Jewish date: 5 ’Adhar Sheni 5776 (Parashath Wayyiqra’).
Today’s holidays: Bahá’í Month of Fasting, Tuesday of the Fifth Week of Lent (Roman Catholicism), Feast Day of St. Edward G. Wood (Church of the SubGenius), Bacchanalia (Roman Religion).
Greetings.
When I first saw promos for Quantico, I thought the show was nothing worthy of attention. However, since then, accusations have been made of the show being anti-Semitic, e.g., “Major Jewish Group Demands ABC Cancel ‘Quantico’ for ‘Vicious Defamation of Jews, Israel and the IDF’”. The Zionist Organization of America even compiled a long list of anti-Semitism and apologetics for Islamic terrorism in the show, ending it with urging readers to complain to the network responsible, ABC. In the name of fairness, I have watched Quantico (all 12 episodes which as of this writing can be viewed by someone who is not currently paying on Hulu), and the accusations are completely true. As I do not believe I can reasonably write a better review than the Zionist Organization of America’s, I refer my readers to their “ZOA: ABC’s Anti-Semitic Terrorism Soap-Opera “Quantico” Defames Jews & Israel, Should Be Cancelled” and urge them to follow their instructions to complain to ABC.
To the people at ABC, who are going to get a copy of this: Quantico deserves to be cancelled. I realize it is a piece of fiction, but in this fiction lies are presented as if they are fact. Lies are not harmless. These lies condemn the innocent and exculpate the guilty. Sadly, people do believe things from fiction, even fiction as blatantly unrealistic as The X-Files. And when people believe lies like those presented in Quantico, the result is unfair prejudice against Jews and a blindness towards Islamic terrorism. Please do the right thing, cancel the show, and make the public apology you owe to Israel and the Jewish people. Thanks in advance for your attention.
Peace.
’Aharon/Aaron
COMPLAINING ABOUT BAD THEOLOGY AND RELIGIOUS FALLACIES AND MISINFORMATION SINCE 2009
© 2012 Aaron Solomon Adelman
Showing posts with label anti-Semitism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label anti-Semitism. Show all posts
Tuesday, March 15, 2016
Friday, August 9, 2013
Women of the Wall and a Temple Mount protest
Jewish date: 3 ’Elul 5773 (Parashath Shofeṭim).
Today’s holidays: Feast Day of Teresiae Benedicta of the Cross (Roman Catholicism), Day of Rey Radbod (Germanic Neopaganism), Feast Day of St. Rozencranz/St. Gildenstern (Church of the SubGenius).
Greetings.
I would like to note what happened on Wednesday, or rather what did not happen. Two events were scheduled:
So what did I see?
In short: Not much happened.
Peace and Shabbath shalom.
’Aharon/Aaron
Today’s holidays: Feast Day of Teresiae Benedicta of the Cross (Roman Catholicism), Day of Rey Radbod (Germanic Neopaganism), Feast Day of St. Rozencranz/St. Gildenstern (Church of the SubGenius).
Greetings.
I would like to note what happened on Wednesday, or rather what did not happen. Two events were scheduled:
- Wednesday was Ro’sh Ḥodhesh, the start of a new month on the Jewish calendar, in this case ’Elul. Ro’sh Ḥodhesh is traditionally an extra day off for women. As such, it has been chosen as the day for a Reform “feminist” group, Women of the Wall, to descend on the Western Wall and to hold services according to Reform norms (women leading services, wearing ṭallithoth and tefillin). Now, I have witnessed people praying at the Western Wall who were clearly not Orthodox Jews, but always with respect for the other people there and the holiness of the site; in such cases, no one, even Ḥaredhim, complained. The Women of the Wall are different. On Ro’sh Ḥodhesh Tammuz (two month ago), the police (in their tradition of sucking when it comes to freedom of religion) evicted many Orthodox Jewish women doing nothing offensive from the women’s section so the Women of the Wall could enter and hold a service, very loudly and trying to get the attention of reporters and promote imposing Reform norms at the Western Wall. Needless to say, there were a lot of complaints about this. They also did not have much local support, as nonreligious Israeli Jews tend to be honest about their not being religious rather than try to dress it up as being “Reform”. A new group was formed of Orthodox Jewish women in opposition to the Women of the Wall: Women for the Wall. On Ro’sh Ḥodhesh ’Av (one month ago), the Women for the Wall collectively got up early and got to the Western Wall first, filling up the women’s section. This time the police actually respected the few thousand women who were already there, and the 150-200 Women of the Wall were forced to be ostentatious and complain in the back of the Western Wall plaza. I thus wanted to see what would happen in the next round.
