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November 13, 2009

British Jews organize ‘buycott’ to combat Palestinian boycott threat

British Jews organized a “buycott” of Israeli products to combat a Palestinian boycott campaign against two major supermarket chains.

The Board of Deputies of British Jews and the Fair Play Campaign Group urged shoppers to buy as many Israeli products as possible this week in response to the Palestine Solidarity Campaign’s targeting of Waitrose and Morrisons, reported the London Jewish Chronicle. Pro-Israel groups said a number of stores had almost sold out of their kosher products, including wine, fruit and herbs.

The Palestinian group urged supporters to write letters and deluge the supermarkets with phone calls, and also organized protests outside certain stores.

A Waitrose spokeswoman told the Chronicle that the chain had experience business as usual, while a Morrisons representative would not comment directly on the action but said it carried products from a “wide range of suppliers around the world” so that its shoppers had choices.

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Japan to “strengthen its alliance” with U.S. on Iran

Japan will “strengthen its alliance” with the United States when it comes to Iran issues, the Japanese prime minister said.

Yukio Hatoyama spoke Friday after his summit in Tokyo with President Obama. The two leaders had discussed containing the proliferation of nuclear weapons, particularly in North Korea and Iran.

“We have agreed to closely cooperate with one another,” Hatoyama said. “We would like to support the approach to Iran. On the one hand, we want to emphasize our historic relationship” with Iran, “but also, at the same time, I promise to strengthen our alliance vis-à-vis Iran.”

Obama is seeking wall-to-wall international support for his strategy of reaching out to Iran diplomatically while threatening to sanction the Islamic Republic if it does not stand down from its suspected nuclear weapons program.

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Autsralia orders extradition of alleged Nazi war criminal

In a landmark decision, the Australian government approved the extradition to Hungary of an alleged Nazi war criminal.

Home Affairs Minister Brendan O’Connor said Thursday he was satisfied that 88-year-old Perth resident Charles (Karoly) Zentai could be surrendered to Hungarian authorities, who wish to question him about the murder of an 18-year-old Jew in 1944.

Zentai, who has been imprisoned in Perth since Oct. 22, is the first alleged Nazi war criminal Australia has agreed to extradite. He vehemently denies the accusation, saying he was not even in Budapest at the time of the murder of Peter Balazs, who was caught not wearing the yellow Star of David and later found dead in the Danube.

In a statement, O’Connor said: “My decision is not one of determining Mr. Zentai’s guilt or innocence. It was about deciding whether or not Mr. Zentai should be surrendered to Hungary in accordance with Australia’s extradition legislation and its international obligations.”

Zentai, who immigrated to Australia in 1950, will appeal the decision in the Federal Court, further extending the legal case that began in 2005 when Zentai was flushed out by the Simon Wiesenthal Center’s Operation Last Chance.

“It’s important to remember that the passage of time in no way diminishes the guilt of the murderers in the Holocaust,” the Wiesenthal Center’s Efraim Zuroff told The Associated Press. “The victims of the Nazis and their collaborators are just as worthy today that their killers be brought to justice as they were when the crimes were committed.”

Hungary has two months to complete the extradition.

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U.S. Government: Foundation is front for Iran

The U.S. government is moving to seize four mosques and a skyscraper owned by a nonprofit Muslim group that federal prosecutors charge is controlled by Iran’s government.

In a civil complaint filed in federal court Thursday, the U.S. sought to seize more than $500 million in assets controlled by the Alavi Foundation, according to media reports. That included Islamic centers in New York City, Maryland, California and Houston, 100 acres of property in Virginia and a 36-story building on Fifth Avenue in New York City.

Prosecutors called the Alavi foundation a front for Iran. They charged that through a company called Assa Corp, Alavi illegally funneled millions in rental income from the U.S. to Iran’s state-owned Bank Melli. The complaint also alleges that several top Iranian government officials, including the deputy prime minister and U.N. ambassadors, are involved with Alavi.

Such holdings are illegal under laws sanctioning Iran.

The Alavi Foundation was the successor to the Pahlavi Foundation, a nonprofit organization set up by the late Shah of Iran in the 1970s whose mission changed after the Shah’s overthrow.

