LETTER FROM ISRAEL AT WAR – WEEK 22

Never expecting anything from Hamas, I did expect more from the heads of state and of leading humanitarian organizations.

By Harris Zvi Green

March 1, 2024

My dearest friends,

We are now one hundred and forty-seven days into this bloody war. The past five months have been challenging. Having close family members risk their lives in defense of our country, listening to the hair-raising accounts of their experiences and being confronted by a tsunami of antisemitic hatred, has taken its toll.

Experiencing the arrival of a great-grandchild and the wedding of a grandson during this time were especially gratifying, but also uniquely difficult. How does one celebrate when our young men and women are putting their lives at risk to defend us and 134 of our fellow citizens remain in hostage? How does one comfort the bereaved and celebrate special events in the same breath? There are so many conflicts in our everyday lives.

My faith in universal values has become eroded. I believed these values represented principles that transcended cultural, religious and international boundaries. I got it badly wrong. What was once considered good is no longer virtuous. Bad is no longer evil. Truth is no longer absolute. It’s become contextual. Even flexible. There’s no accountability. These so-called “universal values” haven’t stood the test of time. 

The atrocities of October 7 have been rebranded. They’ve been rationalized. When they aren’t plausible, the atrocities are either regarded as unverifiable or simply denied. Given the unimaginable and primitive acts of savagery of October 7, I can understand that.

Is it because the Victims were Jews?  A protest to bring attention the world wants to ignore. The U.N. agency dedicated to gender equality has been sharply criticized for waiting so long to express alarm over the sexual violence perpetrated during the October 7 Hamas attacks.

Whatever way I look at it, murder is murder. Brutal mutilation of dead bodies is savage. It’s not an integral part of a national struggle or the exercising of a right to self-determination. Rape is rape. It’s not resistance. 

I question my identity. Once upon a time, I defined myself as a liberal. Live and let live. I believed democracy, mutual tolerance and respect were liberal values. Again, I got it badly wrong. Today, people who define themselves as liberals tend to display intolerance and even contempt for anything that doesn’t gel with their view of the world. Perhaps liberalism should be defined as the right to call yourself whatever you like rather than being an absolute value in itself. 

It’s like the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, also known as North Korea. Does that make North Korea a democracy? Wikipedia describes North Korea as a totalitarian dictatorship. I don’t understand how one can confuse a democratic country with a totalitarian dictatorship. Maybe it’s my poor English.

I never expected anything from Hamas. I do, however, expect much more from heads of state, from the executives of the world’s leading humanitarian organizations, from religious leaders of all faiths and from the presidents of the world’s most prestigious academic institutions.

Israeli activists horrified the world ignored October 7 sexual violence against women

One hundred and thirty-four hostages remain in captivity. This number includes the bodies of 33 soldiers and civilians. As far as Hamas is concerned, even dead bodies are a legitimate bargaining tool.

The same heads of state, the same humanitarian organizations, the same religious leaders and the same academic institutions continue pressuring Israel to provide even more humanitarian aid to Gaza.

Nobody wants innocent people to starve to death. But what do these hypocrites in positions of power and influence have to say about the illegal abduction of innocent hostages, including octogenarians, women, children and even dead bodies? Very little. What are they doing about it? To be precise: nothing.

Humanitarian values cut both ways. I’m sure true liberals will concur.

Embarrassed by UNRWA’s complicity in the October 7 massacre, UNRWA’s donor countries put their contributions on hold pending further investigation. Asmund Aukrust, a Norwegian politician, immediately retaliated by nominating UNRWA for the Nobel Peace Prize.

The New Arab, a London-based news outlet owned by a Qatari company, is supporting this absurd attempt to sanitize UNRWA. In their promotion piece, they justify this initiative by praising UNRWA for their “crucial humanitarian support in one of today’s most devastating humanitarian contexts.” Yet another attempt to rewrite history and legitimize the continued funding of terror.

Incongruous and Ig’noble. While over a dozen countries, including major donors such as the United States, Germany, Britain and Sweden, have suspended funding to UNRWA over accusations of employees involved in the October 7 atrocities, Norwegian politician, Asmund Aukrust, has nominated the UN Palestinian refugee agency UNRWA for the Nobel Peace Prize.

Can any self-respecting human being rationalize awarding the Nobel Peace Prize to an organization complicit in the October 7 massacre? It’s an affront to mankind and an insult to human intelligence.

UNRWA’s very existence perpetuates the conflict. The idea of rewarding UNRWA and its incompetent Commissioner-General, Philippe Lazzarini, is outrageous.

Last week I referred to the racist statement made by a South African member of parliament who said:

If the city of Cape Town is handed over to the Zionists, there will be a bloodbath. We will not allow you to make it a Jewish state.”

I received a comment telling me not to confuse anti-Zionism with antisemitism.

Imagine the outcry if an Israeli politician said, “if the city of Jerusalem is handed over to the Jihadis, there will be a bloodbath. We will not allow you to make it an Islamic state”. This politician would be accused of being Islamophobic and ostracized by his colleagues. 

My condolences to those mourning their nearest and dearest. My wishes to the injured for a complete and speedy recovery. May God protect our brave soldiers. May the hostages soon be reunited with their families. May you all be blessed with good health to see smiles on the faces of your loved ones for many years to come.

Wishing you all Shabbat Shalom and better times ahead.

Am Yisrael Chai.

Harris Zvi Green.



About the writer:

Harris Zvi Green was born in Cape Town, South Africa. Aged 77, he made Aliyah 53 years ago. An accountant by profession, he served as the Chief Financial Officer for a number of Israel based hi-tech companies. He is married to Phyllis. They have 3 married children ,13 grandchildren and 3 great-grandchildren. Harris Zvi Green is a founder member of Truth be Told, an organization engaged in public diplomacy on behalf of Israel.






IS SOUTH AFRICA ABANDONING HER JEWS?

Failure to recognise that Zionism and Judaism are as intricately linked as Islam is with the holy cities of Mecca and Medina.

By Ben Levitas

In South Africa today it is anathema to hold sentiments sympathetic to Zionism or supportive of Israel. Use by government officials of pejorative adjectives like “Apartheid”, “Racist”, “Colonialist”, “Genocidal” have been normalized when referring to the State of Israel. The pernicious foundations for this odious attitude started with the inauguration of the ANC’s accession to power. Twenty-five years ago, Dr Neo Mnumzana, representing South Africa at the United Nations, said;

Jews in South Africa come in many different political colours. There are those who belong to the Zionist movement and represent the same reality which is concretised in the state of Israel, and we disapprove of those members of the Jewish community who have these Zionist affiliations.”

Troubling Times. Writer on South African Jewish history, South African politics and the history of antisemitism, UCT Emeritus Professor, Milton Shain laments that “What was once considered unacceptable is now acceptable.”

Since then, the rhetoric has increased in tone and frequency. According to Professor Milton Shain, a leading scholar on anti-Semitism:

 “What was once considered unacceptable is now acceptable.”

Jewish schools have been criticized and targeted for closure because they are deemed to promote Zionist values. These threats against Jewish schools and institutions came close to realization when ISIS members Brandon-Lee Thulsie and his twin brother Tony-Lee, planned to blow them up. 

Terror Thulsie Twins.  Brandon-Lee and Tony-Lee Thulsie – both linked to Islamic State (ISIS) – were convicted in 2022 for plotting to blow up the US Embassy and various Jewish institutions in South Africa. (Photo: Gallo Images/Papi Morake)

Some examples of similar threats made by leaders of PAGAD (People against Gangsterism and Drugs) during a so-called “peace march” in November 2023 were as follows:

  • The Zionists in this country mustn’t think they can walk freely in this country
  • When we are going to unleash the Hezbollah, the party of Allah, they must run and they must hide under every stone they can find. The Koran is our constitution, jihad is our means

Pagad leader Abdul Salaam Ebrahim then roused the crowd, saying it was time to “decentralise” the war and “get involved”.“We must go to their businesses. We must make sure that we target them the way they have killed our people. It doesn’t make sense for someone to leave this country and do his service in Zionist occupied Palestine and then we allow him to come back. We must make sure that we do the same things they are doing to us. If we are serious, then we must fight however we find them. We must boycott them, we must go to their homes, to their schools. We need to be serious if we say we’ll give our lives, our blood, and our souls. We must ask ourselves, are we ready to do it?”

