Google Groups no longer supports new Usenet posts or subscriptions. Historical content remains viewable.
Dismiss

"Anti-Semitism is spreading around the world in a kind of tsunami effect", says Chief Rabbi Sir Jonathan Sacks. BBC News

0 views
Skip to first unread message

Rutherford@001-mayfield.net Fred Rutherford

unread,
Jan 1, 2006, 4:28:18 PM1/1/06
to
<<<In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C.Sec. 107. - Limitations on exclusive
rights: Fair use [The fair use of a copyrighted work, including such use by
reproduction in copies or phonorecords or by any other means specified by that
section, for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching
(including multiple copies for classroom use), scholarship, or research, is not
an infringement of copyright. [I]n any particular case is a fair use the factors
to be considered shall include - (1) whether such use is of a commercial
nature or is for nonprofit educational purposes.. ((this material is distributed
without profit or payment to those who have expressed a prior interest in
receiving this information for non-profit research and educational purposes
only. - FAIR USE INTENDED))>>>

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/4573052.stm
(Link active January 1, 2006. Archived locally as: BBC4573052)

Excerpt:

Sunday, 1 January 2006, 09:22 GMT

Warning of 'anti-Semitic tsunami'

Sir Jonathan blamed prime time TV and best-selling books

Anti-Semitism is spreading around the world in a kind of tsunami effect, says
Chief Rabbi Sir Jonathan Sacks.

Globalisation had led some people to wrongly see Israel as the cause of all the
world's conflicts, he told BBC Radio 4's Sunday Programme.

Holocaust denial and hatred of Jews were circulating widely in best-selling
books and prime time TV, he warned...

He said conflicts around the globe had begun to have uncomfortable repercussions
for some Jewish communities in Europe, the chief rabbi claimed.

"This is all a kind of tsunami of anti-Semitism which is taking place a long way
from this country but (of) which Europe seems unaware," he said.

He said that while the Jewish experience of Britain was generally good, British
Jews were experiencing a globalised anti-Semitism through satellite television,
e-mails and the internet.

He claimed anti-Jewish feeling was on the rise in European countries such as
France.

"A number of rabbinical colleagues throughout Europe have been assaulted and
attacked on the streets.

"We've had synagogues desecrated. We've had Jewish schools burn to the ground -
not here but in France."

'Reconciliation'

Figures from the UK-based Community Security Trust, which monitors anti-Semitic
incidents and advises the Jewish community on such matters, said it had seen a
huge rise in incidents last year.

Some 532 anti-Semitic incidents were recorded by the trust in 2004, 83 of which
were physical assaults.

Sir Jonathan added that he was concerned that more was not being done to change
attitudes...

<END>

Also see:

http://groups.google.com/group/alt.politics.nationalism.white/msg/a1f67a4fdf64a61f
Subject: Anti-semitism on rise worldwide aka Anti-Semitism in Sweden (Expanded)
V2.0 S_0201 Date: Sun, 01 Feb 2004 06:51:44 -0600
Message-ID: <eksp10dhmvhl7iq5v...@4ax.com>
[The above archive relates to the rising anti-Semitism (against Jews) in Sweden,
Greece, France, Germany, The United States and elsewhere!]

Excerpt:

Omaha World-Herald

Published Tuesday
January 21, 2003

Poll indicates anti-Semitism on rise among young Americans

THE WASHINGTON POST

Anti-Semitism may be increasing in the United States as more young adults
express bigoted views about Jews than do middle-aged Americans, according to a
national poll by the Institute for Jewish and Community Research in San
Francisco.

On question after question, researchers found that the proportion of Americans
ages 18 to 35 who held anti-Semitic views was consistently higher than the
percentage of middle-aged Americans who shared those attitudes.

For example, nearly one in four young adults - 23 percent - agreed with the
statement that Jews were a "threat" to the country's "moral character," a view
shared by 15 percent of Americans between ages 45 and 54. And 20 percent of
young adults agreed that Jews "care only about themselves," compared with 12
percent of middle-aged Americans.