The mosques and office building will remain open during the legal proceeding, and there were no raids of the property as part of the court filing. Experts said it was rare that the government had attempted to seize a house of worship.

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AND THE WINNER IS…. NOT AN ISRAELI MOVIE


It had been going wonderfully so far. The Utopian atmosphere enveloping the audience made us feel that indeed, Israeli films were getting the international recognition they deserved, proving that in fact, here is Israel, we make good movies. I could almost here the soundtrack of our fuzzy feeling, “…and I think to myself, what a wonderful, wonderful world….”

And then it happened. Enter stage right. Dover Koshashvili takes the mike and the soundtrack changes to “You’re so vain….” As he states matter-of-factly, that he will not be swept into our “euphoria”, and that we are too quick to celebrate the success of Israeli films. Our movies, he says, are “mediocre”… at best.

Let me set stage:  “Sam Spiegel – Film & Television school Jerusalem”  is celebrating 20 years, and yesterday they organized a 12 hour conference to commemorate the event, at the Cinemateque in Jerusalem. The topic: “The Vision of Israeli Cinema”  features well-known personalities and famous members of the Israeli Film Industry such as:

Yael Abecassis (actress and model), Joseph Cedar  (Director and Screenwriter), Shuly Rand  (actor, singer, director and screenwriter), Ari Folman  (Director and Screenwriter), And many more.

When I wasn’t invited to speak, I elegantly crashed the party, and joined the audience of film professionals and Students of the film industry.

Dover Koshashvili,  an acclaimed Israeli director  (Late Marriage, Gift from Above) dared to burst our bubble, and smash the image of Israeli films playing in the big leagues. In his opinion, Israeli films are not all that good, and he’s not sure if we have the abilities to make them better.

The crowd went wild.

Screaming for blood.

A well-known Israeli actress, a Teacher for the school and a fellow director confronted Dover, accusing him of not bothering to watch Israeli films, of crushing the morale of those present and of generally not arguing in an intellectual manner. Although there were only a handful of people participating in this shout-out, I could feel the ground shaking.

Obviously, Koshashvili was treading thin ice, putting down Israeli films and demoralizing future cinema creators – or – was it his way of giving a motivational speech? When asked why our film producers and directors weren’t good enough, he expressed frustration, and couldn’t understand why we didn’t see it for ourselves. Finally, he added: “They’re not Fellini.”

But I was curious. Was Koshashvili on a self-hating rampage? Did the industry deserve his wrath? Did they really care all that much? 

I spent the next several hours interviewing many of the students, and was surprised to learn that most of them did in fact agree with him. They just didn’t feel comfortable expressing their opinion in that particular forum.

But it didn’t make sense. Israeli Films seem to be getting better every year. They’re everywhere. And lately we’ve been on a winning streak, sought after and appreciated by foreign festivals and even nominated for the academy awards. So, if Koshashvili is right you just have to wonder: Does Israel actually deserve the reputation it’s receiving for outstanding film-making?

One film student I interviewed said she had a hard time finding a film worth paying for at the movies, although, she was quick to add, “they are certainly worth downloading.”

Another told me he thought some Israeli films were exceptionally good compared to other Israeli films, but not compared to the films worldwide.

And still another told me that Israeli films all have that heavy atmosphere to them. She had recently come home from Paris and noticed that from the sky, Israel was covered in a cloud , a foggy haze that didn’t dissipate as they came in for a landing. And that, she pointed out, was an appropriate analogy to the film industry.

Tawfik Abu Wael, an accomplished Arab director and screen-writer  (Atash) spoke candidly when he told us he didn’t feel part of the Israeli Film industry. He complained about his unique situation: On the one hand he represents Arabs and makes films about Arabs, and on the other hand, Arabs don’t see movies.

Tawfik’s criticism towards the Israeli Film Industry was courageous and unexpected. He felt that there is indeed an Israeli mainstream, a template which most film-makers are afraid to move away from. He said that not all Israelis are gay, not all are soldiers or left wing, and that he himself would love to see an authentic film of Israeli settlers fighting for their land.

At the end of his short talk, a member of the audience screamed out to him: “Would YOU make a film about Israeli Settlers fighting Arabs for their land?”

