TYPICAL: kike (Israeli) filth torch church--kike gov. then dis-allows it being re-built

Apollonian

Guest Columnist
Blessed Nativity from the Church of the Multiplication burned by Orthodox 'Jews' and prevented from rebuilding by the Israeli government

Link: http://mauricepinay.blogspot.com/2015/12/blessed-nativity-from-church-of.html


A Nativity icon from the Church of the Multiplication on the shore of the Sea of Galilee. This historic church, parts of which date to the 5th century A.D., was burned by pious Orthodox 'Jews' June 18, 2015 HERE and HERE. Adding injury to injury, the Israeli government is strategizing to withhold funding to rebuild the church.

My corrections to National Geographic's weasel-worded damage-control piece are interspersed below:


[Judaic] Attacks Rattle Christians in Holy Land

Andrew Lawler - National Geographic

Dec. 24, 2015

Nazareth, Israel—Father Matthias Karl hoped to begin rebuilding his shattered church complex on the shores of the Sea of Galilee after Christmas. But following an arson attack six months ago that left one Catholic monk hospitalized and caused nearly $1.8 million in damage, the Israeli government, while strongly condemning the incident, has yet to provide promised financial compensation or put the two right-wing Jewish suspects on trial.

The June assault was the latest and most dramatic sign of tension between Christians in Israel and a growing movement of [Orthodox 'Jews'] who seek to cleanse their nation of [Christian 'idolators'].

“The attacks have become more brutal and more aggressive,” said Father Nikodemus Schnabel, a Benedictine monk at the Dormition Abbey on Mount Zion in Jerusalem that has been subject to several attacks. “And we have not been happy with the political response.”

Taking a page from the [Talmud, which also informs the Zionist-backed] Islamic group ISIS operating in neighboring Syria, a small group of young [Orthodox] Jews influenced by [rabbis of Orthodox Judaism] target Christian sites as centers of heretical idol worship and unwelcome missionary activity. In the past three years, [many more than] a dozen churches and monasteries have been bombed, burned, or vandalized. [To this day], no one was charged in any of these incidents...

[Disingenuous claims that attacks on Christian churches by 'Jews' is a new phenomenon are contemptible misdirection. Notable among many others is the 2002 attack on the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem by the IDF HERE, and Saint-Dimitrios church in Nablus HERE, and the February 27, 1994 Israeli Mossad bombing of Our Lady of Deliverance Maronite Catholic Chuirch at Jounieh, Lebanon, during mass which murdered 11 HERE].

Yinon Reuveni (right) and Yehuda Asraf, suspected of vandalizing the church of the Multiplication of the Loaves and Fishes in Tabgha, on the shore of the Galilee

On the night of June 17, according to court documents, 20-year-old Yinon Reuveni and 19-year-old Yehuda Assraf left Jerusalem in a Subaru they had just bought in the West Bank, where they live in [an illegal] settlement.

The two men stopped to buy gasoline at a filling station outside Tel Aviv, and arrived at the Church of the Multiplication along the Sea of Galilee that night.

The white stone church, built on top of a 5th-century sanctuary, commemorates the place where tradition says Jesus multiplied loaves and fishes to feed a large crowd. It features 6th–century mosaics that are among the earliest Christian mosaics in Israel. Six monks and six nuns manage the complex that includes guest accommodations and is overseen by Dormition Abbey in Jerusalem.

Israeli officials say that the two men waited until three in the morning to pour and light gasoline at the entrance to the monastery and in the reception area for pilgrims. They also spray painted in red [Hebrew graffiti, reading, “the false gods will be eliminated” — a quote from the Aleinu prayer which is mandatory for Orthodox 'Jews' to pray 3 times daily]...

An elderly monk, awakened by the noise of fire, began battling the blaze ... Father Matthias recalled that a 79-year-old monk crawled out a second-story window and used a hose to spray the church roof, preventing the fire’s spread to the sanctuary before firefighters arrived. The monk was subsequently hospitalized for two days, along with a volunteer, for smoke inhalation.

[Due to better than usual international reporting on Israeli savagery in this instance] “There was too much pressure for the Israeli government to dismiss this,” said Father Nikodemus.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu [feigning indignation for the international press] quickly designated the fire as a terrorist attack, making the church ineligible to draw on insurance but paving the way for government compensation. Two months later, the Israeli Tax Authority declared that the violent event did not qualify as terrorism, and therefore could not receive government funding.

