Monday, November 07, 2005

A7news: Labor Party Abuzz

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Labor Party Abuzz: Was There a Deal or Wasn´t There?
Matan Vilnai, dropping out of the race for Labor Party chairman, says he accepts Peres' offer to be a "full partner." Peres says Vilnai will be his Defense Minister. Vilnai says there was no deal.
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Headlines:
 1. Labor Party Abuzz: Was There a Deal or Wasn´t There?
 2. Likud to Help Vote Down PM's Appointments
 3. Slogan in Debate: "We Won´t Forgive and We Won´t Forget"
 4. Netanya College's Rabin Seminar Left-Wing Line-Up
 5. Armed Wing of PA Ruling Party Wants to Wipe Israel Off the Map
 6. Senior Olympic Games Begin in Jerusalem
 7. On A7 Radio: Slice Her Up! The Un-doing of Israel

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Editor: Hillel Fendel
Monday, November 07, 2005
5 Cheshvan 5766


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1. Labor Party Abuzz: Was There a Deal or Wasn´t There?
By Hillel Fendel

Matan Vilnai, dropping out of the race for Labor Party chairman, says he accepts Peres' offer to be a "full partner." Peres says Vilnai will be his Defense Minister. Vilnai says there was no deal.

The race for Labor Party chairman, which has been underway for over two years, is in its final stretch - and continues to cause the party embarrassment. The party's primaries will be held this Wednesday, in 330 polling stations throughout the country. Though four candidates remained as of yesterday, the main competition is between Shimon Peres and Amir Peretz. The other two candidates, Matan Vilnai and and former party leader Binyamin Ben-Eliezer, were pressured to drop out - and last night, Vilnai did.

At around 6:30 PM last night (Sunday), Shimon Peres officially called upon Vilnai to withdraw from the race, offering him a "full partnership" in running the party. Peres even said that if he forms the next government, Vilnai - a former Deputy Chief of Staff in the IDF - would be his Defense Minister.

Some two hours later, Vilnai held a press conference at his Tel Aviv office, and said, "Out of a sense of responsibility and with a heavy heart, I accept Shimon Peres' offer to be his partner in leading the party and to be the first one behind him in the process of rehabilitating the party, preparing it for the coming elections against the Likud, and then leading the State of Israel."

Vilnai explained that though "there is a very large sector in the party that supports me, it is only the third-largest. As a realistic and open-eyed leader, I understand that my victory will have to wait..."

This morning, Vilnai denied allegations that he had sold his ideals and made a "political deal" with Peres. Denying that he had been promised the Defense Ministry, he said, "What deal was there? There is deep trust between Shimon and myself." Asked how he could now support Peres when only recently he said that Peres would lead the party to defeat, Vilnai said, "When I am with him, the entire situation looks different."

Amir Peretz, the Histadrut Labor Union chairman who recently joined Labor and now wishes to lead a "social revolution," says that the Vilnai-Peres partnership is simply a way of ganging up against his own candidacy. Peretz said that the recent developments appear to be an attempt to "buy power [by promising] jobs," and in fact his aides were reported to be considering turning to the courts to review the Peres-Vilnai understandings.

Peretz aides said it appears that "all means are acceptable" to stop Peretz: "First they changed the date of the election, then they changed the voters [by disqualifying allegedly fraudulent registrations - ed.], and now they're changing the candidates."

Shimon Peres is in favor of remaining in the national unity government with the Likud, while Amir Peretz says that Labor must quit the unity government immediately.

Pressure is now being brought to bear upon Binyamin Ben-Eliezer to withdraw from the race, but these efforts appear to be futile. Ben-Eliezer continues to insist that he will not drop out of the race, saying that while Peres is content with being second to Sharon, "I plan to lead the party to victory over the Likud."

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2. Likud to Help Vote Down PM's Appointments
By Hillel Fendel

Prime Minister Ariel Sharon appears headed for a loss in the Knesset this afternoon in his proposal to appoint three disengagement-supporters to ministerial positions.


