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Anarchy in Gaza Strip
Ynet News ^ | 9-12-05

Posted on 09/12/2005 5:47:05 AM PDT by SJackson

Ynet reporter provides snapshot of mayhem inside Gaza Strip. Mobs loot, vandalize evacuated communities, gunmen can be seen everywhere, as Palestinian security forces watch Ali Waked, Gaza

A special report from Gaza: The face of anarchy.

Thousands of Palestinians raided evacuated Gaza Strip settlements in the wake of the IDF’s withdrawal, resorting to an orgy of looting and vandalism.

Palestinian security forces at first attempted to resist the masses, but in most cases were overwhelmed by the mobs and gave up. What was supposed to be an orderly process of assuming control over the area turned into a huge scene of chaos mostly controlled by armed terrorists.

In Kfar Darom for example, one can find dozens of gunmen belonging to the Popular Front, with dozens of PA security forces lying down under trees and watching the gunmen in silence.


Palestinians celebrate in Gaza (Photo: AFP)

Still, PA troops in Kfar Darom showed determination in an attempt to prevent vandalism around the evacuated community’s synagogue. Special masked forces belonging to an elite unit encircled the synagogue and prevented Palestinians from accessing it. Two Palestinians who attempted to defy the police were beaten up.

The synagogue itself has turned into an improvised base for security forces. One of the officers on the scene, Ahmed Hilas, promised journalists the Palestinian Authority will put an end to the chaos in “three to four days.”

Yet for the time being, armed men control events on the ground. At the exit of Netzarim one can see jeeps of the Islamic Jihad transporting masked gunmen carrying rockets and mortars openly.

‘We need to be ready for next battle’

One of the gunmen said: “This mortar is what brought the victory and we’ll remind anyone who attempts to make the Palestinian people forget that.”

The terrorist said his group has no intention of disarming in the wake of the IDF’s withdrawal.

“We don’t know whether the Zionist enemy will seek to return and we still don’t know what the corrupt parties in the Palestinian Authority are scheming,” he said. “Therefore, we need to be ready for the next battle.”

Judging by his voice and the eyes peering out of his headgear, he appears barely 20-years-old.

In Netzarim, security forces deployed in the area lost control. Thousands rushed into the community with vehicles and are looting whatever they can find, including wood, aluminum, furniture, and plenty of mangos. Elsewhere, Palestinians come in with carts, destroy the evacuated community’s fence, move in and load more objects.

Surrealistic scenes can be seen everywhere. A security officer attempts to prevent a Palestinian from entering hothouses. The Palestinian insists and gets a plant. At the exit to Netzarim, a Palestinian is dragging a hundred-meter long pipe on his own. Any child who approaches or dares step on the pipe is promptly reprimanded.

Hamas and Jihad flags on synagogue’s rooftop

Hamas and Jihad flags have been raised since early this morning on top of the Netzarim synagogue, already partly set on fire. Two red flags representing the left-wing fronts are also fluttering in the air. Thousands on the ground are singing songs for Palestine, while others stand on the roof, hanging flags and shouting the name of Palestinian Prime Minister Mahmoud Abbas.

Two items are in high demand in Gaza today: Aluminum and mango. Hundreds of Palestinians are walking around carrying bags of mango. Plenty of mango. The fruits, taken from the orchards in Netzarim, are not yet ripe, but anyone who can put his hands on some mango does so. Halil, 63, of Gaza explained: “We do it in order to say that this again belongs to us, the land is ours and the fruits are also ours.”

Palestinian officers fail to stop mob

It appears that what is now taking place in the Gaza Strip is quite different from anticipated scenarios. According to plans (at least in theory,) Palestinian civilians should have been able to enter the settlements only three days after the completion of the pullout, and only after demolitions and ecology experts had made sure that the area is safe.

This theory fully collapsed Sunday night, when instead of demolition experts the settlements were invaded by mango and aluminum experts. At abandoned settlement Elei Sinai a Palestinian officer was trying to prevent people from entering, but gave up after only a few seconds and was forced to allow thousands to get inside. People rummaged through the ruins, and took whatever they could lay their hand on: a piece of window, an armchair, an old lawn mower.