Gary Tobin, president of the group that commissioned the survey, suggested that
the disquieting results may reflect "the blurring of anti-Israelism and
anti-Semitism on college campuses" and that "the social norms against
anti-Semitism that took root following the Holocaust have worn off."

The survey of about 1,000 randomly selected adults was conducted in May. The
margin of sampling error was plus or minus 3 percentage points. <END>

The above text was also archived at:
http://www.fpp.co.uk/online/03/01/WashPost230101.html
(Link active September 23, 2003 and is complete with original Washington Post
Graphics! Archived locally as: WashPost230101)

America is not the only nation with rising anti-semitism.

http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=29841
(Archived locally as: 29841)

Europe's new face of anti-Semitism
5 countries now ban production of kosher meat as synagogues burn, boycott of
Israel continues

Posted: December 3, 2002
1:00 a.m. Eastern

WorldNetDaily.com

One of the first steps in Adolf Hitler's anti-Semitic drive in the creation of
his Third Reich was instituting a ban on the kosher slaughter of animals.

Today, as a new wave of ugly, and sometimes violent, anti-Semitism sweeps
through the European continent, at least five countries have banned kosher food
production, and one of them is considering halting all import of kosher meat.

The latest nation to join the movement is Holland, where the move was guised in
concern for cruelty to animals.

"They simply don't want foreigners and they don't want Jews," said Rabbi Michael
Melchior, former chief rabbi of Norway, another European nation that bans kosher
meat production. "I won't say this is the only motivation, but it's certainly no
coincidence that one of the first things Nazi Germany forbade was kosher
slaughter. I also know that during the original debate on this issue in Norway,
where shechitah has been banned since 1930, one of the parliamentarians said
straight out, 'If they don't like it, let them go live somewhere else.'"

While animal-rights activists have indeed been at the forefront of the recent
efforts to ban kosher slaughter, there is growing concern on the part of people
like Melchior, now an Israeli official, that initiatives spreading through
Europe are gaining popularity because of deep-seated anti-Semitism manifesting
itself in many other ways, from Belgium to Germany to France and Switzerland.

On Saturday, unknown assailants hurled a Molotov cocktail at a synagogue in the
Belgian port city of Antwerp, where riots by Arab immigrants began a week ago
following the shooting of a 27-year-old Moroccan immigrant. About 30,000 people
of Arab origin live in Antwerp. It is also home to a long-established Orthodox
Jewish community of about 20,000.

Several weeks ago, Germany announced a decision to stop all arms sales to
Israel. This comes at a time when attacks on memorials to Nazi-era victims are
on the rise. In at least seven attacks this year, extremists destroyed a
memorial plaque at Raben-Steinfeld, vandalized a memorial in Woebbelin and a
memorial column in Lutterow, and drew a swastika on the grounds of the
Sachsenhausen concentration camp on the Nov. 9 anniversary of Krystalnacht, or
the Night of Broken Glass, when Nazis targeted Jewish businesses and synagogues
in 1938.

German police are investigating an incident last month where anti-Semitic
disruptions occurred at a Berlin ceremony to restore a street name referring to
Jews that was erased by Nazi officials in 1938. Hecklers at the event booed,
whistled and shouted slogans including "Jews out" and "The Jews crucified
Jesus," according to Germany's Central Council of Jews. Paul Spiegel, the
group's head, said he was horrified and that the incident "reminds us painfully
of the late 1920s," when the Nazis began their rise to power in Germany. The
event re-established Juedenstrasse – an old German word for Jews' Street – in
the western district of Spandau after years of deliberations by local officials.
The name, dating back to the 16th century, recalls Spandau's former Jewish
community. Under Nazi rule, the street was renamed for Gottfried Kinkel, a
19th-century poet and art historian who was once imprisoned in Spandau.

Fiona Macaulay, public affairs director of the Board of Deputies of British
Jews, says incidents of anti-Semitism have increased 400 percent in Britain
since the start of the intifada in the fall of 2000.