When [Orthodox Judaic] Israeli President Reuven Rivlin visited the church in early September, just before meeting Pope Francis in Rome, he [likewise feigned concern and] promised to help reverse that decision. “He was shocked by the extent of damage,” said Father Matthias. “Since then there have been a lot of meetings with the government, but no compensation” [which is the to-be-expected yield for Judeo-Christian 'dialogue'].

In the meantime, a group of [image conscious] Israeli rabbis started a crowd-funding campaign that raised [a token] $13,000 [a small fraction of the funding received from the same community by the Orthodox Judaic terrorists who burned the church]. [Crypto-Haredi, Orthodox] Rabbi Alon Goshen-Gottstein, director of the [Judeo-supremacist] Jerusalem-based Elijah Interfaith Institute [which seeks to subordinate Christianity and Islam to Judaism as 'Noahide' step-children HERE], led the effort that included the [also image-conscious] head of the Knesset, Israel’s parliament.

... the small group of violent [Orthodox 'Jews'], made up mostly of young West Bank settlers, has been emboldened by the lack of prosecutions [for their violent crimes and their theft of Palestinian land]...

Assaf Sharon, a philosophy professor at Tel Aviv University who has written about the history of Jewish terrorism, said the youth “are surrounded by institutions that condone, protect, and support them. And there is certainly authority behind them, including rabbis they look up to” [most notably, the codifier of Orthodox Judaism, Moses Maimonides HERE].

A 2009 book written by two [Orthodox] Israeli rabbis [Yitzhak Shapira and Yosef Elitzur] called The King’s Torah [rules] that Jewish law legitimizes violence against Gentiles [including babies]. Tag Meir director Gvaryahu was part of a legal effort to ban the volume [for P.R. purposes], but the Israeli Supreme Court earlier this month rejected that plea as an infringement on free speech [this ruling comes from the same Israeli government which criminalizes Christian preaching to 'Jews'].

... on December 17, [Orthodox Rabbi] Bentiz [sic] Gopstein, who leads the Lehava organization, published a column denouncing Christians as “blood-sucking vampires,” and added that “Christmas has no place in the Holy Land” [among many other things HERE].

Full article:

http://news.nationalgeographic.com/...rorism-arson-christian-church-multiplication/
 
Israel tourists stealing from Dubai hotels, report says

December 31, 2020 at 1:56 pm |

Link: https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/20201231-israel-tourists-stealing-from-dubai-hotels-report-says/

Israeli tourists visiting the United Arab Emirates (UAE) have been stealing items from hotel rooms in Dubai, Israeli daily Yedioth Ahronoth reported.

"I have been visiting the UAE for many years and doing business there," stated an Israeli businessman. "Last month I arrived at the hotel I was staying in and was terrified when I saw in the hotel lobby, Israelis are being searched for stolen items from the rooms."

Complaints of Israeli tourists stealing from hotels comes a month after the first commercial passenger flight from Israel to the UAE to off, as part of a new regular service.

Moreover, a manager of a hotel overlooking the world's tallest building the Burj Khalifa, said: "We host hundreds of tourists from all countries of the world, some of them create problems, but we have not seen items stolen before."

"Recently we have seen Israeli tourists come to the hotel and pile up all their bags, stealing towels, tea and coffee bags, and even lamps."

READ: UAE embassy in Belgium involved in fraud against employees, report says

He added: "One time an Israeli family came with two children to check-out, and we discovered that things were missing in the room, and when the hotel staff tried to tell them that things in the room in which they were staying were missing, they started screaming."

"After the conversation, they finally agreed to open their bag and we discovered that they had ice containers, hangers, and face towels. After we told them that we would inform the police, they decided to return the things and apologised."

The outcome of the "#normalization" with Zionists!
Getting robbed even in hotels

They have robbed all sorts of things from Dubai hotels, like spersso machine and shohorne
pic.twitter.com/tkO4YOOypL

— Soureh (@soureh_design) December 29, 2020

Dr Abd Al-Aziz Al-Khazraj Al-Nasari, a Qatari presenter, published a video claiming a number of Emirati hotel owners contacted him detailing the thefts they discovered.

In the video which went viral across social media, he warned: "They should know that normalisation with Israel means having to give up room objects for now, and maybe land later on."

The UAE and Israel agreed to establish full diplomatic, cultural, and commercial relations following the signing of the controversial agreements on 15 September at the White House.
 