The Palestinian security forces gave up. There was no way they could deal with the thousands who marched miles’ walking in long lines, and broke through the roadblocks. In groups they took over the ruins and started pulling the aluminum out.


Palestinians on the roof of Neve Dekalim synagogue (Photo: Reuters)

Near the Netzarin Junction, known amongst the Palestinians as “Martyrdom Junction” in honor of the many Palestinians who were killed there, Palestinians are walking around careless for the first time in years. The smoke rising from the settlement’s burning synagogue is everywhere, but the Palestinians officers have already given up.They realize that there is not much they can do today.

Local entrepreneurs were quick to make a profit from this day. Abdul Kader is selling hotdogs and dates to passers by and boasting he is going to make a fortune. For the first time since the Intifada started, he says, he feels what it is like to be making a living.


TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Israel
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To: Alouette
...Thousands of triumphant Palestinians poured into abandoned Jewish settlements early Monday, setting buildings on fire, ripping out window frames and shooting in the air...

Sounds like Detroit after a Pistons win...

21 posted on 09/12/2005 6:32:03 AM PDT by COBOL2Java (Many Democrats are not weak Americans. But nearly all weak Americans are Democrats.)
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To: moog
"They do. And they are doing so well with limited government too--just as libertarians would have it."

So this is how you and your neighbors would act if not for the riot police stationed in your neighborhood? I feel sorry for you if that is the case. Limited government is only viable for human beings, not animals.
22 posted on 09/12/2005 6:32:03 AM PDT by monday
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To: siunevada

Mobs loot, vandalize evacuated communities, gunmen can be seen everywhere, as Palestinian security forces watch.

-----

Are we talking about the Gaza Strip or New Orleans?

:-)


23 posted on 09/12/2005 6:33:39 AM PDT by gogogodzilla (Raaargh! Raaargh! Crush, Stomp!)
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To: SJackson

What was left to loot?


24 posted on 09/12/2005 6:35:18 AM PDT by JimRed ("Hey, hey, Teddy K., how many girls did you drown today?")
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To: Alouette

The sewer is blooming!


25 posted on 09/12/2005 6:39:38 AM PDT by ncountylee (Dead terrorists smell like victory)
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To: lOKKI
Looting?--Bush's fault!!!!

Interestingly, the Bush administration blames Israel.

A spokesman for the US State Department acknowledged that the Israeli decision to leave the synagogues intact “puts the Palestinian Authority into a situation where it may be criticized for whatever it does”.

26 posted on 09/12/2005 6:43:02 AM PDT by SJackson (“I worry that I've seen this movie before”, Rep. Mark Kirk on aid to palestinians.)
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To: JimRed
What was left to loot?

The Synagogues and the housing rubble.

27 posted on 09/12/2005 6:44:53 AM PDT by SJackson (“I worry that I've seen this movie before”, Rep. Mark Kirk on aid to palestinians.)
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To: Alouette

http://www.jnewswire.com/library/article.php?articleid=717

Monday, September 12, 2005 15:22 IST
JNW HEADLINE NEWS

'Palestinians' burn Gaza synagogues
By Ryan Jones

September 12th, 2005

Proclaiming their god Allah greater than the God of Israel, “Palestinian” Muslims set upon four abandoned synagogues in the Gaza Strip Monday, setting them ablaze and raising the flags of the PLO and Hamas.

In the early morning hours, even before the last IDF soldier had left Gaza, Arab mobs overwhelmed the scant police forces deployed by the Palestinian Authority and swarmed over the former Jewish communities of Morag, Neve Dekalim, Kfar Darom and Netzarim.

Making straight for the synagogues, they fired their weapons in the air, set off fireworks and chanted “Allah is greater” in celebration of Islam's victory over the Jews in that narrow coastal strip – a piece of land given by God to the Israelite tribe of Judah.