A one-day international conference on sanctions and divestment in London last
week called for a boycott of Israel "not dissimilar to the campaign which
contributed to the end of apartheid in South Africa."
Of course, it's not just Europe that is experiencing a wave of new
anti-Semitism.

Avi Beker, the secretary-general of the World Jewish Congress, says in the past
two years Jews around the world have experienced the worst anti-Semitism since
World War II, primarily because of the effects of the Middle East conflict. In
Canada, the U.S. and Europe, there have been attacks on synagogues and other
Jewish centers as well as individual Jews, he says.

"Anti-Semitism, showing itself to be the most enduring and the hardiest
manifestation of the racism virus, has reared its ugly head once again," says
Keith Landy, the Canadian Jewish Congress president. Landy said across the world
Jewish people continue to face discrimination, harassment and violence because
of their faith. It is a sad day for any religion when a security guard must be
posted at the door of a place of worship so people may pray in safety – a common
occurrence at many Jewish synagogues, he stated. "Instead of declaring 'never
again,' we find ourselves painfully asking, 'will it ever end?'"

Since October 2000, there have been 300 anti-Semitic occurrences in Canada, he
said. Also, he argued, the current international attack on Israel is clear
anti-Semitism.

Australia's Jewish community is also experiencing the highest level of
anti-Semitism since statistics were first collected 57 years ago, figures
released recently by the Executive Council of Australian Jewry showed.

Council President Jeremy Jones told United Press International there were 593
reports of anti-Semitism in the year to Sept. 30, with incidents ranging from
physical and verbal assaults to firebombs thrown at synagogues and community
centers, telephone threats, hate mail and e-mail.

He said there are dozens of groups perpetrating hate crimes. The main ones are
the Australian League of Rights, the Adelaide Institute, neo-Nazi fringe groups
and the Citizens Electoral Councils, which are followers of U.S.-based Lyndon H.
LaRouche Jr.

The man with the highest profile is historian Frederick Toben of the Adelaide
Institute, who, like British historian David Irving, denies the existence of the
Holocaust.

Jones also lamented what he calls horrific material from Muslims in Australia
and singles out Sheik Taj al Din al Hilaly, spiritual leader of Australia's
Muslims and one of the country's most contentious religious figures. After he
arrived from Egypt in 1982, the government tried to expel him for making
statements condemned as incitement to racial hatred. A Sydney Morning Herald
journalist, Alan Ramsey, wrote that these included comments that Jews are the
underlying cause of all wars, use sex and abominable acts of sodomy to control
the world, and that Jews had a malicious disposition toward all mankind.

But it is in Europe where anti-Semitism is getting the most attention – perhaps
because the Holocaust occurred just a generation earlier in the continent.

When there was an effort by Jews in Switzerland to lift the century-old ban on
the production of kosher meat, an anti-Semitic backlash erupted earlier this
year.

"This is a trend that is very much worrying us," said Beker. He points out that
a movement in Sweden, another European nation that bans kosher slaughter,
attempted to ban ritual circumcision – the quintessential rite of passage for
Jewish males. "We regard this as interference in Jewish religious practices."

Abraham Foxman, the national director of the Anti-Defamation League, said bans
on kosher slaughter are the result of activism between animal-rights extremists
"aided and abetted" by anti-Semitic politicians.

"Sometimes anti-Semites will use this as a vehicle to try to isolate the Jewish
community by reaching out to those who are so preoccupied with animal rights,"
he told Jewish Week. "The key is whether or not there is a history in that
country. ... What other issues of animal rights have they engaged in to prohibit
cruelty? When they begin and end with kosher slaughter, that's when I become
suspect."

While the Holland ban offers some loopholes to the Jewish community in the
country, the Swiss ban on shechitah may go even further. The government earlier
this year considered a ban on the import of kosher meat, and the Swiss Animal
Association is calling for a national referendum on barring the import of such
products. A poll shows 76 percent of the population would support such a move.

