Posted on 09/10/2007 7:45:59 PM PDT by TigerLikesRooster
September 10, 2007
Swastikas, neo-Nazi gangs and attacks on Jews. Where? In Israel
James Hider in Jerusalem
Israeli police have broken up a neo-Nazi cell that had been carrying out attacks on religious Jews, homosexuals, drug addicts and workers, in a case that has shocked the Jewish state.
The youths, who had Nazi tattoos and allegedly celebrated Adolf Hitlers birthday, belonged to Soviet Jewish families who had migrated to Israel under its law of return, which allows people with at least one Jewish grandparent to become Israeli citizens.
Under strict religious rules, however, many of the former Soviet immigrants are not considered to be Jewish.
It is difficult to believe that Nazi ideology sympathisers can exist in Israel, but it is a fact, said Major Revital Almog, the police officer in charge of the year-long investigation that began when vandals daubed swastikas and Hitlers name on synagogues in Petah Tikva, near Tel Aviv.
While such incidents have been on the rise in Eastern Europe, this was believed to have been the first time it had occurred on such a scale in Israel, which was formed after the Nazi Holocaust that killed six million Jews.
The tragic irony in this is that they would have been chosen for annihilation by the Nazis they strive to emulate, said Arieh OSullivan, a spokesman for the Anti-Defamation League, which targets cases of anti-Semitism.
Israeli media published videotapes that the group of eight men, aged between 16 and 21, had made of themselves, showing them giving the Nazi salute and kicking a victim to the ground in a subway.
The news has caused deep shock in Israel, and prompted calls by Eli Yishai, the ultra-Orthodox Trade and Industry Minister, for a tightening of the regulations that have allowed large numbers of residents of the former Soviet Union, as well as many Ethiopians of Jewish descent, to become Israeli citizens.
We have to rid ourselves of this Satan who lives in the heart of Israel, Mr Yishai said.
Israels law of return is based on the Nazi definition of what constitutes a Jew, as laid out in Nuremberg in the 1930s, on the grounds that if a person was considered Jewish enough to be murdered by the Nazi regime, they were Jewish enough to live in Israel. Under its rules, more than a million people from the former Soviet Union flocked to Israel in the 1990s. But according to the Immigration and Absorption Ministry, more than 300,000 of them do not consider themselves Jewish.
The neo-Nazi group was allegedly headed by 19-year-old Eli Buanitov, known within the cell as Eli the Nazi. He and his acolytes are believed to have been in regular contact with neo-Nazi groups abroad.
The Israeli Nazis had white supremacist insignia tattooed on their bodies as well as the number 88, suspected of being a code for Heil Hitler, as H is the eighth letter of the alphabet.
Mr Buanitov was quoted by police as saying: I wont ever give up, I was a Nazi and I will stay a Nazi, until we kill them all. I will not rest.
The group had even discussed planning a murder, said police who found knives, explosives, Nazi uniforms, Hitler portraits and other weapons in the groups possession.
The level of violence was outrageous, said Major Almog. This is the first time that weve . . . arrested such a large number of individuals who are part of an organised neo-Nazi group.
Mr Buanitovs mother tried to excuse her son, saying that the Israeli authorities had done little to help Russian immigrants, who she said suffered from regular discrimination. My son is a charity case. He has nothing against the state, she said. He finished junior high and stopped attending school after Arabs stabbed him and the police did nothing about it.
He has no connection with the Nazis. Our family suffered enough under the Nazis.
The groups apparent penchant for filming their own brutal attacks seemed to have greatly bolstered the polices case. One video showed the gang standing around a heroin addict, who was also a Soviet immigrant but who insisted that he was Jewish. He was made to kneel down and beg forgiveness from the Russian people for being Jewish and a junkie, Israeli media reported.
There is no law explicitly banning anti-Semitism in the Jewish state, simply because it was never expected to occur.
The promised land
- More than two million Russian Jews emigrated between 1881-1920 because of a wave of pogroms against them in Russia
- In 1948 the newly established Israel proclaimed itself a haven for Jewish refugees and an ideal destination for voluntary Jewish immigration
- After Israels victory in the 1967 Six-Day War the USSR broke off diplomatic ties with the Jewish state, halting emigration by Russian Jews
- In 1970 a group of 16 Russian refuseniks, comprising 14 Jews and two Christians, tried to hijack a plane and fly it to Sweden. It led indirectly to USSR immigration controls becoming less strict.
- About 250,000 Jews left the USSR for Israel between 1970 and 1980. In 1981 Jewish emigration was limited again by Soviet rulers
- Between 1988 and 1996 about 700,000 Jews left the former Soviet Union for Israel as Mikhail Gorbachevs policies of glasnost and perestroika and the breakdown of communism triggered mass emigration
- About 10 per cent of these immigrants later left Israel for Western countries
More than likely. The arrogance - and stupidity - of these thugs is incomprehensible.
Hmmm... that’s bad.
Lay the blame on the idiots in the Knesset, the reform movement and conservative movement who fought “mi Yehudi” tooth and nail. It would have prevented these “Jews” from entering Israel and claiming citizenship.
ping
see #5.
“They could be fake-Jews, who managed to sneak into Israel during immigration wave from CIS.”
I think that the explaination falls within Israel’s Law of Return.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Law_of_Return
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