Poor behavior giving Israeli tourists bad name in UAE

Link: https://www.ynetnews.com/travel/article/ByJTfsKAP

From overturning luxury jeeps to stealing light fittings and cooking in hotel rooms, some of 66,000 Israelis who flocked to Gulf state in a month have earned shocking reputation, with one local tour guide saying 'some just do not understand where they are'

Adam Kotev|
Published: 01.17.21 , 10:43

Dubai has quickly become a favored holiday destination for Israeli tourists, with more than 66,000 of them visiting the Gulf principality just last month.

•Follow Ynetnews on Facebook and Twitter

But as the flow of tourists to the Gulf has increased so have reports of poor behavior, with claims of disrespectful behavior that blacken Israel's international image.

השכרת רכבי יוקרה: "האטרקציה המרכזית כאן"השכרת רכבי יוקרה: "האטרקציה המרכזית כאן"A tourist stands on the rear of a luxury jeep during a trip to the desert outside Dubai

In addition to reports in the Arab media of Israelis stealing everything they can in hotels, from towels to bedside light fixtures, the Israeli tourism companies say there were rowdy parties, damage to luxury cars, Israelis cooking inside their hotel rooms in clear violation of hotel rules and attempts to avoid paying for minibar purchases by replacing the liquor with water.

"The UAE is very accessible to the Israeli visitor now," says Amalia Lazarov, owner of Trevelicious travel company.

"The fact that you can speak a few words in Arabic does not make the hotel desk clerk your friend. It is disrespectful to behave as if he is," she says.

"I have been working in the UAE and in other Arab countries for the past 12 years and am happy to see Israelis are finally welcomed there after years of dreaming of this opportunity. Now it is all blowing up in our faces because of this inappropriate behavior."

Lazarov warned that things will "end badly" if this behavior continued.

רכבי יוקרה בדובאירכבי יוקרה בדובאיLuxury cars are a favorite of Israeli tourists visiting Dubai

"Israelis should undergo some sort of training before visiting the Arab world and paying $95 for an entrance visa is not enough," she says.

"I would by lying if I said this did not have an impact on the conversation in the UAE. Some of the companies with which Israelis are coming into contact are not Emirati-owned. They are Egyptian and Jordanian and Lebanese. If we don't behave better, we will pay the price," Lazarov says.

Omar Abu Khaled, an Egyptian tourism agent in Dubai, said he knows knew Israelis well from his time working at Sinai resort Sharm al-Sheikh.

"There are no people more generous and kinder than Israelis, and none more fun loving when on vacation. But some just do not understand where they are and how they must behave," he says.

"About a week ago I had five [Israeli] friends who wanted to take a jeep tour of the desert near Dubai. We negotiated a price, but they opted to rent their own car. I told them how important it was to drive safely and not behave in a rowdy manner but within an hour I received the call that after driving wildly, the car overturned and crashed causing great financial damage."

הג'יפ ההפוך במהלך נהיגה פרועה של ישראליםהג'יפ ההפוך במהלך נהיגה פרועה של ישראליםA jeep rented by Israeli tourists overturns in the desert

"When I got to them they began arguing with me, claiming that they had driven perfectly well," he says.

"Finally they paid up but they should be grateful I did not call the police."

Khaled did note however that many other groups of Israelis were a pleasure to work with and had behaved perfectly.

"I doubt anyone in Israel is surprised by these stories coming out of Dubai," says Yehuda Nathanson, who has worked in the tourism industry for the past 36 years.

"We remember the same stories from other destinations such as Turkey, and it is a shame," he says.

Another veteran tourism expert who asked to remain unnamed for fear he may lose business, chose his words carefully.

"The people traveling to the UAE, especially the younger ones, are giving Israel a bad name. I am ashamed," he says.

"I recently received a call from a counterpart in Dubai who told me about tourists who had decided to cook a meal in their hotel room. They were thrown out and I had to find them other accommodation," he says.

מספר זוגות ישראלים רוכבים על גמלים במדבריות דובאייםמספר זוגות ישראלים רוכבים על גמלים במדבריות דובאייםIsraeli tourists on a camel trek in the UAE desert

Some tourists returning from the UAE also had shocking stories to tell.

Eran, who took his son to the Gulf state for his bar mitzvah celebration, recounts the words of a local tour guide that took him and his party into the desert:

"He told us we will be the last Israelis he will work with as Israelis have a reputation of being difficult and problematic. I was very ashamed."
 
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