"It's ominous," said Rabbi Menachem Genack, the kashrut administrator for the
Orthodox Union, the largest kosher-certifying organization in the world. "This
kind of legislation in Europe has to be understood in the context of European
history. A person would have to be extremely naive not to think that this is
linked to anti-Semitism." .... <END>

http://www.cnsnews.com/ForeignBureaus/archive/200301/FOR20030109e.html
(Archived locally as: FOR20030109e)

Anti-Semitism Rising in France
By Eva Cahen
CNSNews.com Correspondent
January 09, 2003

Paris (CNSNews.com) - As Jewish leaders raise alarms over an increase in
anti-Semitism in France, figures showed that in 2002, French emigration to
Israel more than doubled.

On Wednesday, French religious leaders and officials, including four former
prime ministers, gathered for an ecumenical prayer service in a Paris synagogue
in solidarity with Rabbi Gabriel Farhi, who was stabbed last week by an intruder
shouting, "God is Great" in Arabic.

Jean-Yves Camus, a political scientist and spokesman for the European Jewish
Congress, said the aggression "demonstrates that the series of anti-Semitic acts
which peaked between autumn 2001 and spring 2002, and which decreased after the
presidential elections, are on the rise again."

The attack came as officials criticized administrators from a Paris university
who last month voted to end research and educational exchanges with universities
in Israel to show support for the Palestinian Intifada.

Menachem Gourary, the Jewish Agency's representative for France and
Mediterranean Europe, said the number of French citizens migrating to Israel
rose to 2,566 last year, more than twice the 1,156 total for 2001. Indications
from current applications were that the higher rate would continue this year.

"French Jews move to Israel for many reasons, including family and education for
their children," said Gourary, "but one of the reasons they name sometimes is
the rise of anti-Semitism."

Camus called on the government to offer a firm response to the stabbing. The
assailant, who was wearing a motorcycle helmet when he attacked Rabbi Farhi at
his synagogue, has not been caught.

Rabbi Farhi, a leader of the Liberal Jewish Movement of France, "is a symbol of
what extremists everywhere hate: openness of spirit, involvement in
inter-religious dialogue, support for Israel, but also the acceptance of
Palestinian rights to their own nation," said Camus.

On Monday, the rabbi's car was burned in his parking garage.

British Prime Minister Tony Blair sent a message that was read at the ceremony,
urging "people of all faiths to stand together in rejection of violence."

Lionel Jospin, Alain Juppe, Edouard Balladur and Laurent Fabius, all former
French prime ministers, attended the ceremony.

President Jacques Chirac also condemned the stabbing.

The motion to break academic ties with Israel at the University of Paris VI
brought criticism from UNESCO, which said in a statement on Wednesday that the
university's boycott would work against the goal of peace and understanding
through education.

According to Camus, the university's motion was a "result of pressure from
professors and students belonging to the extreme left who support the radical
wing of the Palestinian movement. It is a stupid decision."

On Monday, the Jewish Students Union of France held a rally in front of the
university that drew hundreds of supporters, including officials and
politicians, to demonstrate against the boycott.

Jean Kahn, a prominent French Jewish leader, interviewed on Radio Classique on
Thursday, said he was worried about the increase of violent anti-Semitic acts
even though he felt that most of the French population, including France's
Muslims, was not anti-Jewish.

France has a population of some 600,000 Jews but also 5 million Muslims, mostly
immigrants from North African Arab nations.

Last year, a wave of anti-Jewish aggressions that included vandalism in Jewish
cemeteries, synagogues, and schools also raised an outcry against growing
anti-Semitism in France. <END>

Need I say more? It looks like the noxious Jews are reaping what they have sown.