Bolstered by the support of most of the anti-expulsion camp in the Likud, the opposition appears likely to succeed in rebuffing Sharon's ministerial appointments. Sharon has nominated MK Roni Bar-On as Minister of Industry and Trade, and Ze'ev Boim as Minister of Immigrant Aborption. In addition, for his third appointment, Sharon will be proposing Acting Finance Minister Ehud Olmert as permanent Finance Minister.

Several of the Likud "rebels" - they call themselves the "loyalists" - say they would gladly vote for Olmert as Finance Minister, if only Sharon would agree to separate that vote from the other two. Sharon refuses to do so - though he may do so tomorrow if he fails to pass the appointments today.

Sharon's advisor Eyal Arad told Army Radio, "Sharon does not plan to make any deals to get these appointments passed."

Behind the scenes, however, efforts are being made to come to a working understand between the Likud "rebels" and the government that would enable the Likud to rule for the coming year, until the national elections next November.

The arrangements include an internal "coordination" forum of party leaders that will include Sharon-allies Olmert and Foreign Minister Silvan Shalom, as well as leaders of the anti-expulsion camp Binyamin Netanyahu and Uzi Landau.

If the appointments are not passed, however, some analysts feel that Sharon will have no reason not to break up the government - and possibly form another party. "I have no intention of returning to the grave situation that I have faced over the past several months," Sharon said last night. "The Likud faction cannot continue to function the way it has until now."

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3. Slogan in Debate: "We Won´t Forgive and We Won´t Forget"
A new motto has taken over much of the anti-disengagement camp - but not everyone agrees with it.
Even the Yesha Council of Jewish Communities in Judea, Samaria and Gaza - which some say was overly cooperative with the expulsion forces during the disengagement - has produced a calendar and other items with the motto "We Won't Forgive and We Won't Forget." Events have been held under this heading, youths wear T-shirts with this slogan, and bumper stickers advertising this message have been mass-produced and distributed.

B'Sheva correspondent Hagit Ritterman asked several religious-Zionist leaders how they feel about the slogan. Excerpts from their responses, which appear in this past week's edition of B'Sheva, follow:

Yesha Council Chairman Bentzy Lieberman:
"Regarding the first part, 'we won't forget,' it is certainly forbidden under any circumstances to forget the act of expulsion. The expulsion must be a meaningful Zionist narrative engraved in the public consciousness. But we must look into the second part. What does it mean not to forgive - are we divorcing ourselves from the State? ... In my opinion, we can't forgive as long as the wound is still bleeding. We are not divorcing ourselves from the army or the State. But as long as the people of Gush Katif and northern Shomron have not yet reached their final homes, we can simply not forgive... He who sinned by carrying out the expulsion must carry out counter-measures. If [the sinners] meet the needs of those who were expelled and remedy the injustices, then there is room to carry out the act of forgiveness."

Rabbi Yehoshua Shapira, head of Yeshivat Ramat Gan - a leading institution in the anti-expulsion campaign:
"One cannot forgive one who does not ask for forgiveness. When someone carries out a crime, supports it, and intends to do similar things in the future, he cannot be forgiven. The motto is therefore very correct. A terrible crime was committed, and we are obligated to express the clear voice of the truth, honesty, justice and Torah...

"Why is this sin different than others which we [are more quick to forgive]? The answer is that this sin is [beginning] now. When the sin of public Sabbath desecration first began, it was correct to cry out - but a person who desecrates the Sabbath today is doing so because that's what his parents did. Now that the situation exists as it does, we must bring them closer with love. But the struggle over the Land is different; our secular brothers also sacrificed themselves for it, and they 'belong' to it, and therefore we can demand that they fulfill it...

"And the main thing is that the danger is still at our doorstep, and we continue to fight for Judea, Samaria and Jerusalem; the slogan [at issue] is part of the public expression of this struggle...

"At the same time, we must also find a long-term solution - namely, to bring our brother Jews closer to our Father in Heaven, for there will not be a [national revival here] without a great return/repentance [Teshuvah]. It is incumbent upon us to establish a Teshuvah movement."

