Affairs to complete the preparedness of five critical Trauma Centers in the hardest hit areas in and around Sderot. The centers provide various forms of diagnostic services and counseling to help victims overcome these events.
Five counseling sessions for a child is $300. It costs $80 for play therapy sessions which include like paints, games and more for play therapy, so children can overcome their fears and learn to just be kids again.
Typical symptoms from such rocket attacks include: insomnia; lack of focus; irritability; anger; blackouts; nightmares; heightened anxiety; and nearly phobic avoidance of people and places associated with the trauma.
The Fellowship is participating as a full partner along with Israel’s Ministries of Health, Welfare, and Pensioner’s Affairs to complete the preparedness of five critical Trauma Centers in the hardest hit areas in and around Sderot. The centers provide various forms of diagnostic services and counseling to help victims overcome these events.
Five counseling sessions for a child is $300. It costs $80 for play therapy sessions which include like paints, games and more for play therapy, so children can overcome their fears and learn to just be kids again.
Barzilai Hospital Support from IFCJ
Barzilai Hospital Support from IFCJ
This hospital is located in Ashkelon and serves victims of Hamas terror as well as IDF soldiers injured in battle. With the increase in the number of victims of the war and terror attacks, the hospital needs additional emergency equipment. The Fellowship will be providing 4 respirators, 2 anesthesia machines, 2 anesthesia monitors, as well as, special lights for operating rooms.
This hospital is located in Ashkelon and serves victims of Hamas terror as well as IDF soldiers injured in battle. With the increase in the number of victims of the war and terror attacks, the hospital needs additional emergency equipment. The Fellowship will be providing 4 respirators, 2 anesthesia machines, 2 anesthesia monitors, as well as, special lights for operating rooms.
In Times of War
Israel's People Come Together In Time of War
January 8, 2009
The Israeli people’s determination to establish and protect the Jewish homeland is what has kept us strong and confident in the face of terror for the past 60 years. The morale of Israelis has not been broken by the endless attacks launched on us by our neighbors. Instead, these vicious acts have strengthened us in our conviction that God promised Israel to the Jews and will keep us victorious in order to protect and watch over His land. Despite our trials, we have not lost faith in the biblical principles of hope, love, and the need to confront evil.
Logic says that we should be ready to give up on our 2000 year old dream of living in our biblical homeland, because Israel has been at war since the establishment of the Jewish state sixty years ago. We have been attacked by every single one of our neighboring countries and demonized by countless others. We have seen terror attacks cruel beyond imagination – bombs detonated on public buses full of innocent civilians on their way to work and school, scores killed and injured while celebrating the sacred holiday of Passover, women with infants murdered while waiting outside a synagogue. We have become all too accustomed to harsh, unfair treatment by world governing bodies like the U.N. and to calls from world governments to wipe Israel off the face of the earth. Yes, it may seem like our morale should be broken, but all of these atrocities have only strengthened our resolve to protect our people and nation.
During my recent visits to the war-torn southern part of Israel, I was shocked to see that the streets are not ghost towns. In fact, people from northern Israel are traveling south to show their solidarity and lend a hand to the most helpless residents. We are seeing teenagers spending days in Sderot and Ashkelon, going house to house and shelter to shelter visiting the elderly, playing with children, and showing their love and support in whatever way possible. Instead of spending their days at malls and movies, our youth spend their extra time volunteering in war zones.
Most Israelis believe this is a just war. This is inspiring since, in the game of politics, no one ever seems to agree. Yet in this instance it is different. After seven years of watching Israeli citizens in the south terrorized by missiles, Israelis seem to know that, as terrible as it is, war is the only option left to bring the hope of peace.
This war is a bloody war, and not because we try to kill Palestinian civilians. In fact, Israel deliberately tries to avoid Palestinian civilian casualties by carefully targeting terrorist leadership. The blame lies with Hamas, which uses its own people as human shields, its children’s school houses as missile launching sites, and university dorm rooms as weapon storage areas. Israelis sympathize with and regret Palestinian suffering, yet we know enough to see that this suffering has come about due to their own rulers’ lack of respect for the sanctity for life – both Israeli and Palestinian.
Speaking to Fellowship friends on the phone, I have realized that there is not one of you whose hearts and prayers are not directed towards Israel during this time of war. I have heard your tears from far away, and it gives me strength to know that you understand our suffering and support us. Your generous donations to The Fellowship’s Victims of War and Terror Fund have already reached the suffering population in southern Israel, and have contributed to the successful 24 hour a day operations in the Fellowship-funded trauma centers and bomb shelter projects, programs to provide the needy with food coupons, programs to provide the elderly and infirm with emergency transportation to and from medical appointments, and so much more. American Christians are truly standing for Israel by offering us help in this time of desperate need.
Throughout the year your gifts have helped to prepare the Israeli people for whatever arises, and therefore the people here have learned to trust and rely on you. When The Fellowship comes to their homes with food, clothing, and other assistance, the Israeli residents know it is given with love – and that is the best gift possible. Thank you for your genuine concern, prayers, and compassionate action on behalf of the Jewish people.
Shabbat Shalom,
Yael
January 8, 2009
The Israeli people’s determination to establish and protect the Jewish homeland is what has kept us strong and confident in the face of terror for the past 60 years. The morale of Israelis has not been broken by the endless attacks launched on us by our neighbors. Instead, these vicious acts have strengthened us in our conviction that God promised Israel to the Jews and will keep us victorious in order to protect and watch over His land. Despite our trials, we have not lost faith in the biblical principles of hope, love, and the need to confront evil.
Logic says that we should be ready to give up on our 2000 year old dream of living in our biblical homeland, because Israel has been at war since the establishment of the Jewish state sixty years ago. We have been attacked by every single one of our neighboring countries and demonized by countless others. We have seen terror attacks cruel beyond imagination – bombs detonated on public buses full of innocent civilians on their way to work and school, scores killed and injured while celebrating the sacred holiday of Passover, women with infants murdered while waiting outside a synagogue. We have become all too accustomed to harsh, unfair treatment by world governing bodies like the U.N. and to calls from world governments to wipe Israel off the face of the earth. Yes, it may seem like our morale should be broken, but all of these atrocities have only strengthened our resolve to protect our people and nation.
During my recent visits to the war-torn southern part of Israel, I was shocked to see that the streets are not ghost towns. In fact, people from northern Israel are traveling south to show their solidarity and lend a hand to the most helpless residents. We are seeing teenagers spending days in Sderot and Ashkelon, going house to house and shelter to shelter visiting the elderly, playing with children, and showing their love and support in whatever way possible. Instead of spending their days at malls and movies, our youth spend their extra time volunteering in war zones.
Most Israelis believe this is a just war. This is inspiring since, in the game of politics, no one ever seems to agree. Yet in this instance it is different. After seven years of watching Israeli citizens in the south terrorized by missiles, Israelis seem to know that, as terrible as it is, war is the only option left to bring the hope of peace.
This war is a bloody war, and not because we try to kill Palestinian civilians. In fact, Israel deliberately tries to avoid Palestinian civilian casualties by carefully targeting terrorist leadership. The blame lies with Hamas, which uses its own people as human shields, its children’s school houses as missile launching sites, and university dorm rooms as weapon storage areas. Israelis sympathize with and regret Palestinian suffering, yet we know enough to see that this suffering has come about due to their own rulers’ lack of respect for the sanctity for life – both Israeli and Palestinian.
Speaking to Fellowship friends on the phone, I have realized that there is not one of you whose hearts and prayers are not directed towards Israel during this time of war. I have heard your tears from far away, and it gives me strength to know that you understand our suffering and support us. Your generous donations to The Fellowship’s Victims of War and Terror Fund have already reached the suffering population in southern Israel, and have contributed to the successful 24 hour a day operations in the Fellowship-funded trauma centers and bomb shelter projects, programs to provide the needy with food coupons, programs to provide the elderly and infirm with emergency transportation to and from medical appointments, and so much more. American Christians are truly standing for Israel by offering us help in this time of desperate need.
