Showing posts with label Jebel Mukaber. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jebel Mukaber. Show all posts

Saturday, October 24, 2015



THE CITY OF FEAR
 
Jerusalem is affectionately known by many Israelis as the City of Gold, thanks to the golden limestone from which it is built, and the golden light that suffuses the air. In the last weeks however a new title might be deemed more appropriate - the City of Fear.
 
I have survived 35 years of life in Israel during which I have gone through at least four wars, two Intifadas, and the constant threat of terror, but I have not felt before the level of fear apparent in the city at this time. Last Sunday I went out and, for the first time in my life, bought a weapon. It is just a can of pepper spray, but it is terribly sad to me that I feel the need to carry such a weapon, not just to try and defend myself should I be attacked, but perhaps to help save someone else. I am not alone. Last week the stores ran out of pepper spray and cans of tear gas, as many people rushed out to buy them.
 
Incitement
 
"The current violence in Israel has been characterized by two things: an unbridled bloodlust among an entire brainwashed generation of Palestinian Arabs, and an unprecedented level of faulty and biased media coverage".

For the last month or so our city has been the focus of an intense 'wave of terror' stirred up by the incitement coming from Arab leaders and the preachers in the mosques, which claim erroneously that Israel is trying to change the status quo on the Temple Mount, and plans to destroy the Muslim holy sites there. This vicious lie is being propagated in the mosques and newspapers, and especially in the social media, throughout the entire Arab world, and  it is willingly believed by a population that has been brought up to hate and fear Jews.  In a religious system that is based on submission (the very word 'Islam' means 'submission'), not only to Allah but also to his representatives, the spiritual leaders and teachers, people will believe what they are told to believe, without question. What is more, Islam sanctions the twisting of truths and out-and-out lies in the interests of Jihad, the goal of world domination. This is called the doctrine of al-taqiyya. (For more on this see  "Islam's Doctrines of Deception" by Raymond Ibrahim, Jane's Islamic Affairs Analyst, on   


 
Islam offers no certainty of salvation or eternal life, except to those shahids (martyrs) who die in the cause of Jihad. Shahids are promised 72 virgins in Paradise. Add to all this a generation of Palestinian children who have been brainwashed from the womb to hate Jews and to believe these lies, and you have an explosive mix.

For more about the promise of virgins see "Suicide, Terror and Shahada" in http://palwatch.org/main.aspx?fi=565
 
Every war or terror wave seems to have its catch phrases, and that of the current one gripping Jerusalem and Israel is
'incitement', or 'hatzitah'  in Hebrew. The word 'hatzitah' literally means to set alight or to ignite a fire. The problem with lighting fires that once lit they take on a life of their own. They will keep burning and spreading as long as there is fuel and the right atmospheric conditions. It's a whole lot easier to light a fire than put one out, especially if there is an abundant supply of fuel and the right conditions.
 


 


Clashes in the West Bank city of Hebron
Palestinian protesters sling stones at Israeli soldiers during clashes in the West Bank city of Hebron on Oct. 22, 2015.
(Abed Al Hashlamoun / European Pressphoto Agency)

http://www.latimes.com/world/middleeast/la-fg-backstory-israel-palestinians-20151022-story.html

 
 
The preachers of the Lie and the inciters of violence have lit a fire in Jerusalem. There is plenty of fuel and the conditions are 'right'. There seems little chance of it burning itself out or of anyone being able to subdue it. It is spreading to Hebron, Bet Shemesh  and other towns and villages throughout Israel and the West Bank.
 
The acceptance of the Lie by a poorly educated and deeply brainwashed Palestinian population is easy to understand, but it is much more difficult to understand the degree to which the Western Press is willing to swallow the lies and deceptions of Palestinian propaganda. Most of the headlines in the western press suggest that the Palestinians killed or injured by Israeli security forces are the victims rather than the perpetrators of the violence. The level of bias in the reporting of the situation by the BBC, for example,  is so high that even its former chairman, Lord Michael Grade, spoke up against it saying that the BBC has shown 'inexcusable bias' against Israel.
Woe to those who call evil good, and good evil;
Who put darkness for light, and light for darkness;
Who put bitter for sweet, and sweet for bitter!
Isaiah 5:20
 
 
 
Fear
 
To put all this in perspective, the level of violence in the current terror wave has not, yet at least, reached that which we experienced during the Second Intifada (2000 -2005), when we suffered the  suicide bombings of buses, shopping malls, markets and restaurants, and in which 1053 Israelis, including 714 civilians died.  Nevertheless in the past month,  we have seen around 4-5 terror attacks daily, and ongoing rioting in many parts of the City and elsewhere in Israel and the West Bank.  Ten Israeli citizens have been killed, and many more seriously wounded, mainly as a result of stabbing, shooting or by the throwing of  rocks and Molotov cocktails.  Some 47 Palestinians have also been killed when they tried to attack Israeli citizens or soldiers. http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-4714804,00.html.
 