MK Gila Finkelstein (National Religious Party):
"I don't forgive the State of Israel and its organs for the purging of the Jewish communities from Gush Katif and northern Shomron. I don't forgive the Cabinet ministers and Knesset Members who approved the expulsion. I don't forgive the media that encouraged it and ignored the breaking of the principles of democracy. I don't forgive the army, police and security forces, and certainly not the public that supported, accepted or reacted with apathy to the expulsion from Gush Katif and northern Shomron. Yes, a State without compassion is not worthy of forgiveness... True forgiveness can only occur when the [sinner] abandons his former ways. But at present, it appears that they are not doing so..."

Educator and Author Rabbi Ze'ev Karov, of Karnei Shomron:
"The motto is doubly-sinful - one in its framework, and one in its content. The first is connected with its style and how it sounds: out of four words, two of them are 'no' [if translated as 'No forgetting, no forgiving']. Many people know what not to say and what not to do, but the question is what yes to do? The Torah way is to find out how to repair and how to improve, and to be involved in positive actions and positive talk... The motto is one of despair, crisis, putting down others, detachment and hatred...

"But the sin of content in this slogan is even worse. First of all, whom are we not forgiving? Every policeman and soldier who was involved in any way? Every Jew who supported [the disengagement]? The rabbis who supported or who did not sharply condemn it?... Secondly, it represents a lack of faith in the Congregation of Israel. We believe that there is no such thing as a total spiritual breakdown in Israel or total assimilation. Belief in the Congregation of Israel is the cardinal belief in the coming of the Messiah. It is accepted that Israel will ultimately repent... and one of the fundamentals of Judaism is forgiveness..."

MK Tzvi Hendel (National Union), who was expelled from his home in the Gush Katif community of Ganei Tal:
"I generally try to be a forgiving person. I believe that the natural Jewish desire is to forgive. But here it's not only me, my home and my life's work, but rather an unprecedented national crime. This was a cruel move carried out by a Prime Minister of Israel for corrupt motives and with the advice of advisors lacking in values and faith. For this, there is no forgiveness and no atonement.

"The destruction and cruelty are reflected from every angle. Security-wise, the Chief of Staff warned that it would lead to a supportive wind for terrorism, and this is coming true: The terrorists were convinced by this move that only by murdering Jews will they get rid of us, and in this way Sharon empowered Hamas and Islamic Jihad... Values were trampled. A Prime Minister elected by the nationalist camp spat in the faces of those who sent him in order to push aside his criminal files... Even now, after they were so shamelessly thrown out, Sharon and his government continue to humiliate them and trample the honor of these great pioneers of our generation. Therefore, even when I try to call up all my spiritual capacities, I can never forget and forgive. I know of no other issue since the establishment of the State [in 1948] about which we can say, 'No forgetting and no forgiving.'"

MK Michael Ratzon (Likud):
"We must not forget, and we must forgive. We are one nation, and if we desire life, we must be united. But this means that we must concede to each other. We are Jews, and forgiveness is a Jewish value...

"But at the same time, we must be on guard and do everything we can to prevent another expulsion... If Jews had been expelled from their homes in other countries, we would have been up in arms. The fact that it took place in the Land of Israel, at the hand of Jews, increases the pain so much more. The Prime Minister acted against the wishes of his voters, and is leading Israel to the 1967 borders. He was elected to put down terrorism, and instead he leads a unilateral process that encourages the Palestinians to demand gestures without giving anything in return... At the same time, we must not refrain from forgiveness, because we are brothers and that which was done cannot be undone... The expulsion is a grave chapter and unforgettable in our history, and as we move on to the next chapter, we must remember it - but we must also be able to forgive."

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4. Netanya College's Rabin Seminar Left-Wing Line-Up
By Hillel Fendel

The Academic College of Netanya will be holding a two-day seminar in memory of the 10th anniversary of the murder of Yitzchak Rabin. Jibril Rajoub was invited to speak.

The rostrum of speakers at the seminar, which is also sponsored by the Rabin Heritage Center, slants sharply towards the left. The most right-wing speaker is Defense Minister Sha'ul Mofaz - a supporter of the disengagement/expulsion plan from Gaza and Northern Shomron.

Conference spokesman Shaya Segal confirmed that the organizers considered inviting PA terrorists Jibril Rajoub and Muhammed Dahlan to participate, and that contact was in fact made with Rajoub, but neither of them will appear.

