Archive | July 2024

Israeli soldiers are finding Judaica in Gaza — and trying to locate the items’ owners

Israeli soldiers are finding Judaica in Gaza — and trying to locate the items’ owners

DEBORAH DANAN/JTA


Similar posts of Judaica have cropped up in the more than eight months since Israel began its ground invasion of Gaza at the end of October.

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Or, a solider fighting in Gaza, displays a seder plate he found in the territory. / (photo credit: OR/JTA

(JTA) — The commander of a small Israeli military drone unit in Gaza was on a routine reconnaissance mission with his team in an apartment in Rafah when one of his soldiers came across an object that looked strikingly out of place: a wood laminate challah board framed with the biblical injunction to “remember the Shabbat” in gold lettering, in Hebrew and English.

The commander knew that he was allowed to take property only if he needed to use it to fight the war, which didn’t apply here. But he wasn’t sure what to do.

“We’re definitely not allowed to take them as souvenirs or anything like that,” said the soldier, named Yoya. Military regulations prohibit soldiers from giving their full names to the press. “Stealing is forbidden and it’s also immoral. But in this case, when I saw that this was a Jewish item I said, ‘this can’t be theirs.’”

So he tried to locate the owner of the challah board by posting a photo of it on Facebook. While the post garnered 1,400 reactions and nearly 250 comments, nobody claimed the ritual object.

Similar posts have cropped up in the more than eight months since Israel began its ground invasion of Gaza at the end of October. Two weeks before Passover, another post made the rounds on social media — and was published in an Israeli news outlet — calling for the owners of a Seder plate found in a home in Khan Younis to claim their lost property.

Floor mosaic from the ancient synagogue in Gaza (credit: AVISHAI TEICHER/WIKIPEDIA)

In December, Yoya’s brother, Elisha, also an IDF soldier, found a Hanukkah menorah in the shape of a hamsa, a hand-shaped symbol, in a home in Khan Younis. The post said, without elaborating, that the menorah had “probably been taken on October 7” amid looting during the Hamas-led attack on southern Israel. 

Other troops who have encountered Judaica in Gaza have made the same assumption. Maj. (res.) Maor Lavi likewise found a menorah in what he described as the home of a terrorist in Gaza City’s Shejaiya neighborhood, alongside weapons, military uniforms and equipment.  Lavi told Israel’s public broadcaster Kan that he had a “gut feeling” it was stolen on October 7

“Next to the bed, we just saw the menorah sticking out on top of one of the dressers. We took it,” Lavi said. “I would really want to return it to its owner and find the person, the family it belongs to.”

His unit lit the menorah on the seventh and eighth nights of Hanukkah. Shortly after the incident, Lavi, a father of four, was killed. 

Regulations around seizing property

In response to inquiries, the Israel Defense Forces detailed its regulations regarding seizing property, though it did not specifically address the issue of Judaica. More broadly, Israeli military looting has been an issue during the war. 

In February, IDF Chief of Staff Herzi Halevi called on soldiers “not to take anything that is not ours — be it a souvenir or a piece of military equipment.” Three months later, Israel’s Military Advocate General, Maj-Gen Yifat Tomer-Yerushalmi, announced that the IDF was investigating 70 incidents of suspected violations of the laws of war by IDF soldiers, including looting. Several soldiers have been indicted for alleged looting from Palestinians in recent years — including during operations in Gaza.

“As part of the fighting and subject to the military protocols, it is possible to use enemy property for military necessity, as well as take property that belongs to the terrorist organizations subject to the protocols regarding booty of war,” the spokesperson said. “Taking property in ways that are not in accordance with army protocols is prohibited by law. Incidents in which forces did not behave in accordance with protocols and the law will be examined.”

Lt. Col. (res) Maurice Hirsch, former director of the IDF’s Military Prosecution in the West Bank, noted that while there is no way to fully ascertain whether the menorah and objects like it were stolen, nor whether they were taken on Oct. 7 or beforehand, there is evidence of looting of Israeli homes and businesses by Palestinians on October 7. Prior to the attack, more than 18,000 Gaza Palestinians worked legally in Israel, so it’s possible they acquired the items then.

According to its author, Asa Kasher, violations like looting fly in the face of the IDF’s Code of Ethics, which stresses the “purity of arms.”

“It means that you use your military force only for certain purposes, for the purposes of fighting a war which is justified,” he said. “And looting is using your force in a wrong way, and therefore it is absolutely forbidden.”

