A parlor meeting entitled ‘Welcome the Sudanese’ will take place in the posh North Tel Aviv neighborhood of Neveh Avivim in the first week of August.
This is a continuation of the ‘Ramat Aviv First’ initiative by MK Dr. Michael Ben-Ari (National Union), which seeks to make liberal Israelis in upper class neighborhoods aware of what it is like to have African infiltrators living near their home.
The MK claims that liberal “do-gooders” protesting deportation of foreign workers or infiltrators do not have to deal with them in daily life, as do people in poorer areas where schools are overrun by non-Jews without a clue about Judaism and crime rates have jumped. At the parlor meeting, local residents will be invited and requested to share in the burden of Sudanese absorption and ‘adopt’ Sudani refugees.
President Barack Obama has repeatedly said that peace in the Middle East requires negotiations between Israel and the Palestinian Authority. PA president Mahmoud Abbas has been urged to resume negotiations with Israel, and no one has been more anxious for resumption of talks than Israel’s Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu. The aficionada call this “conflict resolution,”
Back in 1992, an election was held in Algeria, a military dictatorship. Unexpectedly, Muslims, otherwise called “Islamic fundamentalists,” garnered the largest share of the votes. So, with a nod from France, Algeria’s military stepped in and nullified the election. This plunged the country into civil war, and some 200,000 Algerians have been killed to date.
Arabs understand the Jews very well. Despite the benevolent policies of Israel’s government documented in chapter 4, Arab leaders play the “victimization” card. They also couch their demands in democratic language—in terms of “rights” or “legitimate rights.” They know that such language disarms the Jews (historically an oppressed and persecuted people). The Jews, or rather
President Barack Obama has repeatedly said that peace in the Middle East requires negotiations between Israel and the Palestinian Authority. PA president Mahmoud Abbas has been urged to resume negotiations with Israel, and no one has been more anxious for resumption of talks than Israel’s Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu. The aficionada call this “conflict resolution,”