Throughout the year your gifts have helped to prepare the Israeli people for whatever arises, and therefore the people here have learned to trust and rely on you. When The Fellowship comes to their homes with food, clothing, and other assistance, the Israeli residents know it is given with love – and that is the best gift possible. Thank you for your genuine concern, prayers, and compassionate action on behalf of the Jewish people.
Shabbat Shalom,
Yael
Day 17 of Israel's War to Defend Her People
Report From Day 17 Of Israel's War To Defend Her People
Monday, January 12, 2009
The Israeli army continues to push deeper into Gaza city, in a fierce battle to defend innocent men, women and children from the deadly rocket attacks that have rained over Southern Israel for the last seven years. And while a million innocent Israeli civilians stand on the front lines of the war, watching their homes, schools, and communities destroyed by Hamas rockets, their morale has not been destroyed. The people in the war torn areas of Israel continue to hope that the IDF will bring an end to the incessant missile attacks, and that they will once again be able to live a normal and peaceful life.
The Fellowship staff in Israel has worked tirelessly to bring relief to the many cities across southern Israel hit hardest by the war. Your contributions have funded food for bomb shelters, food stamps for the elderly and emergency equipment for shelters including heaters and radios, as well as games for the children and other small electrical equipment. The Fellowship has also funded emergency transportation to hospitals for people hurt and traumatized in the attacks, as well as for the elderly and the infirm who must now travel miles from their homes for their dialysis and other life-saving medical treatments.
As we travel across the many areas in Israel that are still threatened by a daily barrage of rockets attacks, the people living there are eager to share their stories with The Fellowship’s donors who have offered them a ray of light at the end of the tunnel. We meet the men, women, and children who are living in the bomb shelters that are funded by The Fellowship -- people who, amazingly, continue to have hope amidst their tragedies.
During our travels, we have heart some heartbreaking and chilling stories. We met Shoshanna, who narrowly avoided death when a rocket hit the room she had been sitting in just seconds before. We heard the story of little Inbal, a deaf girl in the third grade, who must stay in her bomb shelter day and night because she cannot hear the “Code Red” siren. We met Smadar, who spends all her time in the shelter with her children because she is too afraid to leave.
They are ordinary people thrown into extraordinary circumstances who continue to live their lives as best they can and pray for a lasting peace. They have the same hopes and dreams that we all have. “We want our children to be able to go outside and play,” says Maria, a resident of the town of Okafim, which was recently hit by rockets for the first time. “We want them to be able to go back to school. We want them to be able to have a normal childhood. We’re ready to pay the price.”
The battle, however, is one that they are not able to fight on their own. The Fellowship staff in Israel continues to work in areas hit by the terrorists, supporting their increasing critical needs. Israelis are extremely grateful for this life-saving assistance. But there is still much work to be done. We continue, for example, to work in areas like Ashkelon and Katzrin, renovating their bomb shelters to the highest standards, and giving them a place to run when the rockets fall.
The Fellowship staff in Israel feels extremely blessed by the outpouring of support and generosity from Christians in America – by their love for Israel, and their willingness to stand with her during this war. Throughout the years, your donations have helped renovate the bomb shelters that many Israelis are now living in, and continue to fund their many arising needs. The people in Israel know that they can trust and rely on their Christian friends. Thank you.
Monday, January 12, 2009
The Israeli army continues to push deeper into Gaza city, in a fierce battle to defend innocent men, women and children from the deadly rocket attacks that have rained over Southern Israel for the last seven years. And while a million innocent Israeli civilians stand on the front lines of the war, watching their homes, schools, and communities destroyed by Hamas rockets, their morale has not been destroyed. The people in the war torn areas of Israel continue to hope that the IDF will bring an end to the incessant missile attacks, and that they will once again be able to live a normal and peaceful life.
The Fellowship staff in Israel has worked tirelessly to bring relief to the many cities across southern Israel hit hardest by the war. Your contributions have funded food for bomb shelters, food stamps for the elderly and emergency equipment for shelters including heaters and radios, as well as games for the children and other small electrical equipment. The Fellowship has also funded emergency transportation to hospitals for people hurt and traumatized in the attacks, as well as for the elderly and the infirm who must now travel miles from their homes for their dialysis and other life-saving medical treatments.
As we travel across the many areas in Israel that are still threatened by a daily barrage of rockets attacks, the people living there are eager to share their stories with The Fellowship’s donors who have offered them a ray of light at the end of the tunnel. We meet the men, women, and children who are living in the bomb shelters that are funded by The Fellowship -- people who, amazingly, continue to have hope amidst their tragedies.
During our travels, we have heart some heartbreaking and chilling stories. We met Shoshanna, who narrowly avoided death when a rocket hit the room she had been sitting in just seconds before. We heard the story of little Inbal, a deaf girl in the third grade, who must stay in her bomb shelter day and night because she cannot hear the “Code Red” siren. We met Smadar, who spends all her time in the shelter with her children because she is too afraid to leave.
They are ordinary people thrown into extraordinary circumstances who continue to live their lives as best they can and pray for a lasting peace. They have the same hopes and dreams that we all have. “We want our children to be able to go outside and play,” says Maria, a resident of the town of Okafim, which was recently hit by rockets for the first time. “We want them to be able to go back to school. We want them to be able to have a normal childhood. We’re ready to pay the price.”
The battle, however, is one that they are not able to fight on their own. The Fellowship staff in Israel continues to work in areas hit by the terrorists, supporting their increasing critical needs. Israelis are extremely grateful for this life-saving assistance. But there is still much work to be done. We continue, for example, to work in areas like Ashkelon and Katzrin, renovating their bomb shelters to the highest standards, and giving them a place to run when the rockets fall.
The Fellowship staff in Israel feels extremely blessed by the outpouring of support and generosity from Christians in America – by their love for Israel, and their willingness to stand with her during this war. Throughout the years, your donations have helped renovate the bomb shelters that many Israelis are now living in, and continue to fund their many arising needs. The people in Israel know that they can trust and rely on their Christian friends. Thank you.
Words from Yael - Daughter of Rabbi Yechiel Eckstein
Why Israelis Will Fight For Their Country
January 12, 2009
The media’s portrayal of Israel’s war on Hamas terror, as well as the worldwide demonstrations taking place today to protest Israel’s right to protect herself, make it clear that the much of the world doesn’t understand the current battle in Gaza. And, in a greater sense, they don’t understand the Jewish need – the Jewish imperative – to defend our homeland.
Since Jews were sent into exile with the destruction of the Second Temple in Jerusalem 2,000 years ago, we have endured many catastrophes. In the countries where we have settled, we have been subject to unfathomable hate and attempted genocide. We have built businesses, established communities, and paid taxes to governments that allowed us to live under their rule, only to later have them turn against us.
The most horrifying example of this occurred during the last century. During the early 1900’s in Europe, Jews were thriving and contributing to society as much as any other culture or people living there. Some Jews immersed themselves in the secular world and held high positions in the government, universities, and hospitals. Others kept their strong faith and traditional orthodox Jewish ways of living, studying the Torah day and night.
And yet, no matter how “European” either group of these Jews felt, they all faced the same fate when Hitler’s brutal Nazi regime came into power in Germany and began to conquer Europe. The same Nazi policemen who found and imprisoned Jews who were hiding from the oppression, who murdered Jewish children in front of their mothers, were the same people that had been their neighbors. After the Holocaust, Jews saw that their efforts to find a place to live peacefully in another country had only resulted in millions of Jewish corpses.