“This is only the first step of the liberation. Tomorrow we'll liberate all of Palestine,” they shouted.

The burned-out shells of the Jewish houses of worship, as well as the other 15 or more synagogues in Gaza, will be razed in the coming days, PLO chief Mahmoud Abbas said early Monday, after Israel chose to leave the structures standing.

“The Israelis left behind empty structures that served as synagogues in the past,” Abbas stated. “But they removed all religious artifacts from there and therefore they are no longer holy places.”

That formal destruction began Monday afternoon, when a PA bulldozer was reported by the Associated Press to have started razing the synagogue in Netzarim.

Earlier, Israeli Foreign Minister Silvan Shalom had pleaded with UN Secretary General Kofi Annan to intervene and prevent the desecration of the synagogues, according to Ynet.

Annan promised to do so, but either failed to keep his word or was rebuffed by the PLO chief.

Last week, Knesset Member Effi Eitam said the Palestinian Arabs' treatment of the synagogues following the IDF's departure would prove what kind of people Israel was dealing with.

“This is a test for this new [Palestinian] entity,” Eitam told CNSNews. “If the first thing that they will do is to destroy the synagogues and just to wipe out any Jewish presence from this land, that will prove that their face is [toward] war forever.”

By resorting to such desecration, the Palestinian Arabs “will prove that they are not only terrorists...but they are really barbarians,” he continued.

That was the exact sentiment expressed by Shalom Monday morning as scenes of the burning synagogues began flood the media.

Shalom told Israel Radio the Gazan Arabs' actions were “barbaric.”

He was supported in that assessment by Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee Chairman Yuval Steinitz, who said the images from Gaza prove “we have no genuine, responsible partner for peace on the other side, but at most, a partner for excuses.”

Some in Israel suggested the unbridled desecration of the synagogues should be answered with the destruction of the Al Aqsa Mosque, which occupies Israel's holiest site – the Jerusalem Temple Mount.

“If the government does not do it, no one should be surprised to find proud Jews standing up and doing it instead,” an unnamed source told Ynet.


28 posted on 09/12/2005 6:47:27 AM PDT by Esther Ruth (I have loved thee with an EVERLASTING LOVE, Jeremiah 31:3 Genesis 12:1-3)
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To: JimRed
What was left to loot?

All that was left was debris, hollowed-out buildings, and trash. But for the Palis, these things are definitely a step-up.

29 posted on 09/12/2005 6:48:27 AM PDT by COBOL2Java (Many Democrats are not weak Americans. But nearly all weak Americans are Democrats.)
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To: Alouette

Well we're movin on up,
To the east side.
To a deluxe apartment in the sky.
Movin on up,
To the east side.
We finally got a piece of the pie.

Fish don't fry in the kitchen;
Beans don't burn on the grill.
Took a whole lotta tryin',
Just to get up that hill.
Now we're up in the big leagues,
Gettin' our turn at bat.
As long as we live, it's you and me baby,
There ain't nothin wrong with that.

Well we're movin on up,
To the east side.
To a deluxe apartment in the sky.
Movin on up,
To the east side.
We finally got a piece of the pie.

30 posted on 09/12/2005 6:50:21 AM PDT by COBOL2Java (Many Democrats are not weak Americans. But nearly all weak Americans are Democrats.)
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To: ncountylee

Bloody Savages!


31 posted on 09/12/2005 6:50:48 AM PDT by elcid1970
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To: SJackson

That's the Bush Israel's best friend ever Administration, if you don't mind.

Why do Jews vote Democrat when Republicans are so friendly towards Israel?


32 posted on 09/12/2005 6:52:07 AM PDT by Sabramerican (Islam is to Peace as Rape is to Love)
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To: SJackson

THere is one thing that will unite them. Hatred of "you know whom."


33 posted on 09/12/2005 6:56:00 AM PDT by Rippin
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To: SJackson

Car swarms are so yesterday.

Any resemblance between a "Palestinians" and a decay and rot seeking maggots is purely coincidental.