- The police closed the Temple Mount to Jews for the second half of Ramāḍan, the closure lasting until this coming Sunday. This was simple caving into Muslims getting violent over Jews on the Temple Mount again, something which I have complained about frequently in the past, both on this blog and on Facebook. Thus there was a protest scheduled at the (locked) entrance for Jews to the Temple Mount at 7:30 AM.
So what did I see?
- I got to the Western Wall around 8:30 AM. The women’s section was filled with women praying respectfully. There was no sign of Women of the Wall. Reportedly pretty much what had happened on Ro’sh Ḥodhesh ’Av had happened this month, too: Women for the Wall got to the Wall first, and the Women of the Wall had to pray in the back and grumbled about lack of support from other women.
- The protest at the entrance to the Temple Mount was going strong at the time and continued for about another hour. Several dozen Orthodox Jews were there. Many were praying. Others had protest signs. There were a over a dozen police officers there, but they did little but stand around, remove a Torah scroll which had been brought in to read, and ask the protesters not to block foot traffic. Why there were so many police officers was not explained. See “Jews protest visitation restrictions at Temple Mount during Ramadan” and “Activists Protest Closure of Temple Mount - Inside Israel” for more details.
In short: Not much happened.
Peace and Shabbath shalom.
’Aharon/Aaron
Wednesday, August 22, 2012
מחאת בני עקיבא למען הר הבית (עם המשטרה אדישה) • Bene ‘Aqiva’ Temple Mount protest (with the police apathetic)
תאריך יהודי: ה׳ אלול תשע״ב (פרשת שופטים).
החגים של היום: מלכהות של מרים (הקתוליות הרומית), יום החג של סנט איגנציוס ריילי (כנסיית תת־הגאון).
שלום.
הייתי בהפגנת הר בית ביום שני. (המשטרה עדיין גרועה כשזה בחופש דת ליהודים בהר הבית.) המחאה הזאת הייתה יוצאת דופן בכך שהיא אורגנה על ידי קבוצת נוער בני עקיבא. היו גם הרבה מצלמות שם, של צוותות חדשות ושל משתתפים.
אולי שמעתם שהמשטרה, עובדת קשה למען למחוק את כל התקדמות שאולי הם עשו, מתייגת כל מחאה בסיסמה: ״הר הבית בידינו״ (במקור נאמר על ידי מוטה גור בהתאחדות ירושלים בשנת 1967), שוקלת את זה ״הסתה״. (כאילו שהמוסלמים צריכים הסתה להתנהג רע. כשהם ממציאים דברים שלא קיימים להתלונן עליהם, ״הסתה״ היא רק אמתלה ולא סיבה.) המשטרה הגידה לילדים לא להשתמש בסיסמה. כמה שלטים הובאו שלא היה נוחים למשטרה, והוויכוח היה קולני, יותר מדי. תודה לה׳, המשטרה לא עשתה דבר בתגובה ל״הסתה״ הזאת. מצד השני, אף על פי שהיו כמה שוטרים בקרבת מקום, לא ראיתי אותם שמים לב למחאה בכלל.
המחאה התקיימה בסוג פרק, הטיילת. תמונות אלו, שעבורן שימשתי ברמות שונות של פונקצית הזום, יתנו מושג כלשהו על מקומו ביחס להר הבית.
The protest took place at a sort of park known as the Ṭayyeleth. These pictures, for which I made use of various levels of the zoom function, should give some idea of its position to the Temple Mount.
פסל ליד הטיילת. אני רק צלמתי אותו. אני לא יכול להסביר את זה.
A sculpture near the Ṭayyeleth. I just photographed it. I cannot explain it.
בניין ארגון הפיקוח על הפסקת אש של האומות המאוחדות הקרוב.
The United Nations Truce Supervision Organization building nearby.
