Facts at Our Fingertips: Arguments for Israel

iitb

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While not the most extensive list I've seen, I figured this little nugget from us-israel.org might interest some here.



[font=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]In this age of sound-bites, here are some key facts at your fingertips.[/font]


When it comes to Israel, tempers sometimes flare, and sometimes we don't even know how to respond. We might hear a new argument or a new perspective, and the limited knowledge we have proves to be insufficient. Especially in the age of sound-bites and knee-jerk politics, we need to have more facts at our fingertips, organize what we know, and be prepared to respond effectively.

Recognizing this, here is a "Four-Point" educational campaign produced by Hasbara Fellowships. Each of the following 10 topics has four bullet-points -- to help deepen our understanding of the major issues of the Mideast conflict.

Settlements

1) Jews can live in Mexico City, Bangkok, St. Louis, and any city in the world (except in Saudi Arabia) -- but the PA wants to forbid Jews from living in the very cradle of Judaism.

2) The only period in the last 3,000 years without a continued Jewish presence in the West Bank was the 19 years between 1948-1967 when the Jordanian government banned Jews from living there.

3) In 1979, Ariel Sharon dismantled Yamit and other settlements in the Sinai when it was absolutely clear that compromise would bring a true peace.

4) Since the disputed territories were never part of a sovereign nation, and were acquired in a defensive war, international law permits the voluntary settlement of the land. Recognizing this, and the Oslo agreements never addressed the issue of Jewish or Arab settlements.

Refugees

1) There would be no refugee problem if seven Arab nations had not attacked Israel upon its inception in 1948.

2) Syria, Lebanon, Saudi Arabia and other Arab countries have consciously chosen to isolate refugees as political pawns,rather than integrate them into a normalized life. UN General Assembly Resolution 194 reads that all governments involved must share responsibility.

3)800,000 Jewish refugees were expelled from Arab countries in 1948, but their descendents are normalized today because they were absorbed by Israel and other countries.

4) As opposed to refugees in Arab countries, Israel integrated Arabs within its borders as citizens, and 1.2 million Israeli Arabs now enjoy citizenship, benefits, and governmental representation in Israel.

Compromises for Peace

1) Israel signed independent peace treaties with Egypt (1979) and Jordan (1994), each time giving away either land, oil, settlements, or strategic military advantage to achieve a peaceful agreement.

2) Israel gave the Palestinian Authority land, money, weapons, training, and intelligence, all in the hope that the PA would reciprocate with an end to terror and incitement.

3) The very formula "Land for Peace" indicates that Arabs compromise for what they want most -- land, while Israel compromises for what it wants most -- peace.

4) In 1917, 1937, 1947, 1956, 1979, and 1993 Israeli leaders established a pattern of accepting the handover of land in exchange for peace agreements with its Arab neighbors.

Waiting for a true Partner

1) The real PLO took the Israeli Olympic delegation hostage in the 1972 Munich Olympic games, and after failing to extort the release of Palestinian prisoners, killed 11 Israeli athletes.

2) The real PLO invented the idea of skyjackings in 1970, and instilled fear in travelers across the world.

3) The real PLO shot and killed the elderly, unarmed, wheelchair-bound, U.S. citizen Leon Klinghoffer on the Achille Lauro cruise liner in 1985.

4) The real PLO continues to incite violence against Jews, promote the armed struggle to "liberate all of Palestine," and indoctrinate Palestinian children into a culture of hatred where death is the ultimate prize.

The 3,000-year Jewish connection

1) The only independent sovereign nations to ever exist in the Land of Israel were the two ancient Jewish commonwealths, the second of which was destroyed in 70 of the common era.

2) For 3,000 years, Jews have expressed the desire to return to their ancestral homeland: at the Passover Seder, the Yom Kippur service, in daily prayer, in the blessing after meals, under the wedding canopy, on the yearly day of national mourning Tisha B'Av, and by placing Israeli soil in the coffin of their deceased.

3) Even after exile, Jews managed to keep a continual presence of Jewish communities in such cities as Jerusalem, Tzfat, Tiberias, Shechem, and Hebron.

4) Centuries before the inception of Islam, Jews were yearning to return to Israel, and the Koran itself records this in many suras (chapters), such as 17:7, 17:104, and 5:21 that tells the Jews to "enter into the Holy Land which Allah has assigned to you."

Holy Sites

1) When Israel gained control and reunified Jerusalem in 1967, rather than forbid Muslim worship or close the mosques, it allowed the Muslim Waqf (religious authority) to administer and control the Temple Mount and maintain the Al-Aqsa mosque.

