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August 9, 2016

Israeli military razes West Bank shelters built by EU

Israel razed five buildings in the West Bank constructed without permits, including three built by the European Union.

Forces from the Civil Administration tore down the buildings Tuesday in a Bedouin village near Hebron. A day earlier, three others were razed near Jericho.

The buildings taken down Tuesday housed 27 Palestinians, including 16 minors, according to the B’Tselem human rights group.

Six prefabricated homes funded by the EU in the same village were razed in April.

Regavim congratulated the Civil Administration on the demolitions, which the Israeli legal advocacy organization said occurred just days after it filed a complaint against the buildings.

“In recent years, the European Union has unilaterally built over a thousand illegal structures across Area C in violation of international law,” Regavim asserted in a statement. Area C of the West Bank is under Israeli military control.

The European Union says that providing the houses and shelters is humanitarian assistance and should not need permits from the Israeli military.

Israeli military razes West Bank shelters built by EU Read More »

Author of Black Lives Matter position on Israel defends ‘genocide’ claim

The co-author of the Black Lives Matter platform passage accusing Israel of “genocide” defended the term, saying Israel’s actions fit in its wider definition.

Ben Ndugga-Kabuye co-authored the statement along with Rachel Gilmer, the former board member of a Zionist youth group. Ndugga-Kabuye told JTA he understood why Jewish groups disagree with the statement, but was perplexed that it has received so much attention.

He compared it with the accusations of genocide that black activists have leveled at the United States and called the Israeli-Palestinian conflict one of many international conflicts U.S. black activists feel connected to.

“The way we look at it is, we take strong stances,” Ndugga-Kabuye, a New York City organizer for the Black Alliance for Just Immigration, told JTA. “The demand we’re making is we’re against the U.S. continuing funding and military aid to the government of Israel. These are all things that are going to be in debate.”

The platform, released Aug. 2 by The Movement for Black Lives coalition, is largely a statement of the goals of a movement that coalesced around police violence directed against black people in the United States, mass incarceration of African-Americans and other domestic issues.

But it also calls for ending U.S. military aid to Israel and accuses Israel of being an apartheid state. The platform includes a link to a website promoting the movement to boycott, divest and sanction Israel called BDS.

“The US justifies and advances the global war on terror via its alliance with Israel and is complicit in the genocide taking place against the Palestinian people” reads the “Invest/Divest” section of “A Vision for Black Lives.”

A string of Jewish organizations, from the Anti-Defamation League to the Reform movement and National Council of Jewish Women, has condemned the genocide and apartheid language as well as the BDS endorsement. T’ruah, a rabbis’ human rights group that opposes Israel’s West Bank occupation, also criticized the document.

Most of the organizations took pains to note that they are sympathetic to other parts of the platform, many of which jibe with liberal Jewish positions on the criminal justice system, economic justice and immigration.

“While we are deeply concerned about the ongoing violence and the human rights violations directed at both Israelis and Palestinians, we believe the terms genocide and apartheid are inaccurate and inappropriate to describe the situation,” NCJW wrote in a statement. “Further, BDS is too often used to de-legitimize Israel’s right to exist.”

Benjamin Ndugga-Kabuye Photo courtesy of Ndugga-Kabuye

Jewish Voice for Peace, which supports BDS, was the rare Jewish group that endorsed the platform in its entirety.

Ndugga-Kabuye said state actions don’t need to rise to the level of the Holocaust or other historical genocides to deserve the term, which he said could connote unjust state killing of a disadvantaged group. He compared his usage of the word to We Charge Genocide, a group that opposes police violence in Chicago.

“We’re talking about a structure of violent deaths that are state sanctioned, that are without accountability, and that are ongoing,” he told JTA. “We can say this is what’s happening in Palestine and not equate it with what’s happening in South America. It doesn’t say it’s the same number of people being killed or the [same] manner of people being killed.”