34 posted on 09/12/2005 6:56:55 AM PDT by Sabramerican (Islam is to Peace as Rape is to Love)
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To: Esther Ruth

http://web.israelinsider.com/Articles/Politics/6566.htm

Palestinians torch four Gaza synagogues
By israelinsider staff and partners September 12, 2005

Palestinians burn the synagogue at Netzarim. (AP)

Thousands of triumphant Palestinians poured into abandoned Jewish settlements early Monday, setting empty synagogues on fire and shooting in the air, as the last Israeli soldier rolled out of the Gaza Strip, completing the Israeli pullout from the territory after a 38-year presence.

Palestinian police stood by helplessly as gunmen raised flags of terrorist groups in the settlements and crowds smashed what was left in the ruins or walked off with doors, window frames, toilets, and scrap metal. Initial plans by Palestinian police to bar the crowds from the settlements for the first few hours quickly disintegrated, illustrating the weakness of the Palestinian security forces and concerns about growing chaos after Israel's departure.

Gaza's night sky turned orange as fires roared across the settlements. Women ululated, teens set off fireworks and crowds chanted "God is great".

Just after sunrise, the last column of tanks rumbled out of Gaza, passing through the Kissufim crossing into Israel. Gaza commander Brig. Gen. Aviv Kochavi drove through the crossing and became the last Israeli soldier to leave.

"The mission has been completed, and an era has ended," he said after crossing into Israel. Then Israeli troops raised their national flag, removed from Gaza military headquarters, on the Israeli side of coastal strip.

As Israel completed its pullout, Palestinian Jeeps decorated with the flags of the Hamas and Islamic Jihad terrorist groups stopped just near the border and a group of masked gunmen waved their weapons before Palestinian police began moving them away.

"Today is a day of joy and happiness that our people were deprived of in the past century," said Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas, adding that the Palestinians still have a long path toward statehood. He denounced Israeli rule in Gaza as "aggression, injustice, humiliation, killing and settlement activity."

Just before daybreak, Abbas was heading to what was once the largest Jewish settlement, Neve Dekalim, his aides said. However, aides later said he was forced to turn back because of huge traffic jams.

Israel's pullout marks the first time the Palestinians will have control over a defined territory, and Gaza is seen as a testing ground for Palestinian aspirations of statehood.

Palestinians hope to build their state in Gaza, the West Bank and east Jerusalem -- areas that Israel captured in the 1967 Mideast War -- but fear that Israel will not hand over additional territory. They say Israel's occupation of Gaza has not ended because it retains control over borders (with Israel) and air space.

Israel removed some 8,500 Gaza settlers from their homes in 21 settlements last month, and razed homes and most buildings in the communities. However, the Israeli Cabinet decided at the last minute Sunday to leave 19 synagogue buildings intact, drawing complaints from the Palestinians and criticism from the United States.

After rushing into the settlements early Monday, Palestinians set fire to three empty synagogues, in the Morag, Kfar Darom and Netzarim settlements, as well as a Jewish seminary in Neve Dekalim. In Netzarim, two young Palestinians waving flags stomped on the smoldering debris outside the synagogue, and others took turns hitting the building with a large hammer.

Palestinian police appeared overwhelmed, watching the destruction from the sidelines. Police Col. Abdel Khader Abu Tayr said police didn't have enough time to deploy because Israeli troops left without sufficient warning. "Now we are expending every effort to kick the people out and protect the buildings," Abu Tayr said.

In the Neve Dekalim settlement, 22-year-old Abdel Rahman Barakat rode his bicycle through the streets, amazed at the space the settlers had enjoyed. "Oh my God, I feel so comfortable here," he said. "It (the settlement) is very wide, it's very big."

In northern Gaza, university student Rami Rayan walked toward the abandoned settlement of Elei Sinai, where he said a cousin carried out a suicide bombing five years ago. "I want to feel that his blood wasn't spilled in vain," Rayan said, as he picked up bullet casings as souvenirs. "They (the Israelis) left because of resistance," Rayan said.

