How to stop Israeli soccer racism
ATFP World Press Roundup Article from The Jerusalem Post by Larry Derfner - (Opinion) June 23, 2011 - 12:00am Here’s a suggestion on how to stop racism at Israeli soccer games – the chanting of “death to the Arabs,” the hooting of monkey sounds at black players, all that stuff: Film it and show it to the world. |
ICRC demands Hamas provide proof Shalit is alive
ATFP World Press Roundup Article from Alertnet June 23, 2011 - 12:00am The International Red Cross called on Hamas on Thursday to provide proof that Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit is still alive nearly five years after his capture by Palestinian militants. In an unusual public appeal, the independent aid agency said Shalit's family had a right under international humanitarian law to be in contact with their 24-year-old son, held incommunicado since his capture on June 25, 2006. |
Jordan Valley families left homeless
ATFP World Press Roundup Article from Ma'an News Agency (Analysis) June 23, 2011 - 12:00am "The big soldier wouldn’t speak to me. He just said ‘This is my job, sit down and shut up’," the newly homeless Ralia Darraghmeh, a diabetes sufferer in her sixties said of the one of the crew who had come to demolish her home Tuesday morning. She was sitting alone, crying in Khirbet Yarza, a tiny Bedouin hamlet, as her tin home was taken down by order of Israel's Civil Administration, which governs planning and permit issuing in the 60 percent of the West Bank categorized as Area C under the 1993 Oslo Accords. |
Jordan remains stabilizing factor, Israel committed to helping monarchy survive
ATFP World Press Roundup Article from Ynetnews by Asaf Romirowsky - (Opinion) June 23, 2011 - 12:00am President John F. Kennedy once said that those who make peaceful revolution impossible make violent revolution inevitable. As a case in point, the so-called “Arab Spring” in the Middle East has now spread to the traditionally stable country of Jordan, a historical ally of the United States and Israel. |
Israel surveys support for Palestinian state
ATFP World Press Roundup Article from Ma'an News Agency June 23, 2011 - 12:00am Israel's foreign ministry estimates under two-thirds of UN member states will recognize a Palestinian state declared in September, and is launching a campaign to keep the number down, Israel Radio reported Thursday. Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman instructed his department to survey the 192 countries in the United Nations, and send Israeli parliamentarians to nations who are yet undecided, the broadcast noted. The study said 118 nations would support the bid. |
Did a Jerusalem court really sentence a dog to death by stoning?
ATFP World Press Roundup Article from The Christian Science Monitor by Eoin O'Carroll - (Analysis) June 21, 2011 - 12:00am Have you heard the one about the dog who walked into a rabbinical court? Here's how the BBC reported it: A pooch made its way into a beth din in Jerusalem's ultra-Orthodox neighborhood of Mea Shearim. One of the judges, believing the dog to be the reincarnation of a now-deceased lawyer whom the court had cursed some two decades earlier, sentenced the dog to death by stoning, and ordered that the sentence be carried out by children. The dog escaped before the sentence could be carried out. Dog-lovers have filed a complaint against the court. |
The historical truth behind the Israeli-Palestinian narratives
ATFP World Press Roundup Article from Haaretz by Dmitry Shumsky - (Opinion) June 23, 2011 - 12:00am In his article "Truth, not narrative," (June 17 ), Prof. Shlomo Avineri calls to separate nationalist narratives from historical truth when presenting the events of the Nakba (the Palestinian "catastrophe" that occurred when Israel was founded ). He says that on the one hand, there is the Israeli-Zionist narrative regarding the Jewish people's connection to its historic homeland and the Jews' miserable situation, while on the other hand, there is the Palestinian narrative, which regards the Jews solely as a religious group and Zionism as an imperialist phenomenon. |
Artists Investigate Identity and Boundaries in Extraterritorial Waters
ATFP World Press Roundup Article from The New York Times by Alice Pfeiffer - June 22, 2011 - 12:00am The legal term “ex-territory” historically refers to being outside the physical borders of a country and beyond its laws. Today, a project by two Israeli artists has found life in extraterritorial waters off Israel using a floating gallery and conference space as a forum for questions of boundaries and identity. The project was conceived in 2009, when two artists in Tel Aviv — Maayan Amir, 33, and Ruti Sela, 36 — were looking for a neutral space to screen a compilation of films by various artists in the Middle East. |
Israeli military begins to move West Bank barrier
ATFP World Press Roundup Article from CNN by Kevin Flower, Kareem Khadder - June 22, 2011 - 12:00am Jerusalem (CNN) -- Four years after an Israeli high court initially ruled that the path of the barrier separating Israelis from Palestinians around the West Bank village of Bilin needed to be rerouted, the Israeli military Wednesday began to dismantle parts of the controversial fence. |
Obama: U.S., Israel Must Assess Mideast With 'Fresh Eyes' Read more: http://forward.com/articles/138918/#ixzz1Q15JCYRh
ATFP World Press Roundup Article from Jewish Telegraphic Agency (JTA) June 21, 2011 - 12:00am President Obama told Jewish donors to his reelection campaign that Israel and the United States must assess the new Middle East with “fresh eyes.” “Both the United States and Israel are going to have to look at this new landscape with fresh eyes,” Obama said Monday night at an event in Washington that charged a minimum $25,000 a couple. “It’s not going to be sufficient for us just to keep on doing the same things we’ve been doing and expect somehow that things are going to work themselves out. We’re going to have to be creative and we’re going to have to be engaged.” |