Signal, No Noise

August 29, 2010

Al Qaeda Plans for War with Israel

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Al Qaeda is warning its supporters and sympathizers to prepare for a new war in the Middle East, which it says will pit Israel against Iran. Al Qaeda’s franchise in Yemen, the self-styled al Qaeda in the Arabian Pennisula (AQAP), issued an audio message this month with a lecture by its second-in-command Saeed al Shehri in which he tells jihadists in the Middle East that “what is expected is for the war to begin by the Jews against Iran.” Israel will stage air strikes on Iran’s nuclear installations to start. Shehri expects the Iranian Shia regime to try to take advantage of an Israeli attack on its nuclear facilities to seize the holy cities of Mecca and Medina by blaming Saudi Arabia for helping Israel attack. In turn, the Israelis will seize territory in the Levant to establish “the greater state of Israel.” The Sunni Arab population of the Middle East will be caught between the “Jews in the Middle East and Iran in the Peninsula.”

Shehri was held in Guantanamo for six years after being caught in Pakistan in December 2001 before being sent back home to his native Saudi Arabia and then fleeing to Yemen to help set up AQAP. He has been a creative strategist for AQAP from its start and was behind the plot to assassinate Saudi Arabia’s deputy interior minister, Muhammad bin Nayef, a year ago that failed only by inches when the suicide bomber tripped at the last minute. In this message, Shehri tells the jihadist faithful that this climatic war will offer many opportunities for al Qaeda and that they should begin planning now how to exploit the conflict. Any sympathizer who has access to Arab leaders like the princes of the House of Saud, for example, should look for a chance to kill one in an act of terror reminiscent of the assassination of the “tyrant Anwar Sadat” in 1981. Any pilot in the Saudi air force or other Arab air forces who secretly supports the jihad should fly his plane into Israeli air space and try to blow up a target by smashing into it. Other practical ways to create terror and mayhem are laid out as well.

Al Qaeda has consistently said a struggle between Israel and Iran can only be good for the global Islamic jihad by blooding two of its enemies and forcing America to side with Israel. But this warning is the most vivid by far and comes with the most explicit instructions on how to exploit a new conflict.

Shehri tells his supporters that AQAP is ready for the next war. He says the “Shura Council of the Mujahedin in the Arabian Peninsula” has held a meeting to prepare for the coming apocalypse and is ready to act. AQAP has demonstrated in the last year that it can reach beyond Yemen to carry out its plans when it dispatched the suicide bomber who tried to blow up Northwest Flight 253 last Christmas. It has been active this summer in attacking intelligence officers of the Yemeni government and in publishing Inspire, the first al Qaeda journal in English on the Internet. General James Mattis, the new commander of Central Command, told the Senate this week that al Qaeda is putting significant pressure on the Yemeni government, already stretched by other internal problems and that there are “signs of decline in the capacity of Yemeni President Ali Abdallah Salih to control the situation.”

So why does al Qaeda want another war? Because it calculates an Israeli strike on Iran will prompt Iran to strike back against not only Israel but also the United States. Iran will attack American installations in the Gulf, encourage its proxies in Iraq and Afghanistan to attack Americans, and engage in a global terror campaign. In Lebanon, Hezbollah will start another war, raining missiles down on northern Israeli cities and towns and provoking Israeli airstrikes on Beirut and maybe even into Syria. Iran might even try to close the Strait of Hormuz and disrupt the global energy market. All this chaos and violence will make America even more unpopular in the Islamic world and open doors for al Qaeda to exploit. In this they are right, another war will be blamed on America rightly or wrongly. Shehri and his boss, Osama bin Laden, probably don’t really know if another war is in the making but they are almost certainly right that if it comes it will be good news for al Qaeda

Former Israeli chief rabbi: Abbas should perish

Filed under: Israel,Judaism,Middle East,Palestine,Religion — mungurk @ 19:08

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Former Israeli chief rabbi calls Palestinians “evil, bitter enemies of Israel”.
Last Modified: 29 Aug 2010 16:33

The spiritual leader of Israel’s Shas party denounced upcoming talks between Israel and the Palestinian Authority and wished for the death of Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas.