The fact is, for the past 2000 years Jews have been wandering because we have been chased out of nearly every one of our homes after seeing fellow Jews slaughtered because of their faith. “Pogrom” (an organized massacre of Jews) is not just a word in the history books for us, but a word we use to describe to our children how their grandparents or great-grandparents died. We never had a Jewish homeland that would protect us from harm, and because of these painful collective memories from exile, the Jewish people no longer feel confident that we will be safe no matter where we live.
Now, 63 years after the Holocaust ended, I am sitting at my home in Jerusalem surrounded by 6 million fellow Jewish citizens of the land of Israel – the same number of Jews who were murdered during World War II. And yet, I still feel a historical dĂ©jĂ vu.
There is good reason for this. I turn on the news and see Iran calling for Israel’s destruction. I see U.N. ceremonies taking place with maps of “Palestine” hanging in the background, maps on which the state of Israel simply does not exist. I see Hamas terrorists and Muslim clerics praying to Allah to wipe Israel into the sea. I see terrorists firing rockets at civilian populations of southern Israel, tearing apart countless lives.
But I am heartened to know that finally, after seven years of terrorist rockets striking Israeli territory and Israel trying every form of negotiation possible, we are fighting back militarily. We have told both Hamas and the world that we will not allow the historical atrocities to repeat themselves again. We Jews have learned not to take terrorist threats in vain and we have summoned the nation’s courage to address these threats and fight them to the end. We know we will prevail because our true strength lies in the Torah, the book of Psalms, and prayer – and with those weapons there is no losing potential.
So I want to make clear today to all those protesting against Israel today what we are really fighting for. We are fighting for our survival, our people, and our history. We fight in the name of the millions of Jews that were murdered during the past 2,000 years because they didn’t have a government to stand up for their rights or a homeland to protect their ancient faith. What would the people who are picketing against Israel like us to do when we are faced with thousands of rockets being fired at our citizens – sit back and beg for mercy until they destroy us or kick us out of our land?
My friends, history may be repeating itself in many ways, but we also see progression and change for the better. YOU are that positive change. For 2000 years the Jews didn’t have any friends to turn to during our time of need. Now we have millions of Christians in North and South America, Canada, and around the world that love us and back us in our fight for freedom and life. Through both your physical and spiritual support, you have proven yourselves to be genuine and sincere partners with the Jewish people. Through The Fellowship you have given sacrificial financial gifts to provide lifesaving aid to Jewish people in Israel and around the world. Because of your donations we have Jewish Ethiopians, Indians, Iranians, and many more nationalities all living in their Jewish homeland in order to strengthen it – a true fulfillment of biblical prophecy. And now, during this time of war, when the rocket-stricken citizens of southern Israel retreat to their bomb shelters to find safety, they are greeted by a plaque that tells them that the Jewish people will never again be fighting alone: “Donated With Love by Christians in America, The Fellowship”.
Thank you for standing with us, both physically and spiritually, and positively changing the course of history forever.
With great gratitude and prayers for shalom,
Yael
January 12, 2009
The media’s portrayal of Israel’s war on Hamas terror, as well as the worldwide demonstrations taking place today to protest Israel’s right to protect herself, make it clear that the much of the world doesn’t understand the current battle in Gaza. And, in a greater sense, they don’t understand the Jewish need – the Jewish imperative – to defend our homeland.
Since Jews were sent into exile with the destruction of the Second Temple in Jerusalem 2,000 years ago, we have endured many catastrophes. In the countries where we have settled, we have been subject to unfathomable hate and attempted genocide. We have built businesses, established communities, and paid taxes to governments that allowed us to live under their rule, only to later have them turn against us.
The most horrifying example of this occurred during the last century. During the early 1900’s in Europe, Jews were thriving and contributing to society as much as any other culture or people living there. Some Jews immersed themselves in the secular world and held high positions in the government, universities, and hospitals. Others kept their strong faith and traditional orthodox Jewish ways of living, studying the Torah day and night.
And yet, no matter how “European” either group of these Jews felt, they all faced the same fate when Hitler’s brutal Nazi regime came into power in Germany and began to conquer Europe. The same Nazi policemen who found and imprisoned Jews who were hiding from the oppression, who murdered Jewish children in front of their mothers, were the same people that had been their neighbors. After the Holocaust, Jews saw that their efforts to find a place to live peacefully in another country had only resulted in millions of Jewish corpses.
The fact is, for the past 2000 years Jews have been wandering because we have been chased out of nearly every one of our homes after seeing fellow Jews slaughtered because of their faith. “Pogrom” (an organized massacre of Jews) is not just a word in the history books for us, but a word we use to describe to our children how their grandparents or great-grandparents died. We never had a Jewish homeland that would protect us from harm, and because of these painful collective memories from exile, the Jewish people no longer feel confident that we will be safe no matter where we live.
Now, 63 years after the Holocaust ended, I am sitting at my home in Jerusalem surrounded by 6 million fellow Jewish citizens of the land of Israel – the same number of Jews who were murdered during World War II. And yet, I still feel a historical dĂ©jĂ vu.
There is good reason for this. I turn on the news and see Iran calling for Israel’s destruction. I see U.N. ceremonies taking place with maps of “Palestine” hanging in the background, maps on which the state of Israel simply does not exist. I see Hamas terrorists and Muslim clerics praying to Allah to wipe Israel into the sea. I see terrorists firing rockets at civilian populations of southern Israel, tearing apart countless lives.
But I am heartened to know that finally, after seven years of terrorist rockets striking Israeli territory and Israel trying every form of negotiation possible, we are fighting back militarily. We have told both Hamas and the world that we will not allow the historical atrocities to repeat themselves again. We Jews have learned not to take terrorist threats in vain and we have summoned the nation’s courage to address these threats and fight them to the end. We know we will prevail because our true strength lies in the Torah, the book of Psalms, and prayer – and with those weapons there is no losing potential.
So I want to make clear today to all those protesting against Israel today what we are really fighting for. We are fighting for our survival, our people, and our history. We fight in the name of the millions of Jews that were murdered during the past 2,000 years because they didn’t have a government to stand up for their rights or a homeland to protect their ancient faith. What would the people who are picketing against Israel like us to do when we are faced with thousands of rockets being fired at our citizens – sit back and beg for mercy until they destroy us or kick us out of our land?
My friends, history may be repeating itself in many ways, but we also see progression and change for the better. YOU are that positive change. For 2000 years the Jews didn’t have any friends to turn to during our time of need. Now we have millions of Christians in North and South America, Canada, and around the world that love us and back us in our fight for freedom and life. Through both your physical and spiritual support, you have proven yourselves to be genuine and sincere partners with the Jewish people. Through The Fellowship you have given sacrificial financial gifts to provide lifesaving aid to Jewish people in Israel and around the world. Because of your donations we have Jewish Ethiopians, Indians, Iranians, and many more nationalities all living in their Jewish homeland in order to strengthen it – a true fulfillment of biblical prophecy. And now, during this time of war, when the rocket-stricken citizens of southern Israel retreat to their bomb shelters to find safety, they are greeted by a plaque that tells them that the Jewish people will never again be fighting alone: “Donated With Love by Christians in America, The Fellowship”.
Thank you for standing with us, both physically and spiritually, and positively changing the course of history forever.
With great gratitude and prayers for shalom,
Yael
Life in Southern Israel
The Fellowship has been in the field during this crisis since day 1 tending to tens of thousands of Israelis in the cities of Ashkelon and Katzrin who are currently under fire from Hamas rockets do not have adequate bomb shelters. Help us fulfill our commitment to renovate 500 private bomb shelters in the poorest areas of these war-torn Israeli cities.
Watch our video (link below) to get a first-hand account of the affects this war has caused for so many of Israel’s people and why they need your help. Continue to show your support by continuing to tell your friends to join The Fellowship’s causes and spreading the word.