Galvanizing Hatred. Pagad leader Abdul Salaam Ebrahim said in 2023 that by “putting pressure on the satanic Zionist regime” we would help Hamas, Hezbollah, Islamic Jihad, the people of Yemen and Lebanon.

MENACING MOUTHS

This descent into what was unacceptable language has also come from ANC Ministers and leaders, such as Fatima Hajaig who in her role as Deputy Foreign Minister referred to “Jewish money power” – a typical anti-Semitic trope. Tony Ehrenreich, leader of COSATU (a member of the tri-partite alliance) referred to Jews as owning most of the property in Cape Town, while also threatening Jewish owned businesses and encouraging Jews with Zionist leanings to leave South Africa. 

Sound Familiar? Top South African trade-unionist and senior ANC politician, Tony Ehrenreich, has called on Jewish leaders supporting Zionism to leave the country and threatened Jewish-owned businesses.

In 2022 Chief Justice Mogoeng Mogoeng uttered a very benign remark in which he said that South Africa was “depriving itself” of an opportunity to be a “game changer” in the Israel/Palestine conflict due to its pro-Palestinian stance. An outcry of anger aimed at the Chief Justice ensued. He was severely criticized and censured and ordered to apologize for misconduct for “criticizing and proposing changes to the official policy of the South African government towards Israel.” The vehemence of the reaction made it impossible for him to return to his post and led to his early retirement.

In contrast there was a well-worn path of other Justices, such as Judge Seraj Desai, unapologetically aligning themselves with a pro-Palestinian viewpoint. When the SAZF (South African Zionist Federation) tried to hold Judge Desai to account, he not only refused to apologise, but doubled down on his pro-Palestinian sentiments.

MATCHING McCarthyism

The scaremongering of the governing ANC party aimed at undermining the very existence of Israel is reminiscent of the spreading of fear during the notorious McCarthy era in the US, a woeful period in American history of witch-hunting resulting in political repression. The targets then were Communists, the targets of the ANC are Zionists, but make no mistake the targets now are Jews! Still fresh in our minds is the recent stripping of David Teeger of the captaincy of the Under 19 Cricket team for expressing his admiration at a private event for Israeli soldiers in the recent Gaza war. The CSA (Cricket South Africa) statement – “Cricket South Africa has decided that David should be relieved of his captaincy for the (World cup) tournament” – went on to justify its stance that: 

This is in the best interests of all the players…..and David himself”. 

The weak-kneed collapse by CSA to threats of the BDS movement indicate a lack of backbone to stand up to antisemitic intimidation.

In the view of law professor Ziyad Motala, anyone with Zionist sympathies should be disqualified from occupying any position representing the state. According to him:

 “Teeger’s speech was not mere offensive speech. Instead, it was speech in support of Zionism, a political ideology of racism.” 

OUT!” for being a Zionist. In today’s South Africa, David Teeger as a Jew was good enough to be selected captain of the South African Under-19 cricket team but as a Zionist he wasn’t.

He used the same rationale to disqualify David Unterhalter from being considered for appointment to the Constitutional Court or the Supreme Court of Appeal. This was a subtler manifestation of antisemitism when the JSC (Judicial Service Commission) repeatedly rejected Unterhalter as a candidate for one of four vacant positions, despite him being eminently qualified and endorsed by Lawson Naidoo, Executive Secretary of the Council for the Advancement of the South African Constitution (CASAC).

He was questioned – more akin to ‘interrogation’ – for his past membership of the SAJBOD (South African Jewish Board of Deputies), which was founded in 1912 to represent and protecting Jewish interests and with a particular focus today in combatting the growing menace of anti-Semitism. In contrast to the SAZF (South African Zionist Federation), the SAJBOD representing Jews of all persuasions, does not have any specific Zionist role. The EFF party leader Julius Malema, who sits on the selection board of the JSC has opposed Unterhalter’s selection based on his vehemently anti-Israel bias and has threatened to support and supply Hamas with weapons. He has also threatened to not only shut down Jewish businesses but all businesses that deal or import any goods from Israel.

Inciting to Kill. EFF leader Julius Malema vows to fund Hamas if his party wins the 2024 elections saying, “When the EFF takes over next year it is going to arm Hamas and make sure they have the necessary equipment to fight for their freedom.” (Photo: Image: EFF Twitter)

Leading government’s charge against the Jewish state is its foreign minister, Naledi Pandor. She has gone beyond threats to cut off all business and diplomatic links with Israel or companies dealing with Israel. She has now championed herself as of the leaders of the international campaign against Israel by taking Israel to the International Criminal Court in The Hague, falsely accusing it of committing genocide against Palestinians but really aiming at delegitimizing Israel and preventing it from defending itself from terrorist attacks. She has cut all diplomatic links with Israel and taken the vitriol against Israel to another level. All visits to Israel and any contacts with Israeli leaders by any civil servant have effectively been banned. The ANC imposed on its members and on the Civil Service a hermitically sealed echo-chamber of anti-Israel views that all must conform with.

Recently in February, 2024 Member of Parliament, Ahmed Manzoor Shaik Emam of the National Freedom Party said in Parliament:

But let me give a loud and clear message to the Democratic Alliance: If you think that the people of this country are going to allow you to take this beautiful country, the city of Cape Town of ours, and hand it over to the Zionists, the city of Cape Town will be a bloodbath, I can assure you [of] that.”

Continuing:

We will not allow you to take this and sell it, sell your principles, your ethics, and values, like you have just pawned the land in the Western Cape to the United States and others. We will not allow you to make this a Jewish state!” 

Threatening a Blood Bath. In South Africa’s parliament, Ahmed Manzoor Shaik Eman accused rival ‘Democratic Alliance’ party of handing Cape Town to “Zionists” and threated there would “be a blood bath”. The fiery parliamentarian bellowed: “We will not allow you to make this a Jewish state.”

SOUNDS OF SILENCE

The ANC government has been completely silent about all these hateful and hurtful threats. It is in denial that antisemitism exists. The Minster of Justice asserts that antisemitism “doesn’t exist at all.”

It is time to state unequivocally that these incendiary and inflammatory attacks on Zionism, go beyond the pale and are hurtful to Jews and make the continuation of Jewish life in South Africa untenable. It is also time to state unequivocally that Zionism and Judaism are as intricately linked as Islam is with the holy cities of Mecca and Medina. Jews believe that “out of Zion come the law of the Torah”. Zion is mentioned on 2,000-year-old coins found recently in archaeological digs in the City of David. Jews pray in the “Amidah” – the silent prayer, facing Jerusalem for the rebuilding of Jerusalem and the return of “the Davidic” throne in Jerusalem. Zion is the hill in Jerusalem where the grave of King David is believed to be located, making it and Jerusalem synonymous. 

It is time to call the witch-hunt in South Africa against Zionism what it is really is – a witch-hunt against Jews and the continuity of a sustainable Jewish presence in South Africa.



About the writer:

A former Chairperson of the Cape Branch of the South African Zionist Federation, Ben Levitas includes among his alma maters, the University of the Witwatersrand, the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, the University of Pretoria and the London School of Economics.






SAVIOUR OR SATAN’S HANDMAIDEN?

Lacking legal foundation and exploiting the law on genocide, why is South Africa doing the legal bidding of homicidal Hamas?

By Craig Snoyman

I was always a little sceptical about South Africa’s application against Israel in the International Court of Justice (ICJ). Possibly because Colonel Richard Kemp, the former British commander in Afghanistan, and Major John Spencer, an urban war specialist at Westpoint Military Academy- two internationally respected military experts – had ridiculed the idea of a genocide and possibly or probably – because I am Jewish and grew up with the words “Destroy the memory of Amalek, do not forget” which always sounded a little counterintuitive. For me, South Africa’s application to the International Court of Justice had the hallmarks of an ulterior motive. 

