Doubt kikes are racist, big-time?--observe how they HATE intermarriage--among kikes, anyway, hoho ho

Apollonian

Guest Columnist
Israeli left leader says intermarriage by U.S. Jews is ‘actual plague’ and he vows to find ‘a solution’

Mondoweiss Editors on June 25, 2018 81 Comments

Link: https://mondoweiss.net/2018/06/israeli-intermarriage-solution/

Isaac Herzog is the outgoing leader of the Israeli political “left,” the Zionist Camp coalition, and the new chairman of the Jewish Agency for Israel, which seeks to strengthen bonds between Jews worldwide. In an interview on Israeli TV (for which David Sheen provided translation), he describes intermarriage between American Jews and non-Jews as a “plague” for which he seeks to find a “solution”.

“I’ll tell you a personal story. Last summer I traveled [with my wife] to the USA for a vacation. I graduated from a Jewish school in New York. And we went to meet friends. I have a ton of friends in the U.S.A. And I encountered something that I called an actual plague. I saw my friends’ children married or coupled with non-Jewish partners! And the parents beat their breasts and ask questions, and are suffering. Listen, it’s every [Jewish] family in the U.S.A.! And we are talking about millions. And I said there must be a campaign, a solution. We have to rack our brains to figure out how to solve this great challenge.

Herzog is an expert on love. He has warned that his party must not be seen as “Arab-lovers.”

The intermarriage rate among American Jews is 58 percent, but 71 percent among the non-Orthodox.

The young are making these choices voluntarily. Herzog’s breast-beating, suffering friends are surely in the more traditional, religiously-identified Jewish community. Herzog attended the Ramaz school in New York when his father served here as an Israeli diplomat. He went on to Cornell and NYU. Among less-strongly-identified U.S. Jews, there is wide acceptance of intermarriage, because Jews are mixing freely with non-Jews at schools and jobs, and in neighborhoods.

Herzog is a regular at J Street, the liberal Zionist pro-Israel lobby group; and

His anti-intermarriage stance is shared within the Zionist community: notably by Dennis Ross, former White House negotiator who co-chairs the Jewish People Policy Institute.
 
Israel steps up its war on mixed marriages

Link: https://electronicintifada.net/cont...il&utm_term=0_e802a7602d-64df612869-290660781

David Sheen The Electronic Intifada 23 July 2018

The Israeli government has long funded various efforts to try to prevent romantic relationships between Jews and non-Jews, both inside territories it controls and around the world.

But a new program confirmed this month by the tourism ministry takes Israel’s war on families of mixed religion or ethnicity to a new level.

Israeli media reported on 10 July that in 2019, the government of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will fund trips to the country for foreign Jews, with the express objective of participating in singles mixers on and around Tu B’Av, a day celebrated by some as the “Jewish Valentine’s Day.”

“Over the course of the events, young Jewish-Israelis and Jews that live in the diaspora will get to know one another, and that is likely to lead to couples forming,” predicted Israel Hayom, the pro-Netanyahu newspaper owned by casino billionaire, Republican financier and anti-Palestinian donor Sheldon Adelson.

“We’ll return to the glory days,” ruling Likud Party lawmaker Sharren Haskel told the paper. “Young [Jewish] men and women from all over the world will arrive and form relationships with local young men and women, in order to prevent assimilation and strengthen the connection to Judaism.”

Haskel used a Hebrew word that literally translates as “assimilation,” but that in modern Hebrew is commonly used as a euphemism for miscegenation – romantic relationships and procreation between Jews and non-Jews.

Haskel recently toured the al-Aqsa mosque compound along with Uri Ariel, a cabinet minister and leading figure in the Jewish extremist movement that supports the destruction of the Dome of the Rock and al-Aqsa mosque in order to replace them with a Jewish temple.

Israeli governments past and present have spent enormous sums subsidizing trips to the country for young Jews from abroad.

Between 2010 and 2015 alone, the government gave more than $250 million to the largest provider of such trips, Birthright Israel.

Adelson himself donated $40 million to Birthright in 2015.

“Free sex vacation to Israel”

The primary purpose of the program is fostering Zionist commitment and eventual emigration by young Jews, but the trips also aim to encourage young Jews to have sexual relations with one another, hoping this will sour them on romantic relationships with non-Jewish people back in their home countries.

Birthright’s promotion of relationships between tour participants – and between participants and Israeli tour staff – is not explicitly cited in its official publications.

But it is nonetheless widely acknowledged.