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Chicago-IL/The-International-Fellowship-of-Christians-and-Jews/30914589895#/video/video.php?v=54963239973
Watch our video (link below) to get a first-hand account of the affects this war has caused for so many of Israel’s people and why they need your help. Continue to show your support by continuing to tell your friends to join The Fellowship’s causes and spreading the word.
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Chicago-IL/The-International-Fellowship-of-Christians-and-Jews/30914589895#/video/video.php?v=54963239973
Friday, January 9, 2009
Tally of air strikes from Gaza
Tally of missiles, rockets and mortar shells fired from Gaza
• Since 2001, total number of identified rocket and mortar shell hits: 8,691.
• Since Israel's unilateral disengagement from Gaza in August 2005: 6,000.
• Since 4 November 2008: 896.
• Since the ceasefire ended on 19 December 2008: 831.
• Since Operation Cast Lead began on 27 December 2008: 676.
• Since 2001, total number of identified rocket and mortar shell hits: 8,691.
• Since Israel's unilateral disengagement from Gaza in August 2005: 6,000.
• Since 4 November 2008: 896.
• Since the ceasefire ended on 19 December 2008: 831.
• Since Operation Cast Lead began on 27 December 2008: 676.
MILITANT ISLAM THREATENS US ALL
MILITANT ISLAM THREATENS US ALL
Benjamin Netanyahu
Wall Street Journal, January 7, 2009
Imagine a siren that gives you 30 seconds to find shelter before a Kassam rocket falls from the sky and explodes, spraying its lethal shrapnel in all directions. Now imagine this happens day after day, month after month, year after year. If you can imagine that, you can begin to understand the terror to which hundreds of thousands of Israelis have been subjected. Three years ago Israel withdrew from every square inch of Gaza. And since that withdrawal, our civilians have been targeted by more than 6,000 rockets and mortars fired from Gaza. In the face of this relentless bombardment, Israel has acted with a restraint that other countries, faced with a similar threat, would find hard to fathom. Israel’s government has finally decided to respond.
For this action to succeed, we must first have moral clarity. There is no moral equivalence between Israel, a democracy which seeks peace and targets the terrorists, and Hamas, an Iranian-backed terror organization that seeks Israel’s destruction and targets the innocent.
In launching precision strikes against Hamas rocket launchers, headquarters, weapons depots, smuggling tunnels and training camps, Israel is trying to minimize civilian casualties. But Hamas deliberately attacks Israeli civilians and deliberately hides behind Palestinian civilians—a double war crime. Responsible governments do their utmost to minimize civilian casualties, but they do not grant immunity to terrorists who use civilians as human shields. The international community may occasionally condemn Hamas for putting Palestinian civilians in harm’s way, but if it ultimately holds Israel responsible for the casualties that ensue, then Hamas and other terror organizations will employ this abominable tactic again and again.
The charge that Israel is using disproportionate force is equally baseless. Does proportionality demand that Israel fire 6,000 rockets indiscriminately back at Gaza? Does it demand an equal number of casualties on both sides? Using that logic, one would conclude that the United States employed disproportionate force against the Germans because 20 times as many Germans as Americans died in World War II. In that same war, Britain responded to the firing of thousands of rockets on its population with the wholesale bombing of German cities. Israel’s measured response to rocket fire on its cities has come in the form of surgical strikes. To further root out Hamas terrorists in a way that minimizes Palestinian civilian casualties, Israel’s army is now engaged in a ground operation that places its soldiers in great peril. Carpet-bombing of Palestinian cities is not an option that any Israeli leader will entertain.
The goal of this mission should be clear: To end the current round of missile attacks and to remove the threat of such attacks in the future. The only cease-fire or diplomatic initiative that should be accepted is one that achieves this dual objective.
If our enemies assumed that the Israeli public would be divided on the eve of an election, they were wrong. When it comes to exercising our most basic right of self-defense, there is no opposition and no coalition. We stand united against Hamas because we know that only by defeating Hamas can we provide security for our people and hope for a future peace. We fight to defend ourselves, but in so doing we are also fighting a fanatical ideology that seeks to reverse the course of history and throw the civilized world back into a new dark age. The struggle between militant Islam and modernity—whether fought in Afghanistan, Iraq, India or Gaza—will decide our common future. It is a battle we cannot afford to lose.
(Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel’s ninth prime minister, is the chairman
of the Likud Party and its candidate for prime minister.)
Benjamin Netanyahu
Wall Street Journal, January 7, 2009
Imagine a siren that gives you 30 seconds to find shelter before a Kassam rocket falls from the sky and explodes, spraying its lethal shrapnel in all directions. Now imagine this happens day after day, month after month, year after year. If you can imagine that, you can begin to understand the terror to which hundreds of thousands of Israelis have been subjected. Three years ago Israel withdrew from every square inch of Gaza. And since that withdrawal, our civilians have been targeted by more than 6,000 rockets and mortars fired from Gaza. In the face of this relentless bombardment, Israel has acted with a restraint that other countries, faced with a similar threat, would find hard to fathom. Israel’s government has finally decided to respond.
For this action to succeed, we must first have moral clarity. There is no moral equivalence between Israel, a democracy which seeks peace and targets the terrorists, and Hamas, an Iranian-backed terror organization that seeks Israel’s destruction and targets the innocent.
In launching precision strikes against Hamas rocket launchers, headquarters, weapons depots, smuggling tunnels and training camps, Israel is trying to minimize civilian casualties. But Hamas deliberately attacks Israeli civilians and deliberately hides behind Palestinian civilians—a double war crime. Responsible governments do their utmost to minimize civilian casualties, but they do not grant immunity to terrorists who use civilians as human shields. The international community may occasionally condemn Hamas for putting Palestinian civilians in harm’s way, but if it ultimately holds Israel responsible for the casualties that ensue, then Hamas and other terror organizations will employ this abominable tactic again and again.
The charge that Israel is using disproportionate force is equally baseless. Does proportionality demand that Israel fire 6,000 rockets indiscriminately back at Gaza? Does it demand an equal number of casualties on both sides? Using that logic, one would conclude that the United States employed disproportionate force against the Germans because 20 times as many Germans as Americans died in World War II. In that same war, Britain responded to the firing of thousands of rockets on its population with the wholesale bombing of German cities. Israel’s measured response to rocket fire on its cities has come in the form of surgical strikes. To further root out Hamas terrorists in a way that minimizes Palestinian civilian casualties, Israel’s army is now engaged in a ground operation that places its soldiers in great peril. Carpet-bombing of Palestinian cities is not an option that any Israeli leader will entertain.
The goal of this mission should be clear: To end the current round of missile attacks and to remove the threat of such attacks in the future. The only cease-fire or diplomatic initiative that should be accepted is one that achieves this dual objective.
If our enemies assumed that the Israeli public would be divided on the eve of an election, they were wrong. When it comes to exercising our most basic right of self-defense, there is no opposition and no coalition. We stand united against Hamas because we know that only by defeating Hamas can we provide security for our people and hope for a future peace. We fight to defend ourselves, but in so doing we are also fighting a fanatical ideology that seeks to reverse the course of history and throw the civilized world back into a new dark age. The struggle between militant Islam and modernity—whether fought in Afghanistan, Iraq, India or Gaza—will decide our common future. It is a battle we cannot afford to lose.
(Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel’s ninth prime minister, is the chairman
of the Likud Party and its candidate for prime minister.)
The Task at Hand - Gaza Conflict
THE TASK AT HAND
Moshe Arens
Ha’aretz, January 7, 2009
We have reached a crucial stage in the IDF’s operation against Hamas in the Gaza Strip. If we are not careful, we may have defeat staring us in the face—another defeat, after the fiasco of the Second Lebanon War. This time at the hands of Hamas, a terrorist organization even smaller and weaker than Hezbollah.