כמה מהילדים עם שלטי מחאה: ״אבן השתייה הוא לא הפקר!״ ו״לא מקילים ראש במקום קדוש!״
Some of the kids with protest signs: “The Foundation Stone is not ownerless property!” and “Do not belittle a holy place!”
גרפיטי בערבית באנגלית.
Graffiti in Arabic and English.
מפגין עם שלט שואל ״הר הבית לא בידינו?!״ המשטרה לא עשתה שום דבר לעצור אותו.
A protester with a sign asking “Is not the Temple Mount in our hands?!” The police did nothing to stop him.
עוד סטודנטים מפגינים.
More student protesters.
השלט החדה הוא ״שומרים מפקד לירך!״
The new sign is “Maintain control of your city!”
השלטים החדשי הם ״לא עוד לביזוי מקדשנו!״, ״מדינה יהודית?!״, ודבר מה שאני לא יכול לקרוא די ממנו בתמונה הזאת.
The new signs are “No more demeaning our Temple!”, “A Jewish state?!”, and something I cannot read enough of in this picture.
השלטים החדשים הם ״די לביזוי באבן השתיה״, ״ואין פוקד את הר הבית בעיר העתיקה!״ (ציטוט מ״ירושלים של זהב״), ו״מדינה בלי עבר—היא ללא עתיד!״
The signs are “Enough demeaning the Foundation Stone”, “And there is no visitor of the Temple Mount in the Old City” (a quote from “Jerusalem of Gold”), and “A state without a past is without a future!”
שלט שהוזכר לעיל שונה ל״הר הבית בידינו!״ המשטרה עדיין לא עשתה שום דבר.
A sign mentioned above was modified to read “The Temple Mount is in our hands!” The police still did nothing.
דובר מכנסת.
A speaker from the Keneseth.
העיתונות ״האמיתית״ הייתה שם באמת.
The “real” press was actually there.
ראו גם: ״Bnei Akiva Rally on Behalf of the Temple Mount״. לא הייתי יחיד שם עם מצלמה.
האם אני מצפה להרבה בדרך של תוצאות מהמחאה הזאת? לא. זאת נערכת במקום מחוץ לדרך עם רק עוברי אורח אחדים. אבל זוהי התחלה, במיוחד משום שהרבה בני נוער היו שם. יהי רצון ה׳ שילכו מעורבות פוליטית גדולה יותר וטובה יותר ולעזור לשנות את המדינה לטובה יותר.
Am I expecting much in the way of results from this protest? No. It was held in an out-of-the-way place with few passersby. But it is a start, especially since a lot of youth were involved. May they go on to bigger and better political involvement and help change the country for the better.
שלום.
Peace.
אהרן
’Aharon/Aaron
Sunday, July 29, 2012
The Israeli police still suck more than I thought
Jewish date: 10 ’Av 5772 (Parashath Wa’ethḥannan).
Today’s holidays: The Fast of ’Av (Judaism), Seventeenth Sunday of Ordinary Time (Roman Catholicism), Feast Day of St. Brigham Young (Church of the SubGenius), Feast of Paschal Beverly Randolph (Thelema), Stikklestad Day (Germanic Neopaganism).
Short update on the police over here outright violating their job of enforcing freedom of religion and tolerance. Not only did the police close the Temple Mount to non-Muslims on flimsy excuses about “provocations” (when to Muslims the very presence of Jews can be considered a “provocation”), but the Jewish reaction was refuse to go away and read the Book of Lamentations—the correct ceremony for the Fast of ’Av. See “Police close Temple Mount to Jews on Tisha Be'av” and “Jews Read Lamentations Outside Temple Mount in Defiance of Ban” for details. I congratulate the protestors for standing their ground and sending the police the message that “no” has consequences. May it be the will of YHWH that every such baseless refusal of admission be met with even worse inconveniences.
’Aharon/Aaron
The Israeli police suck more than I thought
Jewish date: 10 ’Av 5772 (Parashath Wa’ethḥannan).
Today’s holidays: The Fast of ’Av (Judaism), Seventeenth Sunday of Ordinary Time (Roman Catholicism), Feast Day of St. Brigham Young (Church of the SubGenius), Feast of Paschal Beverly Randolph (Thelema), Stikklestad Day (Germanic Neopaganism).