These attacks are creating a high level of fear because they are being carried out by the Arab men, women and children who are our neighbours and work colleagues, or who serve us in shops, repair our houses, and drive our buses and taxis.  In a city in which 40% of the population is Arab, anyone standing beside you at a traffic light or walking behind you on the street might be a terrorist. He or she could  pull out a knife and slit your throat in a flash. Some of the attackers have been children of only 13 or 15 years of age. You can trust no one. This creates an atmosphere of fear and suspicion, and we are all walking the streets in an intense state of watchfulness and caution.  
 
I live in the part of the city, known as Armon Hanatziv (or East Talpiot) that adjoins the Palestinian villages of Jebel al- Mukaber and Tsur Baher, from whence many of the attackers have come. Normally we get along fine. We rub shoulders in the supermarket and shops of our shared shopping center, and treat each other with respect and tolerance. Now however we are all afraid of each other, Jew and Arab alike.
 
 Last week two young men from Jebel al-Mukaber boarded our local bus, armed with a knife and a gun. Blocking the doors and all hope of escape, they set about stabbing and shooting  the passengers, until they were 'neutralized' . Two passengers were killed and some 40 injured.  Our bus lines now run almost empty.  A hidden  news camera on our bus last week captured the fear. A young Arab man boarded the bus and sat near the front. The ten or so other passengers quickly moved away from him, and most disembarked at the next stop. The newsmen interviewed the young Arab and asked him if he had noticed everyone's reaction to him. He said "Yes" and it made him feel very afraid. He said he had deliberately left his bag at home and carried nothing in his hands or pockets, because he was afraid of being taken for a terrorist as he travelled into the city to do some business at a government office. It is not only the Jews who are afraid these days, but also the Arabs.
 


 
Last Saturday I went up to the street to take out my garbage, and sat a while on  a bench to get some fresh air. I wanted badly to go for  a stroll but decided it was too risky. The only walker I saw was an elderly lady clutching a big spray can of tear gas as she went. That made me feel very sad. It was only a few minutes later, after I returned home, when I heard the 'thrub thrub' of a police helicopter circling overhead - a sure sign of trouble amiss. I later learned that a terrorist had been shot and killed, just down the road, when he pulled out a knife and threatened some border police officers who had stopped him because he had been reported as acting suspiciously by a passer by.
 
The following day it was with some trepidation therefore that I ventured into our shopping center to pick up a parcel at the post office. There were plenty of parks (unusually) and the shops were deserted. I was the only customer in the post office. Usually on a Sunday morning it is heaving with Jews and Arabs going about their business,  but not any more. People are basically staying home and just going out only when absolutely necessary.  
 
 
In view of the current tension our Mayor and the Heads of the Security Forces have advised all those who have guns to carry them, and those who do not have guns to arm themselves if possible with tear gas or pepper spray. This is pretty scary too. When I was in a shop buying some pepper spray there was a man there buying what looked to me a very deadly device consisting of two heavy metal bars joined by a chain - a sort of bolas-type weapon. I wondered what he planned to use it for and it made me afraid that such weapons are so easily available to all and sundry.
 
With many fear-filled civilians carrying weapons it was only a matter of time until something tragic happened. And it did. Last Saturday night a terrorist, armed with a gun, entered the central bus station in Beer Sheva and began attacking travelers, killing one and wounding ten others.  As chaos ensued with the injured on the ground and others fleeing in every direction, a security guard mistook an innocent Eritrean refugee for one of the terrorists and shot him. The angry crowd then fell on this refugee throwing chairs on him and kicking him brutally. He later died of his wounds.  Only some time later did it become apparent he was just an innocent traveler and it was all a terrible case of mistaken identity. This is an illustration of the danger of fear - it can easily erupt into hatred and violence especially in a crowd situation.  
 