Masters at Masquerading. Caring nothing for the massacre of Jews that occurred in Israel by Hamas, South Africa sends its legal pugilists to The Hague to falsely accuse Israel of committing genocide. It failed.

Many people in South Africa watched the ICJ hearing at The Hague. I was shocked when South Africa attempted to explain Netanyahu’s interpretation of Amalek. For secular Jews like myself, Amalek has always represented the eternal enemy that rises against the Jews in every generation. However, the story of the prophet Samuel instructing King Saul to go to war, was unknown to most of us who have only read the five books of Moses. It added an unfamiliar perspective. Another surprise was my old law professor’s explanation – Prof. John Dugard – of the dispute between South Africa and Israel which teetered on misrepresentation. Was there even a genuine dispute? The description of the situation in Gaza was tragic but sadly similar to what occurs in all wars. However, in Gaza, the enemy was hiding behind civilians – men, women and children, young and old. If the Court could not enforce a ceasefire on Hamas, then it would be unreasonable to so order Israel which was acting in defence following a massacre of its citizens – mostly civilians and who were set on freeing its hostages. South Africa’s demand for an immediate ceasefire was doomed from the start.

The court ruled that there was a valid dispute but refused to grant the immediate ceasefire. It handed down various precautionary measures. I was left with the impression that any warring country could be subjected to charges in terms of the Genocide Convention as there is always the lingering doubt that just maybe there might be a “plausibility of genocide”. South Africa hailed the judgement as a great victory but Israel continued its war of defence with Hamas.

The Director General of DIRCO (Department of International Relations and Co-operation) justified how “the ICJ had effectively ordered Israel to immediate cease-fire” and then referred the matter back to the ICJ, within 3 weeks of the judgment being handed down. South Africa applied to the court for further urgent precautionary orders preventing Israel from continuing its unprecedented military action in Rafah. Second time round, the South African expectation – or blind hope – was surely to achieve a more substantive result than initially handed down.

South Africa’s claim requested that the Court consider exercising its power under Article 75(1) of the Rules of Court that provides:

  “The Court may at any time decide to examine proprio motu whether the circumstances of the case require the indication of provisional measures which ought to be taken or complied with by any or all the parties.”  

The term “proprio motu” is not commonly used, but is defined as “an official act taken without a formal request from another party” – in other words, on one’s own initiative.

South Africa reminded the Court that it had “full discretion to exercise this power without any hearing or submissions by parties, and should do so.”

VAGUE AT THE HAIGUE

Israel described South Africa’s new request as “unfounded in fact and law” and “morally repugnant.” Israel pointed out that Article 75(1) of the Rules of Court allowed the court to issue provisional measures of its own accord, but not at the request of a party. It stated that factually, there had been no change in the situation in Gaza on the ground since the ICJ hearing and the alleged “unprecedented military offensive in Rafah” had not happened.

Back to Court. South Africa rapidly returns to the ICJ only for its request for urgent measures to limit Israeli action in Rafah to be rejected. (AP/Peter Dejong)

South Africa came to the Court with two aims. The first was to arrogantly remind the court that it was failing to do its job and therefore was incumbent of the bench to take more decisive action. The second was that the court should henceforth so proceed without Israel even being afforded a right to respond. As any experienced courtroom practitioner should know, judges hardly appreciate being told by counsel that they are not doing their job. Also, it would be extraordinary for a court to impose extremely onerous conditions on a party without hearing what that party has to say. Not only did South Africa attempt to bully the court, but attempted to exclude Israel from the process. These was not a sound basis for a successful application!

So why did South Africa institute this application? With Israel’s assault on Rifah looming, the most logical explanation was its attempt to undermine Israel’s military progress – in other words to obtain a complete cessation of hostilities – the permanent ceasefire that it had initially sought from the court. Another plausible and possibly additional explanation could be that the Court would oblige Israel to submit regular reports as originally demanded and that South Africa would then claim non-compliance with each report and publicise this non-compliance bringing further international opprobrium on Israel. In other words, using the court of law to impact on the court of public opinion.

The ICJ responded remarkably quickly and gave short shrift to the South African application. It stated that there were already emergency measures in place throughout Gaza, which included Rafah and there was no reason to vary the original order.

The South African government spun this application as a win. It stated that the Court “acknowledged that Israel’s planned incursions in Rafah would render what is already a humanitarian disaster even more perilous.” No longer was it alleged that Israel had already invaded Rafah – the very grounds that South Africa relied upon to justify both extreme urgency and the prevention of Israel’s right to be heard. The spin that “Any decision by Israel to engage in military activities against Palestinians in the current circumstances is a violation of the order of the International Court of Justice” was contrary to the express ruling of the Court, which emphasised “that the State of Israel remains bound to fully comply with its obligations under the Genocide Convention and the Order…” 

The Court accepted that Israel was acting in terms of the order. South Africa persists in spinning the myth that Israel is not.

Is South Africa – as accused by Israel – the “handmaiden of Hamas”? Had South Africa demonstrated “an intention to abuse the Genocide Convention?” South Africa’s courting of Hamas, both at home and abroad, suggests this accusation has merit. The statement by South Africa’s foreign minister, Naledi Pandor that all the advocates donated their professional services rings hollow, particularly concerning the two King’s Counsel who have no allegiance to South Africa. 

Site of Sorrow. By instituting action against Israel at the ICJ, “South Africa seeks to allow Hamas to return to commit the war crimes,” says Israel. (Photo: Jack Guez/AFP via Getty Images) JANUARY 11, 2024 4:45 PM CET

Was South Africa bought and paid for to render services for Hamas? 

The application was prima facie dishonest and irrational. The allegations made by South Africa were untrue, and easily disprovable. Its demand for the exclusion of Israel’s input was duplicitous. Once again, its aim appeared to have the Court unilaterally further tie the hands of Israel in its war against Hamas.  

South Africa has tarred Israel internationally as a “genocide nation”. The ICJ will investigate and eventually confirm the view of Major Spencer that “For Israel’s part, it’s taken more care to prevent civilian deaths than any other army in human history”?  

How is South Africa going to cleanse itself of the blood libel that it has propagated? Does it even care?


27 Jan 2024: Kemp explains why Israel is not guilty of genocide and why Hamas, Hezbollah, and their patrons in Tehran are.




About the writer:
Craig Snoyman is a practising advocate in South Africa.





While the mission of Lay of the Land (LotL) is to provide a wide and diverse perspective of affairs in Israel, the Middle East and the Jewish world, the opinions, beliefs and viewpoints expressed by its various writers are not necessarily ones of the owners and management of LOTL but of the writers themselves.  LotL endeavours to the best of its ability to credit the use of all known photographs to the photographer and/or owner of such photographs (0&EO).

SHOAH CASTS A GIANT SHADOW

South Africans honour their fallen in Israel while lamenting how far South Africa has morally fallen

By David E. Kaplan

It was a strange feeling. 

Some 150 South Africans – roughly half living in Israel the other visiting from South Africa on a Jewish National Fund South Africa -organised solidarity mission. They were joined as well by forty young South Africans on youth movement programmes. The same thought was on everyone’s mournful minds – here we were in the heart of the JNF-KKL Lavi Forest honouring South Africa’s fallen either in acts of war or terror, including the present war in Gaza, and the South African government could not care a damn! 

Showing Solidarity. Flanked by the flags of South Africa, the JNF-KKL and Israel, Michael Kransdorff, JNF SA’s national chairman speaks beside the memorial board to South Africa’s fallen at the KKL-JNF ceremony at Lavi Forest on February 20, 2024. (Courtesy JNF SA)

Correction, they do care – it reserves its concern for the killers of those fallen Jews!