Labor MK Danny Yatom, Chairman of the College's Strategic Dialogue Center, which is organizing the conference, issued a statement regarding the above. Yatom said, "Peace is made with enemies, not with friends, our enemies include also those who fought with us and killed us, and whom we killed as well... We must also remember that these are Palestinain figures with whom both the Likud and Labor governments had and have official contacts."

Arutz-7 asked why the organizers did not see fit to include representatives of the right-wing camp, sometimes known as the "orange" camp. Several answers were received. The spokesman for the Netanya College said, "I don't know... I speak only with the regional press, not the national press."

A staffer at the Strategic Dialogue Center of the Netanya College, which is hosting the seminar, said that whether the rostrum is left-wing or right-wing is "a matter of analysis/opinion."

Shaya Segal, former press advisor to both Ariel Sharon and Binyamin Netanyahu, serves as seminar spokesman. He explained that the purpose of the seminar is to discuss Yitzchak Rabin and his influence on various processes in the Middle East. "The purpose of the seminar is not to discuss the disengagement or to bridge the gap in Israeli society," Segal said.

"Could no one on the right-wing side of Israeli public life be found who had something to say about Yitzchak Rabin or the diplomatic process he initiated?" Arutz-7 asked. "Wasn't there someone who had at least as strong of a connection with events involving Rabin as Jibril Rajoub?"

Segal repeated that the issues to be discussed at the seminar did not necessitate the inviting of speakers other than those included.

Finally, when this question was raised to Prof. Joseph Ginat, Director of the Strategic Dialogue Center, he said though this was an academic conference, and not a political one, he would raise the matter at the next meeting, and that he hopes to have an answer by Thursday.

The seminar is billed as "develop[ing] a basis for a future plan of action which will create hope for cooperation and peace." The promotional literature states that "conference participants will concentrate on creating a balanced dialogue between leading figures from the Arab countries and Israel..."

The following speakers, among others, are scheduled to appear at the "Vision of Peace" seminar:

Past and present Labor Party MKs Shimon Peres, Dalia Rabin, Binyamin Ben-Eliezer, and Amnon Lipkin-Shachak;

Dr. Osama El Baz, Political Advisor to the President of Egypt

Dr. Abdel Salam Majali, Former Prime Minister of Jordan

Saeb Erekat, Head of PLO's Negotiations Affairs Department, representative of President of the Palestinian Authority Mahmud Abbas (Abu Mazen)

Dr. Munther Haddadin - Former Minister of Water, Jordan

Prof. Ibrahim Soliman, Director of Syria/Israel Projects, Institute for Middle East Peace and Developments

Prof. Shibley Telhami, Anwar Sadat Professor for Peace and Development at the University of Maryland

Dr. Alfred Abed Rabbo - Bethlehem University

Prof. Itamar Rabinovich, President of Tel Aviv University and former Ambassador of Israel to the U.S

Vice Prime Minister Ehud Olmert

Former U.S. Ambassador to Israel Martin Indyk

Former U.S. Ambassador to Egypt and Israel Dan Kurtzer

Ambassador to Israel Richard H. Jones, former Ambassador to Lebanon, Kazakhstan and Kuwait

Lionel Jospin, Former Prime Minister of France

Justice of the Supreme Court Elyakim Rubinstein, former Attorney-General

The Stategic Dialogue Center at the Netanya Academic College can be reached by phone at (+972- 9) 860 7885, fax at (+972-9) 860 7701, and by email at sdc@netanya.ac.il or paltera@netanya.ac.il

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5. Armed Wing of PA Ruling Party Wants to Wipe Israel Off the Map
By Scott Shiloh

The armed wing of Fatah, the ruling party of the Palestinian Authority and of PA chief Mahmoud Abbas, has called for wiping the State of Israel off the map.

Fatah’s military wing, the Al Aksa Brigades, said in a pamphlet distributed in the Gaza district that "anybody who recognizes Israel will burn in the fire of the Islamic nation's fury. Any [Islamic leader] who recognizes the Zionist regime means he is acknowledging the surrender and defeat of the Islamic world."

Harking back to its pre-Oslo days when Fatah, an international terrorist organization, led the Arab struggle against the Jewish state, the group’s armed wing has become the first Palestinian organization to publicly identify with Iran’s president’s Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's recent call to “wipe Israel off the map.”