Some 5,000 Israeli troops left in Gaza began driving toward Israel before dawn Monday, and the last Israeli soldier was out just after daybreak.

Two tanks broke down because of mechanical problems, and troops waited for huge tow trucks to arrive. Soldiers fired in the air to prevent Palestinians from approaching.

After the pullout was completed, Maj. Gen. Dan Harel, head of Israel's southern command, pointed toward the horizon and told the AP, "It's a very strange feeling, almost unreal. I have a lot of memories from that place, a lot of friends who died."

"The responsibility is of the Palestinian Authority," he told reporters a few minutes later as Hamas and Islamic Jihad supporters gathered a few hundred meters behind him. "We hope that they will rise to the responsibility, and enable all of us to live in peace and security."

Late Sunday, Israeli troops lowered their national banner in Neve Dekalim, snapped farewell pictures and closed army headquarters, which were left intact for use by the Palestinians.

In a somber farewell ceremony, Kochavi, the Gaza commander, expressed hope the pullout would be a step toward peace.

"The gate that will close behind us is also the gate that will open," he said. "We hope it will be a gate of peace and quiet, a gate of hope and goodwill, a gate of neighborliness."

But he added a threat: "If a bad wind breaks through, then we will greet it with a force of troops ready and waiting."

A field commander, Lt. Col. Tzvika Tzoran, sat on the turret of a tank on an isolated sand dune in his final moments in Gaza, bidding farewell to the Mediterranean coastline. Other soldiers took pride in the orderly withdrawal, in contrast to a hasty retreat from southern Lebanon five years ago.

But the withdrawal, code-named "Last Watch," was overshadowed by Israeli-Palestinian disputes, including over border arrangements. The army was forced to cancel a formal handover ceremony, initially set for Sunday, after angry Palestinians said they wouldn't show up.

The final phase of the pull began Sunday with twin decisions in the Israeli Cabinet _ to end military rule in Gaza and not to raze 19 synagogues in former Jewish settlements there.

The last-minute decision to leave the synagogue buildings intact, a reversal of position, angered the Palestinians who said they would now be forced to demolish the buildings. In Washington, U.S. State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said the Israeli Cabinet decision "puts the Palestinian Authority into a situation where it may be criticized for whatever it does."

When settlers left Gaza, they took with them the sacred Torah scrolls and the other holy items from the synagogues.

The Palestinians want full control over the Gaza-Egypt border after Israel's withdrawal, saying free movement of people and goods is essential for rebuilding Gaza's shattered economy.

Israel wants to retain some control, at least temporarily, fearing that terrorists will smuggle weapons into Gaza, as they have done on many occaisons before.

Israel last week unilaterally closed the Rafah border crossing.

Last week, Israel agreed in principle that foreign observers could eventually replace Israeli inspectors at Rafah. However, Israel said it could be months before the border reopens, and that a final deal would depend on Palestinian willingness to crack down on terrorist groups.

In the meantime, it plans to reroute border traffic through alternate Israeli-controlled crossings and turn over security control of the border to Egyptian forces, 750 of whom deployed at the border over the weekend.

The AP contributed to this report.


35 posted on 09/12/2005 6:57:08 AM PDT by Esther Ruth (I have loved thee with an EVERLASTING LOVE, Jeremiah 31:3 Genesis 12:1-3)
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To: Sabramerican
Two items are in high demand in Gaza today: Aluminum and mango. Hundreds of Palestinians are walking around carrying bags of mango. Plenty of mango. The fruits, taken from the orchards in Netzarim, are not yet ripe, but anyone who can put his hands on some mango does so. Halil, 63, of Gaza explained: “We do it in order to say that this again belongs to us, the land is ours and the fruits are also ours.”

Ever try planting some mango?

36 posted on 09/12/2005 6:58:17 AM PDT by blurb
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To: Esther Ruth

http://web.israelinsider.com/views/6575.htm

The Face of Islamic Religious Intolerance
By Paula R. Stern September 12, 2005

Today, as I knew they would, crazed Palestinian mobs are desecrating 25 synagogues in Gaza, setting them on fire and destroying what it took years to build. I have visited almost all of these synagogues, prayed in many of them. I cannot even begin to put into words the pain I feel today, the anger, and the sadness.