Even though former South Africans had been murdered the day of the massacre on October 7 2023 while others were kidnapped and held captive in Gaza, “It took weeks for them [ANC government] to condemn the single biggest massacre of Jews since the Holocaust,” said Michael Kransdorff, Chairman of the JNF and Vice Chairman of the South African Zionist Federation, the two organisations that organized the high-powered Jewish leadership mission to Israel. “Rather than use their influence with Hamas and the Iranian regime to bring home the hostages, and to end the conflict, they have chosen to side with Hamas and the Iranian regime, and attack Israel in its defensive war to protect its home front and return the hostages.”

Lives Cut Short. South Africans – comprising immigrants, community leaders visiting on a solidarity mission and youngsters on programmes in Israel – gather to honour South Africans who have fallen in the defense of the State of Israel or in acts of terrorism. The stone memorial cleft in half in the background, expresses profoundly the lives of those that were cut short through war and terror. (Photo: D.E. Kaplan)

Can South Africa’s President Ramaphosa answer one question: 

Would the late Mandela have behaved this way?

Although critical of “the occupation”, Mandela fully supported Israel’s right to exist. We know this because during a visit to Israel in 1999, Mandela said: 

“I cannot conceive of Israel withdrawing if Arab states do not recognise Israel within secure borders.” 

An advocate of the two-state solution, Mandela would not have countenanced South Africa’s present foreign minister, Naledi Pandor, recently joining in the chant – “From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free”, which in effect calls for the elimination of Jews in its biblical homeland, something Hamas attempted on October 7. 

Picking up on this theme, Kransdorff continued:

 “We, as the Jewish community are deeply disappointed with the [South African] government and think that it missed a major opportunity to play a positive role in the world, in the spirit of Mandela. Instead, it chose to support Hamas and side with terror.”

The Shoah cast a shadow over the Lavi Forest memorial ceremony incapsulated in the poignant words of former SAZF chairman, Avrom Krengel when he said:

“…Only when you visit these magnificent kibbutzim and settlements, places that flourished, do you realise that for one day, a ‘Holocaust’ came to Israel. It’s a reminder of the Eastern Front of 1941 of what befell our ancestors in Lithuania and Ukraine when the Nazis went from town to town and murdered every single Jew they could find. And on the 7 October that is what Hamas did.”

History of Heroism. Following announcing the recent names added to the memorial board, an emotional chairman of Telfed, Maish Isaacson continued, “We pay tribute here today to our heroes who lost their lives with courage.” (Photo: D.E. Kaplan)

 Looking towards the memorial board where nearly 90 South African have fallen – since Avraham Katz fell in July 1 1938 in the defence of kibbutz Hanita on the border with Lebanon, now still under attack in 2024 – Krengel turned back to face the gathering and continued:

But unlike the mass murder of 1941 that continued every single day for another five years, and saw the death of six million Jews, this time we have a state and we have an army and while we were caught by surprise for one day, we fight back; we fight back in a ferocious manner; we fight back to protect the people of Israel and the Jewish people. That is what the world actually hates about us now.  We don’t go meekly and quietly to our deaths. We protect Jewish life.  We take the fight to our enemies wherever they are, no matter how deep they are in every single tunnel. And that is the privilege of our generation that we have a State of Israel that is committed to the protection of every Jew in the world. We have not had that for 2000 years and we have not been able to protect ourselves until now.” 

Revival of Evil. Referring to the horrors of 1941 for the Jews of Eastern Europe, once again “a Holocaust came to Israel,” said SAZF Honorary President Avrom Krengel.

With wind whistling through the trees and a hint of rain, I listened to one speaker after another, in particular the families of the fallen and former hostage Aviva Segal, who was born in South Africa and came to Israel with her family at the age of nine. And while she related the horrifying and terrifying details being held as a hostage for 51 days by Hamas while her American-born husband Keith, still remains a hostage in Gaza. I reflected on the words of PA Prime Minister Mohammad Shatayyeh, who this week has resigned by but only a week earlier had said at the Munich Security Conference – and ‘Munich’ of all places – that:

 “One should not continue focusing on October 7

No End to Horror. Former hostage Aviva Segal relates tearfully of her ordeal as a hostage in Gaza for 51 days and says the “horror continues every minute of every day” as she longs anxiously for her husband Keith still held in captivity. (Photo: D.E. Kaplan)

Really; after the worst massacre of Jews in one day since the Holocaust and which Israel needs to prevent ever happening again and this is the sentiment of the Palestinian leadership that Israel is expected to reach a rapprochement.

Back in November, senior Palestinian Authority official Jibril Rajoub was one of the first Palestinian Authority officials to speak publicly about the October 7 attacks, and he openly justified the mass slaughter and kidnapping of Israelis.

Rajour, at a press conference in Kuwait drew no distinction between Hamas and his own Palestinian Authority when he characterized the massacre of Jews on October 7 attack as part of “the defensive war OUR people are waging.” In fact, his choice of words embraces the massacre!

This is what and who South Africa choses to champion in the courts of law and world opinion.

Killed in Action. One of the sad new names added to the SA memorial board, Clive Chitiz speaks of his son Yaron who was killed in battle in Gaza. (Photo: D.E. Kaplan)

And while on the question of law, one only has to compare the founding documents of Hamas and South Africa to know they set out on diametrically opposite ideological paths. South Africa’s constitution – considered the birth certificate and soul of the “Rainbow Nation” – marked the way for a new democratic order. Considered one of the most advanced constitutions in the world, it established a constitutional democracy in which a finely crafted Bill of Rights enjoys pride of place.

In contrast, the Hamas charter warns about “transgressors…smitten with vileness” in general but Jews in particular.

Up front as a priority, it thunders:

“Israel will exist and will continue to exist until Islam will OBLITERATE it, just as it obliterated others before it.”

This is the narrative that South Africa by its support now stakes its reputation on.

While South Africa during the 1930s and 1940s had its fair share of supporters for the Nazis – many of whom emerged as future leaders in a post-WWII Apartheid South Africa – its leaders of today have no problem supporting the spiritual heirs of Nazi Germany. 

Victims of Terrorism. South African Israelis, Larry and Marlin Butchins stand before the memorial board, where Marlin points out the names of her family members – her mother Sylvia Bernstein (aged 73) and sister Gail Belkin (aged 48) -who were killed together in a suicide terrorist bombing of Dizengoff Center in March 6, 1996.

I take comfort that the day following the ceremony for the South African fallen, I received an email from esteemed South African author and journalist, Henning van Aswegen, who wrote the following:  

Realise please that South Africa’s Corrupt Antisemitic ANC government does not speak for the people of South Africa, only for a portion thereof. There is massive support for Israel and its people here and we are cheering on the IDF every day in its righteous response to Hamas’ terrorism.”

With the support and understanding of true friends may the day dawn when no more names of fallen will be added to memorial boards.





LETTER FROM ISRAEL AT WAR – WEEK 21

“Friends, what Hamas started in Gaza on October 7, will not end in Gaza or in Jerusalem”

By Harris Zvi Green

February 23, 2024

My dearest friends,

Martin Luther King said:

 “The ultimate measure of a man is not where he stands in moments of comfort and convenience, but where he stands at times of challenge and controversy

The inflammatory antisemitic rhetoric in the context of the Israel-Hamas conflict is becoming increasingly dangerous. It’s unthinkable that this spike in antisemitism is occurring in the wake of the October 7 massacre. I would have imagined that the wanton killing and the perverted rapes would have provided an ideal opportunity for fair-minded people to speak out against these universally accepted evils. Sadly, that’s not been the case.

Most of the players on the international stage are doing their utmost to steer clear of any challenge or controversy that might put their leadership abilities to the test. They prefer comfort and convenience.

Today’s so-called leaders are conspicuous by their silence and their apathy. By Martin Luther King’s standards, they are not leaders.

I was deeply moved by the recent YouTube clip put out by South Africa’s Chief Rabbi, Warren Goldstein, following his diplomatic mission to Israel. Throughout the crisis, his courage has been an inspiration to all of us. The Rabbi has displayed the qualities of a leader during this stressful period of challenge and controversy. I’m sure Martin Luther King would concur.

