Eight-year-old
Palestinian girl killed by an Israeli rocket
Palestinian Information Center
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- June 6, 2008
Khan Younis, (PIC)-- The body of 8-year-old Aya al-Najjar was
mutilated on Thursday afternoon by a rocket fired from an
Israeli airplane while she was playing in the garden outside her
house in the village of Khuza'a in the southern Gaza Strip.
The little girl had just finished her school exams and went home
eager to play as she had no more revision to do.
She asked her mother if it was ok for her to play in the garden
and the mother agreed.
An apache helicopter hovered over the place, Aya looked at it
and carried on playing. Neither her nor her mother expected to
be the target of a rocket fired from the apache.
It seems, however, that Zionist hate for everything Palestinian
has no limits as Aya was hit directly with the rocket causing
her young body to be shredded into little pieces.
Aya was not the first Palestinian child to be targeted by the
IOF and will not be the last; Muhammad al-Dora, Iman al-Hams and
Iman Hijjo are but three names, of Palestinian children killed
by the IOF, in a list of about 1000 Palestinian children killed
by the IOF since the start of the Aqsa intifada out of a total
of 5000 Palestinians killed during the same period.
Earlier, Palestinian resistance fighters fired a home made
missile at an Israeli colony in retaliation to an IOF incursion
into the Gaza Strip during which the troops bulldozed tracts of
land and uprooted trees.
The attack resulted in the death of one Israeli settler and the
wounding of three others, according to Israeli sources.
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- Source: http://uruknet.info/?p=m44643&hd=&size=1&l=e
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Zionist Rabbi - Death For
ALL Who Dislike Jews
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- Genocide Announced
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- "All of the Palestinians must be
killed; men, women, infants, and even their beasts."
This was the religious opinion issued one week ago by Rabbi
Yisrael Rosen, director of the Tsomet Institute, a
long-established religious institute attended by students
and soldiers in the Israeli settlements of the West Bank. In
an article published by numerous religious Israeli
newspapers two weeks ago and run by the liberal Haaretz on
26 March, Rosen asserted that there is evidence in the Torah
to justify this stand. Rosen, an authority able to issue
religious opinions for Jews, wrote that Palestinians are
like the nation of Amalekites that attacked the Israelite
tribes on their way to Jerusalem after they had fled from
Egypt under the leadership of Moses. He wrote that the Lord
sent down in the Torah a ruling that allowed the Jews to
kill the Amalekites, and that this ruling is known in Jewish
jurisprudence.
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- Rosen's article, which created a lot of
noise in Israel, included the text of the ruling in the
Torah: "Annihilate the Amalekites from the beginning to
the end. Kill them and wrest them from their possessions.
Show them no mercy. Kill continuously, one after the other.
Leave no child, plant, or tree. Kill their beasts, from
camels to donkeys." Rosen adds that the Amalekites are
not a particular race or religion, but rather all those who
hate the Jews for religious or national motives. Rosen goes
as far as saying that the "Amalekites will remain as
long as there are Jews. In every age Amalekites will surface
from other races to attack the Jews, and thus the war
against them must be global." He urges application of
the "Amalekites ruling" and says that the Jews
must undertake to implement it in all eras because it is a
"divine commandment" .
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- Rosen does not hesitate to define the
"Amalekites of this age" as the Palestinians. He
writes, "those who kill students as they recite the
Torah, and fire missiles on the city of Siderot, spread
terror in the hearts of men and women. Those who dance over
blood are the Amalekites, and we must respond with
counter-hatred. We must uproot any trace of humanitarianism
in dealing with them so that we emerge victorious."
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- The true outrage is that most of those
authorised to issue Jewish religious opinions support the
view of Rabbi Rosen, as confirmed by Haaretz newspaper. At
the head of those supporting his opinion is Rabbi Mordechai
Eliyahu, the leading religious authority in Israel's
religious national current, and former chief Eastern rabbi
for Israel. Rosen's opinion also has the support of Rabbi
Dov Lior, president of the Council of Rabbis of Judea and
Samaria (the West Bank), and Rabbi Shmuel Eliyahu, the chief
rabbi of Safed and a candidate for the post of chief rabbi
of Israel. A number of political leaders in Israel have also
shown enthusiasm for the opinion, including Ori Lubiansky,
head of the Jerusalem municipality.
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- There is no dispute among observers in
Israel that the shooting in Jerusalem three weeks ago that
killed eight Jewish students in a religious school was
pivotal for Jewish authorities issuing religious opinions of
a racist, hateful nature. The day following the Jerusalem
incident, a number of rabbis led by Daniel Satobsky issued a
religious opinion calling on Jewish youth and "all
those who believe in the Torah" to take revenge on the
Palestinians as hastily as possible. A week following the
operation, a group of leading rabbis issued an unprecedented
religious opinion permitting the Israeli army to bomb
Palestinian civilian areas. The opinion is issued by the
"Association of Rabbis of the Land of Israel" and
states that Jewish religious law permits the bombing of
Palestinian civilian residential areas if they are a source
of attacks on Jewish residential areas. It reads, "when
the residents of cities bordering settlements and Jewish
centres fire shells at Jewish settlements with the aim of
death and destruction, the Torah permits for shells to be
fired on the sources of firing even if civilian residents
are present there."