Ovadia Yosef, a former Israeli chief rabbi, called Palestinians “evil, bitter enemies of Israel” during his weekly sermon on Saturday.

“Abu Mazen and all these evil people should perish from this world,” he said, using Abbas’ common nickname. “God should strike them with a plague, them and these Palestinians.”

Saeb Erekat, the chief negotiator for the PA, said Yosef’s remarks were tantamount to a call for “genocide against Palestinians”.

The 89-year-old Yosef is a respected scholar among Jews of Middle Eastern and North African descent.

He has made similarly offensive comments before: He has referred to Arabs as “vipers,” and in a 2001 sermon during the Jewish holiday of Passover, he called for Israel to “annihilate” Arabs.

“It is forbidden to be merciful to them. You must send missiles to them and annihilate them,” he said. “They are evil and damnable.”

Yosef’s provocations are not limited to Arabs, either: In 2005, he blamed Hurricane Katrina on the “godlessness” of New Orleans, and on former US president George Bush’s support for Israel’s disengagement from Gaza. And last year, he criticised women who pray at the Western Wall as “stupid”.

‘An insult’ to talks

Erekat also called Yosef’s comments “an insult to all our efforts to advance the negotiations process”.

Abbas is scheduled to meet this week with Binyamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, for their first direct negotiations in more than 18 months. Both men will attend a dinner in Washington on Wednesday hosted by US president Barack Obama, and then will meet on Thursday for talks.

Israel’s Yedioth Ahronoth newspaper reported that other PA officials were dismissive of Yosef’s remarks.

Netanyahu’s office issued a short statement distancing the Israeli premier from Yosef’s remarks.

“These comments do not reflect prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu or the Israeli government’s stance,” the statement said. “Israel is engaging in negotiations out of a desire to reach an agreement with the Palestinians.”

Yosef is the spiritual adviser of the ultra-Orthodox Shas party, which holds 11 seats in the Israeli Knesset. Eli Yishai, the head of the party, is the current interior minister.

Yishai said on Wednesday that he would not support an extension of Netanyahu’s 10-month West Bank settlement freeze, which is due to expire on September 26. Shas party officials said earlier this month that Yishai would do “everything possible” to persuade Netanyahu not to extend the freeze.

August 17, 2010

Ex-Israeli Soldier’s Photos Condemned

Filed under: Israel,Middle East,Palestine,Prisoner Policy — mungurk @ 09:22

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Ex-Israeli Soldier’s Photos Condemned

By ETHAN BRONNER
Published: August 16, 2010

TEL AVIV — An Israeli woman who completed her military service last year posted photographs of herself from the army posing with blindfolded and bound Palestinian prisoners under the title “The Army … The Most Beautiful Time of My Life,” producing enraged commentary on the Internet and condemnation from the military.

The woman, Eden Abergil, from the southern city of Ashdod, is seen in the pictures, posted on her Facebook page, smiling next to the prisoners.

A few friends on her page praised the pictures, including one who wrote, “You look so sexy like that.” Ms. Abergil’s reply, using the shorthand of the medium, was, “Yeah I know lol honey. What a day it was. Look how he completes my picture. I wonder if he’s got Facebook!”

After an Israeli Web site posted the selections from the page, angry commentary ensued. The Israeli military issued a statement saying: “This was shameful behavior by the soldier. In light of the fact that she was discharged last year, all of the details have been turned over to the commanders for further attention.”

Generally, acts done while in military service can be prosecuted, but a spokesman said that since Ms. Abergil had been discharged last year, legal action remained unclear. The Public Committee Against Torture, an Israeli group, said that abusive behavior by soldiers was the norm at West Bank checkpoints and at detention centers.

Several bloggers who asked Ms. Abergil for comment were turned away. She also changed her Facebook settings to block outsiders.