Ndugga-Kabuye said the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is just one of many international issues the platform comments on — including the dangers African migrants face in crossing the Mediterranean Sea, or conflicts in Somalia, Colombia or Honduras. He said the passage on Israel is longer because “there’s a certain prominence to it, and that may require us to go a little more in detail.” But he said the statements about other conflicts, charging the United States with imperialist actions, are just as strong as the language condemning Israel.

“I don’t see it as a special connection,” Ndugga-Kabuye said about the link between the Movement for Black Lives and the Palestinian cause. “We stand in solidarity with Palestine, but it’s not any different than our connection with the Somali community. It’s not any different than our connection with the Colombian community.”

The vast majority of the platform addresses issues unrelated to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Its six sections deal with physical, social, economic and political discrimination against black people. Among its list of demands is an end to capital punishment, free universal education and a universal basic income for black Americans, the demilitarization of police, a broad reform of the prison system and reparations for black Americans.

In addition to demanding an end to foreign aid for Israel and Egypt, the platform calls for divesting from the fossil fuel industry and reducing the U.S. defense budget.

The platform accuses the U.S. of subjecting black Americans to “food apartheid” and “educational apartheid.” In both cases, it claims the government has deprived black communities of access to the same resources enjoyed by white Americans.

Ndugga-Kabuye told JTA that his goal was “thinking about all the different ways American military policy impacts different black communities across the world and how that’s tied into what’s going on here domestically.”

“The main effort of a number of the sections in the platform is to connect the domestic Movement for Black Lives to the international movement for black lives in a number of different countries,” he said.

Gilmer, the co-author of the Invest/Divest section, told Haaretz her father is African-American and her mother is Jewish. She is a former board member of Young Judaea, a Zionist youth group, although she no longer identifies as Jewish, according to Haaretz, and has become an anti-Israel activist. Now she is the chief of strategy for Dream Defenders, a black community organizing group based in Florida.

(Gilmer did not respond to  email and Facebook messages from JTA seeking comment.)

Dream Defenders released a statement doubling down on the genocide language. The statement accused pro-Israel critics of being “wolves in sheep’s clothing” for supporting the Black Lives Matter movement only as long as it supports Israel. It asserted that Israel committed genocide during its 1948 War of Independence, as some 700,000 Palestinians were expelled from Israel or fled and were prevented from returning.

Fighting Israeli “apartheid,” the statement said, is inseparable from fighting racism in America. It called on its allies to join the BDS campaign.

“As Black people fighting for our freedom, we are not thugs and our Palestinian brothers and sisters are not terrorists,” the statement said. “For the children who are met with tear gas and rubber bullets as they walk home from school, for the families of those we have lost to police violence, for the communities devastated by economic violence and apartheid walls, we fight.”

On Friday, Jewish Voice for Peace released a statement from a group called the Jews of Color Caucus backing the platform’s section on Israel.

“We call on the U.S. Jewish community to end its legitimization of anti-Black racism through its combined attacks on the Black Lives Matter Platform and U.S. Palestine solidarity,” the statement said. “We call on the U.S. Jewish groups that have engaged in this anti-Black violence to retract their racist and harmful statements.”

Mainstream Jewish groups rejected the notion that because they object to the use of the term “genocide” and the emphasis on Israel, they are opposed to the economic and social justice goals of the Black Lives Matter movement. The groups noted how difficult, if not impossible, it is for them to work with members of Black Lives Matter on common causes when the Israel language signals they are not welcome.

“JCRC cannot and will not align ourselves with organizations that falsely and maliciously assert that Israel is committing ‘genocide,'” wrote Boston’s Jewish Community Relations Council in a statement on the platform. That being said, the statement continued, “As we dissociate ourselves from the Black Lives Matter platform and those BLM organizations that embrace it, we recommit ourselves unequivocally to the pursuit of justice for all Americans, and to working together with our friends and neighbors in the African-American community, whose experience of the criminal justice system is, far too often, determined by race.”

Ndugga-Kabuye said he understood that the genocide term could prevent some Jews from joining the Black Lives Matter movement, but said it was “something we have to consider, but it’s also something we have to accept.” He said negative Jewish reactions to the platform recalled the later years of the 1960s civil rights movement, when white and black allies split over tactics and ideology.

