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cheka.
25th December 2016, 11:44 AM
http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/features/2016/12/israeli-rabbis-launch-war-christmas-tree-161223074207821.html

Nazareth - As tens of thousands of Christian pilgrims converge on the Holy Land this week to celebrate the birth of Jesus, senior Israeli rabbis have announced a war on the Christmas tree.

In Jerusalem, the rabbinate has issued a letter warning dozens of hotels in the city that it is "forbidden" by Jewish religious law to erect a tree or stage new year's parties.

Many hotel owners have taken the warning to heart, fearful that the rabbis may carry out previous threats to damage their businesses by denying them certificates declaring their premises to be "kosher".

In the coastal city of Haifa, in northern Israel, the rabbi of Israel's premier technology university has taken a similarly strict line. Elad Dokow, the Technion's rabbi, ordered that Jewish students boycott their students' union, after it installed for the first time a modest Christmas tree.

He called the tree "idolatry", warning that it was a "pagan" symbol that violated the kosher status of the building, including its food hall.

READ MORE: Gaza's Christians - 'Israel can't beat us down'

About a fifth of the Technion's students belong to Israel's large Palestinian minority.

While most of Israel's Palestinian citizens are Muslim, there are some 130,000 Christians, most of them living in Galilee. More Palestinian Christians live under occupation in East Jerusalem, which Israel has annexed in violation of international law.

"This is not about freedom of worship," Dokow told the Technion's students. "This is the world's only Jewish state. And it has a role to be a 'light unto the nations' and not to uncritically embrace every idea."

Rabea Mahajni, a 24-year-old electrical engineering student, said that placing the tree in the union was backed by Palestinian students but had strongly divided opinion among Jewish students and staff. The majority, he said, were against the decision.

"One professor upset [Palestinian] students by taking to Facebook to say that the tree made him uncomfortable, and that those who wanted it should either put one up in their own home or go to Europe," he told Al Jazeera.
Tensions with Israel overshadow Christmas in Palestine

Mahajni added: "This is not really about a Christmas tree. It is about who the tree represents. It is a test of whether Jewish society is willing to accept an Arab minority and our symbols."

He pointed out that Palestinian students had not objected to the students' union also marking Hanukkah, referring to the Jewish winter "festival of lights" that this year coincides with Christmas.

For most of Israel's history, the festive fir tree was rarely seen outside a handful of communities in Israel with significant Christian populations. But in recent years, the appeal of Christmas celebrations has spread among secular Israeli Jews.

Interest took off two decades ago, after one million Russian-speaking Jews immigrated following the fall of the Soviet Union, said David Bogomolny, a spokesman for Hiddush, which lobbies for religious freedom in Israel.

Many, he told Al Jazeera, had little connection to Jewish religious practice in their countries of origin, and had adopted local customs instead.

"The tree [in the former Soviet Union] was very popular but it had nothing to do with Christmas," he said. "Each home had one as a way to welcome in the new year."

Nazareth, which claims to host the tallest Christmas tree in the Middle East, has recently become a magnet for many domestic tourists, including Jews, Christians and Muslims. They come to visit the Christmas market, hear carols and buy a Santa hat.

Haifa and Jaffa, two largely Jewish cities with significant Palestinian Christian populations, have recently started competing. Jaffa, next to Tel Aviv, staged its first Christmas market last year.

READ MORE: Violence hurts Bethlehem's Christmas tourism business

Meanwhile, hotels are keen to erect a tree in their lobbies as a way to boost tourism revenue from Christian pilgrims, who comprise the bulk of overseas visitors.

But the growing popularity of Christmas has upset many Orthodox rabbis, who have significant powers over public space. Bogomolny said that some rabbis were driven by a desire to make the state "as Jewish as possible" to avert it losing its identity.

Others may fear that the proliferation of Christmas trees could lure Israeli Jews towards Christianity.

Wadie Abu Nassar, a spokesman for the Latin Patriarch in Jerusalem, said that he had noticed an increasing interest from Israeli Jews in Christian festivals, including in some cases requests to attend Christmas mass.

He told Al Jazeera this was not a threat to Judaism, but healthy curiosity. "If we want to live together in peace, we have to understand each other and learn to trust," he said.

Given this hostile political climate, the battle to gain legitimacy for our religious symbols becomes all the more important. Otherwise we face a dark future.