But Kasher said that given the sheer scale of the current war – in which 300,000 reservists were called up in addition to regular soldiers — isolated incidents of looting, even if they number in the dozens, are statistically negligible and not indicative of the military’s broader conduct.

“It’s not the IDF. It’s the criminal margins that are expected if you have that quantity of people participating,” he said.

In the case of Jewish ritual artifacts, there is “cause to believe that they have been stolen and so soldiers would be entitled to seize those items and attempt to return them to their lawful owners,” Hirsch said. He added that as they attempt to return the items, the soldiers need to provide detailed documentation of where the objects were discovered, so that if the original owners were not identified, the artifacts could potentially be returned to the place from which they were taken.

He added however, that the IDF may harbor concerns over making exceptions for Judaica and ritual items, which “could give rise to a lapse of judgment by the soldiers where they would be taking property which is not even reasonably thought to be stolen — and that’s looting.”

Kasher asserts that a formal procedure should be in place for handling such items, where soldiers report them up the chain of command rather than taking them to their homes. “If taking the item is justified, it must be done by the state, not by the soldier,” he said.

To date, the seder plate and menorahs all lay unclaimed. Still, that hasn’t dampened Yoya’s hope to find the owner of the challah board. 

“I really wish we’ll find who it belongs to, because it definitely doesn’t belong in Rafah,” he said. 


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Canada Police Charge Syrian Returnee with Terrorism Offenses

Canada Police Charge Syrian Returnee with Terrorism Offenses

Reuters and Algemeiner Staff


Illustrative. A Royal Canadian Mounted Police officer stands guard outside the Senate of Canada prior to the Speech from the Throne in Ottawa, Canada on September 23, 2020. Photo: AFP photo/DAVE CHAN

Canadian police said on Saturday they had charged a returnee from Syria with terrorism-related offenses after an investigation into allegations that she had gone to join the Islamic State group.

Kimberly Polman, 51, was charged with two counts of leaving Canada to participate in the activity of a terrorist group and participation in the activity of a terrorist group, the police said in a statement.

The charges under Section 83 of the Criminal Code stem from the investigation into the allegations Polman traveled to Syria from Canada in 2015 to join ISIS, police said.

She was repatriated to Canada in 2022 but not charged criminally, her lawyer said at the time.


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Sztuka namawiania do zła


Co może być lepszego i bardziej skutecznego od konferencji prasowej Hamasu?


Sztuka namawiania do zła

Andrzej Koraszewski


Widziałem to dziesiątki razy. W mediach społecznościowych najlepszym argumentem usprawiedliwiającym miłość do Hamasu jest malunek artysty podpisującego się Banksy. Wczoraj po raz kolejny zobaczyłem na Facebooku znajomej zdjęcie muralu, na którym słodka mała dziewczynka do namalowanego na pękniętym murze słowa PEACE dopisuje litery. Widzimy końcowy efekt: PLEASE. Dziewczynka ma spódniczkę z palestyńskiej flagi. Genialne.

Sztuka posługuje się symbolami, skrótami myślowymi, które mają apelować do naszych zmysłów. Artysta nie pokazuje zamaskowanych uzbrojonych mężczyzn żądających natychmiastowego zawieszenia broni po niezliczonych atakach na cywilną ludność w Izraelu. Mała dziewczynka pisząca na murze, słodki kotek na murze zburzonego domu, puste huśtawki na tle ruin miasta, mężczyzna rzucający wiązką kwiatów jak granatem, bezbronny człowiek uchylający fragment granicznego muru, gołąbek nad Betlejem, żydowski i palestyński chłopczyk podlewający drzewko. Jak nie kochać Hamasu i jak nie czuć odrazy do Żydów?

Sztuka jest potęgą, a Banksy jest mistrzem. Mistrz nie pokazuje porwanych izraelskich dzieci, nie pokazuje również obrazów bicia Palestyńczyków, którzy „kradną” żywność z magazynów pomocy humanitarnej, nie pokazuje Palestyńczyków zabitych przez hamasowskich zbirów za żądanie pokoju z Izraelem. Nie pokazuje członków Hamasu oddających nazistowski salut, ani spalonych izraelskich domów.