He rejected the idea that accusing Israel of genocide makes the movement anti-Semitic, saying the accusation is not connected to Israel’s Jewish character.

“Are you saying I’m committing genocide because of who I am, my identity?” Ndugga-Kabuye said, hypothetically placing himself in Israel’s role. “That would obviously be racist. But if you’re talking about a series of policies that are in place between one group over another, folks may argue we’re wrong, but the question of whether we’re anti-Semitic is another question altogether.”

Author of Black Lives Matter position on Israel defends ‘genocide’ claim Read More »

Stop Being Afraid of Being Afraid: Motivation for the Next Step

On Mondays, I write about motivation as inspiration for myself and to share about myself and ” target=”_blank”>Travel Writing Awards on We Said Go Travel.

For the past month, I have written more about my battles to believe that I can make this website into something great. In Malcolm Gladwell’s “ This is what I have been wondering. Is it worth it? How do you know? Last Sunday at ceramics class, the instructor told the students who asked how do you know when you are done centering, “When you are done, you are done.” No one else can tell you. I have really been pondering this phrase and the quote above from Gladwell.

Should I pitch more articles? Make more videos? Add more ads? Change the format? Play by the rules? Strike Back? Forgive? “When you are done, you are done.”

I am watching the national political conventions and thinking about the upcoming Olympics, all of these people are convinced they CAN do it. Win the gold medal or be the next president. However, they cannot all win. They cannot all come home with gold. But, there is room for And, as we know, David did beat the giant, as Gladwell tells us: “David came running toward Goliath, powered by courage and faith…He was an underdog and a misfit, and that gave him the freedom to try things no one else even dreamt of.

I wonder what would happen if I just decided to go for it as if I was working towards a gold medal in the Olympics or running for president. Where could We Said Go Travel end up? As I write this, the site is ranked 104,683 for USA Alexa which means it is nearly in the top 100,000 of all sites in the USA according to Alexa. By Similar Web, it is #22,122 in travel sites. Maybe things are going better than I realize.

” target=”_blank”>on video. In December 2014, I had 320 videos with 580 subscribers and 280,000 views. In December 2015, I had 400 videos live on YouTube. As of today, there are 540 videos, over 1050 subscribers, and nearly 465,000 views on YouTube. With my video views on other platforms, I have over 650,000 views! By October for my birthday, I hope to have 3/4 of a million video views! Maybe I am doing just fine.

I like what Gladwell writes about courage:

Courage is not something that you already have that makes you brave when the tough times start. Courage is what you earn when you’ve been through the tough times and you discover they aren’t so tough after all.”

This summer I stopped believing in myself again. It has not been good. I have been through tough times and I am strong. I need to remind myself that I can do it. I am doing it. Things are growing and changing for the better. I believe in myself and in We Said Go Travel. Thank you for reading and participating and being there for me. I am grateful.

I want to remember that I am a brave rebel and I can do it. We can do it together. I do not need to be president or take home a gold medal. I need to just take the next step and then the one after that. That is the only way forward.

I want to remember what Gladwell says about fear:

We are all of us not merely liable to fear, we are also prone to be afraid of being afraid, and the conquering of fear produces exhilaration.…The contrast between the previous apprehension and the present relief and feeling of security promotes a self-confidence that is the very father and mother of courage.

I hope you will have a courageous August! Lisa

I wanted to share videos about icons who created their own way and are being remembered for their choices. In May at The Beverly Hills Hotel, I was invited to preview the recently renovated bungalows. Bungalow #5 is in decorated in the style and in honor of Frank Sinatra. Bungalow #22 is where Elizabeth Taylor spent 6 of her 8 honeymoons.

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Lithuanian city defends recreational events at former Nazi concentration camp

The city of Kaunas in Lithuania defended the operator of a former concentration camp where recreational events are held near the graves of thousands of Jews killed by Nazis and local collaborators.