Israel to refuse to stop building settlements

Filed under: Israel,Middle East,Palestine,groups.Hamas — mungurk @ 08:48

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Israel to refuse to stop building settlements

Israel is to reject demands to halt the construction of new settlements, in a move likely to complicate the resumption of direct peace talks.

Refusing to stop building new settlements runs against a key condition set by the Quartet of Middle East mediators for talks to begin.

Officials said they would only respond favourably to an invitation to talks without preconditions, snubbing the Quartet. The Quartet is made up of the United Nations, the United States, the European Union, and Russia

Israels decision will put more pressure on the Palestinian leader, President Mahmoud Abbas, who had also demanded settlement building be frozen but looks likely to enter talks anyway.

Israeli officials say they expect a separate invitation will be issued shortly by the United States without preconditions, allowing the relaunch of the direct negotiations which were broken off when Israel forces invaded Gaza in December 2008.

The Quartet is expected to issue its call for the resumption of face-to-face talks in the coming days.

Its statement will reportedly call for Israel to halt settlement construction and agree to the creation of a Palestinian state based on the 1967 borders, with east Jerusalem as its capital.

The Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, and senior ministers decided to reject the Quartet terms of reference at a meeting on Sunday night.

“The Quartet declaration will likely be a fig leaf for stipulating preconditions on the part of the Palestinians, and this is unacceptable to us,” a senior official said.

Since May, indirect talks have been conducted through the US envoy, George Mitchell, who has been shuttling between Jerusalem and Ramallah, the seat of the Palestinian authority.

They were made possible by a partial, 10-month moratorium on buildingwhich expires on September 26th.

The Arab League has already given Mr Abbas a green light to enter direct talks at a time he sees fit, but that decision will further undermine his position with more radical Palestinians, including Hamas, which runs Gaza.

Hamas and 10 other groups issued a statement in Damascus declaring their opposition to the resumption of direct negotiations.

A joint statement accused the US of backing Israeli plans to expand settlements, control Jerusalem and maintain the blockade on Gaza.

July 20, 2010

American Jews Battle Israeli Conversion Bill

Filed under: Israel,Judaism,Middle East,Religion — mungurk @ 22:19

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American Jews Battle Israeli Conversion Bill
LOURDES GARCIA-NAVARRO

July 20, 2010

A battle is brewing that is pitting the powerful American Jewish community against some of the leading Jewish figures in Israel.

Over the weekend, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the disagreement over a controversial law that deals with conversion to Judaism could “tear apart” the Jewish people.

America is a close second to Israel in terms of how many Jews live there. And the U.S. Jewish community is vital in terms of the political, financial and moral support it lends the Jewish state. So when a senior Jewish delegation representing some of the most powerful Jewish groups comes from the U.S. to Jerusalem for an emergency meeting, it’s serious.

‘Unacceptable’

“We do not want to see a schism among the Jews of the United States and Israel,” said Rabbi Daniel Allen, director of the Association of Reform Zionists of America. “This will say to the Jews of the United States that they don’t have a serious place in this country, and that is unacceptable to us.”

Allen said American Jewish groups are in crisis mode.

“This would be an affirmative act of the Knesset to create a second class of Jewery,” he said. “And therefore it is a much more important moment in time in terms of the sweep of Jewish history.”

There is a fundamental divide between Jews in the U.S. and Jews in Israel. Most American Jews belong to the more liberal branches of Judaism — the Reform or Conservative movements. In Israel, the Orthodox are in almost total control of Jewish life.

American Jews are upset that the conversion bill making its way through the Knesset will, for the first time, give sole control over conversions to Israel’s chief rabbinate, which is dominated by Orthodox Jews.

At the moment in Israel, conversions performed outside the country by the more liberal branches of Judaism are honored. American Jews fear that could change if power is handed over to the rabbinate.

“Never in the history of the state of Israel has there been a law to determine the status of a convert,” said Rabbi Naamah Kelman, dean of Hebrew Union College.