2) Under Jordanian rule, Jews were forbidden from praying at the Western Wall; the Mount of Olives cemetery and 58 Jewish synagogues were destroyed. However, Christian, Jewish, and Muslim sites are open to all worshippers under Israeli rule -- except for the site of the ancient Jewish Temple, the Temple Mount, where Jews are normally forbidden to pray.

3) When Israel transferred military control to the PA, angry mobs burned and destroyed Jewish holy sites and religious artifacts at Jericho, Hebron, and Joseph's tomb in Nablus.

4) In 2002, Palestinian terrorists took 30 monks hostage in Bethlehem's Church of the Nativity because they knew Jewish soldiers would not shoot inside. After the hostages were freed, investigators found the Church profaned and desecrated.

Jerusalem

1) Mecca and Medina are the holiest cities to Muslims; Vatican City is the holiest to Catholics. While Jerusalem has significance to many religions, Jerusalem is supreme and holiest only to the Jews. When it was conquered by Jordan in 1949, no Muslim dignitary or leader visited Jerusalem in any official, public, or religious capacity.

2) Jerusalem has been central to Judaism since biblical times, when it was made the eternal spiritual capital of the Jewish people.

3) Jews have been the majority in Jerusalem since 1840, and there has been a continual Jewish presence in Jerusalem since the destruction of the Temple in the year 70 of the common era. (Paul Johnson, History of the Jews)

4) Jerusalem is for everyone only when it is in Israeli control.

The UN and International Law

1) The 1917 Balfour Declaration, the League of Nations Mandate, the 1947 UN Partition Plan, and Israel's 1949 admission into the UN reaffirmed Israel the international right to exist as the Jewish homeland.

2) UN Security Council Resolution 242 reads that Israel should relinquish land only if it is in the context of a "peaceful and accepted settlement." 3) UN Resolution 242 requires that all states in the area recognize Israel's "right to live in peace with secure and recognized borders free from threats or acts of force."

4) Until 2002, Israel was the only UN member state ineligible to sit on the Security Council, and today that right is still only limited and temporary. Since the 1970s, an Arab-Soviet-Third World Bloc reinforced Israel's outcast status by barring Israel from other key UN bodies and making Israel the object of more investigative committees and special representatives than any other state in the UN.

Israel's Excessive Restraint

1) Israel is facing a serious threat -- Palestinian gunmen have repeatedly fired at civilians and soldiers from hospitals, mosques and schools, using humans as shields and ambulances to transport weaponry.

2) Though the intifada has heaped violence upon Israel, there have been, on average, less than one person injured per Palestinian riot. Israel is currently training 26 other countries in technology it has created to minimize injury in crowd and riot control situations.

3) During "Black September" in Jordan in 1970, 2,500 Palestinian rioters were killed in 10 days by the Jordanian army. In 1993, UN Peacekeeping troops justified the killing of almost 100 Somalis by noting that, "Everyone on the ground in the vicinity was a combatant, because they meant to do us harm."

4) In April 2002, IDF ground forces went door-to-door to target known terrorists in Jenin, rather than use artillery or carpet bomb the city from above. Israel put its own troops at risk and lost 23 of its own soldiers because of this concern to not injure the innocent among its enemies.

Palestinian Lexicon

1) Hudna: strategic ceasefire engineered to rearm for the next battle, in English it is referred to as a "peace agreement." In the West, we tend to think of a "ceasefire" leading to peace - a Hudna is designed to lead to war.

2) Fatwa: Religiously inspired death warrant on the head of an enemy, all Jews living in Israel have a fatwa issued by Hamas leadership.

3) Occupation: Term describing a Jewish presence in any of the Land of Israel, including Israeli cities such as Haifa, Tel Aviv, and Hadera; in Western media it is tailored to refer only to the West Bank and Gaza.

4) Jihad: The religious struggle to eradicate the Jews from Israel and establish an Islamic society in their stead.



Published: Sunday, March 14, 2004
 

simchat_torah

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While the facts are wonderful, many of the interpretations of this author are a bit flawed. For example, the Lexicon states:
Jihad: The religious struggle to eradicate the Jews from Israel and establish an Islamic society in their stead.
While Jihad is used in this way, it is not the definition of Jihad. Jihad, as many know, means holy war. The Koran states that Jihad is a physical war against unbelievers, and may be used to convert.

To exclusively place the Jews in that category, while the Jews are one of the major targets of Jihad, is not exactly accurate.

