Sunday, February 2, 2020

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February 2, 2020 / 7 Shevat 5780
 


Bait-and-Switch
Kushner Tells Egyptian TV Peace PlanAims to Block Settlements Expansion

David Israel 
After everything Kushner said, the Deal of the Century doesn't look so good anymore.

Headlines & Recommended
Terror Attack Foiled at Efrat Junction in Gush Etzion

Hana Levi Julian
The incident took place at the IDF "pillbox" (observation post) between Highway 60 and northern Efrat, in Gush Etzion.


2 Failed Israeli Elections, Government Paralysis, Result in Billion Dollar Budget Surplus

David Israel
Things are shaping up to look like the dream come true of every conservative economist: limit government's ability to spend, then sit back and watch the economy growing.


Complaint Filed Against World Council of Churches for EspionageIllegal Entry into Israel, Threat to IDF Soldiers

Aryeh Savir, Tazpit News Agency
The WCC has been running the anti-Israel "Ecumenical Accompaniment Programme in Palestine and Israel" (EAPPI)


Abbas Slammed for Saying Israeli Ethiopians, Russians are Not Jews

TPS / Tazpit News Agency
Netanyahu said, "Our brothers and sisters, our flesh, Jews from birth who have dreamed in exile for generations on the return of Zion and have fulfilled their dream."

Bennett vs. Terror
After Days of Terror, No Concrete for Gaza, Fewer Israeli Entry Permits

Hana Levi Julian
Five hundred fewer Gazans will be allowed to enter Israel to conduct business. Gaza was receiving 5,500 commercial entry permits.


DM Bennett Bans PA Produce in Retaliation for PM Shtayyeh’s Boycott of Israeli Calves

David Israel
Prime Minister Mohammad Shtayyeh warned in closed talks that he would resign if he were forced to fold under Israeli pressure.

Coronavirus
Thai Doctors Successfully Treat Coronavirus with Antiviral Drug Cocktail

Hana Levi Julian
The cocktail included oseltamivir – an anti-flu medication – together with lopinavir and ritonavir, both anti-viral drugs used to treat HIV.


Netanyahu Orders Israeli Scientists to Produce Coronavirus Vaccine

David Israel
"I have instructed the Biological Institute and the Health Ministry to work on producing a vaccine for the virus and to set up a vaccination network," Netanyahu announced.


Read more Headlines & Recommended articles

The Yishai Fleisher Show
Zeal of the Century
Settlers saw their self-sacrifice rewarded by Trump's recognition of Jewish rights in Judea, but will the plan bring regional prosperity?


Read more The Yishai Fleisher Show articles

News
Interior Ministry Preparing for New Council Elections following Annexation
The heads of councils in Judea and Samaria were elected democratically, but their power stems from the defense ministry.


IDF Launches Drill that Simulates War on Multiple Fronts
The drill will emphasize collaborations, multi-system planning and operating in emergency situations.


‘Confidence in the Israeli Economy’: S&P Ratify’s Israel’s High -AA Rating
This is the highest rating Israel has ever had, putting it on par with the Czech Republic and Qatar and among a relatively small list of 17 countries, and above others such as China and Japan.

The Great Outdoors
Lake Kinneret Inching Towards FullCapacity
The level of the lake is now just 1.455 meters (4.77 feet) from the “upper red line,” where the water reaches the lake’s full capacity.


Israelis Brave Gaza Rockets to Visit their Kalaniot
Over the weekend, Israelis flocked to the western Negev, to grab an eyeful of the annual miracle of the return of the Kalaniot – the red Anemone which paint the desert red each winter after the big rains.


Read more News articles

InDepth
The Irony and Hypocrisy of World Hijab Day

Middle East Forum
It might be easier to support WHD if it encouraged women to wear what they like, and men to mind their own business.


Arabian Gulf Citizens and Changing Views

Gatestone Institute
The worldwide lack of support for those who advocate peace or the reform of Islam has brought about exactly what the extremists want: a fear of speaking up. Many of us Muslims do not want to be viewed as traitors, labelled "enemies of the nation"... and have our lives put under threat...


Germany’s Selective Fight against Anti-Semitism

Judith Bergman
The question, then, is why jihadi anti-Semitism does not appear to have been included in the German government's package of initiatives to combat anti-Semitism?

Thoughts on the Deal
Trump’s Critics Shouldn’t Encourage Palestinians to Make Yet Another Mistake

Jonathan S. Tobin
Contrary to the bad advice they’re getting from the Democrats and J Street, Palestinians need to accept that the U.S. plan is their best chance for statehood.


15 Reasons to Embrace the Trump Plan

David Weinberg
Israel should act to implement the Trump Plan and reap its early rewards, because it transforms the Mideast peace paradigm; recognizes a permanent eastern border for Israel; breathes new life into all 150 Israeli towns in Judea and Samaria; endorses permanent Israeli security control of the entire West Bank envelope; enshrines Jerusalem as the undivided and united capital of the State of Israel; unleashes a regional dynamic whereby Arab states can move towards open partnership with Israel; it treats Palestinians as responsible adults, with no free pass regarding the type of state they might establish; and it might nudge Palestinians towards replacement of their rejectionist leadership with men and women who seek peace and prosperity for their people, in partnership with Israel. Most importantly, the plan reflects, and can serve as a platform for, Israeli consensus on the Palestinian issue.


Historic Opportunity Must Be Seized

Maj.Gen.Gershon Hacohen
Regardless of the ambiguities and open questions attending President Trump’s “Deal of the Century,” Israel clearly stands at a historic juncture and must decide what to make of this one-time opportunity. About such moments it is said: “There are those who gain the world in a single moment and there are those who lose the world in a single moment.”