‘A Ticking Bomb’

The bill’s sponsor is Member of the Knesset David Rotem, who represents hundreds of thousands of immigrants, many of them from the former Soviet Union who are trying to formally convert to Judaism in Israel.

The conversion process in Israel can sometimes take years, costs thousands of dollars and ultimately leads nowhere. Some conversions have been overturned by competing rabbis from the Orthodox and Ultra Orthodox communities.

Rotem said the point of his bill is to make the conversion process easier by decentralizing it. If the bill passes, municipal rabbis will be allowed to approve conversions under the auspices of the chief rabbinate.

“I am trying to get some parts out from the rabbinical courts and to give it to the municipality courts or rabbis who are much more friendly to people who want to convert,” he said.

The many problems with the conversion process in Israel must be addressed to simplify the system, he said.

“We are sitting on a ticking bomb. We have got 400,000 new immigrants who came from the former Russian union who are not recognized as Jews according to the Jewish law,” Rotem said. “They are serving in the Israeli army, and they are being taken as hostages today for the Reform and Conservative movements who are against this law with no reason.”

Rotem said American Jews are using their power to interfere in internal Israeli affairs.

“I am willing to talk to them. I am not willing to be hostage,” he said. “I am not willing to be threatened, and I’m not willing to be blackmailed.”

The bill has already passed through committee, and the next step is for it to be voted on in the Knesset. It’s not clear whether that will happen before or after the legislative body disbands for summer recess at the end of this week.

June 3, 2010

Jewish Chronicle hit by denial-of-service attack after Gaza flotilla incident

Filed under: Cyberspace,Israel,Middle East,Palestine — mungurk @ 11:01

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Jewish Chronicle confirms that it was hit by a denial-of-service attack on Monday following Gaza flotilla incident

June 02, 2010

The Jewish Chronicle was hit by a massive denial-of-service (DoS) attack on Monday.

Following the Gaza flotilla incident on Monday, a column in the Spectator claimed that the website of the paper was down following ‘a massive denial-of-service, apparently to shut down its balanced coverage of the Ashdod flotilla incident’.

Speaking to SC Magazine, Richard Burton, managing editor of the Jewish Chronicle, confirmed that this did occur and happens often. He said: “We are a target and it is part of our security policy that we understand people want to stop the Jewish voice. It was probably an attempt to silence us on a controversial subject.

“It is usual for us, we have been hacked before and this is a DoS where a lot of IP addresses are hitting our servers at one time. The techies were trying to detect the IP domains and trying to find common denominators.”

He further explained that the website does not get much traffic on a Saturday, but on a Sunday it gets traffic from the Jewish community and a much wider readership. Burton said: “It is a PR disaster for Israel, but we are not a mouthpiece for the Israeli government as we are critical of them, and our editor has said that there are two sides to it.”

Commenting, Paul Bristow, chief operating officer of Webscreen Technology, said that the attack came as no surprise to him, as they have moved on to become the method of choice for disabling online competitors and in the past few years, geo-political usage of DDoS has become more and more prominent.

He said: “It is clear if you run any online news service that makes comments that someone/anyone is potentially going to take offence to, then it’s only a matter of time before you get ‘DDoS’d’.”

He recommended getting some dedicated DDoS mitigation technology (not some bolt-on feature on a IPS/IDS appliance) to make sure upstream bandwidth has enough ‘burstable capacity’ to soak up an attack that is at least a 1GB in size, and the greater the ‘burstable capacity’ the better.

He said: “Then you monitor and proactively manage your traffic data, this is far more challenging for news services because in theory they are open to traffic from all around the world whereas commercial sites typically only see legitimate traffic from certain geographic zones.”

May 28, 2010

Israel’s other demographic challenge

Filed under: Israel,Judaism,Middle East,Religion — mungurk @ 18:23

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Israel’s other demographic challenge
Last Updated: Monday, 3 September 2007, 06:14 GMT 07:14 UK

By Tim Franks
BBC News, Jerusalem


Jerusalem’s busy Mea Shearim neighbourhood is witness to a looming demographic dilemma for Israel.