The world, as I expected, is silent. The UN's Kofi Annan was asked to protect the remaining synagogues, but we hear nothing. Empty buildings, they will protest quietly, and what did you expect? Unspoken is the silent message that while the Christian world and the Jewish world would respect places of worship, the Moslem world cannot be held to the same level of accountability. Did you expect any different? No, I did not, though it would be a mistake to assume that knowing they would destroy these holy places in any way lessens the pain.

We can't say that we expected no better, of course, because that would be deemed racist and wrong. It would be insulting to the honorable religion of Islam, even though it is the truth. It would imply that their values are different than ours, even though they are. It would suggest that their culture is one that lacks respect for other religions, one deeply embedded in violence and one that cannot tolerate and respect the beliefs of others. We can't say all that, and so the lie will live on, the destruction go unpunished, the truth left unsaid.

The world will quietly offer Israel their condolences and throughout the world, in places like Afghanistan, Iran, Iraq, Syria, Egypt, and even in Poland, Romania, Hungary and the Ukraine, people will wonder if maybe they could destroy a nearby synagogue too. Why should the land on which these buildings sit continue to be "wasted" when there are no Jews around? Could there be a way to rid Europe and Arab countries of these buildings in which Jews once prayed? The first step, of course, is to deny.

Palestinian President Abu Mazen has become a rabbi, apparently. He can now determine the holiness of a synagogue and has issued his rabbinic doctrine that these buildings are no longer synagogues, no longer holy. If you take the wooden pews, the musical instruments, the Bibles, hymnals, altar furnishings and vestments out of a church, is it then permissible to burn it down? Does it lose its sanctity because the inner contents has been removed?

Perhaps others are wondering if they too could use the Palestinian excuse that a building stripPed and desecrated is no longer holy and can be destroyed. How many Jewish cemeteries are there in Europe? Are Jews ever likely to return to Iraq? Must Tunisia protect the remaining synagogues? What of Morocco?

Luckily, our holy places will be saved by the most unlikely source. Abu Mazen has one problem in making his claim believable. His own people reject his words. Watch the pictures of them dancing on the rooftops of these buildings, see how they set fire to these holy places.

In his mad rush for the border, Sharon gave the Palestinians millions of dollars in infrastructure, public buildings, lighting, roads and more. And yet the pictures in the media are all the same. The Palestinian mobs are frantic and out of control in their bloodthirsty quest to destroy the synagogues because they recognize that these places are holy to the Jews.

What interest would they have in simply destroying a building? They will scavenge around and take what they can ... but the synagogues are being destroyed. Why burn and damage them if not for the intense hate-filled desire to destroy something that represents Judaism, a non-Moslem place of worship?

But it is not only the pictures from Gaza that cause me great pain today, not just the hatred and destruction that we all knew was inevitable. Add in a debate going on now in England, civilized England. At first glance it seems like it is a different topic entirely, and yet, it its own way, it is the same debate, albeit in a more civilized environment. Perhaps commemorating Holocaust Day is too Jewish, say a team of advisors to Prime Minister Tony Blair. Perhaps it would be more politically correct to call it Genocide Day so as to avoid insulting England's growing Moslem population.

How appropriate that this debate would be raised on days when synagogues are again being burned and destroyed. Would England deny the unique place the Holocaust has in world history? Are the Holocaust and the few days we commemorate it not sacred? There have been many attempts at genocide throughout the centuries, but none were as systematic, as civilized and endorsed as the Holocaust.

Nowhere, never, was the machine of a government focused so totally on obliterating all traces of a religion or people in such an efficient and barbaric way while being accompanied by the silence of nations who could have, should have done something.