This week the level of violence in the city seems to have diminished a bit - or perhaps we are all just growing used to it. The streets are now being patrolled by some 4,000 regular police, border police and soldiers. There are groups of police and soldiers, armed to the teeth, standing about at every potential flashpoint. Mounted police are clop clopping about the streets on quarter horses - something once seen only in the narrow alleyways of the Old City. Huge concrete blocks have been placed at the entrances to the Arab villages from whence terrorists have come or where rioting is occurring, and every car or pedestrian coming out of these villages are being searched. All these measures, along with the threat of the demolition of  the  family homes of terrorists (a controversial but effective measure), are having a calming effect. The heightened vigilance of both civilians and police also mean that quite often would-be attackers are neutralized before they can do any harm.
 
The truth is the violence is being perpetrated by only a small percentage of Arabs, mainly young men, and the vast majority of the Arab population wants to see it stopped as much as we do. The fear and the violence is affecting them even more than us. They cannot easily get out of their villages to go to work or school, and their shops, restaurants and market stalls are empty of customers.
 
 
 
 
Jewish worshippers in the Old City, September 15, 2015.
Border Police accompany Jewish worshippers in the Jewish Quarter of the Old City, Jerusalem, September 15, 2015.AFP
http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium-1.676047
 

Border Police guarding the Damascus Gate entrance to the Old City
http://www.jpost.com/HttpHandlers/ShowImage.ashx?ID=304359
 
A Ray of Light
 
In the midst of  all this darkness this week a ray of light shone forth. In the bus attack in Armon Hanatziv one of the injured passengers was an amazing Dutch lady, Marike Veldman, who for 32 years has been running a foster home for Arab children from difficult backgrounds, both Muslim and Christian. She has raised 20 such children, one of whom is personally known to me. This quiet, but courageous Christian lady is now recovering at home from her wounds, both physical and emotional. Before being released from the hospital she gave an interview to the reporters from the Israeli online newspaper "Ynetnews". I recommend you read the article that appeared in the headlines on Tuesday,  and watch the embedded video of the interview. It is very uplifting. http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-4713456,00.html
 
Pray
 
Pray for the peace of Jerusalem:
“May they prosper who love you.
Peace be within your walls,
Psalm 122: 6-7
 
 
How can we pray at a time like this?
Pray:
  • That truth will be upheld, and lies and deception exposed;
  • Against the fear, especially that it will not develop into hatred and more violence, and trigger mob 'lynchings' and revenge attacks by Jews;
  • for a silencing of the voices of incitement and for a calming of the spirit of deception that is driving the present violence;
  • for our protection as we go about our daily business, especially for the children as they travel to school and play in the streets;
  • for the children and young adults who are carrying out these terrible attacks,  often being killed as a result, while the leaders, teachers and parents who have brainwashed them and incited them to violence sit safely in their homes and offices. This is child abuse of an extreme form  (Remember that our Lord Yeshua taught us that we should pray for our enemies);
  •  for the healing of the wounds, both physical and emotional, of those injured and harmed, and of those who have lost loved one, on both sides;
  • that Arab, Jew and Gentile alike will turn away from deception and lies, and cry out to the true living God of love and peace through Yeshua. There is no other answer and no other hope for the Middle East, and indeed the whole world.
 
I have set watchmen on your walls, O Jerusalem;
They shall never hold their peace day or night.
You who make mention of the Lord, do not keep silent,
And give Him no rest till He establishes
And till He makes Jerusalem a praise in the earth
Isaiah 62: 6-7
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 









Saturday, November 22, 2014

 

 

TERROR IN THE SYNAGOGUE

Early on Tuesday morning in Jerusalem this week the 'thub thub' of helicopters circling overhead announced trouble in the city once more. Turning on the TV I learned that two Palestinian terrorists had entered a synagogue in the west Jerusalem neighborhood of Har Nof, armed with axes, knives and a gun, and had set about hacking and shooting the men inside who were at their morning prayers.  They killed four, three rabbis and another man, and injured 8 others.  Security forces were quick to respond and were there within seconds. In the shoot-out that followed a Druze policeman  was seriously injured, and later died, and an ambulance driver broke a leg while running for cover. The two terrorists were killed by police. 