Haredi men study in Yeshiva (photo: Tim Franks)

Haredi life is devoted to studying Jewish law and thought

It is an almost exclusively ultra-orthodox Jewish enclave, its narrow streets and crowded apartments teeming with thousands of black-hatted, white-shirted Haredi men and their families.

The Haredim live in a world apart from modern, westernised West Jerusalem, devoting their lives to the study of Jewish law and thought, practising what they see as the purest form of Judaism.

It is widely accepted that Palestinian population growth in Israel and the occupied territories is a major strategic issue for Israel.

But the proportion of ultra-orthodox Haredi Jews is also growing, approximately three times as fast as the rest of the population.

In a country where every 18-year-old Jew is supposed to join the army – and which has faced six major conflicts with its neighbours and battled two Palestinian uprisings – that Haredi population growth poses some urgent questions.

Spiritual needs

The ultra-orthodox do not face compulsory conscription; they are exempted from national service in order to continue their religious studies.

Israeli army troops

Secular Israelis see the army as the state’s most important institution

Once it was a tiny minority which took that route; now they account for more than 10% of draft-age Israeli Jews. By 2019, the government forecasts they will constitute almost one in four.

Former Deputy Prime Minister Yosef Lapid represents a constituency in Israel that asks whether Haredi behaviour is not in fact undermining the Jewish state.

“I have nothing against them because they are religious,” says Mr Lapid. “I very much oppose the fact that they don’t serve in the army. They represent God in God’s country, but don’t defend God’s country”.

From the yeshivas, or theological colleges, around Jerusalem, where the young men sway back and forth as they read and debate centuries of law and commentary, there is a different view.

They believe that the country has spiritual as well as physical needs, and there is no greater service than that of religious study.

“The difficulty a secular Israeli is going to have is just not understanding the whole world-view that the religious world is coming from,” says Haredi rabbi Moshe Zeldman.

“If you look at the whole history of the Jewish people, it can’t be explained in physical terms. What made us survive this long? We really believe God has a hand in history,” he says.

Welfare

Rabbi Zeldman says he is not living in a dreamland, where only God takes care of the Jews and Israel does not need an army.

Haredi men's hats (photo: Tim Franks)

The Haredi issue will become more central as the population grows

“You also need a balance. And the balance has to be that as much as you’re worried about your physical survival, you’re also focussed on your spiritual survival,” he says.

But there is a further source of tension – the economy.

At a food distribution scheme in Mea Shearim, dozens of families come to collect cardboard boxes full of all types of kosher food.

This is not an unusual sight, because most Haredim are poor and many rely heavily on welfare. Government figures suggest that two out of three Haredi men do not have a paid job.

More and more, Israelis are asking if this too can carry on.

Demographer Mencahem Friedman says that either the Haredim will have to change their ways or “the government will force them” to contribute more to the economy and defence.

“To keep the status quo as it is now probably will not be possible,” he says.

“Everyone has to make a very crucial decision to change the situation. How they will make it, I don’t know.”

It is one of the most difficult questions of all for Israel – what a Jewish state should demand of its own Jewish citizens.

2008: Set apart for God and Torah

Filed under: Israel,Judaism,Middle East,Religion — mungurk @ 18:20

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Page last updated at 05:20 GMT, Tuesday, 19 August 2008 06:20 UK

Set apart for God and Torah

The BBC’s Erica Chernofsky in Jerusalem gets a rare insight into the lives of members of Israel’s Ultra-Orthodox Jewish community.

Haredi mother Michal Greenwald and her four children

Mrs Greenwald says being Haredi means being someone who fears God

Sitting on a park bench in the late afternoon, Michal Greenwald watches her children run around the playground with dozens of other kids as she takes a few minutes rest from her hectic day.