Insistent calls are being heard for a cease-fire. Some of these calls come from outside Israel and others come from within our midst. If the IDF does not complete the mission it has been assigned, of suppressing the launching of rockets from the Gaza Strip against the cities, towns and villages of southern Israel, and if the final act before a cease-fire goes into effect ends up being an avalanche of rockets fired by Hamas against Israel, not only Hamas and the Arab states, but most of the world, will consider Hamas as having succeeded in defeating Israel.… [S]uch a second defeat would do irreparable damage to the general security of Israel, serving as an invitation to further provocations and aggression by Israel’s enemies in the years to come. All of Israel’s citizens, not only those living in the south, would bear the burden of such a development.
It was Henry Kissinger who said that “the conventional army loses if it does not win—the guerilla wins if he does not lose.” Any terrorist group that manages to face up to the might of the IDF and survive while continuing its attacks against Israel will invariably be seen as the victor. In the present fighting in the Gaza Strip, the IDF will lose if it does not win, and Hamas will emerge as the victor. No amount of wordage in a UN Security Council resolution calling for a cease-fire, or promises offered Israel by the international community, are going to change the face of the end result. That is what happened when UN Security Council Resolution 1701 brought about the cease-fire that ended the Second Lebanon War and the deployment of UNIFIL forces in southern Lebanon. You only need to take a look at what has happened to Hezbollah, its stockpile of rockets and its position in Lebanon since the cease-fire to see what is likely to occur in the Gaza Strip in the wake of a similar cease-fire there. For some reason, it is Israel that has difficulty learning that a cease-fire with terrorists is only to the advantage of the terrorists. Terrorism has to be destroyed.…
The idea that Israel may face unbearable international pressure that would limit its response against terrorist forces has little basis in fact.… [I]f we are seen as being successful, we will have nothing to fear from any quarter. If there are any doubts in our midst they can be laid to rest by recalling the statements made by Mayor Michael Bloomberg, of New York, during his recent visit to Ashkelon, and those made by senior Democratic and Republican senators and by President Bush. Most of those Israeli politicians who speak of the need to stop our military activity before international pressure forces us to stop have precious little experience with the American political establishment.
Our job now is to keep our eye on the ball, and not be diverted from the task at hand. The IDF must continue to pursue the mission it has been assigned and put an end to the firing of rockets from the Gaza Strip. We have the ability to do so and it must be done. The consequences of failure, regardless of the explanations offered by Israeli politicians and the wording of the relevant UN Security Council Resolution, would bode very ill for Israel.
Moshe Arens
Ha’aretz, January 7, 2009
We have reached a crucial stage in the IDF’s operation against Hamas in the Gaza Strip. If we are not careful, we may have defeat staring us in the face—another defeat, after the fiasco of the Second Lebanon War. This time at the hands of Hamas, a terrorist organization even smaller and weaker than Hezbollah.
Insistent calls are being heard for a cease-fire. Some of these calls come from outside Israel and others come from within our midst. If the IDF does not complete the mission it has been assigned, of suppressing the launching of rockets from the Gaza Strip against the cities, towns and villages of southern Israel, and if the final act before a cease-fire goes into effect ends up being an avalanche of rockets fired by Hamas against Israel, not only Hamas and the Arab states, but most of the world, will consider Hamas as having succeeded in defeating Israel.… [S]uch a second defeat would do irreparable damage to the general security of Israel, serving as an invitation to further provocations and aggression by Israel’s enemies in the years to come. All of Israel’s citizens, not only those living in the south, would bear the burden of such a development.
It was Henry Kissinger who said that “the conventional army loses if it does not win—the guerilla wins if he does not lose.” Any terrorist group that manages to face up to the might of the IDF and survive while continuing its attacks against Israel will invariably be seen as the victor. In the present fighting in the Gaza Strip, the IDF will lose if it does not win, and Hamas will emerge as the victor. No amount of wordage in a UN Security Council resolution calling for a cease-fire, or promises offered Israel by the international community, are going to change the face of the end result. That is what happened when UN Security Council Resolution 1701 brought about the cease-fire that ended the Second Lebanon War and the deployment of UNIFIL forces in southern Lebanon. You only need to take a look at what has happened to Hezbollah, its stockpile of rockets and its position in Lebanon since the cease-fire to see what is likely to occur in the Gaza Strip in the wake of a similar cease-fire there. For some reason, it is Israel that has difficulty learning that a cease-fire with terrorists is only to the advantage of the terrorists. Terrorism has to be destroyed.…
The idea that Israel may face unbearable international pressure that would limit its response against terrorist forces has little basis in fact.… [I]f we are seen as being successful, we will have nothing to fear from any quarter. If there are any doubts in our midst they can be laid to rest by recalling the statements made by Mayor Michael Bloomberg, of New York, during his recent visit to Ashkelon, and those made by senior Democratic and Republican senators and by President Bush. Most of those Israeli politicians who speak of the need to stop our military activity before international pressure forces us to stop have precious little experience with the American political establishment.
Our job now is to keep our eye on the ball, and not be diverted from the task at hand. The IDF must continue to pursue the mission it has been assigned and put an end to the firing of rockets from the Gaza Strip. We have the ability to do so and it must be done. The consequences of failure, regardless of the explanations offered by Israeli politicians and the wording of the relevant UN Security Council Resolution, would bode very ill for Israel.
Thursday, January 8, 2009
12th Day of Gaza Conflict
BICOM BRIEFING: GAZA SITUATION UPDATE - 8 JANUARY 2009
• At least two Katyusha rockets were fired this morning at the northern Israeli town of Nahariya. While unclear whether the situation on the northern border would escalate, this does indicate how Israel remains vulnerable on two fronts.
• The IDF has opened a humanitarian corridor in Gaza for the second day running. About 100 trucks are to be transferred to Gaza via the Kerem Shalom and Erez crossings. Some 500,000 litres of heavy duty diesel for the Gaza power station are also scheduled to be transferred to Gaza through the Nahal Oz fuel depot.
• To visit our new Operation Cast Lead section on our website, please go to http://www.bicom.org.uk/news/operation-cast-lead. It contains daily situation updates, analyses, useful facts and figures, and videos. You can also find the section by going to our homepage and clicking on the Operation Cast Lead button on the right-hand side. You will also find this button on the right-hand side of this email.
Key statements
High-ranking security official (1/6): "Even as the ground operation is taking place, the defence minister is keeping two channels open. In one, he is instructing the army to prepare practically for the operation's third stage. In the other, he is discussing the possibility of an agreement with Hamas. We have trained and prepared reserve troops available."
High-ranking security official (1/6): "The Americans are putting pressure on the Egyptians to get the tunnels closed. The problem is that this is being done harshly. The Egyptians don't want to look like their sovereignty has been violated, so if they want to increase the number of police officers along the road, Israel will consider that in a positive light."
Henry Carmeli, manager of the Nahariya nursing home hit by rocket fire from Lebanon (1/7): "The fact that all of the seniors were there [in the dining room waiting for breakfast at the time of the attack] saved many lives, because we saw that the strike caused heavy damage to the rooms on the second floor [where the residents sleep]."
Situation on the ground
Twelve rockets and mortar shells have already been fired by Palestinian militants into Israel today, wounding four people. Two sustained moderate wounds when a mortar shell exploded in the western Negev. A rocket scored a direct hit on a sports facility next to a school in Ashkelon.
At least two Katyusha rockets were fired this morning at the northern Israeli town of Nahariya, leaving one resident of a nursing home with a broken leg and many other residents suffering from shock. It is believed that the rockets were fired by a Palestinian organisation - not by Hezbollah - but a Hamas spokesperson in Lebanon said Hamas was not involved. While unclear whether the situation on the northern border would escalate, this does indicate how Israel remains vulnerable on two fronts. Additionally, UNIFIL patrols in Lebanon have been increased after eight Katyusha rockets were discovered aimed at Israel and connected to timers.