In April, Birthright participants told Sarah Seltzer, a reporter with The Investigative Fund, about how “the combination of hook-up pressure, spring-break partying and romanticization of planned encounters between Israeli soldiers and American women” creates “a pervasive environment of sexual pressure that encourages Jews to meet, marry and, someday, procreate with other Jews.”

In the experience of one young woman profiled by Seltzer, that pressure contributed to an alleged sexual assault perpetrated against her during a Birthright trip by an Israeli soldier.

A writer for Vice who went on Birthright called it a “free sex vacation to Israel” and an “all-expenses-paid orgy in the desert,” sponsored by the Israeli government in the hope that “young Semites will meet, marry and procreate, yielding little mini Jews.”

Other have also mocked the trips for sponsoring “22-year-olds to go to the Middle East, get totally drunk and have sex with everyone.”

And in 2013, Birthright benefactor Sheldon Adelson himself told an assembled audience of young participants: “I hope you’ve all been doing the hanky-panky.”

Dispensing with the pretense

But the new Tu B’Av trips promoted by Haskel dispense with pretense: the initiative’s authors openly admit that their main objective is to encourage Jews to form romantic relationships with other Jews and to steer clear of non-Jews.

Israel Hayom reported that the trips would include “wine tastings and camping in vineyards across the country,” to which local Israeli Jews would also be invited.

The mixers will feature singing and dancing events dubbed “Returning to the Palmach and the Irgun” – a reference to two Zionist militias that participated in the 1948 Nakba, the ethnic cleansing of more than 750,000 Palestinians.

The Irgun is particularly notorious for the massacre of Palestinian civilians in the village of Deir Yassin in 1948 and for the bombing of the King David Hotel two years earlier.

Israel Hayom does not say how organizers would ensure that attendance would be restricted to Jews, and forbidden to Palestinian citizens of Israel, African refugees and other non-Jewish single men and women.

However, given the highly segregated reality within Israel, this should not be difficult.

No mixed marriages

Israeli law records religious designations for each of its citizens and it does not permit couples registered under different religions to legally marry one another.

The state does, however, retroactively recognize wedding ceremonies performed for such couples in other countries.

Statisticians estimate that as many as one in 10 marriages in Israel are between persons from different groups.

However, non-Jewish spouses – especially if they are from African states – often face deliberate obstacles from the government to their entry or residency.

In recent years, Israeli government attacks on mixed relationships, within Israel and without, have been led by the far-right Jewish Home party and its leader Naftali Bennett.

During Bennett’s time as education minister, Israel has stripped from its recommended reading lists for high school students books about mixed relationships.

In 2015, it removed Borderlife, about a romance between a Jewish woman and a Palestinian man, and in 2016, it removed Trumpet in the Wadi, about a romance between a Jewish man and a Palestinian woman.

Bennett’s education ministry also funds groups of religious Jews to move into the few mixed neighborhoods that still exist in the country – where Jews and Palestinians live alongside one another as unequal citizens, but in relative coexistence.

There, the new arrivals incite against local mixed families and have distributed leaflets warning that “there are mixed marriages in almost every building in Jaffa” and exhorting residents to “strengthen Jewish identity.”

Groups like Lehava recruit teens and adults to patrol Israeli towns and public beaches, where they harass mixed couples. They also protest Jewish-Palestinian wedding ceremonies with chants of “Death to the Arabs!”

In 2014, three Lehava members torched the only school in the Jerusalem area with instruction in both Hebrew and Arabic, daubing the walls with slogans including “End miscegenation” and “No coexistence with cancer.”

The three received sentences of about three years in prison.

Fighting mixed marriages abroad

In his other role as minister of diaspora affairs, Bennett funnels money to programs aimed at stamping out relationships between Jews and non-Jews overseas as well.

When Bennett took over the diaspora affairs ministry in 2013, its budget from the government was about $8 million a year.

Now Bennett is talking about spending $1 billion annually on projects around the world described as promoting “the future of the Jewish people.”

In June 2016, Bennett told a committee of the Knesset, Israel’s parliament, that the marriage of Jews to non-Jews in modern times is a disaster on par with four other tragedies of Jewish history, including the Nazi Holocaust.

Five months later, two young Israelis beat to death Sudanese asylum-seeker Babikir Adham-Uvdo in a Tel Aviv suburb.

Angered that a non-Jewish Black man had stopped to talk to a group of young Israeli Jewish women, the killers crushed his face so badly that his own brother was unable to recognize him.

In February, one of Adham-Uvdo’s killers received a maximum jail sentence of 10 years for manslaughter, in a plea bargain, although he will probably be released in just a few years.

Sentencing of the other killer, a minor at the time of the incident, has yet to be determined.