Tavish

http://groups.google.com/group/alt.revisionism/msg/11790f5dfb16ee23?fwc=1
Subject: Jewish Bigotry as Documented From Their Own Web Sites and Their Very
Own Words Message-ID: <eqkhq1d2ffvne5ufe...@4ax.com>
Date: 21 Dec 2005 04:14:34 GMT
Excerpts:
BAVA METZIA: CHAPTER 5: MISHNAH 6
One may not accept an ironclad investment from an Israelite, since it is
interest, but one may accept an ironclad investment from heathens. Furthermore,
one may borrow from them and loan to them with interest. The same applies to a
resident alien. An Israelite may loan the money of a heathen with the approval
of the heathen, but not with the approval of an Israelite...
But one may accept an ironclad investment from heathens - since it is
permitted to loan to a non-Jew for interest... <END>

From: V2.1b Non-Jew Can't Pour Wine for a Jew -- Only a Fellow Jew Can!...
"We are not allowed to drink any wine or grape juice, or any drink
containing wine or grape juice, which has been touched by a non Jew
after the seal of the bottle has been opened..."
"Wine contacted by an idolator at any stage of its preparation is the
basis to prohibit its consumption by a Jew... Kosher wine has two categories.
First is “not mevushal” which means it has not been cooked or boiled. It is
acceptable for a non Jew to handle the bottle as long as the seal is intact.
Once the seal is broken non Jews are prohibited access. The second category is
“mevushal.” The presumption is that wine boiled after pressing is not associated
with pagan use." <END>

From: Bigotry by Jews Toward Non-Jews (Wine Bigotry) New Findings [In Their Own
Words Series]
"...Yayin Akum - wine touched by a non-Jew: Rabbis prohibited (even to
derive benefit from) the wine of a Jew if it was touched and moved (or even if
it may have been touched) by a non-Jew..."
"If some wine has been extracted from the grapes pressed in a tank, be
it even only a small quantity, or if some wine has been taken out of it into a
vessel, the entire contents of the tank is legally called wine, and it becomes
forbidden by the touch of a non-Jew even if only the kernels or the husks have
been touched. It is, therefore, forbidden to make use of the tanks of grapes
found in the house of a non-Jew, for it is likely that the non-Jew has already
extracted some wine from it. It is forbidden to let a non-Jew press grapes in a
tank, even if such a tank is provided with a stopper.
We must also be careful not to let a non-Jew remove the kernels and the
husks from the wine-press, even after we have already extracted the first and
second wine from it, as they might still be moist with wine.
If a non-Jew has poured water into wine with the intention of diluting
it, we are not allowed to drink from it. But if he had not intended to dilute
it, or even it if is only doubtful whether he has intended to do so, its use is
permissible.
If a non-Jew touches wine by means of something else (not a part of his
body), or if it is touched through his power, a rabbi should be consulted as to
the fitness of the wine.
When we send wine through a non-Jew, we must take the precaution of
doubly sealing the mouth or the faucet of the vessel.
There are many diverse laws regarding the wine that a Jew makes for a
non-Jew, for the purpose of selling it to Jewish consumers. In certain
instances, even double seals and a lock are of no avail. It is necessary to
consult an ordained rabbi as to what procedure to follow in such a case. The
scrupulous should avoid the use of such wine." <END>
<<Tavish comment: Those last two paragraphs should clue the truly clueless in
on how much Jews trust non-Jews!!! Notice Jews teach that the rest of humanity
are heathens, pagans, and idolators!! Is that not bigoted and hate mongering?>>


_______________________________________________________________________________
Posted Via Uncensored-News.Com - Accounts Starting At $6.95 - http://www.uncensored-news.com
<><><><><><><> The Worlds Uncensored News Source <><><><><><><><>

me

unread,
Jan 1, 2006, 5:27:02 PM1/1/06
to
Maybe if the savages stopped sexually mutilating helpless baby boys
anti-Semitism would stop.

Maybe stop begging America for $3B a year in foreign aid also.


Wishful thinking. Jews love to beg for USA $ and stab babies between the
legs.

"Fred Rutherford" <Fred Ruthe...@001-mayfield.net> wrote in message
news:29hgr1hiluht4sqjd...@4ax.com...