A full-time property lawyer, Mrs Greenwald is the sole breadwinner and also takes care of her four young children and tends to the housework. Her husband, Shmuel, spends his days studying in a religious seminary for men. She says she cannot imagine life any other way.

”Girls are raised this way from a young age, and such are the lives of Haredim in Israel,” she says of the Ultra-Orthodox Jews who choose to live separately from mainstream Israeli society.

It is difficult to walk the streets of Jerusalem without running into Haredim, but their community can seem isolated and closed.

The men are distinct in their long black wool coats and trousers, stark white button-down shirts and black hats, even in the heat of the Middle Eastern summer.

Living ‘with a purpose’

Mrs Greenwald, 34, lives in Har Nof, an ultra-orthodox neighbourhood of Jerusalem where absolutely everything is closed on Saturday – the Sabbath – and only kosher food is sold in shops.

Moshe Eliahu studying Torah, Jerusalem
We look different, in fact we look very weird – we dress how people used to dress 100 years ago
Moshe Eliahu
Haredi student and father

Like all Haredi women, she dresses very modestly, covers her hair with a wig or scarf and will not allow physical contact of any kind with any man other than her husband.

“Being Haredi means being someone who fears God,” Mrs Greenwald says. “It means that first and foremost in life are the Torah (Bible) and keeping the mitzvoth (commandments).”

She is referring to the 613 commandments in the Bible that Jews believe were given to them by God. “Everything in my life is built around the Torah,” she says.

“If I go on a trip with my family, I can’t eat just anything, I can’t go mixed swimming, and I’m constantly thinking ‘what is the proper thing to do now?’ As Haredim we don’t just live, but we live with a purpose.”

That purpose, as she defines it, is to fulfil the Torah and mitzvoth by bettering herself as well as the world around her, and in so doing striving to become closer to God.

It is for this reason that she proudly supports her family while her husband pursues his religious studies.

‘Positive energy’

Currently Haredim make up about 10% of Israeli society, and have a less than positive reputation among secular Israelis, many of whom view their customs as primitive and disapprove of their choice to study at seminaries and thus avoid the mandatory army draft.

“It’s an ancient concept in Judaism that the spiritual and the physical are united, that to win a war you need both spirit and strength,” says Moshe Eliahu, a Haredi father of two and full-time student at a Jerusalem seminary.

Haredi men, Jerusalem

Haredi men in black suits and hats are a common sight in Jerusalem

“You need people fighting, but you also need people learning and praying.”According to government figures, the majority of Haredi men do not have paid jobs.

Mr Eliahu, who also earns a meagre wage working at a support centre for Haredi youth in the evenings, explains that Haredim believe that there must always be a certain amount of men learning the Jewish books in order for life, as we know it, to go on.

He is a direct descendant of the Hatam Sopher, a leading 19th Century rabbi of European Jewry and one of several key figures who were the early leaders of the various Haredi sects.

Mr Eliahu says Israel and the world need the “positive energy” that comes from learning Torah.

“This sounds funny to the western ear – what can a man learning in a yeshiva all day possibly give back to the world?” he says. “Torah learning that we do is the hidden code of the physical existence of all mankind, and if for one single second there is no Torah learning in the air, all the world would go back to chaos.”

Mr Eliahu’s wife, Miriam, teaches English at two Jerusalem schools and takes care of their children. “There’s no point to our physical existence without a spiritual purpose, and I, as the husband who is learning all day, am primarily responsible for that,” he explains.

‘Defence mechanism’

He also rejects the view that Haredi gender roles are primitive. In Judaism, he says, women are actually considered to be closer to God than men. ”They are the ones who create life, they are the queens.”

Dressed in classic Haredi garb, he acknowledges he stands out on the street.

”We look different, in fact we look very weird. We dress how people used to dress 100 years ago, we have long peyot (side locks), and all these things set us apart.”

He explains that Haredi men dress this way as a “defence mechanism” to “protect ourselves from assimilation”.

Mrs Greenwald too defines herself by her religious ideals, setting herself apart from the values of wider society.