Not since Nazi Germany have so many synagogues been destroyed. Moslem intolerance is well known and yet the world continues to be silent. Why was the world silent when 2000 Hindi temples were destroyed by Moslems in India? When will the world finally react to Islamic religious intolerance? Would the world remain silent if 25 churches were burned in one day? Where is the Vatican's voice of outrage as the synagogues in Gaza burn? I can only imagine what fury there would be if Israel were to now demolish 25 mosques on Israeli soil.

Just three days ago, I stood in the Yamit Yeshiva in Neve Dekalim last week, the famous synagogue in the shape of a Jewish star. Abu Mazen has promised that this building will be destroyed. Apparently its continued existence would be an insult to the Palestinians who do not believe in the sanctity of any religion but their own.

As I walked around, there was a swirl of action. Soldiers moved quickly back and forth removing whatever could be taken. The books had been removed, the holy Torah scrolls long since taken away so they would not see the shame of what would come. The High Court had not yet ruled whether Israel should destroy the buildings in anticipation of the desecration Abu Mazen and his government was promising. But the soldiers knew destruction was coming soon.

In the end, the Israeli government made the correct choice. We will not destroy synagogues. We will not send a signal to the world that it is acceptable to wantonly destroy the holy places of our religion or another, and so today, as yesterday and tomorrow, mosques will be safe in Israel while synagogues burn elsewhere.

Jews do not destroy places of worship even if the alternative in the end is the desecration of these Houses of God at the hands of rioting mobs who worship terror, incite violence and care not for any buildings or any people, not even their own. The world will not admit it, it can't be said or written, but Jews honor churches, mosques and synagogues throughout our country and in our communities. Since the Holocaust, the Jewish synagogues in Europe have largely been protected and public outcries have often resulted when desecrations have occurred.

Israelis even protect Arab holy sites when they are built on top of our holy places, as they are on the Temple Mount in Jerusalem, Joseph's Tomb, Samuel's Tomb and the Tomb of the Patriarchs in Hebron.

The face of the future state of Palestine can be seen in the actions of Palestinians today. There is an impossible divide between our culture and theirs, our dreams and the nightmares they would force upon us.

Jews made their stand yesterday by not destroying their synagogues. Palestinians made their stand today by burning and desecrating them. The remaining question now is what the Christian world will do. Will you express outrage at Islamic intolerance or continue in silence?
Views expressed by the author do not necessarily reflect those of israelinsider.


37 posted on 09/12/2005 7:06:05 AM PDT by Esther Ruth (I have loved thee with an EVERLASTING LOVE, Jeremiah 31:3 Genesis 12:1-3)
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To: SJackson

Interesting to hear the "brave, masked terrorist" say HE caused this to happen. Maybe his kind did, but only because this end result was CHOSEN by US policy (from Oslo to chastisement of Arafat's house arrest) and SHARON.

This WAS the expected result, forget about the PC version of "orderly takeover." Nobody but fools are shocked by this behavior. Its typical of lawless mobs without loyalty to civility or anyone but themselves, witness NewOrleans after the hurricane.


38 posted on 09/12/2005 7:07:14 AM PDT by Zrob (freedom without lies)
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To: blurb
Ever try planting some mango?

Are you kidding? These people are the poster children of the welfare state.

Some surviving mango trees may somewhat bloom next year but in 5 years they will all be dead and gone and the scene will be overtaken with hordes of rats and the Palestinians will be wailing the Jooos did it!

39 posted on 09/12/2005 7:11:16 AM PDT by Gritty ("Maybe the 9/11 Commission can rename themselves the Katrina Kommission - Mark Steyn)
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To: APRPEH

I was saying this is just typical of what Arafat had promoted. Keeping the people he was supposed to be leading poor, stupid, and violent.
While his wife lived like royalty in Paris, his people were forced to starve so they could claim victimhood and promote jihad around the world for maximum profit to his organization.
The man was a pig and responsible for soo much of the violence and terrorism coming out of the middle-east these days.
Thats his legacy. A legacy of violence, lies, terrorism, death, and destruction.


40 posted on 09/12/2005 7:11:54 AM PDT by Proud_USA_Republican
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