Banksy jest symbolem sztuki w służbie ludobójczej ideologii. Nic nowego. Umysł zniewolony Czesława Miłosza nigdy nie był masową lekturą. Setki utalentowanych artystów oddawało swoje talenty na usługi propagandy. Jedni, jak Włodzimierz Majakowski, kończyli samobójczą śmiercią, inni pozostawali wierni, powoli tracąc talent, jeszcze inni tworzyli dzieła tak wspaniałe, że gotowi jesteśmy przymykać oczy na ich grzeszny związek z ludobójczymi ideologiami. (Dla mnie takim przykładem jest García Márquez, którego nie umiem przestać podziwiać mimo jego związków z wściekłym komunizmem, czy Knut Hamsun, wielbiciel Hitlera, którego Głód jest nadal arcydziełem.)

Banksy jest rewolucjonistą z rzekomo uczciwymi intencjami. Nic tu nie jest pewne poza ckliwością na potrzeby odbiorców z miękkim sercem i leniwym umysłem. Anonimowy uliczny artysta. Są silne poszlaki, że nazywa się Robin Gunningham, podobno pochodzi z Bristolu, podobno jest dziś multimilionerem, podobno mieszka obecnie w Nowym Jorku, twierdzi się, że dziś malunki podpisane „Banksy” to często dzieła „zbiorowego artysty”. Jest jednak autentyczny Banksy, a jego liczne malunki w Gazie są dowodem, że był goszczony przez władców nazistowskiej twierdzy prezentowanej przez niego jako obóz koncentracyjny pod gołym niebem.

Jego kontakty z wczorajszymi władcami Gazy podważają domniemanie niewinności. Wie, kim są ludzie Hamasu, wie jacy są. 

Ktoś napisał, że gdyby głupota bolała, znaczna część ludzkości musiałaby być nieustannie na morfinie. Sztuka może dostarczać środków łagodzących ból powodowany przez prawdę, zmienia obraz świata w naszych oczach, może uczyć radosnego przyswajania kłamstwa i dumy z powodu jego akceptacji.      

Ideologia Hamasu jest kontynuacją nazizmu. To nie jest żadna przenośnia. Powiązania z odległej przeszłości, dzisiejsza ideologia zmierzająca do podboju świata, nienawiść do demokracji, idea suprermacji, religijnej, a nie rasowej, ale to drobny szczegół. Gloryfikacja bezwzględnej przemocy i okrucieństwa. Widzimy to w ideologii Hamasu, Bractwa Muzułmańskiego, Al-Kaidy, ISIS, Boko Haram, Islamskiej Republiki Iranu, ale również Autonomii Palestyńskiej, czy tureckiego państwa. Obcinanie głów, ataki na cywilną ludność, terroryzm, niewolnictwo, porywanie ludzi, niewolenie kobiet. Usprawiedliwianie tej ideologii wymaga wielkiej sztuki. Banksy jest mistrzem.

Podobno jedno zdjęcie warte jest więcej niż tysiąc słów. Obraz apeluje do uczuć, łatwo obrazem manipulować umysły. Palestyńska propaganda szczególnie często posługuje się Photoshopem, propagandowym aktorstwem, fałszywymi podpisami. Amerykański historyk Richard Landes wymyślił nawet specjalną nazwę „Pallywood”. Zdjęcia dzieci zabitych przez wadliwe palestyńskie rakiety sprzedawane są zachodniej opinii publicznej jako ofiary żydowskiej agresji. To działa niezawodnie. Hamasowskie Ministerstwo Prawdy (nazywane ministerstwem zdrowia), nie ma żadnych problemów z kredytem zaufania. Kwestionowanie oświadczeń Ministerstwa Prawdy byłoby formą islamofobii. Automatyczne kwestionowanie oświadczeń władz izraelskich jest dowodem dziennikarskiej rzetelności.

Sztuka jest nawet ważniejsza od dziennikarstwa korzystającego z usług „palestyńskich dziennikarzy”, którzy nieodmiennie okazują się również członkami Hamasu. Sztuka przemawia do każdego, nie wymaga tłumaczeń, ani sprostowań. Jest krzykiem z najwyższej ambony. Banksy jest zasobem, prawdziwym skarbem ludobójczej ideologii.

Terrorysta obcina głowę, żeby napełnić nasze serca strachem. (Tak każe święty Koran.) Artysta atakuje nasze uczucia opiekuńcze, potrafi zablokować potrzebę dalszych pytań. To działa niezawodnie, przynosi również milionowe zyski. Trudno o lepsze wykorzystanie talentu w walce z kapitalizmem. Rewolucja parowóz dziejów.