Let’s return to the recent spike in antisemitic violence. These were inspired in different locations around the world immediately after the October 7 massacre. Demonizing Israel to justify the Hamas atrocities of October 7 was, and remains, a tactical priority. Mass marches in European cities supporting the Hamas cause began immediately after the massacre. The notorious “gas the Jews” demonstration at the Sydney Opera House took place on October 9. 

Sydney’s Sad Symphony. Only two days after Hamas massacres Jews in Israel, pro-Palestinian protesters gathered at the Sydney Opera House on October 9, 2023 and chanted “Gas the Jews”. Originally planned to be illuminated in the colors of the Israeli flag, instead the police advised the Jewish community to stay away from Sydney’s iconic Opera House. (AP/Rick Rycroft)

It never stopped there.

The number of reported antisemitic attacks in the UK in 2023 was more than double those reported in 2022. Following an arson attack on his constituency office, a member of the British House of Commons and a supporter of Israel, announced he would not seek re-election.

Brazil’s President, Lula da Silva, compared Israel’s war against Hamas to Adolf Hitler and the extermination of Jews by the Nazis in World War II. 

Lula’s Lunacy. Inciting antisemitism, Brazil’s President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva says Israel like “Hitler” committing “genocide” in Gaza (Ricardo STUCKERT / Brazilian Presidency / AFP)

A member of South Africa’s Parliament, Ahmed Munzoor Shaik Emam, ranted: 

If the city of Cape Town is handed over to the Zionists, there will be a bloodbath. We will not allow you to make it a Jewish state

Who elects racists like this to represent them in parliament? If this doesn’t constitute hate speech, what does? The number of Jews in South Africa has dropped from 120,000 in 1970 to less than 50,000. This number continues to plummet in the wake of South Africa’s growing hostility towards Israel.

South African MP Ahmed Munzoor Shaik Emam: “If the City of Cape Town Is Handed Over to the Zionists, there Will Be a Bloodbath; We Will Not Allow You to Make It a Jewish State.”

Friends, what Hamas started in Gaza on October 7, will not end in Gaza or in Jerusalem.

Israel has and will always serve as a magnet for world Jewry. In 1947, 4.5% of world Jewry resided in the Land of Israel. Fast forward 77 years. Today 45.3% of world Jewry resides in Israel. It’s estimated that in around 8 years from now, more than half of world Jewry will reside in Israel.

Given what’s going on in the world today, the demographics of the Jewish world will continue to change dramatically. More than 7,000 people immigrated to Israel since October 7. There’s been a significant increase in immigration applications from France, Canada, the US and the UK. Once flourishing communities will dwindle and age. The diaspora’s loss will be Israel’s gain.

The international community is systematically engaged in demonizing Israel. The most ridiculous conspiracy theories are gaining momentum. The victim of the October 7 massacre has become the criminal. The criminal has become the victim.

The UN is doing its utmost to protect the Hamas leadership and what’s left of its terror tunnel network and stockpile of armaments. A ceasefire in Gaza and the withdrawal of Israeli forces will not bring peace to the region. It will, however, guarantee another round of hostilities. More war, more bloodshed. 

Towns and villages along Israel’s southern and northern borders remain deserted. Around 200,000 people have been displaced from their homes. Places of work have been closed for almost five months. Security in these areas must be restored so these people can safely return to their homes and resume their livelihoods.

Israel’s Empty North. Without security, Israel’s northern citizens can’t return to their homes. An Israeli soldier near the Israel-Lebanese border patrols a path in abandoned Kibbutz Manara devastated by constant shelling from Hezbollah in Lebanon. (Photo: Amnon Gutman/Bloomberg)

Of course, the UN should be focusing its efforts on implementing Resolution 1701 adopted in 2006 which requires the disarmament of Hezbollah in South Lebanon. Failure to achieve this will increase the level of tension and make full-scale war inevitable.

The Secretary-General of the UN needs to be reminded that what’s happening in Gaza, isn’t happening in a vacuum. What might happen in Lebanon, could make Gaza look like child’s play.

The plight of the hostages continues to plague us. One hundred and thirty-four hostages have been held in captivity for the past 140 days in the most inhumane conditions. Amongst them is 1 year old Kfir Bibas and his four-year-old brother, Ariel. At the time of his abduction, Kfir was 9 months old. He is now 14 months old. Who’s taking care of him?

Does the World Care? Flash of orange as Shiri Bibas and her sons Ariel, 4, and baby Kfir, are violently abducted from Kibbutz Nir Oz by Hamas terrorists on October 7, 2023. (Screenshot)

Please spare a thought for Kfir and his fellow hostages.

Unfortunately, neither the UN nor the Red Cross are willing to take responsibility for their welfare. The calls for their immediate and unconditional release are no more than lip service.

My condolences to those mourning their nearest and dearest. My wishes to the injured for a complete and speedy recovery. May God protect our brave soldiers. May the hostages soon be reunited with their families.

Wishing you all Shabbat Shalom and better times ahead.

Am Yisrael Chai.

Harris Zvi Green.



“Zionism is an essential part of who we are, our identity, our soul…our bond with Israel is unbreakable,” South Africa’s Chief Rabbi Warren Goldstein gives an emotional account of his trip of solidarity to Israel.



About the writer:

Harris Zvi Green was born in Cape Town, South Africa. Aged 77, he made Aliyah 53 years ago. An accountant by profession, he served as the Chief Financial Officer for a number of Israel based hi-tech companies. He is married to Phyllis. They have 3 married children ,13 grandchildren and 3 great-grandchildren. Harris Zvi Green is a founder member of Truth be Told, an organization engaged in public diplomacy on behalf of Israel.





SHORT-SIGHTED SOUTH AFRICA

Looking East instead of West, South Africa’s ruling ANC fails to see ills closer to home

By Kenneth Mokgatlhe

South Africa’s late unsung philosopher hero, Robert Mangaliso Sobukwe said during the launch of his Pan Africanist Congress party in 1959:

 “I wish to make it clear again that we are anti-nobody. We are pro-Africa. We breathe, we dream, we live Africa because Africa and humanity are inseparable.”

Sobukwe was a political strategist who was cognisant of the balance of power. While it is prevalent that he was inspired by the outcomes of the Bandung Conference in 1955 where 29 Asian and African countries resolved not to take either side of the East or the West, it is clear that Sobukwe acknowledged that African countries had a fundamental duty of building inclusive and effective state institutions, policies and systems to replace the foreign systems which were imposed by the colonialist.

Numerous African and Asian countries are still adhering to the principles of the Non-Aligned Movement in the current conflicts between Israel and Hamas as well as Russia and Ukraine. South Africa has recently made headlines when it took Israel to the International Court of Justice (ICJ) on the accusations of genocide by Israel against the people of Gaza.

Pretoria’s foreign policy has shifted from the West to the East political and economic bloc. In 2010, under the country’s controversial former leader, Jacob Zuma, South Africa joined BRICS to become BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China, and SA) a move that was seen as the adoption of the “Look East Policy”. South Africa has sought to strengthen its ties with East powers such as Russia, China, Turkey, Iran, and others in recent years.

The Boys of BRICS. Clasping hands at the BRICS Summit in Johannesburg on August 23, 2023 are South African President Cyril Ramaphosa (centre) with from (l-r) Brazil’s President Luiz da Silva, China’s President Xi Jinping, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov. (Photo:  Alet Pretorius/pool/AFP via Getty Images)

Ever since the ANC emerged as South Africa’s governing party in 1994, it has confounded many with a seemingly inconsistent foreign policy taking contradicting stances on global issues. End result, the ANC stands exposed as hypocrites. They do not see anything wrong with supporting and associating with Russia’s Vladimir Putin whom they believe is a hero for invading and mass killing Ukrainians but accuse Israel of committing genocide when it responds in defense of its people.

The ANC is complacent about what the ruling tyrant ZANU-PF party is doing to its oppressed people. Today, nearly four out of every five Zimbabweans just about survives in absolute poverty. Zimbabweans on average are poorer now than they were at independence in 1980. Zimbabwe’s grave humanitarian crisis is only being met by increased state repression. It is mind-boggling to think that while the Zimbabweans have been oppressed in the backyard of South Africa for decades, our ANC government turns a blind eye and instead focuses on issues taking place a continent away! If South Africa cares about the welfare of people and the abuse of human rights, why has it turned its back on the long-suffering neighbouring Zimbabweans?