“I don’t live life for myself,” she says. “My priority is my family, my home, and then my career. I can’t say I desire to become a famous lawyer, or to be a millionaire.

“For us, there is a bigger picture here. We know this world is just a hallway to the real life, to the Garden of Eden.”

2009: Orthodox strife grips Jerusalem

Filed under: Israel,Judaism,Middle East,Religion — mungurk @ 18:13

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Page last updated at 22:51 GMT, Thursday, 16 July 2009 23:51 UK

Orthodox strife grips Jerusalem

There were violent scuffles as ultra Orthodox Jews protested against what they saw as state interference

Ultra-Orthodox Jews in Jerusalem have clashed with police in protest at what they see as interference by the Israeli authorities in their community.

Police said at least 28 people were arrested after protesters threw stones at officers and burned rubbish bins.

Hundreds of police have been deployed – 10 were reported to have been injured.

The incidents followed the arrest of an ultra-orthodox woman for allegedly starving her three-year-old son deliberately. The child is in hospital.

The protests are taking place in two ultra-Orthodox neighbourhoods, Mea Shearim and Bar-Ilan.

There were later reports of unrest in Beit Shemesh, a few miles outside Jerusalem, where police broke up a group of about 100 protesters attempting to block a road into the town.

It is time someone woke up because the violence threatens to cause victims
Police chief Aaron Franco

There were also reports of stone-throwing attacks on municipal workers.

“Thousands of ultra-orthodox from the Mea Shearim district tried to close a main road to traffic, obliging law enforcement to intervene with water cannons,” said police spokesman Shmuel Rubi.

“Some police officers were hurt when stones were thrown” and police questioned dozens of people, he told the AFP news agency.

On Thursday, police used horses and water cannon to disperse the black-garbed Haredim.

Police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said the violence was “something that was not expected”.

Meanwhile the city’s police chief, Aaron Franco, has said ultra-orthodox rabbis are not doing enough to denounce the violence.

“It is time someone woke up because the violence threatens to cause victims,” he said.

Car park row

An ultra-orthodox Jewish man is led away by police in Jerusalem (16 July 2009)

The Haredim say the authorities are intruding on their way of life

Jerusalem is home to large Orthodox communities whose strict adherence to Jewish law sometimes puts them at odds with more the majority secular Jews.

Anger is high at what has been seen as the “unjust” arrest of the mother, who is said to be suffering from a mental disorder.

A hospital spokeswoman, Yael Bossem-Levy, was quoted by the Associated Press as saying the woman had Munchausen syndrome by proxy, a condition in which one person mimics or induces illness in another.

Another current Haredi grievance has been the Sabbath opening of a private car park near the religiously sensitive Old City area, when Orthodox Jews abstain from work.

2008: Is that cellphone kosher?

Filed under: Israel,Judaism,Middle East,Religion — mungurk @ 18:11

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Page last updated at 07:58 GMT, Monday, 6 October 2008 08:58 UK

Is that cellphone kosher?

Haredi man surfs the internet

Some Haredi Jews have embraced modern technology, with limits

The BBC’s Erica Chernofsky looks at how Israel’s highly traditional ultra-Orthodox Jewish community is tackling the challenges and opportunities of new communications technologies.

When Israeli father Avi tried to register his six-year-old twin daughters for his local ultra-Orthodox school this year, he was happy to sign a form saying his children did not watch television or use the internet at home.

But he was surprised to discover he had to give a “kosher cellphone number”. He did not have one.

Avi lives in Har Nof, one of the main ultra-Orthodox, or Haredi, neighbourhoods of Jerusalem.

I feel I can control myself not to use the bad features – but do I trust my children?
Avi

The community separates itself from mainstream society through its traditional religious practices and distinctive attire of black hats, coats and sidelocks for the men and long skirts and sleeves for the women.

Like most other men in his community, Avi studies the Jewish scriptures daily, keeps the Sabbath and eats only kosher food.