„Już nic i nikt nie wypełni tej pustki! A wielcy tego świata z uśmiechem przyglądają się dzieciobójstwu.” – tak pisze internauta pod zdjęciem muralu z pustymi huśtawkami na tle ruin miasta.

Wymalowane na gazańskim murze niebo rozjaśnione rozbłyskami rakiet wystrzelonych na izraelskie miasta nigdy nie dałoby tego wspaniałego efektu.

Banksy jest dziś jednym  z najbardziej rozpoznawalnych w świecie artystów. Nie trzeba chodzić do muzeów, dociera do milionów, przemawia do umysłów mocniej niż inni. Nie potrzebuje reklamy, ma miliony agentów.

Taki obrazek na gazańskim murze mógłby narazić artystę na trudności dotarcia do europejskich serc i na okrutny gniew palestyńskich mecenasów sztuki.


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UN refers Albanese probe, for alleged pro-Hamas funded trips, to colleagues who defended her

UN refers Albanese probe, for alleged pro-Hamas funded trips, to colleagues who defended her

MIKE WAGENHEIM


The committee investigating the special rapporteur denounced Francesca Albanese’s accusers in May from the very charges it is now reviewing.

Francesca Albanese, U.N. special rapporteur to the Palestinians, during a session of the UN Human Rights Council, in Geneva, on March 26, 2024. Photo by Fabrice Coffrini/AFP via Getty Images.

The Magna Carta entitles the accused to a “lawful judgment of his peers.” The United Nations appears to take that literally in assigning an investigation of Francesca Albanese, special rapporteur for the Palestinians, to her colleagues in the global body’s Coordination Committee for Special Procedures.

Not only will the six special rapporteurs and independent experts on the committee—all unpaid advisers to the United Nations who essentially hold the same role as Albanese—judge whether their colleague indeed traveled on the dime of pro-Hamas groups, in violation of U.N. rules, but the sextet publicly supported Albanese against the same accusations that it is now probing.

“It would be a travesty of justice for the high commissioner to pass the buck in this case, particularly because the coordination committee has already pronounced itself on this matter, in at least two statements,” Hillel Neuer, executive director of the Geneva-based nonprofit UN Watch, told JNS.

The U.N. Office of Internal Oversight Services told Neuer on June 26 that it had referred the allegations against Albanese to Volker Turk, U.N. high commissioner for human rights, for “attention and appropriate action,” Neuer told JNS.

That correspondence came hours after the publication of a widely-circulated video clip of JNS asking a U.N. spokesman why Albanese and other of the global body’s entities refused or ignored requests to clarify or refute details of accusations that she traveled to Australia and New Zealand on trips funded by pro-Hamnas lobbying groups.

Turk has no jurisdiction over the matter and sent the complaint to the Coordination Committee for Special Procedures, a spokeswoman for the U.N. high commissioner for human rights told JNS.

‘Unfounded allegations’

The U.N. Human Rights Council appoints the special rapporteurs and “independent experts” who make up the committee and serve on a voluntary basis. All of the committee members, and Albanese, fall under the U.N. “special procedures” category and are considered to be technically independent of the global body.

By design, U.N. officials do not challenge the work and public statements of the committee, which is supposed to follow established procedures, including operating with “integrity, independence and impartiality,” in its investigation of Albanese.

On May 16, all six members of the committee issued a statement defending unnamed “U.N. human rights experts” from attacks, including “unfounded allegations of misuse of resources and claims of bias and unprofessional conduct intended to damage reputations, on social media, during U.N. meetings and even when experts are on official country visits.”

Although the committee didn’t name Albanese, it did state that “our colleagues addressing the situation in the Occupied Palestinian Territory and Israel face severe targeting in social media and baseless accusations that question their integrity and motivations.” Albanese’s mandate covers that region.

Officials of the U.N. special procedures unit are supposed to document their travel in the unit’s annual report; however, Albanese’s trips to Australia and New Zealand, which UN Watch estimates to have cost more than $20,000, do not appear. That, the nonprofit says, calls into question whether Albanese’s stays were official visits.

JNS sought comment repeatedly from Albanese’s office about the source or sources of funding for the trip to the two countries. Three U.N. offices—that of Secretary-General António Guterres, the Human Rights Council and special procedures—declined to respond to a JNS question on whether they could demonstrate that the global body funded Albanese’s trip to the two countries.