Skewered Scruples. South Africa is failing but it is also failing its northern neighbour Zimbabwe too by turning a blind eye to gross human rights violations.

With the ANC’s erratic foreign policy – dubious at best on issues of morality – it came as little surprise to read about the unholy meeting between Cyril Ramaphosa and Mohamed Hamden Dagalo who is chiefly implicated in the 2005 genocide in Darfur, Sudan. Well, we should all remember that the International Criminal Court ruled that South Africa was guilty for failure to arrest the former Sudanese president Omar al-Bashir who is accused of war crimes, genocide, and violations of human rights. 

Embracing Killers. Judges at the International Criminal Court strongly criticized South Africa for its failure to arrest president Omar Hassan al-Bashir wanted on charges of “crimes against humanity” for his government’s violence in Darfur when he visited Johannesburg in 2015.

Instead, South Africa, under the ANC, is continuing to use every little chance they get to delegitimize the State of Israel. This obsession by the ANC has nothing to do with resolving the historical and political impasse between Israel and Palestine. Trivialized and politicized, the Israel-Palestine issue is now used as an electioneering weapon to deflect and defocus the attention and sobriety of voters who are so disillusioned with the bad record of Nelson Mandela’s party.

If we are really to believe that our foreign policy is premised on the principles and values of human rights, why does the ANC not apply the same humanitarian concern to its neighbour – the long-suffering people of Zimbabwe? 

I am just worried by the ANC’s growing and increasing coziness with Hamas, a terrorist group that does not have regard for the people they claim to be waging the struggle for. Does the ANC know that Hamas has been diverting funds meant for the civil services of the people of Gaza since 2005 to build tunnels and buy armaments in a bid to eradicate the State of Israel? And furthermore, is the ANC so ignorant that it is unaware that when Hamas supporters chant – including our foreign minister Naledi Mandisa Pandor – “From the river to the sea” that they mean the destruction of the Jewish State.

Morally Malignant Minister. Foreign Affairs minister, Naledi Pandor, panders to Hamas thus aligning South Africa with the perpetrators of a massacre of Jews.

A SEA CHANGE
Whatever happened to the ANC when on the eve of South Africa’s democracy three decades ago condemned the senseless attacks by the PAC against innocent civilians because they were White? The ANC then encouraged dialogue thus preventing a huge loss of life and lambasted those who were calling for white people to be driven off into the sea. That ANC is today is unrecognizable! Where they once stood for not driving the Whites into the sea, today they embrace killers whose sole aim is to drive the Jews of Israel into the sea. 



About the writer:

Kenneth Mokgatlhe is a political writer and columnist studying Master’s at Ben Gurion University in Israel.







LETTER FROM ISRAEL AT WAR – WEEK 20

Who should adjudicate the crimes committed by UNRWA and its complicity in the October 7 massacre?

By Harris Zvi Green

February 16, 2024

My dearest friends,

Lyndon B. Johnson said: 

Yesterday is not ours to recover, but tomorrow is ours to win or lose.” 

The speed with which our headlines changed during the past week, clearly demonstrated this.

The best news by far was the release of two of the hostages who had been held in captivity by Hamas for 129 days. Another 134 hostages remain in Gaza. Contrary to the requirements of the Geneva Convention, they haven’t been visited by representatives of the International Committee of the Red Cross. Nor did the medicines provided for them reach their destination.

The Red Cross doesn’t care. Qatar, who brokered the shipment, doesn’t care. South Africa doesn’t care. The UN doesn’t care. Hamas certainly doesn’t care. 

Any references made to the unfortunate plight of the hostages by the international community and the media are no more than lip-service. The awful truth is that nobody cares.

Since its inception in 1949, the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) has been an integral part of the Arab terror machine. Some weeks ago, entrances from UNRWA schools to the Hamas subterranean network of terror tunnels were discovered. The involvement of UNRWA personnel in the October 7 massacre is now an established fact.

Exposing Tunnels, Exposes UNRWA.  A soldier stands in a Hamas tunnel underneath a UNRWA school in Gaza City, February 8, 2024. (Emanuel Fabian/Times of Israel)

Earlier this week, a state-of-the-art Hamas data center, equipped with sophisticated computer servers, was discovered under the UNRWA headquarters in Gaza. As if this wasn’t enough, it transpires this data center was powered by electricity from the UNRWA building. 

Philippe Lazzarini, UNRWA’s Commissioner-General, claims his organization had no knowledge regarding the goings-on under its facilities. Lazzarini is either a liar or totally incompetent. Probably both.

‘We did not know’. UNRWA head pleads ignorance after Hamas data center found under agency’s HQ.

On September 5, 2014, almost 10 years ago, I launched a Facebook group called Investigate UNRWA Now. My action was motivated by the brazen use of UNRWA facilities as missile storage units and safe havens for terror groups. 

At around that time, I initiated an internet petition calling on the Secretary General of the UN to conduct a transparent investigation into this and to bring the guilty UNRWA officials to justice. 1,593 people signed this petition.

UN’worthy to Head. Despite overwhelming evidence, UNRWA head says his agency knew nothing about terrorist Hamas data center directly under its Gaza City HQ.(AP/Bilal Hussein)

I’m a pensioner. I’ve never been an employee of UNRWA. I spent my entire working life working hard to make a decent living and raising a family. So, how is it, that, for the past 10 years, I’ve known about UNRWA’s complicity in supporting Palestinian terror, while UNRWA’s Commissioner-General claims he’s not aware of any such complicity? 

Lazzarini has brought UNRWA into disrepute. UNRWA’s mandate is to provide humanitarian services to the people of Gaza. In reality, UNRWA is a conduit for transferring funds to fuel the Hamas terror machine.

Let’s not forget that much of UNRWA’s funding is provided by the US and the EU. Lazzarini’s incompetence does not excuse these countries from adequately verifying how their taxpayer’s money is being spent.

The required course of action is clear. UNRWA must be dismantled and Lazzarini must be fired and charged at the International Criminal Court for his criminal incompetence which resulted in acts of genocide against Israel.

Earlier this week, I listened to an interesting webinar delivered by a former High Court judge in South Africa. The judge presented his views and interpretations of the rulings of the International Court of Justice against Israel. His explanations related to the legal considerations of the rulings. They also exposed the weaknesses of International Law when it comes to fairly adjudicating charges of genocide and war crimes.

In this respect, the comments made by the dissenting judge from Uganda that the conflict is political and should, therefore, be referred to the Security Council, are worthy of note.

There are differences between law and justice. Law is a system of rules and regulations established by governments to maintain social order and protect the rights of their citizens. Justice, on the other hand, embodies the principles of fairness, impartiality and the treatment of people based on rights, merits and equality.

I expect the rulings of the ICJ to reflect justice. The question is, can they?

Jurisdiction of the ICJ is partial. It is limited to states. The ICJ does not have jurisdiction over acts of genocide committed by Hamas and other Palestinian groups. How, then, can the ICJ adequately adjudicate the charges brought by South Africa, on behalf of Hamas, against Israel? 

The Hamas Charter is clearly genocidal. By not classifying Hamas a terrorist organization, the UN has negatively impacted its own credibility to address one of the worst terror attacks in history.

Motivating Murder. A close read of Hamas’s founding documents clearly shows its genocidal intentions.

Does the ICJ have jurisdiction over countries who provide military know-how and arms to Hamas? At the end of the day, Hamas is a proxy acting on behalf of those countries. It’s like hiring a “hit man” to take the “rap”. It’s the oldest alibi in town.

The ICJ is an organ of the UN and therefore has no jurisdiction over the UN and its agencies. Who, then, should adjudicate the crimes committed by UNRWA and its complicity in the October 7 massacre? 

If justice is to be done, the issues must be judged in their entirety without providing impunity to the political forces who control the purse strings.

The international community is doing its utmost to tie our hands behind our backs, but we will prevail. We have no choice.