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- The opinion adds that sometimes it is
necessary to respond with shelling to sources of fire
immediately, without granting the Palestinian public prior
warning. A week ago, Rabbi Eliyahu Kinvinsky, the second
most senior authority in the Orthodox religious current,
issued a religious opinion prohibiting the employment of
Arabs, particularly in religious schools. This religious
opinion followed another that had been issued by Rabbi Lior
prohibiting the employment of Arabs and the renting of
residential apartments to them in Jewish neighbourhoods. In
order to provide a climate that allows Jewish extremist
organisations to continue attacking Palestinian citizens,
Rabbi Israel Ariel, one of the most prominent rabbis in the
West Bank settlement complex, recently issued a religious
opinion prohibiting religious Jews involved in attacks
against Palestinians to appear before Israeli civil courts.
According to this opinion, they must instead demand to
appear before Torah courts that rule by Jewish religious
law.
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- Haaretz newspaper noted that what Rabbi
Ariel was trying to achieve through this religious opinion
has in fact already taken place. The first instance of such
a court in Kfar Saba ordered the release of a young Jewish
woman called Tsevia Teshrael who attacked a Palestinian
farmer in the middle of the West Bank. And there are Jewish
religious authorities that glorify killing and praise
terrorists, such as Rabbi Yitzhaq Ginsburg, a top rabbi in
Israel who published a book entitled Baruch the Hero in
memoriam of Baruch Goldstein, who committed the Ibrahimi
Mosque massacre in 1994 when he opened fire and killed 29
Palestinians as they were performing the dawn prayer in
Hebron in the southern West Bank. Ginsburg considers his act
"honourable and glorious".
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- The danger of these religious opinions
lies in the fact that the religious authorities issuing them
have wide respect among religious Jewish youth. And while
only 28 per cent of Israel's population is religious, more
than 50 per cent of Israelis define themselves as
conservative and grant major significance to opinions issued
by Jewish religious authorities. According to a study
conducted by the Social Sciences Department of Bar Elon
University, more than 90 per cent of those who identify as
religious believe that if state laws and government orders
are incongruous with the content of religious opinions
issued by rabbis, they must overlook the former and act in
accordance with the latter.
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- What grants the racist religious opinions
a deeper and far-reaching impact is the fact that for the
last decade followers of the Zionist religious current, who
form nearly 10 per cent of the population, have been seeking
to take control of the army and security institutions. They
are doing so through volunteering for service in special
combat units. The spokesperson's office in the Israeli army
says that although the percentage of followers of this
current is low in the state's demographic makeup, they form
more than 50 per cent of the officers in the Israeli army
and more than 60 per cent of its special unit commanders.
According to an opinion poll of religious officers and
soldiers supervised by the Interdisciplinary Centre Herzliya
and published last year, more than 95 per cent of religious
soldiers and officers say that they will execute orders from
the elected government and their leaders in the army only if
they are in harmony with the religious opinions issued by
leading rabbis and religious authorities.
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- Wasil Taha, Arab Knesset member from the
Tajammu Party led by Azmi Bishara, says that these religious
opinions lead to the committal of crimes. He mentions
religious opinions issued by a number of rabbis in mid-1995
that led to the assassination of former Israeli Prime
Minister Yitzhak Rabin at that time. "If that's what
happens when religious opinions urge attacks against Jewish
leaders such as Rabin, what will the situation be like when
they urge attacks against Palestinian leaders and the
Palestinian public?" he asks. "We, as Arab
leaders, have begun to feel a lack of security following
this flood of religious opinions, and we realise that the
matter requires a great deal of caution in our movements as
we are certain that there are those who seek to implement
these opinions," he told Al-Ahram Weekly.
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- Taha dismisses those who ask about the
role of the government and Israeli political cadre in
confronting these extremist religious opinions. "The
ministers in the Israeli government and the Knesset members
compete to incite against the Palestinian public and don't
hesitate to threaten expulsion of the Palestinians who live
on their land in Israel and carry Israeli citizenship
outside of Israel's borders, just as former deputy premier
Avigdor Lieberman and representative Evi Etam did,"
Taha said. He notes that Palestinian citizens within Israel
have begun to take extreme precautionary measures since the
issue of these religious opinions, including security
measures around mosques and public institutions and
informing officials of public demonstrations so that members
of Jewish terrorist organisations can be prevented from
attacking participants. Taha holds that the sectors of the
Palestinian population most likely to be harmed by these
religious opinions are those living in the various cities
populated by both Jews and Palestinians, such as Haifa,
Jaffa, Lod, Ramleh and Jerusalem.
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- Palestinian writer and researcher Abdul-Hakim
Mufid, from the city Um Fahem, holds that the religious
opinions of rabbis have gained major significance due to the
harmony between official rhetoric and that of the rabbis.
Mufid notes that official Israeli establishments have not
tried to confront the "fascist" rhetoric expressed
in these religious opinions even though they are capable of
doing so. "Most of the rabbis who issue tyrannical
religious opinions are official employees in state
institutions and receive salaries from them. And the state
has not held these rabbis accountable or sought to prohibit
the issue of such opinions," he told the Weekly.
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- Mufid points out that when the official
political institution is in a crisis, the Zionist consensus
behind these religious opinions grows more intense, and
offers as an example the religious opinions relied upon by
Rabbi Meir Kahane in the early 1980s to justify his call to
forcefully expel the Palestinians. Mufid adds that Israel in
practice encourages all those who kill Palestinians, and
points to the way that the Israeli government dealt with the
recommendations of the Orr Commission that investigated the
Israeli police's killing of 13 Palestinians with Israeli
citizenship in October of 2000. The government closed the
file even though the commission confirmed that the police
had acted aggressively towards the Palestinian citizens.
Mufid suggests that what makes the racist rhetoric the
rabbis insist upon influential is the silence of leftist and
liberal voices, and the lack of any direct mobilisation
against it.
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- http://weekly.ahram.org
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