“A plague”

Trying to win political points by bashing mixed relationships is not exclusive to right-wing parties in Israel.

In a televised interview in Hebrew in June, Isaac Herzog, the former leader of Israel’s ostensibly left-wing Zionist Union and Labor parties, called mixed families “a plague” for which he hoped to find “a solution.”

The noxious comments came on the very day that Herzog was chosen as the next leader of the Jewish Agency, the state-backed organization that prior to the Nakba led Zionist efforts to colonize Palestine.

On the same day, Herzog also headed to Jerusalem to pay his respects to Israel’s Sephardic Chief Rabbi Yitzhak Yosef – a powerful religious official with a long history of racist statements.

There, Israeli media reported, Herzog thanked Yosef for his personal blessing, which included an instruction to “defend the Jewish people from assimilation.”
 
Jewish assimilation in US is ‘like a second Holocaust,’ Israeli minister claims

Published time: 10 Jul, 2019 04:57
Edited time: 10 Jul, 2019 09:21

Link: https://www.rt.com/news/463799-israeli-minister-diaspora-holocaust/

Intermarriage among diaspora Jews – particularly those in North America – is “like a second Holocaust,” Israeli Education Minister Rafi Peretz declared in a cabinet meeting, uniting much of that diaspora in shocked offense.

The Jewish community “lost 6 million people” over the last 70 years because of intermarriage and assimilation, Peretz told a cabinet meeting on trends in Jewish communities around the world, particularly in the US. His spokesman confirmed the statement to Israeli Channel 13.

Also on rt.com ‘Whirlwind of politics not for women’: Prominent Israeli rabbi reacts to talk of female party leader

American Jews, unsurprisingly, were outraged. Anti-Defamation League CEO Jonathan Greenblatt called the remarks “inconceivable” in a tweet, adding that “This kind of baseless comparison does little other than inflame and offend.” The ADL tweeted an additional response in Hebrew, blaming Peretz’s statement for “add[ing] to the already existing tension between Israel and US Jewry” and pleading with him to “engage in respectful dialogue.”

“Israel’s government has a moral responsibility to maintain and improve the country’s relationship with diaspora Jews in general, and with the American Jewish community in particular,” Jay Ruderman, president of the Ruderman Family Foundation, a Jewish organization that advocates for people with disabilities.

And Peretz’s fellow ministers – some of them, anyway – took a dim view of the comment. “First we need to stop disregarding and looking down on Jews in America that see themselves as Jews not only religiously but even more culturally and historically,” argued Minister of Energy Yuval Steinitz.

But PM Benjamin Netanyahu shared Peretz’s alarm over demographic trends, claiming US Jews are abandoning Jewish traditions in a trend that is not easily reversed.

Also on rt.com Israeli minister’s diaries reveal Mossad involvement in anti-BDS push abroad

Support for Israel among American Jews has been declining for years, and Peretz’s comments – far from the first to compare assimilation to the Holocaust – are unlikely to heal the rift.
 
New Documentary Sheds Light On Israel's Strict Prohibitions On Interracial Marriage

Link: https://national-justice.com/new-do...aels-strict-prohibitions-interracial-marriage

Eric StrikerDec 9, 2020 | 620 words  1,938

In 1967 Jewish activists sued to overturn bans on interracial marriage in America, yet in 2020, the Jewish state retains the strictest miscegenation laws in the world.

This is the subject of a new Press TV documentary on Israelis who are not allowed to marry by the country's Rabbinate. Some couples use a loophole that allows them to marry abroad, but with COVID travel restrictions this has become impossible.

The Zionist state does not allow its citizens to obtain a civil marriage. Jewish apologists will often assert that Israel's marriage laws are primarily motivated by the population's concern with religious tradition, but a Gallup survey has found that Israel is one of the least religious countries in the world.

Under the rules set by the Rabbinate, a Jew who seeks to marry an individual who might be racially impure under Halakhic law must subject their spouse to DNA tests in order to prove their "genetic Jewishness." Converts to Judaism and communities such as Ethiopian Jews are also largely banned from wedding.

Though Israel's population is 75% Jewish and the country is highly secular, 98% of Jews say their friends are mostly or only Jewish. 89% of Jews also say they would not accept their child marrying a Gentile, going as high as 97% were the theoretical partner a Muslim.

While mixing in general is rare, the Israeli state funds initiatives every year intended to discourage Jews from dating outside their race. A street organization composed of Jewish men called Lehava patrol more cosmopolitan neighborhoods in Jerusalem and beat up interracial couples.