Killers Let Loose. Hamas’s deliberate attack on Israelis and the atrocities it committed fall firmly under the category defined by international law as war crimes and crimes against humanity, and amount to genocide. (Photo: Hani Al Shaer/Anadolu Agency)

My condolences to those mourning their nearest and dearest. My wishes to the injured for a complete and speedy recovery. May God protect our brave soldiers. Their bravery was certainly put to the test in the operation that secured the release of the two hostages earlier this week. May the remaining hostages soon be reunited with their families.

Wishing you all Shabbat Shalom and better times ahead.

Am Yisrael Chai.

Harris Zvi Green



About the writer:

Harris Zvi Green was born in Cape Town, South Africa. Aged 77, he made Aliyah 53 years ago. An accountant by profession, he served as the Chief Financial Officer for a number of Israel based hi-tech companies. He is married to Phyllis. They have 3 married children ,13 grandchildren and 3 great-grandchildren. Harris Zvi Green is a founder member of Truth be Told, an organization engaged in public diplomacy on behalf of Israel.








CRY FOR ME, ARGENTINIA

From a curse to a blessing – have Argentina and Israel turned a tide in diplomatic relations?

By Jonathan Feldstein

Jerusalem’s Kiryat Hayovel neighborhood has a distinct international flavor. Streets are named Bolivia, Brazil, Costa Rica, Guatemala, Uruguay and more, recognizing Latin American countries that voted to establish a Jewish state in the Land of Israel in 1947. Notably missing from the top of the list is Argentina which abstained during the 1947 UN vote.

A Street Named ‘Guatemala’. With a number of streets in Jerusalem named after South American countries, conspicuous by its absence is Argentina that did not join fellow Latin American states that voted at the UN in 1947  to support the establishment of a Jewish state.

Recently, Argentinian President Javier Milei arrived in Israel to show solidarity at this time of war, and to turn the tide between the stained past of his country’s relationship with Israel. Milei’s visit was significant and historic on many levels. He arrived shortly after being elected in November, signifying the significance he places on Israel and his country’s relationship with Israel, which was a foundation of his campaign. Indeed, it was Milei’s first state visit overseas. Milei’s arrival also made him the first head of state to visit Israel from South America since the inhuman Hamas attack on Israel and massacre, the beginning of a war that’s now well into its fourth month.

Big Move. Announcing plans to move the embassy to Jerusalem,  Argentina’s President Javier Milei is seen here on 6 February 2024 praying and in tears at the Western Wall in Jerusalem’s Old City. (photo: Western Wall Heritage Foundation)

As many foreign dignitaries have done, Milei visited communities next to the Gaza border that were overrun by Hamas terrorists, among which some 1200 people were massacred by the terrorists, and from which hundreds were take hostage. Indeed, the significance of President Milei’s visit was amplified by him being accompanied to Israel’s Gaza border by Israel’s President Isaac Herzog.

Presidents Milei and Herzog were accompanied by former hostage Ofelia Roitman, a woman originally from Argentina, who moved to Israel in 1985. This was her first visit back to the farming community from which she was kidnapped.

Walk in the Shadow of Death. Exposed to the massacre that took place on October 7, President Isaac Herzog (left) and Argentinian President Javier Milei visit the destroyed homes on Kibbutz Nir Oz on February 8, 2024. (Maayan Toaf/GPO)

Milei gave unconditional backing to Israel, calling Hamas, the Palestinian Arab Islamists, a “terrorist group” who had committed “a crime against humanity.”Mieli noted:

 “The free world can’t remain indifferent in this case, as we see clear examples of terrorism and anti-Semitism and what I would describe as 21st century Nazism. When we hear about the methods that were used this time, it reminds us of the atrocities of the Holocaust.”

Hearing the Horror. During the visit to devastated kibbutz Nir Oz, Argentinian President Javier Milei (left) was joined by former Argentinian, Ofelia Roitman (right) who had been taken hostage and released from Gaza, and was returning to her home for the first time since the massacre. Israeli President Issac Herzog (right) look on.

Milei’s visit was also noteworthy in that he prayed at the Western Wall, danced with Israeli worshippers, and affirmed his intention to move Argentina’s embassy to Jerusalem.

During his visit, some of my Argentinian friends went out of their way to express their pride and joy in seeing their president turning the tide on relations with Israel that have been marred by a history that’s less than positive, and previous leaders whose positions who have been decidedly hostile to Israel, or ambivalent at best. Following the Holocaust, Argentina welcomed and gave refuge to Nazi leaders and war criminals. Then in the 1990s, two massive Islamist terrorist attacks took place in Buenos Aries, targeting in 1992 the Israeli embassy, followed by the Jewish Community Center in1994. Investigations into these and the culpability of its leaders at the time also lead to the mysterious death of a Jewish prosecutor, Alberto Nisman, on the eve of a trial that would have made much of this public. 

President Milei’s visit made me think of my friend Diego Freytes and his profound and personal essay in “Israel the Miracle,” published by the Genesis 123 Foundation, featuring 75 essays by Christian leaders from around the world about why Israel is significant to them.  Diego not only refers to Argentina’s bitter past in blocking Jewish immigration in the 1930s, harboring Nazi war criminals and terrorists, and covering up its compliance as a base for Iranian terror.  He does a deep dive into the meaning of the promise God made to Abraham in verse Genesis 12:3:

I will bless those who bless you, And I. will curse him who curses you; And in you, all the families of the earth shall be blessed.”

Israel the Miracle. Diego and Carolina Freytes.

More than just a cursory repetition of the Biblical verse, he looks at the root of the Hebrew words and what they mean, noting not just that its an imperative to bless Israel. Diego writes that the root of the word “to bless” is the same as the root of the word “knee”.  He explained that it’s not just a concept, but an active duty, as in to bend a knee. Literally, to stand in solidarity.  President Milei’s visit clearly did that.

The corollary to actively blessing Israel is cursing Israel. Despising Israel. A simple English or Spanish translation does not reveal the depth of the verse in the original Hebrew.  The consequence for cursing, or “looking down on someone” is not simply a non-descript curse.  Diego notes the Hebrew for the second part come from the word that means “to destroy completely.”

Reflecting on Argentina’s past, Diego notes the consequence of its actions that have been a curse to Israel, and how that has been a scar on Argentina for decades, leading to multiple examples of a country that once had a glorious past, spiraling downward to near utter destruction in the 80 years since it began cursing Israel. He writes before Milei’s election, as a reflection and seeking forgiveness for Argentina’s past, and as a prayer for its future. “What happened to my nation? Argentina is in a deep economic, political, and social crisis that has lasted more than 80 years. Inflation grows at over 100 percent per year. There is only a memory of that dazzling nation.”

This week, Diego Freyets’ words and President Milei’s visit came together as the beginning of a hint of turning the tide. In the early hours of February 12, the IDF conducted a seamless and bold military operation in the southern Gaza city, Rafah, rescuing two hostages.  Rafah remains the last stronghold of Hamas to where its terrorist leaders have fled, and where they have brought the remaining hostages held since October 7.

Of 136 hostages held, it could have been any hostages found and brought home. However, the two rescued were born in Argentina.  When President Milei visited the Gaza border area, he knew these Argentines were still in captivity just miles away. Is this a coincidence, or a divine wink that the tide is turning in the right direction, that the blessing is beginning?  Only God knows. May He continue to work through President Milei to heal the decades long rift, and may all the remaining hostages be rescued and come home soon.



About the writer:

Jonathan Feldstein ­­­­- President of the US based non-profit Genesis123 Foundation whose mission is to build bridges between Jews and Christians – is a freelance writer whose articles appear in The Jerusalem Post, Times of Israel, Townhall, NorthJersey.com, Algemeiner Jornal, The Jewish Press, major Christian websites and more.