I greatly appreciate this article for the facts it presents. However, it is greatly opinionated in many areas... just be aware of this when reading much of the above text.

shalom,
yafet
 
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Toney

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justinhulsey said:
The UN and International Law

1) The 1917 Balfour Declaration, the League of Nations Mandate, the 1947 UN Partition Plan, and Israel's 1949 admission into the UN reaffirmed Israel the international right to exist as the Jewish homeland.

Justin, Thanks for posting this article! I agree with Yafet that the piece shines when objectively stating historical facts and disappoints in some of its interpretations.

Regarding the Balfour Declaration, it was the League of Nations Mandate (1920) that implemented it. The declaration itself reaffirmed nothing, but rather expressed His Majesty's government's "favour" toward establishing a Jewish homeland in Palestine. The Zionist dream of a Jewish state was articulated in 1929 at the Sixteenth Zionist Conference.

In 1922, Winston Churchill wrote a White Paper outlining the intent of the Balfour Declaration. The Arabs rejected it and the Zionists, although displeased, accepted it.

This is important: The Arabs, as part of their 'all or nothing' strategy throughout the history of this conflict, have continually rejected the solutions put forth by the Great Powers . Israel, as part of a 'take what we can get and hope for more' strategy, has agreed to these solutions time and time again. The Arab strategy is now completely bankrupt and their leadership, what little there is of it, is marginalized, corrupt, and without credibility.

What the Arabs now claim they want was on the table in 1947 and they rejected it!

The Palestinian problem is an Arab problem of Arab making, and yet the Arab world continues to use the Palestinians as pawns in an evil strategy to destroy Israel. There is no partner for peace.
 
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muffler dragon

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I have always wondered about this part:

1) When Israel gained control and reunified Jerusalem in 1967, rather than forbid Muslim worship or close the mosques, it allowed the Muslim Waqf (religious authority) to administer and control the Temple Mount and maintain the Al-Aqsa mosque.

What was the compulsion to do so? It bothers me to no end that this is the way it is set up, but there's not a whole lot I can do.
 
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rooster

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muffler dragon said:
I have always wondered about this part:

1) When Israel gained control and reunified Jerusalem in 1967, rather than forbid Muslim worship or close the mosques, it allowed the Muslim Waqf (religious authority) to administer and control the Temple Mount and maintain the Al-Aqsa mosque.

What was the compulsion to do so? It bothers me to no end that this is the way it is set up, but there's not a whole lot I can do.

My opinion on this is that it is a compromise on Isreal's part to ensure its survival and provide some oppotunity for peace or ceasefire. If they were to tear down the Dome and the Al Aqsa, it would really be a war with either the Isrealis or the muslims become extinct.
Its like superman walking up to the Qaba and taking a **** on it, even though the whole muslim world know they cannot beat superman but the degree of the sacrilage is so large that they would try to bring down superman even to the last man.
the flattening of the mount then would escalate the violence to an extend where no end would be in sight.
Furthermore, the secular elements(which would probably be the majority) within the Isreali government would not allow such an event to happen in face of a definate public relations disaster and also considerations of Geo-political nature.
Anyway the Waqf is currently doing really childish things like digging on the mount to destroy the archaeological heritage of Isreal.
 
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Toney

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muffler dragon said:
I have always wondered about this part:

1) When Israel gained control and reunified Jerusalem in 1967, rather than forbid Muslim worship or close the mosques, it allowed the Muslim Waqf (religious authority) to administer and control the Temple Mount and maintain the Al-Aqsa mosque.

What was the compulsion to do so? It bothers me to no end that this is the way it is set up, but there's not a whole lot I can do.

Nathan,

Marvelous restraint, wouldn't you say? Immediately following the Six Day War, Moshe Dyan reassued Christians and Moslems alike that they would be allowed to run their own holy shrines out of respect for their religious rights! The prohibition against Jews holding services on the Haram (Temple Mount) continues to this day. This stands in stark contrast to the Jordanian prohibition against Jews praying at the Western Wall during their pre-1967 administration of the city.

It should be noted that archaeologists are uncertain as to where the Devir (entrance to the Holy of Holies) is located. So, no Jew wants to go tramping around up there. It ain't safe for lots of reasons.
 
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Toney

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muffler dragon said:
Thanks Toney.

The answer is satisfactory, yet frustrating.

Have a great weekend.

Nathan

If that's the way you feel, you will enjoy reading about the Temple Mount Faithful, a movement that began in Israel in 1967.

It's founder, Gershom Solomon, conducts frequent speaking tours in the U.S.

Shalom Shabbat
 
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