Operation Cast Lead continues, with 60 specific targets hit in Gaza overnight. These included a mosque used as a weapons storage facility, 15 tunnels used by Hamas terror operatives - some of which were located under houses, 10 additional weapons storage facilities, and 15 launching areas and underground launching pads used to fire mortar shells at IDF forces.
The IDF permitted the entry of a limited number of journalists into Gaza yesterday. This embedded press pool was allowed to later distribute footage from the area.
Diplomatic developments
Maj. Gen. (res.) Amos Gilad, director of the Political-Security Staff in the Israeli Defence Ministry, left for Cairo this morning to discuss prospects for a long-term Israel-Hamas ceasefire with Egyptian Intelligence Chief Omar Suleiman. However, officials in the Defence Minister's Bureau are not optimistic that Gilad will come back with positive news of progress in negotiations.
US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, Foreign Minister David Miliband and French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner remain at UN Headquarters in New York to continue UN Security Council talks on the situation in Gaza. The US, the UK and France would like to issue a statement on a ceasefire, rather than a resolution; the statement they have offered emphasises the need for a sustainable ceasefire which includes guarantees that arms smuggling into Gaza will be prevented.
Tally of missiles, rockets and mortar shells fired from Gaza
• Since 2001: 8,648
• Since Israel's unilateral disengagement from Gaza in August 2005: 5,957
• Since 4 November 2008: 853
• Since the ceasefire ended on 19 December 2008: 788
• Since Operation Cast Lead began on 27 December 2008: 633
For a daily tally of rockets and mortars fired into Israel, see BICOM Statistics: Total number of identified rocket and mortar shell hits since 2001; daily tally for 2008 and 2009. Please note the new web link.
Humanitarian aid to Gaza
Israel is conducting the latest operation while making sure that food, basic supplies and medical needs are constantly transferred into the Gaza Strip. Israel maintains ongoing contact with humanitarian agencies and enables the constant flow of goods and supplies into the strip.
Since the beginning of operation in Gaza, 534 truckloads of humanitarian aid (12,229 tons) have been transferred at the request of international organisations, the Palestinian Authority and various governments. Israel does not wish to see the humanitarian situation in the strip deteriorate. Preparations are underway to facilitate further shipments expected to arrive in the coming days.
7 January 2009
Throughout the day, the crossings facilitated the movement of 76 trucks loaded with 2,068 tons of humanitarian goods, comprised of donations from Jordan and Egypt and aid on behalf of UNRWA, the World Food Programme, the World Health Organisation and the International Committee of the Red Cross. Also, 482,000 litres of heavy duty diesel for the power plant, 92,000 litres of diesel for UN humanitarian operations and 43 tons of gas for domestic use were transferred to the Gaza Strip.
Ongoing activities are taking place to repair additional electrical lines. Nevertheless, most of the population in the Gaza Strip has electricity.
6 January 2009
57 trucks loaded with 1,312 tons of humanitarian aid entered the Gaza Strip via the Kerem Shalom crossing. The trucks contained medical supplies, flour, powdered milk, potatoes, barley and more, shipped to Gaza at the request of international organisations including UNRWA, the World Food Programme and the World Health Organisation, as well as international donations on behalf of the governments of Jordan, Egypt and Greece. Israel's humanitarian efforts, in conjunction with international organisations operating in the Gaza Strip, also include medical treatment in Israeli hospitals and infrastructure repairs in the Gaza Strip.
5 January 2009
49 trucks carrying 1,119 tons of food and medicines were transferred to Gaza via the Kerem Shalom crossing, including four with medical equipment and medicines. The aid was donated by international organisations - UNRWA, WFP and the ICRC - and by several countries, including Egypt and Jordan. In addition, 215,000 litres of diesel fuel for the power plant, 93,000 litres of diesel for the use of various UN organisations and 50 tons of cooking gas for domestic uses were transferred via the Nahal Oz terminal.
The evacuation of dual nationals is continuing.
2 January 2009
Israel transferred 64 trucks carrying 1,530 tons of humanitarian aid (including basic foodstuffs, medicines and medical supplies, tents and generators) via the Kerem Shalom crossing.
1 January 2009
60 trucks, with approximately 1,360 tons of humanitarian aid, medical supplies and medication were conveyed through Kerem Shalom cargo terminal.
31 December 2008
93 truckloads carrying some 2,500 tons of humanitarian aid, medical supplies and medications were transferred through the Kerem Shalom crossing. The World Food Programme notified the Israeli authorities that their food warehouses in the Gaza Strip are full, with a two-week supply, and they do not require further shipments.
The Nahal Oz fuel crossing remained closed due to continuing fire in the area.
Twelve Palestinians, including two children, were transferred to Israeli hospitals.
30 December 2008
93 truckloads carrying 2,366 tons of humanitarian supplies as well as five ambulances donated by Turkey were transferred to the Gaza Strip. A Red Cross plane arrived with medical supplies for the hospital operating room. The aid included food and medicine provided by the World Food Programme, UNRWA, UNICEF, the ICRC, the World Health Organisation, Doctors without Borders, and Care International, as well as donations from Egypt, Jordan, Qatar and Turkey.
29 December 2008
63 trucks with 1,545 tons of humanitarian goods (food, medicines and medical supplies) were delivered via the Kerem Shalom crossing. Most of the aid was provided by the International Red Cross, UNRWA, Doctors without Borders, and Care International. Five ambulances from the Palestinian Red Crescent Society (PRCS) in Ramallah passed through, at the request of the International Red Cross (ICRC). 1,000 units of blood donated by the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan were also delivered.
Erez crossing: Four people (patients and their escorts), and ten international staff, including a pregnant employee of the UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation and her Palestinian husband, left the Gaza Strip and crossed into Israel.
28 December 2008
At the request of international organisations (the International Red Cross, UNRWA, WFP) and of the Palestinian National Authority in Ramallah, 23 truckloads of humanitarian goods such as flour, medicines and medical supplies were transferred via Kerem Shalom crossing.
However, the transfer of additional aid through the crossings is being delayed by the high risk of terrorist attacks on the crossings themselves. There is a long history of such attacks, including:
• 22 May 2008: a Palestinian bomber blew up an explosives-laden truck on the Palestinian side of the Erez crossing, causing substantial damage.
• 20 April 2008: Hamas gunmen wounded 13 Israeli soldiers in an assault with mortar shells, explosives-laden vehicles and gunfire against the Kerem Shalom crossing.
• 9 April 2008: Two Israeli civilian fuel truck drivers working at the Nahal Oz fuel depot - which supplies fuel to Gaza - were killed in an attack by Gaza militants.
Further Information
For a full news review for 8 January, click here.
• At least two Katyusha rockets were fired this morning at the northern Israeli town of Nahariya. While unclear whether the situation on the northern border would escalate, this does indicate how Israel remains vulnerable on two fronts.
• The IDF has opened a humanitarian corridor in Gaza for the second day running. About 100 trucks are to be transferred to Gaza via the Kerem Shalom and Erez crossings. Some 500,000 litres of heavy duty diesel for the Gaza power station are also scheduled to be transferred to Gaza through the Nahal Oz fuel depot.
• To visit our new Operation Cast Lead section on our website, please go to http://www.bicom.org.uk/news/operation-cast-lead. It contains daily situation updates, analyses, useful facts and figures, and videos. You can also find the section by going to our homepage and clicking on the Operation Cast Lead button on the right-hand side. You will also find this button on the right-hand side of this email.
Key statements
High-ranking security official (1/6): "Even as the ground operation is taking place, the defence minister is keeping two channels open. In one, he is instructing the army to prepare practically for the operation's third stage. In the other, he is discussing the possibility of an agreement with Hamas. We have trained and prepared reserve troops available."
High-ranking security official (1/6): "The Americans are putting pressure on the Egyptians to get the tunnels closed. The problem is that this is being done harshly. The Egyptians don't want to look like their sovereignty has been violated, so if they want to increase the number of police officers along the road, Israel will consider that in a positive light."