LETTER FROM ISRAEL AT WAR – WEEK 19

Shame on those who act against Israel in the name of “human rights” but then discriminate against my people and hold them to a different standard

By Harris Zvi Green

My dearest friends,

For me, this week started off on the wrong foot with the sudden passing of a dear friend of more than 60 years. Finding the words to comfort her family was so difficult. As one grows older, one becomes more experienced in things like this, but none of the stock phrases reserved for bereavements, could adequately express my deep sorrow. May her family be comforted amongst the mourners of Zion and Jerusalem.

Last Friday morning, I attended a demonstration of the expatriate South African community in Israel to protest the South African Government’s decision to file charges of genocide against Israel at the ICJ. This issue continues to annoy and disturb me.

Setting it Straight. Identifying the true nature and perpetrators of genocide, Nazi hunter and Director of the Simon Wiesenthal Center in Jerusalem, Dr. Efraim Zuroff, speaks at the TbT/Telfed protest against South Africa’s government in Ra’anana, Israel on February 2, 2023. (Photo: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zScK9MiZk2s)

One of the speakers, Dr. Efraim Zuroff, Director of the Simon Wiesenthal Center in Jerusalem, said:

It’s all politics. It’s all bullshit.”

Be that as it may, the politics and the bullshit, under the patronage of the international community, are stirring up anti-Israel and antisemitic rhetoric around the world.

Hamas and the other Iranian proxies in the region are becoming increasingly emboldened while antisemitism is sweeping through the streets of Europe and across university campuses in the United States at an unprecedented rate. Jewish communities around the world are becoming increasingly threatened.

The atrocities perpetrated by Hamas on October 7 are no longer an issue. The holding of 136 Israeli hostages for 126 days has been relegated to the back pages of the newspapers. The brutal killings and the gang rapes have long been forgotten. The outrageous charges made at the ICJ, the absurd comments made by the UN Secretary-General and the financial hold Qatar has on much of the media and academic institutions around the world, have effectively buried these issues.

I’m sick of the double standards, the demonization and the delegitimization. I’m more than disappointed with those who claim to act in the name of human rights but who repeatedly discriminate against my people and hold them to a different standard.

Selective Sight. Israelis (seen here in Tel Aviv) are constantly concerned for their hostages who are not only buried underground in Gaza’s tunnels but are buried by the global media from world attention. (Abir Sultan/EPA/Shutterstock)

I’m happy for Israel to be held to the highest standard, but this standard must be binding on all.

I recently read a review of a new book entitled “Ethics of our Fighters” by Rabbi Shlomo Brody. In the midst of dealing with an existential threat and facing orchestrated criticism from our enemies, I found the book most interesting. It’s thought provoking and presents a multitude of issues that challenge the moral fiber of a nation at war.

The author relates to the criticism being levelled at Israel that Judaism is making us conduct our war for survival in an unethical manner. He believes traditional Jewish ethics contribute positively to the IDF’s moral behavior on the battlefield.

Rabbi Brody explains that in-depth research of traditional Jewish texts reveals that Judaism encompasses many values, including the importance of destroying evil. Judaism believes all humans are created in the image of God. It cares about the deaths of all human creatures and doesn’t require unnecessary deaths or collateral damage to achieve military objectives. Judaism brings a balance of values to address these complex moral and ethical issues.

The Rabbi believes much of the criticism of Israel is based on an exclusive concern for upholding human rights without giving any consideration to the need to destroy the forces of evil that threaten our very existence. He notes that Israel, in her efforts to avoid randomly killing innocent Gazans, should not put her own soldiers at unnecessary risk. This, too, represents a serious moral and ethical dilemma.

Ricky Business. The labyrinth of terror tunnels beneath most of Gaza are a constant danger to Israeli soldiers searching for the hostages.(AP Photo/Jack Guez, Pool, File)

As Rabbi Brody concludes, there’s clearly a need to develop our moral fortitude to fully understand why we’re fighting this war. We need to win this war by doing what’s right and this includes destroying the forces of evil.

We need to judge ourselves by our own moral standards and not be deterred by selective criticism and the double standards used by our enemies. Responsibility for the deaths of non-combatants lies solely with Hamas who exploits them as human shields. The fact the world doesn’t recognize this, should be of no relevance to us.

Thanks to those of you who regularly inquire about the wellbeing of my family. Your concern means so much to me.

Ariel has made a good recovery from his injuries. He still requires some minor surgery. The doctors are confident he’ll be as good as new. Omer, too, will undergo surgery to address the infection at the bottom of his back. Much to his disappointment, this will sideline him from military action for the next two months. Ori has been released from the army for a few months and has resumed his studies. Eyal, too, has resumed his studies while Linor is preparing to embark on her academic career.

This war has been a major strain on my children. Having to contend with younger children in addition to worrying about the safety of their serving children in these tense and difficult times, has been a huge challenge.

The spouses of my grandchildren are also deserving of praise for providing their spouses with the encouragement and peace of mind to achieve their goals on the battlefield. I’m so proud of the way they handle themselves. These are the people who are winning this war for us.

My condolences to those mourning their nearest and dearest. My wishes to the injured for a complete and speedy recovery. May God protect our brave soldiers. May the hostages soon be reunited with their families.

Wishing you all Shabbat Shalom and better times ahead.

Am Yisrael Chai.

Harris Zvi Green






About the writer:

Harris Zvi Green was born in Cape Town, South Africa. Aged 77, he made Aliyah 53 years ago. An accountant by profession, he served as the Chief Financial Officer for a number of Israel based hi-tech companies. He is married to Phyllis. They have 3 married children ,13 grandchildren and 3 great-grandchildren. Harris Zvi Green is a founder member of Truth be Told, an organization engaged in public diplomacy on behalf of Israel.






YOU ARE NOT ALONE

HOMAGE TO THE HOSTAGES

Stolen from Israel, our precious hostages lie isolated in a hostile dark. Despite their disconnect, millions who knew them not, know them today as family. 
Such is the sentiment expressed in this poem by Fonda Dubb of Eilat.
(David Kaplan Lay of the Land editor)

By Fonda Dubb

We feel your pain
We feel your suffering
Our souls are connected with yours
You are not alone

Your strength is from the Lord
Your Creator
You are not alone

We grieve with you
and grieve for you
Your longing to be home
You will never be forgotten
You are not alone

We cry for you
We do not know you
You are “people ” some of us have never met
Yet my heart sings a song of love and tears
Longing for you to come home
To be freed from your chains of bondage
And united again together with your family and friends

How brave you are!!
We simple mortals cannot feel nor see your pain
But cry in unison
That soon you will be free to roam in our beloved land again
While I who do not know you
shed tears of sorrow and love
To come back again
You are not alone

I feel you belong to me
I pray that almighty G-d will protect you all
And give you strength to live each day in a noble way
Knowing
You are not Alone

Hashem anoints your head with precious oils
And heals you in a calming way
With thoughts of coloured butterflies
Of white, blue, yellow and red
that come gently down to rest upon your shoulders
So you can rest at night
to give you peace of mind
You are not alone

I shed a final tear with hope, love and prayer
to restore your mind
Knowing
You are not alone

We live in a world that cares
And cries for you with might
We blow you kisses
We send you hugs
To hold you and secure you tight
So you are not alone at night
And to feel our tears
That are not in vain that splash upon our pillows at night
To protect you all the day and night
With a gentle smile
We send a glow of light to spread our message to tell you
Spread out on a golden sheet
Our love for will never waver
YOU ARE NOT ALONE



Wherever you are in Israel, from the cities to the smallest town, the faces of the hostages stare back, appealing …..
Seen here is a woman looking at a board displaying pictures of hostages, in Tel Aviv, Israel, February 5. (Photo: Reuters/Susana Vera)



About the poet:

Fonda Dubb, a former South African who in her own daring way challenged the apartheid regime by teaching dance and cooking in “Black areas” in the Eastern Cape and Northern Transvaal. Fonda Dubb, today, resides in Eilat, Israel (see article: The Right Moves). Her lifelong concern for others has led to her receiving numerous awards, most notably in 2012 the ‘Woman of the Year Miller Prize’ for volunteerism from the Mayor of Eilat. In recent times, Fonda has taken to writing poetry drawing from her experiences both in South Africa and Israel.