Today is the Fast of ’Av, the culmination of the Three Weeks and Nine Days commemorating the destruction of the First and Second Temple.
Last week I posted “משטרת ישראל היא לא גרועה כמו קודם • The Israeli Police suck less than before”, which is about my visit to the Temple Mount last Sunday. Ideally I would have liked to go today, but I am afraid to do much of anything outside during fast days due to dehydration and overheating, which are serious concerns in the summer. (Especially the summer in Israel, which is hot and dry. Even more especially during the summer in Israel feeling the effects of global warming, which make me not want to leave my apartment more than absolutely necessary.) However, some brave souls do attempt to visit the Temple Mount on fast days. It has been reported on Facebook that a large number of Jews showed up to ascend to the Temple Mount this morning, only to be turned away because the police decided to pander to Islamic supremacism rather than do their jobs. I therefore declare the police to have increased their level of suck, and I encourage everyone to let the government, political parties, and anyone else relevant to know.
On the Fast of Tammuz, I posted “Pathological mourning”, arguing that we should not be ritually mourning as an end in itself, but, like all mourning, should be a means towards moving on and rebuilding the Temple. I am not the only one who thinks mourning should not be an end in itself. “Next Year in Jerusalem — Maybe”, “What Are We Fasting For?”, and “Ninth of Av Message on Moving to Israel – Rabbi Beryl Wein, Rabbi Zev Leff and Rabbi Shalom Gold” all argue for making ‘aliyyah (immigration to Israel).
And they have a point. The destruction of both Temples was accompanied by exile. The Hebrew Bible has an ideal that the Jewish people should live in Israel and YHWH promises that we will return. However, we have done a lousy job of this. The Book of Ezra records that when the Persian Emperor Koresh (Cyrus) allowed the Jews to return and rebuild the Temple, very few did so. We are doing a better job today (about 50% of the way there), but life in the West is still rather comfortable, and it is easy even for religious Jews to put off moving to Israel indefinitely. I know. I used to be that way. Food for thought.
’Aharon/Aaron
Today’s holidays: The Fast of ’Av (Judaism), Seventeenth Sunday of Ordinary Time (Roman Catholicism), Feast Day of St. Brigham Young (Church of the SubGenius), Feast of Paschal Beverly Randolph (Thelema), Stikklestad Day (Germanic Neopaganism).
Today is the Fast of ’Av, the culmination of the Three Weeks and Nine Days commemorating the destruction of the First and Second Temple.
Last week I posted “משטרת ישראל היא לא גרועה כמו קודם • The Israeli Police suck less than before”, which is about my visit to the Temple Mount last Sunday. Ideally I would have liked to go today, but I am afraid to do much of anything outside during fast days due to dehydration and overheating, which are serious concerns in the summer. (Especially the summer in Israel, which is hot and dry. Even more especially during the summer in Israel feeling the effects of global warming, which make me not want to leave my apartment more than absolutely necessary.) However, some brave souls do attempt to visit the Temple Mount on fast days. It has been reported on Facebook that a large number of Jews showed up to ascend to the Temple Mount this morning, only to be turned away because the police decided to pander to Islamic supremacism rather than do their jobs. I therefore declare the police to have increased their level of suck, and I encourage everyone to let the government, political parties, and anyone else relevant to know.
On the Fast of Tammuz, I posted “Pathological mourning”, arguing that we should not be ritually mourning as an end in itself, but, like all mourning, should be a means towards moving on and rebuilding the Temple. I am not the only one who thinks mourning should not be an end in itself. “Next Year in Jerusalem — Maybe”, “What Are We Fasting For?”, and “Ninth of Av Message on Moving to Israel – Rabbi Beryl Wein, Rabbi Zev Leff and Rabbi Shalom Gold” all argue for making ‘aliyyah (immigration to Israel).
And they have a point. The destruction of both Temples was accompanied by exile. The Hebrew Bible has an ideal that the Jewish people should live in Israel and YHWH promises that we will return. However, we have done a lousy job of this. The Book of Ezra records that when the Persian Emperor Koresh (Cyrus) allowed the Jews to return and rebuild the Temple, very few did so. We are doing a better job today (about 50% of the way there), but life in the West is still rather comfortable, and it is easy even for religious Jews to put off moving to Israel indefinitely. I know. I used to be that way. Food for thought.