Deputy Mayor Povilas Maciulis made his defense of the Seventh Fort this week following an article published last month by JTA about summer camps, barbecue parties, treasure hunts and camping activities there. In 2009 the city privatized the site, which is run by a nongovernmental organization, the Military Heritage Center, headed by 37-year-old amateur historian, Vladimir Orlov.

“Yes, there are activities carried out in the museum, however, they are exclusively educational and pertaining to the museum’s purpose,” Maciulis wrote in a statement that he sent to several people a few days after the Israel director of the Simon Wiesenthal Center, Efraim Zuroff, asked the mayor to intervene to have festivities banned from the Seventh Fort – a former military complex that was turned into a camp in 1941.

During a July 12 visit to the Seventh Fort, JTA documented children playing and dancing near the barbecue corner at the entrance to the camp. Asked whether one could have a wedding reception at the site, Orlov told a JTA reporter: “This is not a problem, it sometimes happens here,” and said he would send a price quote in an email, which never arrived.

Zuroff and the Lithuanian novelist Ruta Vanagaite independently confirmed the holding of recreational activities at the Seventh Fort in a Lithuanian-language book they coauthored and published earlier this year. Following the JTA expose, the news portal Lrytas published photos of a camping activity on the grounds.

On Friday, the city posted on its website an interview with Orlov in an unsigned article titled “Journalistic provocation didn’t work out: Kaunas respects and cherishes the memory of Jewish people.”

In it, Orlov is quoted as saying: “No wedding party has even been hosted in the territory of the Fort,” though “on several occasions newlyweds applied … with a request to arrange photo shoots at the Fort, in the museum, surrounded by historic items.”

Orlov said a mass grave for those who died at the camp – which is commemorated only by a pole — accounts for only 2 percent of the camp and that no festivities are held there. According to the book by Zuroff and Vanagaite, Orlov exhumed bones found on the premises that had been reburied there in 2014 with help from the Jewish Community of Lithuania.

The community said in a statement that it has complained to authorities in the past about the absence of commemoration and the festivities.

According to a 2011 report by the Delfi news agency, Orlov has received European Union subsidies that make up part of a $160,000 budget for maintaining the Seventh Fort.

In the interview with Orlov, the city said it had “made a resolution to put in order the place of the Jewish massacre at the Seventh Fort” and that “this autumn the stairs will be arranged close to the mass grave, a place to have a seat and rest.” A “memorial stone will be erected in the location,” it added.

Zuroff told JTA he hoped the city would follow through but that the official reaction so far “is a cop-out.”

The failure to reply to his letter, he said, is indicative of a larger lack of motivation on the part of authorities in Lithuania to commemorate Holocaust victims seriously.

“Instead of treating the problem,” Zuroff said, “the municipality denies its existence.”

Lithuanian city defends recreational events at former Nazi concentration camp Read More »

Israeli judo star loses out on Olympic medal

Sagi Muki of Israel failed to medal in the judo under-73 kg weight class after advancing to the semifinals at the Rio Olympics.

Muki lost to Lasha Shavdatuashvili of Georgia in the bronze medal match on Monday after losing earlier in the day to Azerbaijan’s Rustam Orujov in the semifinals. The Israeli finished in fifth place.

Muki, the current European champion in his weight class, defeated American Nick Delpopolo in the quarterfinals earlier Monday.

Israel, which has sent its largest delegation ever to the Rio games, has failed to medal through the first four days of competition.

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Two million cut off from running water in Aleppo

This article originally appeared on The Media Line.

The ongoing battle between troops loyal to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and various rebel groups has crippled the infrastructure in Aleppo and left two million residents without running water, according to the UN. The crisis was caused by attacks on the electricity transmission station that pumped water to the eastern and western parts of the city.

“Children and families in Aleppo are facing a catastrophic situation. These cuts are coming amid a heat wave, putting children at a grave risk of waterborne diseases,” UNICEF's representative in Syria, Hanaa Singer told The Media Line. “Getting clean water running again cannot wait for the fighting to stop. Children's lives are in serious danger.”