The scenes in the synagogue after the attack were not for the faint hearted. Five Israeli citizens were dead, 8 injured and 26 children made fatherless.






http://www.algemeiner.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/jerusalem-synagogue-attack.jpg
 
The terror organization, Hamas, immediately claimed that the attack was revenge for the killing of an Arab bus driver found dead by hanging in a bus on Sunday. Even though the autopsy report ruled the death as suicide, the belief that it was a murder perpetrated by "Israeli settlers" persists among Palestinians and is igniting many riots and violent acts around the city. Palestinian Authority President, Mahmoud Abbas had called for a "Day of Rage" on the Tuesday  to avenge the bus-driver's death, which act makes his later condemnation of the synagogue massacre ring a little hollow.
 
Immediately after the attack, celebrations broke out in Palestinian areas, and especially in Gaza. The two terrorists were acclaimed as 'martyrs' and heroes, and sweets were thrown in the streets in celebration.
 
                                                        Celebrations in Gaza
 
                                  http://www.israelnationalnews.com/static/Resizer.ashx/News/468/282/547069.jpg
 
Within minutes the social media were flooded with cartoons and other propaganda celebrating the massacre, such as those below:
 
 
 
                                                  http://www.israeltoday.co.il/Portals/0/news/141118_cartoon.jpg
 

http://www.jpost.com/Arab-Israeli-Conflict/Hamas-affiliated-social-media-abuzz-with-cartoons-glorifying-Jerusalem-terror-attack-382152

http://media.cagle.com/180/2014/11/20/156519_600.jpg
The feeling amongst the Jewish population in Jerusalem is that, with this massacre in a place of prayer, a red line has been crossed. Although we have suffered months of rioting and terror attacks, this is a dangerous escalation, and has the potential of igniting the city in a whirlwind of religious war. On the night of the attack I received a recorded phone message calling me to participate in a protest at the Meitar Strings Bridge at the entrance to Jerusalem, near the central bus station. I didn't go of course but around  300 did and were calling for  "revenge," and for Internal Security Minister Yitzhak Aharonovich to be fired for failing to deal with the ongoing and escalating Arab violence. Scuffles broke out with the police and a number of protestors were arrested.





                                 http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/187610#.VHBmS5scRLM
 
The city is tense and the streets emptier than normal. People are fearful and we all wonder what will happen next. The sad thing is that most of the people in this city, Jews and Arabs alike, just want to get on with our lives. There are 300,000 Arabs in this city of 1 million and mostly we all get along just fine. We live cheek by jowl, work together, shop together, travel on the same buses and streets and even eat at the same restaurants. Contrary to the opinions of many, there is no apartheid here. The Arab population is as fearful as the Jewish population. None of us know who will carry out the next attack. Arabs can be killed in these attacks just as easily as others. Perhaps the next terrorist will be the man sitting behind us in the bus, or in the car stopped next to us at the stop light, or the shop keeper from whom we buy our groceries. In many ways this sort of warfare is worse than a conventional war because you cannot identify your enemy. He is amongst us and looks just like anyone else. Someone you have worked with for years, and have come to like and trust, can suddenly turn and sink a knife into you. (The two terrorists who carried out the synagogue attack worked in a shop in the same street).
 
This fear prompted  the mayor of Ashkelon to bar Arab construction workers at three kindergartens in his city, a move which was instantly criticized by government ministers and many others. However we all understand the fear. Even at my school we employ Arab cleaners and our school bus drivers are all Palestinians from East Jerusalem. This climate has led many Palestinians to fear for their jobs and this is only exacerbating tensions.
The two young men who carried out this horrendous act were from the Arab neighborhood of Jebel Mukaber, which abuts my own (Jewish) neighborhood of Armon HaNatziv. We have been subjected to a constant barrage of fireworks, rocks and Molotov cocktails for months from Jebel Mukaber and the adjacent village of Tsur Baher, but following this attack, the intensity of the rioting increased greatly. It has been difficult to sleep because of the noise. Residents of my neighborhood say they are afraid to walk the streets or shop at the shopping center, which has been bombarded with rocks on occasion.  Those who live close to Jebel Mukaber have had rocks raining down on their houses and breaking windows. Fortunately I live across the valley and feel quite safe in my own house, but it is very unpleasant for those affected. I used to drive to work past Tsur Baher but lately I have been taking a different route for fear of being a target.    