Hanna Swaid, former legislator

The controversial status of Christmas in Israel was underscored four years ago when Yair Netanyahu, the 21-year-old son of Israel's prime minister, caused a minor scandal by being photographed wearing a Santa hat next to a Christmas tree.

The office of Benjamin Netanyahu hurriedly issued a statement saying that Yair had posed as a joke while attending a party hosted by "Christian Zionists who love Israel, and whose children served in the [Israeli army]".

Two years earlier, Shimon Gapso, the mayor of Upper Nazareth, originally founded for Jews on Nazareth's land, banned all signs of Christmas in the city's public places. He has been a vociferous opponent of an influx of Christians from overcrowded Nazareth.

The Israeli parliament, the Knesset, has also been declared a Christmas tree-free zone.

In 2013, its speaker rejected a request from Hanna Swaid, then a Palestinian Christian legislator, to erect a tree in the building. Yuli Edelstein said it would evoke "painful memories" of Jewish persecution in Europe and chip away at the state's Jewish character.

Swaid pointed to the prominence of Jewish symbols in public spaces in the United States, including an annual Hanukkah party at the White House, during which the president lights menorah candles.

"Israeli leaders expect the US to be religiously inclusive, but then they refuse to practise the same at home," he told Al Jazeera.

He also noted that the religious freedoms of the Palestinian minority were under ever greater attack, most notably with the recent drafting of a so-called "muezzin bill", which would crack down on mosques' use of loudspeakers for the call to prayer.

"Given this hostile political climate, the battle to gain legitimacy for our religious symbols becomes all the more important," he said. "Otherwise we face a dark future."

READ MORE: Jewish leader demands expulsion of 'Christian vampires'

Nonetheless, there has been a backlash, especially from secular Jews, against the rigid control exercised by Orthodox rabbis.

Haifa's mayor, Yona Yahav, overruled the city's rabbi in 2012 when he tried to ban Christmas trees and new year's parties. The Jewish new year occurs several months before the Christian one.

And last year, in the face of a legal challenge from Hiddush, the chief rabbinate backed down on threats to revoke the kosher certificates of businesses that celebrate Christmas.

But while the ban on Christmas trees has been formally lifted, in practice it is still widely enforced, according to Bogomolny.

"The problem is that the chief rabbinate actually has no authority over city rabbis, who can disregard its rulings, as we have seen with the letter issued by the Jerusalem rabbis," he said.

Most hotels wanted to ignore the prohibition on Christmas trees because it was bad for business, but feared being punished.

"It is a problem throughout the country," he said. "The hotels are afraid to take a stand. If they try to fight it through the courts, it will be costly and could take years to get a ruling."

One hotel manager in West Jerusalem to whom Al Jazeera spoke on condition of anonymity said he feared "retaliation" from the rabbis.

"The letter was clearly intended to intimidate us," he said. "The Christian tourists are here to celebrate Christmas and we want to help them do it, but not if it costs us our certificate."

cheka.
25th December 2016, 11:49 AM
izzy gov working to become spacebook censors

https://www.bloomberg.com/technology

Israeli Ministers Approve ‘Facebook Law’ Against Web Incitement

by Gwen Ackerman
December 25, 2016, 9:01 AM CST

Bill would let court issue warrants for removal of content
Cabinet to discuss tougher measures amid free-speech concerns

Israeli courts could demand that companies such as Facebook Inc. remove content deemed as incitement, under a bill that that will head for parliamentary approval amid concerns about free speech.

The law would give Israel the tools “to have content liable to lead to murder and terror removed immediately,” Public Security Minister Gilad Erdan said via text message after an Israeli ministerial committee approved the bill Sunday.

Erdan and Justice Minister Ayelet Shaked have continued pushing the bill even after Facebook agreed in a September meeting to create joint teams to deal with Internet incitement. Israel’s Cabinet said Sunday it would discuss even tougher measures against violent content on the web, without indicating what those measures might be.

The Internet giants aren’t ignoring the problem: Facebook, Microsoft Corp., Twitter Inc. and YouTube said earlier this month they were creating a shared database to help enforce policies against online terrorist content. After the September meeting in Israel, Facebook said it has “zero tolerance for terrorism.”
Limiting Speech?