Dr. Zaher Shaloul, a Syrian-American doctor told an informal Security Council meeting organized by the US that medical facilities in eastern Aleppo are routinely targeted by Syrian bombings, and that people are dying from treatable conditions. “We don't need condemnations, prayers or pointing fingers, we had enough of that. I ask you to meet the people of Aleppo and see them as humans. I have one request, besides saving Shahd, visit Aleppo yourself and meet with its doctors, nurses and patients. If three doctors from Chicago were able to do that, you can do it,” Shaloul told diplomats.

His statement came as the World Health Organization (WHO) said that more than 15 doctors who were outside Aleppo when the government laid siege to the eastern part of mid-July were now unable to return. The organization said that there were at least ten attacks on medical facilities in eastern Aleppo just in July.

Aleppo is just the latest example of the grinding conflict that has left an estimated 500,000 dead in Syria and millions displaced as internal or external refugees. International efforts to end the fighting have failed, and Syria only makes the news when the death toll is even higher than “normal.”

“Syria has become the main arena for influence and gain in the Middle East,” Nir Boms, a Syria expert at the Moshe Dayan Center for Middle Eastern and African Studies at Tel Aviv University told The Media Line. “This war is being fought by proxies. This is how world wars are fought today.”

On one side of the conflict is Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, who is supported by Iran, Hizbullah and Russia. While many Mideast analysts thought that Assad was on the verge of collapse a year ago, he has since rallied, and with the help of Russian airstrikes, scored some impressive gains against various rebel forces.

The most important of the rebel forces are the al-Nusra Front, an offshoot of al-Qa’ida, and the Islamic State which has established a “caliphate” in Raqqa. The US position has been that Assad has carried out atrocities against his people and must leave. At the same time, the US wants to see a transitional administration. Since 2014, the US had conducted airstrikes on Islamic State.

The rebel groups are also supported by Turkey, which has been a conduit for arms and fighters for rebel groups, as well as Sunni Arab states such as Saudi Arabia and Qatar.

Tensions between these two groups have played out against the background of the Syrian conflict. Turkey and Russia, which used to be close allies, fell out over Turkey’s downing of a Russian warplane along its border last year, described by Russian President Vladimir Putin as “a stab in the back.”

The two countries moved toward reconciliation this week, with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s visit to Moscow this week, his first since an attempted coup last month. The two leaders were all smiles at the visit.

“The region has expectations of us politically. I believe that our solidarity will help toward the resolution of regional problems,” Erdogan said.

One regional power staying out of the conflict is Israel, which has made it clear it has no intention of getting involved. Israel has treated hundreds of wounded Syrians, many of them from various rebel groups, but has not gotten involved in the fighting.

Cynically, some Israelis say that as long as there is inter-Arab fighting, these groups will be too busy to attack the Jewish state. Boms says that there is also fear that the war could spill over.

“This type of war is not good for Israel,” he said. “You don’t want to live in area where there are constant wars.”

Two million cut off from running water in Aleppo Read More »

2nd Gaza humanitarian worker indicted for assisting Hamas

A United Nations humanitarian aid worker in Gaza used his position to provide material assistance to the terrorist efforts of Hamas, Israel’s Shin Bet security service said.

Waheed Borsh, 38, was indicted in Beersheba District Court on Tuesday for assisting Hamas. It is the second indictment of a Gaza Palestinian aid worker accused of assisting Hamas in the last week.

Borsh was arrested on July 16 by the Shin Bet and the Israel Police, the Shin Bet said in a statement issued Tuesday. The statement said Borsh confessed that he carried out activities that aided Hamas.

Borsh, from Jabaliya in the Gaza Strip, has worked for the United Nations Development Programme, or UNDP, in Gaza as an engineer since 2003. His areas of responsibility include demolishing houses damaged during armed conflicts and clearing the rubble from sites after demolition.

The UNDP, one of the world’s largest multilateral development agencies, conducts development and rehabilitation projects for the Palestinian population of the Gaza Strip. The projects include assisting in the rehabilitation of housing damaged during armed conflicts.