Henry Carmeli, manager of the Nahariya nursing home hit by rocket fire from Lebanon (1/7): "The fact that all of the seniors were there [in the dining room waiting for breakfast at the time of the attack] saved many lives, because we saw that the strike caused heavy damage to the rooms on the second floor [where the residents sleep]."
Situation on the ground
Twelve rockets and mortar shells have already been fired by Palestinian militants into Israel today, wounding four people. Two sustained moderate wounds when a mortar shell exploded in the western Negev. A rocket scored a direct hit on a sports facility next to a school in Ashkelon.
At least two Katyusha rockets were fired this morning at the northern Israeli town of Nahariya, leaving one resident of a nursing home with a broken leg and many other residents suffering from shock. It is believed that the rockets were fired by a Palestinian organisation - not by Hezbollah - but a Hamas spokesperson in Lebanon said Hamas was not involved. While unclear whether the situation on the northern border would escalate, this does indicate how Israel remains vulnerable on two fronts. Additionally, UNIFIL patrols in Lebanon have been increased after eight Katyusha rockets were discovered aimed at Israel and connected to timers.
Operation Cast Lead continues, with 60 specific targets hit in Gaza overnight. These included a mosque used as a weapons storage facility, 15 tunnels used by Hamas terror operatives - some of which were located under houses, 10 additional weapons storage facilities, and 15 launching areas and underground launching pads used to fire mortar shells at IDF forces.
The IDF permitted the entry of a limited number of journalists into Gaza yesterday. This embedded press pool was allowed to later distribute footage from the area.
Diplomatic developments
Maj. Gen. (res.) Amos Gilad, director of the Political-Security Staff in the Israeli Defence Ministry, left for Cairo this morning to discuss prospects for a long-term Israel-Hamas ceasefire with Egyptian Intelligence Chief Omar Suleiman. However, officials in the Defence Minister's Bureau are not optimistic that Gilad will come back with positive news of progress in negotiations.
US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, Foreign Minister David Miliband and French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner remain at UN Headquarters in New York to continue UN Security Council talks on the situation in Gaza. The US, the UK and France would like to issue a statement on a ceasefire, rather than a resolution; the statement they have offered emphasises the need for a sustainable ceasefire which includes guarantees that arms smuggling into Gaza will be prevented.
Tally of missiles, rockets and mortar shells fired from Gaza
• Since 2001: 8,648
• Since Israel's unilateral disengagement from Gaza in August 2005: 5,957
• Since 4 November 2008: 853
• Since the ceasefire ended on 19 December 2008: 788
• Since Operation Cast Lead began on 27 December 2008: 633
For a daily tally of rockets and mortars fired into Israel, see BICOM Statistics: Total number of identified rocket and mortar shell hits since 2001; daily tally for 2008 and 2009. Please note the new web link.
Humanitarian aid to Gaza
Israel is conducting the latest operation while making sure that food, basic supplies and medical needs are constantly transferred into the Gaza Strip. Israel maintains ongoing contact with humanitarian agencies and enables the constant flow of goods and supplies into the strip.
Since the beginning of operation in Gaza, 534 truckloads of humanitarian aid (12,229 tons) have been transferred at the request of international organisations, the Palestinian Authority and various governments. Israel does not wish to see the humanitarian situation in the strip deteriorate. Preparations are underway to facilitate further shipments expected to arrive in the coming days.
7 January 2009
Throughout the day, the crossings facilitated the movement of 76 trucks loaded with 2,068 tons of humanitarian goods, comprised of donations from Jordan and Egypt and aid on behalf of UNRWA, the World Food Programme, the World Health Organisation and the International Committee of the Red Cross. Also, 482,000 litres of heavy duty diesel for the power plant, 92,000 litres of diesel for UN humanitarian operations and 43 tons of gas for domestic use were transferred to the Gaza Strip.
Ongoing activities are taking place to repair additional electrical lines. Nevertheless, most of the population in the Gaza Strip has electricity.
6 January 2009
57 trucks loaded with 1,312 tons of humanitarian aid entered the Gaza Strip via the Kerem Shalom crossing. The trucks contained medical supplies, flour, powdered milk, potatoes, barley and more, shipped to Gaza at the request of international organisations including UNRWA, the World Food Programme and the World Health Organisation, as well as international donations on behalf of the governments of Jordan, Egypt and Greece. Israel's humanitarian efforts, in conjunction with international organisations operating in the Gaza Strip, also include medical treatment in Israeli hospitals and infrastructure repairs in the Gaza Strip.
5 January 2009
49 trucks carrying 1,119 tons of food and medicines were transferred to Gaza via the Kerem Shalom crossing, including four with medical equipment and medicines. The aid was donated by international organisations - UNRWA, WFP and the ICRC - and by several countries, including Egypt and Jordan. In addition, 215,000 litres of diesel fuel for the power plant, 93,000 litres of diesel for the use of various UN organisations and 50 tons of cooking gas for domestic uses were transferred via the Nahal Oz terminal.
The evacuation of dual nationals is continuing.
2 January 2009
Israel transferred 64 trucks carrying 1,530 tons of humanitarian aid (including basic foodstuffs, medicines and medical supplies, tents and generators) via the Kerem Shalom crossing.
1 January 2009
60 trucks, with approximately 1,360 tons of humanitarian aid, medical supplies and medication were conveyed through Kerem Shalom cargo terminal.
31 December 2008
93 truckloads carrying some 2,500 tons of humanitarian aid, medical supplies and medications were transferred through the Kerem Shalom crossing. The World Food Programme notified the Israeli authorities that their food warehouses in the Gaza Strip are full, with a two-week supply, and they do not require further shipments.
The Nahal Oz fuel crossing remained closed due to continuing fire in the area.
Twelve Palestinians, including two children, were transferred to Israeli hospitals.
30 December 2008
93 truckloads carrying 2,366 tons of humanitarian supplies as well as five ambulances donated by Turkey were transferred to the Gaza Strip. A Red Cross plane arrived with medical supplies for the hospital operating room. The aid included food and medicine provided by the World Food Programme, UNRWA, UNICEF, the ICRC, the World Health Organisation, Doctors without Borders, and Care International, as well as donations from Egypt, Jordan, Qatar and Turkey.
29 December 2008
63 trucks with 1,545 tons of humanitarian goods (food, medicines and medical supplies) were delivered via the Kerem Shalom crossing. Most of the aid was provided by the International Red Cross, UNRWA, Doctors without Borders, and Care International. Five ambulances from the Palestinian Red Crescent Society (PRCS) in Ramallah passed through, at the request of the International Red Cross (ICRC). 1,000 units of blood donated by the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan were also delivered.
Erez crossing: Four people (patients and their escorts), and ten international staff, including a pregnant employee of the UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation and her Palestinian husband, left the Gaza Strip and crossed into Israel.
28 December 2008
At the request of international organisations (the International Red Cross, UNRWA, WFP) and of the Palestinian National Authority in Ramallah, 23 truckloads of humanitarian goods such as flour, medicines and medical supplies were transferred via Kerem Shalom crossing.
However, the transfer of additional aid through the crossings is being delayed by the high risk of terrorist attacks on the crossings themselves. There is a long history of such attacks, including:
• 22 May 2008: a Palestinian bomber blew up an explosives-laden truck on the Palestinian side of the Erez crossing, causing substantial damage.
• 20 April 2008: Hamas gunmen wounded 13 Israeli soldiers in an assault with mortar shells, explosives-laden vehicles and gunfire against the Kerem Shalom crossing.
• 9 April 2008: Two Israeli civilian fuel truck drivers working at the Nahal Oz fuel depot - which supplies fuel to Gaza - were killed in an attack by Gaza militants.
Further Information
For a full news review for 8 January, click here.