Without batting an eyelash, he retorted: “Give me a good script and the money and I’ll make it.”

It’s safe to say that most of us left feeling that the future of the Israeli film industry was in dire straits, not only as far as quality of production and subject matter were concerned, but also because of the growing problems of film piracy, disastrous co-productions, and a sever shortage of funding – all issues that were raised, with a relatively pessimistic view as to solving them.

And yet, the same questions continue to haunt me:  Why does it seem that Israeli Films are gaining recognition around the world? Is it my imagination? Is it a passing fad?

Are Israeli films popular these days because they’re not politically correct? Is conflict “in”? Are our headlines piquing the curiosity of those who think that war and anger are what good movies are all about? Is it the topics we choose rather than the quality?

Or does Israel, in fact, make good movies?

I need to find the answer…soon…before I’m out of a job.

AND THE WINNER IS…. NOT AN ISRAELI MOVIE Read More »

Sholom Rubashkin of Agriprocessors slaughterhouse convicted on 86 fraud charges

A jury convicted Sholom Rubashkin, the former owner of an Iowa kosher slaughterhouse, of 86 out of 91 fraud charges.

The 12-person jury decision on Thursday in Sioux Falls, S.D. likely means that Rubashkin, 50, will spend the rest of his life in prison; combined sentences could reach over 1,250 years.

Federal authorities launched investigations into the Agriprocessors plant in Postville, Iowa after a May 2008 immigration raid. The jury took four days to deliberate after a month-long trial, and convicted him on a range of fraud charges, money laundering and failing to pay his suppliers. Rubashkin’s lawyers had argued that he was an incompetent businessman.

The trial was moved to South Dakota after an Iowa judge agreed that the juror pool had been prejudiced by media coverage.

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Emmy Rossum And Adam Duritz: Love At First Tweet

It was love at first tweet for Emmy Rossum and Adam Duritz.  Well, almost. 

On Thursday, Rossum explained on the radio show Valentine in the Morning that she was invited via Twitter to tour with the band Counting Crows this past summer on a dare.  “They dared me to come sing with them a song that I’d never sung before …”  So she accepted, of course (who would reject a dare?), and joined the band on tour; from then on, it was history.

Rossum recently separated from her husband (music executive Justin Siegel) in August.  Now, she is going public with her relationship with Adam Duritz.  Duritz seems to wind up with the good looking women of Hollywood, having dated Courtney Cox, Mary-Louise Parker and Jennifer Aniston.  From Counting Crows to counting his blessings or his Hollywood women.  “I get why chicks dig him,” Emmy told People.  Maybe it’s his hair? 

Twitter apparently is not just for updates anymore; now dares are included, and maybe even finding one’s beshert.  So if you are single, you never know.  Maybe you too can be tweeted from a dreadlocked rock star.  Phew, I’m safe…I’m married.  But then again, so was she.

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Alleged Jewish terrorist Yaakov Teitel charged with murder

An alleged U.S.-born Jewish terrorist was indicted for two murders and three attempted murders.

Yaakov (Jack) Teitel appeared in Jerusalem District court Thursday, where he was charged with the murders of two Palestinians and attempted murders of Jews.

He was also indicted on several other charges, including smuggling firearms into Israel, and violence against Arabs, gays and lesbians, leftists, police officers and messianic Jews.

The court also agreed to hold Teitel in prison until the end of legal proceedings against him.

“It was a pleasure and an honor to serve my God. I have no regret and no doubt that God is pleased,” Teitel reportedly said in the courtroom.

Teitel, 37, was arrested Oct. 7 in a joint police-Shin Bet operation. Along with allegedly killing the two Palestinians, he also allegedly assembled a package bomb that seriously injured the son of a messianic Jew and set up a pipe bomb near the home of prominent professor Ze’ev Sternhell.

A Florida native, Teitel made aliyah in 2000 and is a resident of the Shvut Rachel outpost in the northern West Bank. He has four young children.

Teitel is reported to have confessed to the two murders. A court-appointed psychiatrist has found Teitel fit to stand trial, according to reports.

Several families of victims hurt by Teitel said they would file a civil suit of about $1 million against him, The Jerusalem Post reported.

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