So far the rioting has involved rock throwing, Molotov cocktails and the firing of fireworks. It may sound fairly harmless but even these so-called light weapons can cause serious injury or even death. This week, just two days after the synagogue massacre, Israeli police captured a large shipment of fireworks and other weapons from China disguised as Christmas decorations and destined for Palestinian interests in Beit Hanina, Jerusalem. Inside the containers confiscated police found 18,000 fireworks of the restricted 20mm variety, as well as 5,200 commando knives, 4,300 flashlights that can be modified into improvised Tasers, 5,500 Tasers, and 1,000 swords. http://www.jpost.com/Israel-News/Police-Massive-weapons-cache-uncovered-among-Christmas-decorations-382393


 

 http://www.algemeiner.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/Israel-police-weapons-capture-2.-Photo-Facebook-300x300.jpg

Watching the police unpacking these boxes of 'Christmas decorations' was a horrifying experience. Just imagine what could be done with such weapons. I thank God they were discovered in time but one cannot help wondering if other shipments have somehow slipped through. The Palestinian terrorists  of East Jerusalem may not have easy access to guns but they are very inventive and almost anything can be used as a weapon - including cars and JPG diggers (tractors) as we know only too well. Last night a group of Jewish students were attacked and injured on the Mount of Olives by a gang of Arabs armed with boards through which long nails had been driven.

The atmosphere of fear in the city is almost palpable. We are all aware of it. The problem with fear is that it easily breeds hatred and hatred breeds violence. And violence breeds revenge. It can all build in a vicious cycle and escalate out of control very easily. It is hard to know what can be done to break the cycle. For many months our security forces have taken a 'softly, softly' approach in the hope that things will calm down of their own accord, but the latest developments have raised an outcry against this policy and many are calling for stronger reprisals and a harsher response. A massive police presence in the hotspots, surveillance balloons overhead, concrete barriers and checkpoints have sprung up over the city.

The government has reinstituted the controversial policy of destroying terrorists' homes and the first such razing took place yesterday.  Many see this as a humanitarian crime and a kind of group punishment. However terrorists do not grow out of a vacuum. They are formed and educated by their families, who very often support and celebrate their acts. Even so, the efficacy of such a policy was doubtful during the second intifada and only inflames passions more in my opinion.

Is there any solution?  It seems likely that the situation will only deteriorate at least in the near future. So how can we pray? The Bible commands us to "pray for the peace of Jerusalem" but conflict and warfare play a big part in the prophecies concerning Jerusalem and are apparently a necessary precursor to the ultimate redemption of the world. Nevertheless at the bottom line God does not want bloodshed, whether it be Jewish blood or Arab, or that of anyone else. We can and should pray for peace amongst all peoples and watch our own attitudes and beliefs, guarding our hearts against prejudice and hatred.  As a child I was taught in Sunday school a song that I still remember, and it goes like this:
Jesus loves the little children, all the children of the world, red and yellow, black and white, they are precious in his sight, Jesus loves the little children of the world.... 
Songwriters
WILLIAM BRADBURY, ANNA WARNER, TOM FETTKE
Published by
Lyrics © ALFRED PUB CO INC
 
I am grateful to my teachers who instilled that sentiment into my young heart. Would that more  would do so for the present generation.
 
I believe that God grieves for all who die whether they be Jew or Arab or Gentile. He loves us all. This present violence is grievous to a loving God and he longs for a better world just as much as we do. It is hard for us to understand why he allows it, but we must trust his judgment in this and walk in faith that it is all ultimately for good, and as his Word promises,  one day peace and goodwill will reign on Earth. In the meantime we must play our part in the process, praying and acting in love towards all. After all, Jesus taught us to pray for our enemies, as radical an idea in his time as it is in ours. I am learning what that means in reality - to pray for the salvation of those who want nothing more than to kill me. After all they can only destroy my body. My eternal soul is safe in Yeshua's hands, but they face Hell and judgment and are thus to be pitied. Muslim teachers promise Paradise and 70 virgins to all martyrs in the cause of 'holy' Jihad, but I often wonder what a shock these young, people must get when they die and are confronted the Holy God of Israel and his wrath. I feel sad for them. They are the real victims of Satan's deception.  

So let's continue to pray for peace in Jerusalem, both in the material and in the spiritual realms and especially in our hearts and minds, and may we all know the 'perfect peace that passes all understanding' that can be found only in relationship with Yeshua (Jesus).

And the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.  
Philippians 4:7