History is Made: Peace Plan Puts Israeli Concerns First

Israel Kasnett
The plan sends a clear message to the Palestinians. “First, time is not on your side. Second, you used to have support, but now you do not have the same level,” said Professor Eytan Gilboa, director of the Center for International Communication at Bar-Ilan University in Ramat Gan.


Read more InDepth articles


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INVESTIGATION CONTINUES INTO MYSTERIOUS ANGEL ENCOUNTERS



INVESTIGATION CONTINUES INTO MYSTERIOUS ANGEL ENCOUNTERS

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Feb 2, 2020
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Join the SkyWatch TV panel for the second part of a 4-week special investigative report on near death experiences, the afterlife, and extraordinary accounts of angelic intervention as told by those who experienced them!

City of Nice remembers the thousands forcibly deported We look at the history of the French city with two shuls that has just dedicated a new Wall of Names

City of Nice remembers the thousands forcibly deported

We look at the history of the French city with two shuls that has just dedicated a new Wall of Names

The new Wall of Names with names of the 3,485 Jews who were deported during Nazi occupation
The new Wall of Names with names of the 3,485 Jews who were deported during Nazi occupation
This month marked the dedication of the new Wall of Names remembering the 3,485 Jews forcibly deported from the French city of Nice during Nazi occupation.
Of the millions of tourists who visit the glamorous French Riviera, few know about the removal of Jewish residents from Nice station to Drancy, then on to Poland and Germany, where most
were killed.
I better understood the city’s Jewish heritage while working in the archives of the Alpes-Maritimes, sorting documents from a 20th century politician, when I came across a letter from a constituent, which gripped me like no other.
You could almost feel the sweat dripping with every word as the writer tried to convey to the Vichy councillor that he was about to be deported by the Gestapo because they thought he was Jewish, when in fact he was not.
By then, Jews knew what awaited them if caught, and this non-Jew spoke with terror, his first realisation of what Jews had been going through. Nice was by then one of the last refuges for Jews in Europe.
The city became part of France in 1860. Before that, and since 1388, it was part of the County of Savoy, ruled by a duke in Turin, northern Italy. In 1430, a ghetto ‘Juiverie’ was mandated and Jews were told that they had to wear a yellow star on their clothes, but Nice authorities did not enforce it, as evidenced by a letter sent 18 years later, castigating authorities for not separating the Jews of Nice.
That year, in 1448, while life for Jews was getting harder in Turin, the city of Nice in fact gave its banking franchise to a Jewish banker named Bonnefoy de Chalons.
The Latin contract shows that Bonnefoy had the right to live wherever he pleased – impossible if a Jewish ghetto had been imposed; yet in 1733 a short-lived ghetto did become a reality.
Permission was given that year to designate a synagogue on the third floor of a building owned by the Catholic brotherhood Pénitents Noirs, with a mikveh in the basement. In 1750, the obligation for Jews to wear a badge was formally abolished and all legal restrictions on Jews ended in 1848.
The ghetto is located in the Old Town and the buildings on at least one side of the street had underground tunnels to the adjacent street, Rue Droit, which would allow Jews to come and go when they chose.
During my research, I learned that those same tunnels probably housed Jews during the Holocaust. Sure enough, in a private cellar, I discovered a star of David,
a menorah, communist symbols and one symbol still unknown, etched into the walls.
The Jewish cemetery, opened in 1783, contains the tombs of the previous Jewish cemetery. It, by itself, tells the history of Jewish families who came to Nice. The stones spell the city in a variety of ways – Nizza, Niza, Nica, Nissa, Ніцца, Ηίκαια, Nicea, Nicaea, Nisa, Ницца – in French, Hebrew, Polish, Italian,
Russian, English and German.
The Great Synagogue, Nice, one of the town’s two functioning shuls
Nice’s past Jewish residents came from all over, too, born in Kyiv, Vasylkiv, Warsaw, Kishinev, Mariupol, Kherson, Odessa, Nikolaev, Kaunas, Berlin, St Petersburg, Lwów, Radautz of Bukovina (Rădăuți, Romania), Algeria, Oran, Constantine, Taganrog, Constantinople, London, Rangoon, Cairo and Johannesburg. They could all tell a story, yet the most extraordinary Jewish
stories took place during the war.
In September 1942, Nice fell under the jurisdiction of the Italians, who refused to hand over Jews to the Germans, creating a sanctuary. Jewish families flooded in: at one point up to 100,000 were in the city, filling its hotels, hostels and apartments.
Fearing an Italian collapse, they hatched a plan to hire ships to take them to parts of newly-liberated North Africa, but before they could do so, the Germans rushed in to take over the Italian zone.
The ark and stained glass windows
In September 1943, the infamous Jew-hating SS commander Alois Brunner came to town. Thousands of recently-arrived newly-registered Jews were easy targets. The city reacted, hiding Jews and their children, working through resistance groups such as the Marcel Network, and the famed Nazi-hunter Serge Klarsfeld.
Still, it was a traumatic time, and only with time has the city opened up to discussing it. A monument to the ‘Justes’ was erected in 2014 and now, this week, the Wall of Names commemorates the deportees.
Today, visitors can see two functioning synagogues dating from the end of the 19th century. The city has an active Jewish community, where I have learned both Judeo-Espanol as well as Yiddish.
Yet it is also a city that will never truly lose the horror and fear of the war, of houses lit from outside around midnight, and the sound of heavy Gestapo boots racing up the stairs.

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