> event re-established Juedenstrasse - an old German word for Jews' Street -

> posted at the door of a place of worship so people may pray in safety - a

> But it is in Europe where anti-Semitism is getting the most attention -


perhaps
> because the Holocaust occurred just a generation earlier in the continent.
>
> When there was an effort by Jews in Switzerland to lift the century-old
ban on
> the production of kosher meat, an anti-Semitic backlash erupted earlier
this
> year.
>
> "This is a trend that is very much worrying us," said Beker. He points out
that
> a movement in Sweden, another European nation that bans kosher slaughter,

> attempted to ban ritual circumcision - the quintessential rite of passage

Beaver Cleaver

unread,
Jan 1, 2006, 8:45:49 PM1/1/06
to
On Sun, 1 Jan 2006 17:27:02 -0500, <ZGYtf.6873$2j2....@fe11.lga> "me"
<sp...@spam.net> wrote:

>Maybe if the savages stopped sexually mutilating helpless baby boys
>anti-Semitism would stop.

Those Rabbis do love "sucking the wound" don't they?

http://groups.google.com/group/alt.politics.nationalism.white/msg/7e0188cd6558a4d0?fwc=1
Subject: Child Molestation and the Jewish Talmud - Doc Tavish Battles it Out
With Neo-Pharisees V3.0 T_0928
Message-ID: <v0jlj1pna5e2fh7lo...@4ax.com>
Date: 28 Sep 2005 17:05:14 GMT

>Maybe stop begging America for $3B a year in foreign aid also.
>
>
>Wishful thinking. Jews love to beg for USA $ and stab babies between the
>legs.

They also love reaping big profits from killing Gentile babies!

http://groups.google.com/group/alt.revisionism/msg/2ab9509d68833716?fwc=1
Subject: The Holocaust Against Millions of Innocents by Christ Denier
Anti-Christs Continues V3.0 T_1110
Message-ID: <f087n1l9sgtsc5hvp...@4ax.com>
Date: 10 Nov 2005 19:31:21 GMT

Tavish

http://groups.google.com/group/alt.conspiracy/msg/a512f7c8dd7d1352?fwc=1
Subject: "Anti-Semitism is spreading around the world in a kind of tsunami
effect", says Chief Rabbi Sir Jonathan Sacks. BBC News
Message-ID: <29hgr1hiluht4sqjd...@4ax.com>
Date: 1 Jan 2006 21:28:18 GMT

_______________________________________________________________________________

Ariadne

unread,
Jan 1, 2006, 8:58:24 PM1/1/06
to
Funny what you omitted, Bradbury. And what you added.

'Dr Sacks said attempts to "silence and even ban" Jewish student groups

were "quite extraordinary" because most of Britain's 350,000 Jews
regarded themselves primarily as "British citizens".

He continued: "If, God forbid, one could imagine a world in which the
state of Israel did not exist and, I repeat, God forbid, then not one
of the world's conflicts would be changed by one millimetre - there
would still be conflict in Chechnya, in Ossetia, in Indonesia, in the
Philippines. So to make this [Israeli-Palestinian] conflict - where the

two sides have worked now for 12 years in a process of peace - the
epicentre of global politics is not merely wrong ... but it is also
quite troubling."

He said that while the Jewish experience in Britain was in general a
"real cause for celebration", British Jews were experiencing a
globalised anti-Semitism through satellite television, the internet and

e-mail. He was also worried by the strength of anti-Jewish feeling in
some European states including France.'

The entire article:


Chief Rabbi warns of anti-Semitic 'tsunami'
Chris Hastings, Arts Correspondent
(Filed: 01/01/2006)


Sir Jonathan Sacks, the Chief Rabbi, fears that a "tsunami of
anti-Semitism" is threatening to engulf parts of the world.


Sir Jonathan Sacks: 'very scared'


In an interview with BBC Radio 4's Sunday programme, to be broadcast
today, Dr Sacks admitted he was "very scared" by the rise in
anti-Jewish feeling, which had led to Holocaust denial, attacks on
synagogues and a boycott of Jewish groups on university campuses.