The Shin Bet said its investigation of Borsh discovered that he had been instructed by a senior member of Hamas to redirect his work for UNDP to serve Hamas’ military interests.

In one such activity last year, he helped build a military jetty in the northern Gaza Strip for Hamas naval forces using UNDP resources, the Shin Bet said. Borsh also persuaded UNDP managers to prioritize the rehabilitation of housing in areas populated by Hamas members in response to a request by Hamas.

Borsh, who told investigators that there are other Palestinians employed by aid organizations that are working for Hamas, also disclosed information on Hamas tunnels and military bases that he had been exposed to during his work in Gaza, the Shin Bet said.

The Borsh case “demonstrates how Hamas exploits the resources of international aid organizations at the expense of the civilian population of the Gaza Strip,” according to the statement.

On Thursday, the Shin Bet announced the arrest of Mohammed El-Halabi, 32, director of the Gaza branch of the international humanitarian aid organization World Vision, on charges that he funneled tens of millions of dollars from the charity to Hamas.

2nd Gaza humanitarian worker indicted for assisting Hamas Read More »

From Munich to Munich to Munich: Defense Minister Lieberman does not learn from history

I was the news editor of a daily newspaper (Haartez) the night Ariel Sharon implicitly compared George W. Bush to Neville Chamberlain. I remember that night, because it was one of the busiest, craziest nights in an era filled with such nights. That day, an airplane, making its way from Tel Aviv to Novosibirsk, dived into the Black Sea along with 78 people on board. There was a terror attack that day in Israel – these were the early days of the second Intifada. And lastly, late at night, as we were planning to put the paper to bed, several settlers wandered into Palestinian territory and a rush to rescue them was under way.

And there was also the speech. Sharon’s speech. “Do not repeat the dreadful mistake of 1938,” he warned the world, US included, “when enlightened European democracies decided to sacrifice Czechoslovakia for a convenient temporary solution.” In Israel, it barely registered. As far as I remember, ours was the only newspaper to give it some space on the front page. Even then, it was just one column on the right side. Even then, there was a debate the next morning among several of the senior editors of the paper about whether giving it space on the front page on such a day was the right decision. It was, after all, just a speech, given on a bloody day.

But the so-called Munich speech did register in Washington and hence became a teachable moment in Sharon’s term as Prime Minister. The “bull” – as Bush sometimes called him – had to learn certain manners of restraint. Frantic phone calls from Washington and Jerusalem were made in the hours following the speech, and, to Sharon’s credit, it did not take him long to realize that he is going to have to climb off the tall tree rather than expect an American ladder of forgetfulness or forgiveness.

“Unfortunately, the metaphor in my words was not understood correctly, and I'm sorry about that,” the proud Prime Minister said. He was apologizing, taking his words back. He knew that State Department officials were inflating the anger over his speech. He knew that Secretary Colin Powell was working behind his back on a plan for Israel and Palestine. He had reasons to worry, and he had reasons to be frustrated with the administration. And yet, there are things a Prime Minister of Israel cannot say – not even implicitly – about an American President. Sharon learned his lesson. The Munich speech was the last major incident of carless statements of this sort.

Apparently, Avigdor Lieberman, Israel’s Defense Minister, did not learn the lesson. Maybe he forgot the Munich speech, maybe it did not register – as I said, the speech was not a huge story in Israeli public debate as it was in diplomatic circles. Whatever the case, it is now Lieberman’s turn to learn a lesson. Last week his Defense Ministry was blunt in its response to Obama’s ridiculous implied claim that “the country that was most opposed to the deal” is now in favor of the Iran deal. “Israeli military and security community … acknowledges this has been a game changer,” the President said. No wonder that smoke came out of Lieberman’s ears. No wonder that he was angry. No wonder that he wanted to set the record straight (no – Israel still does not think the deal was a great achievement).