But he has not yet opted for the new religious adaptation to modern technology that has swept the Haredi world in Israel.

‘Immodest’ behaviour

The kosher cellphone looks like an ordinary cellphone, can make and receive calls, and may have a calculator and alarm clock.

Phone with the stamp saying Approved by the Committee of Rabbis for Communication Affairs

One of the defining features of kosher mobiles is a rabbinical stamp

But it cannot send or receive text messages, browse the internet or take photos – all activities that could potentially involve behaviour considered “immodest” among Haredis.

For example, SMS capability could lead to the unwitting receipt of mass text messages publicising secular events. It could also be used as a method of illicit communication between male and female teenagers.

And all photos of women are forbidden, as is accessing websites with content deemed inappropriate.

The phone’s other defining feature is a rabbinical stamp of approval, similar to those seen on kosher food items.

All the major Israeli cellphone companies have accommodated the powerful Haredi constituency by providing kosher phones, and cheaper-than-normal packages which connect only with other Haredi numbers.

As the companies have created distinct code prefixes to accompany the kosher phone plans, the phone numbers have quickly become a badge of religious observance.

Not only do some Haredi newspapers refuse to publish ads with non-kosher phone numbers, but parents are worried their children will be blacklisted by the shadchan, or matchmaker, if their numbers are not kosher.

Banana filtered

“What do you associate with the Haredi community? You wear black trousers, a white shirt and some sort of hat, but today the things that define you have changed,” says Avi.

Internet page

Protected surfing is calibrated differently for different Haredi groups

He says he feels there is a sense that anyone who does not have a kosher phone “should be excluded from society”.

“If you say you are associating yourself with us, please act according to our codes, otherwise do not call yourself Haredi and do not send your kids to our schools.”

But while they have managed to adapt the cellphone to their lifestyles, Haredis have had a harder time with the internet.

Last year, an Orthodox rabbi and an Israeli technology executive established an internet service provider (ISP) called Rimon, which claims to be the only filtering service provider in Israel that offers customised surfing packages.

The company says it cuts out pornography, violence, and gambling, and then provides the user with five levels of further filtering, from the “protected” level that blocks images of women in intimate apparel to the “hermetic” level, which allows users to view only unchanging, vetted websites such as encyclopaedias.

There are many things on the internet that are not appropriate for me as a Haredi woman, things I would prefer that my family and I didn’t see or hear
Miriam

“If your kid puts ‘banana’ into Google, some of the first sites he’ll get are porn,” explains chairman Moshe Weiss. “Put banana into Google on Rimon, and you get all the same sites without the porn.”

One Haredi sect, the Belz, which normally forbids online access, has partially endorsed the use of Rimon, but only for those who need the internet for business purposes.

The general rule for the local Haredi community still remains no radio, no TV, no internet and no movies – though Rimon is hoping that once it starts targeting the Haredi market that will change.

For now, its 15,000 subscribers are mostly secular and modern Orthodox.

Self control

Miriam, a teacher living in Jerusalem, is one of many Haredi Jews who do not have home web access.

Haredi gathering

An Orthodox Jewish life for men is one devoted to studying the scriptures

She expresses concern over the amount of time people devote to surfing the net, wasting time they could spend learning Torah or doing good deeds.

Her main worry, however, is over the lack of control over content.

“There are many things on the internet that are not appropriate for me as a Haredi woman, things I would prefer that my family and I didn’t see or hear, like violence, pornography and inappropriate sexual relations,” she says.

For Haredis, “inappropriate” means any physical contact between a man and a woman who are not married.

But Avi, who says he needs the internet for his work in the tourist industry, has unfiltered online access.

“I’m not afraid of the negative aspects because I grew up with internet and I feel I can control myself not to use the bad features,” he says.

“But do I trust my children?” he wonders aloud.

“When they are old enough to use it I will definitely have to re-evaluate. I think then I might put filters on or use Rimon, or maybe then I’ll even disconnect internet from the house altogether. It’s just not worth the risk.”

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