’Aharon/Aaron
Wednesday, July 25, 2012
משטרת ישראל היא לא גרועה כמו קודם • The Israeli Police suck less than before
תאריך יהודי: ו׳ באב תשע״ב (פרשת דברים).
Jewish date: 6 ’Av 5772 (Parashath Devarim).
החגים של היום: תשעת הימים (יהדות), יום חג ג׳ימז (נצרות קתולית), יום חג שיילוק הקדוש (כנסיית תת־הגאון), פורינאליה (דת הרומאים העתיקים).
Today’s holidays: The Nine Days (Judaism), Feast Day of James (Roman Catholicism), Feast Day of St. Shylock (Church of the SubGenius), Furinalia (ancient Roman religion).
שלום.
Greetings.
הערה: זהו עוד הודעה שבה אני מתכנן לשלוח לאנשים שונים בממשל, בפוליטיקה, ובג׳רוזלם פוסט. לפיכך, אני כותב את זה גם בעברית וגם באנגלית. רציתי לעשות את זה בשני טורים מקבילים, אבל Blogger מסרב לעשות טבלאות, ואני ממש לא רוצה לכתוב את ה־HTML באופן ידני. סליחה על הסגנון שבחרתי, שנראה לי להיות הפחות הבעייתי, למרות שיש לו מראה די מוזר.
החלטתי לבקר את הר הבית ביום ראשון (ג׳ באב תשע״ב, 22 ביולי 2012). תשעת הימים הם לזכר חורבן בית המקדש הראשון והשני, לכן זה נראה לי מתאים.
היה כדאי לי להביא כרטיס הרשמי של בלוגר (הדפסתי חבילה של עשר) וגם תדפיס של הבלוג האחרון שלי על ביקור בהר הבית. (יש תוצאות מסרב לי רשות כניסה, והודעתי אותן למשטרה. בנימוס, כמובן, אבל הודעתי להם.) היה גם כדאי (בכנות) לעמוד על כך אני חושב על לעשות ספר צילומים אודות כל העיר העתיקה (כולל הר הבית) ורציתי לצלם את האדריכלות. כמובן, הרעיון שלי של מה נחשב אדריכלות הוא כנראה קצת שונה מזו של המשטרה והוואקף—צילמתי פסולת בניין, חומרי בניין, גרפיטי, ועובדים, וגם כמה בניינים—אבל נכנסתי. ברור שאני הפר איסור הבלתי חוקית של התפילה היהודית. השוטר ופקיד הוואקף המלווים אותי ואת שני יהודים דתיים אחרים ברחבי הר הבית גם נתנו לי מרחב פעולה מספיק (אולי בשל איומים אמיתיים מאוד שלי) שנראה לי שאם רציתי עזבתי אותם. אחד המבקרים האחרים ואני דיברנו על אדריכלות, מציינים איפה היו חלקים שונים של בית המקדש ומרגיזים פקיד הוואקף בהעובדה שזה לא כשלעצמו מהווה תפילה ולכן לא היה לו סיבה להתנגד. הערה מוארת: נראה כאילו המוסלמים החלו לקרצף חלק גרפיטי. מצד שני, הקבוצה שלי התקרב לבמה המרכזית ממה שהלכתי קודם לכן, ועוד יותר פנימה נראה שיש גרפיטי הרבה פחות. היה גם עדיין הרבה כתובות גרפיטי ברחבי בקצוות.