Jews in the United States are also known as the people who pioneered gay marriage, but in Israel same-sex marriage is prohibited.

In Israel marriage is a respected institution that enjoys fierce government protection. 50% of Jews marry by the age of 25, while in America only 29% of people between the ages of 18 to 34 are married.

With 95% of American Jews affirming support for the state of Israel, the sincerity of our country's vanguard of "tolerance," cosmopolitanism and social liberalism ought to be brought into question.
 
Black Jewish Woman Speaks out on Racism She Experienced at L.A. Jewish Day Schools

Link: https://jewishjournal.com/culture/3...xperienced-on-l-a-jewish-day-school-campuses/

"As a black Jew, I've never faced more racism in my life than I have from the Jewish community and Jewish schools."

Ariel Sobel
June 4, 2020
https://jewishjournal.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/jj_avatar.jpg

Chana Hall as a child with her parents. Photo Courtesy of Hall.

After witnessing how the death of George Floyd opened the floodgates of black Americans discussing racism, 22-year-old Los Angeles resident Chana Hall decided it was time to tell her own story. Her experience was not about police brutality, but the mistreatment she had experienced as a black child at Jewish day schools.

Hall posted on her Facebook page: “What I am posting is no way to draw hate to the Jewish community. As a black Jew, I’ve never faced more racism in my life than I have from the Jewish community and Jewish schools.”

The post, which Hall later deleted (she told the Journal she feared she would be targeted), described how she switched high schools due to the racism she experienced.

Hall, who was raised Orthodox, was born to an Ashkenazi Jewish mother and a black father who converted to Judaism. She told the Journal her experiences with racism have discouraged her from being more observant in her adult life.

“I love the Jewish community and I am proud to be apart of it,” she told the Journal. “I grew up very Orthodox. As I grew up, I grew less and less religious.” In her FB post, she wrote, “Over the course of my childhood I would become increasingly aware of the stares I received when attending temple with my family and it made me very uncomfortable, and eventually due to this just becoming less religious. I stopped attending temple.”

The post also stated, “It’s funny, because a lot of the people in my first high school are the ones on here preaching about BLM (Black Lives Matter) and supporting the black community, when not too long ago they said the most outrageous things,” she wrote.

Chana Hall, today.

“The Jewish schools I’ve gone to, I’ve had a good amount of Jews who were nice to me,” Hall said. However, she posted that one particular school is “where I heard my first racial slur.”

It was at that school, Hall continued in her FB post that she and her brother were two out of the three African American students. She said in the fifth grade another student called her the n-word, but “when I told a teacher, they didn’t care and brushed it off.” Hall also told the Journal that when she was in second grade, administrators told her father she could not wear her hair in braids because “it was basically too ethnic.”

Hall as a child making challah with her cousin Tehila Schechet. Photo Courtesy of Chana Hall.

Hall’s father, Gary Hall, told the Journal initially he wanted to complain about the rule, but decided against it. “We were still relatively new to the community here and had to find our niche. Kicking up dust was not a good idea,” he said. “Plus, the choice of [religious] schools was pretty thin. [The school we chose] was all we had so I swallowed…begrudgingly.”

He added he gave his children “clearly Jewish names because I wanted them to feel like they belonged to the Jewish community no matter where they go. It kills me that my daughter was driven away from the community because of her skin color.”

Hall said she continued to experience bigotry even when she switched to a different Jewish high school in the area. She said of her second school, “I had the most horrendous things said to me. I had someone say, ‘What color noose do you want to be lynched with?’ at lunch.” She added someone on her dance team told her, “Coach put you in the back in front of the black curtain so no one can see you.”

Gary added that his daughter only recently started sharing her experiences with racism at school with him. “I did not expect that in a religious school, and I didn’t expect it in a liberal Jewish school,” he said. “I wish I had known before. I’d have cracked the earth to protect my child from that kind of abuse from the student body, and more so, the apathy of the school officials [at both schools].”

Hall said she believes a lack of education on race and black history in the Jewish day schools she attended contributed to the racism she experienced.

Chana Hall dressed as Queen Esther at a school event.

“The majority of my life was spent in Jewish day schools, and we weren’t really taught about race and blacks and slavery,” she said. “Because there’s a lack of education on it, there’s not a lot of sensitivity towards people of color.”

Today, Hall is a business major studying global supply chain management at California State University, Northridge, where she feels more accepted. She said she believes many people with an exclusively Jewish education are unprepared to participate in the conversation America is having around race right now.