Senate standing with Israel!
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
January 08, 2009
Contact:Josh Blockjblock@aipac.org
AIPAC Applauds Passage of Senate Resolution Reaffirming Support for Israel
AIPAC applauds the United States Senate for backing Israel's quest for peace and right to self-defense and its overwhelming expression of solidarity and support for the State of Israel with the passage of S.Res 10. The resolution supports a durable and sustainable diplomatic outcome to the current crisis that will ensure an end to the smuggling of arms into Gaza and an end to Hamas terror attacks on Israel, in an effort to create an environment conducive to a sustainable and lasting peace between the Israeli and Palestinian people.
The bipartisan resolution cosponsored by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) and Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY), conveys America's unequivocal and steadfast support for Israel's right to self-defense against relentless assaults by the Iranian-backed terrorist group Hamas, who along with Iran's other terrorist proxy Hizballah, have killed more Americans than any other terrorist group except Al Qaeda. A similar Resolution is expected to be passed by the House shortly.
"The United States Senate will strengthen our historic bond with the State of Israel by reaffirming Israel's inalienable right to defend against attacks from Gaza, as well as our support for the Israeli-Palestinian peace process," Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid stated from the floor of the Senate.
"The Israelis, as the Majority Leader has indicated, are responding exactly the same way we would if rockets were being launched into the United States from Canada or Mexico, or some situation like that. The Israelis have every right to defend themselves against these acts of terrorism, so I enthusiastically support this," Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell added.
The United States Congress has once again demonstrated its unwavering support to Israel and her right to self-defense. While Israel is forced to defend its citizens from those who aim to destroy her, America has, as always, remained a voice of strength and reason.
AIPAC also applauds President Bush and the administration as well as the continued bipartisan support of the leadership of the House and Senate, President-elect Obama, and the numerous other American leaders who have defended Israel's right to a terror-free existence.
###
Consistently ranked as the most influential foreign policy lobbying organization on Capitol Hill, AIPAC is an American membership organization that seeks to strengthen the relationship between the United States and Israel. For more than 50 years, AIPAC has been working with Congress to build a strong, vibrant relationship between the U.S. and Israel. With more than 100,000 members across the United States, AIPAC works throughout the country to improve and strengthen that relationship by supporting U.S.-Israel military, economic, scientific and cultural cooperation.
January 08, 2009
Contact:Josh Blockjblock@aipac.org
AIPAC Applauds Passage of Senate Resolution Reaffirming Support for Israel
AIPAC applauds the United States Senate for backing Israel's quest for peace and right to self-defense and its overwhelming expression of solidarity and support for the State of Israel with the passage of S.Res 10. The resolution supports a durable and sustainable diplomatic outcome to the current crisis that will ensure an end to the smuggling of arms into Gaza and an end to Hamas terror attacks on Israel, in an effort to create an environment conducive to a sustainable and lasting peace between the Israeli and Palestinian people.
The bipartisan resolution cosponsored by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) and Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY), conveys America's unequivocal and steadfast support for Israel's right to self-defense against relentless assaults by the Iranian-backed terrorist group Hamas, who along with Iran's other terrorist proxy Hizballah, have killed more Americans than any other terrorist group except Al Qaeda. A similar Resolution is expected to be passed by the House shortly.
"The United States Senate will strengthen our historic bond with the State of Israel by reaffirming Israel's inalienable right to defend against attacks from Gaza, as well as our support for the Israeli-Palestinian peace process," Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid stated from the floor of the Senate.
"The Israelis, as the Majority Leader has indicated, are responding exactly the same way we would if rockets were being launched into the United States from Canada or Mexico, or some situation like that. The Israelis have every right to defend themselves against these acts of terrorism, so I enthusiastically support this," Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell added.
The United States Congress has once again demonstrated its unwavering support to Israel and her right to self-defense. While Israel is forced to defend its citizens from those who aim to destroy her, America has, as always, remained a voice of strength and reason.
AIPAC also applauds President Bush and the administration as well as the continued bipartisan support of the leadership of the House and Senate, President-elect Obama, and the numerous other American leaders who have defended Israel's right to a terror-free existence.
###
Consistently ranked as the most influential foreign policy lobbying organization on Capitol Hill, AIPAC is an American membership organization that seeks to strengthen the relationship between the United States and Israel. For more than 50 years, AIPAC has been working with Congress to build a strong, vibrant relationship between the U.S. and Israel. With more than 100,000 members across the United States, AIPAC works throughout the country to improve and strengthen that relationship by supporting U.S.-Israel military, economic, scientific and cultural cooperation.
Wednesday, January 7, 2009
Renovated bomb shelters funded by IFCJ
During these times of war, with the help of all our supporters, IFCJ has been able to renovate local shelters in some of the hardest hit areas in Israel with rockets and missiles pouring down. Here are some things to note:
Sderot – 32 public shelters
Ashkelon – 302 private shelters
North – 1,896 private shelters
- Carmiel
- Hatzor
- Shlomi
- Nahariya
- Ma’alot
- Kiryat Shmona
- Acco
- Tzafed
- Rosh HaPina
- Tiberias
Sderot – 32 public shelters
Ashkelon – 302 private shelters
North – 1,896 private shelters
- Carmiel
- Hatzor
- Shlomi
- Nahariya
- Ma’alot
- Kiryat Shmona
- Acco
- Tzafed
- Rosh HaPina
- Tiberias
Monday, January 5, 2009
Emergency in Israel
Emergency in Israel —
Your Help Needed Now
Hamas terrorist rocket and missile attacks continue to take a serious toll on innocent Israelis. More than a quarter of a million people live within the reach of Hamas rockets and missiles. Even as Israel's defensive operation inside Gaza has begun, the death toll from Hamas rockets is rising. Hundreds of Israelis have been hurt and traumatized. Lives are on hold and schools and businesses are closed as the shrill "red alert" sirens continually warn of incoming missiles. Hundreds of thousands have left their homes and are living in bomb shelters.
The Fellowship's staff in Israel is at work in areas hit by the terrorists providing emergency relief and care, assessing the need for bomb shelter supplies, increased support at trauma centers, and much more. We need your help to meet rapidly increasing emergency needs amid this crisis.
Your gift today will help us rush emergency aid to support innocent people whose lives have been shattered by these terrorist attacks. Their need is truly urgent and we must respond swiftly to support them as they struggle to protect themselves and their families. Thank you for providing immediate life-saving care to people in desperate need.
Your Help Needed Now
Hamas terrorist rocket and missile attacks continue to take a serious toll on innocent Israelis. More than a quarter of a million people live within the reach of Hamas rockets and missiles. Even as Israel's defensive operation inside Gaza has begun, the death toll from Hamas rockets is rising. Hundreds of Israelis have been hurt and traumatized. Lives are on hold and schools and businesses are closed as the shrill "red alert" sirens continually warn of incoming missiles. Hundreds of thousands have left their homes and are living in bomb shelters.
The Fellowship's staff in Israel is at work in areas hit by the terrorists providing emergency relief and care, assessing the need for bomb shelter supplies, increased support at trauma centers, and much more. We need your help to meet rapidly increasing emergency needs amid this crisis.
Your gift today will help us rush emergency aid to support innocent people whose lives have been shattered by these terrorist attacks. Their need is truly urgent and we must respond swiftly to support them as they struggle to protect themselves and their families. Thank you for providing immediate life-saving care to people in desperate need.
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About The Fellowship
- The Fellowship
- Chicago/Israel, Illinois, United States
- The International Fellowship of Christians and Jews was founded in 1983 by Rabbi Yechiel Eckstein to promote understanding between Jews and Christians and build broad support for Israel and other shared concerns. Now celebrating our 25th year of lifesaving ministry, our vision is that Jews and Christians will reverse their 2,000-year history of discord and replace it with a relationship marked by dialogue, respect and cooperation