It really pays to bring an official blogger’s card (I made a batch of them) and a printout of one’s last blog post on visiting the Temple Mount. (There are consequences to them refusing me, and I let them know it. Politely, of course, but I let them know it.) Not to mention sticking strictly to the (true) story that I am thinking about making a photo book about the entire Old City (including the Temple Mount) and want to photograph the architecture really pays. Of course, my idea of what constitutes architecture is probably a bit different than that of the police and the Waqf—I photographed rubble, construction materials, graffiti, and workers as well as some buildings—but it got me in. It should go without saying that I blatantly disregarded the illegal prohibition on Jewish prayer. The police officer and Waqf official accompanying me and two other observant Jews around the Mount also gave me enough leeway (possibly due to my very real threats) that I could have probably wandered off. And one of the other visitors and I did discuss architecture, noting where various parts of the Temple were and annoying the Waqf official with the fact that this did not in and of itself constitute prayer and thus was no cause for him to object. Bright note: it looks like the Muslims have started scrubbing off some of the graffiti. On the other hand, my group went closer to the central platform than I had gone before, and further in, there seems to be a lot less graffiti. There was also still plenty of graffiti around on the edges.
עמודות לפני הכיבוש המוסלמי.
Columns from before the Muslim conquest.
זה ברמדאן, ומאז מוסלמים שומרי מצוות הצום בחודש הרמדאן, הם שמו למעלה יריעות לספק צל כדי שלא ימותו מהתייבשות. זה מאפשר להם להמשיך חבלה ארכיאולוגית בזמן צום.
This is during Ramaḍān, and since observant Muslims fast during Ramaḍān, they put up tarps to provide shade so they do not die of dehydration. This makes it possible for them to continue archaeological sabotage while fasting.
כפי שצויין בהודעות קודמות, עדיין יש הרבה הריסות במקומות רבים בהר הבית בתוצאת החבלה הארכיאולוגית. פקיד הוואקף לא יכול לתת כל הסבר אמיתי מדוע עוד לא ניקו את זה. (לשם השוואה, אחד תימצא שום הריסות זרוקה ליד הכותל המערבי.)
As noted in previous posts, there is still plenty of rubble in many places on the Temple Mount due to the archaeological sabotage. The Waqf official could not give any real explanation why they not cleaned it up yet. (For comparison, one will find absolutely no rubble lying around at the Western Wall.)
חומרי בניין.
Building materials.
נראה כי הם באמת עושים עבודה בתוך מבנה כיפת הסלע.
It appears that they really are doing work on inside the Dome of the Rock.
על הקצוות, אין הריסות בלבד, אלא שפע של צמחים גדלים בין האבנים.
Out on the edges, there is not only rubble, but plenty of plants growing between the stones.
ספונסרים גאים של חבלה ארכיאולוגית.
Proud sponsors of archaeological sabotage.
עובד על הגג. הוא לא היה שמח להצטלם, אבל אף אחד לא עצר אותי ואחד מהמבקרים היהודים הדתיים האחרים מצלם אותו.
A worker on a roof. He was not happy being photographed, but no one stopped me and one of the other observant Jewish visitors from photographing him.
מכונת ניקוי.
A cleaning machine.
יש עדיין הרבה כתובות גרפיטי בערבית. המוסלמים עדיין נראה הרבה יותר לכתוב על המקומות הקדושים מיהודים. (נראה לי שאולי טוב לי לחפש גרפיטי גם בכנסיית הקבר ובמסגדים…)
There is still plenty of Arabic graffiti. Muslims still seem to write much more on holy places than Jews. (Come to think about it, arguably I ought to also look for graffiti at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre and at mosques...)
זה היה בשער של הר הבית שבו יצאתי. מישהו לא יודע בבירור שיש חדל להיות גבול בתוך ירושלים בשנת 1967.
This was at the gate of the Temple Mount where I exited. Someone clearly does not know that there ceased being a border inside Yerushalayim (Jerusalem) in 1967.
תקציר:
Summary:
ניסיון ביקור: 6.
ביקור מוצלח: 3.
מצב פיזי: הרס מתמשך של כל דבר שאינו מוסלמי, עם ההריסות שנוצרה.
התנהגות המשטרה: משופרת, אבל עדיין בכניעה לעליונות האיסלאמית.
Police behavior: Improved, but still kowtowing to Islamic supremacism.
התנהגות הוואקף: עדיין באשליה שהם מחזיקים במקום. פרנואיד עדיין על יהדות, גם על הדיון של האדריכלות הדתית היהודית היסטורית.
Waqf behavior: Still under the delusion they own the place. Still paranoid about Judaism, even the discussion of historical Jewish religious architecture.
עיין עוד:
See also:
Peace.
’Aharon/Aaron
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