He said: "I am very scared by [it] and I'm very scared that more
protests have not been delivered against it, but this [anti-Semitism]
is part of the vocabulary of politics in certain parts of the world."


Figures produced by the London-based Community Security Trust and the
Israeli government show that anti-Semitism is on the rise in Britain.
The trust recorded 532 anti-Semitic incidents in 2004, including 83
physical assaults.


Meanwhile, some groups opposed to Israeli government policy have
organised boycotts of Jewish academics and student groups. Since 2002,
Jewish student groups on 17 British campuses have faced the threat of
expulsion from fellow students opposed to Israeli action.


In April, the Association of University Teachers became the latest in a

line of academic bodies to announce action against Israel. It declared
a boycott of two Israeli universities at the request of Palestinian
leaders, but later changed its mind after widespread condemnation.


Dr Sacks said attempts to "silence and even ban" Jewish student groups
were "quite extraordinary" because most of Britain's 350,000 Jews
regarded themselves primarily as "British citizens".


He continued: "If, God forbid, one could imagine a world in which the
state of Israel did not exist and, I repeat, God forbid, then not one
of the world's conflicts would be changed by one millimetre - there
would still be conflict in Chechnya, in Ossetia, in Indonesia, in the
Philippines. So to make this [Israeli-Palestinian] conflict - where the

two sides have worked now for 12 years in a process of peace - the
epicentre of global politics is not merely wrong ... but it is also
quite troubling."


He said that while the Jewish experience in Britain was in general a
"real cause for celebration", British Jews were experiencing a
globalised anti-Semitism through satellite television, the internet and

e-mail. He was also worried by the strength of anti-Jewish feeling in
some European states including France.


"A number of my rabbinical colleagues throughout Europe have been


assaulted and attacked on the streets. We've had synagogues desecrated.

We've had Jewish schools burnt to the ground - not here but in France
... So it's the kind of feeling that you don't know what's going to
happen next, and that is making some European Jewish communities feel
uncomfortable."


Dr Sacks, who was being interviewed to mark the 350th anniversary of
the re-entry of Jews to England, said he hoped that the Jewish voice
would become more "articulate" over the coming year.


http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2006/01/01/nsack...

Ariadne

unread,
Jan 1, 2006, 9:00:16 PM1/1/06
to
Funny what you omitted, Bradbury. And what you added

Chief Rabbi warns of anti-Semitic 'tsunami'

He said that while the Jewish experience in Britain was in general a

"real cause for celebration", British Jews were experiencing a
globalised anti-Semitism through satellite television, the internet and

e-mail. He was also worried by the strength of anti-Jewish feeling in
some European states including France.


"A number of my rabbinical colleagues throughout Europe have been


assaulted and attacked on the streets. We've had synagogues desecrated.

We've had Jewish schools burnt to the ground - not here but in France

serwad

unread,
Jan 2, 2006, 4:05:34 AM1/2/06
to
THAT IS WHAT YOU ARE ASKING FOR! PUT ANOTHER 40,000 PALESTINIANS THROUGH
YOUR TORTURE CHAMBERS AND EXPECT THEM TO LOVE YOU?
"Ariadne" <ari...@mac.hush.com> wrote in message
news:1136167215.9...@g14g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...

Bruce Scott TOK

unread,
Jan 2, 2006, 7:41:10 AM1/2/06
to
In article <ZGYtf.6873$2j2....@fe11.lga> you write:
>Maybe if the savages stopped sexually mutilating helpless baby boys
>anti-Semitism would stop.

Typical anti-Semite lies.

>Maybe stop begging America for $3B a year in foreign aid also.

That's Israel, not Jews.

>Wishful thinking. Jews love to beg for USA $ and stab babies between the
>legs.

Typical anti-Semite lies. Human social problems are no less and no more
prevalent in that group than in any other.

--
ciao,
Bruce

drift wave turbulence: http://www.rzg.mpg.de/~bds/

0 new messages