“Once you get to a public school…you’re more exposed to the outside world and get more of a sense of how other races are and how they relate to you,” she said. “That’s what Judaism really teaches us, to love all Jews no matter who they are or what they look like. This isn’t only about black Jews – this includes Hispanic Jews, Asian Jews, Jews of all races and colors. I feel like that message gets lost in exclusively Jewish day schools where the majority of the history we are taught is focused on Jewish history.”

She added that teaching Jewish children about Jewish heritages outside of Europe could fix the issue.”We only solely focus on our past,” she said, “Not what’s going on in the future.”
 
Racism is at the very heart of Israel

Link: https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/20210825-racism-is-at-the-very-heart-of-israel/

August 25, 2021 at 4:55 pm
Dr Belal Yasin

Many international organisations and human rights groups have confirmed that Israel imposes a racist — "apartheid" — regime which oppresses the Palestinians. This regime denies them basic rights and exposes them to repeated attacks by illegal Jewish settlers, which increases the tension in the occupied Palestinian territories and within Israeli itself. The Palestinians continue to be beaten, killed and forcibly displaced.

On 9 May, the Israeli authorities tried to prevent thousands of Palestinians living in the 1948-occupied Palestinian territories — they are Israeli citizens — from reaching Al-Aqsa Mosque in occupied Jerusalem to commemorate the twenty-seventh night of the holy month Ramadan, which is a sacred night for all Muslims. Mass protests followed, and Zionist settlers did not hesitate to attack the Palestinians with live ammunition and hand grenades. The Israeli government encourages a policy of divide and rule, pitting one ethnic group against another, but in this case the Israeli police arrested more than 500 Palestinians rather than the fully armed and dangerous settlers, not one of whom was detained. If nothing else, this was an indication of the institutionalised racism of the Israeli authorities against its own Palestinian citizens.

Who are the Arab Palestinian citizens of Israel?

Although Zionist terrorists displaced more than 800,000 Palestinians from their homes in 1948, a number of Palestinians remained in the occupied cities of what is now called Israel. According to the Israeli Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS), in 2019, the number of Palestinians who reside in the territory occupied in 1948 was estimated at about 2 million, one-fifth of the population of the occupation state. They live mainly in the Galilee, the Negev and the "Triangle", Arab towns and villages adjacent to the Green (1949 Armistice) Line between Israel and the occupied West Bank.

Forms of racism

Although Palestinians in the 1948-occupied Palestinian territories have Israeli citizenship, they are faced with institutional racism. They are not regarded or treated as equals in any aspect of life. Dozens of laws have been enacted to reinforce this racism, most notably:

•The Jewish Nation-State Law, which limits the right to self-determination to Jews alone within the self-styled Jewish state. Muslim and Christian citizens have no such right.
•The Israeli Citizenship Law, which states that every Jew becomes an Israeli citizen the instant she or he steps on Israeli soil, no matter where in the world they are from. This law excludes Palestinians from their legitimate right to return to their homeland. Palestinian citizens do not have the same rights as Jewish citizens.

Not only have the Israeli authorities enacted racist laws against the Palestinians, but state officials also issue statements that directly affect the Arab Palestinians and their lives, and incite settlers against them. The number of attacks on Palestinians has increased accordingly.

More than 1,700 Palestinian citizens of Israel have been killed between 2000 and 2020. The Israel occupation authorities have refrained from conducting any investigations, which leads us to ask how the Israeli police can arrest the perpetrators of crimes against Jewish settlers often within 24 hours, while refusing to investigate or even care about crimes committed against the Palestinians, the perpetrators of which are subsequently usually registered as "persons unknown"?

READ: HRW indirectly promotes Israel's colonial narrative and aggression

In its report dated 15 March 2017, the UN Social and Economic Commission for Western Asia (ESCWA) answered this question, stressing that the Israeli authorities have established an apartheid regime that dominates the entire Palestinian people. The facts and evidence prove beyond reasonable doubt that Israel is guilty of the crime of apartheid as defined by international law.

Human Rights Watch also accused Israel of apartheid in its report dated 27 April this year. Indeed, it accused the state of committing two crimes against humanity, by pursuing a policy of apartheid and persecution against the Arab citizens of Israel as well as the inhabitants of the 1967-occupied Palestinian territories.

According to the facts backed up by the UN and other reports, the Israeli authorities practice the ugliest forms of racism against the Palestinian people residing in the 1948-occupied Palestinian territories. This reinforces the continuous tension and increases the chance of violence. The UN and its member states are legally obligated to take urgent action to end all forms of apartheid and take appropriate steps against the guilty party. Racism is at the very heart of Israel; its impunity must end.
 
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