Israel responded to Ahmadinejad’s statement by demanding that the United Nations revoke Iran’s membership in the world body.

The statement published in the Fatah group’s leaflet strongly supported Ahmadinejad’s bellicose remark. "We affirm our support and backing for the positions of the Iranian president toward the Zionist state which, by God's will, will cease to exist," read the pamphlet. "Recognizing Israel's right to exist means underestimating the Palestinian people, who are making daily sacrifices to liberate Palestine and Jerusalem."

Israel has not responded to the Fatah group’s statements. Officially, Israel has backed the creation of a Palestinian state under the U.S. roadmap plan. Both the United States and Israel had been hoping that such a state would be led by the Fatah, the ruling party of the Palestinian Authority and of PA chief Mahmoud Abbas.

Israel opposes Hamas participation in the upcoming PA elections because that terror group vehemently opposes the existence of the state of Israel. In regard to the Hamas, Foreign Minister Silvan Shalom said ironically at Monday’s cabinet meeting, "Do we really believe that an organization that has engraved on its banner the goal of destroying Israel would give up its party platform after being elected?"

Under a plan supported by the United States and Israel, hundreds of terrorists from the Fatah’s Al Aksa Brigades have been recruited into the PA’s security forces. The PA cabinet decided last month to set up five training camps to prepare the recruits for their new tasks. The camps will be built in territories controlled by the PA in Judea and Samaria.

The Fatah group’s brazen invective against Israel, however, runs in direct contravention of the Oslo accords. According to those agreements signed by the late Prime Minister Yitzchak Rabin in 1993, the Palestine Liberation Organization, led by Fatah leader Yasser Arafat, formerly recognized Israel’s right to exist.

The ideas behind the Fatah group’s latest statements have received support from PA academia. A professor at Al Najah University in Shechem, Abdel Sattar Kessem, berated western countries such as the United States, Britain, and France for condemning the Iranian leader’s anti-Israel remarks.

“These aggressive countries, which specialize in political fraud and the exploitation of other people, did not express reservations when Palestine was wiped off the map in 1948," he said.

"Millions of Palestinian refugees have been living for the past 60 years under harsh conditions so that Israel could continue to exist. And these countries, which have been emphasizing their keenness about human rights, insist on preventing these refugees from returning to their homes and property. Israel remains an alien organ in the Arab and Muslim region," the professor said.

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6. Senior Olympic Games Begin in Jerusalem
By Ezra HaLevi

The second annual Seniors Olympics began Monday in Jerusalem.


The games, which are open to competitors over the age of 60, will take place for two days and will include a 10- kilometer race, discus and javelin throwing, shot put, swimming, tennis, cycling, table tennis, lawn bowling and badminton.

More than 350 participants will compete in the games. The oldest participant is a 93-year-old. In the 2004 games, a 91-year-old distance-runner competed in the run.

The event is sponsored by the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee (JDC), the Municipality of Jerusalem and the Association of Community Centers. Organizers say it is aimed at highlighting the positive side of aging. The official press release announcing the event proclaims that the aim is to demonstrate that “age is not a barrier to rigorous physical competition and to encourage seniors to remain physically active.”

The Senior Olympics, officially called "SABA" - a Hebrew acronym for Sport, Health, Quality of Life, and which literally means “Grandpa” - “were created to highlight the positive side of aging and improve the general image of the elderly in Israel," said JDC spokesman Joshua Berkman.

According to the JDC, Israel has a higher proportion of seniors than any other nation in the world. "Senior citizens have so much to contribute to Israel and the Jewish world,” Berkman added, “we want to ensure that they can remain active and independent for as long as possible."

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7. On A7 Radio: Slice Her Up! The Un-doing of Israel
A7 Radio's "The Tamar Yonah Show"
The Vatican wants Jerusalem's King David's Tomb for themselves. The Evangelists want the shores of the Sea of Galilee. The U.N. is hinting it wants Jerusalem to be its new home and the Arab invaders want ALL of Israel. How much will Israel secede before fading to oblivion? Plus: Prof. Paul Eidelberg speaks on, "The State Versus The Jewish People".


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