In an e-mailed statement Sunday, Facebook said it works “aggressively” to remove problematic content “as soon as we become aware of it.” The company said it hopes to continue a “constructive dialogue” with Israel that includes “careful consideration of the implications of this bill for Israeli democracy, freedom of speech, the open Internet and the dynamism of the Israeli Internet sector.”

Exclusive insights on technology around the world.
Get Fully Charged, from Bloomberg Technology.
Tehilla Shwartz Altshuler, head of the Israel Democracy Institute’s Center for Democratic Values and Institutions, called the bill “an assault on freedom of expression on an international scale.” Compared to similar legislation in other countries, the Israeli bill would hold content providers like Facebook and Google parent Alphabet Inc. to a much higher level of responsibility, Shwartz Altshuler said in an e-mailed statement.

“The ‘Facebook Bill’ needs to be substantially revised,” she said.

After attackers opened fire at a social services center in San Bernardino, California in July, killing 14 people and wounding 22, U.S. President Barack Obama asked Silicon Valley firms to work with law enforcement to prevent terrorists from using social media and encryption technologies to encourage violence.
Influencing Attackers

Shaked noted that some 71 percent of 1,755 complaints about incitement filed to Internet companies this year were addressed immediately. Still, while she welcomed the Internet companies’ cooperation, "it is important that it be obligatory and not on a whim,” she said in an e-mailed statement.

Many Palestinians arrested this year after attacking Israelis said they had been influenced by content on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and other online platforms, Erdan and Shaked said in September.

Lawyers filed a $1 billion lawsuit against Facebook in July, alleging it allowed the Palestinian militant group Hamas to use its platform to plot attacks that killed four Americans. That same month, Erdan accused Facebook of complicity in Palestinian violence, saying the blood of a 13-year-old Israeli girl stabbed to death in her bed was “partially on Facebook’s hands.”

cheka.
25th December 2016, 11:51 AM
ted cruz demands more palestinian genocide

http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/ted-cruz-no-us-funding-for-un-until-israel-vote-reversed/article/2610351

Ted Cruz: No US funding for UN until Israel vote 'reversed'

Texas Sen. Ted Cruz put the United Nations on notice Saturday evening, issuing his toughest statement yet in response to Friday's vote to condemn Israeli settlement building.

In a tweet, the Republican lawmaker said he spoke with Israeli Prime Minister Saturday evening to not only wish him a happy Hanukkah, but also to "assure him of strong support in Congress."

cheka.
25th December 2016, 12:01 PM
http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/1.760525

Israeli TV Authority Bans Advert for Backing Gay Marriage and Arabic Language

A public service announcement from the Association for Civil Rights in Israel has been banned from television because of its message of support for gay marriage.


read more: http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/1.760525

Twisted Titan
25th December 2016, 12:17 PM
Many hotel owners have taken the warning to heart, fearful that the rabbis may carry out previous threats to damage their businesses by denying them certificates declaring their premises to be "kosher".



Fearful of honoring The Father because a group of impostors dangles a few fiat shekels before you?

May The "courage" of your conviction bear witness for you on The Last Day.

crimethink
25th December 2016, 01:20 PM
http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/1.760525

Israeli TV Authority Bans Advert for Backing Gay Marriage and Arabic Language

A public service announcement from the Association for Civil Rights in Israel has been banned from television because of its message of support for gay marriage.


read more: http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/1.760525

I can't criticize them for doing the right thing on this issue.

cheka.
25th December 2016, 10:33 PM
I can't criticize them for doing the right thing on this issue.

it's the blatant hypocrisy that makes it notable. all-fag-all-the-time promotion in the US from their nyc.dc attack base....but not in their country

Neuro
26th December 2016, 12:39 AM
it's the blatant hypocrisy that makes it notable. all-fag-all-the-time promotion in the US from their nyc.dc attack base....but not in their country

It is a war and tolerance=cultural suicide ==>physical suicide=anhilation

Neuro
29th December 2016, 10:15 AM
Just came back from my Latvian shopping trip. Direct from the Christmas market in Riga...
8786
http://gold-silver.us/forum/attachment.php?attachmentid=8786&d=1483031675

As you can see on the pic Sweden is about 90° rotation away from the US, that is why it appears as the decoration hangs sideways, but I can guarantee you it is hanging down here.