Several pro-Hamas groups have said that they supported the trips and one publicly claimed that it sponsored the trip. Albanese has denied the charge that pro-Hamas groups funded her travel on her social media account, and she has also said that allegations that her staff accepted honoraria outside established frameworks are untrue. She has not provided evidence publicly that disproves the allegations.

The United Nations pays for some of the expenses of those in its special procedures unit via a designated budget, and officials are permitted to fundraise from states and private donors, all of which they are supposed to include in their annual report.

Accepting payment, including for travel, and honoraria from “any governmental or non-governmental source” for “activities carried out in pursuit” of the special rapporteur’s mandate is prohibited, per the United Nations.

‘Total disregard for rules and regulations’

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Antisemitic Gang Attacks Participants of Pride Parade in Sweden Wearing Stars of David

Antisemitic Gang Attacks Participants of Pride Parade in Sweden Wearing Stars of David

Jacob Frankel


Attendees of a pride event wearing Stars of David in Malmö, Sweden were attacked by an antisemitic gang. Photo: Screenshot

Attendees of an LGBTQ+ pride event in Malmö, Sweden wearing Stars of David were attacked by an antisemitic and homophobic gang that hurled insults at the victims while assaulting them, according to Swedish police and videos circulated on social media.

The incident came amid an ongoing surge in antisemitic incidents across Europe following the Palestinian terrorist group Hamas’ Oct. 7 massacre across southern Israel.

Swedish police confirmed on Tuesday that pro-Israel participants of the Malmö Pride Parade wearing and displaying rainbow garments and flags with the Star of David embossed on them were stopped, harassed, and assaulted while walking through the streets over the weekend. Police have opened an investigation into the case.

“The Swedish police take this type of crime very seriously and we are actively working on the current case,” a police spokesperson said, according to the Jerusalem Post.

Video circulated on social media showed men driving up alongside the pride marchers, verbally harassing them. They then exited the vehicle and were joined by others. The assailants, who appeared to be of Middle Eastern extraction, shoved the pro-Israel attendees and attempted to snatch one of their rainbow Israeli flags while calling them “f—king f—gots” and asking if they “support killing children.”

Some members of the crowd threw punches at the pride event attendees. One woman wearing a keffiyeh appeared to attempt to calm the mob from escalating the violence.

Police confirmed the video is authentic and depicts the incident they are investigating. Malmö Pride reportedly became aware of the assault on Monday and condemned the incident.

Malmö Pride is a four-day annual pride festival that culminates with a large parade through downtown Malmö.

The Swedish town of Malmö received international attention for hosting the Eurovision Song Contest earlier this year, amid backlash against Israel’s participation in the competition. Israel’s representative, Eden Golan, faced large, anti-Israel demonstrations outside of her hotel room. Facing death threats, Golan was ordered by Israeli security to remain in her hotel room when not competing in Eurovision. 

Eden Golan performing “Hurricane” for Israel at the second semi-final for the 2024 Eurovision Song Contest at Malmo Arena on May 9, 2024. Photo: Corinne Cumming/EBU

Golan, who placed fifth in the competition with her song “Hurricane,” was encouraged online by Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. “You’re competing not just in the Eurovision in a proud and very impressive manner, but you are competing successfully in the face of an ugly wave of antisemitism — and you are standing up to it and representing the State of Israel with huge honor,” he said in a message to Golan.

Meanwhile, Jewish members of the LGBTQ+ community have continued to distance themselves from pride events as antisemitism in Europe continues to skyrocket. In London last month, KeshetUK – a Jewish LGBTQ+ network and charity organization in the UK – announced that it would not participate in London’s pride parade, called Pride in London, after organizers accused Israel of committing “genocide” in Gaza.

KeshetUK cited safety concerns as the reason for not marching. “Against the background of what has been a challenging and at times a complex year for many Jews in the UK, including LGBT+ Jews, some of our friends and congregants have said they do not feel safe marching in the Pride in London event as they have felt in previous years,” said KeshetUK in a joint statement with the London Synagogue for British Jews.

Antisemitic incidents in Sweden have skyrocketed since Hamas’ Oct. 7 attacks on Israel, where 1,200 people were killed and about 250 were taken hostage. According to the Swedish National Council for Crime Prevention, the number of reported antisemitic hate crimes increased by a factor of five between 2022 and 2023.


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