So his ministry released a statement in which Obama was implicitly compared to – well – I guess Chamberlain is an option: “The Munich agreement”, the statement said, “did not prevent the Second World War and the Holocaust, precisely because their basic assumption, that Nazi Germany could be a partner to any kind of agreement, was wrong, and because the leaders of the world at that time ignored the explicit statements by Hitler and the rest of the leaders of Nazi Germany.” So Iran is today’s Nazi Germany, and the Munich agreement is the Iran deal. The deal Obama advanced. The deal in which he believes.

It is ironic that his trying to teach the president a history lesson – Munich, Nazis – is proof that Israel’s Defense Minister refuses to learn his own history lesson – Bush, Sharon. So now it is Lieberman’s turn to apologize and learn Sharon’s lesson. It is a simple lesson, really: No matter how frustrated you are with the American President, with his policies, with speeches in which he makes preposterous claims about Israel’s positions – Israel cannot, and ought not, compare the president of the United States, explicitly or implicitly, to Neville Chamberlain. Clearly, Prime Minister Netanyahu knows this. He was also unhappy with Obama’s remarks, and was blindsided by his Defense Minister, who did not deem it necessary to consult with anyone before releasing his own statement. Clearly, Lieberman needs to learn this the hard way: by climbing down a tree without a ladder, clarifying his comments, and damaging his image as a Trump-like truth-teller who fears no one.

He does fear someone. He fears Obama. Here is one proof, for those who still need any, that Obama is no Neville Chamberlain.

From Munich to Munich to Munich: Defense Minister Lieberman does not learn from history Read More »

Germany’s “love letter” to a granddaughter of Holocaust survivors

In response to my “Love Letter to Germany,” which was translated into German for
 Die Achse Des Guten and then went viral, I received a love letter back from Germany!

Dear Orit

I want to thank you for you love letter you have written to me.  Thank you with all my heart. It surprises me. It makes me feel embarrassed. It makes me feel ashamed of myself.

I know this has not been your intention. But all the horror I have inflicted upon your grandparents – and thereby upon you as well – and upon your entire people does not become less horrible because it is our past, but it becomes even more horrible because sadly anti-Semitism is still and again our present – more than it seems to you when you fortunately feel my embrace.

And I have learned the wrong lesson from our common history. “Never again war” is the wrong lesson. “Never again lack of freedom” would be the right lesson. Most importantly, however, your love letter makes me feel incredibly good. It gives me comfort and courage – and confidence and hope that I will still learn the right lesson after all.

Now Israel and I have common concerns. Hopefully this will be redemptive for all of us. I can and have to learn a lot from Israel.

Hopefully we will save freedom and gain safety together. Your declaration of your love to me means a lot to me, Orit. Now you are in my heart – in Berlin.  I want to be responsive to your pleas. I want to take care of myself. And I want to take care of you. I hope I will accomplish that.May G-d protect and bless you, your family, and Israel.

Love,

Germany
unofficially represented by Matthias Stöhr

Now, if only Germany had actually written this letter, we would really be able to open a new chapter in our tortured history.

Thank you, Germany (as unofficially represented by Matthias)!

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Game of Thrones Live Concert Event

Today my daughter and I were delighted to attend the Game of Thrones Live Concert Event at the Hollywood Palladium Theater in Los Angeles.  This special event began with the USC Marching Band proudly marching a few blocks to the Palladium.   Next the doors opened to the theater, to reveal wonderful costumes, exhibits, props and banners from the wildly popular HBO Series.

Then, after an announcement about the Live Concert Experience, which will visit 28 cities throughout North American in 2017, the full orchestra started playing that magnificent music.  Game of Thrones Composer Ramin Djawadi was on hand with Actor Isaac Hempstead Wright from the series.  Breathtaking!

The organizers handled the many fans and executed the event beautifully, as they performed the music three times to allow everyone to get in and see and hear it with good crowd control.  Tickets for the Game of Thrones Live Concert Experience go on sale August 13.  For more information visit gameofthronesconcert.com.

I would like to thank my daughter Lauren, a talented photographer, for taking and editing most of the wonderful photos of today’s event.  You can see more of them it the gallery at joybennett.com under the August 9, 2016 blog entry.

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